Air Plan Approval; California; South Coast Air Quality Management District, 70616-70625 [2023-22518]
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70616
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 196 / Thursday, October 12, 2023 / Proposed Rules
Venture designated representative, the
on-site project manager by telephone
number 785–953–1465 or on Marine
Band Radio VHF–FM channels 13 and
16 from the pusher tug Miss Stacy to
request permission. If permission is
granted, mariners must proceed at their
own risk and strictly observe any and all
instructions provided by the COTP,
Skanska-Corman-McLean, Joint Venture,
or designated representative to the
mariner regarding the conditions of
entry to and exit from any area of the
safety zone. The COTP or the COTP’s
representative can be contacted by
telephone number 410–576–2693 or on
Marine Band Radio VHF–FM channel
16 (156.8 MHz).
(3) The Coast Guard will publish a
notice in the Fifth Coast Guard District
Local Notice to Mariners and issue
marine information broadcasts on VHF–
FM marine band radio announcing
specific enforcement dates and times.
(d) Enforcement officials. The U.S.
Coast Guard may be assisted in the
patrol and enforcement of the safety
zone by Federal, State, and local
agencies.
(e) Enforcement period. This section
will be subject to enforcement from
12:01 a.m. on November 08, 2023, to
11:59 p.m. on January 30, 2023.
Dated: October 05, 2023.
David E. O’Connell,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port Maryland-National Capital Region.
[FR Doc. 2023–22545 Filed 10–11–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 2 and 51
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2004–0489; FRL–8604–04–
OAR]
Revisions to the Air Emissions
Reporting Requirements
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule; extension of
comment period.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is extending the comment
period for the proposed revisions to the
Air Emissions Reporting Requirements
(AERR), published in the Federal
Register on August 9, 2023. The current
comment period for the proposed rule is
set to end on October 18, 2023. EPA has
received numerous requests to extend
the comment period given the
complexity and length of the proposed
rulemaking. The EPA is extending the
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SUMMARY:
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comment period for the proposed action
to November 17, 2023. The EPA is also
extending the comment period for the
associated Information Collection
Request (ICR), number 2170.09, for the
proposed AERR to November 17, 2023.
DATES: The comment period for the
proposed rule and ICR published on
August 9, 2023, at 88 FR 54118 is
extended. Comments must be received
on or before November 17, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2004–0489, by one of the
following methods:
• www.regulations.gov: Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments.
• Email: a-and-r-docket@epa.gov.
Fax: (202) 566–9744.
• Mail: Air Emissions Reporting
Requirements Rule, Docket No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2004–0489, Environmental
Protection Agency, Mailcode: 2822T,
1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW,
Washington, DC 20460. Please include
two copies.
• Hand Delivery: Docket No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2004–0489, EPA Docket
Center, Public Reading Room, EPA
West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution
Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460. Such
deliveries are only accepted during the
Docket’s normal hours of operation, and
special arrangements should be made
for deliveries of boxed information.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Docket ID No. for this
rulemaking. Comments received may be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov/, including any
personal information provided.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Marc Houyoux, Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards, Air Quality
Assessment Division, Emission
Inventory and Analysis Group (C339–
02), U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC
27711; telephone number: (919) 541–
3649; email: NEI_Help@epa.gov (and
include ‘‘AERR’’ on the subject line).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
Wednesday, August 9, 2023, the EPA
published proposed revisions to the Air
Emissions Reporting Requirements
along with an associated ICR in the
Federal Register. The comment period
for the proposed AERR was for 70 days,
ending on October 18, 2023. On
September 14, 2023, the EPA reopened
the comment period for the ICR (88 FR
63046). The EPA received numerous
comments requesting that the Agency
extend the comment period for the
proposed AERR. To ensure the public
has sufficient time to review the
proposed AERR and the associated ICR,
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the EPA is extending the comment
periods for both by 30 days, ending on
November 17, 2023.
Dated: October 5, 2023.
Richard A. Wayland,
Director, Air Quality Assessment Division,
Office of Air Quality and Planning Standards.
[FR Doc. 2023–22530 Filed 10–11–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2023–0494; FRL–11442–
01–R9]
Air Plan Approval; California; South
Coast Air Quality Management District
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve a
revision to the South Coast Air Quality
Management District (SCAQMD or ‘‘the
District’’) portion of the California State
Implementation Plan (SIP) as SIP
strengthening. This revision concerns
emissions of oxides of nitrogen (NOX)
and particulate matter (PM) from
indirect sources associated with
warehouses. The EPA is proposing to
approve SCAQMD Rule 2305,
‘‘Warehouse Indirect Source Rule—
Warehouse Actions and Investments to
Reduce Emissions (WAIRE) Program,’’
to regulate these emission sources under
the Clean Air Act (CAA or the Act). The
EPA is taking comments on this
proposal and plans to follow with a
final action.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before November 13, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R09–
OAR–2023–0494 at https://
www.regulations.gov. For comments
submitted at Regulations.gov, follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted, comments
cannot be edited or removed from
Regulations.gov. The EPA may publish
any comment received to its public
docket. Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. The EPA will generally not
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 196 / Thursday, October 12, 2023 / Proposed Rules
consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, please
contact the person identified in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
For the full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets. If you need
assistance in a language other than
English or if you are a person with
disabilities who needs a reasonable
70617
accommodation at no cost to you, please
contact the person identified in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: La
Kenya Evans-Hopper, EPA Region IX, 75
Hawthorne St., San Francisco, CA
94105. By phone: (415) 972–3245 or by
email at evanshopper.lakenya@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to the EPA.
D. What requirements does the rule
establish?
II. The EPA’s Evaluation and Action
A. How is the EPA evaluating the rule?
B. Does the rule meet the evaluation
criteria?
C. Public comment and proposed action
III. Incorporation by Reference
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Table of Contents
Table 1 lists the rule addressed by this
proposal with the dates that it was
adopted by the local air agency and
submitted by the California Air
Resources Board (CARB).
I. The State’s Submittal
A. What rule did the State submit?
B. Are there other versions of this rule?
C. What is the purpose of the rule?
I. The State’s Submittal
A. What rule did the State submit?
TABLE 1—SUBMITTED RULE
Local agency
Rule #
SCAQMD ....................
2305
Rule title
Warehouse Indirect Source Rule—Warehouse Actions and Investments to Reduce Emissions (WAIRE) Program.
On February 13, 2022, the submittal
for SCAQMD Rule 2305 was deemed
complete by operation of law with
respect to the completeness criteria in
40 CFR part 51, appendix V, which
must be met before formal EPA review.
B. Are there other versions of this rule?
SCAQMD Rule 2305 is a new rule.
There are no previously approved
versions of the rule in the applicable
SIP.
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C. What is the purpose of the rule?
Emissions of NOX contribute to the
production of ground-level ozone, smog
and PM, which harm human health and
the environment. Emissions of PM,
including PM equal to or less than 2.5
microns in diameter (PM2.5) and PM
equal to or less than 10 microns in
diameter (PM10), contribute to effects
that are harmful to human health and
the environment, including premature
mortality, aggravation of respiratory and
cardiovascular disease, decreased lung
function, visibility impairment, and
damage to vegetation and ecosystems.
Section 110(a) of the CAA requires
States to submit regulations that control
NOX and PM emissions for purposes of
attainment and maintenance of the
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS) and to meet other CAA
requirements.
The purpose of SCAQMD Rule 2305
is to reduce local and area-wide
emissions of NOX and PM, by
facilitating emission reductions
associated with warehouses and the
mobile sources attracted to warehouses
in order to assist in meeting State and
Federal air quality standards for ozone
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Amended
and PM2.5. Mobile sources of emissions
associated with warehouses include the
trucks that deliver goods to and from the
facilities, yard trucks, transport
refrigeration units (TRUs) located on
trucks and trailers, and passenger
vehicle trips associated with employees
and visitors.1 Most of these vehicles are
diesel powered, except for passenger
vehicles which are typically gasoline
powered. Heavy-duty trucks contribute
roughly 90% of the overall mobile
source inventory of NOX emissions from
warehouse operations, followed in order
of importance from an emissions
standpoint by TRUs, passenger vehicles,
and then yard trucks.2 Additional
emissions sources can include onsite
stationary equipment (e.g., diesel
backup generators or manufacturing
equipment).3 The rule applies within
the jurisdiction of the SCAQMD, which
includes all of Orange County, the nondesert portions of Los Angeles and San
Bernardino counties, and all of
Riverside County (except for the Palo
Verde Valley in far eastern Riverside
County).
Also, through adoption of the 2016
South Coast Air Quality Management
Plan (AQMP), the SCAQMD committed
to assess and identify potential actions
to further reduce emissions associated
with emission sources operating in and
1 SCAQMD, Final Staff Report, ‘‘Proposed Rule
2305—Warehouse Indirect Source Rule—
Warehouse Actions and Investments to Reduce
Emissions (WAIRE) Program and Proposed Rule
316—Fees for Rule 2305’’, May 2021, ‘‘SCAQMD
Final Staff Report’’, 12.
2 SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 13.
3 Id.
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05/07/2021
Submitted
08/13/2021
out of warehouse distribution centers,4
and the SCAQMD adopted Rule 2305 to
fulfill that commitment. The purpose of
the 2016 South Coast AQMP is to
establish a path toward the goal of
attainment for ozone and PM2.5 NAAQS
in the nonattainment areas subject to
SCAQMD jurisdiction.
The EPA has taken several actions on
the 2016 South Coast AQMP. With
certain exceptions not relevant here, the
EPA approved portions of the 2016
South Coast AQMP addressing the
Serious Area requirements for the 2006
24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS in the South
Coast Air Basin (‘‘South Coast’’); the
portions of the 2016 South Coast AQMP
updating the control strategies and
attainment demonstrations for the 1hour and 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS,
and addressing the 2008 8-hour ozone
NAAQS in the South Coast; the portions
of the 2016 South Coast AQMP
addressing the Moderate Area
requirements for the 2012 annual PM2.5
NAAQS in the South Coast; and the
portions of the 2016 South Coast AQMP
addressing the Severe Area
requirements for the 2008 8-hour ozone
NAAQS in Coachella Valley.5 In so
doing, the EPA approved the
SCAQMD’s Stationary and Mobile
4 SCAQMD, Final 2016 Air Quality Management
Plan, March 2017, pages 4–25, 4–28, and 4–29. The
2016 South Coast AQMP designates the warehouse
measure as MOB–03 (‘‘Emission Reductions at
Warehouse Distribution Centers’’).
5 84 FR 3305 (February 12, 2019), corrected at 84
FR 19680 (May 3, 2019) (2006 PM2.5 NAAQS); 84
FR 52005 (October 1, 2019) (1-hour, 1997 and 2008
Ozone NAAQS in South Coast); 85 FR 71269
(November 9, 2020) (2012 PM2.5 NAAQS); and 85
FR 57714 (September 16, 2020) (2008 Ozone
NAAQS in Coachella Valley).
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Source Control Measures, including the
facility-based mobile source measures
such as the Emission Reductions at
Warehouse Distributions Center
measure. The 2016 South Coast AQMP
includes enforceable commitments by
the SCAQMD to achieve certain
aggregate emissions reductions by
certain years through adoption and
implementation of the SCAQMD’s
Stationary and Mobile Source Control
Measures.
D. What requirements does the rule
establish?
Rule 2305 applies to owners and
operators of warehouses located in the
SCAQMD with greater than 100,000
square feet of indoor floor space in a
single building and who operate at least
50,000 square feet of the warehouse for
warehousing activities. Warehouse
operators are required either to earn
points, as discussed below, from
emission reducing activities, or to pay a
mitigation fee. Warehouse facility
owners or warehouse land owners may
opt in to earn Warehouse Actions and
Investments to Reduce Emissions Points
(‘‘WAIRE Points’’) and transfer these
points to a warehouse operator at the
same site. Both warehouse facility
owners and operators must comply with
certain recordkeeping and reporting
requirements under the rule. Warehouse
facility owners were required to submit
initial Warehouse Operations
Notifications to the SCAQMD by
September 1, 2021, and then again
within certain prescribed periods
thereafter if certain conditions occur.
