Removal of Title V Emergency Affirmative Defense Provisions From State Operating Permit Programs and Federal Operating Permit Program, 47029-47054 [2023-15067]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 139 / Friday, July 21, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
County,13 the finding of failure to attain
the PM10 NAAQS does not apply to
tribal areas, and the rule would not
impose a burden on Indian reservation
lands or other areas where the EPA or
an Indian tribe has demonstrated that a
tribe has jurisdiction within West Pinal
County. Thus, this rule does not have
tribal implications and will not impose
substantial direct costs on tribal
governments or preempt tribal law as
specified by Executive Order 13175.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order
13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern
environmental health or safety risks that
the EPA has reason to believe may
disproportionately affect children, per
the definition of ‘‘covered regulatory
action’’ in section 2–202 of the
Executive Order. This action is not
subject to Executive Order 13045
because the effect of this action is to
trigger additional planning requirements
under the CAA. This action does not
establish an environmental standard
intended to mitigate health or safety
risks.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This final rule is not subject to
Executive Order 13211, because it is not
a significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
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I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
13 A map of Federally-Recognized Tribes in the
EPA’s Pacific Southwest (Region IX) is available at
https://www.epa.gov/tribal-pacific-sw/mapfederally-recognized-tribes-epas-pacific-southwestregion-9.
18:12 Jul 20, 2023
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K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This rule is exempt from the CRA
because it is a rule of particular
applicability. This rule makes factual
determinations for specific entities and
does not directly regulate any entities.
The determination of a failure to attain
by the attainment date and
reclassification does not in itself create
any new requirements beyond what is
mandated by the CAA.
L. Petitions for Judicial Review
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean
Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the
appropriate circuit by September 19,
2023. Filing a petition for
reconsideration by the Administrator of
this final rule does not affect the finality
of this rule for the purposes of judicial
review nor does it extend the time
within which a petition for judicial
review may be filed, and shall not
postpone the effectiveness of such rule
or action. This action may not be
challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements (see section
307(b)(2)).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Particulate matter, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629,
February 16, 1994) directs federal
agencies, to the greatest extent
practicable and permitted by law, to
make environmental justice part of their
mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations (people of color and/or
Indigenous peoples) and low-income
populations. There is no information in
the record indicating that this action
VerDate Sep<11>2014
would be inconsistent with the stated
goals of Executive Order 12898 of
achieving environmental justice for
people of color, low-income
populations, and indigenous peoples.
Dated: July 13, 2023.
Martha Guzman Aceves,
Regional Administrator, Region IX.
Part 52, Chapter I, title 40 of the Code
of Federal Regulations is amended as
follows:
PART 52—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart D—Arizona
2. Section 52.126 is amended by
adding paragraph (e) to read as follows:
■
§ 52.126 Control strategy and regulations:
Particulate matter.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Effective August 21, 2023, the EPA
has determined that the West Pinal
Serious PM10 nonattainment area failed
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47029
to attain the 1987 24-hour PM10 NAAQS
by the applicable attainment date of
December 31, 2022. This determination
triggers the requirements of CAA
sections 179(d) and 189(d) for the State
of Arizona to submit a revision to the
Arizona SIP for West Pinal to the EPA
by December 31, 2023. The SIP revision
must, among other elements,
demonstrate expeditious attainment of
the 1987 PM10 NAAQS within the time
period provided under CAA section
179(d) and provide for an annual
reduction in the emissions of direct
PM10 or a PM10 plan precursor pollutant
within the area of not less than five
percent until attainment.
[FR Doc. 2023–15339 Filed 7–20–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 70 and 71
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2016–0186; FRL–8961–02–
OAR]
RIN 2060–AV39
Removal of Title V Emergency
Affirmative Defense Provisions From
State Operating Permit Programs and
Federal Operating Permit Program
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is removing the
‘‘emergency’’ affirmative defense
provisions from the EPA’s title V
operating permit program regulations.
These provisions established an
affirmative defense that sources could
have asserted in enforcement cases
brought for noncompliance with
technology-based emission limitations
in operating permits, provided that the
exceedances occurred due to qualifying
emergency circumstances. These
provisions, which have never been
required elements of state operating
permit programs, are being removed
because they are inconsistent with the
EPA’s interpretation of the enforcement
structure of the Clean Air Act (CAA or
the Act) in light of prior court decisions
from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
D.C. Circuit. The removal of these
provisions is also consistent with other
recent EPA actions involving affirmative
defenses and would harmonize the
EPA’s treatment of affirmative defenses
across different CAA programs. Through
this document, the EPA is also
providing guidance on the
implementation process resulting from
SUMMARY:
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the removal of the emergency
affirmative defense provisions from the
EPA’s regulations, including the need
for some state, local, and tribal
permitting authorities to submit
program revisions to the EPA to remove
similar title V affirmative defense
provisions from their EPA-approved
title V programs, and to remove similar
provisions from individual operating
permits.
This final rule is effective on
August 21, 2023.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2016–0186. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov website.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., CBI or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available electronically through https://
www.regulations.gov.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Corey Sugerik, Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards, Air Quality
Policy Division (C504–05),
Environmental Protection Agency,
Research Triangle Park, NC; telephone
number: (919) 541–3223; email address:
sugerik.corey@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
B. Does this action apply to me?
Entities potentially directly affected
by this rulemaking include federal,
state, local, and tribal air pollution
control agencies that administer title V
operating permit programs.1 Entities
potentially indirectly affected by this
rulemaking include owners and
operators of emissions sources in all
industry groups who hold or apply for
title V operating permits.
C. Where can I get a copy of this
document and other related
information?
A. How is this Federal Register
document organized?
In addition to being available in the
docket, an electronic copy of this
Federal Register document will be
posted at https://www.epa.gov/title-voperating-permits/current-regulationsand-regulatory-actions.
The information presented in this
preamble is organized as follows:
II. Background and Overview of the
Final Action
I. General Information
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B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(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
Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
To Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
VI. Statutory Authority
VII. Judicial Review
I. General Information
A. How is this Federal Register document
organized?
B. Does this action apply to me?
C. Where can I get a copy of this document
and other related information?
II. Background and Overview of the Final
Action
III. Response to Significant Comments
A. Affirmative Defenses and the NRDC
Decision
B. Exemptions and the Sierra Club
Decision
C. Other Legal and Policy Considerations
D. Potential Impacts
E. Response to Comments Outside the
Scope of This Action
IV. Implementation Considerations
A. Program Revisions
B. Permit Revisions
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
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The EPA has promulgated permitting
regulations applicable to the operation
of major and certain other sources of air
pollutants under title V of the CAA.
These regulations are codified in 40 CFR
parts 70 and 71, which contain the
requirements for state operating permit
programs and the federal operating
permit program, respectively. These
regulations contained identical
provisions establishing an affirmative
defense that sources could assert in
enforcement actions brought for
noncompliance with technology-based
emission limitations caused by specific
emergency circumstances. These
1 This preamble makes frequent use of the term
‘‘state,’’ usually meaning the state air pollution
control agency that serves as the permitting
authority. The use of the term ‘‘state’’ also applies
to local, tribal, and U.S. territorial air pollution
control agencies, where applicable.
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‘‘emergency’’ provisions were located at
40 CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g).
In this action, the EPA is removing
the emergency affirmative defense
provisions in 40 CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g)
because they are inconsistent with the
EPA’s current interpretation of the
enforcement structure of the CAA, in
light of prior court decisions from the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C.
Circuit—primarily the court’s 2014
decision in NRDC v. EPA, 749 F.3d 1055
(D.C. Cir. 2014). The removal of these
provisions is also consistent with other
recent EPA actions involving affirmative
defenses 2 and will harmonize the EPA’s
treatment of affirmative defenses across
different CAA programs. The EPA
previously provided background on the
title V emergency provisions and
articulated its justification for this
action in the preamble to the 2016 and
2022 proposed rules preceding this final
rule.3 4 Section III. of this document
responds to significant comments we
received on those proposals and
provides additional information in
support of this final rule.
As a consequence of the EPA’s action
to remove these provisions from 40 CFR
70.6(g), it will be necessary for any
states that have adopted similar
affirmative defense provisions in their
part 70 operating permit programs to
revise their part 70 programs to remove
these provisions. In addition, individual
operating permits that contain title V
affirmative defenses based on 40 CFR
70.6(g) or similar state regulations will
eventually need to be revised. The EPA
discussed its expectations concerning
how states will implement this rule in
section V. of the preamble to the 2016
proposed rule and also requested
2 In newly issued and revised New Source
Performance Standards (NSPS), emission guidelines
for existing sources, and NESHAP regulations, the
EPA has either omitted new affirmative defense
provisions or removed existing affirmative defense
provisions. See, e.g., National Emission Standards
for Hazardous Air Pollutants for the Portland
Cement Manufacturing Industry and Standards of
Performance for Portland Cement Plants; Final
Rule, 80 FR 44771 (July 27, 2015); National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
for Major Sources: Industrial, Commercial, and
Institutional Boilers and Process Heaters; Final
Rule, 80 FR 72789 (November 20, 2015); Standards
of Performance for New Stationary Sources and
Emission Guidelines for Existing Sources:
Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste Incineration
Units; Final Rule, 81 FR 40956 (June 23, 2016).
3 See Removal of Title V Emergency Affirmative
Defense Provisions From State Operating Permit
Programs and Federal Operating Permit Program,
Proposed Rule, 81 FR 38645 (June 14, 2016);
Removal of Title V Emergency Affirmative Defense
Provisions From State Operating Permit Programs
and the Federal Operating Permit Program,
Proposed Rule, 87 FR 19042 (April 1, 2022).
4 Docket No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2016–0186
comprises all supporting documents and public
comments for both the 2016 and 2022 proposals.
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comments on some of the aspects
discussed. Additional information
regarding these implementation
considerations and the EPA’s response
to relevant comments received on these
issues are included in section IV. of this
document.
EPA expects that program revisions to
remove the title V emergency defense
provisions from state operating permit
programs will include, at minimum: (1)
a redline document identifying the
state’s proposed revision to its part 70
program rules; (2) a brief statement of
the legal authority authorizing the
revision; and (3) a schedule and
description of the state’s plans to
remove affirmative defense provisions
from individual operating permits. The
EPA encourages states to consult with
their respective EPA regional offices on
the specific contents of their revision
submittal packages.
In general, any impermissible
affirmative defense provisions within
individual operating permits that are
based on a title V authority and that
apply to federally-enforceable
requirements will need to be removed.
As explained in the 2016 proposal, the
EPA expects that any necessary permit
changes should occur in the ordinary
course of business, such as during
periodic permit renewals or revisions.
At the latest, states would be expected
to remove affirmative defense
provisions from individual permits by
the next periodic permit renewal that
occurs following either (1) the effective
date of this rule (for permit terms based
on 40 CFR 70.6(g) or 71.6(g)) or (2) the
EPA’s approval of state program
revisions (for permit terms based on a
state affirmative defense provision).
III. Response to Significant Comments
This section contains the EPA’s
response to significant comments
regarding the EPA’s proposed action to
remove 40 CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g) and
provides the EPA’s justification for this
final action. Comments and the EPA’s
responses are divided into four general
topic areas: section III.A. of this
document discusses the legal basis for
this action in light of the NRDC
decision; section III.B. discusses issues
related to exemptions from emission
limitations and the D.C. Circuit’s 2008
decision in Sierra Club v. EPA, 551 F.3d
1019 (D.C. Cir. 2008); section III.C.
discusses other legal and policy
considerations; and section III.D.
discusses various issues involving the
consequences of removing the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions from operating permit
programs, focusing primarily on the
impact on sources.
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A. Affirmative Defenses and the NRDC
Decision
The following subsections address
comments received concerning the
NRDC decision and the EPA’s legal
basis for this action. Subsections III.A.1.
and III.A.2. of this document address
general comments either supporting or
opposing the EPA’s interpretation of the
NRDC decision. Subsection III.A.3.
addresses specific comments concerning
the extent to which the NRDC decision
should apply beyond the context of
citizen-suit enforcement under CAA
section 304, and how the decision
should inform the EPA’s treatment of
affirmative defenses in the context of
EPA-initiated judicial enforcement and
administrative penalty actions under
CAA sections 113(b) and (d). Specific
comments that discuss the relationship
between the NRDC decision and prior
case law are presented in section III.C.2.
of this document.
1. Support for the EPA’s Interpretation
of the CAA’s Enforcement Structure in
Light of the NRDC Decision
Comment: Multiple environmental
and state commenters supported the
EPA’s view that, in light of NRDC, the
title V emergency affirmative defense
provisions should be removed because
they impermissibly limit the authority
of courts to decide appropriate penalties
in private civil suits. Some commenters
claimed that the EPA lacks the authority
to create such provisions. Other state
and industry commenters acknowledged
that the NRDC decision limits the EPA’s
discretion to retain affirmative defense
provisions, either altogether or in
certain contexts. Commenters argued
that when Congress wanted to limit the
authority of courts, to allow an
affirmative defense or to permit an
extrajudicial entity to modify penalties,
it did so expressly, citing CAA sections
113(e)(1), 113(c)(5)(C)–(D), and
113(d)(2)(B).
Some commenters asserted that the
NRDC decision applies beyond the
specific context of CAA section 112
standards because the court’s rationale
was based on CAA sections 113 and
304, not CAA section 112. Therefore,
commenters concluded that the
prohibition on affirmative defenses
applies to any citizen-enforceable
emission standards or limitations under
the Act. Commenters claimed that
NRDC is applicable to the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions because, like the hazardous
air pollution standards at issue in
NRDC, all other emission standards
contained in title V operating permits
are enforceable under CAA section 304.
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Some commenters further asserted that
the fundamental principles underlying
the NRDC decision with respect to
affirmative defenses were reinforced by
the D.C. Circuit’s 2016 decision in U.S.
Sugar v. EPA.5
Response: The EPA generally agrees
with commenters supporting the legal
basis for this action to remove the
emergency affirmative defense
provisions from the EPA’s title V
regulations. The EPA previously
explained its legal rationale for this
action in the 2016 and 2022 proposed
rules.6 Here, the EPA reiterates some of
the primary legal principles guiding this
current action.
The EPA’s current interpretation of
the CAA with respect to affirmative
defenses is informed by the D.C.
Circuit’s NRDC decision. In NRDC, the
D.C. Circuit vacated affirmative defense
provisions contained in the EPA’s
National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) for
the portland cement industry,
promulgated under CAA section 112.
The D.C. Circuit concluded that the EPA
lacked the authority to create these
affirmative defense provisions because
they contradicted fundamental
requirements of the Act concerning the
authority of courts to decide whether to
assess civil penalties in CAA
enforcement suits. Importantly, the
court’s decision did not turn upon any
specific provisions of CAA section 112,
but rather on the provisions of CAA
sections 113 and 304. These provisions
5 U.S. Sugar Corp. v. EPA, 830 F.3d 579 (D.C. Cir.
2016), amended on rehearing on unrelated grounds,
U.S. Sugar Corp v. EPA, 844 F.3d 268 (D.C. Cir.
2016).
6 See 81 FR 38649. As noted in the 2016 and 2022
proposals, the EPA has also previously explained
its interpretation of the CAA in light of the NRDC
decision at great length in multiple other
documents, including documents supporting the
EPA’s 2015 SSM SIP Action. See State
Implementation Plans: Response to Petition for
Rulemaking; Findings of Substantial Inadequacy;
and SIP Calls To Amend Provisions Applying to
Excess Emissions During Periods of Startup,
Shutdown and Malfunction; Supplemental Proposal
To Address Affirmative Defense Provisions in
States Included in the Petition for Rulemaking and
in Additional States, Supplemental Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, 79 FR 55919, 55929
(September 17, 2014) (SSM SIP Action
Supplemental Proposal); State Implementation
Plans: Response to Petition for Rulemaking;
Restatement and Update of EPA’s SSM Policy
Applicable to SIPs; Findings of Substantial
Inadequacy; SIP Calls To Amend Provisions
Applying to Excess Emissions During Periods of
Startup, Shutdown and Malfunction, Final Action,
80 FR 33839, 33851 (June 12, 2015) (SSM SIP
Action); and Memorandum, Withdrawal of the
October 9, 2020, Memorandum Addressing Startup,
Shutdown, and Malfunctions in State
Implementation Plans and Implementation of the
Prior Policy, 3–4 (September 30, 2021), available at
https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/202109/oar-21-000-6324.pdf (September 2021 SSM SIP
Memo).
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pertain to enforcement of a wide variety
of CAA requirements beyond section
112 standards, including enforcement of
emission limits contained in title V
permits. Thus, the mere fact that the
court addressed the legality of an
affirmative defense provision in the
context of a section 112 NESHAP does
not mean that the court’s interpretation
of sections 113 and 304 does not also
apply more broadly. To the contrary, the
EPA sees no reason why the logic of the
court concerning sections 113 and 304
would not apply to the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions, as well.
Notably, in 2016, the D.C. Circuit
reaffirmed its NRDC opinion concerning
affirmative defenses. In U.S. Sugar, the
D.C. Circuit addressed various
challenges to rules promulgated in 2011,
including challenges urging that—in the
absence of affirmative defenses—the
EPA was required to address periods of
malfunction in setting the applicable
standards. Discussing NRDC, the U.S.
Sugar opinion stated that the affirmative
defense provision at issue in the NRDC
case was ‘‘an impermissible intrusion
on the judiciary’s role.’’ 7 The fact that
the title V emergency affirmative
defenses arguably apply more broadly
(i.e., to potentially numerous
technology-based emission limits
developed under multiple CAA program
areas) than the affirmative defense at
issue in NRDC potentially makes it even
more intrusive on the judiciary’s role.
In light of the NRDC decision and the
EPA’s reevaluation of the CAA, the EPA
interprets the enforcement provisions in
sections 113 and 304 of the CAA to
preclude affirmative defense provisions
that would operate to limit a court’s
authority or discretion to determine the
appropriate remedy in an enforcement
action. Section 304(a) grants the federal
district courts jurisdiction to determine
liability and to impose penalties in
enforcement suits brought by citizens.
Similarly, section 113(b) grants the
federal district courts jurisdiction, in
enforcement actions brought by the U.S.
Department of Justice (DOJ) on behalf of
the EPA, to determine liability and to
impose remedies of various kinds,
including injunctive relief and monetary
penalties. These grants of jurisdiction
come directly from Congress, and the
EPA is not authorized to alter or
eliminate this authority. With respect to
monetary penalties, CAA section 113(e)
lists various factors that courts and the
EPA shall consider in the event of
judicial or administrative enforcement
for violations of CAA requirements,
including title V permit conditions.
7 See
U.S. Sugar, 830 F.3d at 607.
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Because Congress has already given
federal courts the authority to determine
what penalties are appropriate in the
event of judicial enforcement for a
violation of a title V permit provision,
neither the EPA nor states should be
able to alter or eliminate that authority
by superimposing restrictions on the
authority and discretion granted by
Congress to the courts. Affirmative
defense provisions by their nature limit
or eliminate the authority of federal
courts to determine liability or to
impose remedies through considerations
that differ from the explicit grants of
authority in section 113(b) and section
113(e). Therefore, these provisions are
not appropriate under the CAA, no
matter what type of event they apply to,
what criteria they contain, or what
forms of remedy they purport to limit or
eliminate. The emergency affirmative
defense provisions that the EPA is
removing from 40 CFR 70.6(g) and
71.6(g) purported to interfere with the
authority of the courts to determine
whether and to what extent penalties or
other remedies were appropriate in
judicial enforcement actions, conflicted
with the holding of NRDC, and were
contrary to the enforcement structure of
the CAA. Thus, the EPA has determined
that these provisions should be removed
from the EPA’s regulations.
Section IV.A. of this document
contains additional information
concerning the need for states to submit
program revisions to remove similar
title V affirmative defense provisions
from EPA-approved state operating
permit programs, and to remove similar
provisions from individual operating
permits.
2. Comments Suggesting That the NRDC
Case Is a Narrow Decision That the EPA
Is Incorrectly Extending or Misapplying
Comment: Some commenters stated
that the D.C. Circuit’s decision in NRDC
v. EPA was limited to the particular
facts or circumstances of that case and
that the EPA’s reliance on the decision
to support removal of the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions is an incorrect extension or
misapplication of the decision.
Commenters generally claimed that the
EPA should not apply the NRDC court’s
ruling to every corner of the CAA,
including to the title V affirmative
defense provisions within the EPA’s
regulations and state operating permit
programs. Some commenters stated that
the NRDC decision only invalidated an
affirmative defense associated with a
NESHAP issued in accordance with
CAA section 112, and that the decision
should be limited to those standards (or,
even, to the specific standards for
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portland cement plants subject to that
litigation). Commenters alleged that the
D.C. Circuit provided no language to
broaden its ruling. Some commenters
focused on the specific statutory
mandates involved in establishing
section 112 standards. One commenter
alleged that the D.C. Circuit held that
once a section 112 standard is
promulgated and established for all
operating modes, no ‘‘gap’’ remains for
the EPA to create an affirmative defense.
Other commenters focused on the
differences between title V permits and
the section 112 standards that the NRDC
court considered. These commenters
explained that title V permits contain
numerous different underlying
standards applicable to a source (such
as standards developed under a State
Implementation Plan (SIP) or under
New Source Review Programs), as well
as additional procedural and
monitoring, reporting, and
recordkeeping requirements. Thus, one
commenter asserted that enforcement of
title V permit requirements differs from
enforcement of specific section 112
emission limits, and that the D.C.
Circuit’s logic prohibiting affirmative
defenses does not apply to other types
of applicable requirements in a title V
permit, including substantive standards
as well as administrative or procedural
requirements.
Some commenters attempted to
distinguish the title V emergency
affirmative defense, which at least one
commenter characterized as a defense to
‘‘liability’’ or ‘‘noncompliance,’’ from
the affirmative defense to ‘‘civil
penalties’’ at issue in the NRDC case.
One commenter claimed that the NRDC
decision was based on the assumption
that excess emissions automatically
result in a violation of a section 112
standard, and therefore that the D.C.
Circuit only addressed how affirmative
defense provisions affect a court’s
authority to determine appropriate
remedies after an actionable violation
has been identified. Multiple
commenters asserted that neither CAA
section 113 nor the NRDC case speak to
provisions that define when a violation
has occurred. Some commenters also
asserted that the NRDC decision
involved an affirmative defense for
malfunctions, not emergencies, and
concluded that the EPA should not
apply the decision to the title V
emergency affirmative defense because
malfunctions are not similar in nature to
emergencies.
Some commenters also claimed more
generally that the title V affirmative
defense provisions do not impair a
court’s ability to decide whether a
source has met its burden of
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demonstrating that an emergency has
occurred and whether civil penalties are
appropriate. Other commenters
discussed the breadth of the NRDC case
with respect to SIP provisions.
Commenters asserted that the D.C.
Circuit did not opine on the authority of
the EPA or states to provide relief from
noncompliance with technology-based
SIP standards that are incorporated into
title V operating permits. Commenters
also claimed that the D.C. Circuit
expressly reserved judgment concerning
the validity of such defenses in SIPs,8
and that states have discretion under the
CAA to include affirmative defense
provisions in their SIPs. These
commenters attempted to distinguish
SIPs from the section 112 standards at
issue in the NRDC case. Multiple
commenters also incorporated in their
comment submissions various
attachments related to the Startup,
Shutdown, and Malfunction (SSM) SIP
Action,9 including comments submitted
on the initial and supplemental SSM
SIP Call proposals 10 as well as briefs
filed in the ongoing SSM SIP Action
litigation.11 Portions of these
attachments addressed the EPA’s
interpretation of the NRDC case.
Response: The EPA disagrees with
commenters’ assertions that the logic of
the NRDC case was restricted to the
context of section 112 standards, or to
a single NESHAP standard. Most of
these comments do not address the
fundamental legal principles upon
which the D.C. Circuit based its
decision, or the EPA’s explanation of
these principles. Contrary to what some
commenters suggest, the NRDC decision
was not based on any statutory
mandates specific to promulgating CAA
section 112 standards. Instead, the
decision was based on CAA sections
113 and 304, which apply broadly to the
enforcement of a wide range of CAA
requirements, including SIP
requirements. Thus, any differences
between section 112 standards and
other standards contained in title V
permits (or, for example, the difference
between malfunctions and emergencies)
are irrelevant to the legal principles
upon which the NRDC decision was
based, and which apply equally well to
the EPA’s title V regulations in 40 CFR
8 Commenters
cited NRDC, 749 F.3d at 1064 n.2.
SIP Action, 80 FR 33840.
10 State Implementation Plans: Response to
Petition for Rulemaking; Findings of Substantial
Inadequacy; and SIP Calls To Amend Provisions
Applying to Excess Emissions During Periods of
Startup, Shutdown, and Malfunction; Proposed
Rule, 78 FR 12460 (February 22, 2013); SSM SIP
Action Supplemental Proposal, 79 FR 55919.
11 Environmental Committee of the Florida
Electric Power Coordinating Group, Inc. v. EPA, No.
15–1239 (D.C. Cir.) (SSM SIP Action litigation).
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70.6(g) and 71.6(g), as discussed in the
preceding subsection.
The EPA also disagrees that NRDC is
distinguishable from the current action
due to any functional differences
between the affirmative defense at issue
in NRDC, which some commenters
characterized as a defense to a claim for
civil penalties for violations, and the
title V emergency affirmative defense,
which commenters characterized as a
defense to an action brought for
noncompliance. Both the title V
affirmative defense and the portland
cement NESHAP malfunction
affirmative defense (originally located at
40 CFR 63.1344) established an
affirmative defense that a source could
assert in actions brought under CAA
sections 113 and 304, after an
enforcement action had been initiated
for an alleged violation.12 Both
affirmative defense provisions
functioned in the same manner. The fact
that the portland cement defense was
confined to enforcement actions for
penalties, whereas the title V provisions
do not on their face contain such an
explicit restriction and could potentially
be read more broadly, is irrelevant to the
fact that both provisions purported to
interfere with the authority of courts to
determine whether and to what extent
relief is appropriate in a given case,
including relief from penalties.
Moreover, CAA section 304(a), upon
which the D.C. Circuit relied, is not
restricted to monetary penalties. The
EPA has previously explained its
position that affirmative defenses are
inappropriate regardless of what type of
event they apply to, what criteria they
contain, or what forms of remedy they
purport to limit or eliminate. The EPA
also notes that the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions were
explicitly restricted to noncompliance
with technology-based emission limits
(such as emission limits derived from a
NESHAP similar to the ones the D.C.
Circuit invalidated) and were never
available as a defense in an enforcement
case for violations of other types of title
V permit requirements, contrary to some
commenters’ assertions.
Finally, the EPA disagrees with
commenters’ claims that the title V
affirmative defense provisions would
not impair a court’s ability to decide
whether civil penalties are appropriate
because a source attempting to invoke
the title V emergency affirmative
defense would have the burden to prove
that an emergency occurred and other
12 To the extent that commenters argue that the
title V affirmative defenses function to define when
a violation has occurred, these comments are
addressed further in section III.B.1. of this
document.
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47033
demonstration requirements had been
met. The affirmative defense provision
formerly in the portland cement
NESHAP was similarly structured, and
the D.C. Circuit nonetheless found that
those provisions impermissibly
intruded into the judiciary’s role to
determine whether penalties are
appropriate. Any comments challenging
the holding of the D.C. Circuit in NRDC
are beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
To the extent that commenters
suggested that a title V affirmative
defense provision could be appropriate
with respect to certain technology-based
SIP requirements contained in a title V
permit, the EPA disagrees. For the
reasons previously discussed,
affirmative defense provisions in title V
permits are not appropriate with respect
to any federally-enforceable
requirements. To the extent that
commenters discussed the relationship
between the NRDC and Sierra Club
cases and affirmative defense provisions
contained within SIPs, and to the extent
that commenters incorporated
comments or briefs relevant to the SSM
SIP Action but did not specifically
explain how those comments were
pertinent to the EPA’s proposal to
eliminate the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions, such
comments are beyond the scope of this
current rulemaking. Moreover, the EPA
has previously responded to those
comments and legal briefs in the
appropriate venues.13 To the extent that
comments addressed issues relevant to
this action, the EPA is responding to
these comments in this document.
3. The NRDC Case As It Applies Beyond
Citizen-Suit Enforcement Under CAA
Section 304(a)
Comment: Many commenters argued
that the NRDC decision only invalidated
affirmative defenses that could be
asserted in citizen suits brought under
CAA section 304 in federal court. These
commenters asserted that the NRDC
case does not require the EPA to remove
affirmative defenses with respect to
either: (1) EPA-initiated civil judicial
enforcement actions under section
113(b); or (2) administrative penalty
actions brought under section 113(d).
Many of these commenters
recommended that instead of entirely
13 See SSM SIP Action, 80 FR 33840, 33852
(noting that ‘‘[s]tates have great discretion in how
to devise SIP provisions, but they do not have
discretion to create provisions that contradict
fundamental legal requirements of the CAA’’ and
that ‘‘[t]he jurisdiction of federal courts to
determine liability and to impose statutory
remedies for violations of SIP emission limitations
is one such fundamental requirement’’); Initial Brief
of Respondent EPA, SSM SIP Action Litigation
(filed July 26, 2016).
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removing the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions, the EPA
should amend the provisions to clarify
that they do not apply to any
enforcement actions based on section
304, but only to actions based on
sections 113(b) and (d).
First, regarding EPA-initiated
enforcement under section 113(b), some
commenters acknowledged the EPA’s
position (as explained in the 2016
proposed rule) that, because both
sections 304 and 113(b) vest federal
district courts with the ability to
determine liability and assess penalties,
the EPA’s hands are tied with respect to
its own civil enforcement. One
commenter noted that the NRDC case
did not directly speak to enforcement
actions brought by the EPA under
section 113(b). Other commenters
claimed that section 113(b) does nothing
to impede the EPA’s ability to define the
circumstances under which it is
‘‘appropriate’’ to initiate an enforcement
action, and that this would not interfere
with the authority of a court to
determine liability and assess penalties
in an eventual enforcement action.
Some commenters suggested that the
EPA could use the affirmative defense to
define by rule when it would be
appropriate to commence an
enforcement action, and others noted
that the practical effect of the defense is
to define when the EPA will exercise its
enforcement discretion to initiate an
enforcement action in the courts.
Second, regarding the EPA’s authority
to assess administrative penalties under
section 113(d), commenters cited
language from the NRDC decision,
wherein the D.C. Circuit noted that,
although the EPA did not have
discretion to determine whether civil
penalties should be imposed by a court,
the agency had discretion to determine
whether to assess administrative
penalties under section 113(d).14
Various commenters similarly alleged
that because CAA section 113(d)
explicitly gives the EPA the authority to
modify penalties, it therefore allows the
EPA to establish an affirmative defense
in the context of administrative
enforcement. Some commenters claimed
that retaining the title V affirmative
defense for administrative enforcement
is especially important because most
penalties related to emission
exceedances are imposed through
administrative penalties sought by the
agency, not as a result of citizen suits in
federal court. Finally, some commenters
suggested that the EPA could define
14 See
NRDC, 749 F.3d at 1063.
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when it would be appropriate to assess
administrative penalties.
Commenters also made similar
arguments with respect to the ability of
states to determine when it would be
appropriate to pursue enforcement
action, whether through the courts or
with respect to administrative penalties.
Response: The EPA disagrees with the
claim that it would be appropriate to
retain the title V affirmative defense
provisions for use in EPA-initiated
judicial enforcement or administrative
penalty actions. First, as explained
previously and as acknowledged by
commenters, the logic of the NRDC case
applies not only to citizen-suit actions
under section 304(a), but also to judicial
enforcement actions initiated by DOJ on
behalf of the EPA pursuant to section
113(b). Like section 304(a), section
113(b) involves enforcement actions that
are ultimately brought before federal
courts. Therefore, any affirmative
defense that could be asserted in an
enforcement proceeding brought under
section 113(b) would similarly infringe
on the authority of courts to determine
appropriate penalties. Regarding
suggestions that the EPA could treat the
affirmative defense as establishing
criteria defining whether the EPA
considers it ‘‘appropriate’’ to commence
an enforcement action under section
113(b), the EPA finds that this is not
necessary or appropriate. For the
reasons provided in section III.D.2. of
this document, the EPA has decided not
to explicitly codify such an
‘‘enforcement discretion’’ type
provision.
Second, the EPA acknowledges that
NRDC does not address the EPA’s
authority to establish an affirmative
defense to CAA section 113(d)
administrative actions. However, such
an affirmative defense is not necessary.
As discussed further in section III.D.2.,
if a source believes it is unable to
comply with emissions standards as a
result of an emergency, the EPA may
use its case-by-case enforcement
discretion to determine whether to
initiate enforcement, as appropriate.
Further, as the D.C. Circuit recognized,
in an EPA or citizen enforcement action,
the court has the discretion to consider
any defense raised and determine
whether penalties are appropriate.15
The same is true for EPA administrative
actions. Moreover, assessment of
15 See NRDC, 749 F.3d at 1064; see also U.S.
Sugar, 830 F.3d at 609. (‘‘[Sources] can argue that
penalties should not be assessed because of an
unavoidable malfunction’’ and courts ‘‘should not
hesitate to exercise their judicial authority to craft
appropriate civil remedies in the case of emissions
exceedances caused by unavoidable
malfunctions.’’).
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penalties for violations in
administrative proceedings and judicial
proceedings should generally be
consistent. Cf. CAA section 113(e), 42
U.S.C. 7413(e) (requiring both the
Administrator of the EPA and the court
to take specified criteria into account
when assessing penalties). The EPA has
previously explained this approach in
various rules developed under CAA
sections 111, 112, and 129.16
Section IV.A.3. of this document
discusses similar issues regarding how
states may be able to implement this
rule by retaining or developing similar
provisions that apply in the limited
context of state-initiated administrative
enforcement actions or judicial
enforcement in state courts.
B. Exemptions and the Sierra Club
Decision
In the 2016 proposed rule, the EPA
noted that the D.C. Circuit in Sierra
Club vacated an EPA rule that exempted
sources from otherwise applicable
emissions standards during periods of
SSM because the SSM exemption
violated the CAA requirement that such
standards apply continuously. The EPA
stated that, although the title V
emergency affirmative defenses were
not exemptions, if they were to be
construed or treated as exemptions, they
would run afoul of Sierra Club and also
should be removed for that reason. The
EPA received various comments relating
to these issues.
1. Comments Suggesting That the Title
V Emergency Provisions Create an
Exemption to Emission Limits or Define
Whether a Violation Has Occurred
Comment: Commenters presented
differing perspectives on how the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions function. The majority of
commenters addressing this topic
supported the EPA’s position that the
title V affirmative defense provisions, by
their terms, clearly function as an
affirmative defense, rather than as
exemptions or provisions that define
when a violation occurs. Commenters
supporting this perspective explained
that applicable emission limits would
still apply during an emergency, and
exceedances would still constitute a
16 See, e.g., National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants Residual Risk and
Technology Review for Flexible Polyurethane Foam
Production; Final Rule, 79 FR 48073, 48082 n.3
(August 15, 2014); Oil and Natural Gas Sector:
Reconsideration of Additional Provisions of New
Source Performance Standards; Final Rule, 79 FR
79017, 79024 n.3 (December 31, 2014); National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants:
Polyvinyl Chloride and Copolymers Production
Reconsideration; Proposed Rule, 85 FR 71490 n.16
(November 9, 2020).
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violation, but sources could later assert
the affirmative defense in an effort to
demonstrate to either the agency or a
judge that, despite a violation of the
applicable requirement, there are valid
reasons to excuse the source from some
or all penalties associated with the
violation. Another commenter noted the
very strict conditions that a source
attempting to claim the affirmative
defense for an emergency would have to
comply with and document in order to
be eligible for the affirmative defense.
Similarly, commenters acknowledged
that asserting this defense would not
automatically mean it was granted.
However, other commenters suggested
that the affirmative defense provisions
functionally serve as exemptions to
applicable emission limits or define
when a violation of an emission limit
has occurred. For example, one
commenter claimed that the title V
affirmative defense provisions operate
as an exemption, whereby no restriction
or emission limit would exist in specific
emergency circumstances. One
commenter suggested that the
affirmative defenses found in 40 CFR
70.6(g) are an affirmative defense to
liability rather than an affirmative
defense for the reduction of penalties,
which the commenter claims was
considered in NRDC. Other commenters
claimed that the title V affirmative
defense essentially provides criteria for
the EPA, the state, or a court to consider
when deciding whether excess
emissions trigger a violation in the first
instance, and these commenters
attempted to distinguish the title V
affirmative defense from the section 112
affirmative defense at issue in the NRDC
decision. Environmental commenters
stated that the emergency provisions
could be interpreted to mean that, when
their terms are met, a source did not
violate the relevant emission limitation,
thereby effectively providing an
exemption. Environmental commenters
also argued that this type of functional
exemption would be illegal.