Warehouse operators are also required
to submit their Initial Site Information
Reports (ISIR) and Annual WAIRE
Reports to the SCAQMD. All of the
notifications and reports are to be
submitted through the WAIRE Program
Online Portal (WAIRE POP). In
addition, records which document the
accuracy and validity of all information
submitted to the SCAQMD as required
by the rule must be kept by the
warehouse owner, or operator as
applicable, for a minimum of seven
years from the reporting deadline.
Records must be made available upon
request to the SCAQMD during normal
business hours.
The principal substantive requirement
in the rule is the requirement that each
warehouse operator meet an annual
compliance obligation by earning
WAIRE Points. The annual compliance
obligation, referred to as the WAIRE
Points Compliance Obligation (WPCO),
for each warehouse operator is
calculated based on Weighted Annual
Truck Trips (WATTs) multiplied by a
stringency factor (0.0025 points per
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WATT) and an annual variable (which
accounts for the phased implementation
of the rule).6 WATT reflects all trips in
a given year by trucks with gross vehicle
weight ratings (GVWR) greater than
8,500 pounds but multiplies trips by
trucks with GVWRs greater than 33,000
pounds (‘‘Class 8’’ trucks) by 2.5.7 The
WATTs parameter serves as a proxy for
overall warehouse activity and
emissions.8 A warehouse owner may
earn WAIRE Points and may transfer
them to any warehouse operator at the
site where the WAIRE Points were
earned within a three-year period.
The requirement to earn WAIRE
points to meet a WPCO does not apply
to warehouse operators who use less
than 50,000 square feet for warehousing
activities of a warehouse that is greater
than or equal to 100,000 square feet.9
This exemption does not apply if the
same parent company owns or controls
multiple operators in the same building
who collectively use more than 50,000
square feet of space for warehousing
activity.10 A warehouse operator with a
WPCO that is less than 10 in any
compliance period also is exempt from
earning WAIRE Points for that
compliance period. In both cases,
certain recordkeeping and reporting
requirements (as stated above) under the
rule continue to apply.
In situations where investments or
actions that were completed by a
warehouse owner or operator perform
significantly lower than anticipated due
to unforeseen circumstances beyond the
control of the warehouse owners or
operators resulting in lower than
anticipated earned WAIRE Points, the
warehouse owner or operator may apply
6 SCAQMD
Rule 2305(d)(1)(A) and Tables 1 and
to the Executive Officer 11 for a partial
or complete exemption.12 This
application must specify what portion
of the WPCO that the malfunctioning
equipment would have satisfied, and all
relevant details on why the anticipated
action was unable to earn the expected
WAIRE Points. The Executive Officer
will use the following criteria to grant
a partial or complete exemption: (a)
there is a manufacturing defect or an
installation defect when using
manufacturer-approved methods, and
(b) the warehouse operator can
demonstrate that despite good faith
efforts for repairs on the vehicle or
equipment, through either the warranty
or other manufacturer and/or installerapproved methods, the repairs were not
completed in a timely manner.
Warehouse owners (who opt in) and
operators are required to earn WAIRE
Points either: through the completion of
specified actions from the list of actions
in the WAIRE Menu,13 completion of
actions in an approved custom plan,
through payment of a mitigation fee, or
through a combination of these three
options.14 The WAIRE Points provision
within Rule 2305 includes a WAIRE
Menu with a list of specific actions that
a warehouse owner or operator may take
to earn points to meet the annual
WPCO.15 The menu includes nine
different types of actions or investments
that qualify for points: (i) acquire Zero
Emission (ZE)/Near-Zero Emission
(NZE) Trucks, (ii) number of ZE/NZE
Truck Visits,16 (iii) acquire ZE Yard
Truck, (iv) use ZE Yard Truck, (v) install
onsite ZE charging or fueling
infrastructure, (vi) use onsite ZE
charging or fueling infrastructure, (vii)
install and energize onsite solar panels,
(viii) use onsite solar panels, and (ix)
2.
7 SCAQMD
Rule 2305(d)(1)(B).
Final Staff Report, 27, 35. As
explained in footnote 44 of the SCAQMD Final Staff
Report, the SCAQMD adopted WATTs as the
parameter for determining the WPCO for
warehouses rather than emissions or vehicle miles
travelled (VMT). SCAQMD decided against a
parameter like emissions or VMT to reduce the
administrative burden on warehouse operators and
the SCAQMD compliance staff. Also, the SCAQMD
notes that motor carriers had expressed concern
that they do not want to reveal where or how far
they travel to warehouse operators or SCAQMD in
order to keep their clients private.
9 In Rule 2305(c)(33), the term ‘‘warehousing
activities’’ is defined as meaning operations at a
warehouse related to the storage and distribution of
goods, including but not limited to the storage,
labelling, sorting, consolidation and
deconsolidation of products into different size
packages. Supporting office administration,
maintenance, manufacturing areas, or retail sales
areas open to the general public, within the same
warehouse building, that are physically separate
from the warehouse area, are not considered
warehousing activities for the purpose of the rule.
10 The exemptions are set forth in SCAQMD Rule
2305(g).
8 SCAQMD
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11 Executive Officer refers to the Executive Officer
or designee of the SCAQMD. The Executive Officer
is the Air Pollution Control Officer for the
SCAQMD.
12 For example, if a warehouse operator purchases
a zero-emission truck and anticipates using this
same truck to earn WAIRE Points, but a malfunction
in the powertrain due to an equipment
manufacturer defect (e.g., malfunctioning electric
motor, fuel cell stack, etc.) results in an inability to
use the equipment, then the operator may apply for
relief for the WAIRE Points that would have be
earned. The exemption would be granted if the
vehicle or equipment is shown to be due to a
manufacturer defect or an installation defect.
SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 37.
13 SCAQMD Rule 2305, Table 3.
14 SCAQMD Rule 2305(d)(1) and (2).
15 SCAQMD Rule 2305, Table 3.
16 NZE and ZE truck visits can come from the
warehouse operator’s own fleet or by any other
third-party fleet (whether contracted by the
warehouse operator or not). See SCAQMD Final
Staff Report, at 99. The term ‘‘truck visits’’ refers to
the round-trip a truck takes to and from a
warehouse. For example, 520 ‘‘truck visits’’ is the
same as 1,040 one-way ‘‘truck trips’’ as explained
in the SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 30.
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install MERV 16 or greater filters or
filter systems in residences, schools,
daycares, hospitals, or community
centers.
Rule 2305 specifies the number of
points for the different types of actions
or investments, ranging from 1 point
(per 165,000 kilowatt-hours) from the
use of onsite solar panels to 1,680 points
for installation of a 700-kilogram-perday hydrogen (H2) fueling station.
SCAQMD assigned WAIRE Points to the
different types of actions or investments
based on three key parameters: cost,
regional emissions reductions, and local
emissions reduction.17 For example,
under Rule 2305, acquiring a new class
8 ZE/NZE truck in the warehouse
operator fleet would be worth 126
points. Similarly, 365 visits by class 8
ZE/NZE trucks to a warehouse would be
worth 51 points during a given annual
compliance period.
Based on the most current
information contained in the first
Annual Report for the WAIRE Program,
the average WPCO per warehouse
operator was rounded to 80 points for
the 2022 compliance period.18 The same
number of WATTs in 2023 and 2024
(and beyond) for the same warehouse
operators would result in an average
WPCO of 160 points and 240 points,
respectively, taking into account the
annual variable under Phase I (which
applies to warehouses equal to or
greater than 250,000 square feet) for
those years.19
Under the rule, the Custom WAIRE
Plan is a second option that allows
warehouse owners or operators to earn
WAIRE Points through a customized
plan specific for a warehouse facility.20
Custom WAIRE Plan applications must
demonstrate how the proposed action
will earn WAIRE Points based on the
incremental cost of the action, the NOX
emission reductions from the action,
and the diesel PM (DPM) emission
reductions from the action, relative to
baseline conditions. Custom WAIRE
Plans may not include actions that are
included in the WAIRE Menu on Table
3 of Rule 2305. The methodology to
determine the total WAIRE Points for an
17 SCAQMD
Final Staff Report, 111.
Annual Report for the Warehouse
Actions and Investments to Reduce Emissions
(WAIRE) Program, January 2023, 16. The report
represents 47% of warehouses in the SCAQMD. The
average WPCO estimate of 80 points reflects
SCAQMD’s anticipated aggregate WPCO of
approximately 30,000 divided by 380, the number
of Phase I warehouses for which Initial Site
Information Reports (ISIR) were submitted in time
for the report. The 30,000 aggregate point value
reflects a 0.33 annual variable for the first
compliance period for Phase I warehouses.
19 Rule 2305, table 2 (‘‘Annual Variable’’).
20 SCAQMD Rule 2305(d)(4).
action in a Custom WAIRE Plan
application must be consistent with
methods in the WAIRE Program
Implementation Guidelines.21 Any
WAIRE Points earned from a Custom
WAIRE Plan for emission reductions
must be quantifiable, verifiable, and real
as determined by the Executive Officer
and consistent with the WAIRE
Implementation Guidelines.
Warehouse owners or operators have
a third option to meet the annual
compliance obligation that involves
payment of a mitigation fee in the
amount of $1,000 for each WAIRE
Point.22 The mitigation fee is an option
for warehouse operators to fulfill all or
a portion of their WPCO. In adopting
Rule 2305, the SCAQMD Governing
Board directed the Executive Officer to
develop the WAIRE Mitigation Program
with funds generated from mitigation
fee payments.23 Any solicitations for
requests for funding, or funding
allocations that would be spent from the
WAIRE Mitigation Program, must be
approved by the SCAQMD Governing
Board in a public meeting.24 In adopting
the Rule 2305, the Board also specified
that proposed solicitations and project
awards must be presented to the
Governing Board no less frequently than
on an annual basis. The Board directed
the Executive Officer to track mitigation
fees paid by warehouse operators
according to the Source Receptor Area
(SRA) 25 and county in which they are
located to achieve or facilitate emission
reductions in the same SRAs and
counties in which the mitigation fees
were paid. As adopted by the Board, if
sufficient projects are not identified in
each individual SRA relative to the
available funding, then funds may be
directed either to an adjacent SRA in the
same county or held for a subsequent
funding. The SCAQMD states that the
mitigation fees collected from Rule 2305
will go towards the purchase of NZE
and ZE trucks, installation of ZE
charging and/or hydrogen fueling
infrastructure.26 Funds may also be
combined with other incentive
programs, such as Carl Moyer and
Proposition 1B, as allowable on a caseby-case basis.
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18 SCAQMD,
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21 SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 86. A copy of the
current version of the SCAQMD’s WAIRE
Implementation Guidelines, version 1.1, is included
in the docket for this rulemaking.
22 SCAQMD Rule 2305(d)(5).
23 SCAQMD, Resolution 21–9, signed June 4,
2021, 6.
24 SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 40.
25 Source Receptor Areas (SRAs) are shown in a
SCAQMD-prepared map titled ‘‘General Forecast
Areas & Air Monitoring Areas’’.
26 SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 40.
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As noted above, warehouse operators
have three basic options, or any
combination of these options, through
which to earn or obtain points sufficient
to meet their WPCO. Warehouse owners
may also earn WAIRE Points using the
same methods or options available to
warehouse operators and may transfer
these WAIRE Points to any warehouse
operator at the site where the WAIRE
Points were earned within a three-year
period.
In the SCAQMD’s first Annual Report
for the WAIRE Program, the SCAQMD
compiled information from 380 ISIR’s
that had been submitted by warehouse
operators through September 30, 2022.