Finally, one commenter suggested
that the EPA convert the emergency
affirmative defense provisions into a
narrowly tailored exemption from
technology-based standards. The
commenter asserted that this approach
would be within the EPA’s authority,
and that an exemption would provide
more consistency than the use of
enforcement discretion alone.
Response: The EPA agrees with the
majority of commenters that
acknowledged that the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions did not create exemptions or
otherwise define whether a violation
has occurred, as stated in the
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proposal.17 The provisions being
removed through this action, found at
40 CFR 70.6(g)(2) and 71.6(g)(3) state, in
part, ‘‘An emergency constitutes an
affirmative defense to an action brought
for noncompliance with . . .
technology-based emission limitations.’’
By their terms, these provisions
explicitly purported to establish an
affirmative defense to an enforcement
action, not an exemption. Moreover,
these provisions purported to establish
an affirmative defense to an action
brought for noncompliance with certain
emission limits. So, before the defense
would apply, alleged noncompliance
with an emissions limitation would
have already occurred, and an
enforcement action (administrative or
judicial) would have been brought
because of such noncompliance. The
title V affirmative defenses, like the
affirmative defense provisions at issue
in the NRDC case, were thus based on
the establishment of an alleged violation
of permitted emission limits in the first
instance. Moreover, it would not have
been the burden of the party bringing an
action for noncompliance to negate any
claimed emergency ‘‘exemption’’ to an
otherwise applicable emission limit.
Rather, it would clearly have been the
source’s burden in defending against
such an action to properly assert and
prove all the elements of the emergency
affirmative defense.18 The result of a
successfully pled affirmative defense
would be to provide the decision maker
in an enforcement case with reasons
why, despite violations of an emission
limit, the source should not be held
liable and assessed penalties (or
potentially other forms of relief) for
such noncompliance. Therefore, the
EPA believes that the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions were not
intended and should not be interpreted
to function as an exemption or to
otherwise define when a violation has
occurred.
To the extent that the affirmative
defense provisions could have been
interpreted to provide an exemption or
define whether a violation has occurred,
the EPA reiterates that such an
exemption would be impermissible
under the EPA’s interpretation of the
CAA and in light of Sierra Club. Some
commenters suggested that the EPA
should interpret the affirmative defense
to function as an affirmative defense to
liability or to define whether the
emission limitation applies and thus
whether there is a ‘‘violation.’’ But, if
there is no ‘‘violation’’ when certain
81 FR 38645, 38651.
40 CFR 70.6(g)(4) (the ‘‘permittee . . . has
the burden of proof’’).
PO 00000
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18 See
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47035
criteria or conditions for an affirmative
defense are met, then there is, in effect,
no emission limitation that applies
when the criteria or conditions are met,
and the affirmative defense would
operate to create an exemption from the
emission limitation. As discussed in the
following subsection, and based on the
EPA’s interpretation of the Sierra Club
decision, this would violate the basic
CAA principle that emission limitations
must apply continuously and cannot
contain exemptions, conditional or
otherwise. For the same reasons, it is
not appropriate to convert the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions into an exemption, as
suggested by a commenter.
2. Comments Interpreting the Sierra
Club Case With Respect to Exemptions
From Emission Limitations
Comment: Commenters presented
differing views on the EPA’s
interpretation of Sierra Club.
Environmental commenters supported
the EPA’s conclusion that exemptions
from emission limitations are unlawful,
and that, to the extent that the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions could be interpreted as
providing for an exemption, those
provisions would be unlawful.
Commenters noted that in the Sierra
Club case, the D.C. Circuit held that
sections 112 and 302(k), read together,
require that there must be continuous
section 112-compliant standards.
Commenters claimed that the statutory
terms ‘‘emission standard’’ and
‘‘emission limitation’’ mean the same
thing, citing CAA section 302(k).
Therefore, commenters asserted the
court’s holding in Sierra Club also
applies to the emission limitations
affected by the title V affirmative
defenses. Environmental commenters
further asserted that the fundamental
principles underlying the Sierra Club
decision with respect to exemptions
were reinforced by the D.C. Circuit’s
U.S. Sugar decision.
However, a number of industry
commenters challenged the EPA’s
interpretation of the Sierra Club case,
arguing generally that the case has
limited applicability beyond the context
of section 112 standards. Some
commenters asserted that Sierra Club is
not relevant to the current rulemaking
because the case was anchored to the
unique language of CAA section 112
and only addressed exemptions under
CAA section 112, rather than
regulations in operating permit
programs, SIP requirements, or New
Source Performance Standards (NSPS)
regulations. One commenter argued that
because the Sierra Club decision was
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limited to section 112 standards, the
decision could at most be read to
prohibit title V provisions excusing
noncompliance with an underlying
NESHAP provision.
Other commenters asserted that
requirements that limit emissions on a
continuous basis do not have to impose
the same limitation at all times, and that
the form of the limitation does not
always have to be the same. For
example, commenters noted that CAA
section 302(k) includes design,
equipment, work practice, and
operational standards, which could
apply during periods of operation not
covered by a numerical emissions
limitation. These commenters claim that
the Sierra Club case did not approach
the question of whether these different
types of standards would be acceptable.
One commenter also asserted that the
emergency affirmative defense is not an
exemption from continuously
applicable emission limits.
Response: As discussed in the
preceding subsection, the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions should not be interpreted to
provide an exemption to emission limits
or otherwise define when a violation of
an emission limitation has occurred.
However, as noted in the proposal, to
the extent that the title V provisions
could be interpreted as providing such
an exemption, this would run afoul of
the CAA requirement that emission
limitations be continuous. See CAA
section 302(k), 42 U.S.C. 7602(k). The
EPA disagrees with commenters’
assertions that the Sierra Club court’s
reasoning does not apply beyond
section 112 standards. As the EPA has
explained in depth in other documents,
the same logic prohibiting exemptions
from NESHAP emission limits applies
to other emission limitations subject to
the definition of ‘‘emission limitation’’
within section 302(k), including
emission limits contained within a
source’s title V permit.19 Finally,
comments on whether it is appropriate
19 See, e.g., SSM SIP Action, 80 FR 33892 (‘‘Since
the 2008 D.C. Circuit decision in Sierra Club v.
Johnson, however, it has been clear that NSPS and
NESHAP standards themselves cannot contain such
exemptions. The reasoning of the court was that
exemptions for SSM events are impermissible
because they contradict the requirement that
emission limitations be ‘continuous’ in accordance
with the definition of that term in section 302(k).
Although the court evaluated this issue in the
context of EPA regulations under section 112, the
EPA believes that this same logic extends to SIP
provisions under section 110, which similarly must
contain emission limitations as defined in the CAA.
Section 110(a)(2)(A) requires states to have
emission limitations in their SIPs to meet other
CAA requirements, and any such emission
limitations would similarly be subject to the
definition of that term in section 302(k).’’); see also
id. at 33862.
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to impose different types of emission
limitations during different modes of
operation may be relevant to standardsetting or other proceedings where such
limitations are established, but these
comments are not material to this
rulemaking to remove the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions.
C. Other Legal and Policy
Considerations
This section addresses comments
involving other legal and policy
considerations related to the EPA’s
removal of the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions.
1. Ongoing SSM SIP Action Litigation
Comment: Some state and industry
commenters urged the EPA to delay
finalizing this action until the ongoing
SSM SIP Action litigation concludes.
These commenters claimed that the
EPA’s rationale underlying this title V
action depends on the same core legal
issues involving the EPA’s
interpretation of the NRDC and Sierra
Club cases, which the commenters
claimed is currently under judicial
review in the SSM SIP Action litigation.
One commenter further asserted that an
adverse ruling in the SSM SIP Action
litigation would be dispositive of the
issues involved here.
Response: The EPA disagrees with the
commenters’ suggestion to delay this
final action. The EPA has no reason to
delay moving forward with the removal
of affirmative defense provisions from
various CAA program areas, including
title V, solely because litigants have
challenged the SSM SIP Action. The
EPA is confident of the strong legal and
policy bases for this current action, as
well as prior actions in the SSM SIP
Action and numerous regulations
promulgated under CAA sections 111,
112, and 129 that also address
affirmative defense provisions. In fact,
the EPA’s interpretation of the CAA and
its application of relevant court
decisions was upheld by the D.C.
Circuit.20 The EPA also disagrees with
commenters’ assertions that an adverse
decision with respect to the SSM SIP
Action would necessarily undermine
the legal justification for this rule,
because the SSM SIP Action litigation
could be decided on procedural or
substantive grounds that would not be
determinative for this action. For
example, the ongoing SSM SIP Action
20 Specifically, the EPA’s approach to addressing
malfunction emissions in section 112 rules for
major boilers and area boilers and section 111 and
129 rules for commercial and industrial solid waste
incinerators was upheld by the D.C. Circuit in U.S.
Sugar.
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litigation involves many issues that are
unrelated to this current rulemaking.21
2. Consideration of Prior Case Law
Comment: Multiple state and industry
commenters discussed court decisions
involving SSM issues and affirmative
defenses predating the NRDC cases.
These commenters generally asserted
that the EPA relied too heavily on the
NRDC case in justifying the current
action, and that the EPA failed to
address the importance of prior case law
and the relationship between these prior
cases and the NRDC case.
Many of these commenters cited to
the Fifth Circuit’s Luminant 22 decision,
where commenters asserted the court
determined that affirmative defense
provisions do not interfere with a
court’s jurisdiction to assess civil
penalties or enforce the CAA, contrary
to the D.C. Circuit’s decision in NRDC.
One commenter, acknowledging the
differing outcomes of the Luminant and
NRDC cases, asked the EPA to discuss
this dissonance and claimed that the
EPA should have sought en banc review
of the NRDC decision before the full
D.C. Circuit, or alternatively sought
review by the Supreme Court. Another
commenter suggested that the EPA
should delay finalizing this rule because
of the confusion in the courts resulting
from the differing NRDC and Luminant
decisions. Some commenters claimed
that the Luminant case is more directly
relevant to the current action than the
NRDC case. One commenter asserted
that the Luminant case would be
controlling over the NRDC case in states
within the Fifth Circuit’s jurisdiction,
including Texas. Some commenters
noted that the NRDC case explicitly
distinguished its holding from that of
Luminant and avoided confronting the
SIP issues discussed in Luminant.
Similarly, some commenters cited the
Eleventh Circuit’s Georgia Power 23 case,
which also involved affirmative defense
provisions contained within a SIP.
Some commenters also cited two cases
where circuit courts upheld the EPA’s
ability to use affirmative defense
provisions in Federal Implementation
Plans (FIPs), including the Ninth
Circuit’s Montana Sulphur 24 decision
and the Tenth Circuit’s Arizona Public
21 For example, briefs filed in the SSM SIP Action
litigation allege, among other things, that the EPA
failed to make the showing required to issue a SIP
call, which is a procedure specific to CAA section
110. See Brief of Industry Petitioners, SSM SIP
Action Litigation (filed March 16, 2016).
22 Luminant Generation Co. v. EPA, 714 F.3d 841
(5th Cir. 2013).
23 Sierra Club v. Georgia Power, 443 F.3d 1346,
1357 (11th Cir. 2006).
24 Montana Sulphur & Chemical Co. v. EPA, 666
F.3d 1174 (9th Cir. 2012).
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Service 25 case. Other commenters cited
to prior cases decided in the context of
Clean Water Act regulations, including
Marathon Oil 26 and Essex Chemical,27
and claimed that these cases support the
creation of mechanisms like affirmative
defenses to account for the
unforeseeable and uncontrollable failure
of even the best technology.
Some commenters also addressed the
D.C. Circuit’s U.S. Sugar decision. One
commenter claimed generally that the
case did not undercut the EPA’s basis
for providing the title V emergency
affirmative defense. Other commenters,
however, claimed that U.S. Sugar
reinforced the EPA’s view that
affirmative defense provisions that
constrain or interfere with a court’s
authority under CAA sections 113 and
304 are inimical to the Act.
Response: The EPA acknowledges
that various circuit court cases
preceding the D.C. Circuit’s NRDC
decision, including the Fifth Circuit’s
Luminant decision, upheld the agency’s
prior interpretation of affirmative
defense provisions in various contexts,
including the authority of the EPA to
approve affirmative defense provisions
contained in SIPs and the authority of
the EPA to create affirmative defense
provisions in FIPs. In these decisions,
the courts deferred to the EPA’s prior
interpretation of the CAA with respect
to affirmative defense provisions.28
While some courts found the EPA’s
former interpretation permissible, those
courts did not determine that the EPA’s
former interpretation was the only or
even the best permissible interpretation.
As previously noted, it is well within
the EPA’s legal authority to now revise
its interpretation to a different
interpretation of the CAA.29 Those prior
decisions were based upon an
interpretation of the CAA that the
agency no longer holds, and therefore
those prior decisions do not speak to the
validity of the EPA’s current policy with
respect to affirmative defenses. The EPA
further notes that the affirmative
defense provisions at issue in the other
court decisions cited by the
commenters, including affirmative
25 Arizona Public Service v. EPA, 562 F.3d 1116
(10th Cir. 2009).
26 Marathon Oil Co. v. EPA, 564 F.2d 1253 (9th
Cir. 1977).
27 Essex Chemical Corp. v. Ruckelshaus, 486 F.2d
427 (D.C. Cir. 1973).
28 For example, the Fifth Circuit in Luminant held
that the EPA’s interpretation of the CAA at that time
was a ‘‘permissible interpretation of section [113],
warranting deference.’’ 714 F.3d at 853.
29 FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S.
502, 515 (2009); Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State
Farm Mutual Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 42 (1983).
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defenses in SIPs and FIPs, are not
affected by this action.
In NRDC, however, the D.C. Circuit
conclusively determined that the EPA’s
former interpretation of the CAA
concerning affirmative defenses was not
permissible with respect to section 112
standards promulgated by the EPA. The
NRDC court vacated the affirmative
defense provisions in that case, finding
them without legal basis because they
contradicted fundamental requirements
of the Act concerning the authority of
courts to decide whether to assess civil
penalties in CAA enforcement suits.
Because the NRDC decision interprets
CAA sections 113 and 304 and
addresses the legal basis for affirmative
defense provisions, the EPA has
reevaluated its interpretation of the
CAA with respect to affirmative defense
provisions in title V programs as well.
Based on this reevaluation and the
reasoning of the NRDC decision, the
EPA has determined that it is
appropriate to remove the emergency
affirmative defense provisions in 40
CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g), and to require
removal of similar affirmative defense
provisions from state operating permit
programs and individual operating
permits, because these provisions are
not authorized by the CAA.
Finally, the EPA notes that the D.C.
Circuit’s U.S. Sugar decision further
reinforced the principles underlying the
NRDC decision. In U.S. Sugar, the D.C.
Circuit, acknowledging that the EPA
could not create an exemption or
affirmative defense provision, deferred
to the EPA’s decision to rely on case-bycase enforcement discretion as the
mechanism to handle excess emissions
during malfunctions.30 Arguments
suggesting that prior cases, including
Marathon Oil and Essex Chemical,
require the EPA to provide affirmative
defenses in such situations are contrary
to the U.S. Sugar decision.
3. EPA’s Historical Policies Concerning
Affirmative Defense Provisions
Comment: A number of commenters
addressed the EPA’s historical policies
concerning affirmative defenses,31
including the title V emergency
provisions and the policy
considerations underlying this type of
mechanism to address emissions in
unusual situations. Many commenters
discussed the EPA’s initial decision to
create the title V affirmative defense in
the 1992 part 70 rule and 1996 part 71
rule. One commenter claimed that the
Sugar, 830 F.3d at 607–09.
commenters also discussed the EPA’s
historical policy on exemptions prior to the Sierra
Club case.
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30 U.S.
EPA initially included the title V
provisions to do what was right, even if
the EPA did not concede that it was
required. Commenters focused on the
initial purpose of the emergency
provisions, asserting that the affirmative
defense provisions were a very limited,
appropriate recognition that even
properly designed and maintained
technology is not infallible and can fail
due to emergencies beyond the control
of a source. Other commenters noted the
EPA’s prior approach that
acknowledged that enforcement and the
imposition of penalties might not be
appropriate in certain situations beyond
the control of the source. Commenters
asserted that the NRDC decision does
not undermine the policy reasons that
initially informed the promulgation of
affirmative defense provisions, and that
these same policy reasons support the
title V emergency affirmative defense
provisions.
Commenters also claimed that the
title V emergency provisions are
consistent with decades of EPA policy,
citing various rulemakings and guidance
documents. Commenters also stated that
these types of affirmative defense
provisions were recognized by states
long before the 1990 CAA Amendments
and the title V operating permits
program, and that the title V affirmative
defense provisions have existed for over
25 years. Commenters also pointed to
other EPA actions justifying affirmative
defenses, including FIPs for Montana
and New Mexico, EPA’s briefs prepared
for litigation in the Luminant case, and
EPA’s withdrawal of Texas’ SIP Call.
Commenters also noted that affirmative
defense provisions are still contained in
other regulations promulgated by the
EPA, including NSPS and NESHAP
standards.
Some commenters addressed the
EPA’s legal authority to change its
policy on affirmative defenses.
Commenters asserted that agencies are
only permitted to change their existing
interpretations when they offer a
reasoned explanation for the change,
citing various Supreme Court cases
including Encino Motorcars, LLC v.
Navarro 32 and FCC v. Fox Television
Stations.33 These commenters alleged
that the EPA’s action is arbitrary and
capricious because the EPA has failed to
provide an adequate justification for the
agency’s revised policy with respect to
the title V affirmative defenses.
However, other commenters
acknowledged that the EPA may change
its interpretation so long as the agency
provides a reasoned explanation, and
31 Some
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32 136
33 556
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agreed that the justifications provided
by the EPA in the 2016 and 2022
proposed rules are sufficient.
Finally, some commenters discussed
the perceived inequity or unfairness of
the EPA’s change in policy and removal
of affirmative defense provisions, based
in part on the supposition that sources
have come to rely on these provisions.
Specific comments addressing how the
removal of the title V affirmative
defense provisions could impact sources
are discussed further in section III.D.2.
of this document.
Response: The EPA acknowledges the
underlying considerations supporting
the EPA’s past policies—especially the
agency’s recognition that even welldesigned and appropriately operated
equipment may sometimes fail due to
circumstances beyond the control of the
source (such as during emergencies) and
that, in certain situations, enforcement
for violations of technology-based
standards may not be appropriate. This
rule does not change that general
recognition. As discussed in section
III.D.2. of this document, the EPA
continues to believe that enforcement
may not be warranted under certain
specific circumstances, such as during
an emergency, as determined on a caseby-case basis by enforcement
authorities. The EPA, states, citizens,
and the courts retain the discretion and
authority to consider such
circumstances in evaluating how to
respond to exceedances or violations.
However, an affirmative defense
provision that interferes with the
authority of courts to assess penalties is
no longer an appropriate or legally
sound mechanism to address these
situations.
The EPA also acknowledges its past
policies regarding different mechanisms
to account for excess emissions during
periods of SSM and emergencies. Based
on these former policies, the EPA
previously established affirmative
defense provisions in various other CAA
program areas, including within
previously promulgated FIPs and
various NSPS and NESHAP regulations.
However, since that time, decisions
from the D.C. Circuit, including Sierra
Club and NRDC, have established
parameters under the CAA regarding
legally permissible approaches for
addressing excess emissions during
periods of SSM or emergency events. In
light of these decisions—particularly the
2014 NRDC decision—the EPA has
concluded that certain aspects of its
prior interpretation of the CAA were not
legally permissible under the CAA.
Thus, the EPA has revised its
interpretation of the CAA with respect
to affirmative defense provisions, and
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this revised interpretation provides the
basis for the current action (and similar
actions in other CAA program areas).
Following the 2016 proposal, the EPA
continued to evaluate SSM provisions,
including affirmative defenses, in SIPs.
In October 2020, the EPA issued a
guidance memorandum that, among
other things, expressly superseded a
portion of the EPA’s interpretation of
affirmative defenses presented in the
2015 SSM SIP Policy.34 However, on
September 30, 2021, the EPA issued a
guidance memorandum that withdrew
the October 2020 memorandum in its
entirety and reinstated the legal and
policy positions expressed in the 2015
SSM SIP Policy in their entirety.35 Thus,
the EPA’s current interpretation of
affirmative defenses in the context of
SIPs is the interpretation set out in the
2015 SSM SIP Policy.
The EPA’s revised interpretation
following the NRDC decision was, and
continues to be, well within the EPA’s
legal authority, and the EPA has
properly exercised its authority to revise
its interpretation of the CAA through
the appropriate processes. The authority
of an agency to change its interpretation
of a statute is well-established, provided
that it gives a reasoned explanation for
the change.36 The EPA disagrees with
commenters that suggest that the EPA
has not provided an adequate rationale
for this shift in policy, either generally
with respect to affirmative defenses or
specifically with respect to the title V
emergency affirmative defense
34 Memorandum, Inclusion of Provisions
Governing Periods of Startup, Shutdown, and
Malfunctions in State Implementation Plans, 6
(October 9, 2020), available at https://www.epa.gov/
system/files/documents/2021-09/2020-ssm-insipsguidance-memo.pdf. In 2020, EPA also took
action relating to an SSM-related affirmative
defense in a SIP for Texas, withdrawing a SSM ‘‘SIP
call’’ in part because the SIP-based affirmative
defense was deemed to not be inconsistent with the
CAA. See 85 FR 7232 (February 7, 2020); see also
85 FR 23700 (April 28, 2020) (SIP call withdrawal
relating to North Carolina) and 85 FR 73218
(November 17, 2020) (SIP call withdrawal relating
to Iowa). Petitions for review of these withdrawal
actions were filed in the United States Court of
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. See Sierra Club v. EPA,
No. 20–1115.
35 September 2021 SSM SIP Memo, supra note 5.
This memorandum also announced an intent to
revisit, among other things, the 2020 action
withdrawing the SSM affirmative defense-related
SIP call for Texas. Id. at 5. On December 17, 2021,
the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C.
Circuit granted the EPA’s request for a voluntary
remand of that 2020 Texas SIP call withdrawal
action, as well as the similar SIP call withdrawal
actions relating to North Carolina and Iowa, in light
of EPA’s stated intent to reconsider those actions.
Sierra Club v. EPA, No. 20–1115.
36 See, e.g., Encino Motorcars, 136 S. Ct. at 2125–
26; FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S.
502 (2009); see also Nat’l Cable & Telecomms. Ass’n
v. Brand X internet Servs., 545 U.S. 967, 981–82
(2005) (agency must adequately explain the reasons
for a reversal of policy).
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provisions. The EPA has clearly
articulated its revised interpretation of
the CAA with respect to affirmative
defenses, here and in other documents,
including the 2016 proposed rule (as
referenced in the 2022 proposed rule),
based on the EPA’s analysis of the
NRDC decision.37 Commenters have not
substantiated their claim that the EPA’s
rationale is inadequate.
4. Consistency With Other CAA
Program Areas
Comment: A number of commenters
acknowledged and addressed the EPA’s
desire to ensure consistent agency
policy with respect to affirmative
defense provisions across different CAA
program areas. However, some
commenters asserted that consistency
between the EPA’s title V regulations
and other CAA programs is not a
rationale for taking this action. Other
commenters disagreed that the title V
provisions should be removed for
consistency with actions like the 2015
SSM SIP Action, arguing that the two
actions are distinguishable. Finally,
some commenters claimed that removal
of the title V affirmative defense would
actually undermine the goal of
consistency across CAA program areas,
because title V permits incorporate
emission limits developed under
numerous CAA regulatory authorities,
and because various NSPS, NESHAP,
and SIP regulations currently still
contain affirmative defense provisions.
One commenter also suggested that
the EPA could resolve any
inconsistency between the title V
affirmative defense provisions and
underlying standards that do not allow
an affirmative defense by clarifying
through an interpretive rule or rule
revision that nationwide standards
outweigh affirmative defense provisions
under title V.
Response: The EPA is not removing
the title V emergency affirmative
defense provisions solely for the sake of
consistency. Rather, as discussed in the
proposal and in section III.A. of this
document, these provisions present
legal issues substantially similar to
those that called for the removal of
affirmative defense provisions from
other regulations. In addition to the
legal considerations supporting the
current action, and as previously
explained in the preamble to the 2016
proposed rule (as referenced in the 2022
proposal), the EPA believes that it is
important to apply, as much as
37 The EPA has clearly explained its general shift
in policy with respect to affirmative defense
provisions in other documents. See, e.g., 81 FR
36849; SSM SIP Action Supplemental Proposal, 79
FR 55934; SSM SIP Action, 80 FR 33851.
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reasonably possible, the EPA’s policy
concerning affirmative defense
provisions consistently across CAA
program areas. As previously explained,
the EPA has removed affirmative
defense provisions from numerous other
CAA standards since the 2014 NRDC
decision.38 Based on the relationship
between title V and these underlying
standards, it is particularly important to
remove the affirmative defense
provisions from the title V program
regulations. Title V permits include a
wide range of substantive CAA
requirements that apply to a source,
including SIP provisions and standards
developed under CAA sections 111,
112, and 129. Because the title V
affirmative defense provisions applied
independent of these underlying
standards, the title V emergency
affirmative defense might be asserted in
civil actions or other proceedings
involving noncompliance with title V
permit terms reflecting standards from
which the EPA has recently eliminated
affirmative defenses. In this way, the
continued presence of the title V
affirmative defense provisions could
effectively undermine the EPA’s efforts
to remove affirmative defenses from the
underlying standards, as well as the
efforts of states to revise SIPs to comply
with the 2015 SSM SIP Action. The EPA
acknowledges that not all affirmative
defense provisions in the EPA’s
regulations have been removed as of the
date of this rule. However, the fact that
this is an ongoing process does not
provide a basis for retaining or delaying
removal of the title V affirmative
defense provisions.
Moreover, the EPA does not believe
that it would be appropriate to simply
clarify in some manner—whether by
revising the emergency affirmative
defense rules or issuing guidance—that
the title V affirmative defense would not
apply where the underlying standards
do not allow or provide for an
affirmative defense. Although this
approach could potentially reduce
inconsistency between title V provisions
and the underlying standards from
which affirmative defenses have been
removed, it would nonetheless fail to
address the more fundamental problem
that the title V affirmative defense
provisions are, in and of themselves,
inconsistent with the enforcement
structure of the CAA and thus legally
impermissible.
38 87 FR 19042, 19044, n. 3 (citing recent EPA
rulemakings removing affirmative defense
provisions).
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5. Relationship to Other CAA Standards
Comment: Commenters raised a
number of concerns involving the
relationship between the title V
emergency affirmative defense and other
CAA standards, including section 112
NESHAP, section 111 NSPS, and SIPs.
Comments specifically relating to SIPs
are discussed in the following
subsection.
Commenters claimed generally that
the EPA has failed to consider how the
CAA requirements related to
enforcement must be harmonized with
the CAA requirements relating to
standard setting and permitting. One
commenter claimed that the title V
affirmative defense provisions avoid the
need to address emergencies in each
individual underlying standard, which
the commenter characterized as an
impractical approach. Another
commenter asserted that the title V
affirmative defense provisions have
effectively become part of the
underlying applicable standards, and
other commenters suggested that the
title V affirmative defense provisions are
necessary to ensure that underlying
technology-based standards are
achievable and adequately
demonstrated, taking into account costs.
These commenters asserted that
removing the affirmative defense would
have the effect of making the underlying
standards in a permit more stringent
than those authorized by the governing
standards, in that sources would be
subject to a level of control technology
that is technologically and economically
infeasible. Other commenters suggested
that if affirmative defenses are removed,
either title V permits or underlying
standards would need to provide some
other way to account for malfunctions,
such as through alternative emission
limitations, work practice standards, or
malfunction abatement plans.
Some commenters also claimed that
the overlap between the title V
emergency provisions and various
malfunction provisions in NSPS and
NESHAP regulations could cause
confusion. However, other commenters
recognized that the removal of the title
V affirmative defense provisions should
not have any impact on independent
malfunction or emergency provisions
contained in underlying technologybased standards.
Lastly, several environmental
commenters asserted that EPA must go
further and quickly remove ‘‘SSM
loopholes’’ from other CAA programs,
including section 111 NSPS, section 112
NESHAP, and SIPs.
Response: Many of the comments
relating to malfunction emissions and
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the development of technology-based
standards are either not directly related
to the current rule to remove the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions or reflect a misunderstanding
about the relationship between the title
V affirmative defense provisions and
underlying standards included within
operating permits. As an initial matter,
title V of the CAA does not generally
impose new substantive requirements
on a source. Rather, title V permits
provide a vehicle to clarify in a single
document the various CAA
requirements applicable to a source.
Although title V permits must contain
conditions (such as monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting
provisions) necessary to assure
compliance with all CAA requirements
already applicable to a source, title V of
the CAA does not provide the basis for
making substantive changes to
underlying applicable standards.39
Therefore, title V permits are not an
appropriate mechanism for addressing
commenters’ concerns related to the
development of, for example, alternative
emission limits, work practice
standards, or malfunction abatement
plans. These considerations may be
more relevant in the context of
developing specific SIP provisions or
section 111, 112 or 129 standards.40
Moreover, the underlying standards,
not the title V affirmative defense
provisions, establish the appropriate
level of emission controls, accounting
for technological, economic, and other
considerations, as appropriate. The title
V emergency affirmative defense
provisions are not, as some commenters
suggested, part of the underlying
applicable requirements themselves.
The title V affirmative defense
provisions operated independently from
the specific standards and/or emission
limits, as well as any emergency,
malfunction, or upset provisions
contained within underlying applicable
39 40 CFR 70.1(b) (requiring all title V sources to
have a permit to operate that ‘‘assures compliance
by the source with all applicable requirements’’ and
stating that ‘‘title V does not impose substantive
new requirements,’’ although it does require
imposition of fees and certain compliance
measures).
40 The D.C. Circuit’s U.S. Sugar decision
addressed arguments, raised in the context of
challenges to NESHAPs issued under CAA section
112 that did not provide for an affirmative defense
for unavoidable malfunctions, that such
malfunctions must be accounted for either by an
affirmative defense or by appropriate adjustments
in the standard-setting itself. The D.C. Circuit
upheld the EPA’s decision to neither include an
affirmative defense nor adjust the underlying
standard, as requested by Petitioners, to account for
malfunction periods. Instead, the court upheld the
EPA’s decision to use enforcement discretion to
address exceedances that occur during malfunction
periods.
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requirements. Although the title V
provisions provided for an affirmative
defense in emergencies, removal of the
affirmative defenses would not make
underlying technology-based standards
more stringent or otherwise have any
effect on standards applicable to a
source. The title V provisions merely
provided an affirmative defense that a
source, after having allegedly violated a
technology-based emission limitation
contained in its title V permit, could
assert in an enforcement proceeding
brought for alleged violations of the title
V permit term reflecting the
requirements of the underlying
standard. Because the title V affirmative
defense did not provide an exemption to
any standard or define when a violation
of a standard has occurred, a source’s
compliance status with the underlying
standard itself—as well as the source’s
compliance status with the title V
permit term—would not be affected by
the presence or absence of an
affirmative defense.
Finally, comments discussing the
purported need to provide for or address
excess emissions associated with
malfunctions are immaterial because
this action addresses the title V
affirmative defense provisions for
emergencies, which—although there
may be some similarities—are
significantly different, and narrower,
than malfunction events. For further
discussion, see section III.D.3. of this
document.
6. Relationship to the 2015 SSM SIP
Action
Comment: Multiple commenters
addressed the relationship between this
action and the 2015 SSM SIP Action.
Some commenters asserted that the
EPA’s current action is based on the
2015 SSM SIP Action, or claimed that
the two actions are related for various
reasons. Other commenters claimed that
the 2015 SSM SIP Action is not at issue
in this rulemaking, disagreed with the
EPA’s statements that certain aspects of
the 2015 SSM SIP Action are especially
relevant, and attempted to distinguish
the types of provisions at issue in the
2015 SSM SIP Action from those at
issue here.
Some commenters also specifically
discussed the need for states to develop
SIP provisions that account for SSM
situations (including work practice
standards) and claimed that states
should not be prohibited from including
approved state SSM plans in title V
permits. One commenter suggested that
removing the title V affirmative defense
provisions before SIP issues are resolved
could prevent states from incorporating
all applicable requirements, including
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SIP requirements, into title V permits,
and another commenter asserted that
this title V rule should be withdrawn
while states modify their rules to
address the 2015 SSM SIP Action. On
the other hand, other commenters
suggested that by promptly finalizing
this title V rule, the EPA can better
facilitate the coordination of SSM SIP
revisions with title V program revisions
and individual operating permit
revisions.
Response: This current title V rule is
related to the 2015 SSM SIP Action to
the extent that each rule is based at least
in part on the EPA’s view that, in light
of the NRDC decision, affirmative
defense provisions are contrary to the
enforcement structure of the CAA.41
However, this title V action is not
‘‘based on’’ the 2015 SSM SIP Action,
and the two actions are functionally
independent rulemakings, each
operating within distinct areas of the
CAA’s regulatory structure. Therefore,
and for the reasons discussed in the
preceding subsection discussing the
relationship between title V and other
CAA standards, this current action
involving the title V affirmative defense
provisions will not have any effect on
states’ ability to develop appropriate SIP
provisions in response to the 2015 SSM
SIP Action, and it will not affect states’
ability to ensure that title V permits
appropriately reflect all requirements
applicable to a source, including revised
SIP provisions. In fact, as some
commenters indicated, it may be
convenient for states to coordinate
implementation of any title V permit
changes related to the 2015 SSM SIP
Action with permit changes related to
this rulemaking. Issues regarding
implementation of this rule are
discussed further in section IV. of this
document.
7. Title V of the CAA
Comment: Some commenters noted
that while title V of the CAA does not
establish or mandate affirmative defense
provisions, neither does title V of the
CAA prohibit the EPA from establishing
affirmative defenses.
Response: The EPA acknowledges
that title V of the CAA is silent with
respect to affirmative defense
provisions; it neither provides for such
provisions nor explicitly prohibits them.
However, the EPA interprets other
provisions of the CAA that apply to
enforcement of the title V operating
permits program—including sections
41 This legal rationale is not affected by any
differences between affirmative defense provisions
implicated by the 2015 SSM SIP Action and those
implicated by this action.
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113 and 304—to effectively prohibit the
creation of affirmative defense
provisions, as discussed in section
III.A.1. of this document.
8. Constitutional Issues
Comment: Some commenters raised
constitutional issues with the removal
of the title V emergency affirmative
defense provisions. Commenters argued
that the imposition of penalties for any
conduct that is unavoidable violates
basic constitutional protections
guaranteed by the Eighth Amendment
and due process requirements.
Commenters further asserted that
explicit affirmative defense provisions
are necessary to satisfy minimum
constitutional standards, and that
alternative approaches, such as the
exercise of enforcement discretion, are
not sufficient.
Response: The EPA disagrees with
commenters with respect to these
constitutional arguments. The
comments suggest that without the title
V affirmative defense, any penalty
assessed for violation of a title V permit
term during an emergency would be per
se ‘‘excessive’’ or ‘‘arbitrary’’ and that
the existing CAA enforcement
provisions would be facially
unconstitutional. The EPA disagrees. It
should be reiterated, first, that the title
V emergency affirmative defense has
never been a required permit term and
it has not universally been adopted by
all permitting authorities for all permits.
Even where the defense may be
available, it is, by its own terms, very
limited and narrowly circumscribed.
Commenters have provided no
information indicating that the defense
has been asserted with any frequency or,
indeed, at all. It is difficult to see how
the removal from the EPA’s regulations
of a narrowly circumscribed,
discretionary defense that apparently is
infrequently asserted could render the
CAA unconstitutional.
Moreover, the CAA does not mandate
that EPA automatically initiate an
enforcement action, let alone
automatically assess a penalty, for a
violation of a CAA requirement. EPA
has absolute discretion on whether to
initiate an enforcement action in any
circumstance, including during an
emergency.42 If EPA chooses to initiate
an enforcement action in a circumstance
involving a violation during an
emergency, and chooses to seek a
penalty for that violation, the CAA
establishes a maximum civil penalty in
42 Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U.S. 821 (1985)
(holding that decisions of agency not to undertake
enforcement action are presumed unreviewable).
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section 113(b) 43 but then expressly
provides in section 113(e) that the EPA
or the courts ‘‘shall take into
consideration various criteria—
including specifically, ‘‘good faith
efforts to comply,’’ and, more generally,
‘‘other factors as justice may require.’’
Thus, the CAA on its face does not
mandate the imposition of any penalty
automatically, much less one that is per
se excessive. The commenters fail to
provide any specific support for their
claim that the statutory penalty
provisions of the CAA are facially
unconstitutional, instead making only
generalized claims.
In addition, State Farm Mutual Auto
Insurance Co. v. Campbell,44 a case
cited by some commenters, provides no
support for any claim that removal of
the title V affirmative defense would
somehow be unconstitutional. State
Farm involved a claim that a jury award
of $145 million in punitive damages
was excessive and, accordingly,
contrary to the Due Process Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment to the
United States Constitution. Reaffirming
that the Fourteenth Amendment
‘‘prohibits the imposition of grossly
excessive or arbitrary punishments,’’ the
Supreme Court held that, under the
particular circumstances of the case, the
punitive damages award was excessive
and ‘‘an irrational and arbitrary
deprivation of property.’’ 45 Here, no
penalties have been assessed at all, and
State Farm provides no support for the
conclusion that—absent the title V
emergency affirmative defenses—the
CAA’s authorization, in accordance
with various identified criteria, of
possible penalties is necessarily
unconstitutional.46
The EPA also disagrees with the
claims that—absent the title V
affirmative defenses—the penalty
provisions of the CAA would be facially
contrary to the Eighth Amendment.
Again, if a party believes that the
penalties assessed in a particular
enforcement action violate the Eighth
Amendment, it can raise that claim at
the appropriate time. As with the
commenters’ due process arguments,
Congress has addressed the potential for
unfair—or unconstitutional—penalties
by setting out various criteria to be
43 The maximum statutory civil monetary penalty
amounts are adjusted annually for inflation in 40
CFR part 19.
44 538 U.S. 408 (2003).
45 Id. at 429.
46 Additionally, State Farm involved a claim
under the Fourteenth Amendment, which imposes
limitations on the states, not the federal
government. This discussion assumes, for the sake
of argument, that the principles expressed in State
Farm would also apply to claims under the Due
Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
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considered in determining civil
penalties. The penalty criteria in section
113(e) provide an opportunity to raise
concerns about imposition of penalties
in the event of an emergency similar to
that afforded by the title V affirmative
defenses, albeit directed at the courts’
discretion. The commenters do not
explain why they believe these explicit
statutory factors do not provide
sufficient protection against the
imposition of an allegedly
unconstitutionally excessive penalty.
D. Potential Impacts
This section discusses various issues
involving the effects of removing the
title V emergency affirmative defense
provisions, focusing primarily on the
impact on sources. Overall, the EPA
does not believe that removing the
emergency affirmative defense
provisions will substantially affect the
legal rights of title V sources or the
decisions sources make when
confronted with emergency situations. It
is also important to reiterate that the
EPA is basing the current action on its
interpretation of the CAA in light of
relevant caselaw indicating that these
affirmative defense provisions must be
removed because they are inconsistent
with the enforcement structure of the
CAA.
1. Scope and Use of Title V Affirmative
Defense Provisions
Comment: Multiple state and industry
commenters acknowledged the limited
scope of the title V affirmative defense
provisions, which apply only to
emergency situations. Commenters also
addressed the relationship between
emergencies and malfunctions. While
some commenters provided examples of
situations that would constitute an
emergency but not a malfunction, other
commenters asserted that the terms
‘‘emergency’’ and ‘‘malfunction’’ are
closely related in that they both relate
to unexpected and unforeseen events.
A number of commenters further
acknowledged the limited historical and
potential use of the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions.
However, commenters suggested that
the rule could have greater impacts than
might be apparent.
Environmental commenters, on the
other hand, characterized large SSM
exceedances as routine and claimed that
large polluters have used affirmative
defense provisions in many citizen
enforcement actions. Additionally, these
commenters asserted that excess
emissions are often the result of
operator errors, poor plant design, and
a lack of preventive maintenance. Thus,
commenters claimed that sources using
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SSM affirmative defense provisions
have lacked an incentive to make
investments in accident prevention.
Finally, these commenters claimed that
emissions during SSM and emergency
events can be controlled.
Response: The EPA agrees with
commenters that emphasized the
limited scope of the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions. Unlike
more general affirmative defense
provisions addressing excess emissions
during equipment malfunctions (which
some commenters appear to address),
the title V provisions being removed
were specific to situations that qualify
as an ‘‘emergency,’’ defined as ‘‘any
situation arising from sudden and
reasonably unforeseeable events beyond
the control of the source, including acts
of God, which situation requires
immediate corrective action to restore
normal operation, and that causes the
source to exceed a technology-based
emission limitation under the permit,
due to unavoidable increases in
emissions attributable to the
emergency.’’ 40 CFR 70.6(g)(1). Thus,
while the title V emergency affirmative
defenses, like affirmative defenses for
malfunctions, relate to events that are
beyond the control of a source, the title
V defenses would only have been
available in a more extreme, limited set
of circumstances. While it is possible for
some overlap in malfunction and
emergency situations to exist (e.g.,
certain emergency events could
potentially cause equipment
malfunctions), the EPA believes that the
majority of exceedances during
malfunction events would not be
attributable to ‘‘emergencies’’ as defined
in the title V affirmative defense
provisions. In addition, the title V
affirmative defense provisions being
removed contain various procedural
requirements that must be met to assert
the defense. See 40 CFR 70.6(g)(3).
Moreover, as some commenters
acknowledged and based on the best
information available to the EPA, the
title V emergency affirmative defense
provisions have rarely, if ever, been
asserted in enforcement proceedings.
Comments contending that sources
frequently or routinely have asserted
affirmative defenses appear to relate to
SSM affirmative defenses, rather than
the narrower title V affirmative defense
for emergencies. It is unlikely that the
criteria for the title V emergency
affirmative defense would have been
met in such circumstances, as the title
V provisions could not be asserted for
(among other things) noncompliance
caused by improperly designed
equipment, lack of preventative
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maintenance, careless or improper
operation, or operator error.
For these reasons, the EPA does not
believe that the removal of the narrowly
drawn and apparently infrequently used
title V emergency affirmative defense
provisions will have a significant
impact on sources. Further, as discussed
in the following subsection, the EPA,
state authorities, and other entities
likely would consider the relevant
circumstances—especially the relatively
unusual, extreme, and unavoidable
circumstances that would have qualified
under the narrow definition of
‘‘emergency’’—in deciding whether to
pursue enforcement action or seek
penalties, and sources remain free to
argue to the court, in the event of an
enforcement action, that penalties
should not be assessed for these same
reasons.
2. Alternatives to an Affirmative
Defense: Discretion To Initiate
Enforcement and the Discretion of
Decision Makers To Determine
Appropriate Remedies
Comment: Many commenters
expressed concerns that removing the
title V emergency affirmative defense
provisions would result in less certainty
or greater risk of liability to sources
confronted with emergency situations.
One commenter asserted that even if the
EPA is not legally required to provide
an affirmative defense in title V permits,
the EPA should, to the maximum extent
consistent with law, continue to provide
and allow states to provide sources
relief from the threat of enforcement for
exceedances caused by emergencies.
Another commenter claimed more
generally that the EPA must find other
ways to assure sources that they will not
be subject to penalties if they operate to
provide vital services in an emergency.
Commenters generally requested
additional guidance from the EPA to
provide more certainty to sources in the
absence of an explicitly codified
affirmative defense.
Most commenters acknowledged the
fact that even in the absence of an
affirmative defense, the EPA, state, and
citizens all retain the discretion to
determine whether to bring an
enforcement action, based on the unique
circumstances of each case. Thus, most
commenters acknowledged that not all
exceedances of emission limits will
automatically result in enforcement
actions. One commenter asserted that
the EPA routinely uses enforcement
discretion to decide which alleged
violations to pursue, and that such
decisions are often made on the same
principles codified in an affirmative
defense. Other commenters asserted that
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the EPA does not intend for true
emergencies to result in increased
enforcement, and that the EPA’s
suggested enforcement discretion
approach avoids forcing every violation
to judicial resolution. Finally, one
commenter asserted that the exercise of
enforcement discretion by state
permitting authorities is appropriate
and consistent with CAA sections 113
and 304 and separation of power
principles.
However, a number of commenters
challenged the sufficiency of relying on
enforcement discretion alone to handle
excess emissions caused by
emergencies. Commenters noted that
explicitly codified affirmative defense
provisions have the benefit of providing
certainty to permittees, promoting
consistency to agency actions, and
promoting the creation and retention of
records necessary to justify agency
actions. Commenters claimed that
relying on enforcement discretion alone
would result in more uncertainty and
jeopardy and less harmony among
different CAA programs, because
enforcement discretion policies may be
unwritten and unavailable to the public.
Other commenters noted, citing the U.S.
Sugar decision, that federal and state
policies regarding enforcement
discretion do nothing to prevent citizens
from pursuing enforcement. Some
commenters also asserted that an
enforcement discretion approach still
leaves sources in the difficult position
of choosing between proper emergency
response and compliance with emission
limits. Other commenters claimed that
relying on enforcement discretion puts
all power in the hands of the EPA,
without any checks and balances, and
asserted that this contradicts principles
of cooperative federalism and exceeds
the authority intended in the passage of
the CAA.
Some commenters discussed how
prior court decisions have treated
enforcement discretion. One commenter
claimed that the D.C. Circuit in U.S.
Sugar acknowledged, but did not
evaluate, the EPA’s reliance on
enforcement discretion, and the
commenter alleged that the court
appeared to have doubts that
enforcement discretion alone is
sufficient. Another commenter claimed
that the U.S. Sugar decision did not
validate the enforcement discretion
approach beyond the context of section
112 standards. Other commenters cited
to the 1973 D.C. Circuit opinion in
Portland Cement Assn. v.
Ruckelshaus 47 in support of their
position that reliance on enforcement
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F.2d 375, 399 n.91 (D.C. Cir. 1973).
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discretion is not a sufficient response to
addressing excess emissions from
malfunctions, and another commenter
claimed that the 9th Circuit rejected the
EPA’s use of enforcement discretion in
the 1977 Marathon Oil 48 Clean Water
Act case.
Some commenters requested that the
EPA provide additional guidance to
clarify the circumstances under which
permitting authorities (including the
EPA) should exercise their discretion
not to bring enforcement actions. Many
commenters encouraged the use of the
criteria contained in 40 CFR 70.6(g) in
guiding permitting authorities’ exercise
of enforcement discretion. Some
commenters asserted that states should
be able to rely on those criteria when
exercising their enforcement discretion.
Other commenters urged the EPA: to
make clear that the EPA would not
expect to bring an enforcement action
under circumstances meeting those
criteria; to make clear that the EPA
would continue to use its enforcement
discretion in the case of emergency
situations; and to create a strong policy
statement that the EPA does not support
civil penalties in situations meeting
those criteria. Commenters, with one
quoting a passage from the EPA’s brief
in the U.S. Sugar case, urged the EPA
to more fully articulate certain
standards for determining whether the
EPA would pursue enforcement in a
given situation, including consideration
of the good faith efforts of a source to
minimize emissions, which types of
preventative and corrective actions
would be considered, and the nature
and extent of the root cause analysis
that should be employed by sources to
ascertain and rectify excess emissions.
Another commenter claimed that it is
appropriate for permitting authorities to
take into account circumstances
involving how a source mitigated
damage to people and the environment
in responding to an emergency.
Relatedly, one commenter suggested
that instead of removing the affirmative
defense provisions, the EPA should
amend them to provide that the
affirmative defense may be allowed, if
specified conditions are met, at the
discretion of the enforcement entity.
Commenters also acknowledged that
even when an enforcement action is
commenced, the ultimate decision
makers also have the discretion to
determine whether and to what extent
penalties are appropriate in a given
situation. Environmental commenters
asserted that both the EPA and the
NRDC court recognized that even
48 Marathon Oil Co v. EPA, 564 F.2d 1253, 1272–
73 (9th Cir. 1977).
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without an affirmative defense, sources
are still free to argue to a court that they
should be subject to lesser (or no) civil
penalties for any number of reasons,
including practical considerations or
emergencies. Another commenter noted
that the D.C. Circuit in U.S. Sugar
confirmed that sources may still argue
to a court that penalties should not be
assessed in a given situation, and that
sources may support these arguments
with relevant facts, such as the source’s
compliance history and good faith
efforts to comply with emission limits.
However, while some commenters
acknowledged that the absence of an
affirmative defense would not
automatically result in the imposition of
particular remedies, other commenters
asserted that without an affirmative
defense, sources would lack a legal
defense in enforcement actions and
would be liable for unforeseeable events
outside of their control. One commenter
claimed that this would be unjust, and
that imposing an unjust system would
foster disrespect for the law.
Finally, some commenters requested
further guidance on how sources could
make similar defenses in enforcement
proceedings. Commenters requested that
the EPA retain or narrow the definition
of ‘‘emergency’’ in its regulations, as
this definition could help guide a
court’s review of circumstances that are
unlikely to warrant punishment, and
could provide more certainty to sources.
Response: As discussed in detail in
the 2016 proposal,49 the EPA reiterates
that the legal rights and obligations of
individual sources potentially subject to
enforcement proceedings will not be
significantly affected by the removal of
emergency affirmative defense
provisions from their title V permits.
The absence of an affirmative defense
provision in a source’s title V permit
does not mean that all exceedances of
emission limitations in a title V permit,
including those resulting from an
emergency, will automatically be
subject to enforcement or automatically
be subject to imposition of penalties or
other remedies.
First, any entity that may bring an
action to enforce title V permit
provisions has enforcement discretion
that they may exercise as they deem
appropriate in any given circumstance.
For example, if the excess emissions
caused by an emergency occurred
despite proper operation of the facility,
and despite the permittee taking all
reasonable steps to minimize such
emissions, EPA or other relevant entities
may well decide that no enforcement
action is warranted in a specific case. In
49 See
81 FR 38653.
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the event that an entity decides to bring
an enforcement action, it may,
nonetheless, take into account the
emergency circumstances in deciding
what remedies to seek.
The EPA appreciates that relying on
enforcement discretion might afford less
certainty to sources than an affirmative
defense provision. However, as the EPA
has explained, the latter approach is not
legally consistent with the enforcement
structure of the CAA, which among
other things imposes a duty on the
source to continually comply with
emission limits and standards.
Moreover, the EPA believes the exercise
of enforcement discretion in lieu of a
codified affirmative defense provision is
both appropriate and sufficient to carry
out the mandates established by
Congress in the CAA in a fair and
equitable fashion, a position that the
D.C. Circuit upheld in its U.S. Sugar
decision.50 The EPA believes that it is
unlikely that entities would initiate an
enforcement action for emissions
exceedances resulting solely from a true
emergency situation that would have
qualified under the narrow definition
and particular requirements of the title
V emergency affirmative defense
provisions. The EPA also generally
agrees with commenters that the
conditions contained in the title V
emergency provisions, including but not
limited to the nature of the emergency
event and the source’s efforts to take all
reasonable steps to minimize emissions
during an emergency, would likely be
important considerations to take into
account when deciding whether to
pursue enforcement, among all other
relevant factors. Enforcement discretion
decisions necessarily involve casespecific considerations, which should
not be confined to the specific
conditions contained in the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions.51 Thus, the EPA will not, in
the course of this rulemaking, provide
50 In its U.S. Sugar decision, the D.C. Circuit
upheld the EPA’s reliance on case-by-case
enforcement discretion as a permissible and
reasonable substitute for affirmative defense
provisions in accounting for malfunctions within
section 112 standards. U.S. Sugar, 830 F.3d at 607–
09. The EPA believes that the D.C. Circuit’s
statements in NRDC and U.S. Sugar are more
reflective of the court’s current views concerning
affirmative defenses and enforcement discretion
than the much earlier decisions cited by
commenters, including Portland Cement Assn. v.
Ruckelshaus. Arguments suggesting that prior
cases, including Marathon Oil and Essex Chemical,
require the EPA to provide affirmative defenses in
such situations are contrary to the D.C. Circuit’s
holdings.
51 These considerations could potentially be
much broader than the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions, and encompass
situations where a source would never have been
eligible for the emergency affirmative defense.
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47043
explicit criteria that the EPA, states, or
other entities should apply in
determining whether to commence an
enforcement action. Nothing in this
action precludes the EPA from issuing
such guidance in other appropriate
proceedings or formats if the agency
should subsequently determine that to
be appropriate.
Second, even if an enforcement action
is commenced for exceedances caused
by an emergency, the absence of an
explicitly defined affirmative defense
provision does not affect a source’s
ability to demonstrate to the court (or to
the EPA in an administrative
enforcement action) that penalties or
other kinds of relief are not warranted.
Under section 113(e), courts (and the
EPA in an administrative enforcement
action) must consider various factors
when assessing monetary penalties,
including the source’s compliance
history, good faith efforts to comply for
the duration of the violation, and ‘‘such
other factors as justice may require.’’
Thus, with or without an explicit
affirmative defense, a source retains the
ability to defend itself in an
enforcement action and to oppose the
imposition of particular remedies or to
seek the reduction or elimination of
monetary penalties, based on the
specific facts and circumstances of the
emergency event. The D.C. Circuit has
noted that such justifications would be
a ‘‘good argument . . . to make to the
courts.’’ 52 Thus, overall, elimination of
the title V emergency affirmative
defense provisions will not deprive
sources of these defenses in potential
enforcement actions. Sources retain all
of the arguments they previously could
have made. Congress vested the courts
with the authority to judge how best to
weigh the evidence in an enforcement
action and to determine appropriate
remedies. The EPA may not, through the
title V affirmative defenses, restrict a
court’s ability to do so, and the EPA
does not believe that it would be
appropriate, in this action, to provide
guidance to the courts with respect to
what factors a court should or must
consider.
For similar reasons, the EPA does not
believe it would be appropriate or
necessary to retain the definition of
‘‘emergency’’ or any of the other
provisions formerly contained in 40
CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g) that were
associated with the title V affirmative
defense. These additional provisions,
which were created solely for the
purpose of supporting the title V
affirmative defense and ensuring that it
was narrowly tailored, no longer serve
52 NRDC,
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a purpose in the EPA’s part 70 and part
71 regulations. For example, the EPA
does not believe that retaining a
standalone definition of ‘‘emergency’’
without any context or application
would be helpful to relevant entities
determining whether to initiate
enforcement or to the courts or an
agency determining the appropriate
remedies.
As explained in section III.A.,
affirmative defense provisions by their
nature limit or eliminate the authority of
federal courts to determine liability or to
impose remedies through considerations
that differ from the explicit grants of
authority in section 113(b) and section
113(e). Therefore, these provisions are
not appropriate under the CAA, no
matter what type of event they apply to,
what criteria they contain, or what
forms of remedy they purport to limit or
eliminate. Thus, it would not be
appropriate to amend the title V
affirmative defense provisions to
provide that the affirmative defense may
be allowed if specified conditions are
met, at the discretion of the enforcement
entity.
3. Impacts on the Decision Making and
Planning of Sources Confronted With
Emergency Situations
Comment: Industry commenters
raised concerns involving how the
removal of the title V affirmative
defense provisions will affect how
sources plan for and react to emergency
situations. Many of these comments
asserted that without an affirmative
defense provision in their title V
permits, sources confronted with an
emergency situation would be forced to
decide whether to (1) comply with
operating permit requirements or (2)
deal with the emergency situation in a
manner protective of human safety or
other public interests, at the risk of
being held liable for violating permit
terms. Specifically, some commenters
asserted that facilities faced with the
threat of liability may be less willing to
shut down systems in an emergency,
creating the risk of more catastrophic
accidents. Other commenters suggested
that sources might shut down earlier
than would normally be the case, which
could result in resource shortages that
could impede emergency response
efforts or area recovery. Commenters
asserted that the affirmative defense
provisions serve the important purpose
of allowing sources the flexibility to
continue or resume operations to
provide vital services in times of
emergency.
One industry commenter, citing
discussion in the EPA’s 2014 SSM SIP
Action Supplemental Proposal, asserted
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that removing the affirmative defense
provisions could result in an additional
resource burden for sources, who could
be forced to invest in facility
improvements in order to protect the
source from emergency situations.
Other commenters asserted similar
arguments specifically concerning
electric grid reliability, asserting that
sources would have to weigh
compliance obligations against the need
to continue generating electricity to
avert grid reliability problems. Some
commenters generally claimed, without
describing specific instances, that the
title V emergency affirmative defense
provisions, in addition to other
available mechanisms for relief from
penalties, have helped ensure reliable
electric grid operation in emergency
situations. Several commenters
provided specific examples of these
situations.
Commenters presented differing
views of whether the definition of
‘‘emergency’’ in the title V affirmative
defense provisions would encompass
reliability or electric system
emergencies. One commenter asserted
that the definition of ‘‘emergency’’
should cover an extreme situation
involving critical reliability concerns
because the EPA has recognized that
CAA rules need to account for the
unique interconnected and
interdependent operations of power
plants. However, another commenter
acknowledged that the definition may
not be broad enough to cover this
situation, but suggested that the EPA
recognize that enforcement may be
unwarranted not only for unit-specific
emergencies, but also for situations
where facilities are called upon to
support reliability in the context of a
larger electric system emergency.
Some commenters claimed that
certain electric system operators cannot
force a source to continue generating
electricity in order to ensure system
reliability if doing so would cause the
source to violate an environmental
requirement, such as a permit condition.
Thus, these commenters expressed
concern that without the title V
affirmative defense—characterized by
the commenters as an ‘‘exemption’’—
electric system operators would not be
able to force a source to generate
electricity in order to ensure system
reliability. Other commenters discussed
emergency generation orders issued by
the Department of Energy (DOE) under
section 202(c) of the Federal Power Act
(FPA), 16 U.S.C. 824a(c), by which the
DOE may require power plant owners to
operate and generate electricity in
certain emergency situations. While
some commenters expressed concern
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that a source could face the risk of
significant penalties for emissions
exceedances resulting from complying
with such an order, other commenters
discussed an amendment to the FPA
that excuses sources from compliance
with environmental regulations when
necessary to comply with DOE
emergency orders. One commenter
concluded that this FPA provision
should be viewed as complementary to,
rather than a substitute for, the title V
emergency defense, and another
asserted that this legislation indicates
congressional support for an emergency
defense when electric system reliability
is at issue.
Commenters urged the EPA to consult
with other agencies with expertise in
reliability. Commenters also suggested
that the EPA direct federal and state
enforcement offices to engage in close
consultation with relevant grid
operators or reliability authorities prior
to initiating enforcement actions where
exceedances were caused by a
demonstrated reliability need.
Commenters also proposed that system
operators should be able to submit a
reliability analysis in the record of any
enforcement proceeding and suggested
that courts should not independently
assess previously established reliabilityrelated determinations.
Response: The EPA does not believe
that the removal of the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions will significantly affect the
decision making of sources confronted
with emergency situations. Sources
confronted with an emergency situation
will always have to assess the risk of
liability involved with courses of action
that would result in exceedances of
emission limits contained in title V
permits as well as the underlying
standards. The EPA does not believe
that removing the title V affirmative
defense provisions will affect this risk
assessment. First, the title V emergency
provisions did not provide guaranteed
protection from liability. They simply
created an affirmative defense that a
source, having allegedly violated a
technology-based emissions limit, could
assert in narrowly defined
circumstances after an enforcement
action was initiated. Moreover,
permittees seeking to assert the defense
bore the burden of establishing that a
number of required conditions were
met.
Second, the incentives that exist for
sources to behave in a prudent manner
during emergencies remain largely
unchanged, even without an explicit
affirmative defense. As discussed in
section III.D.2. of this document,
sources can still argue all available
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defenses to an alleged violation and/or
assert that penalties should not be
imposed, based on the particular
circumstances. The ability to assert
relevant considerations in this manner
is not limited to the particular
conditions associated with the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions. The EPA agrees that the
need to avert catastrophic accidents, or
to avert an electric reliability crisis, or
any number of other public interestrelated considerations, could be
especially relevant to the decision
whether to pursue enforcement or
impose penalties. The EPA cannot,
however, restrict or define—through the
operation of an affirmative defense or
otherwise—the evidence or
considerations that a court may take
into account when determining whether
penalties should be assessed in a given
situation.
Additionally, the EPA does not
believe that removing the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions will have a significant effect
on how sources plan for emergencies or
invest in facility improvements in order
to prepare for emergencies. The EPA
notes that the comments received on
this point, and the EPA’s statements in
the 2014 SSM Supplemental Proposal
cited by commenters, are more relevant
to preparing for excess emissions from
equipment malfunctions than to
preparing for emergencies. Moreover, as
discussed previously, removing the
affirmative defense provisions should
not change the incentives that sources
have to prepare for emergencies.
Prudent behavior with respect to
planning for emergency situations and
minimizing emissions during an
emergency to the maximum extent
possible would be just as advantageous
to a source seeking to reduce the
possibility that enforcement will be
initiated (or seeking to establish that
penalties are not appropriate) as it
would be to a source attempting to meet
the criteria of a codified affirmative
defense provision. The EPA believes
that such prudent behavior is a matter
of good business practice that most, if
not all, sources would normally pursue
irrespective of an affirmative defense.53
Regarding specific comments
concerning electric grid reliability, the
EPA does not believe that the current
action will have a measurable impact on
53 Additionally,
as discussed in section III.D.3.,
the title V emergency affirmative defense provisions
have rarely, if ever, been asserted in enforcement
proceedings. Thus, the EPA does not believe that
the removal of the narrowly drawn and apparently
infrequently used title V emergency affirmative
defense provisions will have a significant impact on
sources.
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electric grid reliability, and the EPA
does not believe that it is necessary to
consult with other agencies with
expertise in reliability with respect to
the limited actions being taken in this
rule. As an initial matter, even if the
EPA were to retain the existing title V
emergency affirmative defense, the
availability of that defense in different
types of situations involving issues of
grid reliability is uncertain. The EPA
generally agrees with the commenters
suggesting that most electric grid
reliability situations would not have
qualified as emergencies eligible for the
title V affirmative defense, based on the
narrow definition of ‘‘emergency’’ in the
title V regulations being removed
through this action.54 However, again,
nothing would prevent the
consideration of reliability-related
circumstances in determining whether
to initiate enforcement or in deciding
whether penalties are appropriate.
Additionally, contrary to the assertion
of commenters, the removal of the
affirmative defense provisions should
not affect the ability of electric grid
operators to request that sources
generate electricity in order to avert grid
reliability problems. Some of these
comments were based on the mistaken
premise that the title V affirmative
defense provisions functioned as an
exemption to emission limits.55
Moreover, as other commenters note,
Congress has provided various forms of
relief in these situations, including the
amendment to FPA section 202(c)
(exempting sources from compliance
with environmental regulations when
necessary to comply with a DOE
emergency order), as well as provisions
such as CAA section 110(f) (authorizing
state governors to temporarily suspend
certain requirements where the
54 Again, the title V emergency provisions were
only available for ‘‘sudden and reasonably
unforeseeable events beyond the control of the
source’’ requiring ‘‘immediate corrective action to
restore normal operation, and that causes the source
to exceed a technology-based emission limitation
under the permit, due to unavoidable increases in
emissions attributable to the emergency.’’ 40 CFR
70.6(g)(1). This definition of ‘‘emergency’’ generally
contemplated emergencies directly affecting the
operations of a single source. In contrast, the need
for one source to continue operating in response to
reliability concerns would generally not involve
any sort of emergency at that particular source, but
rather would likely be motivated by circumstances
occurring at a different source. For example, one
source might be required to generate electricity to
make up for power that another source was unable
to generate due to an emergency at the other source.
55 A source faced with demands to continue
generating electricity would always have to decide
whether doing so could cause it to exceed emission
limits in its title V operating permit; the presence
or absence of an affirmative defense that could later
be asserted in an enforcement proceeding does not
change this fact. For further discussion, see section
III.B.1. of this document.
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President determines a national or
regional energy emergency exists). The
EPA cannot here provide any further
guarantees in this regard in the form of
an affirmative defense, exemption, or
other mechanism that would run
contrary to the CAA.
4. Perceived Benefits of the
Requirements Associated With the Title
V Affirmative Defense Provisions
Comment: Some commenters
discussed perceived benefits of
retaining affirmative defense provisions
as written, in addition to the increased
certainty and consistency that
commenters believe the provisions
provided. One commenter claimed that
the various demonstration and reporting
requirements in the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions serve as
incentives for sources to prevent and
minimize excess emissions during
emergencies, an incentive that the
commenter claimed would be lost if the
affirmative defense was removed.
Response: The components of the title
V emergency affirmative defense
involving recordkeeping and reporting
requirements and the obligation for a
source to properly operate its facility
and take all reasonable steps to
minimize excess emissions (40 CFR
70.6(g)(3) and 71.6(g)(3)) were important
to limit the scope of the defense and any
potential for abuse. However, the EPA
does not agree that removing the
affirmative defense will eliminate the
incentives for sources to appropriately
prepare for and respond to emergency
situations, to minimize excess
emissions, to maintain proper records of
such events, or to notify relevant
authorities in a timely manner. Because
the CAA requires continuous
compliance with applicable emission
limitations and emission standards,
sources should properly operate and
take steps to minimize excess emissions
at all times. Sources still have an
incentive to do all of these things in the
event of an emergency, because doing so
would continue to be in their best
interests both for compliance purposes
and for purposes of defending against an
enforcement action. Again, the EPA
believes that such prudent behavior is a
matter of good business practice that
most, if not all, sources would normally
pursue irrespective of an affirmative
defense.
5. Environmental and Public Health
Impacts
Comment: A number of commenters
discussed the potential air quality and
public health impacts of removing the
title V affirmative defense provision.
Industry commenters asserted that
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removing the affirmative defense
provisions would not reduce emissions
or provide any air quality benefits.
Moreover, industry and state
commenters claimed that the EPA has
not made any demonstration that
emissions during emergencies endanger
public health or safety or have resulted
in problems with attainment of the
NAAQS. One commenter claimed that
EPA action to remove the title V
affirmative defense provisions would be
arbitrary and capricious because the
action would impose regulatory burdens
without any significant benefit, and
because the EPA failed to consider the
costs and benefits of its proposed action.
On the other hand, environmental
commenters claimed that affirmative
defense provisions impermissibly allow
large facilities to emit massive amounts
of pollution in violation of applicable
emission limits without consequence.
These commenters provided extensive
discussion of the health impacts of
different pollutants and cited to
numerical data and case studies
involving the emissions of a number of
large industrial facilities. The
commenters asserted that this is an
environmental justice issue, as these
emissions impact surrounding
communities, which the commenters
claimed are often low-income
communities or communities of color.
Environmental commenters asserted
that the impacts of climate change may
increase the incidence of malfunctions
due to extreme weather events.
Response: As previously explained,
the EPA is removing the affirmative
defense provisions from the title V
program regulations because these
provisions are inconsistent with the
EPA’s interpretation of the enforcement
structure of the CAA. The EPA is not
basing this current action on potential
air quality benefits, or a weighing of
costs and benefits, associated with the
removal of these provisions. While the
EPA acknowledges that there are
benefits to reducing emissions,
including reducing impacts to
communities with environmental justice
concerns, as previously explained, the
purpose of this rulemaking is to
eliminate the affirmative defense
provisions that EPA finds to be
inconsistent with the enforcement
structure of the Clean Air Act. This
action also does not take into account
the impact of climate change on the
incidence of malfunctions and, as
previously explained, emergencies,
which—although there may be some
similarities—are significantly different,
and narrower, than malfunction events.
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E. Response to Comments Outside the
Scope of This Action
Comment: Several industry
commenters requested that EPA should
consider removing hospital, medical,
and infectious waste incinerators
(HMIWI) as a title V source category or
consider reducing program
requirements applicable to HMIWIs.
Separately, one commenter expressed
disagreement with the EPA’s return to
its 2015 SSM SIP Policy.
Response: These comments are not
relevant to the current rulemaking
action and are outside the scope of this
final rule.
IV. Implementation Considerations
This section provides guidance and
addresses comments on various aspects
related to implementing this final rule.
First, as indicated in the 2016 and 2022
proposed rules, as a result of the EPA’s
removal of 40 CFR 70.6(g), state, local
and tribal permitting authorities 56
whose part 70 programs contain
impermissible affirmative defense
provisions 57 must submit program
revisions to the EPA to remove such
impermissible provisions from their
EPA-approved part 70 programs. The
part 70 program revision process should
follow the procedures in 40 CFR 70.4(a)
and (i), as specified in the guidance
provided in the following subsections.
In summary, the EPA expects that states
with part 70 programs containing
impermissible affirmative defense
provisions will submit to the EPA either
a program revision, or a request for an
extension of time, within 12 months of
the effective date of this final rule—i.e.,
by August 21, 2024. Other
considerations associated with program
revisions are discussed further in
section IV.A. of this document.
States must also remove title V-based
affirmative defense provisions
contained in individual operating
permits. The EPA encourages states to
remove these provisions at their earliest
convenience. The EPA expects that any
necessary permit changes should occur
in the ordinary course of business as
states process periodic permit renewals
or other unrelated permit modifications.
At the latest, states must remove
affirmative defense provisions from
56 As noted previously, the term ‘‘state’’ is used
generically throughout this section to refer to all
state, local, U.S. territorial, and tribal permitting
authorities that administer EPA-approved part 70
(title V) programs. See 40 CFR 70.2 and 71.2.
57 As specified further in section IV.A.1. of this
document, the term ‘‘impermissible affirmative
defense provisions’’ is intended to refer to all
affirmative defense provisions that, for the same
reasons necessitating the EPA’s removal of CFR
70.6(g) and 71.6(g), are inconsistent with the
enforcement structure of the CAA.
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individual permits during the next
permit revision or periodic permit
renewal for the source that occurs
following either (1) the effective date of
this rule (for permit terms based on 40
CFR 70.6(g) or 71.6(g)) or (2) the EPA’s
approval of state program revisions (for
permit terms based on an affirmative
defense provision in an EPA-approved
title V program). Additional
considerations associated with permit
revisions are discussed further in
section IV.B. of this document.
A. Program Revisions
This section clarifies the EPA’s
expectations for how the final action to
remove 40 CFR 70.6(g) will affect state
programs and responds to comments
involving these considerations.
Specifically, this section describes the
actions that some states will need to
take in order to submit program
revisions to remove impermissible
affirmative defense provisions.
1. Necessity for State Program Revisions
As indicated in the 2016 and 2022
proposed rules, as a result of the
removal of 40 CFR 70.6(g), the EPA has
determined that it is necessary for states
whose part 70 programs contain
impermissible affirmative defense
provisions to submit program revisions
to the EPA to remove such provisions
from their EPA-approved part 70
programs.58 This determination is based
on the EPA’s interpretation of the
enforcement structure of the CAA, as
informed by the NRDC decision. The
EPA’s rationale concerning affirmative
defenses, presented in section III.A. of
this document, applies equally to
affirmative defense provisions within
state part 70 operating permit programs,
which the EPA now considers to be
impermissible. The term ‘‘impermissible
affirmative defense provisions’’ as used
throughout this section is intended to
refer to all affirmative defense
provisions that, for the same reasons
necessitating the EPA’s removal of CFR
70.6(g) and 71.6(g), are inconsistent
with the CAA. This includes, but is not
limited to, any provisions within EPAapproved part 70 programs that are
similar to, based on, or function in
similar ways to the provisions being
removed from 40 CFR 70.6(g). For
example, any title V provisions that
establish an affirmative defense that
could be asserted in a civil enforcement
58 To the extent that this document refers to the
need to remove affirmative defense provisions from
part 70 programs, the EPA is referring to the need
for states to submit program revisions to the EPA
to remove such provisions from states’ EPAapproved part 70 (title V) operating permit
programs.
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action involving alleged noncompliance
with any federally-enforceable
standards would be inconsistent with
the enforcement structure of the CAA.
Such provisions are impermissible
regardless of whether the affirmative
defense provisions are specific to
emergency situations, and regardless of
other criteria contained within such
provisions. Any provisions in an EPAapproved part 70 program that establish
an exemption to emission limitations as
described in this document will
similarly need to be removed. This
action will not have any direct effect on
affirmative defense provisions
established under other CAA programs,
such as the SIP or section 111, 112, or
129 programs.