The first Annual Report suggests that
warehouse operators expect to meet
their WPCOs, at least in the early years
of the program, primarily through ZE
hostler usage, (i.e., yard tractors that
move trailers and containers around
warehouse facilities; approximately
40% of the anticipated WAIRE points
based on the ISIRs received), NZE Class
8 Truck Visits (approximately 27%),
and ZE hostler acquisition
(approximately 8%).27 The submitted
ISIRs also suggest that, in addition to
taking actions from the WAIRE Menu,
warehouse operators anticipate earning
about 5,500 points through mitigation
fees, representing about 3% of total
points earned, and about $5.5 million.28
The SCAQMD developed emissions
reduction estimates for various
scenarios representing different
compliance approaches to Rule 2305.29
The estimates of reductions in
emissions of NOX and DPM vary widely
among the scenarios and from year to
year but represent positive emission
reductions beyond those that are
expected by the SCAQMD to occur due
to CARB regulations (such as CARB’s
Advanced Clean Trucks, Low NOX
Omnibus, and Heavy Duty Inspection
and Maintenance (I/M) regulations).30
Lastly, the rule includes
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements. The three types of reports
that are due under Rule 2305 include:
(1) the Warehouse Operations
Notification (WON), which is the
responsibility of the warehouse owner,
(2) the ISIR, and (3) the Annual WAIRE
Report, both of which are the
responsibility of warehouse operators.
The rule also specifies a sunset date
after the EPA finds that all air basins
within the SCAQMD have attained the
27 SCAQMD, Annual Report for the Warehouse
Actions and Investments to Reduce Emissions
(WAIRE) Program, January 2023, 15.
28 Id.
29 SCAQMD Final Staff Report, Tables 15 and 16.
30 SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 62.
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2015 ozone NAAQS and that CARB
finds that all air basins within the
SCAQMD have attained the California
ozone ambient air quality standard
(which is numerically the same as the
2015 ozone NAAQS).31
II. The EPA’s Evaluation and Action
A. How is the EPA evaluating the rule?
The EPA has evaluated SCAQMD
Rule 2305 against the applicable
procedural and substantive
requirements of the CAA for SIPs and
SIP revisions and has concluded that,
with certain exceptions discussed
below, Rule 2305 meets the applicable
requirements and would strengthen the
SIP. Generally, SIPs must include
enforceable emission limitations and
other control measures, means, or
techniques, as well as schedules and
timetables for compliance, as may be
necessary to meet the requirements of
the Act (see CAA section 110(a)(2)(A));
must provide necessary assurances that
the State will have adequate personnel,
funding, and authority under State law
to carry out such SIP (and is not
prohibited by any provision of Federal
or State law from carrying out such SIP)
(see CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)); must be
adopted by a State after reasonable
notice and public hearing (see CAA
section 110(a)(1); section 110(a)(2);
section 110(l)); and must not interfere
with any applicable requirement
concerning attainment and reasonable
further progress, or any other applicable
requirement of the Act (see CAA section
110(l)).32
The SCAQMD jurisdiction covers all
the South Coast Air Basin, and portions
of the Salton Sea and Mojave Desert Air
Basins, and includes air quality
planning areas that are designated as
nonattainment for the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS and the 1997, 2008 and 2015 8hour ozone NAAQS (South Coast and
Coachella Valley areas); the 1997 24hour and annual PM2.5 NAAQS, the
2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS and the
2012 annual PM2.5 NAAQS (South Coast
area), and the 1987 24-hour PM10
NAAQS (Coachella Valley area).33 The
South Coast Air Basin is currently
31 SCAQMD
Rule 2305(e) and (h).
section 193, which prohibits any pre-1990
SIP control requirement relating to nonattainment
pollutants in nonattainment areas from being
modified unless the SIP is revised to insure
equivalent or greater emission reductions of such
air pollutants, does not apply to the SCAQMD Rule
2305 because, as a new rule, it does not represent
a pre-1990 SIP control requirement.
33 40 CFR 81.305. In addition, a portion of Los
Angeles County is designated nonattainment for the
lead NAAQS, but SCAQMD Rule 2305 does not
affect lead emissions, and thus, the lead NAAQS is
not germane to our proposed action and is not
discussed further.
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classified as an Extreme nonattainment
area for the 1-hour ozone NAAQS and
the 1997, 2008, and 2015 8-hour ozone
NAAQS, as a Moderate nonattainment
area for the 1997 annual and 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS, and as a Serious
nonattainment area for the 2006 24-hour
and 2012 annual PM2.5 NAAQS. The
Coachella Valley portion of the Salton
Sea Air Basin is classified as a Severe
nonattainment area for the 1-hour ozone
NAAQS, as an Extreme nonattainment
area for the 1997 and 2008 8-hour ozone
NAAQS,34 as a Severe nonattainment
area for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS;
and as a Serious nonattainment area for
the 1987 24-hour PM10 NAAQS.
CAA section 172(c)(1) requires States
with ozone nonattainment areas to
implement all reasonably available
control measures (RACM), including
such reductions in emissions from
existing sources in the area as may be
obtained through the adoption, at a
minimum, of reasonably available
control technology (RACT), as
expeditiously as practicable. CAA
sections 182(b)(2) and 182(f) specify that
implementation of RACT under CAA
section 172(c)(1) is required for all
major stationary sources of NOX in the
area. In addition, the CAA requires
States with Serious PM10 and PM2.5
NAAQS nonattainment areas to
implement Best Available Control
Measures (BACM), including Best
Available Control Technology (BACT)
(see CAA section 189(b)(1)(B)). As noted
above, SCAQMD includes both Extreme
and Severe ozone nonattainment areas
and Moderate and Serious PM
nonattainment areas.
With respect to rule stringency, the
EPA is prohibited by the CAA from
requiring States and local air agencies to
submit indirect source review (ISR)
programs as a condition to approving a
SIP.35 Because the EPA cannot require
a State or local air agency to adopt and
implement an ISR program, the EPA
34 The EPA recently finalized a reclassification
requested by CARB for Coachella Valley from
Severe to Extreme for the 2008 ozone NAAQS. 88
FR 14291 (March 8, 2023).
35 CAA section 110(a)(5)(A)(i); National
Association of Home Builders v. San Joaquin Valley
Unified Air Pollution Control District, 627 F.3d 730,
737–38 (9th Cir. 2010) (‘‘NAHB v. SJVUAPCD’’)
(‘‘Congress added section 110(a)(5) to the Act in
1977 after the EPA had tried to force the states to
regulate indirect sources of pollution. When the
states had not regulated indirect sources to the
EPA’s satisfaction, the EPA began to promulgate its
own rules for indirect sources. The EPA’s move
‘drew heavy criticism because [it] represented a
significant federal intrusion into the traditionally
local domain of land use control.’ In response to the
EPA’s actions, a 1977 amendment to the Act
‘severely limit[ed] the EPA’s authority’ over indirect
sources, but ‘left largely to the states’ the matter of
‘whether and how to regulate’ indirect sources.’’
(Internal citations omitted)).
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reasons that it likewise cannot require
that such a program meet any particular
level of stringency otherwise required to
meet SIP requirements, such as
attainment plan requirements for the
ozone or PM NAAQS. Therefore, the
EPA is not evaluating SCAQMD Rule
2305 for compliance with the RACM/
RACT or BACM/BACT requirements.
B. Does the rule meet the evaluation
criteria?
1. Did the State provide for reasonable
public notice and hearing prior to
adoption?
Under CAA section 110(l), SIP
revisions must be adopted by the State,
and the State must provide for
reasonable public notice and hearing
prior to adoption. Pursuant to 40 CFR
51.102, States must provide at least 30days’ notice of any public hearing to be
held on a proposed SIP revision. States
must provide the opportunity to submit
written comments and allow the public
the opportunity to request a public
hearing within that period. Rule 2305
was adopted by SCAQMD on May 7,
2021, through Resolution 21–9,
following a public hearing held on the
same day. Prior to adoption, the
SCAQMD published notice of the May
7, 2021 public hearing on March 31,
2021, and provided more than 30 days
for submission of written comments.
The CARB subsequently adopted the
rule as a revision to the SIP on August
13, 2021, through Executive Order
S–21–012. The CARB then submitted
SCAQMD Rule 2305 to the EPA on
August 13, 2021, as an attachment to a
letter with the same date. Various other
materials comprising the SIP
submission package were submitted as
well, including copies of public
comments received during the comment
period, District responses to comments,
and environmental and socioeconomic
impact assessments.
Based on the materials provided in
the August 13, 2021 SIP submission
summarized above, we propose to find
that the District and the CARB have met
the procedural requirements for
adoption and submission of SIPs and
SIP revisions under CAA section 110(l)
and 40 CFR 51.102.
2. Does the State have adequate legal
authority to implement the rule?
The SCAQMD has been granted both
general and specific authority under the
California Health & Safety Code
(CH&SC) to adopt and implement Rule
2305.36 Specific authority is found in
CH&SC section 40440 (‘‘Rules and
36 General authority is found in CH&SC sections
40000 and 40001.
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regulations’’), which authorizes the
SCAQMD to provide for indirect source
controls in those areas of the South
Coast District in which there are highlevel, localized concentrations of
pollutants.
Moreover, the EPA knows of no
obstacle under State or Federal law in
the SCAQMD’s ability to implement
Rule 2305. With respect to State law, the
EPA notes that, during the rule
development phase, certain commenters
challenged the mitigation fee option in
Rule 2305 on the grounds that it
imposes an unlawful tax under State
law. However, CARB’s August 13, 2021
SIP submission package includes a legal
analysis from the State Attorney
General’s Office 37 that concludes that
the mitigation fee is not an unlawful tax
under the California Constitution
because, as a compliance option, the fee
is not compulsory.38 In explaining how
the mitigation fee option is not
compulsory, the State Attorney
General’s Office letter notes that, under
Rule 2305, ‘‘warehouse operators have
numerous options to reduce their
emissions or otherwise earn compliance
points. If they elect not to take actions
to reduce their emissions or
environmental impacts, warehouse
operators may comply by paying the inlieu fee. A ‘hallmark’ of a tax is that ‘it
is compulsory.’ The in-lieu fee is not
compulsory, so it is not a tax.’’ 39
(Internal citations omitted.) Also, even if
viewed as compulsory, the Attorney
General’s Office explains how the
mitigation fee option falls under two
exceptions to the meaning of ‘‘tax’’
under the relevant provisions of State
law.40 The EPA proposes to find that the
State Attorney General’s Office letter
provides the necessary assurances that
State law with respect to the mitigation
fee option is not an obstacle to the
SCAQMD’s ability to implement Rule
2305.
With respect to Federal law, the EPA
is aware of an ongoing legal challenge
by the California Trucking Association
(CTA), among others, to the SCAQMD’s
legal authority to implement Rule 2305
in litigation to which the EPA is not a
party.41 In the CTA case, plaintiff CTA
and plaintiff-intervenor Airlines for
America assert that implementation and
37 Robert Swanson, Deputy Attorney General,
California Department of Justice, letter to Ellen
Peter, Chief Counsel, CARB, dated May 6, 2021,
included as an enclosure to Ellen M. Peter, Chief
Counsel, CARB, letter to Wayne Nastri, Executive
Officer, SCAQMD, dated May 6, 2021.
38 Id. at 12–14.
39 Id. at 12.
40 Id. at 12–14.
41 California Trucking Association v. South Coast
Air Quality Management District, C.D. Cal., Docket
#21–cv–06341 (CTA).
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enforcement of Rule 2305 by the
SCAQMD is preempted under the CAA,
the Airline Deregulation Act (ADA) and
the Federal Aviation Administration
Authorization Act (FAAAA or F4A).