2. EPA’s Authority To Require State
Program Revisions
Comment: Multiple commenters
objected to the EPA’s indication that, if
the EPA finalized the removal of 70.6(g),
it may be necessary for states with
similar affirmative defense provisions to
remove those provisions and submit
program revisions.
A number of commenters discussed
the legal authority by which the EPA
could require state program revisions.
Environmental commenters suggested
that CAA section 502(b), read together
with sections 502(d) and (i) and with 40
CFR 70.4, plainly authorizes the EPA to
revise the minimum elements of
operating permit program regulations
when the Administrator determines that
revisions are necessary to meet the
requirements of the CAA. Other
commenters argued that the EPA has no
legal basis for imposing its policy
preference on states, and some industry
commenters claimed that nothing in the
CAA authorizes the EPA to withdraw its
final approval of a state title V permit
program because the EPA prefers a
particular improvement to what was
already approved, claiming that this
would be contrary to Congressional
intent and the purpose of title V. One
state commenter similarly claimed that
requiring program revisions would
fundamentally shift the careful balance
between the state and the federal
governments’ regulatory partnership.
Some commenters also claimed that
requiring states to make title V program
changes would constitute a challenge to
the legality of state programs and would
require a finding that there is no
situation where the state program
provisions can be applied in a way that
is consistent with the Act. One
commenter characterized state program
revisions as an unfunded mandate,
which the commenter asserted should
not be imposed on states without a clear
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and compelling need. One commenter
claimed that the EPA has impermissibly
extended its interpretation of the NRDC
case to state operating permit programs.
State commenters discussed the
authority of states to tailor the details of
their own title V program regulations
and potential limits on the EPA’s
authority to dictate the fine particulars
of state programs. One state commenter
claimed that by removing the title V
emergency affirmative defense
provisions, the EPA would substantially
raise the minimum elements required by
the Act for state operating permit
programs, citing 40 CFR 70.1(a). Other
state commenters claimed that under
title V, similar to CAA section 110 for
SIPs, after the EPA sets minimum
program requirements, states must meet
these minimum requirements but have
the authority and discretion to
otherwise tailor their program to their
specific state requirements, such as by
providing for affirmative defenses. State
commenters further asserted that the
EPA’s implementing regulations do not
require a state’s enforcement program to
be set out in any particular manner,
while acknowledging that states must
have adequate authority to carry out all
aspects of the program and submit a
description of their enforcement
program to the EPA, citing 40 CFR
70.4(b)(3) and (5). One state commenter
noted that an acceptable enforcement
program should include the ability to
account for emissions during distinct
periods of operation, including SSM.
Both state and industry commenters
also highlighted the fact that the title V
emergency provisions have always been
discretionary, not required, elements of
state programs. One commenter argued
that because the affirmative defense
provisions were initially discretionary,
it should now be up to states to decide
whether to retain them. The commenter
claimed that this is a logical extension
of a state’s constitutional authority and
that the EPA should not disturb state
authorities by disapproving existing
state permit programs that contain these
provisions.
Response: The EPA agrees with those
commenters who asserted that the CAA
authorizes the EPA to revise its part 70
implementing regulations when
necessary to conform to the CAA,
including provisions of the CAA that
apply to the enforcement of title V
permit requirements. As the CAA and
the EPA’s implementing regulations are
periodically updated to address
evolving legal, policy, technical, and
scientific information, so must state
operating programs be updated. State
part 70 program revisions, while
infrequent, are a natural and necessary
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part of a complex regulatory program,
and this process is entirely consistent
with the principles of cooperative
federalism established in title V of the
CAA. As various commenters
acknowledged, the EPA has the
authority to establish the minimum
elements for state title V programs. See
CAA section 502. The EPA’s part 70
regulations implement this authority.
When the EPA must remove an element
from its implementing regulations in
order to maintain consistency with CAA
requirements, it follows that it would
also generally be necessary to revise
EPA-approved state part 70 programs to
meet the same minimum legal
requirements required by the CAA. The
EPA acknowledges that states may
establish additional permitting
requirements, but only to the extent
they are not inconsistent with the CAA.
See CAA section 506(a). States do not
have discretion to implement provisions
that are inconsistent with the
enforcement structure of the CAA or the
EPA’s part 70 regulations.
As some commenters acknowledged,
the EPA’s existing part 70 implementing
regulations clearly establish a
framework by which state part 70
programs may need to occasionally be
revised, including when the part 70
regulations are revised or modified. See,
e.g., 40 CFR 70.4(a) (if part 70 is revised
and the Administrator determines that
changes to approved state programs are
necessary, states must submit program
revisions); 70.4(i) (program revisions
may be necessary when relevant federal
or state statutes or regulations are
modified). The EPA has the authority to
approve or disapprove program
revisions based on the requirements of
the part 70 regulations and the CAA.
See 40 CFR 70.4(i)(1), (2). Thus, the EPA
has authority to require state title V
program revisions.
To be clear, the final action being
taken in this rule is the removal of the
affirmative defense provisions from the
EPA’s regulations at 40 CFR 70.6(g) and
71.6(g). As a consequence of this
regulatory action, it will be necessary
for states with part 70 programs
containing impermissible affirmative
defense provisions to make conforming
revisions to their part 70 programs.
However, contrary to the assertions of
some commenters, the EPA is not, at
this time, disapproving or making any
finding of deficiency or inadequacy
with respect to any particular state
program (such as a finding under 40
CFR 70.10), although this type of
determination may be appropriate at a
later time. This document clarifies the
EPA’s expectations for how the program
revision process will unfold, based on
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the EPA’s existing implementing
regulations and the EPA’s longstanding
experience in overseeing title V
operating permit programs. The EPA
intends that this guidance will be useful
to permitting authorities and permit
holders interested in understanding
how removal of the affirmative defense
provisions from the EPA’s regulations
will affect their programs and
individual permits, respectively.
The EPA also reiterates, as multiple
commenters acknowledged, that the title
V affirmative defense provisions have
always been discretionary elements of
state permitting programs, and the EPA
has never required states to adopt these
provisions. In fact, a number of state
part 70 programs do not appear to
contain any such title V affirmative
defense provisions. However, contrary
to one commenter’s assertion, the fact
that these provisions were never
required elements of state programs
does not mean that they now must be
deemed appropriate program elements
or that states must be allowed to
continue implementing them.
Finally, as explained in section V.D.
below, this action does not contain an
unfunded mandate of $100 million or
more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C.
1531–1538, and does not significantly or
uniquely affect small governments. The
action imposes no new enforceable duty
on any state, local or tribal governments
or the private sector. As a result of this
rule, some states with EPA-approved
part 70 programs that contain
impermissible affirmative defense
provisions will be required to submit
program revisions to the EPA, according
to the framework established by the
EPA’s existing regulations. To the extent
that such affected states allow local air
districts or planning organizations to
implement portions of the state’s
obligation under the CAA, the
regulatory requirements of this action
do not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments because those
governments have already undertaken
the obligation to comply with the CAA.
3. Scope of Necessary Program
Revisions
Comment: Commenters addressed
various aspects of the scope of state
program revisions that would be
necessary following the removal of 40
CFR 70.6(g). First, some commenters
claimed that part 70 program
regulations that incorporate by reference
40 CFR 70.6(g) or any state affirmative
defense provisions effectively function
the same as regulations that expressly
include an affirmative defense.
Commenters claimed that if these
provisions were not removed from state
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programs, they would create ambiguity
and would undermine CAA
enforcement. Therefore, these
commenters asserted that part 70
program regulations that incorporate by
reference any other affirmative defense
provisions must also be removed from
state programs.
Next, multiple commenters expressed
support for the view that states may
retain affirmative defense provisions
that could be used for alleged
noncompliance with permit
requirements arising solely from state
law. Some commenters asserted that the
EPA has no authority to limit the ability
of states to provide this type of stateonly affirmative defense provision.
Another commenter suggested that
state-only affirmative defense provisions
should be available not only for
enforcement actions brought by state
agencies, but also for enforcement
actions brought by citizens or the EPA.
However, other commenters indicated
concern that sources could attempt to
invoke state-only affirmative defense
provisions in enforcement proceedings
involving noncompliance with federal
requirements, thereby undermining the
enforcement of the CAA. These
commenters suggested that the EPA
provide guidance to clarify that if a state
wishes to retain an affirmative defense
for noncompliance with state-only
requirements, the state must also
include clarifying language in their
regulations expressly limiting the
applicability of such remaining
affirmative defense provisions.
Commenters also suggested that states
identify these state-only program
provisions in their title V program
revisions.
Additionally, some commenters
asserted that states should be able to
circumscribe their own authority to
enforce even federally enforceable
requirements. Commenters suggested
that states should be able to provide an
affirmative defense to state-initiated
enforcement (such as for administrative
penalty proceedings) or otherwise
restrict their ability to enforce alleged
violations of federally-enforceable
applicable requirements.
Finally, some commenters disagreed
with the EPA’s suggestion that states
may retain portions of the emergency
provisions, such as the definition of
‘‘emergency’’ or certain reporting
requirements, for purposes of
supporting other regulations that do not
involve an affirmative defense. The
commenters expressed concern that the
presence of a definition of ‘‘emergency’’
or other recordkeeping, reporting, or
work practice requirements could be
interpreted as providing for an
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affirmative defense or otherwise
excusing a source from compliance
during these periods. However, these
commenters also asserted that the EPA
should encourage more readily
accessible information about excess
emission events, in order to better
inform surrounding communities of air
quality issues.
Response: As previously noted, all
impermissible affirmative defense
provisions, as specified in section
IV.A.1. of this document, will need to be
removed from EPA-approved part 70
programs. To reiterate, this encompasses
provisions that are similar to, based on,
or function in similar ways to the
provisions in 40 CFR 70.6(g) that the
EPA is removing in this action,
including all provisions that effectively
establish an affirmative defense that
could be asserted in an enforcement
action involving alleged noncompliance
with any federally-enforceable
standards. In light of comments
received, the EPA is also providing
clarification on various other topics
related to the scope of necessary
program revisions.
Regarding state part 70 provisions that
incorporate other affirmative defense
provisions by reference, as a general
matter, the EPA agrees with
commenters’ assertions that
incorporating a provision by reference
may have the same legal effect as
explicitly including the provision
within a regulation. Thus, where a state
part 70 program incorporates by
reference another independently
applicable affirmative defense that
suffers the same infirmities as those
provisions being removed from 40 CFR
70.6(g) and 71.6(g), the state provision
incorporating the affirmative defense
provision would generally need to be
removed.59
Concerning the comments supporting
the option for states to retain an
affirmative defense as a ‘‘state-only’’
provision—which would apply solely to
rights and responsibilities created by
state law and would not apply to,
interfere with, or otherwise affect any
requirements or remedies under the
CAA or federally-enforceable
regulations—the EPA agrees that states
have the discretion to develop such
state-only provisions, as allowed under
59 It may be possible that some state programs
could incorporate 40 CFR 70.6(g) (or a similar state
provision) by reference in such a manner as to leave
it free from doubt that the incorporating provision
would have no legal effect following the removal of
40 CFR 70.6(g) from the EPA’s regulations (or
following the removal of the state affirmative
defense). However, the EPA believes that removal
of the incorporating provision would nonetheless
be the best practice to avoid the potential for
confusion.
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state law. However, any such provisions
would only be available in enforcement
actions brought solely under state law,
and they would not be available in
enforcement actions brought for alleged
violations of any federally-enforceable
requirements in a source’s title V
permit. This rulemaking would have no
effect on, and does not preclude states
from retaining or creating, such
regulations unrelated to the state’s EPAapproved part 70 program. State-only
affirmative defense provisions that are
included within individual operating
permits would need to be clearly
labeled to indicate their limited
applicability. 40 CFR 70.6(b)(2).
However, notwithstanding the ability
of states to create state-only affirmative
defense provisions within their state
regulations, any impermissible
affirmative defense provisions
contained within any EPA-approved
part 70 programs will nonetheless need
to be removed from the state’s EPAapproved part 70 program. In such
instances, the state would need to
transmit to the EPA a program revision
submittal to remove the affirmative
defense provision from the body of
regulations that comprise the state’s
official EPA-approved part 70 program.
The EPA believes that the best practice
for states would be to conduct a
rulemaking to remove the affirmative
defense provision from the state’s
current regulations (or to revise the state
regulations to clarify the limited
applicability of a state-only affirmative
defense) and/or a legislative process to
remove such provisions from a state
statute, in addition to submitting the
part 70 program revision to the EPA to
formally remove the provision from the
state’s EPA-approved part 70 program.
This would provide clarity for sources
and the public and avoid any
inconsistency between the state’s EPAapproved part 70 program and the
state’s current regulations and/or
statutes.
Regarding comments suggesting that
states should be able to limit their own
authority to enforce even federally
enforceable requirements, as noted in
section III.D.2. of this document,
permitting authorities always retain the
discretion to determine whether to
initiate an enforcement action based on
the circumstances of a given case. To
the extent that a state develops an
‘‘enforcement discretion’’-type
provision that applied only in its own
administrative enforcement actions or
only with respect to enforcement
actions brought by the state in state
courts, such a provision may be
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appropriate under state rules.60
However, among the minimum required
elements of a title V permit program is
the requirement that, consistent with
EPA regulations, the permitting
authority have adequate authority to
assure compliance with applicable
standards, requirements, and
regulations, and to enforce permits,
including the ability to recover civil
penalties for each violation. See CAA
section 502(b)(5), 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b)(5).
EPA regulations further provide that
approved title V programs must have
appropriate enforcement authority,
including the authority to seek
injunctive relief and to assess or recover
civil penalties for violations of any
applicable requirement or permit
condition. See 40 CFR 70.11. Thus, to
the extent that states wish to describe
certain aspects of their enforcement
discretion policy within their part 70
program regulations, this could only be
permissible provided that the provision
does not effectively undermine or
eliminate the state’s ability to enforce its
title V program, even under the
circumstances previously covered by
the affirmative defense. For example, it
would likely not be permissible for a
state to establish criteria that, when met,
would effectively preclude the state
from enforcing, even in part, a federallyenforceable standard. Nor would it be
permissible for any such provision to
limit the ability of the EPA or citizens
to enforce any federally-enforceable
permit terms or to interfere with the
authority of the federal courts to
determine whether and to what extent
certain remedies are appropriate in a
given case.
Finally, although states may not retain
title V provisions establishing an
affirmative defense to noncompliance
with federal requirements, the EPA
reiterates its position that states may
choose to retain certain aspects of their
existing program regulations—such as
the definition of ‘‘emergency’’ and
associated reporting and recordkeeping
requirements—to support functions
unrelated to an affirmative defense,
such as prompt reporting requirements.
The EPA disagrees with commenters’
assertions that the presence of
definitions or reporting and
recordkeeping requirements associated
with emergencies would necessarily
imply that an affirmative defense exists
or that exceedances of emission limits
during emergencies are excused. To the
contrary, and although the EPA is not
retaining such provisions within its own
60 The EPA has previously discussed an
analogous issue in the context of SIPs. See SSM SIP
Action, 80 FR 33855.
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regulations, states may decide that some
of these provisions could potentially
serve a useful function for state
permitting authorities considering
whether to pursue enforcement, for
sources faced with the possibility of a
state enforcement action, and for the
public.
4. Timing Associated With Program
Revisions
Comment: Multiple state and industry
commenters requested that the EPA
allow states additional time to submit
any required part 70 program revisions.
These commenters all asserted that 12
months is not sufficient time to conduct
the administrative processes required to
change part 70 program regulations, and
suggested that anywhere between 18
and 36 months should be allowed, for
various reasons. Some state commenters
provided specific examples of the
administrative actions associated with
rulemakings that would necessitate
additional time, including outreach,
public hearings and comment periods,
rule development, gubernatorial
approval, legislative committee review,
and legislative approval. One state
commenter noted that many states face
program and staff resource constraints
based on other rulemaking obligations.
Another state commenter predicted that
necessary rule changes may take longer
to promulgate because they will be
controversial. Some commenters
recommended providing additional time
for state program revisions because
these affirmative defense provisions are
not currently causing any pressing
problems with enforcement and there is
no urgent need to change the provisions.
Finally, one commenter suggested that
additional time for state program
revisions would be necessary to allow
time for sources to implement measures
to address the loss of the affirmative
defense.
Other commenters, on the other hand,
recommended a more limited time
frame, while acknowledging the
discretion that the EPA has under 40
CFR 70.4(a) to extend program revision
deadlines. These commenters supported
the EPA’s default 12-month submission
deadline with the possibility of an
extended deadline of up to 24 months,
on the grounds that states should be
able to easily amend their operating
permit rules within months, and that
prompt action would facilitate the
coordination of SIP revisions and title V
revisions (and associated permit
revisions). Environmental commenters
urged the EPA to require states seeking
an extension to specifically request
additional time and to demonstrate good
cause for the extension, and urged that
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such requests be granted only under
compelling circumstances. These
commenters also suggested additional
details concerning the required form,
content, and timing of such an
extension request.
Response: As discussed in the
proposal, the necessary changes to part
70 programs arising from this rule
should generally be relatively minor and
straightforward, involving the removal
of affirmative defense provisions from
the state’s part 70 program.61 Because of
the nature of the required revisions, the
EPA continues to believe that most or
many states should be able to complete
the necessary program revisions within
12 months. However, the EPA again
appreciates that some states may require
more time to complete program
revisions, based on a number of
different factors associated with their
administrative process, including the
potential need for legislative approval.
Therefore, the EPA is allowing states to
submit a request to the appropriate EPA
Regional office requesting an extension
to this 12-month deadline and
demonstrating why such an extension is
necessary. Such extension requests
should include detailed information
concerning the steps that the state will
take to revise its part 70 program, as
well as the specific timing associated
with each of these steps. The EPA
understands that many states have
lengthy rulemaking processes and
expects that requests for extension that
include the information identified here
in sufficient detail would generally be
approved. Nonetheless, the EPA will
consider each program revision
submission and extension request on a
case-by-case basis. The EPA expects that
each state with a part 70 program
containing impermissible affirmative
defense provisions will submit a
program revision or request for an
extension of time to the EPA by August
21, 2024.
5. Program Revision Submittal Details
Comment: Two state commenters
discussed the details of any required
program revision submittals. One state
suggested requiring the following four
components: (1) legal authorization to
revise the state rules and part 70
program; (2) redlined changes to state
rules; (3) timeline for planned removal
of affirmative defense from each permit;
61 As discussed in section IV.A.3. of this
document, this particular revision to remove
affirmative defense provisions from a state’s EPAapproved part 70 program might not necessarily
also involve a notice-and-comment rulemaking to
revise the state’s current administrative code,
although the EPA believes this would be a best
practice to ensure clarity.
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and (4) a plan to make these changes to
individual permits. Another state
commenter requested additional clarity
on what form of legal authority
demonstration would be required for
program revision submittals, and
suggested that a rulemaking certification
(certifying that the rules have been
reviewed by legal counsel and have
been found to be within the legal
authority of the agency) would be
sufficient and less burdensome than a
formal opinion by the state Attorney
General. One state commenter further
expressed concern with the additional
burden that would be associated with
preparing and submitting a revised
program plan. Finally, one commenter
requested clarification of the EPA’s
intention to publish proposed program
revisions in the Federal Register and
provide a 30-day public comment
period. They requested further
clarification on whether the EPA
intended to publish notice of approval
in the Federal Register or issue a letter
to state governors or their designees.
Response: As stated in the
introduction to this section regarding
program revisions, the part 70 program
revision process should follow the
procedures in 40 CFR 70.4(a) and (i).
The EPA’s part 70 regulations provide
that for state program revisions, the state
should submit such documents as the
EPA determines to be necessary. See 40
CFR 70.4(i)(2)(i). As noted in the 2016
proposal, the EPA expects that program
revisions to remove the title V
emergency defense provisions will
include, at minimum: (1) a redline
document identifying the state’s
proposed revision to its part 70 program
rules; (2) a brief statement of the legal
authority authorizing the revision; and
(3) a schedule and description of the
state’s plans to remove affirmative
defense provisions from individual
operating permits. The EPA encourages
states to consult with their respective
EPA regional offices on the specific
contents of their revision submittal
packages.
Regarding one commenter’s
statements concerning the legal
authority demonstration component, the
EPA reiterates that this component
could take various forms depending on
the specific circumstances of each state,
and a formal opinion by an Attorney
General should not be required for the
narrow program revisions implicated by
this particular rule. For a revision
involving only the removal of
affirmative defense provisions, a
certification indicating that the
revisions are within the legal authority
of the agency and followed all required
administrative (including public
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participation) requirements should be
sufficient. For other program revisions
related to the removal of affirmative
defense provisions, such as the
inclusion of a narrowly tailored
enforcement discretion provision, as
discussed in section IV.A.3. of this
document, the legal authority
demonstration should also contain
assurances that the state has adequate
authority to enforce its part 70
program.62
It is unclear what the comments
discussing a ‘‘revised program plan’’
refer to. The EPA believes that the plan
described in this document, involving
narrow program revision submittals to
remove affirmative defense provisions,
is appropriate. As noted in the 2016
proposal, states may, but need not, also
include as part of their program revision
submittals any other unrelated revisions
to state program regulations.
6. Consequences of Failure To Submit
Program Revisions
Comment: Some commenters
requested that the EPA clarify the
consequences for states that refuse to
revise their operating permit
regulations. Specifically, commenters
cited to CAA sections 502(d) and (i) and
discussed the possibility of notices of
deficiency (NOD), sanctions, and the
eventual withdrawal of permitting
authority.
Response: Commenters are correct
that the EPA has the authority under
CAA sections 502(d) and (i), and as
specified in the EPA’s implementing
regulations at 40 CFR 70.10, to issue
NODs, issue sanctions, and potentially
withdraw approval of part 70 programs
under appropriate circumstances,
potentially including the failure of a
permitting authority to submit required
program revisions to the EPA. The EPA
would exercise this authority on a caseby-case basis for this element of the
program, as it would with any other.
7. Discussion of State-Specific Program
Provisions
Comment: In response to requests
from the EPA for information about part
70 programs that contain affirmative
defense provisions, various commenters
discussed certain provisions in
specifically identified state part 70
62 For example, the state should demonstrate that
any such alternative provisions: do not interfere
with the authority of courts to determine whether
and to what extent certain remedies are appropriate
in a given case; do not limit the ability of citizens
or the EPA to pursue enforcement; and do not limit
the state’s ability to enforce its part 70 program, for
example by establishing criteria that, when met,
would effectively preclude the state from assessing
or recovering penalties consistent with 40 CFR
70.11(a)(3).
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programs that could be impacted by the
final rule.63 Several commenters also
requested an update to the document
titled ‘‘Title V Affirmative Defense
Provisions in State, Local, and Tribal
Part 70 Programs’’ that was included in
the docket during the 2016 rulemaking
process.
Response: The EPA appreciates this
additional information. As noted
previously, the EPA is not taking any
action in this final rule with respect to
the adequacy or inadequacy of
individual state programs, including
specific programs identified in the 2016
document referenced by commenters.
The EPA expects that permitting
authorities with part 70 programs that
have impermissible affirmative defense
provisions will follow the process
provided in section IV. of this
document. EPA Regional offices will
work closely with permitting authorities
to provide support during this process.
States with additional questions about
the impact of this rule on their operating
permit programs should contact the
appropriate EPA Regional office for
further assistance.
B. Permit Revisions
This section clarifies the EPA’s
expectations for the eventual removal of
impermissible affirmative defense
provisions from individual title V
operating permits.
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1. Scope of Permit Revisions
Comment: One commenter claimed
that title V permits containing
affirmative defenses derived from
sources of authority other than 40 CFR
70.6(g) would not need to be revised.
Response: In general, any
impermissible affirmative defense
provisions within individual operating
permits that are based on a title V
authority and that apply to federallyenforceable requirements will need to
be removed. For example, permit
conditions that directly rely on 40 CFR
70.6(g) or 71.6(g) would need to be
removed following the removal of these
provisions from the EPA’s regulations.
Importantly, however, permit revisions
63 In the proposed rule, the EPA solicited
comment on a document titled, ‘‘Title V Affirmative
Defense Provisions in State, Local, and tribal Part
70 Programs’’ that was included in in the docket
associated with this rulemaking (Docket ID No.
EPA–HQ–OAR–2016–0186). This document
contains a tentative list of part 70 programs that
appear to contain affirmative defense provisions
that could be affected by this action. The document
was intended for informational purposes only and
does not reflect any type of determination as to the
adequacy or inadequacy of any specific program
provisions. The EPA received comments involving
provisions within the Texas and Georgia part 70
programs that purportedly incorporate by reference
affirmative defense provisions.
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would not be limited to permit
conditions based on 40 CFR 70.6(g) and
71.6(g); any permit conditions that rely
on a similarly impermissible title V
affirmative defense provision contained
in (or incorporated by reference into) a
state’s part 70 program would also have
to be removed following state program
revisions. On the other hand, and as the
EPA explained in the 2016 proposal,
this rule will not directly affect
affirmative defense provisions
contained in title V permits that are
derived from independent applicable
requirements, such as SIP, NSPS or
NESHAP provisions. Finally, should a
state decide to retain a ‘‘state-only’’
affirmative defense or enforcement
discretion-type provision, it may need
to eventually amend title V operating
permits to explicitly state the limited
applicability of the state-only provision.
See 40 CFR 70.6(b)(2). The discussion
provided in the following subsections
applies to both the removal of
affirmative defense provisions from
permits and to the amendment or
modification of such permit terms.
2. Burden, Mechanism, and Timing of
Permit Revisions
Comment: State commenters and one
tribal commenter claimed that the EPA
underestimates the burden of removing
affirmative defense provisions from
individual permits, and challenged the
EPA’s statement in the proposal that
‘‘removal of affirmative defense
provisions from permits should
generally occur in the ordinary course of
business and should require essentially
no additional burden on states and
sources.’’ State commenters explained
that thousands of existing operating
permits would require some form of
revision action to be processed by the
state, and that revising certain general
permits that apply to multiple sources
would require an administrative process
similar to a rulemaking.
Numerous state and industry
commenters supported the EPA’s
suggestion that states may utilize a
number of existing permit mechanisms
to remove affirmative defense
provisions from title V permits in the
ordinary course of business, such as
when the permitting authority next
processes a permit renewal or
significant permit modification for a
source. One state commenter noted that
this would be the most sensible and
least disruptive and burdensome
mechanism to complete permit
revisions.
Commenters agreed with the EPA’s
initial suggestion that the removal of
affirmative defense provisions from
operating permits could be
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47051
accomplished through the minor permit
revision process and would not
constitute a significant permit
modification. Further, one state
suggested that the EPA adopt a policy
interpretation that removal of
affirmative defense provisions could be
accomplished through the
administrative amendment process.
Some commenters also asserted that
permit revisions should not be based on
any other independent deadline or
timeline, and that there is no urgency to
remove the provisions. Other
commenters, though, urged the EPA to
encourage permitting authorities to
exercise their discretion to remove the
provisions as expeditiously as possible,
on the earliest possible occasion.
Commenters also addressed the
sequence of program revisions and
permit revisions. One commenter
expressed concern that potential
ambiguity may arise if a source invokes
an affirmative defense provision found
in the permit, after the program
revisions have been approved but the
permit has not been amended. Lastly,
one tribal commenter expressed its
concern that making conforming
revisions to permits before
programmatic revisions would create
inconsistencies that could undermine
enforcement.
Response: The EPA acknowledges
commenters’ general assertions that a
large number of existing title V permits
across the nation will eventually need to
be revised to remove title V affirmative
defense provisions. However, the EPA
disagrees that this will involve any
extraordinary burden on states or
sources. The need to occasionally revise
individual title V permits is a natural,
common, and required feature of the
title V operating permits program. Title
V operating permits, by their nature,
include a wide variety of requirements
applicable to a source, and permit
changes are periodically necessary to
incorporate new or modified applicable
requirements, and to reflect physical or
operational changes that occur at a
source. The EPA’s regulations, and all
EPA-approved state part 70 programs,
contain well-established mechanisms to
account for various types of necessary
revisions to title V permits. See, e.g., 40
CFR 70.7(d)–(h). The permit revisions
that will need to occur as a result of this
rulemaking fit well within this existing
regulatory framework for occasional
permit revisions.
Moreover, the EPA expects permit
changes to remove discretionary title V
affirmative defense provisions to be a
potentially less burdensome process
than, for example, the process required
to incorporate new applicable
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requirements in a permit via permit
reopening. See, e.g., 40 CFR 70.7(f)(1)(i).
As explained in the 2016 proposal, the
EPA expects that any necessary permit
changes should occur in the ordinary
course of business. For example, these
revisions could be made when a state
processes periodic permit renewals or
other permit revisions. Additionally,
states may utilize other existing
mechanisms to effectuate these permit
changes, consistent with each state’s
approved part 70 program regulations.
For example, the EPA does not believe
that a permit revision to simply remove
a discretionary affirmative defense
provision would require significant
modification procedures, and permitting
authorities may be able to process these
changes as minor modifications. Also,
in certain circumstances, it may be
possible for some permit changes to be
made using administrative permit
amendment procedures, provided that
the removal of the title V emergency
provisions would satisfy one of the
specific circumstances contemplated
within each state’s approved part 70
program regulations governing
administrative amendments.64 States
may also be able to utilize other
streamlined mechanisms for processing
multiple permit revisions at once.
Regarding the timing of such permit
changes, for state or tribal permitting
agencies implementing the federal title
V program or part 70 programs that
directly rely on 40 CFR 70.6(g), any
permit revisions necessary to remove
impermissible affirmative defense
provisions from individual permits
should occur promptly after the
effective date of this final rule. For
states implementing part 70 programs
that contain state affirmative defense
provisions, any permit revisions
necessary to remove impermissible
affirmative defense provisions from
individual permits should similarly
occur promptly after the EPA’s approval
of the necessary part 70 program
revisions.65 Generally, states would be
expected to remove title V affirmative
defense provisions from permits (or
clearly label remaining provisions as
state-only) at the earliest possible
occasion when each permit is next
64 In addition to specifying various types of
permit changes for which the administrative
amendment process would be appropriate, the
EPA’s regulations in 40 CFR 70.7(d) also provide
states with the opportunity to specify additional
criteria as part of their part 70 programs, if the EPA
Administrator determines that those situations are
similar to those specified in 40 CFR 70.7(d).
65 81 FR 38645, 38653, n. 35 (June 14, 2016)
(acknowledging limits on state discretion where
currently-approved state program regulations
require inclusion of emergency affirmative defense
provisions in state-issued title V permits).
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reviewed by the permitting authority,
such as the next permit renewal or
unrelated permit revision. Thus, at the
latest, states would be expected to
remove affirmative defense provisions
from individual permits by the next
periodic permit renewal that occurs
following either (1) the effective date of
this rule (for permit terms based on 40
CFR 70.6(g) or 71.6(g)) or (2) the EPA’s
approval of state program revisions (for
permit terms based on a state affirmative
defense provision).
It is important to note that while the
EPA is not currently establishing any
independent timeline for states to
remove these provisions from
individual permits, the EPA encourages
states to begin removing these
provisions from permits prior to the
completion of any necessary part 70
program revisions. States may also find
it convenient to remove these provisions
in the course of completing revisions to
permits related to the implementation of
the 2015 SSM SIP Action.
3. EPA Objections to Permits
Comment: Some commenters urged
the EPA to make clear that the agency
will object to title V permits issued after
the effective date of the final rule that
incorporate or refer to title V affirmative
defense provisions.
Response: As previously noted, the
EPA expects that any necessary permit
revisions will generally occur following
program revisions to remove the
underlying affirmative defense
provisions from each permitting
authority’s part 70 program regulations.
Therefore, although the EPA encourages
states to remove title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions from
operating permits at the earliest possible
opportunity (including during permit
renewals that occur before program
revisions take place), the EPA generally
does not anticipate objecting to title V
permits that contain emergency
affirmative defense provisions during
the Agency’s 45-day review period until
after the relevant permitting authority
has made necessary corrections to its
approved part 70 program. The
Administrator will evaluate any
petitions to object to proposed title V
operating permits on a case-by-case
basis. Statements in this document are
not intended to prejudge such petition
responses.
As noted in section IV.B.2. of this
document, in those state or tribal areas
that implement the federal title V
program (in 40 CFR part 71) or where
the operating permit program directly
relies on or incorporates by reference 40
CFR 70.6(g), the EPA expects states to
begin the process of removing
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impermissible affirmative defense
provisions from operating permits
promptly after the effective date of this
final rule, as such permit revisions
would not need to await state program
revisions.
V. Statutory and Executive Orders
Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant
regulatory action and was therefore not
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose any new
information collection burden under the
PRA. OMB has previously approved the
information collection activities
contained in the existing regulations
and has assigned OMB control numbers
2060–0243 (for part 70 state operating
permit programs) and 2060–0336 (for
part 71 federal operating permit
program). In this action, the EPA is
removing certain provisions from the
EPA’s regulations, which should
ultimately result in the removal of
similar provisions from state, local, and
tribal operating permit programs and
individual permits. Consequently, some
states will be required to submit
program revisions to the EPA in order
to remove affirmative defense
provisions from their EPA-approved
part 70 programs, and will eventually be
required to remove provisions from
individual permits. However, this action
does not involve any requests for
information, recordkeeping or reporting
requirements, or other requirements that
would constitute an information
collection under the PRA.
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. Entities potentially affected
directly by this proposal include state,
local, and tribal governments, and none
of these governments would qualify as
a small entity. Other types of small
entities, including stationary sources of
air pollution, are not directly subject to
the requirements of this action.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain an
unfunded mandate of $100 million or
more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C.
1531–1538, and does not significantly or
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uniquely affect small governments. The
action imposes no new enforceable duty
on any state, local or tribal governments
or the private sector. As a result of this
rule, some states with EPA-approved
part 70 programs that contain
impermissible affirmative defense
provisions will be required to submit
program revisions to the EPA, according
to the framework established by the
EPA’s existing regulations. To the extent
that such affected states allow local air
districts or planning organizations to
implement portions of the state’s
obligation under the CAA, the
regulatory requirements of this action
do not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments because those
governments have already undertaken
the obligation to comply with the CAA.
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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, it will neither impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
federally recognized tribal governments,
nor preempt tribal law. One tribal
government (the Southern Ute Indian
Tribe) currently administers an
approved part 70 operating permit
program, and one tribal government (the
Navajo Nation) currently administers a
part 71 operating permit program
pursuant to a delegation agreement with
the EPA. These tribal governments may
be required to take certain actions,
including a program revision (for the
part 70 program) and eventual permit
revisions, but these actions will not
require substantial compliance costs.
The EPA conducted outreach with tribal
officials early in the process of
developing this regulation to permit
them to have meaningful and timely
input into its development. A summary
of that outreach is provided in the
rulemaking docket, Docket ID No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2016–0186, available at
https://www.regulations.gov.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order
13045 as applying to those regulatory
actions that concern environmental
health or safety risks that the EPA has
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18:12 Jul 20, 2023
Jkt 259001
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 does not concern an
environmental health risk or safety risk.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13211 because it is not a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629,
February 16, 1994) directs federal
agencies, to the greatest extent
practicable and permitted by law, to
make environmental justice part of their
mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations (people of color) and lowincome populations.
The EPA believes that it is not
practicable to assess whether the human
health or environmental conditions that
exist prior to this action result in
disproportionate and adverse effects on
people of color, low-income populations
and/or Indigenous peoples. This action
simply removes the emergency
affirmative defense provisions from the
EPA’s operating permit program
regulations. As a result of this action, it
will also be necessary for some state,
local, and tribal permitting authorities
to remove similar affirmative defense
provisions from their EPA-approved
part 70 programs and from individual
title V operating permits. These title V
provisions existed independently from
any specific environmental health
standards, and their removal should not
affect the establishment of, or
compliance with, environmental health
or safety standards. It is not practicable
to predict whether the removal of these
affirmative defense provisions will
result in any significant difference in
emissions and subsequently whether
this action will have any positive or
negative effect on people of color, lowincome populations and/or Indigenous
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
47053
peoples. Information supporting this
Executive Order review is contained in
section III.D.5. of this document.
The EPA provided meaningful
participation opportunities for people of
color, low-income populations and/or
Indigenous peoples or tribes in the
development of the action through tribal
outreach outlined in section V.F. of this
document and summarized in the
rulemaking docket, Docket ID No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2016–0186, as well as the
standard opportunity to provide public
comment on each proposal (2016 and
2022).
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).
VI. Statutory Authority
The statutory authority for this action
is provided in CAA sections 502(b) and
502(d)(3), 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b) & (d)(3),
which direct the Administrator of the
EPA to promulgate regulations
establishing state operating permit
programs and give the Administrator the
authority to establish a federal operating
permit program. Additionally, the
Administrator determines that this
action is subject to the provisions of
CAA section 307(d), which establish
procedural requirements specific to
rulemaking under the CAA. CAA
section 307(d)(1)(V) provides that the
provisions of CAA section 307(d) apply
to ‘‘such other actions as the
Administrator may determine.’’ 42
U.S.C. 7607(d)(1)(V).
VII. 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
United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia 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).
This final action is ‘‘nationally
applicable’’ within the meaning of CAA
section 307(b)(1). In the alternative, to
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 139 / Friday, July 21, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
the extent a court finds this final 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).66 This final action
revises both the regulatory requirements
in 40 CFR part 70 that govern state,
local, tribal, and U.S. territorial
operating permit programs nationwide
and the regulatory requirements in 40
CFR part 71 that govern federal
operating permits nationwide.67
Accordingly, this final action is a
nationally applicable regulation or,
alternatively, the Administrator is
exercising the complete discretion
afforded to him by the CAA and hereby
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 hereby 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 within 60 days from
the date this final action is published in
the Federal Register. Filing a petition
for reconsideration by the Administrator
of this final action does not affect the
finality of the action for the purposes of
judicial review, nor does it extend the
time within which a petition for judicial
review must be filed, and shall not
postpone the effectiveness of such rule
or action.
List of Subjects
40 CFR Part 70
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
40 CFR Part 71
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
66 In
deciding whether to invoke the exception by
making and publishing a finding that this final
action is based on a determination of nationwide
scope or effect, the Administrator has also taken
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.
67 In the report on the 1977 Amendments that
revised section 307(b)(1) of the CAA, Congress
noted that the Administrator’s determination that
the ‘‘nationwide scope or effect’’ exception applies
would be appropriate for any action that has a
scope or effect beyond a single judicial circuit. See
H.R. Rep. No. 95–294 at 323, 324, reprinted in 1977
U.S.C.C.A.N. 1402–03.
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18:12 Jul 20, 2023
Jkt 259001
Air pollution control, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, title 40, chapter I of the Code
of Federal Regulations is amended as
follows:
PART 70—STATE OPERATING PERMIT
PROGRAMS
1. The authority citation for part 70
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
§ 70.6
■
[Amended]
2. In § 70.6, remove paragraph (g).
PART 71—FEDERAL OPERATING
PERMIT PROGRAMS
3. The authority citation for part 71
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
§ 71.6
■
[Amended]
4. In § 71.6, remove paragraph (g).
[FR Doc. 2023–15067 Filed 7–20–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
This
correction fixes the amendatory
instruction for 3052.204–71, Contractor
employee access, to clarify that the text
in Alternate II should not be removed,
and adds in 3052.212–70, Contract
terms and conditions applicable to DHS
acquisition of commercial items, two
alternative clauses that were
inadvertently not included in the final
rule.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Correction
In FR Doc. 2023–11270 appearing on
page 40560 in the Federal Register of
Wednesday, June 21, 2023, the
following corrections are made:
3052.204–71
3052.24–71
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
48 CFR Part 3052
[HSAR Case 2015–001; DHS Docket No.
DHS–2017–0006]
RIN 1601–AA76
Homeland Security Acquisition
Regulation; Safeguarding of Controlled
Unclassified Information; Correction
Office of the Chief Procurement
Officer, Department of Homeland
Security (DHS).
ACTION: Final rule; correction.
AGENCY:
The Office of Chief
Procurement is correcting a final rule
published in the Federal Register on
June 21, 2023, titled Safeguarding of
Controlled Unclassified Information.
The final rule amended the Homeland
Security Acquisition Regulation (HSAR)
to address requirements for the
safeguarding of Controlled Unclassified
Information (CUI).
DATES: Effective July 21, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Shaundra Ford, Procurement Analyst,
DHS, Office of the Chief Procurement
Officer, Acquisition Policy and
Legislation, (202) 447–0056, or email
HSAR@hq.dhs.gov. When using email,
include HSAR Case 2015–001 in the
subject line.
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
[Corrected]
1. On page 40598, in the second
column, in part 3052, in amendment 6,
the instruction ‘‘Revise clause
3052.204–71 to read as follows:’’ is
corrected to read: ‘‘Revise section
3052.204–71 to read as follows:’’.
■ 2. On page 40599, in the third column,
in section 3052.24–71, the regulatory
text following Alternate I, starting with
‘‘Alternate II (June 2006)’’ to the end of
the section, is corrected to read:
■
[Corrected]
Alternate II (July 2023)
When the Department has determined
contract employee access to controlled
unclassified information or Government
facilities must be limited to U.S. citizens and
lawful permanent residents, but the contract
will not require access to information
resources, add the following paragraphs:
(g) Each individual employed under the
contract shall be a citizen of the United
States of America, or an alien who has been
lawfully admitted for permanent residence as
evidenced by a Permanent Resident Card
(USCIS I–551). Any exceptions must be
approved by the Department’s Chief Security
Officer or designee.
(h) Contractors shall identify in their
proposals, the names and citizenship of all
non-U.S. citizens proposed to work under the
contract. Any additions or deletions of nonU.S. citizens after contract award shall also
be reported to the Contracting Officer.
(End of clause)
3. On page 40603, in the third column,
in part 3052, amendatory instruction 9
for section 3052.212–70 is corrected to
read:
■ 9. In section 3052.212–70:
■ a. Revise the date of the clause; and
■ b. Amend paragraph (b) of the clause
by:
■ i. Removing the entry for ‘‘3052.204–
70’’;
■ ii. In the entry for ‘‘3052.204–71’’,
adding the entry ‘‘Alternate II’’
following the entry ‘‘Alternate I’’; and
■ iii. Adding in numerical order the
entry ‘‘3052.204–72’’ followed by the
■
E:\FR\FM\21JYR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 139 (Friday, July 21, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 47029-47054]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-15067]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 70 and 71
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2016-0186; FRL-8961-02-OAR]
RIN 2060-AV39
Removal of Title V Emergency Affirmative Defense Provisions From
State Operating Permit Programs and Federal Operating Permit Program
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is removing the
``emergency'' affirmative defense provisions from the EPA's title V
operating permit program regulations. These provisions established an
affirmative defense that sources could have asserted in enforcement
cases brought for noncompliance with technology-based emission
limitations in operating permits, provided that the exceedances
occurred due to qualifying emergency circumstances. These provisions,
which have never been required elements of state operating permit
programs, are being removed because they are inconsistent with the
EPA's interpretation of the enforcement structure of the Clean Air Act
(CAA or the Act) in light of prior court decisions from the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. The removal of these provisions is
also consistent with other recent EPA actions involving affirmative
defenses and would harmonize the EPA's treatment of affirmative
defenses across different CAA programs. Through this document, the EPA
is also providing guidance on the implementation process resulting from
[[Page 47030]]
the removal of the emergency affirmative defense provisions from the
EPA's regulations, including the need for some state, local, and tribal
permitting authorities to submit program revisions to the EPA to remove
similar title V affirmative defense provisions from their EPA-approved
title V programs, and to remove similar provisions from individual
operating permits.
DATES: This final rule is effective on August 21, 2023.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2016-0186. All documents in the docket are
listed on the https://www.regulations.gov website. Although listed in
the index, some information is not publicly available, e.g., CBI or
other information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain
other material, such as copyrighted material, is not placed on the
internet and will be publicly available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are available electronically
through https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Corey Sugerik, Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards, Air Quality Policy Division (C504-05),
Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC; telephone
number: (919) 541-3223; email address: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. How is this Federal Register document organized?
The information presented in this preamble is organized as follows:
I. General Information
A. How is this Federal Register document organized?
B. Does this action apply to me?
C. Where can I get a copy of this document and other related
information?
II. Background and Overview of the Final Action
III. Response to Significant Comments
A. Affirmative Defenses and the NRDC Decision
B. Exemptions and the Sierra Club Decision
C. Other Legal and Policy Considerations
D. Potential Impacts
E. Response to Comments Outside the Scope of This Action
IV. Implementation Considerations
A. Program Revisions
B. Permit Revisions
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (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 Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
VI. Statutory Authority
VII. Judicial Review
B. Does this action apply to me?
Entities potentially directly affected by this rulemaking include
federal, state, local, and tribal air pollution control agencies that
administer title V operating permit programs.\1\ Entities potentially
indirectly affected by this rulemaking include owners and operators of
emissions sources in all industry groups who hold or apply for title V
operating permits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ This preamble makes frequent use of the term ``state,''
usually meaning the state air pollution control agency that serves
as the permitting authority. The use of the term ``state'' also
applies to local, tribal, and U.S. territorial air pollution control
agencies, where applicable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Where can I get a copy of this document and other related
information?
In addition to being available in the docket, an electronic copy of
this Federal Register document will be posted at https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits/current-regulations-and-regulatory-actions.
II. Background and Overview of the Final Action
The EPA has promulgated permitting regulations applicable to the
operation of major and certain other sources of air pollutants under
title V of the CAA. These regulations are codified in 40 CFR parts 70
and 71, which contain the requirements for state operating permit
programs and the federal operating permit program, respectively. These
regulations contained identical provisions establishing an affirmative
defense that sources could assert in enforcement actions brought for
noncompliance with technology-based emission limitations caused by
specific emergency circumstances. These ``emergency'' provisions were
located at 40 CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g).
In this action, the EPA is removing the emergency affirmative
defense provisions in 40 CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g) because they are
inconsistent with the EPA's current interpretation of the enforcement
structure of the CAA, in light of prior court decisions from the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit--primarily the court's 2014
decision in NRDC v. EPA, 749 F.3d 1055 (D.C. Cir. 2014). The removal of
these provisions is also consistent with other recent EPA actions
involving affirmative defenses \2\ and will harmonize the EPA's
treatment of affirmative defenses across different CAA programs. The
EPA previously provided background on the title V emergency provisions
and articulated its justification for this action in the preamble to
the 2016 and 2022 proposed rules preceding this final
rule.3 4 Section III. of this document responds to
significant comments we received on those proposals and provides
additional information in support of this final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ In newly issued and revised New Source Performance Standards
(NSPS), emission guidelines for existing sources, and NESHAP
regulations, the EPA has either omitted new affirmative defense
provisions or removed existing affirmative defense provisions. See,
e.g., National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants for
the Portland Cement Manufacturing Industry and Standards of
Performance for Portland Cement Plants; Final Rule, 80 FR 44771
(July 27, 2015); National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants for Major Sources: Industrial, Commercial, and
Institutional Boilers and Process Heaters; Final Rule, 80 FR 72789
(November 20, 2015); Standards of Performance for New Stationary
Sources and Emission Guidelines for Existing Sources: Commercial and
Industrial Solid Waste Incineration Units; Final Rule, 81 FR 40956
(June 23, 2016).
\3\ See Removal of Title V Emergency Affirmative Defense
Provisions From State Operating Permit Programs and Federal
Operating Permit Program, Proposed Rule, 81 FR 38645 (June 14,
2016); Removal of Title V Emergency Affirmative Defense Provisions
From State Operating Permit Programs and the Federal Operating
Permit Program, Proposed Rule, 87 FR 19042 (April 1, 2022).
\4\ Docket No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2016-0186 comprises all supporting
documents and public comments for both the 2016 and 2022 proposals.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As a consequence of the EPA's action to remove these provisions
from 40 CFR 70.6(g), it will be necessary for any states that have
adopted similar affirmative defense provisions in their part 70
operating permit programs to revise their part 70 programs to remove
these provisions. In addition, individual operating permits that
contain title V affirmative defenses based on 40 CFR 70.6(g) or similar
state regulations will eventually need to be revised. The EPA discussed
its expectations concerning how states will implement this rule in
section V. of the preamble to the 2016 proposed rule and also requested
[[Page 47031]]
comments on some of the aspects discussed. Additional information
regarding these implementation considerations and the EPA's response to
relevant comments received on these issues are included in section IV.
of this document.
EPA expects that program revisions to remove the title V emergency
defense provisions from state operating permit programs will include,
at minimum: (1) a redline document identifying the state's proposed
revision to its part 70 program rules; (2) a brief statement of the
legal authority authorizing the revision; and (3) a schedule and
description of the state's plans to remove affirmative defense
provisions from individual operating permits. The EPA encourages states
to consult with their respective EPA regional offices on the specific
contents of their revision submittal packages.
In general, any impermissible affirmative defense provisions within
individual operating permits that are based on a title V authority and
that apply to federally-enforceable requirements will need to be
removed. As explained in the 2016 proposal, the EPA expects that any
necessary permit changes should occur in the ordinary course of
business, such as during periodic permit renewals or revisions. At the
latest, states would be expected to remove affirmative defense
provisions from individual permits by the next periodic permit renewal
that occurs following either (1) the effective date of this rule (for
permit terms based on 40 CFR 70.6(g) or 71.6(g)) or (2) the EPA's
approval of state program revisions (for permit terms based on a state
affirmative defense provision).
III. Response to Significant Comments
This section contains the EPA's response to significant comments
regarding the EPA's proposed action to remove 40 CFR 70.6(g) and
71.6(g) and provides the EPA's justification for this final action.
Comments and the EPA's responses are divided into four general topic
areas: section III.A. of this document discusses the legal basis for
this action in light of the NRDC decision; section III.B. discusses
issues related to exemptions from emission limitations and the D.C.
Circuit's 2008 decision in Sierra Club v. EPA, 551 F.3d 1019 (D.C. Cir.
2008); section III.C. discusses other legal and policy considerations;
and section III.D. discusses various issues involving the consequences
of removing the title V emergency affirmative defense provisions from
operating permit programs, focusing primarily on the impact on sources.
A. Affirmative Defenses and the NRDC Decision
The following subsections address comments received concerning the
NRDC decision and the EPA's legal basis for this action. Subsections
III.A.1. and III.A.2. of this document address general comments either
supporting or opposing the EPA's interpretation of the NRDC decision.
Subsection III.A.3. addresses specific comments concerning the extent
to which the NRDC decision should apply beyond the context of citizen-
suit enforcement under CAA section 304, and how the decision should
inform the EPA's treatment of affirmative defenses in the context of
EPA-initiated judicial enforcement and administrative penalty actions
under CAA sections 113(b) and (d). Specific comments that discuss the
relationship between the NRDC decision and prior case law are presented
in section III.C.2. of this document.
1. Support for the EPA's Interpretation of the CAA's Enforcement
Structure in Light of the NRDC Decision
Comment: Multiple environmental and state commenters supported the
EPA's view that, in light of NRDC, the title V emergency affirmative
defense provisions should be removed because they impermissibly limit
the authority of courts to decide appropriate penalties in private
civil suits. Some commenters claimed that the EPA lacks the authority
to create such provisions. Other state and industry commenters
acknowledged that the NRDC decision limits the EPA's discretion to
retain affirmative defense provisions, either altogether or in certain
contexts. Commenters argued that when Congress wanted to limit the
authority of courts, to allow an affirmative defense or to permit an
extrajudicial entity to modify penalties, it did so expressly, citing
CAA sections 113(e)(1), 113(c)(5)(C)-(D), and 113(d)(2)(B).
Some commenters asserted that the NRDC decision applies beyond the
specific context of CAA section 112 standards because the court's
rationale was based on CAA sections 113 and 304, not CAA section 112.
Therefore, commenters concluded that the prohibition on affirmative
defenses applies to any citizen-enforceable emission standards or
limitations under the Act. Commenters claimed that NRDC is applicable
to the title V emergency affirmative defense provisions because, like
the hazardous air pollution standards at issue in NRDC, all other
emission standards contained in title V operating permits are
enforceable under CAA section 304. Some commenters further asserted
that the fundamental principles underlying the NRDC decision with
respect to affirmative defenses were reinforced by the D.C. Circuit's
2016 decision in U.S. Sugar v. EPA.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ U.S. Sugar Corp. v. EPA, 830 F.3d 579 (D.C. Cir. 2016),
amended on rehearing on unrelated grounds, U.S. Sugar Corp v. EPA,
844 F.3d 268 (D.C. Cir. 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: The EPA generally agrees with commenters supporting the
legal basis for this action to remove the emergency affirmative defense
provisions from the EPA's title V regulations. The EPA previously
explained its legal rationale for this action in the 2016 and 2022
proposed rules.\6\ Here, the EPA reiterates some of the primary legal
principles guiding this current action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See 81 FR 38649. As noted in the 2016 and 2022 proposals,
the EPA has also previously explained its interpretation of the CAA
in light of the NRDC decision at great length in multiple other
documents, including documents supporting the EPA's 2015 SSM SIP
Action. See State Implementation Plans: Response to Petition for
Rulemaking; Findings of Substantial Inadequacy; and SIP Calls To
Amend Provisions Applying to Excess Emissions During Periods of
Startup, Shutdown and Malfunction; Supplemental Proposal To Address
Affirmative Defense Provisions in States Included in the Petition
for Rulemaking and in Additional States, Supplemental Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, 79 FR 55919, 55929 (September 17, 2014) (SSM
SIP Action Supplemental Proposal); State Implementation Plans:
Response to Petition for Rulemaking; Restatement and Update of EPA's
SSM Policy Applicable to SIPs; Findings of Substantial Inadequacy;
SIP Calls To Amend Provisions Applying to Excess Emissions During
Periods of Startup, Shutdown and Malfunction, Final Action, 80 FR
33839, 33851 (June 12, 2015) (SSM SIP Action); and Memorandum,
Withdrawal of the October 9, 2020, Memorandum Addressing Startup,
Shutdown, and Malfunctions in State Implementation Plans and
Implementation of the Prior Policy, 3-4 (September 30, 2021),
available at https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/2021-09/oar-21-000-6324.pdf (September 2021 SSM SIP Memo).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The EPA's current interpretation of the CAA with respect to
affirmative defenses is informed by the D.C. Circuit's NRDC decision.
In NRDC, the D.C. Circuit vacated affirmative defense provisions
contained in the EPA's National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants (NESHAP) for the portland cement industry, promulgated under
CAA section 112. The D.C. Circuit concluded that the EPA lacked the
authority to create these affirmative defense provisions because they
contradicted fundamental requirements of the Act concerning the
authority of courts to decide whether to assess civil penalties in CAA
enforcement suits. Importantly, the court's decision did not turn upon
any specific provisions of CAA section 112, but rather on the
provisions of CAA sections 113 and 304. These provisions
[[Page 47032]]
pertain to enforcement of a wide variety of CAA requirements beyond
section 112 standards, including enforcement of emission limits
contained in title V permits. Thus, the mere fact that the court
addressed the legality of an affirmative defense provision in the
context of a section 112 NESHAP does not mean that the court's
interpretation of sections 113 and 304 does not also apply more
broadly. To the contrary, the EPA sees no reason why the logic of the
court concerning sections 113 and 304 would not apply to the title V
emergency affirmative defense provisions, as well.
Notably, in 2016, the D.C. Circuit reaffirmed its NRDC opinion
concerning affirmative defenses. In U.S. Sugar, the D.C. Circuit
addressed various challenges to rules promulgated in 2011, including
challenges urging that--in the absence of affirmative defenses--the EPA
was required to address periods of malfunction in setting the
applicable standards. Discussing NRDC, the U.S. Sugar opinion stated
that the affirmative defense provision at issue in the NRDC case was
``an impermissible intrusion on the judiciary's role.'' \7\ The fact
that the title V emergency affirmative defenses arguably apply more
broadly (i.e., to potentially numerous technology-based emission limits
developed under multiple CAA program areas) than the affirmative
defense at issue in NRDC potentially makes it even more intrusive on
the judiciary's role.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See U.S. Sugar, 830 F.3d at 607.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In light of the NRDC decision and the EPA's reevaluation of the
CAA, the EPA interprets the enforcement provisions in sections 113 and
304 of the CAA to preclude affirmative defense provisions that would
operate to limit a court's authority or discretion to determine the
appropriate remedy in an enforcement action. Section 304(a) grants the
federal district courts jurisdiction to determine liability and to
impose penalties in enforcement suits brought by citizens. Similarly,
section 113(b) grants the federal district courts jurisdiction, in
enforcement actions brought by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) on
behalf of the EPA, to determine liability and to impose remedies of
various kinds, including injunctive relief and monetary penalties.
These grants of jurisdiction come directly from Congress, and the EPA
is not authorized to alter or eliminate this authority. With respect to
monetary penalties, CAA section 113(e) lists various factors that
courts and the EPA shall consider in the event of judicial or
administrative enforcement for violations of CAA requirements,
including title V permit conditions. Because Congress has already given
federal courts the authority to determine what penalties are
appropriate in the event of judicial enforcement for a violation of a
title V permit provision, neither the EPA nor states should be able to
alter or eliminate that authority by superimposing restrictions on the
authority and discretion granted by Congress to the courts. Affirmative
defense provisions by their nature limit or eliminate the authority of
federal courts to determine liability or to impose remedies through
considerations that differ from the explicit grants of authority in
section 113(b) and section 113(e). Therefore, these provisions are not
appropriate under the CAA, no matter what type of event they apply to,
what criteria they contain, or what forms of remedy they purport to
limit or eliminate. The emergency affirmative defense provisions that
the EPA is removing from 40 CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g) purported to
interfere with the authority of the courts to determine whether and to
what extent penalties or other remedies were appropriate in judicial
enforcement actions, conflicted with the holding of NRDC, and were
contrary to the enforcement structure of the CAA. Thus, the EPA has
determined that these provisions should be removed from the EPA's
regulations.
Section IV.A. of this document contains additional information
concerning the need for states to submit program revisions to remove
similar title V affirmative defense provisions from EPA-approved state
operating permit programs, and to remove similar provisions from
individual operating permits.
2. Comments Suggesting That the NRDC Case Is a Narrow Decision That the
EPA Is Incorrectly Extending or Misapplying
Comment: Some commenters stated that the D.C. Circuit's decision in
NRDC v. EPA was limited to the particular facts or circumstances of
that case and that the EPA's reliance on the decision to support
removal of the title V emergency affirmative defense provisions is an
incorrect extension or misapplication of the decision. Commenters
generally claimed that the EPA should not apply the NRDC court's ruling
to every corner of the CAA, including to the title V affirmative
defense provisions within the EPA's regulations and state operating
permit programs. Some commenters stated that the NRDC decision only
invalidated an affirmative defense associated with a NESHAP issued in
accordance with CAA section 112, and that the decision should be
limited to those standards (or, even, to the specific standards for
portland cement plants subject to that litigation). Commenters alleged
that the D.C. Circuit provided no language to broaden its ruling. Some
commenters focused on the specific statutory mandates involved in
establishing section 112 standards. One commenter alleged that the D.C.
Circuit held that once a section 112 standard is promulgated and
established for all operating modes, no ``gap'' remains for the EPA to
create an affirmative defense.
Other commenters focused on the differences between title V permits
and the section 112 standards that the NRDC court considered. These
commenters explained that title V permits contain numerous different
underlying standards applicable to a source (such as standards
developed under a State Implementation Plan (SIP) or under New Source
Review Programs), as well as additional procedural and monitoring,
reporting, and recordkeeping requirements. Thus, one commenter asserted
that enforcement of title V permit requirements differs from
enforcement of specific section 112 emission limits, and that the D.C.
Circuit's logic prohibiting affirmative defenses does not apply to
other types of applicable requirements in a title V permit, including
substantive standards as well as administrative or procedural
requirements.
Some commenters attempted to distinguish the title V emergency
affirmative defense, which at least one commenter characterized as a
defense to ``liability'' or ``noncompliance,'' from the affirmative
defense to ``civil penalties'' at issue in the NRDC case. One commenter
claimed that the NRDC decision was based on the assumption that excess
emissions automatically result in a violation of a section 112
standard, and therefore that the D.C. Circuit only addressed how
affirmative defense provisions affect a court's authority to determine
appropriate remedies after an actionable violation has been identified.
Multiple commenters asserted that neither CAA section 113 nor the NRDC
case speak to provisions that define when a violation has occurred.
Some commenters also asserted that the NRDC decision involved an
affirmative defense for malfunctions, not emergencies, and concluded
that the EPA should not apply the decision to the title V emergency
affirmative defense because malfunctions are not similar in nature to
emergencies.
Some commenters also claimed more generally that the title V
affirmative defense provisions do not impair a court's ability to
decide whether a source has met its burden of
[[Page 47033]]
demonstrating that an emergency has occurred and whether civil
penalties are appropriate. Other commenters discussed the breadth of
the NRDC case with respect to SIP provisions. Commenters asserted that
the D.C. Circuit did not opine on the authority of the EPA or states to
provide relief from noncompliance with technology-based SIP standards
that are incorporated into title V operating permits. Commenters also
claimed that the D.C. Circuit expressly reserved judgment concerning
the validity of such defenses in SIPs,\8\ and that states have
discretion under the CAA to include affirmative defense provisions in
their SIPs. These commenters attempted to distinguish SIPs from the
section 112 standards at issue in the NRDC case. Multiple commenters
also incorporated in their comment submissions various attachments
related to the Startup, Shutdown, and Malfunction (SSM) SIP Action,\9\
including comments submitted on the initial and supplemental SSM SIP
Call proposals \10\ as well as briefs filed in the ongoing SSM SIP
Action litigation.\11\ Portions of these attachments addressed the
EPA's interpretation of the NRDC case.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Commenters cited NRDC, 749 F.3d at 1064 n.2.
\9\ SSM SIP Action, 80 FR 33840.
\10\ State Implementation Plans: Response to Petition for
Rulemaking; Findings of Substantial Inadequacy; and SIP Calls To
Amend Provisions Applying to Excess Emissions During Periods of
Startup, Shutdown, and Malfunction; Proposed Rule, 78 FR 12460
(February 22, 2013); SSM SIP Action Supplemental Proposal, 79 FR
55919.
\11\ Environmental Committee of the Florida Electric Power
Coordinating Group, Inc. v. EPA, No. 15-1239 (D.C. Cir.) (SSM SIP
Action litigation).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: The EPA disagrees with commenters' assertions that the
logic of the NRDC case was restricted to the context of section 112
standards, or to a single NESHAP standard. Most of these comments do
not address the fundamental legal principles upon which the D.C.
Circuit based its decision, or the EPA's explanation of these
principles. Contrary to what some commenters suggest, the NRDC decision
was not based on any statutory mandates specific to promulgating CAA
section 112 standards. Instead, the decision was based on CAA sections
113 and 304, which apply broadly to the enforcement of a wide range of
CAA requirements, including SIP requirements. Thus, any differences
between section 112 standards and other standards contained in title V
permits (or, for example, the difference between malfunctions and
emergencies) are irrelevant to the legal principles upon which the NRDC
decision was based, and which apply equally well to the EPA's title V
regulations in 40 CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g), as discussed in the
preceding subsection.
The EPA also disagrees that NRDC is distinguishable from the
current action due to any functional differences between the
affirmative defense at issue in NRDC, which some commenters
characterized as a defense to a claim for civil penalties for
violations, and the title V emergency affirmative defense, which
commenters characterized as a defense to an action brought for
noncompliance. Both the title V affirmative defense and the portland
cement NESHAP malfunction affirmative defense (originally located at 40
CFR 63.1344) established an affirmative defense that a source could
assert in actions brought under CAA sections 113 and 304, after an
enforcement action had been initiated for an alleged violation.\12\
Both affirmative defense provisions functioned in the same manner. The
fact that the portland cement defense was confined to enforcement
actions for penalties, whereas the title V provisions do not on their
face contain such an explicit restriction and could potentially be read
more broadly, is irrelevant to the fact that both provisions purported
to interfere with the authority of courts to determine whether and to
what extent relief is appropriate in a given case, including relief
from penalties. Moreover, CAA section 304(a), upon which the D.C.
Circuit relied, is not restricted to monetary penalties. The EPA has
previously explained its position that affirmative defenses are
inappropriate regardless of what type of event they apply to, what
criteria they contain, or what forms of remedy they purport to limit or
eliminate. The EPA also notes that the title V emergency affirmative
defense provisions were explicitly restricted to noncompliance with
technology-based emission limits (such as emission limits derived from
a NESHAP similar to the ones the D.C. Circuit invalidated) and were
never available as a defense in an enforcement case for violations of
other types of title V permit requirements, contrary to some
commenters' assertions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ To the extent that commenters argue that the title V
affirmative defenses function to define when a violation has
occurred, these comments are addressed further in section III.B.1.
of this document.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, the EPA disagrees with commenters' claims that the title V
affirmative defense provisions would not impair a court's ability to
decide whether civil penalties are appropriate because a source
attempting to invoke the title V emergency affirmative defense would
have the burden to prove that an emergency occurred and other
demonstration requirements had been met. The affirmative defense
provision formerly in the portland cement NESHAP was similarly
structured, and the D.C. Circuit nonetheless found that those
provisions impermissibly intruded into the judiciary's role to
determine whether penalties are appropriate. Any comments challenging
the holding of the D.C. Circuit in NRDC are beyond the scope of this
rulemaking. To the extent that commenters suggested that a title V
affirmative defense provision could be appropriate with respect to
certain technology-based SIP requirements contained in a title V
permit, the EPA disagrees. For the reasons previously discussed,
affirmative defense provisions in title V permits are not appropriate
with respect to any federally-enforceable requirements. To the extent
that commenters discussed the relationship between the NRDC and Sierra
Club cases and affirmative defense provisions contained within SIPs,
and to the extent that commenters incorporated comments or briefs
relevant to the SSM SIP Action but did not specifically explain how
those comments were pertinent to the EPA's proposal to eliminate the
title V emergency affirmative defense provisions, such comments are
beyond the scope of this current rulemaking. Moreover, the EPA has
previously responded to those comments and legal briefs in the
appropriate venues.\13\ To the extent that comments addressed issues
relevant to this action, the EPA is responding to these comments in
this document.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See SSM SIP Action, 80 FR 33840, 33852 (noting that
``[s]tates have great discretion in how to devise SIP provisions,
but they do not have discretion to create provisions that contradict
fundamental legal requirements of the CAA'' and that ``[t]he
jurisdiction of federal courts to determine liability and to impose
statutory remedies for violations of SIP emission limitations is one
such fundamental requirement''); Initial Brief of Respondent EPA,
SSM SIP Action Litigation (filed July 26, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. The NRDC Case As It Applies Beyond Citizen-Suit Enforcement Under
CAA Section 304(a)
Comment: Many commenters argued that the NRDC decision only
invalidated affirmative defenses that could be asserted in citizen
suits brought under CAA section 304 in federal court. These commenters
asserted that the NRDC case does not require the EPA to remove
affirmative defenses with respect to either: (1) EPA-initiated civil
judicial enforcement actions under section 113(b); or (2)
administrative penalty actions brought under section 113(d). Many of
these commenters recommended that instead of entirely
[[Page 47034]]
removing the title V emergency affirmative defense provisions, the EPA
should amend the provisions to clarify that they do not apply to any
enforcement actions based on section 304, but only to actions based on
sections 113(b) and (d).
First, regarding EPA-initiated enforcement under section 113(b),
some commenters acknowledged the EPA's position (as explained in the
2016 proposed rule) that, because both sections 304 and 113(b) vest
federal district courts with the ability to determine liability and
assess penalties, the EPA's hands are tied with respect to its own
civil enforcement. One commenter noted that the NRDC case did not
directly speak to enforcement actions brought by the EPA under section
113(b). Other commenters claimed that section 113(b) does nothing to
impede the EPA's ability to define the circumstances under which it is
``appropriate'' to initiate an enforcement action, and that this would
not interfere with the authority of a court to determine liability and
assess penalties in an eventual enforcement action. Some commenters
suggested that the EPA could use the affirmative defense to define by
rule when it would be appropriate to commence an enforcement action,
and others noted that the practical effect of the defense is to define
when the EPA will exercise its enforcement discretion to initiate an
enforcement action in the courts.
Second, regarding the EPA's authority to assess administrative
penalties under section 113(d), commenters cited language from the NRDC
decision, wherein the D.C. Circuit noted that, although the EPA did not
have discretion to determine whether civil penalties should be imposed
by a court, the agency had discretion to determine whether to assess
administrative penalties under section 113(d).\14\ Various commenters
similarly alleged that because CAA section 113(d) explicitly gives the
EPA the authority to modify penalties, it therefore allows the EPA to
establish an affirmative defense in the context of administrative
enforcement. Some commenters claimed that retaining the title V
affirmative defense for administrative enforcement is especially
important because most penalties related to emission exceedances are
imposed through administrative penalties sought by the agency, not as a
result of citizen suits in federal court. Finally, some commenters
suggested that the EPA could define when it would be appropriate to
assess administrative penalties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See NRDC, 749 F.3d at 1063.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters also made similar arguments with respect to the ability
of states to determine when it would be appropriate to pursue
enforcement action, whether through the courts or with respect to
administrative penalties.
Response: The EPA disagrees with the claim that it would be
appropriate to retain the title V affirmative defense provisions for
use in EPA-initiated judicial enforcement or administrative penalty
actions. First, as explained previously and as acknowledged by
commenters, the logic of the NRDC case applies not only to citizen-suit
actions under section 304(a), but also to judicial enforcement actions
initiated by DOJ on behalf of the EPA pursuant to section 113(b). Like
section 304(a), section 113(b) involves enforcement actions that are
ultimately brought before federal courts. Therefore, any affirmative
defense that could be asserted in an enforcement proceeding brought
under section 113(b) would similarly infringe on the authority of
courts to determine appropriate penalties. Regarding suggestions that
the EPA could treat the affirmative defense as establishing criteria
defining whether the EPA considers it ``appropriate'' to commence an
enforcement action under section 113(b), the EPA finds that this is not
necessary or appropriate. For the reasons provided in section III.D.2.
of this document, the EPA has decided not to explicitly codify such an
``enforcement discretion'' type provision.
Second, the EPA acknowledges that NRDC does not address the EPA's
authority to establish an affirmative defense to CAA section 113(d)
administrative actions. However, such an affirmative defense is not
necessary. As discussed further in section III.D.2., if a source
believes it is unable to comply with emissions standards as a result of
an emergency, the EPA may use its case-by-case enforcement discretion
to determine whether to initiate enforcement, as appropriate. Further,
as the D.C. Circuit recognized, in an EPA or citizen enforcement
action, the court has the discretion to consider any defense raised and
determine whether penalties are appropriate.\15\ The same is true for
EPA administrative actions. Moreover, assessment of penalties for
violations in administrative proceedings and judicial proceedings
should generally be consistent. Cf. CAA section 113(e), 42 U.S.C.
7413(e) (requiring both the Administrator of the EPA and the court to
take specified criteria into account when assessing penalties). The EPA
has previously explained this approach in various rules developed under
CAA sections 111, 112, and 129.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See NRDC, 749 F.3d at 1064; see also U.S. Sugar, 830 F.3d
at 609. (``[Sources] can argue that penalties should not be assessed
because of an unavoidable malfunction'' and courts ``should not
hesitate to exercise their judicial authority to craft appropriate
civil remedies in the case of emissions exceedances caused by
unavoidable malfunctions.'').
\16\ See, e.g., National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants Residual Risk and Technology Review for Flexible
Polyurethane Foam Production; Final Rule, 79 FR 48073, 48082 n.3
(August 15, 2014); Oil and Natural Gas Sector: Reconsideration of
Additional Provisions of New Source Performance Standards; Final
Rule, 79 FR 79017, 79024 n.3 (December 31, 2014); National Emission
Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants: Polyvinyl Chloride and
Copolymers Production Reconsideration; Proposed Rule, 85 FR 71490
n.16 (November 9, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section IV.A.3. of this document discusses similar issues regarding
how states may be able to implement this rule by retaining or
developing similar provisions that apply in the limited context of
state-initiated administrative enforcement actions or judicial
enforcement in state courts.
B. Exemptions and the Sierra Club Decision
In the 2016 proposed rule, the EPA noted that the D.C. Circuit in
Sierra Club vacated an EPA rule that exempted sources from otherwise
applicable emissions standards during periods of SSM because the SSM
exemption violated the CAA requirement that such standards apply
continuously. The EPA stated that, although the title V emergency
affirmative defenses were not exemptions, if they were to be construed
or treated as exemptions, they would run afoul of Sierra Club and also
should be removed for that reason. The EPA received various comments
relating to these issues.