Based on the information currently
before the EPA at this time, the EPA
proposes to find that Rule 2305 is not
preempted under the CAA, ADA or the
F4A. If the District Court were to issue
a decision against the SCAQMD in the
pending litigation before the EPA takes
final action on Rule 2305 pursuant to
this proposal, we will take that decision
into account and evaluate appropriate
action at that time.42
With respect to the CAA, the EPA’s
evaluation of Rule 2305 indicates that
the SCAQMD is authorized to adopt this
program for inclusion into the California
SIP. CAA section 110(a)(5) authorizes
States to include any ISR program in
their SIPs. Under CAA section 110(a)(5),
the EPA may not require a State to adopt
an ISR program as part of its SIP, but the
EPA may approve an ISR program that
a State chooses to adopt and submit for
inclusion into its approved SIP. In this
context, ‘‘indirect source’’ means a
facility, building, structure, installation,
real property, road, or highway that
attracts, or may attract, mobile sources
of pollution.43 ‘‘Indirect source review
program’’ means the facility-by-facility
review of indirect sources of air
pollution, including such measures as
are necessary to assure, or assist in
assuring, that a new or modified
indirect source will not attract mobile
sources of air pollution, the emissions
from which would cause or contribute
to air pollution concentrations—
• Exceeding any national primary
ambient air quality standard for a
mobile source-related air pollutant after
the primary standard attainment date; or
• Preventing maintenance of any such
standard after such date.44
42 For instance, the EPA may re-propose action or
supplement the proposed action depending upon
the implications of the decision on the District’s
authority to implement and enforce the rule, among
other considerations. If an adverse decision were to
be issued after the EPA approves Rule 2305, then
the EPA would consider withdrawal of the
approval, again, depending upon the implications
of the decision on the District’s authority to
implement and enforce the rule, among other
considerations.
43 CAA section 110(a)(5)(C). The term ‘‘indirect
source’’ as defined in the CAA includes parking
lots, and parking garages, and other facilities subject
to any measure for management of parking supply,
including regulation of existing off-street parking
but such term does not include new or existing onstreet parking. ‘‘Indirect source’’ does not include
direct emissions sources or facilities at, within, or
associated with, any indirect source.
44 CAA section 110(a)(5)(D). Indirect source
review programs are not considered ‘‘transportation
control measures.’’ CAA section 110(a)(5)(E).
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Rule 2305 involves the facility-byfacility review of existing and new
warehouses, which are facilities that
attract mobile sources of air pollution.
Based on this review, the rule provides
a list of specific measures that, when
implemented by the warehouse
operator, will reduce or offset the
related mobile source emissions that
contribute to the exceedances of the
NAAQS for PM2.5 and ozone in areas
under SCAQMD jurisdiction. The rule
also provides options to allow the
operator of the warehouse to develop a
custom WAIRE plan or pay a mitigation
fee or a combination of these options.
More specifically, under Rule 2305,
warehouse operators are required, on an
annual basis, to earn or obtain WAIRE
points sufficient to meet their WPCO, a
value that reflects the WATTs
associated with each warehouse. As
noted previously, the WATTs parameter
represents a calculated value that
reflects the number of truck trips to and
from a warehouse in a given year and
serves as a proxy for overall warehouse
activity and emissions.
To earn or obtain WAIRE points,
warehouse owners and operators have
the option of: (i) taking various types of
actions or making variety types of
investments specified in the WAIRE
menu; (ii) following an approved
Custom WAIRE Plan; (iii) paying a
mitigation fee; (iv) or any combination
of such options (see section I.D of this
document). The SCAQMD anticipates
that the same types of actions and
investments that are specified in Rule
2305 will also occur under the WAIRE
Mitigation Program funded by the
mitigation fee option under the rule (see
section I.D of this document). As such,
Rule 2305 is designed to reduce, offset,
or mitigate the emissions generated by
mobile sources attracted to warehouses
in the SCAQMD. This includes the
associated contribution to area-wide
exceedances of the NAAQS and to the
local pollutant burden on communities
in the vicinities of warehouses.
Rule 2305 is similar to the ISR review
program previously adopted by the San
Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution
Control District (SJVUAPCD) to reduce
or offset emissions of NOX and PM in
the San Joaquin Valley from the
construction-phase and operationalphase of development projects through
design features, on-site measures, and
through off-site measures paid through
implementation of an in-lieu mitigation
fee.45 The SJVUAPCD ISR program was
45 SJVUAPCD Rule 9510 (‘‘Indirect Source
Review (ISR)’’), approved by the EPA at 76 FR
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upheld by the Ninth Circuit in a
challenge that claimed that the program
was characterized as an ISR program but
was in reality a rule regulating
emissions from nonroad equipment in
violation of CAA section 209(e).46
Commenters, objecting to Rule 2305
during its adoption, contended that an
ISR program, for the purposes of CAA
section 110(a)(5), is limited to new or
modified indirect sources and that,
therefore, Rule 2305 is not authorized
under the CAA, at least as it applies to
existing warehouses. This contention is
based on the clause in the definition of
the term ‘‘indirect source review
program’’ describing such programs as
‘‘including such measures as are
necessary to assure, or assist in assuring,
that a new or modified indirect source
will not attract mobile sources of air
pollution.’’ 47
In its own rulemaking process, the
SCAQMD responded to this issue by
noting that the SCAQMD’s authority
derives from State law, not Federal law.
State law does not limit the authority of
the SCAQMD to regulating only new or
modified (as opposed to existing)
indirect sources.48 The SCAQMD also
noted that CAA section 110(a)(5) does
not prescribe limits on State authority
but rather prescribes certain limits on
the EPA. Finally, the SCAQMD stated
that it has authority under CAA section
116 for this type of provision.
In reviewing Rule 2035, the EPA has
specifically evaluated whether it is
consistent with the requirements of
CAA section 110(a)(5). When taking
action on any SIP submission, the EPA
must evaluate whether the SIP
provisions as issue meet applicable
statutory and regulatory requirements.
The EPA acknowledges that there are
ambiguities in the language of section
110(a)(5). For example, section
110(a)(5)(D) superficially appears to
define the term ‘‘indirect source review
program’’ in terms of ‘‘new or modified’’
26609 (May 9, 2011), and approved as amended at
86 FR 33542 (June 25, 2021).
46 NAHB v. SJVUAPCD, 627 F.3d 730, 734 (9th
Cir. 2010); at 739: ‘‘The Act, by allowing states to
regulate indirect sources of pollution, necessarily
contemplates imputing mobile sources of pollution
to an indirect source as a whole. If an indirect
source review program could not attribute the
emissions from mobile sources, while they are
stationed at an indirect source, to the indirect
source as a whole, states could not adopt any
indirect source review program. What allows Rule
9510 to qualify as an indirect source review
program under section 110(a)(5) is precisely what
allows the Rule to avoid preemption under section
209(e)(2): its site-based regulation of emissions. In
this way, the two sections do not conflict, but rather
fit together neatly like two interlocking puzzle
pieces.’’
47 CAA section 110(a)(5)(D).
48 Final SCAQMD Staff Report, Master Responses,
157–158.
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indirect sources. That provision in
relevant part defines an indirect source
program as one ‘‘including’’ such
measures at new or modified sources.
The EPA does not, however, interpret
this definition to restrict States from
having such programs that extend to
existing sources if they elect to do so.
Instead, the use of ‘‘including’’
preceding the reference to ‘‘new or
modified indirect source’’ indicates that
regulation of new or modified indirect
sources is illustrative of the scope of
this provision, not limiting.
Other provisions support this
interpretation. Section 110(a)(5)(C)
defines the term ‘‘indirect source’’ itself
to include many things such as a
building ‘‘which attracts, or may attract,
mobile sources of pollution.’’ This
definition could encompass both
existing and future structures. By
contrast, with respect to parking, section
110(a)(5)(C) expressly states that an
indirect source program can include
‘‘existing off-street parking’’ but not
‘‘new or existing on-street parking.’’ If
such an ‘‘indirect source program’’
could apply to existing off-street
parking, then it is unclear why this
conceptually would not extend to other
existing sources such as existing
buildings, notwithstanding the reference
to new or modified sources in the
definition of ‘‘indirect source program.’’
At most, there is a small degree of
ambiguity with respect to whether
Congress actually intended the
definition of ‘‘indirect source program’’
to function as a restriction on the EPA’s
authority to approve a State indirect
source program that extends to existing
buildings into the State’s SIP. The EPA
does not consider such a restrictive
reading of the provision to be reasonable
or logical, absent a clearer prohibition.
As further support for this
interpretation, the EPA notes that CAA
section 116 explicitly provides that
States retain authority to regulate more
stringently in SIP provisions than
otherwise required by Federal law,
except where preempted from doing so.
Even if Congress anticipated that States
might typically elect to adopt such
programs that would include new or
modified sources, Congress did not
explicitly appear to preclude States
from adopting indirect source programs
that extend to existing sources as well,
except with respect to ‘‘new or existing
on street parking.’’ In other words, by
defining the term ‘‘indirect source
program’’ in CAA section 110(a)(5)(D),
Congress was not diminishing existing
State authority under CAA section 116
to adopt such programs that apply to
existing sources, such as existing
warehouses, if they elect to do so. Thus,
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the EPA concludes that the State is not
precluded from regulating both existing
and new warehouses in Rule 2305, and
thus this poses no issue with respect to
the EPA proposing approval of the rule
into the SIP.
During the rule development process,
the SCAQMD received comments
objecting to Rule 2305 on the grounds
that the rule, while structured as an ISR
program, represents a de facto purchase
mandate for ZE or NZE trucks and is
thus preempted under CAA section
209(a). These adverse comments cited to
the Supreme Court decision in Engine
Mfrs. Ass’n v. S. Coast Air Quality
Mgmt. Dist, 541 U.S. 246 (2004) (EMA).
In EMA, the Supreme Court held that a
‘‘standard’’ under CAA section 209(a),
which the Court described as ‘‘a
requirement that a vehicle or engine not
emit more than a certain amount of
pollutant, be equipped with a certain
type of pollution-control device, or have
some other design feature related to the
control of emissions,’’ is preempted
under Section 209(a) whether applied to
manufacturers through a sales mandate
or to buyers through a purchase
mandate.49
As noted above, the question of
whether an ISR program is preempted
under Section 209 of the CAA was
squarely addressed by the Ninth Circuit
in NAHB v. SJVUAPCD. The EPA agrees
with the Ninth Circuit’s interpretation
of the statute on this point and proposes
to find that Rule 2305 is similar in
relevant respects to the ISR program the
Court determined in NAHB was not
preempted. Most critically, Rule 2305
regulates at the level of the indirect
source, and not at the level of mobile
sources the indirect source may attract.
In Rule 2305 ‘‘[t]the ‘baseline’ amount of
emissions, and the required reduction in
emissions from that baseline, are both
calculated in terms of the [indirect
source site] as a whole.’’ 50 This ‘‘sitebased’’ approach to regulating emissions
‘‘is precisely what allows the Rule to
avoid preemption under section
209(e)(2).’’ 51 That Rule 2305 is properly
characterized as an ISR program under
Section 110(a)(5) distinguishes it from
the vehicle purchase mandate at issue in
the Supreme Court EMA case.52
49 Engine Manufacturers Ass’n v. South Coast Air
Quality Management District, 541 U.S. 246, 253–
255 (2004).
50 NAHB v. SJVUAPCD, 627 F.3d 730, 737.
51 Id., 739.
52 ‘‘Rule 9510 escapes preemption because its
regulation of construction equipment is indirect.
Rule 9510 does not measure emissions by fleets or
groups of vehicles; it measures emissions on a
‘‘facility-by-facility’’ basis. 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(5)(D).