1. Comments Suggesting That the Title V Emergency Provisions Create an
Exemption to Emission Limits or Define Whether a Violation Has Occurred
Comment: Commenters presented differing perspectives on how the
title V emergency affirmative defense provisions function. The majority
of commenters addressing this topic supported the EPA's position that
the title V affirmative defense provisions, by their terms, clearly
function as an affirmative defense, rather than as exemptions or
provisions that define when a violation occurs. Commenters supporting
this perspective explained that applicable emission limits would still
apply during an emergency, and exceedances would still constitute a
[[Page 47035]]
violation, but sources could later assert the affirmative defense in an
effort to demonstrate to either the agency or a judge that, despite a
violation of the applicable requirement, there are valid reasons to
excuse the source from some or all penalties associated with the
violation. Another commenter noted the very strict conditions that a
source attempting to claim the affirmative defense for an emergency
would have to comply with and document in order to be eligible for the
affirmative defense. Similarly, commenters acknowledged that asserting
this defense would not automatically mean it was granted.
However, other commenters suggested that the affirmative defense
provisions functionally serve as exemptions to applicable emission
limits or define when a violation of an emission limit has occurred.
For example, one commenter claimed that the title V affirmative defense
provisions operate as an exemption, whereby no restriction or emission
limit would exist in specific emergency circumstances. One commenter
suggested that the affirmative defenses found in 40 CFR 70.6(g) are an
affirmative defense to liability rather than an affirmative defense for
the reduction of penalties, which the commenter claims was considered
in NRDC. Other commenters claimed that the title V affirmative defense
essentially provides criteria for the EPA, the state, or a court to
consider when deciding whether excess emissions trigger a violation in
the first instance, and these commenters attempted to distinguish the
title V affirmative defense from the section 112 affirmative defense at
issue in the NRDC decision. Environmental commenters stated that the
emergency provisions could be interpreted to mean that, when their
terms are met, a source did not violate the relevant emission
limitation, thereby effectively providing an exemption. Environmental
commenters also argued that this type of functional exemption would be
illegal.
Finally, one commenter suggested that the EPA convert the emergency
affirmative defense provisions into a narrowly tailored exemption from
technology-based standards. The commenter asserted that this approach
would be within the EPA's authority, and that an exemption would
provide more consistency than the use of enforcement discretion alone.
Response: The EPA agrees with the majority of commenters that
acknowledged that the title V emergency affirmative defense provisions
did not create exemptions or otherwise define whether a violation has
occurred, as stated in the proposal.\17\ The provisions being removed
through this action, found at 40 CFR 70.6(g)(2) and 71.6(g)(3) state,
in part, ``An emergency constitutes an affirmative defense to an action
brought for noncompliance with . . . technology-based emission
limitations.'' By their terms, these provisions explicitly purported to
establish an affirmative defense to an enforcement action, not an
exemption. Moreover, these provisions purported to establish an
affirmative defense to an action brought for noncompliance with certain
emission limits. So, before the defense would apply, alleged
noncompliance with an emissions limitation would have already occurred,
and an enforcement action (administrative or judicial) would have been
brought because of such noncompliance. The title V affirmative
defenses, like the affirmative defense provisions at issue in the NRDC
case, were thus based on the establishment of an alleged violation of
permitted emission limits in the first instance. Moreover, it would not
have been the burden of the party bringing an action for noncompliance
to negate any claimed emergency ``exemption'' to an otherwise
applicable emission limit. Rather, it would clearly have been the
source's burden in defending against such an action to properly assert
and prove all the elements of the emergency affirmative defense.\18\
The result of a successfully pled affirmative defense would be to
provide the decision maker in an enforcement case with reasons why,
despite violations of an emission limit, the source should not be held
liable and assessed penalties (or potentially other forms of relief)
for such noncompliance. Therefore, the EPA believes that the title V
emergency affirmative defense provisions were not intended and should
not be interpreted to function as an exemption or to otherwise define
when a violation has occurred.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See 81 FR 38645, 38651.
\18\ See 40 CFR 70.6(g)(4) (the ``permittee . . . has the burden
of proof'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To the extent that the affirmative defense provisions could have
been interpreted to provide an exemption or define whether a violation
has occurred, the EPA reiterates that such an exemption would be
impermissible under the EPA's interpretation of the CAA and in light of
Sierra Club. Some commenters suggested that the EPA should interpret
the affirmative defense to function as an affirmative defense to
liability or to define whether the emission limitation applies and thus
whether there is a ``violation.'' But, if there is no ``violation''
when certain criteria or conditions for an affirmative defense are met,
then there is, in effect, no emission limitation that applies when the
criteria or conditions are met, and the affirmative defense would
operate to create an exemption from the emission limitation. As
discussed in the following subsection, and based on the EPA's
interpretation of the Sierra Club decision, this would violate the
basic CAA principle that emission limitations must apply continuously
and cannot contain exemptions, conditional or otherwise. For the same
reasons, it is not appropriate to convert the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions into an exemption, as suggested by a
commenter.
2. Comments Interpreting the Sierra Club Case With Respect to
Exemptions From Emission Limitations
Comment: Commenters presented differing views on the EPA's
interpretation of Sierra Club. Environmental commenters supported the
EPA's conclusion that exemptions from emission limitations are
unlawful, and that, to the extent that the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions could be interpreted as providing for an
exemption, those provisions would be unlawful. Commenters noted that in
the Sierra Club case, the D.C. Circuit held that sections 112 and
302(k), read together, require that there must be continuous section
112-compliant standards. Commenters claimed that the statutory terms
``emission standard'' and ``emission limitation'' mean the same thing,
citing CAA section 302(k). Therefore, commenters asserted the court's
holding in Sierra Club also applies to the emission limitations
affected by the title V affirmative defenses. Environmental commenters
further asserted that the fundamental principles underlying the Sierra
Club decision with respect to exemptions were reinforced by the D.C.
Circuit's U.S. Sugar decision.
However, a number of industry commenters challenged the EPA's
interpretation of the Sierra Club case, arguing generally that the case
has limited applicability beyond the context of section 112 standards.
Some commenters asserted that Sierra Club is not relevant to the
current rulemaking because the case was anchored to the unique language
of CAA section 112 and only addressed exemptions under CAA section 112,
rather than regulations in operating permit programs, SIP requirements,
or New Source Performance Standards (NSPS) regulations. One commenter
argued that because the Sierra Club decision was
[[Page 47036]]
limited to section 112 standards, the decision could at most be read to
prohibit title V provisions excusing noncompliance with an underlying
NESHAP provision.
Other commenters asserted that requirements that limit emissions on
a continuous basis do not have to impose the same limitation at all
times, and that the form of the limitation does not always have to be
the same. For example, commenters noted that CAA section 302(k)
includes design, equipment, work practice, and operational standards,
which could apply during periods of operation not covered by a
numerical emissions limitation. These commenters claim that the Sierra
Club case did not approach the question of whether these different
types of standards would be acceptable. One commenter also asserted
that the emergency affirmative defense is not an exemption from
continuously applicable emission limits.
Response: As discussed in the preceding subsection, the title V
emergency affirmative defense provisions should not be interpreted to
provide an exemption to emission limits or otherwise define when a
violation of an emission limitation has occurred. However, as noted in
the proposal, to the extent that the title V provisions could be
interpreted as providing such an exemption, this would run afoul of the
CAA requirement that emission limitations be continuous. See CAA
section 302(k), 42 U.S.C. 7602(k). The EPA disagrees with commenters'
assertions that the Sierra Club court's reasoning does not apply beyond
section 112 standards. As the EPA has explained in depth in other
documents, the same logic prohibiting exemptions from NESHAP emission
limits applies to other emission limitations subject to the definition
of ``emission limitation'' within section 302(k), including emission
limits contained within a source's title V permit.\19\ Finally,
comments on whether it is appropriate to impose different types of
emission limitations during different modes of operation may be
relevant to standard-setting or other proceedings where such
limitations are established, but these comments are not material to
this rulemaking to remove the title V emergency affirmative defense
provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See, e.g., SSM SIP Action, 80 FR 33892 (``Since the 2008
D.C. Circuit decision in Sierra Club v. Johnson, however, it has
been clear that NSPS and NESHAP standards themselves cannot contain
such exemptions. The reasoning of the court was that exemptions for
SSM events are impermissible because they contradict the requirement
that emission limitations be `continuous' in accordance with the
definition of that term in section 302(k). Although the court
evaluated this issue in the context of EPA regulations under section
112, the EPA believes that this same logic extends to SIP provisions
under section 110, which similarly must contain emission limitations
as defined in the CAA. Section 110(a)(2)(A) requires states to have
emission limitations in their SIPs to meet other CAA requirements,
and any such emission limitations would similarly be subject to the
definition of that term in section 302(k).''); see also id. at
33862.
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C. Other Legal and Policy Considerations
This section addresses comments involving other legal and policy
considerations related to the EPA's removal of the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions.
1. Ongoing SSM SIP Action Litigation
Comment: Some state and industry commenters urged the EPA to delay
finalizing this action until the ongoing SSM SIP Action litigation
concludes. These commenters claimed that the EPA's rationale underlying
this title V action depends on the same core legal issues involving the
EPA's interpretation of the NRDC and Sierra Club cases, which the
commenters claimed is currently under judicial review in the SSM SIP
Action litigation. One commenter further asserted that an adverse
ruling in the SSM SIP Action litigation would be dispositive of the
issues involved here.
Response: The EPA disagrees with the commenters' suggestion to
delay this final action. The EPA has no reason to delay moving forward
with the removal of affirmative defense provisions from various CAA
program areas, including title V, solely because litigants have
challenged the SSM SIP Action. The EPA is confident of the strong legal
and policy bases for this current action, as well as prior actions in
the SSM SIP Action and numerous regulations promulgated under CAA
sections 111, 112, and 129 that also address affirmative defense
provisions. In fact, the EPA's interpretation of the CAA and its
application of relevant court decisions was upheld by the D.C.
Circuit.\20\ The EPA also disagrees with commenters' assertions that an
adverse decision with respect to the SSM SIP Action would necessarily
undermine the legal justification for this rule, because the SSM SIP
Action litigation could be decided on procedural or substantive grounds
that would not be determinative for this action. For example, the
ongoing SSM SIP Action litigation involves many issues that are
unrelated to this current rulemaking.\21\
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\20\ Specifically, the EPA's approach to addressing malfunction
emissions in section 112 rules for major boilers and area boilers
and section 111 and 129 rules for commercial and industrial solid
waste incinerators was upheld by the D.C. Circuit in U.S. Sugar.
\21\ For example, briefs filed in the SSM SIP Action litigation
allege, among other things, that the EPA failed to make the showing
required to issue a SIP call, which is a procedure specific to CAA
section 110. See Brief of Industry Petitioners, SSM SIP Action
Litigation (filed March 16, 2016).
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2. Consideration of Prior Case Law
Comment: Multiple state and industry commenters discussed court
decisions involving SSM issues and affirmative defenses predating the
NRDC cases. These commenters generally asserted that the EPA relied too
heavily on the NRDC case in justifying the current action, and that the
EPA failed to address the importance of prior case law and the
relationship between these prior cases and the NRDC case.
Many of these commenters cited to the Fifth Circuit's Luminant \22\
decision, where commenters asserted the court determined that
affirmative defense provisions do not interfere with a court's
jurisdiction to assess civil penalties or enforce the CAA, contrary to
the D.C. Circuit's decision in NRDC. One commenter, acknowledging the
differing outcomes of the Luminant and NRDC cases, asked the EPA to
discuss this dissonance and claimed that the EPA should have sought en
banc review of the NRDC decision before the full D.C. Circuit, or
alternatively sought review by the Supreme Court. Another commenter
suggested that the EPA should delay finalizing this rule because of the
confusion in the courts resulting from the differing NRDC and Luminant
decisions. Some commenters claimed that the Luminant case is more
directly relevant to the current action than the NRDC case. One
commenter asserted that the Luminant case would be controlling over the
NRDC case in states within the Fifth Circuit's jurisdiction, including
Texas. Some commenters noted that the NRDC case explicitly
distinguished its holding from that of Luminant and avoided confronting
the SIP issues discussed in Luminant. Similarly, some commenters cited
the Eleventh Circuit's Georgia Power \23\ case, which also involved
affirmative defense provisions contained within a SIP. Some commenters
also cited two cases where circuit courts upheld the EPA's ability to
use affirmative defense provisions in Federal Implementation Plans
(FIPs), including the Ninth Circuit's Montana Sulphur \24\ decision and
the Tenth Circuit's Arizona Public
[[Page 47037]]
Service \25\ case. Other commenters cited to prior cases decided in the
context of Clean Water Act regulations, including Marathon Oil \26\ and
Essex Chemical,\27\ and claimed that these cases support the creation
of mechanisms like affirmative defenses to account for the
unforeseeable and uncontrollable failure of even the best technology.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Luminant Generation Co. v. EPA, 714 F.3d 841 (5th Cir.
2013).
\23\ Sierra Club v. Georgia Power, 443 F.3d 1346, 1357 (11th
Cir. 2006).
\24\ Montana Sulphur & Chemical Co. v. EPA, 666 F.3d 1174 (9th
Cir. 2012).
\25\ Arizona Public Service v. EPA, 562 F.3d 1116 (10th Cir.
2009).
\26\ Marathon Oil Co. v. EPA, 564 F.2d 1253 (9th Cir. 1977).
\27\ Essex Chemical Corp. v. Ruckelshaus, 486 F.2d 427 (D.C.
Cir. 1973).
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Some commenters also addressed the D.C. Circuit's U.S. Sugar
decision. One commenter claimed generally that the case did not
undercut the EPA's basis for providing the title V emergency
affirmative defense. Other commenters, however, claimed that U.S. Sugar
reinforced the EPA's view that affirmative defense provisions that
constrain or interfere with a court's authority under CAA sections 113
and 304 are inimical to the Act.
Response: The EPA acknowledges that various circuit court cases
preceding the D.C. Circuit's NRDC decision, including the Fifth
Circuit's Luminant decision, upheld the agency's prior interpretation
of affirmative defense provisions in various contexts, including the
authority of the EPA to approve affirmative defense provisions
contained in SIPs and the authority of the EPA to create affirmative
defense provisions in FIPs. In these decisions, the courts deferred to
the EPA's prior interpretation of the CAA with respect to affirmative
defense provisions.\28\ While some courts found the EPA's former
interpretation permissible, those courts did not determine that the
EPA's former interpretation was the only or even the best permissible
interpretation. As previously noted, it is well within the EPA's legal
authority to now revise its interpretation to a different
interpretation of the CAA.\29\ Those prior decisions were based upon an
interpretation of the CAA that the agency no longer holds, and
therefore those prior decisions do not speak to the validity of the
EPA's current policy with respect to affirmative defenses. The EPA
further notes that the affirmative defense provisions at issue in the
other court decisions cited by the commenters, including affirmative
defenses in SIPs and FIPs, are not affected by this action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ For example, the Fifth Circuit in Luminant held that the
EPA's interpretation of the CAA at that time was a ``permissible
interpretation of section [113], warranting deference.'' 714 F.3d at
853.
\29\ FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. 502, 515
(2009); Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. State Farm Mutual Auto. Ins.
Co., 463 U.S. 29, 42 (1983).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In NRDC, however, the D.C. Circuit conclusively determined that the
EPA's former interpretation of the CAA concerning affirmative defenses
was not permissible with respect to section 112 standards promulgated
by the EPA. The NRDC court vacated the affirmative defense provisions
in that case, finding them without legal basis because they
contradicted fundamental requirements of the Act concerning the
authority of courts to decide whether to assess civil penalties in CAA
enforcement suits. Because the NRDC decision interprets CAA sections
113 and 304 and addresses the legal basis for affirmative defense
provisions, the EPA has reevaluated its interpretation of the CAA with
respect to affirmative defense provisions in title V programs as well.
Based on this reevaluation and the reasoning of the NRDC decision, the
EPA has determined that it is appropriate to remove the emergency
affirmative defense provisions in 40 CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g), and to
require removal of similar affirmative defense provisions from state
operating permit programs and individual operating permits, because
these provisions are not authorized by the CAA.
Finally, the EPA notes that the D.C. Circuit's U.S. Sugar decision
further reinforced the principles underlying the NRDC decision. In U.S.
Sugar, the D.C. Circuit, acknowledging that the EPA could not create an
exemption or affirmative defense provision, deferred to the EPA's
decision to rely on case-by-case enforcement discretion as the
mechanism to handle excess emissions during malfunctions.\30\ Arguments
suggesting that prior cases, including Marathon Oil and Essex Chemical,
require the EPA to provide affirmative defenses in such situations are
contrary to the U.S. Sugar decision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ U.S. Sugar, 830 F.3d at 607-09.
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3. EPA's Historical Policies Concerning Affirmative Defense Provisions
Comment: A number of commenters addressed the EPA's historical
policies concerning affirmative defenses,\31\ including the title V
emergency provisions and the policy considerations underlying this type
of mechanism to address emissions in unusual situations. Many
commenters discussed the EPA's initial decision to create the title V
affirmative defense in the 1992 part 70 rule and 1996 part 71 rule. One
commenter claimed that the EPA initially included the title V
provisions to do what was right, even if the EPA did not concede that
it was required. Commenters focused on the initial purpose of the
emergency provisions, asserting that the affirmative defense provisions
were a very limited, appropriate recognition that even properly
designed and maintained technology is not infallible and can fail due
to emergencies beyond the control of a source. Other commenters noted
the EPA's prior approach that acknowledged that enforcement and the
imposition of penalties might not be appropriate in certain situations
beyond the control of the source. Commenters asserted that the NRDC
decision does not undermine the policy reasons that initially informed
the promulgation of affirmative defense provisions, and that these same
policy reasons support the title V emergency affirmative defense
provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ Some commenters also discussed the EPA's historical policy
on exemptions prior to the Sierra Club case.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters also claimed that the title V emergency provisions are
consistent with decades of EPA policy, citing various rulemakings and
guidance documents. Commenters also stated that these types of
affirmative defense provisions were recognized by states long before
the 1990 CAA Amendments and the title V operating permits program, and
that the title V affirmative defense provisions have existed for over
25 years. Commenters also pointed to other EPA actions justifying
affirmative defenses, including FIPs for Montana and New Mexico, EPA's
briefs prepared for litigation in the Luminant case, and EPA's
withdrawal of Texas' SIP Call. Commenters also noted that affirmative
defense provisions are still contained in other regulations promulgated
by the EPA, including NSPS and NESHAP standards.
Some commenters addressed the EPA's legal authority to change its
policy on affirmative defenses. Commenters asserted that agencies are
only permitted to change their existing interpretations when they offer
a reasoned explanation for the change, citing various Supreme Court
cases including Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro \32\ and FCC v. Fox
Television Stations.\33\ These commenters alleged that the EPA's action
is arbitrary and capricious because the EPA has failed to provide an
adequate justification for the agency's revised policy with respect to
the title V affirmative defenses. However, other commenters
acknowledged that the EPA may change its interpretation so long as the
agency provides a reasoned explanation, and
[[Page 47038]]
agreed that the justifications provided by the EPA in the 2016 and 2022
proposed rules are sufficient.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ 136 S. Ct. 2117 (2016).
\33\ 556 U.S. 502 (2009).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, some commenters discussed the perceived inequity or
unfairness of the EPA's change in policy and removal of affirmative
defense provisions, based in part on the supposition that sources have
come to rely on these provisions. Specific comments addressing how the
removal of the title V affirmative defense provisions could impact
sources are discussed further in section III.D.2. of this document.
Response: The EPA acknowledges the underlying considerations
supporting the EPA's past policies--especially the agency's recognition
that even well-designed and appropriately operated equipment may
sometimes fail due to circumstances beyond the control of the source
(such as during emergencies) and that, in certain situations,
enforcement for violations of technology-based standards may not be
appropriate. This rule does not change that general recognition. As
discussed in section III.D.2. of this document, the EPA continues to
believe that enforcement may not be warranted under certain specific
circumstances, such as during an emergency, as determined on a case-by-
case basis by enforcement authorities. The EPA, states, citizens, and
the courts retain the discretion and authority to consider such
circumstances in evaluating how to respond to exceedances or
violations. However, an affirmative defense provision that interferes
with the authority of courts to assess penalties is no longer an
appropriate or legally sound mechanism to address these situations.
The EPA also acknowledges its past policies regarding different
mechanisms to account for excess emissions during periods of SSM and
emergencies. Based on these former policies, the EPA previously
established affirmative defense provisions in various other CAA program
areas, including within previously promulgated FIPs and various NSPS
and NESHAP regulations. However, since that time, decisions from the
D.C. Circuit, including Sierra Club and NRDC, have established
parameters under the CAA regarding legally permissible approaches for
addressing excess emissions during periods of SSM or emergency events.
In light of these decisions--particularly the 2014 NRDC decision--the
EPA has concluded that certain aspects of its prior interpretation of
the CAA were not legally permissible under the CAA. Thus, the EPA has
revised its interpretation of the CAA with respect to affirmative
defense provisions, and this revised interpretation provides the basis
for the current action (and similar actions in other CAA program
areas).
Following the 2016 proposal, the EPA continued to evaluate SSM
provisions, including affirmative defenses, in SIPs. In October 2020,
the EPA issued a guidance memorandum that, among other things,
expressly superseded a portion of the EPA's interpretation of
affirmative defenses presented in the 2015 SSM SIP Policy.\34\ However,
on September 30, 2021, the EPA issued a guidance memorandum that
withdrew the October 2020 memorandum in its entirety and reinstated the
legal and policy positions expressed in the 2015 SSM SIP Policy in
their entirety.\35\ Thus, the EPA's current interpretation of
affirmative defenses in the context of SIPs is the interpretation set
out in the 2015 SSM SIP Policy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ Memorandum, Inclusion of Provisions Governing Periods of
Startup, Shutdown, and Malfunctions in State Implementation Plans, 6
(October 9, 2020), available at https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/2021-09/2020-ssm-in-sipsguidance-memo.pdf. In 2020, EPA
also took action relating to an SSM-related affirmative defense in a
SIP for Texas, withdrawing a SSM ``SIP call'' in part because the
SIP-based affirmative defense was deemed to not be inconsistent with
the CAA. See 85 FR 7232 (February 7, 2020); see also 85 FR 23700
(April 28, 2020) (SIP call withdrawal relating to North Carolina)
and 85 FR 73218 (November 17, 2020) (SIP call withdrawal relating to
Iowa). Petitions for review of these withdrawal actions were filed
in the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. See
Sierra Club v. EPA, No. 20-1115.
\35\ September 2021 SSM SIP Memo, supra note 5. This memorandum
also announced an intent to revisit, among other things, the 2020
action withdrawing the SSM affirmative defense-related SIP call for
Texas. Id. at 5. On December 17, 2021, the United States Court of
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit granted the EPA's request for a
voluntary remand of that 2020 Texas SIP call withdrawal action, as
well as the similar SIP call withdrawal actions relating to North
Carolina and Iowa, in light of EPA's stated intent to reconsider
those actions. Sierra Club v. EPA, No. 20-1115.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The EPA's revised interpretation following the NRDC decision was,
and continues to be, well within the EPA's legal authority, and the EPA
has properly exercised its authority to revise its interpretation of
the CAA through the appropriate processes. The authority of an agency
to change its interpretation of a statute is well-established, provided
that it gives a reasoned explanation for the change.\36\ The EPA
disagrees with commenters that suggest that the EPA has not provided an
adequate rationale for this shift in policy, either generally with
respect to affirmative defenses or specifically with respect to the
title V emergency affirmative defense provisions. The EPA has clearly
articulated its revised interpretation of the CAA with respect to
affirmative defenses, here and in other documents, including the 2016
proposed rule (as referenced in the 2022 proposed rule), based on the
EPA's analysis of the NRDC decision.\37\ Commenters have not
substantiated their claim that the EPA's rationale is inadequate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ See, e.g., Encino Motorcars, 136 S. Ct. at 2125-26; FCC v.
Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. 502 (2009); see also Nat'l
Cable & Telecomms. Ass'n v. Brand X internet Servs., 545 U.S. 967,
981-82 (2005) (agency must adequately explain the reasons for a
reversal of policy).
\37\ The EPA has clearly explained its general shift in policy
with respect to affirmative defense provisions in other documents.
See, e.g., 81 FR 36849; SSM SIP Action Supplemental Proposal, 79 FR
55934; SSM SIP Action, 80 FR 33851.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Consistency With Other CAA Program Areas
Comment: A number of commenters acknowledged and addressed the
EPA's desire to ensure consistent agency policy with respect to
affirmative defense provisions across different CAA program areas.
However, some commenters asserted that consistency between the EPA's
title V regulations and other CAA programs is not a rationale for
taking this action. Other commenters disagreed that the title V
provisions should be removed for consistency with actions like the 2015
SSM SIP Action, arguing that the two actions are distinguishable.
Finally, some commenters claimed that removal of the title V
affirmative defense would actually undermine the goal of consistency
across CAA program areas, because title V permits incorporate emission
limits developed under numerous CAA regulatory authorities, and because
various NSPS, NESHAP, and SIP regulations currently still contain
affirmative defense provisions.
One commenter also suggested that the EPA could resolve any
inconsistency between the title V affirmative defense provisions and
underlying standards that do not allow an affirmative defense by
clarifying through an interpretive rule or rule revision that
nationwide standards outweigh affirmative defense provisions under
title V.
Response: The EPA is not removing the title V emergency affirmative
defense provisions solely for the sake of consistency. Rather, as
discussed in the proposal and in section III.A. of this document, these
provisions present legal issues substantially similar to those that
called for the removal of affirmative defense provisions from other
regulations. In addition to the legal considerations supporting the
current action, and as previously explained in the preamble to the 2016
proposed rule (as referenced in the 2022 proposal), the EPA believes
that it is important to apply, as much as
[[Page 47039]]
reasonably possible, the EPA's policy concerning affirmative defense
provisions consistently across CAA program areas. As previously
explained, the EPA has removed affirmative defense provisions from
numerous other CAA standards since the 2014 NRDC decision.\38\ Based on
the relationship between title V and these underlying standards, it is
particularly important to remove the affirmative defense provisions
from the title V program regulations. Title V permits include a wide
range of substantive CAA requirements that apply to a source, including
SIP provisions and standards developed under CAA sections 111, 112, and
129. Because the title V affirmative defense provisions applied
independent of these underlying standards, the title V emergency
affirmative defense might be asserted in civil actions or other
proceedings involving noncompliance with title V permit terms
reflecting standards from which the EPA has recently eliminated
affirmative defenses. In this way, the continued presence of the title
V affirmative defense provisions could effectively undermine the EPA's
efforts to remove affirmative defenses from the underlying standards,
as well as the efforts of states to revise SIPs to comply with the 2015
SSM SIP Action. The EPA acknowledges that not all affirmative defense
provisions in the EPA's regulations have been removed as of the date of
this rule. However, the fact that this is an ongoing process does not
provide a basis for retaining or delaying removal of the title V
affirmative defense provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ 87 FR 19042, 19044, n. 3 (citing recent EPA rulemakings
removing affirmative defense provisions).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, the EPA does not believe that it would be appropriate to
simply clarify in some manner--whether by revising the emergency
affirmative defense rules or issuing guidance--that the title V
affirmative defense would not apply where the underlying standards do
not allow or provide for an affirmative defense. Although this approach
could potentially reduce inconsistency between title V provisions and
the underlying standards from which affirmative defenses have been
removed, it would nonetheless fail to address the more fundamental
problem that the title V affirmative defense provisions are, in and of
themselves, inconsistent with the enforcement structure of the CAA and
thus legally impermissible.
5. Relationship to Other CAA Standards
Comment: Commenters raised a number of concerns involving the
relationship between the title V emergency affirmative defense and
other CAA standards, including section 112 NESHAP, section 111 NSPS,
and SIPs. Comments specifically relating to SIPs are discussed in the
following subsection.
Commenters claimed generally that the EPA has failed to consider
how the CAA requirements related to enforcement must be harmonized with
the CAA requirements relating to standard setting and permitting. One
commenter claimed that the title V affirmative defense provisions avoid
the need to address emergencies in each individual underlying standard,
which the commenter characterized as an impractical approach. Another
commenter asserted that the title V affirmative defense provisions have
effectively become part of the underlying applicable standards, and
other commenters suggested that the title V affirmative defense
provisions are necessary to ensure that underlying technology-based
standards are achievable and adequately demonstrated, taking into
account costs. These commenters asserted that removing the affirmative
defense would have the effect of making the underlying standards in a
permit more stringent than those authorized by the governing standards,
in that sources would be subject to a level of control technology that
is technologically and economically infeasible. Other commenters
suggested that if affirmative defenses are removed, either title V
permits or underlying standards would need to provide some other way to
account for malfunctions, such as through alternative emission
limitations, work practice standards, or malfunction abatement plans.
Some commenters also claimed that the overlap between the title V
emergency provisions and various malfunction provisions in NSPS and
NESHAP regulations could cause confusion. However, other commenters
recognized that the removal of the title V affirmative defense
provisions should not have any impact on independent malfunction or
emergency provisions contained in underlying technology-based
standards.
Lastly, several environmental commenters asserted that EPA must go
further and quickly remove ``SSM loopholes'' from other CAA programs,
including section 111 NSPS, section 112 NESHAP, and SIPs.
Response: Many of the comments relating to malfunction emissions
and the development of technology-based standards are either not
directly related to the current rule to remove the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions or reflect a misunderstanding about the
relationship between the title V affirmative defense provisions and
underlying standards included within operating permits. As an initial
matter, title V of the CAA does not generally impose new substantive
requirements on a source. Rather, title V permits provide a vehicle to
clarify in a single document the various CAA requirements applicable to
a source. Although title V permits must contain conditions (such as
monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting provisions) necessary to
assure compliance with all CAA requirements already applicable to a
source, title V of the CAA does not provide the basis for making
substantive changes to underlying applicable standards.\39\ Therefore,
title V permits are not an appropriate mechanism for addressing
commenters' concerns related to the development of, for example,
alternative emission limits, work practice standards, or malfunction
abatement plans. These considerations may be more relevant in the
context of developing specific SIP provisions or section 111, 112 or
129 standards.\40\
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\39\ 40 CFR 70.1(b) (requiring all title V sources to have a
permit to operate that ``assures compliance by the source with all
applicable requirements'' and stating that ``title V does not impose
substantive new requirements,'' although it does require imposition
of fees and certain compliance measures).
\40\ The D.C. Circuit's U.S. Sugar decision addressed arguments,
raised in the context of challenges to NESHAPs issued under CAA
section 112 that did not provide for an affirmative defense for
unavoidable malfunctions, that such malfunctions must be accounted
for either by an affirmative defense or by appropriate adjustments
in the standard-setting itself. The D.C. Circuit upheld the EPA's
decision to neither include an affirmative defense nor adjust the
underlying standard, as requested by Petitioners, to account for
malfunction periods. Instead, the court upheld the EPA's decision to
use enforcement discretion to address exceedances that occur during
malfunction periods.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, the underlying standards, not the title V affirmative
defense provisions, establish the appropriate level of emission
controls, accounting for technological, economic, and other
considerations, as appropriate. The title V emergency affirmative
defense provisions are not, as some commenters suggested, part of the
underlying applicable requirements themselves. The title V affirmative
defense provisions operated independently from the specific standards
and/or emission limits, as well as any emergency, malfunction, or upset
provisions contained within underlying applicable
[[Page 47040]]
requirements. Although the title V provisions provided for an
affirmative defense in emergencies, removal of the affirmative defenses
would not make underlying technology-based standards more stringent or
otherwise have any effect on standards applicable to a source. The
title V provisions merely provided an affirmative defense that a
source, after having allegedly violated a technology-based emission
limitation contained in its title V permit, could assert in an
enforcement proceeding brought for alleged violations of the title V
permit term reflecting the requirements of the underlying standard.
Because the title V affirmative defense did not provide an exemption to
any standard or define when a violation of a standard has occurred, a
source's compliance status with the underlying standard itself--as well
as the source's compliance status with the title V permit term--would
not be affected by the presence or absence of an affirmative defense.
Finally, comments discussing the purported need to provide for or
address excess emissions associated with malfunctions are immaterial
because this action addresses the title V affirmative defense
provisions for emergencies, which--although there may be some
similarities--are significantly different, and narrower, than
malfunction events. For further discussion, see section III.D.3. of
this document.
6. Relationship to the 2015 SSM SIP Action
Comment: Multiple commenters addressed the relationship between
this action and the 2015 SSM SIP Action. Some commenters asserted that
the EPA's current action is based on the 2015 SSM SIP Action, or
claimed that the two actions are related for various reasons. Other
commenters claimed that the 2015 SSM SIP Action is not at issue in this
rulemaking, disagreed with the EPA's statements that certain aspects of
the 2015 SSM SIP Action are especially relevant, and attempted to
distinguish the types of provisions at issue in the 2015 SSM SIP Action
from those at issue here.
Some commenters also specifically discussed the need for states to
develop SIP provisions that account for SSM situations (including work
practice standards) and claimed that states should not be prohibited
from including approved state SSM plans in title V permits. One
commenter suggested that removing the title V affirmative defense
provisions before SIP issues are resolved could prevent states from
incorporating all applicable requirements, including SIP requirements,
into title V permits, and another commenter asserted that this title V
rule should be withdrawn while states modify their rules to address the
2015 SSM SIP Action. On the other hand, other commenters suggested that
by promptly finalizing this title V rule, the EPA can better facilitate
the coordination of SSM SIP revisions with title V program revisions
and individual operating permit revisions.
Response: This current title V rule is related to the 2015 SSM SIP
Action to the extent that each rule is based at least in part on the
EPA's view that, in light of the NRDC decision, affirmative defense
provisions are contrary to the enforcement structure of the CAA.\41\
However, this title V action is not ``based on'' the 2015 SSM SIP
Action, and the two actions are functionally independent rulemakings,
each operating within distinct areas of the CAA's regulatory structure.
Therefore, and for the reasons discussed in the preceding subsection
discussing the relationship between title V and other CAA standards,
this current action involving the title V affirmative defense
provisions will not have any effect on states' ability to develop
appropriate SIP provisions in response to the 2015 SSM SIP Action, and
it will not affect states' ability to ensure that title V permits
appropriately reflect all requirements applicable to a source,
including revised SIP provisions. In fact, as some commenters
indicated, it may be convenient for states to coordinate implementation
of any title V permit changes related to the 2015 SSM SIP Action with
permit changes related to this rulemaking. Issues regarding
implementation of this rule are discussed further in section IV. of
this document.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ This legal rationale is not affected by any differences
between affirmative defense provisions implicated by the 2015 SSM
SIP Action and those implicated by this action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. Title V of the CAA
Comment: Some commenters noted that while title V of the CAA does
not establish or mandate affirmative defense provisions, neither does
title V of the CAA prohibit the EPA from establishing affirmative
defenses.
Response: The EPA acknowledges that title V of the CAA is silent
with respect to affirmative defense provisions; it neither provides for
such provisions nor explicitly prohibits them. However, the EPA
interprets other provisions of the CAA that apply to enforcement of the
title V operating permits program--including sections 113 and 304--to
effectively prohibit the creation of affirmative defense provisions, as
discussed in section III.A.1. of this document.
8. Constitutional Issues
Comment: Some commenters raised constitutional issues with the
removal of the title V emergency affirmative defense provisions.
Commenters argued that the imposition of penalties for any conduct that
is unavoidable violates basic constitutional protections guaranteed by
the Eighth Amendment and due process requirements. Commenters further
asserted that explicit affirmative defense provisions are necessary to
satisfy minimum constitutional standards, and that alternative
approaches, such as the exercise of enforcement discretion, are not
sufficient.
Response: The EPA disagrees with commenters with respect to these
constitutional arguments. The comments suggest that without the title V
affirmative defense, any penalty assessed for violation of a title V
permit term during an emergency would be per se ``excessive'' or
``arbitrary'' and that the existing CAA enforcement provisions would be
facially unconstitutional. The EPA disagrees. It should be reiterated,
first, that the title V emergency affirmative defense has never been a
required permit term and it has not universally been adopted by all
permitting authorities for all permits. Even where the defense may be
available, it is, by its own terms, very limited and narrowly
circumscribed. Commenters have provided no information indicating that
the defense has been asserted with any frequency or, indeed, at all. It
is difficult to see how the removal from the EPA's regulations of a
narrowly circumscribed, discretionary defense that apparently is
infrequently asserted could render the CAA unconstitutional.
Moreover, the CAA does not mandate that EPA automatically initiate
an enforcement action, let alone automatically assess a penalty, for a
violation of a CAA requirement. EPA has absolute discretion on whether
to initiate an enforcement action in any circumstance, including during
an emergency.\42\ If EPA chooses to initiate an enforcement action in a
circumstance involving a violation during an emergency, and chooses to
seek a penalty for that violation, the CAA establishes a maximum civil
penalty in
[[Page 47041]]
section 113(b) \43\ but then expressly provides in section 113(e) that
the EPA or the courts ``shall take into consideration various
criteria--including specifically, ``good faith efforts to comply,''
and, more generally, ``other factors as justice may require.'' Thus,
the CAA on its face does not mandate the imposition of any penalty
automatically, much less one that is per se excessive. The commenters
fail to provide any specific support for their claim that the statutory
penalty provisions of the CAA are facially unconstitutional, instead
making only generalized claims.
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\42\ Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U.S. 821 (1985) (holding that
decisions of agency not to undertake enforcement action are presumed
unreviewable).
\43\ The maximum statutory civil monetary penalty amounts are
adjusted annually for inflation in 40 CFR part 19.
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In addition, State Farm Mutual Auto Insurance Co. v. Campbell,\44\
a case cited by some commenters, provides no support for any claim that
removal of the title V affirmative defense would somehow be
unconstitutional. State Farm involved a claim that a jury award of $145
million in punitive damages was excessive and, accordingly, contrary to
the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution. Reaffirming that the Fourteenth Amendment ``prohibits the
imposition of grossly excessive or arbitrary punishments,'' the Supreme
Court held that, under the particular circumstances of the case, the
punitive damages award was excessive and ``an irrational and arbitrary
deprivation of property.'' \45\ Here, no penalties have been assessed
at all, and State Farm provides no support for the conclusion that--
absent the title V emergency affirmative defenses--the CAA's
authorization, in accordance with various identified criteria, of
possible penalties is necessarily unconstitutional.\46\
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\44\ 538 U.S. 408 (2003).
\45\ Id. at 429.
\46\ Additionally, State Farm involved a claim under the
Fourteenth Amendment, which imposes limitations on the states, not
the federal government. This discussion assumes, for the sake of
argument, that the principles expressed in State Farm would also
apply to claims under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
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The EPA also disagrees with the claims that--absent the title V
affirmative defenses--the penalty provisions of the CAA would be
facially contrary to the Eighth Amendment. Again, if a party believes
that the penalties assessed in a particular enforcement action violate
the Eighth Amendment, it can raise that claim at the appropriate time.
As with the commenters' due process arguments, Congress has addressed
the potential for unfair--or unconstitutional--penalties by setting out
various criteria to be considered in determining civil penalties. The
penalty criteria in section 113(e) provide an opportunity to raise
concerns about imposition of penalties in the event of an emergency
similar to that afforded by the title V affirmative defenses, albeit
directed at the courts' discretion. The commenters do not explain why
they believe these explicit statutory factors do not provide sufficient
protection against the imposition of an allegedly unconstitutionally
excessive penalty.
D. Potential Impacts
This section discusses various issues involving the effects of
removing the title V emergency affirmative defense provisions, focusing
primarily on the impact on sources. Overall, the EPA does not believe
that removing the emergency affirmative defense provisions will
substantially affect the legal rights of title V sources or the
decisions sources make when confronted with emergency situations. It is
also important to reiterate that the EPA is basing the current action
on its interpretation of the CAA in light of relevant caselaw
indicating that these affirmative defense provisions must be removed
because they are inconsistent with the enforcement structure of the
CAA.
1. Scope and Use of Title V Affirmative Defense Provisions
Comment: Multiple state and industry commenters acknowledged the
limited scope of the title V affirmative defense provisions, which
apply only to emergency situations. Commenters also addressed the
relationship between emergencies and malfunctions. While some
commenters provided examples of situations that would constitute an
emergency but not a malfunction, other commenters asserted that the
terms ``emergency'' and ``malfunction'' are closely related in that
they both relate to unexpected and unforeseen events.
A number of commenters further acknowledged the limited historical
and potential use of the title V emergency affirmative defense
provisions. However, commenters suggested that the rule could have
greater impacts than might be apparent.
Environmental commenters, on the other hand, characterized large
SSM exceedances as routine and claimed that large polluters have used
affirmative defense provisions in many citizen enforcement actions.
Additionally, these commenters asserted that excess emissions are often
the result of operator errors, poor plant design, and a lack of
preventive maintenance. Thus, commenters claimed that sources using SSM
affirmative defense provisions have lacked an incentive to make
investments in accident prevention. Finally, these commenters claimed
that emissions during SSM and emergency events can be controlled.
Response: The EPA agrees with commenters that emphasized the
limited scope of the title V emergency affirmative defense provisions.
Unlike more general affirmative defense provisions addressing excess
emissions during equipment malfunctions (which some commenters appear
to address), the title V provisions being removed were specific to
situations that qualify as an ``emergency,'' defined as ``any situation
arising from sudden and reasonably unforeseeable events beyond the
control of the source, including acts of God, which situation requires
immediate corrective action to restore normal operation, and that
causes the source to exceed a technology-based emission limitation
under the permit, due to unavoidable increases in emissions
attributable to the emergency.'' 40 CFR 70.6(g)(1). Thus, while the
title V emergency affirmative defenses, like affirmative defenses for
malfunctions, relate to events that are beyond the control of a source,
the title V defenses would only have been available in a more extreme,
limited set of circumstances. While it is possible for some overlap in
malfunction and emergency situations to exist (e.g., certain emergency
events could potentially cause equipment malfunctions), the EPA
believes that the majority of exceedances during malfunction events
would not be attributable to ``emergencies'' as defined in the title V
affirmative defense provisions. In addition, the title V affirmative
defense provisions being removed contain various procedural
requirements that must be met to assert the defense. See 40 CFR
70.6(g)(3). Moreover, as some commenters acknowledged and based on the
best information available to the EPA, the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions have rarely, if ever, been asserted in
enforcement proceedings. Comments contending that sources frequently or
routinely have asserted affirmative defenses appear to relate to SSM
affirmative defenses, rather than the narrower title V affirmative
defense for emergencies. It is unlikely that the criteria for the title
V emergency affirmative defense would have been met in such
circumstances, as the title V provisions could not be asserted for
(among other things) noncompliance caused by improperly designed
equipment, lack of preventative
[[Page 47042]]
maintenance, careless or improper operation, or operator error.
For these reasons, the EPA does not believe that the removal of the
narrowly drawn and apparently infrequently used title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions will have a significant impact on
sources. Further, as discussed in the following subsection, the EPA,
state authorities, and other entities likely would consider the
relevant circumstances--especially the relatively unusual, extreme, and
unavoidable circumstances that would have qualified under the narrow
definition of ``emergency''--in deciding whether to pursue enforcement
action or seek penalties, and sources remain free to argue to the
court, in the event of an enforcement action, that penalties should not
be assessed for these same reasons.
2. Alternatives to an Affirmative Defense: Discretion To Initiate
Enforcement and the Discretion of Decision Makers To Determine
Appropriate Remedies
Comment: Many commenters expressed concerns that removing the title
V emergency affirmative defense provisions would result in less
certainty or greater risk of liability to sources confronted with
emergency situations. One commenter asserted that even if the EPA is
not legally required to provide an affirmative defense in title V
permits, the EPA should, to the maximum extent consistent with law,
continue to provide and allow states to provide sources relief from the
threat of enforcement for exceedances caused by emergencies. Another
commenter claimed more generally that the EPA must find other ways to
assure sources that they will not be subject to penalties if they
operate to provide vital services in an emergency. Commenters generally
requested additional guidance from the EPA to provide more certainty to
sources in the absence of an explicitly codified affirmative defense.
Most commenters acknowledged the fact that even in the absence of
an affirmative defense, the EPA, state, and citizens all retain the
discretion to determine whether to bring an enforcement action, based
on the unique circumstances of each case. Thus, most commenters
acknowledged that not all exceedances of emission limits will
automatically result in enforcement actions. One commenter asserted
that the EPA routinely uses enforcement discretion to decide which
alleged violations to pursue, and that such decisions are often made on
the same principles codified in an affirmative defense. Other
commenters asserted that the EPA does not intend for true emergencies
to result in increased enforcement, and that the EPA's suggested
enforcement discretion approach avoids forcing every violation to
judicial resolution. Finally, one commenter asserted that the exercise
of enforcement discretion by state permitting authorities is
appropriate and consistent with CAA sections 113 and 304 and separation
of power principles.
However, a number of commenters challenged the sufficiency of
relying on enforcement discretion alone to handle excess emissions
caused by emergencies. Commenters noted that explicitly codified
affirmative defense provisions have the benefit of providing certainty
to permittees, promoting consistency to agency actions, and promoting
the creation and retention of records necessary to justify agency
actions. Commenters claimed that relying on enforcement discretion
alone would result in more uncertainty and jeopardy and less harmony
among different CAA programs, because enforcement discretion policies
may be unwritten and unavailable to the public. Other commenters noted,
citing the U.S. Sugar decision, that federal and state policies
regarding enforcement discretion do nothing to prevent citizens from
pursuing enforcement. Some commenters also asserted that an enforcement
discretion approach still leaves sources in the difficult position of
choosing between proper emergency response and compliance with emission
limits. Other commenters claimed that relying on enforcement discretion
puts all power in the hands of the EPA, without any checks and
balances, and asserted that this contradicts principles of cooperative
federalism and exceeds the authority intended in the passage of the
CAA.
Some commenters discussed how prior court decisions have treated
enforcement discretion. One commenter claimed that the D.C. Circuit in
U.S. Sugar acknowledged, but did not evaluate, the EPA's reliance on
enforcement discretion, and the commenter alleged that the court
appeared to have doubts that enforcement discretion alone is
sufficient. Another commenter claimed that the U.S. Sugar decision did
not validate the enforcement discretion approach beyond the context of
section 112 standards. Other commenters cited to the 1973 D.C. Circuit
opinion in Portland Cement Assn. v. Ruckelshaus \47\ in support of
their position that reliance on enforcement discretion is not a
sufficient response to addressing excess emissions from malfunctions,
and another commenter claimed that the 9th Circuit rejected the EPA's
use of enforcement discretion in the 1977 Marathon Oil \48\ Clean Water
Act case.
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\47\ 486 F.2d 375, 399 n.91 (D.C. Cir. 1973).
\48\ Marathon Oil Co v. EPA, 564 F.2d 1253, 1272-73 (9th Cir.
1977).
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Some commenters requested that the EPA provide additional guidance
to clarify the circumstances under which permitting authorities
(including the EPA) should exercise their discretion not to bring
enforcement actions. Many commenters encouraged the use of the criteria
contained in 40 CFR 70.6(g) in guiding permitting authorities' exercise
of enforcement discretion. Some commenters asserted that states should
be able to rely on those criteria when exercising their enforcement
discretion. Other commenters urged the EPA: to make clear that the EPA
would not expect to bring an enforcement action under circumstances
meeting those criteria; to make clear that the EPA would continue to
use its enforcement discretion in the case of emergency situations; and
to create a strong policy statement that the EPA does not support civil
penalties in situations meeting those criteria. Commenters, with one
quoting a passage from the EPA's brief in the U.S. Sugar case, urged
the EPA to more fully articulate certain standards for determining
whether the EPA would pursue enforcement in a given situation,
including consideration of the good faith efforts of a source to
minimize emissions, which types of preventative and corrective actions
would be considered, and the nature and extent of the root cause
analysis that should be employed by sources to ascertain and rectify
excess emissions. Another commenter claimed that it is appropriate for
permitting authorities to take into account circumstances involving how
a source mitigated damage to people and the environment in responding
to an emergency.
Relatedly, one commenter suggested that instead of removing the
affirmative defense provisions, the EPA should amend them to provide
that the affirmative defense may be allowed, if specified conditions
are met, at the discretion of the enforcement entity.
Commenters also acknowledged that even when an enforcement action
is commenced, the ultimate decision makers also have the discretion to
determine whether and to what extent penalties are appropriate in a
given situation. Environmental commenters asserted that both the EPA
and the NRDC court recognized that even
[[Page 47043]]
without an affirmative defense, sources are still free to argue to a
court that they should be subject to lesser (or no) civil penalties for
any number of reasons, including practical considerations or
emergencies. Another commenter noted that the D.C. Circuit in U.S.
Sugar confirmed that sources may still argue to a court that penalties
should not be assessed in a given situation, and that sources may
support these arguments with relevant facts, such as the source's
compliance history and good faith efforts to comply with emission
limits.
However, while some commenters acknowledged that the absence of an
affirmative defense would not automatically result in the imposition of
particular remedies, other commenters asserted that without an
affirmative defense, sources would lack a legal defense in enforcement
actions and would be liable for unforeseeable events outside of their
control. One commenter claimed that this would be unjust, and that
imposing an unjust system would foster disrespect for the law.
Finally, some commenters requested further guidance on how sources
could make similar defenses in enforcement proceedings. Commenters
requested that the EPA retain or narrow the definition of ``emergency''
in its regulations, as this definition could help guide a court's
review of circumstances that are unlikely to warrant punishment, and
could provide more certainty to sources.
Response: As discussed in detail in the 2016 proposal,\49\ the EPA
reiterates that the legal rights and obligations of individual sources
potentially subject to enforcement proceedings will not be
significantly affected by the removal of emergency affirmative defense
provisions from their title V permits. The absence of an affirmative
defense provision in a source's title V permit does not mean that all
exceedances of emission limitations in a title V permit, including
those resulting from an emergency, will automatically be subject to
enforcement or automatically be subject to imposition of penalties or
other remedies.
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\49\ See 81 FR 38653.
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First, any entity that may bring an action to enforce title V
permit provisions has enforcement discretion that they may exercise as
they deem appropriate in any given circumstance. For example, if the
excess emissions caused by an emergency occurred despite proper
operation of the facility, and despite the permittee taking all
reasonable steps to minimize such emissions, EPA or other relevant
entities may well decide that no enforcement action is warranted in a
specific case. In the event that an entity decides to bring an
enforcement action, it may, nonetheless, take into account the
emergency circumstances in deciding what remedies to seek.
The EPA appreciates that relying on enforcement discretion might
afford less certainty to sources than an affirmative defense provision.
However, as the EPA has explained, the latter approach is not legally
consistent with the enforcement structure of the CAA, which among other
things imposes a duty on the source to continually comply with emission
limits and standards. Moreover, the EPA believes the exercise of
enforcement discretion in lieu of a codified affirmative defense
provision is both appropriate and sufficient to carry out the mandates
established by Congress in the CAA in a fair and equitable fashion, a
position that the D.C. Circuit upheld in its U.S. Sugar decision.\50\
The EPA believes that it is unlikely that entities would initiate an
enforcement action for emissions exceedances resulting solely from a
true emergency situation that would have qualified under the narrow
definition and particular requirements of the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions. The EPA also generally agrees with
commenters that the conditions contained in the title V emergency
provisions, including but not limited to the nature of the emergency
event and the source's efforts to take all reasonable steps to minimize
emissions during an emergency, would likely be important considerations
to take into account when deciding whether to pursue enforcement, among
all other relevant factors. Enforcement discretion decisions
necessarily involve case-specific considerations, which should not be
confined to the specific conditions contained in the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions.\51\ Thus, the EPA will not, in the
course of this rulemaking, provide explicit criteria that the EPA,
states, or other entities should apply in determining whether to
commence an enforcement action. Nothing in this action precludes the
EPA from issuing such guidance in other appropriate proceedings or
formats if the agency should subsequently determine that to be
appropriate.
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\50\ In its U.S. Sugar decision, the D.C. Circuit upheld the
EPA's reliance on case-by-case enforcement discretion as a
permissible and reasonable substitute for affirmative defense
provisions in accounting for malfunctions within section 112
standards. U.S. Sugar, 830 F.3d at 607-09. The EPA believes that the
D.C. Circuit's statements in NRDC and U.S. Sugar are more reflective
of the court's current views concerning affirmative defenses and
enforcement discretion than the much earlier decisions cited by
commenters, including Portland Cement Assn. v. Ruckelshaus.
Arguments suggesting that prior cases, including Marathon Oil and
Essex Chemical, require the EPA to provide affirmative defenses in
such situations are contrary to the D.C. Circuit's holdings.
\51\ These considerations could potentially be much broader than
the title V emergency affirmative defense provisions, and encompass
situations where a source would never have been eligible for the
emergency affirmative defense.
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Second, even if an enforcement action is commenced for exceedances
caused by an emergency, the absence of an explicitly defined
affirmative defense provision does not affect a source's ability to
demonstrate to the court (or to the EPA in an administrative
enforcement action) that penalties or other kinds of relief are not
warranted. Under section 113(e), courts (and the EPA in an
administrative enforcement action) must consider various factors when
assessing monetary penalties, including the source's compliance
history, good faith efforts to comply for the duration of the
violation, and ``such other factors as justice may require.'' Thus,
with or without an explicit affirmative defense, a source retains the
ability to defend itself in an enforcement action and to oppose the
imposition of particular remedies or to seek the reduction or
elimination of monetary penalties, based on the specific facts and
circumstances of the emergency event. The D.C. Circuit has noted that
such justifications would be a ``good argument . . . to make to the
courts.'' \52\ Thus, overall, elimination of the title V emergency
affirmative defense provisions will not deprive sources of these
defenses in potential enforcement actions. Sources retain all of the
arguments they previously could have made. Congress vested the courts
with the authority to judge how best to weigh the evidence in an
enforcement action and to determine appropriate remedies. The EPA may
not, through the title V affirmative defenses, restrict a court's
ability to do so, and the EPA does not believe that it would be
appropriate, in this action, to provide guidance to the courts with
respect to what factors a court should or must consider.
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\52\ NRDC, 749 F.3d at 1064.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For similar reasons, the EPA does not believe it would be
appropriate or necessary to retain the definition of ``emergency'' or
any of the other provisions formerly contained in 40 CFR 70.6(g) and
71.6(g) that were associated with the title V affirmative defense.
These additional provisions, which were created solely for the purpose
of supporting the title V affirmative defense and ensuring that it was
narrowly tailored, no longer serve
[[Page 47044]]
a purpose in the EPA's part 70 and part 71 regulations. For example,
the EPA does not believe that retaining a standalone definition of
``emergency'' without any context or application would be helpful to
relevant entities determining whether to initiate enforcement or to the
courts or an agency determining the appropriate remedies.
As explained in section III.A., affirmative defense provisions by
their nature limit or eliminate the authority of federal courts to
determine liability or to impose remedies through considerations that
differ from the explicit grants of authority in section 113(b) and
section 113(e). Therefore, these provisions are not appropriate under
the CAA, no matter what type of event they apply to, what criteria they
contain, or what forms of remedy they purport to limit or eliminate.
Thus, it would not be appropriate to amend the title V affirmative
defense provisions to provide that the affirmative defense may be
allowed if specified conditions are met, at the discretion of the
enforcement entity.
3. Impacts on the Decision Making and Planning of Sources Confronted
With Emergency Situations
Comment: Industry commenters raised concerns involving how the
removal of the title V affirmative defense provisions will affect how
sources plan for and react to emergency situations. Many of these
comments asserted that without an affirmative defense provision in
their title V permits, sources confronted with an emergency situation
would be forced to decide whether to (1) comply with operating permit
requirements or (2) deal with the emergency situation in a manner
protective of human safety or other public interests, at the risk of
being held liable for violating permit terms. Specifically, some
commenters asserted that facilities faced with the threat of liability
may be less willing to shut down systems in an emergency, creating the
risk of more catastrophic accidents. Other commenters suggested that
sources might shut down earlier than would normally be the case, which
could result in resource shortages that could impede emergency response
efforts or area recovery. Commenters asserted that the affirmative
defense provisions serve the important purpose of allowing sources the
flexibility to continue or resume operations to provide vital services
in times of emergency.
One industry commenter, citing discussion in the EPA's 2014 SSM SIP
Action Supplemental Proposal, asserted that removing the affirmative
defense provisions could result in an additional resource burden for
sources, who could be forced to invest in facility improvements in
order to protect the source from emergency situations.
Other commenters asserted similar arguments specifically concerning
electric grid reliability, asserting that sources would have to weigh
compliance obligations against the need to continue generating
electricity to avert grid reliability problems. Some commenters
generally claimed, without describing specific instances, that the
title V emergency affirmative defense provisions, in addition to other
available mechanisms for relief from penalties, have helped ensure
reliable electric grid operation in emergency situations. Several
commenters provided specific examples of these situations.
Commenters presented differing views of whether the definition of
``emergency'' in the title V affirmative defense provisions would
encompass reliability or electric system emergencies. One commenter
asserted that the definition of ``emergency'' should cover an extreme
situation involving critical reliability concerns because the EPA has
recognized that CAA rules need to account for the unique interconnected
and interdependent operations of power plants. However, another
commenter acknowledged that the definition may not be broad enough to
cover this situation, but suggested that the EPA recognize that
enforcement may be unwarranted not only for unit-specific emergencies,
but also for situations where facilities are called upon to support
reliability in the context of a larger electric system emergency.
Some commenters claimed that certain electric system operators
cannot force a source to continue generating electricity in order to
ensure system reliability if doing so would cause the source to violate
an environmental requirement, such as a permit condition. Thus, these
commenters expressed concern that without the title V affirmative
defense--characterized by the commenters as an ``exemption''--electric
system operators would not be able to force a source to generate
electricity in order to ensure system reliability. Other commenters
discussed emergency generation orders issued by the Department of
Energy (DOE) under section 202(c) of the Federal Power Act (FPA), 16
U.S.C. 824a(c), by which the DOE may require power plant owners to
operate and generate electricity in certain emergency situations. While
some commenters expressed concern that a source could face the risk of
significant penalties for emissions exceedances resulting from
complying with such an order, other commenters discussed an amendment
to the FPA that excuses sources from compliance with environmental
regulations when necessary to comply with DOE emergency orders. One
commenter concluded that this FPA provision should be viewed as
complementary to, rather than a substitute for, the title V emergency
defense, and another asserted that this legislation indicates
congressional support for an emergency defense when electric system
reliability is at issue.
Commenters urged the EPA to consult with other agencies with
expertise in reliability. Commenters also suggested that the EPA direct
federal and state enforcement offices to engage in close consultation
with relevant grid operators or reliability authorities prior to
initiating enforcement actions where exceedances were caused by a
demonstrated reliability need. Commenters also proposed that system
operators should be able to submit a reliability analysis in the record
of any enforcement proceeding and suggested that courts should not
independently assess previously established reliability-related
determinations.
Response: The EPA does not believe that the removal of the title V
emergency affirmative defense provisions will significantly affect the
decision making of sources confronted with emergency situations.
Sources confronted with an emergency situation will always have to
assess the risk of liability involved with courses of action that would
result in exceedances of emission limits contained in title V permits
as well as the underlying standards. The EPA does not believe that
removing the title V affirmative defense provisions will affect this
risk assessment. First, the title V emergency provisions did not
provide guaranteed protection from liability. They simply created an
affirmative defense that a source, having allegedly violated a
technology-based emissions limit, could assert in narrowly defined
circumstances after an enforcement action was initiated. Moreover,
permittees seeking to assert the defense bore the burden of
establishing that a number of required conditions were met.
Second, the incentives that exist for sources to behave in a
prudent manner during emergencies remain largely unchanged, even
without an explicit affirmative defense. As discussed in section
III.D.2. of this document, sources can still argue all available
[[Page 47045]]
defenses to an alleged violation and/or assert that penalties should
not be imposed, based on the particular circumstances. The ability to
assert relevant considerations in this manner is not limited to the
particular conditions associated with the title V emergency affirmative
defense provisions. The EPA agrees that the need to avert catastrophic
accidents, or to avert an electric reliability crisis, or any number of
other public interest-related considerations, could be especially
relevant to the decision whether to pursue enforcement or impose
penalties. The EPA cannot, however, restrict or define--through the
operation of an affirmative defense or otherwise--the evidence or
considerations that a court may take into account when determining
whether penalties should be assessed in a given situation.
Additionally, the EPA does not believe that removing the title V
emergency affirmative defense provisions will have a significant effect
on how sources plan for emergencies or invest in facility improvements
in order to prepare for emergencies. The EPA notes that the comments
received on this point, and the EPA's statements in the 2014 SSM
Supplemental Proposal cited by commenters, are more relevant to
preparing for excess emissions from equipment malfunctions than to
preparing for emergencies. Moreover, as discussed previously, removing
the affirmative defense provisions should not change the incentives
that sources have to prepare for emergencies. Prudent behavior with
respect to planning for emergency situations and minimizing emissions
during an emergency to the maximum extent possible would be just as
advantageous to a source seeking to reduce the possibility that
enforcement will be initiated (or seeking to establish that penalties
are not appropriate) as it would be to a source attempting to meet the
criteria of a codified affirmative defense provision. The EPA believes
that such prudent behavior is a matter of good business practice that
most, if not all, sources would normally pursue irrespective of an
affirmative defense.\53\
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\53\ Additionally, as discussed in section III.D.3., the title V
emergency affirmative defense provisions have rarely, if ever, been
asserted in enforcement proceedings. Thus, the EPA does not believe
that the removal of the narrowly drawn and apparently infrequently
used title V emergency affirmative defense provisions will have a
significant impact on sources.
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Regarding specific comments concerning electric grid reliability,
the EPA does not believe that the current action will have a measurable
impact on electric grid reliability, and the EPA does not believe that
it is necessary to consult with other agencies with expertise in
reliability with respect to the limited actions being taken in this
rule. As an initial matter, even if the EPA were to retain the existing
title V emergency affirmative defense, the availability of that defense
in different types of situations involving issues of grid reliability
is uncertain. The EPA generally agrees with the commenters suggesting
that most electric grid reliability situations would not have qualified
as emergencies eligible for the title V affirmative defense, based on
the narrow definition of ``emergency'' in the title V regulations being
removed through this action.\54\ However, again, nothing would prevent
the consideration of reliability-related circumstances in determining
whether to initiate enforcement or in deciding whether penalties are
appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ Again, the title V emergency provisions were only available
for ``sudden and reasonably unforeseeable events beyond the control
of the source'' requiring ``immediate corrective action to restore
normal operation, and that causes the source to exceed a technology-
based emission limitation under the permit, due to unavoidable
increases in emissions attributable to the emergency.'' 40 CFR
70.6(g)(1). This definition of ``emergency'' generally contemplated
emergencies directly affecting the operations of a single source. In
contrast, the need for one source to continue operating in response
to reliability concerns would generally not involve any sort of
emergency at that particular source, but rather would likely be
motivated by circumstances occurring at a different source. For
example, one source might be required to generate electricity to
make up for power that another source was unable to generate due to
an emergency at the other source.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, contrary to the assertion of commenters, the removal
of the affirmative defense provisions should not affect the ability of
electric grid operators to request that sources generate electricity in
order to avert grid reliability problems. Some of these comments were
based on the mistaken premise that the title V affirmative defense
provisions functioned as an exemption to emission limits.\55\ Moreover,
as other commenters note, Congress has provided various forms of relief
in these situations, including the amendment to FPA section 202(c)
(exempting sources from compliance with environmental regulations when
necessary to comply with a DOE emergency order), as well as provisions
such as CAA section 110(f) (authorizing state governors to temporarily
suspend certain requirements where the President determines a national
or regional energy emergency exists). The EPA cannot here provide any
further guarantees in this regard in the form of an affirmative
defense, exemption, or other mechanism that would run contrary to the
CAA.
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\55\ A source faced with demands to continue generating
electricity would always have to decide whether doing so could cause
it to exceed emission limits in its title V operating permit; the
presence or absence of an affirmative defense that could later be
asserted in an enforcement proceeding does not change this fact. For
further discussion, see section III.B.1. of this document.
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4. Perceived Benefits of the Requirements Associated With the Title V
Affirmative Defense Provisions
Comment: Some commenters discussed perceived benefits of retaining
affirmative defense provisions as written, in addition to the increased
certainty and consistency that commenters believe the provisions
provided. One commenter claimed that the various demonstration and
reporting requirements in the title V emergency affirmative defense
provisions serve as incentives for sources to prevent and minimize
excess emissions during emergencies, an incentive that the commenter
claimed would be lost if the affirmative defense was removed.
Response: The components of the title V emergency affirmative
defense involving recordkeeping and reporting requirements and the
obligation for a source to properly operate its facility and take all
reasonable steps to minimize excess emissions (40 CFR 70.6(g)(3) and
71.6(g)(3)) were important to limit the scope of the defense and any
potential for abuse. However, the EPA does not agree that removing the
affirmative defense will eliminate the incentives for sources to
appropriately prepare for and respond to emergency situations, to
minimize excess emissions, to maintain proper records of such events,
or to notify relevant authorities in a timely manner. Because the CAA
requires continuous compliance with applicable emission limitations and
emission standards, sources should properly operate and take steps to
minimize excess emissions at all times. Sources still have an incentive
to do all of these things in the event of an emergency, because doing
so would continue to be in their best interests both for compliance
purposes and for purposes of defending against an enforcement action.
Again, the EPA believes that such prudent behavior is a matter of good
business practice that most, if not all, sources would normally pursue
irrespective of an affirmative defense.
5. Environmental and Public Health Impacts
Comment: A number of commenters discussed the potential air quality
and public health impacts of removing the title V affirmative defense
provision. Industry commenters asserted that
[[Page 47046]]
removing the affirmative defense provisions would not reduce emissions
or provide any air quality benefits. Moreover, industry and state
commenters claimed that the EPA has not made any demonstration that
emissions during emergencies endanger public health or safety or have
resulted in problems with attainment of the NAAQS. One commenter
claimed that EPA action to remove the title V affirmative defense
provisions would be arbitrary and capricious because the action would
impose regulatory burdens without any significant benefit, and because
the EPA failed to consider the costs and benefits of its proposed
action.
On the other hand, environmental commenters claimed that
affirmative defense provisions impermissibly allow large facilities to
emit massive amounts of pollution in violation of applicable emission
limits without consequence. These commenters provided extensive
discussion of the health impacts of different pollutants and cited to
numerical data and case studies involving the emissions of a number of
large industrial facilities. The commenters asserted that this is an
environmental justice issue, as these emissions impact surrounding
communities, which the commenters claimed are often low-income
communities or communities of color. Environmental commenters asserted
that the impacts of climate change may increase the incidence of
malfunctions due to extreme weather events.
Response: As previously explained, the EPA is removing the
affirmative defense provisions from the title V program regulations
because these provisions are inconsistent with the EPA's interpretation
of the enforcement structure of the CAA. The EPA is not basing this
current action on potential air quality benefits, or a weighing of
costs and benefits, associated with the removal of these provisions.
While the EPA acknowledges that there are benefits to reducing
emissions, including reducing impacts to communities with environmental
justice concerns, as previously explained, the purpose of this
rulemaking is to eliminate the affirmative defense provisions that EPA
finds to be inconsistent with the enforcement structure of the Clean
Air Act. This action also does not take into account the impact of
climate change on the incidence of malfunctions and, as previously
explained, emergencies, which--although there may be some
similarities--are significantly different, and narrower, than
malfunction events.
E. Response to Comments Outside the Scope of This Action
Comment: Several industry commenters requested that EPA should
consider removing hospital, medical, and infectious waste incinerators
(HMIWI) as a title V source category or consider reducing program
requirements applicable to HMIWIs. Separately, one commenter expressed
disagreement with the EPA's return to its 2015 SSM SIP Policy.
Response: These comments are not relevant to the current rulemaking
action and are outside the scope of this final rule.
IV. Implementation Considerations
This section provides guidance and addresses comments on various
aspects related to implementing this final rule. First, as indicated in
the 2016 and 2022 proposed rules, as a result of the EPA's removal of
40 CFR 70.6(g), state, local and tribal permitting authorities \56\
whose part 70 programs contain impermissible affirmative defense
provisions \57\ must submit program revisions to the EPA to remove such
impermissible provisions from their EPA-approved part 70 programs. The
part 70 program revision process should follow the procedures in 40 CFR
70.4(a) and (i), as specified in the guidance provided in the following
subsections. In summary, the EPA expects that states with part 70
programs containing impermissible affirmative defense provisions will
submit to the EPA either a program revision, or a request for an
extension of time, within 12 months of the effective date of this final
rule--i.e., by August 21, 2024. Other considerations associated with
program revisions are discussed further in section IV.A. of this
document.
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\56\ As noted previously, the term ``state'' is used generically
throughout this section to refer to all state, local, U.S.
territorial, and tribal permitting authorities that administer EPA-
approved part 70 (title V) programs. See 40 CFR 70.2 and 71.2.
\57\ As specified further in section IV.A.1. of this document,
the term ``impermissible affirmative defense provisions'' is
intended to refer to all affirmative defense provisions that, for
the same reasons necessitating the EPA's removal of CFR 70.6(g) and
71.6(g), are inconsistent with the enforcement structure of the CAA.
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States must also remove title V-based affirmative defense
provisions contained in individual operating permits. The EPA
encourages states to remove these provisions at their earliest
convenience. The EPA expects that any necessary permit changes should
occur in the ordinary course of business as states process periodic
permit renewals or other unrelated permit modifications. At the latest,
states must remove affirmative defense provisions from individual
permits during the next permit revision or periodic permit renewal for
the source that occurs following either (1) the effective date of this
rule (for permit terms based on 40 CFR 70.6(g) or 71.6(g)) or (2) the
EPA's approval of state program revisions (for permit terms based on an
affirmative defense provision in an EPA-approved title V program).
Additional considerations associated with permit revisions are
discussed further in section IV.B. of this document.
A. Program Revisions
This section clarifies the EPA's expectations for how the final
action to remove 40 CFR 70.6(g) will affect state programs and responds
to comments involving these considerations. Specifically, this section
describes the actions that some states will need to take in order to
submit program revisions to remove impermissible affirmative defense
provisions.
1. Necessity for State Program Revisions
As indicated in the 2016 and 2022 proposed rules, as a result of
the removal of 40 CFR 70.6(g), the EPA has determined that it is
necessary for states whose part 70 programs contain impermissible
affirmative defense provisions to submit program revisions to the EPA
to remove such provisions from their EPA-approved part 70 programs.\58\
This determination is based on the EPA's interpretation of the
enforcement structure of the CAA, as informed by the NRDC decision. The
EPA's rationale concerning affirmative defenses, presented in section
III.A. of this document, applies equally to affirmative defense
provisions within state part 70 operating permit programs, which the
EPA now considers to be impermissible. The term ``impermissible
affirmative defense provisions'' as used throughout this section is
intended to refer to all affirmative defense provisions that, for the
same reasons necessitating the EPA's removal of CFR 70.6(g) and
71.6(g), are inconsistent with the CAA. This includes, but is not
limited to, any provisions within EPA-approved part 70 programs that
are similar to, based on, or function in similar ways to the provisions
being removed from 40 CFR 70.6(g). For example, any title V provisions
that establish an affirmative defense that could be asserted in a civil
enforcement
[[Page 47047]]
action involving alleged noncompliance with any federally-enforceable
standards would be inconsistent with the enforcement structure of the
CAA. Such provisions are impermissible regardless of whether the
affirmative defense provisions are specific to emergency situations,
and regardless of other criteria contained within such provisions. Any
provisions in an EPA-approved part 70 program that establish an
exemption to emission limitations as described in this document will
similarly need to be removed. This action will not have any direct
effect on affirmative defense provisions established under other CAA
programs, such as the SIP or section 111, 112, or 129 programs.
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\58\ To the extent that this document refers to the need to
remove affirmative defense provisions from part 70 programs, the EPA
is referring to the need for states to submit program revisions to
the EPA to remove such provisions from states' EPA-approved part 70
(title V) operating permit programs.
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2. EPA's Authority To Require State Program Revisions
Comment: Multiple commenters objected to the EPA's indication that,
if the EPA finalized the removal of 70.6(g), it may be necessary for
states with similar affirmative defense provisions to remove those
provisions and submit program revisions.
A number of commenters discussed the legal authority by which the
EPA could require state program revisions. Environmental commenters
suggested that CAA section 502(b), read together with sections 502(d)
and (i) and with 40 CFR 70.4, plainly authorizes the EPA to revise the
minimum elements of operating permit program regulations when the
Administrator determines that revisions are necessary to meet the
requirements of the CAA. Other commenters argued that the EPA has no
legal basis for imposing its policy preference on states, and some
industry commenters claimed that nothing in the CAA authorizes the EPA
to withdraw its final approval of a state title V permit program
because the EPA prefers a particular improvement to what was already
approved, claiming that this would be contrary to Congressional intent
and the purpose of title V. One state commenter similarly claimed that
requiring program revisions would fundamentally shift the careful
balance between the state and the federal governments' regulatory
partnership. Some commenters also claimed that requiring states to make
title V program changes would constitute a challenge to the legality of
state programs and would require a finding that there is no situation
where the state program provisions can be applied in a way that is
consistent with the Act. One commenter characterized state program
revisions as an unfunded mandate, which the commenter asserted should
not be imposed on states without a clear and compelling need. One
commenter claimed that the EPA has impermissibly extended its
interpretation of the NRDC case to state operating permit programs.