Its unit of measurement is the indirect source, not
the fleet. It regulates development sites directly, but
as the term ‘‘indirect source’’ implies, it regulates
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The EPA has previously
acknowledged the possibility that a rule
styled as an ISR program may in effect
be a regulation of direct sources,
including motor vehicles or nonroad
sources. In other words, the EPA is not
obligated merely to accept at face value
a State or local authority’s
characterization, but may consider how
the program will work in practice. In its
2011 final approval action on the
SJVUAPCD ISR, the EPA noted factors
that might indicate a rule ostensibly
measuring emissions from a site was a
de facto regulation of nonroad
engines.53 As explained below, Rule
2305 lacks the indicia of a de facto
regulation of either motor vehicles or
nonroad vehicles or engines.
As explained in section I.D above,
Rule 2305 applies to warehouse
operators and provides multiple options
for meeting the annual WPCO. As noted
by the SCAQMD in response to
comments on proposed Rule 2305, ‘‘the
WPCO is not based on truck emissions;
it is based on truck trips. The proposed
rule uses truck trips as a proxy for total
warehouse emissions when setting the
compliance obligation because the
number of truck visits is representative
of the total activity at, and emissions
associated with, a warehouse.’’ 54 The
various options available (WAIRE
Menu, Custom WAIRE Plan, or
Mitigation Fee) to warehouse operators
that do not involve acquisition of, or
contracting for, ZE or NZE trucks to earn
WAIRE Points support a conclusion that
in Rule 2305, the SCAQMD has not
adopted or attempted to enforce any
standard relating to the control of
emissions from new motor vehicles or
new motor vehicle engines for the
purposes of CAA section 209(a).55
mobile emissions only indirectly. For that reason,
the fleet-based regulations [that were at issue in
EMA] are not analogous to Rule 9510.’’ NAHB v.
SJVUAPCD, 627 F.3d 740.
53 ‘‘[I]n the TSD, EPA evaluates the potential for
Rule 9510, as an ISR rule otherwise authorized
under CAA section 110(a)(5), to nevertheless run
afoul of CAA section 209(e), and in so doing, EPA
identified two ways that an ISR rule that on its face
is authorized under CAA section 110(a)(5) could
nonetheless be preempted. First, the ISR rule could
be preempted if the rule in practice as applied acts
to compel the manufacturer or user of a nonroad
engine or vehicle to change the emission control
design of the engine or vehicle, or second, an ISR
rule could be preempted if it creates incentives so
onerous as to be in effect a purchase mandate.’’ 76
FR 26609, 26611 (May 9, 2011).
54 SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 160.
55 SCAQMD’s Final Socioeconomic Impact
Assessment for Proposed Rule 2305—Warehouse
Indirect Source Rule—Warehouse Actions and
Investments to Reduce Emissions (WAIRE) Program
and Proposed Rule 316—Fees for Rule 2305 (May
2021), particularly pages ES–5—ES–7, and table 18,
indicates that the ZE/NEZ non-acquisition (or
contracting) scenarios are generally 4 to 5 times
more costly (in terms of average annual dollars per
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Commenters objecting to the
SCAQMD’s adoption of Rule 2305
contended that the requirements are
preempted under the ADA and F4A.
Under the ADA, with certain exceptions
not applicable here, a State or political
subdivision of a State may not enact or
enforce a law, regulation, or other
provision having the force and effect of
law related to a price, route, or service
of an air carrier or carrier affiliated with
a direct air carrier through common
controlling ownership when such
carrier is transporting property by
aircraft or by motor vehicle (whether or
not such property has had or will have
a prior or subsequent air movement).56
The F4A extends the same preemptive
language to any motor carrier (‘‘common
carrier’’) or any motor private carrier,
broker, or freight forwarder with respect
to the transportation of property.57 Rule
2305 applies to owners and operators of
warehouses greater than 100,000 square
feet of indoor floor space in a single
building, and both air carriers and
common carriers are subject to the
requirements of Rule 2305 because both
types of carriers own or operate such
warehouses in the SCAQMD.
The EPA does not consider the
requirements under Rule 2305 as
relating directly to the ‘‘price, route, or
service’’ of any air carrier or common
carrier but do recognize that an indirect
effect on price is a foreseeable
consequence of the additional costs
borne by warehouse owners or operators
to comply with the annual WAIRE
points compliance obligation. However,
the EPA proposes to find that Rule 2305
is not preempted under either the ADA
or F4A because any price effect is
indirect and remote. Moreover, the
District is acting under its delegated
police powers to protect public health
in a way that is explicitly authorized
under CAA section 110(a)(5) and CAA
section 116. Any incremental increase
in price for delivery services due to
compliance with Rule 2305 internalizes
costs otherwise borne by the public,
particularly members of the public
living and working in the vicinities of
warehouses, through the types of health
square foot) than the ZE/NZE acquisition (or
contracting) scenarios so as to incentive acquisition
and use of ZE/NZE trucks over the non-acquisition
options. However, the scenarios were developed to
identify the widest range of possible costs assuming
that warehouse owners and operators would only
comply with a single scenario approach from 2022
through 2031. The EPA expects warehouse
operators will select multiple points-earning actions
or investments along with mitigation fees to meet
the annual compliance obligation, and that the
selection will change over the years in light of the
ever-changing circumstances of individual
businesses and the composition of vehicle fleets.
56 49 U.S.C. 41713(b).
57 49 U.S.C. 14501(c)(1).
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effects associated with elevated
concentrations of PM.
3. Is the rule enforceable as required
under CAA section 110(a)(2)?
The EPA has evaluated the
enforceability of Rule 2305 with respect
to applicability and exemptions;
standard of conduct; compliance dates;
sunset provisions; discretionary
provisions; and test methods,
recordkeeping and reporting,58 and the
EPA believes, for the reasons given
below, that the regulation is generally
enforceable for the purposes of CAA
section 110(a)(2) but with certain
deficiencies.
First, with respect to applicability, the
EPA generally finds that Rule 2305 is
sufficiently clear as to which entities are
subject to the requirements in the
regulation and which entities are
exempt.59 The EPA finds that Rule 2305
is sufficiently specific so that the
persons affected by the regulation are
fairly on notice as to what the
requirements and related compliance
dates are.60 To a large extent, the EPA
has already described the substantive
requirements and compliance dates set
forth in Rule 2305 in section I.D of this
document. The EPA notes, however,
that two definitions in Rule 2305 cite to
sections of the California Code of
Regulations (CCR), and thus, the two
definitions in Rule 2305 would be
ambiguous for the purposes of
enforcement of the SIP unless the CCR
sections on which Rule 2305 relies are
submitted and approved into the SIP.61
The CCR sections on which Rule 2305
relies are included in two new CARB
mobile source regulations that the EPA
anticipates that CARB will submit to the
EPA for approval as part of the
California SIP. If these two CCR sections
are submitted and the EPA subsequently
approves them into the SIP, then Rule
2305 will avoid this particular potential
ambiguity and the related implications
for enforceability.
Second, with respect to compliance
dates, the EPA notes that all warehouses
subject to the rule will be required to
meet their WAIRE points annual
compliance obligation requirements
beginning with calendar year 2024. This
is consistent with achieving emission
reductions in advance of the July 20,
58 These concepts are discussed in detail in an
EPA memorandum dated from September 23,1987,
from J. Craig Potter, EPA Assistant Administrator
for Air and Radiation, et al., to Addressees, Subject:
‘‘Review of State Implementation Plans and
Revisions for Enforceability and Legal Sufficiency.’’
59 13 CCR 2023.
60 13 CCR 2023.1.
61 The definitions in Rule 2305 of ‘‘Near ZeroEmission’’ truck and ‘‘Zero-Emission’’ truck cite to
13 CCR 1956.8 and 1963, respectively.
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2032 attainment deadline for the South
Coast Air Basin and Coachella Valley
Extreme nonattainment areas for the
2008 ozone NAAQS. By extension, Rule
2305 compliance dates are compatible
with the applicable attainment
deadlines for the 2015 ozone NAAQS:
August 3, 2033, for the Coachella Valley
‘‘Severe’’ nonattainment area; and
August 3, 2038, for the South Coast Air
Basin ‘‘Extreme’’ nonattainment area.
The compliance dates in Rule 2305 are
also consistent with providing emission
reductions in advance of the applicable
attainment deadlines in the South Coast
of October 16, 2025 for the 2006 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS and December 31, 2025
for the 2012 annual PM2.5 NAAQS.62
Third, Rule 2305 includes a sunset
provision.63 Specifically, Rule 2305
provides that the WAIRE points annual
compliance obligation requirements
expire in the year following the
determinations by the EPA that the
South Coast Air Basin and Coachella
Valley have attained the 2015 ozone
NAAQS and the determinations by
CARB that the South Coast Air Basin
and Coachella Valley have attained the
State ambient air quality standard for
ozone (which is numerically the same as
the 2015 ozone NAAQS). Generally, the
EPA finds sunset provisions in SIP rules
to be a deficiency that must be
addressed for full approval because of
the potential to interfere with
reasonable further progress (RFP) or
attainment of the NAAQS, and potential
inconsistency with CAA section 110(l)
requirements through purported
elimination of existing control
requirements without a sufficient
demonstration at that future date. In this
instance, we are not crediting Rule 2305
at this time with a specific level of
emissions reductions for RFP or
attainment demonstration purposes.
This does not mean that the rule would
not achieve emissions reductions in
practice over the near-term and well
into the future and, therefore, does not
mean that sunsetting the rule would not
result in foregone emissions reductions
that would be relevant for both the
ozone and PM2.5 NAAQS at that future
time. We recommend that SCAQMD
amend Rule 2305 to eliminate the
sunset clause. The SCAQMD is free to
rescind the rule at any time, but a future
rescission of Rule 2305 must be
effectuated though adoption and
submission of the rescission as a SIP
revision to the EPA for review and
62 See 85 FR 57733 (September 16, 2020) and 40
CFR 51.1004(a)(3) (2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS);
and 85 FR 71264 (November 9, 2020) and 40 CFR
51.1004(a)(2) (2012 annual PM2.5 NAAQS).
63 SCAQMD Rule 2305(h).
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action under CAA section 110(k), and
consistent with CAA section 110(l), at
that time.
The EPA notes that Rule 2305
includes provisions that allow for
discretion on the part of the SCAQMD’s
Executive Officer. Such ‘‘director’s
discretion’’ provisions can undermine
enforceability of a SIP regulation, and
thus prevent full approval by EPA. In
the case of Rule 2305, it allows for
director’s discretion in connection with
the determination of whether WAIRE
Points from a Custom WAIRE Plan are
quantifiable, verifiable, and real and the
determination of whether the warehouse
owner or operator is making adequate
progress to complete an approved
Custom WAIRE Plan.64 Inclusion of
such provisions that in effect give a
State official, unilateral, and unbounded
authority to make decisions concerning
whether a regulated entity is, or is not,
in compliance that bind the EPA or
other parties are inconsistent with basic
SIP requirements.
Lastly, Rule 2305 includes
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements that are sufficient to
ensure compliance with the applicable
requirements.65 The EPA notes that, in
adopting Rule 2305, the SCAQMD
Board directed the Executive Officer to
develop an online portal for the purpose
of submitting required reports and
documents as required by Rule 2305.
The online portal (WAIRE POP) will
provide the public information about
how warehouse operators and owners
are complying with Rule 2305 and how
WAIRE Mitigation Program funds are
spent.66 The SCAQMD has since
developed a WAIRE program tab under
Rules & Compliance portion of the
District’s website. It includes a portal to
the WAIRE POP for warehouse
operators to submit reports and includes
general information on the program
such as the implementation guidelines,
applications, guidance, and analytical
tools, among other things.
4. Does the rule interfere with
reasonable further progress (RFP) and
attainment or any other applicable
requirement of the Act?
The SCAQMD adopted Rule 2305 in
part to meet a commitment in the 2016
South Coast AQMP to assess and
identify potential actions to further
reduce emissions associated with
emission sources operating in and out of
warehouse distribution centers. While
the EPA is not proposing to credit Rule
2305 with achieving a specific amount
Rule 2305(d)(4)(A)(iii) and (d)(4)(D).
CCR 2023.8 and 2023.9.
66 SCAQMD Resolution 21–9, 7.
of emissions reductions, the EPA’s
evaluation of Rule 2305 indicates that
the rule will achieve additional
emission reductions. These additional
reductions will incrementally contribute
to the overall reductions needed to
attain the NAAQS in the South Coast
Air Basin and Coachella Valley air
quality planning areas.
However, as discussed previously, we
find that the sunset clause in Rule 2305
could interfere with attainment or
reasonable further progress by foregoing
emissions reductions that may be
needed for attainment or maintenance of
the NAAQS. Thus, the EPA
recommends that the SCAQMD remove
the sunset clause and follow the normal
course of action in rescinding rules from
the SIP, i.e., through a SIP revision and
EPA approval under CAA section 110(k)
and section 110(l).
5. Will the State have adequate
personnel and funding for the rule?
The SCAQMD adopted a specific rule,
Rule 316 (‘‘Fees for Rule 2305’’), for the
purpose of recovering the SCAQMD’s
costs associated with implementing
Rule 2305. In light of the adoption of
Rule 316, the EPA finds that the
SCAQMD will have adequate personnel
and funding to implement Rule 2305.
6. EPA’s Rule Evaluation Conclusion
Based on the above discussion, the
EPA believes Rule 2305 is consistent
with the relevant CAA requirements,
policies, and guidance, except as
otherwise noted. As an ISR program
under CAA section 110(a)(5), Rule 2305
is not a required submission. The EPA
proposes to find that the District has the
authority to implement and enforce
Rule 2305 and is not prohibited from
doing so by any State or Federal law.
While Rule 2305, as stated previously,
will reduce emissions associated with
warehouses, the EPA proposes to find
that the rule is not fully enforceable,
and that the amount of associated
emissions reductions is not sufficiently
quantifiable for credit at the present
time. The EPA proposes to find that
Rule 2305 is SIP-strengthening and
proposes to approve it on this basis. A
recent decision by the Ninth Circuit
upheld the EPA’s approval of a SIP
submission for the San Joaquin Valley
on SIP strengthening grounds.67 In that
case, like our proposed action on Rule
2305, the EPA deemed the SIP provision
at issue not fully enforceable and
accordingly granted no SIP credit for
64 SCAQMD
65 13
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67 Association of Irritated Residents v. EPA, 10
F.4th 937 (9th Cir. 2021).
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emissions reductions from the
provision.
C. Public Comment and Proposed
Action
As authorized in section 110(k)(3) of
the Act, the EPA proposes to approve
the submitted rule. The EPA concludes
that, while SCAQMD Rule 2305 does
not meet all the evaluation criteria for
enforceability, we are proposing
approval because the submitted rule is
not a required SIP element and would
strengthen the SIP. In light of the
deficiencies identified above, however,
the EPA concludes that the submitted
rule should not be credited in any
attainment and rate of progress/
reasonable further progress
demonstrations.
We will accept comments from the
public on the proposed action, the
rationale and basis for the proposed
action, and other relevant matters until
November 13, 2023. If the EPA takes
final action to approve the submitted
rule, the final action will incorporate
this rule into the federally enforceable
SIP.
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III. Incorporation by Reference
In this rule, the EPA is proposing to
include in a final EPA rule regulatory
text that includes incorporation by
reference. In accordance with
requirements of 1 CFR 51.5, the EPA is
proposing to incorporate by reference
SCAQMD Rule 2305, adopted on May 7,
2021, that establishes an ISR program
for certain warehouse owners and
operators, as described in section I of
this preamble. The EPA has made, and
will continue to make, these materials
available through https://
www.regulations.gov and at the EPA
Region IX Office (please contact the
person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
preamble for more information).
IV. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the
Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the
provisions of the Act and applicable
Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k);
40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in reviewing SIP
submissions, the EPA’s role is to
approve State choices, provided that
they meet the criteria of the Clean Air
Act. Accordingly, this proposed action
merely proposes to approve State law as
meeting Federal requirements and does
not impose additional requirements
beyond those imposed by State law. For
that reason, this proposed action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
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of Management and Budget under
Executive Orders 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993), 13563 (76 FR 3821,
January 21, 2011) and 14094 (88 FR
21879, April 11, 2023);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001); and
• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act.
Executive Order 12898 (Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations, 59 FR 7629,
Feb. 16, 1994) directs Federal agencies
to identify and address
‘‘disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects’’
of their actions on minority populations
and low-income populations to the
greatest extent practicable and
permitted by law. The EPA defines
environmental justice (EJ) as ‘‘the fair
treatment and meaningful involvement
of all people regardless of race, color,
national origin, or income with respect
to the development, implementation,
and enforcement of environmental laws,
regulations, and policies.’’ The EPA
further defines the term fair treatment to
mean that ‘‘no group of people should
bear a disproportionate burden of
environmental harms and risks,
including those resulting from the
negative environmental consequences of
industrial, governmental, and
commercial operations or programs and
policies.’’
The SCAQMD did not evaluate
environmental justice considerations as
part of its SIP submittal; the CAA and
applicable implementing regulations
neither prohibit nor require such an
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70625
evaluation. However, the Community
Steering Committees for four
environmental justice communities
admitted into the State’s AB 617
program in the affected area requested
development of a warehouse ISR rule
due to concerns regarding air pollution
impacts from trucks and DPM.68 The
EPA did not perform an EJ analysis and
did not consider EJ in this action. Due
to the nature of the action being
proposed here, this proposed action is
expected to have a neutral to positive
impact on the air quality of the affected
area. Consideration of EJ is not required
as part of this action, and there is no
information in the record inconsistent
with the stated goal of E.O. 12898 of
achieving environmental justice for
people of color, low-income
populations, and Indigenous peoples.
Lastly, the SIP is not approved to
apply on any Indian reservation land or
in any other area where the EPA or an
Indian tribe has demonstrated that a
tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of
Indian country, the proposed rule does
not have tribal implications and will not
impose substantial direct costs on tribal
governments or preempt tribal law as
specified by Executive Order 13175 (65
FR 67249, November 9, 2000).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Particulate
matter, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Dated: October 5, 2023.
Martha Guzman Aceves,
Regional Administrator, Region IX.
[FR Doc. 2023–22518 Filed 10–11–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 152
[EPA–HQ–OPP–2023–0420; FRL–10637–01–
OCSPP]
RIN 2070–AL13
Pesticides; Review of Requirements
Applicable to Treated Seed and
Treated Paint Products; Request for
Information and Comments
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Advanced notice of proposed
rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is soliciting public
SUMMARY:
68 SCAQMD
E:\FR\FM\12OCP1.SGM
Final Staff Report, 9 and 10.
12OCP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 196 (Thursday, October 12, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 70616-70625]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-22518]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R09-OAR-2023-0494; FRL-11442-01-R9]
Air Plan Approval; California; South Coast Air Quality Management
District
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to
approve a revision to the South Coast Air Quality Management District
(SCAQMD or ``the District'') portion of the California State
Implementation Plan (SIP) as SIP strengthening. This revision concerns
emissions of oxides of nitrogen (NOX) and particulate matter
(PM) from indirect sources associated with warehouses. The EPA is
proposing to approve SCAQMD Rule 2305, ``Warehouse Indirect Source
Rule--Warehouse Actions and Investments to Reduce Emissions (WAIRE)
Program,'' to regulate these emission sources under the Clean Air Act
(CAA or the Act). The EPA is taking comments on this proposal and plans
to follow with a final action.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before November 13, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R09-
OAR-2023-0494 at https://www.regulations.gov. For comments submitted at
Regulations.gov, follow the online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted, comments cannot be edited or removed from
Regulations.gov. The EPA may publish any comment received to its public
docket. Do not submit electronically any information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute. Multimedia submissions (audio,
video, etc.) must be accompanied by a written comment. The written
comment is considered the official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to make. The EPA will generally not
[[Page 70617]]
consider comments or comment contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, please contact the person identified in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section. For the full EPA public
comment policy, information about CBI or multimedia submissions, and
general guidance on making effective comments, please visit https://www.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets. If you need assistance in a
language other than English or if you are a person with disabilities
who needs a reasonable accommodation at no cost to you, please contact
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: La Kenya Evans-Hopper, EPA Region IX,
75 Hawthorne St., San Francisco, CA 94105. By phone: (415) 972-3245 or
by email at [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, ``we,'' ``us,''
and ``our'' refer to the EPA.
Table of Contents
I. The State's Submittal
A. What rule did the State submit?
B. Are there other versions of this rule?
C. What is the purpose of the rule?
D. What requirements does the rule establish?
II. The EPA's Evaluation and Action
A. How is the EPA evaluating the rule?
B. Does the rule meet the evaluation criteria?
C. Public comment and proposed action
III. Incorporation by Reference
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. The State's Submittal
A. What rule did the State submit?
Table 1 lists the rule addressed by this proposal with the dates
that it was adopted by the local air agency and submitted by the
California Air Resources Board (CARB).
Table 1--Submitted Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Local agency Rule # Rule title Amended Submitted
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SCAQMD................................ 2305 Warehouse Indirect 05/07/2021 08/13/2021
Source Rule--Warehouse
Actions and Investments
to Reduce Emissions
(WAIRE) Program.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
On February 13, 2022, the submittal for SCAQMD Rule 2305 was deemed
complete by operation of law with respect to the completeness criteria
in 40 CFR part 51, appendix V, which must be met before formal EPA
review.
B. Are there other versions of this rule?
SCAQMD Rule 2305 is a new rule. There are no previously approved
versions of the rule in the applicable SIP.
C. What is the purpose of the rule?
Emissions of NOX contribute to the production of ground-
level ozone, smog and PM, which harm human health and the environment.
Emissions of PM, including PM equal to or less than 2.5 microns in
diameter (PM2.5) and PM equal to or less than 10 microns in
diameter (PM10), contribute to effects that are harmful to
human health and the environment, including premature mortality,
aggravation of respiratory and cardiovascular disease, decreased lung
function, visibility impairment, and damage to vegetation and
ecosystems. Section 110(a) of the CAA requires States to submit
regulations that control NOX and PM emissions for purposes
of attainment and maintenance of the National Ambient Air Quality
Standards (NAAQS) and to meet other CAA requirements.
The purpose of SCAQMD Rule 2305 is to reduce local and area-wide
emissions of NOX and PM, by facilitating emission reductions
associated with warehouses and the mobile sources attracted to
warehouses in order to assist in meeting State and Federal air quality
standards for ozone and PM2.5. Mobile sources of emissions
associated with warehouses include the trucks that deliver goods to and
from the facilities, yard trucks, transport refrigeration units (TRUs)
located on trucks and trailers, and passenger vehicle trips associated
with employees and visitors.\1\ Most of these vehicles are diesel
powered, except for passenger vehicles which are typically gasoline
powered. Heavy-duty trucks contribute roughly 90% of the overall mobile
source inventory of NOX emissions from warehouse operations,
followed in order of importance from an emissions standpoint by TRUs,
passenger vehicles, and then yard trucks.\2\ Additional emissions
sources can include onsite stationary equipment (e.g., diesel backup
generators or manufacturing equipment).\3\ The rule applies within the
jurisdiction of the SCAQMD, which includes all of Orange County, the
non-desert portions of Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties, and all
of Riverside County (except for the Palo Verde Valley in far eastern
Riverside County).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ SCAQMD, Final Staff Report, ``Proposed Rule 2305--Warehouse
Indirect Source Rule--Warehouse Actions and Investments to Reduce
Emissions (WAIRE) Program and Proposed Rule 316--Fees for Rule
2305'', May 2021, ``SCAQMD Final Staff Report'', 12.
\2\ SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 13.