State commenters discussed the authority of states to tailor the
details of their own title V program regulations and potential limits
on the EPA's authority to dictate the fine particulars of state
programs. One state commenter claimed that by removing the title V
emergency affirmative defense provisions, the EPA would substantially
raise the minimum elements required by the Act for state operating
permit programs, citing 40 CFR 70.1(a). Other state commenters claimed
that under title V, similar to CAA section 110 for SIPs, after the EPA
sets minimum program requirements, states must meet these minimum
requirements but have the authority and discretion to otherwise tailor
their program to their specific state requirements, such as by
providing for affirmative defenses. State commenters further asserted
that the EPA's implementing regulations do not require a state's
enforcement program to be set out in any particular manner, while
acknowledging that states must have adequate authority to carry out all
aspects of the program and submit a description of their enforcement
program to the EPA, citing 40 CFR 70.4(b)(3) and (5). One state
commenter noted that an acceptable enforcement program should include
the ability to account for emissions during distinct periods of
operation, including SSM.
Both state and industry commenters also highlighted the fact that
the title V emergency provisions have always been discretionary, not
required, elements of state programs. One commenter argued that because
the affirmative defense provisions were initially discretionary, it
should now be up to states to decide whether to retain them. The
commenter claimed that this is a logical extension of a state's
constitutional authority and that the EPA should not disturb state
authorities by disapproving existing state permit programs that contain
these provisions.
Response: The EPA agrees with those commenters who asserted that
the CAA authorizes the EPA to revise its part 70 implementing
regulations when necessary to conform to the CAA, including provisions
of the CAA that apply to the enforcement of title V permit
requirements. As the CAA and the EPA's implementing regulations are
periodically updated to address evolving legal, policy, technical, and
scientific information, so must state operating programs be updated.
State part 70 program revisions, while infrequent, are a natural and
necessary part of a complex regulatory program, and this process is
entirely consistent with the principles of cooperative federalism
established in title V of the CAA. As various commenters acknowledged,
the EPA has the authority to establish the minimum elements for state
title V programs. See CAA section 502. The EPA's part 70 regulations
implement this authority. When the EPA must remove an element from its
implementing regulations in order to maintain consistency with CAA
requirements, it follows that it would also generally be necessary to
revise EPA-approved state part 70 programs to meet the same minimum
legal requirements required by the CAA. The EPA acknowledges that
states may establish additional permitting requirements, but only to
the extent they are not inconsistent with the CAA. See CAA section
506(a). States do not have discretion to implement provisions that are
inconsistent with the enforcement structure of the CAA or the EPA's
part 70 regulations.
As some commenters acknowledged, the EPA's existing part 70
implementing regulations clearly establish a framework by which state
part 70 programs may need to occasionally be revised, including when
the part 70 regulations are revised or modified. See, e.g., 40 CFR
70.4(a) (if part 70 is revised and the Administrator determines that
changes to approved state programs are necessary, states must submit
program revisions); 70.4(i) (program revisions may be necessary when
relevant federal or state statutes or regulations are modified). The
EPA has the authority to approve or disapprove program revisions based
on the requirements of the part 70 regulations and the CAA. See 40 CFR
70.4(i)(1), (2). Thus, the EPA has authority to require state title V
program revisions.
To be clear, the final action being taken in this rule is the
removal of the affirmative defense provisions from the EPA's
regulations at 40 CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g). As a consequence of this
regulatory action, it will be necessary for states with part 70
programs containing impermissible affirmative defense provisions to
make conforming revisions to their part 70 programs. However, contrary
to the assertions of some commenters, the EPA is not, at this time,
disapproving or making any finding of deficiency or inadequacy with
respect to any particular state program (such as a finding under 40 CFR
70.10), although this type of determination may be appropriate at a
later time. This document clarifies the EPA's expectations for how the
program revision process will unfold, based on
[[Page 47048]]
the EPA's existing implementing regulations and the EPA's longstanding
experience in overseeing title V operating permit programs. The EPA
intends that this guidance will be useful to permitting authorities and
permit holders interested in understanding how removal of the
affirmative defense provisions from the EPA's regulations will affect
their programs and individual permits, respectively.
The EPA also reiterates, as multiple commenters acknowledged, that
the title V affirmative defense provisions have always been
discretionary elements of state permitting programs, and the EPA has
never required states to adopt these provisions. In fact, a number of
state part 70 programs do not appear to contain any such title V
affirmative defense provisions. However, contrary to one commenter's
assertion, the fact that these provisions were never required elements
of state programs does not mean that they now must be deemed
appropriate program elements or that states must be allowed to continue
implementing them.
Finally, as explained in section V.D. below, this action does not
contain an unfunded mandate of $100 million or more as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments. The action imposes no new enforceable duty on any
state, local or tribal governments or the private sector. As a result
of this rule, some states with EPA-approved part 70 programs that
contain impermissible affirmative defense provisions will be required
to submit program revisions to the EPA, according to the framework
established by the EPA's existing regulations. To the extent that such
affected states allow local air districts or planning organizations to
implement portions of the state's obligation under the CAA, the
regulatory requirements of this action do not significantly or uniquely
affect small governments because those governments have already
undertaken the obligation to comply with the CAA.
3. Scope of Necessary Program Revisions
Comment: Commenters addressed various aspects of the scope of state
program revisions that would be necessary following the removal of 40
CFR 70.6(g). First, some commenters claimed that part 70 program
regulations that incorporate by reference 40 CFR 70.6(g) or any state
affirmative defense provisions effectively function the same as
regulations that expressly include an affirmative defense. Commenters
claimed that if these provisions were not removed from state programs,
they would create ambiguity and would undermine CAA enforcement.
Therefore, these commenters asserted that part 70 program regulations
that incorporate by reference any other affirmative defense provisions
must also be removed from state programs.
Next, multiple commenters expressed support for the view that
states may retain affirmative defense provisions that could be used for
alleged noncompliance with permit requirements arising solely from
state law. Some commenters asserted that the EPA has no authority to
limit the ability of states to provide this type of state-only
affirmative defense provision. Another commenter suggested that state-
only affirmative defense provisions should be available not only for
enforcement actions brought by state agencies, but also for enforcement
actions brought by citizens or the EPA. However, other commenters
indicated concern that sources could attempt to invoke state-only
affirmative defense provisions in enforcement proceedings involving
noncompliance with federal requirements, thereby undermining the
enforcement of the CAA. These commenters suggested that the EPA provide
guidance to clarify that if a state wishes to retain an affirmative
defense for noncompliance with state-only requirements, the state must
also include clarifying language in their regulations expressly
limiting the applicability of such remaining affirmative defense
provisions. Commenters also suggested that states identify these state-
only program provisions in their title V program revisions.
Additionally, some commenters asserted that states should be able
to circumscribe their own authority to enforce even federally
enforceable requirements. Commenters suggested that states should be
able to provide an affirmative defense to state-initiated enforcement
(such as for administrative penalty proceedings) or otherwise restrict
their ability to enforce alleged violations of federally-enforceable
applicable requirements.
Finally, some commenters disagreed with the EPA's suggestion that
states may retain portions of the emergency provisions, such as the
definition of ``emergency'' or certain reporting requirements, for
purposes of supporting other regulations that do not involve an
affirmative defense. The commenters expressed concern that the presence
of a definition of ``emergency'' or other recordkeeping, reporting, or
work practice requirements could be interpreted as providing for an
affirmative defense or otherwise excusing a source from compliance
during these periods. However, these commenters also asserted that the
EPA should encourage more readily accessible information about excess
emission events, in order to better inform surrounding communities of
air quality issues.
Response: As previously noted, all impermissible affirmative
defense provisions, as specified in section IV.A.1. of this document,
will need to be removed from EPA-approved part 70 programs. To
reiterate, this encompasses provisions that are similar to, based on,
or function in similar ways to the provisions in 40 CFR 70.6(g) that
the EPA is removing in this action, including all provisions that
effectively establish an affirmative defense that could be asserted in
an enforcement action involving alleged noncompliance with any
federally-enforceable standards. In light of comments received, the EPA
is also providing clarification on various other topics related to the
scope of necessary program revisions.
Regarding state part 70 provisions that incorporate other
affirmative defense provisions by reference, as a general matter, the
EPA agrees with commenters' assertions that incorporating a provision
by reference may have the same legal effect as explicitly including the
provision within a regulation. Thus, where a state part 70 program
incorporates by reference another independently applicable affirmative
defense that suffers the same infirmities as those provisions being
removed from 40 CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g), the state provision
incorporating the affirmative defense provision would generally need to
be removed.\59\
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\59\ It may be possible that some state programs could
incorporate 40 CFR 70.6(g) (or a similar state provision) by
reference in such a manner as to leave it free from doubt that the
incorporating provision would have no legal effect following the
removal of 40 CFR 70.6(g) from the EPA's regulations (or following
the removal of the state affirmative defense). However, the EPA
believes that removal of the incorporating provision would
nonetheless be the best practice to avoid the potential for
confusion.
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Concerning the comments supporting the option for states to retain
an affirmative defense as a ``state-only'' provision--which would apply
solely to rights and responsibilities created by state law and would
not apply to, interfere with, or otherwise affect any requirements or
remedies under the CAA or federally-enforceable regulations--the EPA
agrees that states have the discretion to develop such state-only
provisions, as allowed under
[[Page 47049]]
state law. However, any such provisions would only be available in
enforcement actions brought solely under state law, and they would not
be available in enforcement actions brought for alleged violations of
any federally-enforceable requirements in a source's title V permit.
This rulemaking would have no effect on, and does not preclude states
from retaining or creating, such regulations unrelated to the state's
EPA-approved part 70 program. State-only affirmative defense provisions
that are included within individual operating permits would need to be
clearly labeled to indicate their limited applicability. 40 CFR
70.6(b)(2).
However, notwithstanding the ability of states to create state-only
affirmative defense provisions within their state regulations, any
impermissible affirmative defense provisions contained within any EPA-
approved part 70 programs will nonetheless need to be removed from the
state's EPA-approved part 70 program. In such instances, the state
would need to transmit to the EPA a program revision submittal to
remove the affirmative defense provision from the body of regulations
that comprise the state's official EPA-approved part 70 program. The
EPA believes that the best practice for states would be to conduct a
rulemaking to remove the affirmative defense provision from the state's
current regulations (or to revise the state regulations to clarify the
limited applicability of a state-only affirmative defense) and/or a
legislative process to remove such provisions from a state statute, in
addition to submitting the part 70 program revision to the EPA to
formally remove the provision from the state's EPA-approved part 70
program. This would provide clarity for sources and the public and
avoid any inconsistency between the state's EPA-approved part 70
program and the state's current regulations and/or statutes.
Regarding comments suggesting that states should be able to limit
their own authority to enforce even federally enforceable requirements,
as noted in section III.D.2. of this document, permitting authorities
always retain the discretion to determine whether to initiate an
enforcement action based on the circumstances of a given case. To the
extent that a state develops an ``enforcement discretion''-type
provision that applied only in its own administrative enforcement
actions or only with respect to enforcement actions brought by the
state in state courts, such a provision may be appropriate under state
rules.\60\ However, among the minimum required elements of a title V
permit program is the requirement that, consistent with EPA
regulations, the permitting authority have adequate authority to assure
compliance with applicable standards, requirements, and regulations,
and to enforce permits, including the ability to recover civil
penalties for each violation. See CAA section 502(b)(5), 42 U.S.C.
7661a(b)(5). EPA regulations further provide that approved title V
programs must have appropriate enforcement authority, including the
authority to seek injunctive relief and to assess or recover civil
penalties for violations of any applicable requirement or permit
condition. See 40 CFR 70.11. Thus, to the extent that states wish to
describe certain aspects of their enforcement discretion policy within
their part 70 program regulations, this could only be permissible
provided that the provision does not effectively undermine or eliminate
the state's ability to enforce its title V program, even under the
circumstances previously covered by the affirmative defense. For
example, it would likely not be permissible for a state to establish
criteria that, when met, would effectively preclude the state from
enforcing, even in part, a federally-enforceable standard. Nor would it
be permissible for any such provision to limit the ability of the EPA
or citizens to enforce any federally-enforceable permit terms or to
interfere with the authority of the federal courts to determine whether
and to what extent certain remedies are appropriate in a given case.
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\60\ The EPA has previously discussed an analogous issue in the
context of SIPs. See SSM SIP Action, 80 FR 33855.
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Finally, although states may not retain title V provisions
establishing an affirmative defense to noncompliance with federal
requirements, the EPA reiterates its position that states may choose to
retain certain aspects of their existing program regulations--such as
the definition of ``emergency'' and associated reporting and
recordkeeping requirements--to support functions unrelated to an
affirmative defense, such as prompt reporting requirements. The EPA
disagrees with commenters' assertions that the presence of definitions
or reporting and recordkeeping requirements associated with emergencies
would necessarily imply that an affirmative defense exists or that
exceedances of emission limits during emergencies are excused. To the
contrary, and although the EPA is not retaining such provisions within
its own regulations, states may decide that some of these provisions
could potentially serve a useful function for state permitting
authorities considering whether to pursue enforcement, for sources
faced with the possibility of a state enforcement action, and for the
public.
4. Timing Associated With Program Revisions
Comment: Multiple state and industry commenters requested that the
EPA allow states additional time to submit any required part 70 program
revisions. These commenters all asserted that 12 months is not
sufficient time to conduct the administrative processes required to
change part 70 program regulations, and suggested that anywhere between
18 and 36 months should be allowed, for various reasons. Some state
commenters provided specific examples of the administrative actions
associated with rulemakings that would necessitate additional time,
including outreach, public hearings and comment periods, rule
development, gubernatorial approval, legislative committee review, and
legislative approval. One state commenter noted that many states face
program and staff resource constraints based on other rulemaking
obligations. Another state commenter predicted that necessary rule
changes may take longer to promulgate because they will be
controversial. Some commenters recommended providing additional time
for state program revisions because these affirmative defense
provisions are not currently causing any pressing problems with
enforcement and there is no urgent need to change the provisions.
Finally, one commenter suggested that additional time for state program
revisions would be necessary to allow time for sources to implement
measures to address the loss of the affirmative defense.
Other commenters, on the other hand, recommended a more limited
time frame, while acknowledging the discretion that the EPA has under
40 CFR 70.4(a) to extend program revision deadlines. These commenters
supported the EPA's default 12-month submission deadline with the
possibility of an extended deadline of up to 24 months, on the grounds
that states should be able to easily amend their operating permit rules
within months, and that prompt action would facilitate the coordination
of SIP revisions and title V revisions (and associated permit
revisions). Environmental commenters urged the EPA to require states
seeking an extension to specifically request additional time and to
demonstrate good cause for the extension, and urged that
[[Page 47050]]
such requests be granted only under compelling circumstances. These
commenters also suggested additional details concerning the required
form, content, and timing of such an extension request.
Response: As discussed in the proposal, the necessary changes to
part 70 programs arising from this rule should generally be relatively
minor and straightforward, involving the removal of affirmative defense
provisions from the state's part 70 program.\61\ Because of the nature
of the required revisions, the EPA continues to believe that most or
many states should be able to complete the necessary program revisions
within 12 months. However, the EPA again appreciates that some states
may require more time to complete program revisions, based on a number
of different factors associated with their administrative process,
including the potential need for legislative approval. Therefore, the
EPA is allowing states to submit a request to the appropriate EPA
Regional office requesting an extension to this 12-month deadline and
demonstrating why such an extension is necessary. Such extension
requests should include detailed information concerning the steps that
the state will take to revise its part 70 program, as well as the
specific timing associated with each of these steps. The EPA
understands that many states have lengthy rulemaking processes and
expects that requests for extension that include the information
identified here in sufficient detail would generally be approved.
Nonetheless, the EPA will consider each program revision submission and
extension request on a case-by-case basis. The EPA expects that each
state with a part 70 program containing impermissible affirmative
defense provisions will submit a program revision or request for an
extension of time to the EPA by August 21, 2024.
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\61\ As discussed in section IV.A.3. of this document, this
particular revision to remove affirmative defense provisions from a
state's EPA-approved part 70 program might not necessarily also
involve a notice-and-comment rulemaking to revise the state's
current administrative code, although the EPA believes this would be
a best practice to ensure clarity.
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5. Program Revision Submittal Details
Comment: Two state commenters discussed the details of any required
program revision submittals. One state suggested requiring the
following four components: (1) legal authorization to revise the state
rules and part 70 program; (2) redlined changes to state rules; (3)
timeline for planned removal of affirmative defense from each permit;
and (4) a plan to make these changes to individual permits. Another
state commenter requested additional clarity on what form of legal
authority demonstration would be required for program revision
submittals, and suggested that a rulemaking certification (certifying
that the rules have been reviewed by legal counsel and have been found
to be within the legal authority of the agency) would be sufficient and
less burdensome than a formal opinion by the state Attorney General.
One state commenter further expressed concern with the additional
burden that would be associated with preparing and submitting a revised
program plan. Finally, one commenter requested clarification of the
EPA's intention to publish proposed program revisions in the Federal
Register and provide a 30-day public comment period. They requested
further clarification on whether the EPA intended to publish notice of
approval in the Federal Register or issue a letter to state governors
or their designees.
Response: As stated in the introduction to this section regarding
program revisions, the part 70 program revision process should follow
the procedures in 40 CFR 70.4(a) and (i). The EPA's part 70 regulations
provide that for state program revisions, the state should submit such
documents as the EPA determines to be necessary. See 40 CFR
70.4(i)(2)(i). As noted in the 2016 proposal, the EPA expects that
program revisions to remove the title V emergency defense provisions
will include, at minimum: (1) a redline document identifying the
state's proposed revision to its part 70 program rules; (2) a brief
statement of the legal authority authorizing the revision; and (3) a
schedule and description of the state's plans to remove affirmative
defense provisions from individual operating permits. The EPA
encourages states to consult with their respective EPA regional offices
on the specific contents of their revision submittal packages.
Regarding one commenter's statements concerning the legal authority
demonstration component, the EPA reiterates that this component could
take various forms depending on the specific circumstances of each
state, and a formal opinion by an Attorney General should not be
required for the narrow program revisions implicated by this particular
rule. For a revision involving only the removal of affirmative defense
provisions, a certification indicating that the revisions are within
the legal authority of the agency and followed all required
administrative (including public participation) requirements should be
sufficient. For other program revisions related to the removal of
affirmative defense provisions, such as the inclusion of a narrowly
tailored enforcement discretion provision, as discussed in section
IV.A.3. of this document, the legal authority demonstration should also
contain assurances that the state has adequate authority to enforce its
part 70 program.\62\
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\62\ For example, the state should demonstrate that any such
alternative provisions: do not interfere with the authority of
courts to determine whether and to what extent certain remedies are
appropriate in a given case; do not limit the ability of citizens or
the EPA to pursue enforcement; and do not limit the state's ability
to enforce its part 70 program, for example by establishing criteria
that, when met, would effectively preclude the state from assessing
or recovering penalties consistent with 40 CFR 70.11(a)(3).
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It is unclear what the comments discussing a ``revised program
plan'' refer to. The EPA believes that the plan described in this
document, involving narrow program revision submittals to remove
affirmative defense provisions, is appropriate. As noted in the 2016
proposal, states may, but need not, also include as part of their
program revision submittals any other unrelated revisions to state
program regulations.
6. Consequences of Failure To Submit Program Revisions
Comment: Some commenters requested that the EPA clarify the
consequences for states that refuse to revise their operating permit
regulations. Specifically, commenters cited to CAA sections 502(d) and
(i) and discussed the possibility of notices of deficiency (NOD),
sanctions, and the eventual withdrawal of permitting authority.
Response: Commenters are correct that the EPA has the authority
under CAA sections 502(d) and (i), and as specified in the EPA's
implementing regulations at 40 CFR 70.10, to issue NODs, issue
sanctions, and potentially withdraw approval of part 70 programs under
appropriate circumstances, potentially including the failure of a
permitting authority to submit required program revisions to the EPA.
The EPA would exercise this authority on a case-by-case basis for this
element of the program, as it would with any other.
7. Discussion of State-Specific Program Provisions
Comment: In response to requests from the EPA for information about
part 70 programs that contain affirmative defense provisions, various
commenters discussed certain provisions in specifically identified
state part 70
[[Page 47051]]
programs that could be impacted by the final rule.\63\ Several
commenters also requested an update to the document titled ``Title V
Affirmative Defense Provisions in State, Local, and Tribal Part 70
Programs'' that was included in the docket during the 2016 rulemaking
process.
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\63\ In the proposed rule, the EPA solicited comment on a
document titled, ``Title V Affirmative Defense Provisions in State,
Local, and tribal Part 70 Programs'' that was included in in the
docket associated with this rulemaking (Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-
2016-0186). This document contains a tentative list of part 70
programs that appear to contain affirmative defense provisions that
could be affected by this action. The document was intended for
informational purposes only and does not reflect any type of
determination as to the adequacy or inadequacy of any specific
program provisions. The EPA received comments involving provisions
within the Texas and Georgia part 70 programs that purportedly
incorporate by reference affirmative defense provisions.
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Response: The EPA appreciates this additional information. As noted
previously, the EPA is not taking any action in this final rule with
respect to the adequacy or inadequacy of individual state programs,
including specific programs identified in the 2016 document referenced
by commenters. The EPA expects that permitting authorities with part 70
programs that have impermissible affirmative defense provisions will
follow the process provided in section IV. of this document. EPA
Regional offices will work closely with permitting authorities to
provide support during this process. States with additional questions
about the impact of this rule on their operating permit programs should
contact the appropriate EPA Regional office for further assistance.
B. Permit Revisions
This section clarifies the EPA's expectations for the eventual
removal of impermissible affirmative defense provisions from individual
title V operating permits.
1. Scope of Permit Revisions
Comment: One commenter claimed that title V permits containing
affirmative defenses derived from sources of authority other than 40
CFR 70.6(g) would not need to be revised.
Response: In general, any impermissible affirmative defense
provisions within individual operating permits that are based on a
title V authority and that apply to federally-enforceable requirements
will need to be removed. For example, permit conditions that directly
rely on 40 CFR 70.6(g) or 71.6(g) would need to be removed following
the removal of these provisions from the EPA's regulations.
Importantly, however, permit revisions would not be limited to permit
conditions based on 40 CFR 70.6(g) and 71.6(g); any permit conditions
that rely on a similarly impermissible title V affirmative defense
provision contained in (or incorporated by reference into) a state's
part 70 program would also have to be removed following state program
revisions. On the other hand, and as the EPA explained in the 2016
proposal, this rule will not directly affect affirmative defense
provisions contained in title V permits that are derived from
independent applicable requirements, such as SIP, NSPS or NESHAP
provisions. Finally, should a state decide to retain a ``state-only''
affirmative defense or enforcement discretion-type provision, it may
need to eventually amend title V operating permits to explicitly state
the limited applicability of the state-only provision. See 40 CFR
70.6(b)(2). The discussion provided in the following subsections
applies to both the removal of affirmative defense provisions from
permits and to the amendment or modification of such permit terms.
2. Burden, Mechanism, and Timing of Permit Revisions
Comment: State commenters and one tribal commenter claimed that the
EPA underestimates the burden of removing affirmative defense
provisions from individual permits, and challenged the EPA's statement
in the proposal that ``removal of affirmative defense provisions from
permits should generally occur in the ordinary course of business and
should require essentially no additional burden on states and
sources.'' State commenters explained that thousands of existing
operating permits would require some form of revision action to be
processed by the state, and that revising certain general permits that
apply to multiple sources would require an administrative process
similar to a rulemaking.
Numerous state and industry commenters supported the EPA's
suggestion that states may utilize a number of existing permit
mechanisms to remove affirmative defense provisions from title V
permits in the ordinary course of business, such as when the permitting
authority next processes a permit renewal or significant permit
modification for a source. One state commenter noted that this would be
the most sensible and least disruptive and burdensome mechanism to
complete permit revisions.
Commenters agreed with the EPA's initial suggestion that the
removal of affirmative defense provisions from operating permits could
be accomplished through the minor permit revision process and would not
constitute a significant permit modification. Further, one state
suggested that the EPA adopt a policy interpretation that removal of
affirmative defense provisions could be accomplished through the
administrative amendment process.
Some commenters also asserted that permit revisions should not be
based on any other independent deadline or timeline, and that there is
no urgency to remove the provisions. Other commenters, though, urged
the EPA to encourage permitting authorities to exercise their
discretion to remove the provisions as expeditiously as possible, on
the earliest possible occasion.
Commenters also addressed the sequence of program revisions and
permit revisions. One commenter expressed concern that potential
ambiguity may arise if a source invokes an affirmative defense
provision found in the permit, after the program revisions have been
approved but the permit has not been amended. Lastly, one tribal
commenter expressed its concern that making conforming revisions to
permits before programmatic revisions would create inconsistencies that
could undermine enforcement.
Response: The EPA acknowledges commenters' general assertions that
a large number of existing title V permits across the nation will
eventually need to be revised to remove title V affirmative defense
provisions. However, the EPA disagrees that this will involve any
extraordinary burden on states or sources. The need to occasionally
revise individual title V permits is a natural, common, and required
feature of the title V operating permits program. Title V operating
permits, by their nature, include a wide variety of requirements
applicable to a source, and permit changes are periodically necessary
to incorporate new or modified applicable requirements, and to reflect
physical or operational changes that occur at a source. The EPA's
regulations, and all EPA-approved state part 70 programs, contain well-
established mechanisms to account for various types of necessary
revisions to title V permits. See, e.g., 40 CFR 70.7(d)-(h). The permit
revisions that will need to occur as a result of this rulemaking fit
well within this existing regulatory framework for occasional permit
revisions.
Moreover, the EPA expects permit changes to remove discretionary
title V affirmative defense provisions to be a potentially less
burdensome process than, for example, the process required to
incorporate new applicable
[[Page 47052]]
requirements in a permit via permit reopening. See, e.g., 40 CFR
70.7(f)(1)(i). As explained in the 2016 proposal, the EPA expects that
any necessary permit changes should occur in the ordinary course of
business. For example, these revisions could be made when a state
processes periodic permit renewals or other permit revisions.
Additionally, states may utilize other existing mechanisms to
effectuate these permit changes, consistent with each state's approved
part 70 program regulations. For example, the EPA does not believe that
a permit revision to simply remove a discretionary affirmative defense
provision would require significant modification procedures, and
permitting authorities may be able to process these changes as minor
modifications. Also, in certain circumstances, it may be possible for
some permit changes to be made using administrative permit amendment
procedures, provided that the removal of the title V emergency
provisions would satisfy one of the specific circumstances contemplated
within each state's approved part 70 program regulations governing
administrative amendments.\64\ States may also be able to utilize other
streamlined mechanisms for processing multiple permit revisions at
once.
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\64\ In addition to specifying various types of permit changes
for which the administrative amendment process would be appropriate,
the EPA's regulations in 40 CFR 70.7(d) also provide states with the
opportunity to specify additional criteria as part of their part 70
programs, if the EPA Administrator determines that those situations
are similar to those specified in 40 CFR 70.7(d).
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Regarding the timing of such permit changes, for state or tribal
permitting agencies implementing the federal title V program or part 70
programs that directly rely on 40 CFR 70.6(g), any permit revisions
necessary to remove impermissible affirmative defense provisions from
individual permits should occur promptly after the effective date of
this final rule. For states implementing part 70 programs that contain
state affirmative defense provisions, any permit revisions necessary to
remove impermissible affirmative defense provisions from individual
permits should similarly occur promptly after the EPA's approval of the
necessary part 70 program revisions.\65\ Generally, states would be
expected to remove title V affirmative defense provisions from permits
(or clearly label remaining provisions as state-only) at the earliest
possible occasion when each permit is next reviewed by the permitting
authority, such as the next permit renewal or unrelated permit
revision. Thus, at the latest, states would be expected to remove
affirmative defense provisions from individual permits by the next
periodic permit renewal that occurs following either (1) the effective
date of this rule (for permit terms based on 40 CFR 70.6(g) or 71.6(g))
or (2) the EPA's approval of state program revisions (for permit terms
based on a state affirmative defense provision).
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\65\ 81 FR 38645, 38653, n. 35 (June 14, 2016) (acknowledging
limits on state discretion where currently-approved state program
regulations require inclusion of emergency affirmative defense
provisions in state-issued title V permits).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is important to note that while the EPA is not currently
establishing any independent timeline for states to remove these
provisions from individual permits, the EPA encourages states to begin
removing these provisions from permits prior to the completion of any
necessary part 70 program revisions. States may also find it convenient
to remove these provisions in the course of completing revisions to
permits related to the implementation of the 2015 SSM SIP Action.
3. EPA Objections to Permits
Comment: Some commenters urged the EPA to make clear that the
agency will object to title V permits issued after the effective date
of the final rule that incorporate or refer to title V affirmative
defense provisions.
Response: As previously noted, the EPA expects that any necessary
permit revisions will generally occur following program revisions to
remove the underlying affirmative defense provisions from each
permitting authority's part 70 program regulations. Therefore, although
the EPA encourages states to remove title V emergency affirmative
defense provisions from operating permits at the earliest possible
opportunity (including during permit renewals that occur before program
revisions take place), the EPA generally does not anticipate objecting
to title V permits that contain emergency affirmative defense
provisions during the Agency's 45-day review period until after the
relevant permitting authority has made necessary corrections to its
approved part 70 program. The Administrator will evaluate any petitions
to object to proposed title V operating permits on a case-by-case
basis. Statements in this document are not intended to prejudge such
petition responses.
As noted in section IV.B.2. of this document, in those state or
tribal areas that implement the federal title V program (in 40 CFR part
71) or where the operating permit program directly relies on or
incorporates by reference 40 CFR 70.6(g), the EPA expects states to
begin the process of removing impermissible affirmative defense
provisions from operating permits promptly after the effective date of
this final rule, as such permit revisions would not need to await state
program revisions.
V. Statutory and Executive Orders Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant regulatory action and was
therefore not submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
for review.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose any new information collection burden
under the PRA. OMB has previously approved the information collection
activities contained in the existing regulations and has assigned OMB
control numbers 2060-0243 (for part 70 state operating permit programs)
and 2060-0336 (for part 71 federal operating permit program). In this
action, the EPA is removing certain provisions from the EPA's
regulations, which should ultimately result in the removal of similar
provisions from state, local, and tribal operating permit programs and
individual permits. Consequently, some states will be required to
submit program revisions to the EPA in order to remove affirmative
defense provisions from their EPA-approved part 70 programs, and will
eventually be required to remove provisions from individual permits.
However, this action does not involve any requests for information,
recordkeeping or reporting requirements, or other requirements that
would constitute an information collection under the PRA.
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. Entities
potentially affected directly by this proposal include state, local,
and tribal governments, and none of these governments would qualify as
a small entity. Other types of small entities, including stationary
sources of air pollution, are not directly subject to the requirements
of this action.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain an unfunded mandate of $100 million or
more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not
significantly or
[[Page 47053]]
uniquely affect small governments. The action imposes no new
enforceable duty on any state, local or tribal governments or the
private sector. As a result of this rule, some states with EPA-approved
part 70 programs that contain impermissible affirmative defense
provisions will be required to submit program revisions to the EPA,
according to the framework established by the EPA's existing
regulations. To the extent that such affected states allow local air
districts or planning organizations to implement portions of the
state's obligation under the CAA, the regulatory requirements of this
action do not significantly or uniquely affect small governments
because those governments have already undertaken the obligation to
comply with the CAA.
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, it will neither
impose substantial direct compliance costs on federally recognized
tribal governments, nor preempt tribal law. One tribal government (the
Southern Ute Indian Tribe) currently administers an approved part 70
operating permit program, and one tribal government (the Navajo Nation)
currently administers a part 71 operating permit program pursuant to a
delegation agreement with the EPA. These tribal governments may be
required to take certain actions, including a program revision (for the
part 70 program) and eventual permit revisions, but these actions will
not require substantial compliance costs. The EPA conducted outreach
with tribal officials early in the process of developing this
regulation to permit them to have meaningful and timely input into its
development. A summary of that outreach is provided in the rulemaking
docket, Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2016-0186, available at https://www.regulations.gov.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying to those
regulatory actions that concern environmental health or safety risks
that the EPA has reason to believe may disproportionately affect
children, per the definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in
section 2-202 of the Executive Order. This action is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because it does not concern an environmental
health risk or safety risk.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13211 because it is
not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994) directs
federal agencies, to the greatest extent practicable and permitted by
law, to make environmental justice part of their mission by identifying
and addressing, as appropriate, disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects of their programs, policies, and
activities on minority populations (people of color) and low-income
populations.
The EPA believes that it is not practicable to assess whether the
human health or environmental conditions that exist prior to this
action result in disproportionate and adverse effects on people of
color, low-income populations and/or Indigenous peoples. This action
simply removes the emergency affirmative defense provisions from the
EPA's operating permit program regulations. As a result of this action,
it will also be necessary for some state, local, and tribal permitting
authorities to remove similar affirmative defense provisions from their
EPA-approved part 70 programs and from individual title V operating
permits. These title V provisions existed independently from any
specific environmental health standards, and their removal should not
affect the establishment of, or compliance with, environmental health
or safety standards. It is not practicable to predict whether the
removal of these affirmative defense provisions will result in any
significant difference in emissions and subsequently whether this
action will have any positive or negative effect on people of color,
low-income populations and/or Indigenous peoples. Information
supporting this Executive Order review is contained in section III.D.5.
of this document.
The EPA provided meaningful participation opportunities for people
of color, low-income populations and/or Indigenous peoples or tribes in
the development of the action through tribal outreach outlined in
section V.F. of this document and summarized in the rulemaking docket,
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2016-0186, as well as the standard opportunity
to provide public comment on each proposal (2016 and 2022).
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).
VI. Statutory Authority
The statutory authority for this action is provided in CAA sections
502(b) and 502(d)(3), 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b) & (d)(3), which direct the
Administrator of the EPA to promulgate regulations establishing state
operating permit programs and give the Administrator the authority to
establish a federal operating permit program. Additionally, the
Administrator determines that this action is subject to the provisions
of CAA section 307(d), which establish procedural requirements specific
to rulemaking under the CAA. CAA section 307(d)(1)(V) provides that the
provisions of CAA section 307(d) apply to ``such other actions as the
Administrator may determine.'' 42 U.S.C. 7607(d)(1)(V).
VII. 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 United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia 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).
This final action is ``nationally applicable'' within the meaning
of CAA section 307(b)(1). In the alternative, to
[[Page 47054]]
the extent a court finds this final 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).\66\ This final action
revises both the regulatory requirements in 40 CFR part 70 that govern
state, local, tribal, and U.S. territorial operating permit programs
nationwide and the regulatory requirements in 40 CFR part 71 that
govern federal operating permits nationwide.\67\ Accordingly, this
final action is a nationally applicable regulation or, alternatively,
the Administrator is exercising the complete discretion afforded to him
by the CAA and hereby 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 hereby publishing that finding in the Federal
Register.
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\66\ In deciding whether to invoke the exception by making and
publishing a finding that this final action is based on a
determination of nationwide scope or effect, the Administrator has
also taken 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.
\67\ In the report on the 1977 Amendments that revised section
307(b)(1) of the CAA, Congress noted that the Administrator's
determination that the ``nationwide scope or effect'' exception
applies would be appropriate for any action that has a scope or
effect beyond a single judicial circuit. See H.R. Rep. No. 95-294 at
323, 324, reprinted in 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1402-03.
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Under 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 within 60 days from the date this
final action is published in the Federal Register. Filing a petition
for reconsideration by the Administrator of this final action does not
affect the finality of the action for the purposes of judicial review,
nor does it extend the time within which a petition for judicial review
must be filed, and shall not postpone the effectiveness of such rule or
action.
List of Subjects
40 CFR Part 70
Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Intergovernmental relations, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
40 CFR Part 71
Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, title 40, chapter I of the
Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
PART 70--STATE OPERATING PERMIT PROGRAMS
0
1. The authority citation for part 70 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
Sec. 70.6 [Amended]
0
2. In Sec. 70.6, remove paragraph (g).
PART 71--FEDERAL OPERATING PERMIT PROGRAMS
0
3. The authority citation for part 71 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
Sec. 71.6 [Amended]
0
4. In Sec. 71.6, remove paragraph (g).
[FR Doc. 2023-15067 Filed 7-20-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P