\3\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also, through adoption of the 2016 South Coast Air Quality
Management Plan (AQMP), the SCAQMD committed to assess and identify
potential actions to further reduce emissions associated with emission
sources operating in and out of warehouse distribution centers,\4\ and
the SCAQMD adopted Rule 2305 to fulfill that commitment. The purpose of
the 2016 South Coast AQMP is to establish a path toward the goal of
attainment for ozone and PM2.5 NAAQS in the nonattainment
areas subject to SCAQMD jurisdiction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ SCAQMD, Final 2016 Air Quality Management Plan, March 2017,
pages 4-25, 4-28, and 4-29. The 2016 South Coast AQMP designates the
warehouse measure as MOB-03 (``Emission Reductions at Warehouse
Distribution Centers'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The EPA has taken several actions on the 2016 South Coast AQMP.
With certain exceptions not relevant here, the EPA approved portions of
the 2016 South Coast AQMP addressing the Serious Area requirements for
the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS in the South Coast Air Basin
(``South Coast''); the portions of the 2016 South Coast AQMP updating
the control strategies and attainment demonstrations for the 1-hour and
1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS, and addressing the 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS in
the South Coast; the portions of the 2016 South Coast AQMP addressing
the Moderate Area requirements for the 2012 annual PM2.5
NAAQS in the South Coast; and the portions of the 2016 South Coast AQMP
addressing the Severe Area requirements for the 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS
in Coachella Valley.\5\ In so doing, the EPA approved the SCAQMD's
Stationary and Mobile
[[Page 70618]]
Source Control Measures, including the facility-based mobile source
measures such as the Emission Reductions at Warehouse Distributions
Center measure. The 2016 South Coast AQMP includes enforceable
commitments by the SCAQMD to achieve certain aggregate emissions
reductions by certain years through adoption and implementation of the
SCAQMD's Stationary and Mobile Source Control Measures.
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\5\ 84 FR 3305 (February 12, 2019), corrected at 84 FR 19680
(May 3, 2019) (2006 PM2.5 NAAQS); 84 FR 52005 (October 1,
2019) (1-hour, 1997 and 2008 Ozone NAAQS in South Coast); 85 FR
71269 (November 9, 2020) (2012 PM2.5 NAAQS); and 85 FR
57714 (September 16, 2020) (2008 Ozone NAAQS in Coachella Valley).
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D. What requirements does the rule establish?
Rule 2305 applies to owners and operators of warehouses located in
the SCAQMD with greater than 100,000 square feet of indoor floor space
in a single building and who operate at least 50,000 square feet of the
warehouse for warehousing activities. Warehouse operators are required
either to earn points, as discussed below, from emission reducing
activities, or to pay a mitigation fee. Warehouse facility owners or
warehouse land owners may opt in to earn Warehouse Actions and
Investments to Reduce Emissions Points (``WAIRE Points'') and transfer
these points to a warehouse operator at the same site. Both warehouse
facility owners and operators must comply with certain recordkeeping
and reporting requirements under the rule. Warehouse facility owners
were required to submit initial Warehouse Operations Notifications to
the SCAQMD by September 1, 2021, and then again within certain
prescribed periods thereafter if certain conditions occur. Warehouse
operators are also required to submit their Initial Site Information
Reports (ISIR) and Annual WAIRE Reports to the SCAQMD. All of the
notifications and reports are to be submitted through the WAIRE Program
Online Portal (WAIRE POP). In addition, records which document the
accuracy and validity of all information submitted to the SCAQMD as
required by the rule must be kept by the warehouse owner, or operator
as applicable, for a minimum of seven years from the reporting
deadline. Records must be made available upon request to the SCAQMD
during normal business hours.
The principal substantive requirement in the rule is the
requirement that each warehouse operator meet an annual compliance
obligation by earning WAIRE Points. The annual compliance obligation,
referred to as the WAIRE Points Compliance Obligation (WPCO), for each
warehouse operator is calculated based on Weighted Annual Truck Trips
(WATTs) multiplied by a stringency factor (0.0025 points per WATT) and
an annual variable (which accounts for the phased implementation of the
rule).\6\ WATT reflects all trips in a given year by trucks with gross
vehicle weight ratings (GVWR) greater than 8,500 pounds but multiplies
trips by trucks with GVWRs greater than 33,000 pounds (``Class 8''
trucks) by 2.5.\7\ The WATTs parameter serves as a proxy for overall
warehouse activity and emissions.\8\ A warehouse owner may earn WAIRE
Points and may transfer them to any warehouse operator at the site
where the WAIRE Points were earned within a three-year period.
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\6\ SCAQMD Rule 2305(d)(1)(A) and Tables 1 and 2.
\7\ SCAQMD Rule 2305(d)(1)(B).
\8\ SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 27, 35. As explained in footnote
44 of the SCAQMD Final Staff Report, the SCAQMD adopted WATTs as the
parameter for determining the WPCO for warehouses rather than
emissions or vehicle miles travelled (VMT). SCAQMD decided against a
parameter like emissions or VMT to reduce the administrative burden
on warehouse operators and the SCAQMD compliance staff. Also, the
SCAQMD notes that motor carriers had expressed concern that they do
not want to reveal where or how far they travel to warehouse
operators or SCAQMD in order to keep their clients private.
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The requirement to earn WAIRE points to meet a WPCO does not apply
to warehouse operators who use less than 50,000 square feet for
warehousing activities of a warehouse that is greater than or equal to
100,000 square feet.\9\ This exemption does not apply if the same
parent company owns or controls multiple operators in the same building
who collectively use more than 50,000 square feet of space for
warehousing activity.\10\ A warehouse operator with a WPCO that is less
than 10 in any compliance period also is exempt from earning WAIRE
Points for that compliance period. In both cases, certain recordkeeping
and reporting requirements (as stated above) under the rule continue to
apply.
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\9\ In Rule 2305(c)(33), the term ``warehousing activities'' is
defined as meaning operations at a warehouse related to the storage
and distribution of goods, including but not limited to the storage,
labelling, sorting, consolidation and deconsolidation of products
into different size packages. Supporting office administration,
maintenance, manufacturing areas, or retail sales areas open to the
general public, within the same warehouse building, that are
physically separate from the warehouse area, are not considered
warehousing activities for the purpose of the rule.
\10\ The exemptions are set forth in SCAQMD Rule 2305(g).
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In situations where investments or actions that were completed by a
warehouse owner or operator perform significantly lower than
anticipated due to unforeseen circumstances beyond the control of the
warehouse owners or operators resulting in lower than anticipated
earned WAIRE Points, the warehouse owner or operator may apply to the
Executive Officer \11\ for a partial or complete exemption.\12\ This
application must specify what portion of the WPCO that the
malfunctioning equipment would have satisfied, and all relevant details
on why the anticipated action was unable to earn the expected WAIRE
Points. The Executive Officer will use the following criteria to grant
a partial or complete exemption: (a) there is a manufacturing defect or
an installation defect when using manufacturer-approved methods, and
(b) the warehouse operator can demonstrate that despite good faith
efforts for repairs on the vehicle or equipment, through either the
warranty or other manufacturer and/or installer-approved methods, the
repairs were not completed in a timely manner.
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\11\ Executive Officer refers to the Executive Officer or
designee of the SCAQMD. The Executive Officer is the Air Pollution
Control Officer for the SCAQMD.
\12\ For example, if a warehouse operator purchases a zero-
emission truck and anticipates using this same truck to earn WAIRE
Points, but a malfunction in the powertrain due to an equipment
manufacturer defect (e.g., malfunctioning electric motor, fuel cell
stack, etc.) results in an inability to use the equipment, then the
operator may apply for relief for the WAIRE Points that would have
be earned. The exemption would be granted if the vehicle or
equipment is shown to be due to a manufacturer defect or an
installation defect. SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 37.
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Warehouse owners (who opt in) and operators are required to earn
WAIRE Points either: through the completion of specified actions from
the list of actions in the WAIRE Menu,\13\ completion of actions in an
approved custom plan, through payment of a mitigation fee, or through a
combination of these three options.\14\ The WAIRE Points provision
within Rule 2305 includes a WAIRE Menu with a list of specific actions
that a warehouse owner or operator may take to earn points to meet the
annual WPCO.\15\ The menu includes nine different types of actions or
investments that qualify for points: (i) acquire Zero Emission (ZE)/
Near-Zero Emission (NZE) Trucks, (ii) number of ZE/NZE Truck
Visits,\16\ (iii) acquire ZE Yard Truck, (iv) use ZE Yard Truck, (v)
install onsite ZE charging or fueling infrastructure, (vi) use onsite
ZE charging or fueling infrastructure, (vii) install and energize
onsite solar panels, (viii) use onsite solar panels, and (ix)
[[Page 70619]]
install MERV 16 or greater filters or filter systems in residences,
schools, daycares, hospitals, or community centers.
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\13\ SCAQMD Rule 2305, Table 3.
\14\ SCAQMD Rule 2305(d)(1) and (2).
\15\ SCAQMD Rule 2305, Table 3.
\16\ NZE and ZE truck visits can come from the warehouse
operator's own fleet or by any other third-party fleet (whether
contracted by the warehouse operator or not). See SCAQMD Final Staff
Report, at 99. The term ``truck visits'' refers to the round-trip a
truck takes to and from a warehouse. For example, 520 ``truck
visits'' is the same as 1,040 one-way ``truck trips'' as explained
in the SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 30.
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Rule 2305 specifies the number of points for the different types of
actions or investments, ranging from 1 point (per 165,000 kilowatt-
hours) from the use of onsite solar panels to 1,680 points for
installation of a 700-kilogram-per-day hydrogen (H2) fueling
station. SCAQMD assigned WAIRE Points to the different types of actions
or investments based on three key parameters: cost, regional emissions
reductions, and local emissions reduction.\17\ For example, under Rule
2305, acquiring a new class 8 ZE/NZE truck in the warehouse operator
fleet would be worth 126 points. Similarly, 365 visits by class 8 ZE/
NZE trucks to a warehouse would be worth 51 points during a given
annual compliance period.
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\17\ SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 111.
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Based on the most current information contained in the first Annual
Report for the WAIRE Program, the average WPCO per warehouse operator
was rounded to 80 points for the 2022 compliance period.\18\ The same
number of WATTs in 2023 and 2024 (and beyond) for the same warehouse
operators would result in an average WPCO of 160 points and 240 points,
respectively, taking into account the annual variable under Phase I
(which applies to warehouses equal to or greater than 250,000 square
feet) for those years.\19\
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\18\ SCAQMD, Annual Report for the Warehouse Actions and
Investments to Reduce Emissions (WAIRE) Program, January 2023, 16.
The report represents 47% of warehouses in the SCAQMD. The average
WPCO estimate of 80 points reflects SCAQMD's anticipated aggregate
WPCO of approximately 30,000 divided by 380, the number of Phase I
warehouses for which Initial Site Information Reports (ISIR) were
submitted in time for the report. The 30,000 aggregate point value
reflects a 0.33 annual variable for the first compliance period for
Phase I warehouses.
\19\ Rule 2305, table 2 (``Annual Variable'').
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Under the rule, the Custom WAIRE Plan is a second option that
allows warehouse owners or operators to earn WAIRE Points through a
customized plan specific for a warehouse facility.\20\ Custom WAIRE
Plan applications must demonstrate how the proposed action will earn
WAIRE Points based on the incremental cost of the action, the
NOX emission reductions from the action, and the diesel PM
(DPM) emission reductions from the action, relative to baseline
conditions. Custom WAIRE Plans may not include actions that are
included in the WAIRE Menu on Table 3 of Rule 2305. The methodology to
determine the total WAIRE Points for an action in a Custom WAIRE Plan
application must be consistent with methods in the WAIRE Program
Implementation Guidelines.\21\ Any WAIRE Points earned from a Custom
WAIRE Plan for emission reductions must be quantifiable, verifiable,
and real as determined by the Executive Officer and consistent with the
WAIRE Implementation Guidelines.
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\20\ SCAQMD Rule 2305(d)(4).
\21\ SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 86. A copy of the current
version of the SCAQMD's WAIRE Implementation Guidelines, version
1.1, is included in the docket for this rulemaking.
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Warehouse owners or operators have a third option to meet the
annual compliance obligation that involves payment of a mitigation fee
in the amount of $1,000 for each WAIRE Point.\22\ The mitigation fee is
an option for warehouse operators to fulfill all or a portion of their
WPCO. In adopting Rule 2305, the SCAQMD Governing Board directed the
Executive Officer to develop the WAIRE Mitigation Program with funds
generated from mitigation fee payments.\23\ Any solicitations for
requests for funding, or funding allocations that would be spent from
the WAIRE Mitigation Program, must be approved by the SCAQMD Governing
Board in a public meeting.\24\ In adopting the Rule 2305, the Board
also specified that proposed solicitations and project awards must be
presented to the Governing Board no less frequently than on an annual
basis. The Board directed the Executive Officer to track mitigation
fees paid by warehouse operators according to the Source Receptor Area
(SRA) \25\ and county in which they are located to achieve or
facilitate emission reductions in the same SRAs and counties in which
the mitigation fees were paid. As adopted by the Board, if sufficient
projects are not identified in each individual SRA relative to the
available funding, then funds may be directed either to an adjacent SRA
in the same county or held for a subsequent funding. The SCAQMD states
that the mitigation fees collected from Rule 2305 will go towards the
purchase of NZE and ZE trucks, installation of ZE charging and/or
hydrogen fueling infrastructure.\26\ Funds may also be combined with
other incentive programs, such as Carl Moyer and Proposition 1B, as
allowable on a case-by-case basis.
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\22\ SCAQMD Rule 2305(d)(5).
\23\ SCAQMD, Resolution 21-9, signed June 4, 2021, 6.
\24\ SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 40.
\25\ Source Receptor Areas (SRAs) are shown in a SCAQMD-prepared
map titled ``General Forecast Areas & Air Monitoring Areas''.
\26\ SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 40.
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As noted above, warehouse operators have three basic options, or
any combination of these options, through which to earn or obtain
points sufficient to meet their WPCO. Warehouse owners may also earn
WAIRE Points using the same methods or options available to warehouse
operators and may transfer these WAIRE Points to any warehouse operator
at the site where the WAIRE Points were earned within a three-year
period.
In the SCAQMD's first Annual Report for the WAIRE Program, the
SCAQMD compiled information from 380 ISIR's that had been submitted by
warehouse operators through September 30, 2022. The first Annual Report
suggests that warehouse operators expect to meet their WPCOs, at least
in the early years of the program, primarily through ZE hostler usage,
(i.e., yard tractors that move trailers and containers around warehouse
facilities; approximately 40% of the anticipated WAIRE points based on
the ISIRs received), NZE Class 8 Truck Visits (approximately 27%), and
ZE hostler acquisition (approximately 8%).\27\ The submitted ISIRs also
suggest that, in addition to taking actions from the WAIRE Menu,
warehouse operators anticipate earning about 5,500 points through
mitigation fees, representing about 3% of total points earned, and
about $5.5 million.\28\
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\27\ SCAQMD, Annual Report for the Warehouse Actions and
Investments to Reduce Emissions (WAIRE) Program, January 2023, 15.
\28\ Id.
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The SCAQMD developed emissions reduction estimates for various
scenarios representing different compliance approaches to Rule
2305.\29\ The estimates of reductions in emissions of NOX
and DPM vary widely among the scenarios and from year to year but
represent positive emission reductions beyond those that are expected
by the SCAQMD to occur due to CARB regulations (such as CARB's Advanced
Clean Trucks, Low NOX Omnibus, and Heavy Duty Inspection and
Maintenance (I/M) regulations).\30\
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\29\ SCAQMD Final Staff Report, Tables 15 and 16.
\30\ SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 62.
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Lastly, the rule includes recordkeeping and reporting requirements.
The three types of reports that are due under Rule 2305 include: (1)
the Warehouse Operations Notification (WON), which is the
responsibility of the warehouse owner, (2) the ISIR, and (3) the Annual
WAIRE Report, both of which are the responsibility of warehouse
operators. The rule also specifies a sunset date after the EPA finds
that all air basins within the SCAQMD have attained the
[[Page 70620]]
2015 ozone NAAQS and that CARB finds that all air basins within the
SCAQMD have attained the California ozone ambient air quality standard
(which is numerically the same as the 2015 ozone NAAQS).\31\
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\31\ SCAQMD Rule 2305(e) and (h).
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II. The EPA's Evaluation and Action
A. How is the EPA evaluating the rule?
The EPA has evaluated SCAQMD Rule 2305 against the applicable
procedural and substantive requirements of the CAA for SIPs and SIP
revisions and has concluded that, with certain exceptions discussed
below, Rule 2305 meets the applicable requirements and would strengthen
the SIP. Generally, SIPs must include enforceable emission limitations
and other control measures, means, or techniques, as well as schedules
and timetables for compliance, as may be necessary to meet the
requirements of the Act (see CAA section 110(a)(2)(A)); must provide
necessary assurances that the State will have adequate personnel,
funding, and authority under State law to carry out such SIP (and is
not prohibited by any provision of Federal or State law from carrying
out such SIP) (see CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)); must be adopted by a
State after reasonable notice and public hearing (see CAA section
110(a)(1); section 110(a)(2); section 110(l)); and must not interfere
with any applicable requirement concerning attainment and reasonable
further progress, or any other applicable requirement of the Act (see
CAA section 110(l)).\32\
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\32\ CAA section 193, which prohibits any pre-1990 SIP control
requirement relating to nonattainment pollutants in nonattainment
areas from being modified unless the SIP is revised to insure
equivalent or greater emission reductions of such air pollutants,
does not apply to the SCAQMD Rule 2305 because, as a new rule, it
does not represent a pre-1990 SIP control requirement.
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The SCAQMD jurisdiction covers all the South Coast Air Basin, and
portions of the Salton Sea and Mojave Desert Air Basins, and includes
air quality planning areas that are designated as nonattainment for the
1-hour ozone NAAQS and the 1997, 2008 and 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS
(South Coast and Coachella Valley areas); the 1997 24-hour and annual
PM2.5 NAAQS, the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS and the
2012 annual PM2.5 NAAQS (South Coast area), and the 1987 24-
hour PM10 NAAQS (Coachella Valley area).\33\ The South Coast
Air Basin is currently classified as an Extreme nonattainment area for
the 1-hour ozone NAAQS and the 1997, 2008, and 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS,
as a Moderate nonattainment area for the 1997 annual and 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS, and as a Serious nonattainment area for the
2006 24-hour and 2012 annual PM2.5 NAAQS. The Coachella
Valley portion of the Salton Sea Air Basin is classified as a Severe
nonattainment area for the 1-hour ozone NAAQS, as an Extreme
nonattainment area for the 1997 and 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS,\34\ as a
Severe nonattainment area for the 2015 8-hour ozone NAAQS; and as a
Serious nonattainment area for the 1987 24-hour PM10 NAAQS.
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\33\ 40 CFR 81.305. In addition, a portion of Los Angeles County
is designated nonattainment for the lead NAAQS, but SCAQMD Rule 2305
does not affect lead emissions, and thus, the lead NAAQS is not
germane to our proposed action and is not discussed further.
\34\ The EPA recently finalized a reclassification requested by
CARB for Coachella Valley from Severe to Extreme for the 2008 ozone
NAAQS. 88 FR 14291 (March 8, 2023).
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CAA section 172(c)(1) requires States with ozone nonattainment
areas to implement all reasonably available control measures (RACM),
including such reductions in emissions from existing sources in the
area as may be obtained through the adoption, at a minimum, of
reasonably available control technology (RACT), as expeditiously as
practicable. CAA sections 182(b)(2) and 182(f) specify that
implementation of RACT under CAA section 172(c)(1) is required for all
major stationary sources of NOX in the area. In addition,
the CAA requires States with Serious PM10 and
PM2.5 NAAQS nonattainment areas to implement Best Available
Control Measures (BACM), including Best Available Control Technology
(BACT) (see CAA section 189(b)(1)(B)). As noted above, SCAQMD includes
both Extreme and Severe ozone nonattainment areas and Moderate and
Serious PM nonattainment areas.
With respect to rule stringency, the EPA is prohibited by the CAA
from requiring States and local air agencies to submit indirect source
review (ISR) programs as a condition to approving a SIP.\35\ Because
the EPA cannot require a State or local air agency to adopt and
implement an ISR program, the EPA reasons that it likewise cannot
require that such a program meet any particular level of stringency
otherwise required to meet SIP requirements, such as attainment plan
requirements for the ozone or PM NAAQS. Therefore, the EPA is not
evaluating SCAQMD Rule 2305 for compliance with the RACM/RACT or BACM/
BACT requirements.
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\35\ CAA section 110(a)(5)(A)(i); National Association of Home
Builders v. San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control
District, 627 F.3d 730, 737-38 (9th Cir. 2010) (``NAHB v.
SJVUAPCD'') (``Congress added section 110(a)(5) to the Act in 1977
after the EPA had tried to force the states to regulate indirect
sources of pollution. When the states had not regulated indirect
sources to the EPA's satisfaction, the EPA began to promulgate its
own rules for indirect sources. The EPA's move `drew heavy criticism
because [it] represented a significant federal intrusion into the
traditionally local domain of land use control.' In response to the
EPA's actions, a 1977 amendment to the Act `severely limit[ed] the
EPA's authority' over indirect sources, but `left largely to the
states' the matter of `whether and how to regulate' indirect
sources.'' (Internal citations omitted)).
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B. Does the rule meet the evaluation criteria?
1. Did the State provide for reasonable public notice and hearing prior
to adoption?
Under CAA section 110(l), SIP revisions must be adopted by the
State, and the State must provide for reasonable public notice and
hearing prior to adoption. Pursuant to 40 CFR 51.102, States must
provide at least 30-days' notice of any public hearing to be held on a
proposed SIP revision. States must provide the opportunity to submit
written comments and allow the public the opportunity to request a
public hearing within that period. Rule 2305 was adopted by SCAQMD on
May 7, 2021, through Resolution 21-9, following a public hearing held
on the same day. Prior to adoption, the SCAQMD published notice of the
May 7, 2021 public hearing on March 31, 2021, and provided more than 30
days for submission of written comments. The CARB subsequently adopted
the rule as a revision to the SIP on August 13, 2021, through Executive
Order S-21-012. The CARB then submitted SCAQMD Rule 2305 to the EPA on
August 13, 2021, as an attachment to a letter with the same date.
Various other materials comprising the SIP submission package were
submitted as well, including copies of public comments received during
the comment period, District responses to comments, and environmental
and socioeconomic impact assessments.
Based on the materials provided in the August 13, 2021 SIP
submission summarized above, we propose to find that the District and
the CARB have met the procedural requirements for adoption and
submission of SIPs and SIP revisions under CAA section 110(l) and 40
CFR 51.102.
2. Does the State have adequate legal authority to implement the rule?
The SCAQMD has been granted both general and specific authority
under the California Health & Safety Code (CH&SC) to adopt and
implement Rule 2305.\36\ Specific authority is found in CH&SC section
40440 (``Rules and
[[Page 70621]]
regulations''), which authorizes the SCAQMD to provide for indirect
source controls in those areas of the South Coast District in which
there are high-level, localized concentrations of pollutants.
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\36\ General authority is found in CH&SC sections 40000 and
40001.
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Moreover, the EPA knows of no obstacle under State or Federal law
in the SCAQMD's ability to implement Rule 2305. With respect to State
law, the EPA notes that, during the rule development phase, certain
commenters challenged the mitigation fee option in Rule 2305 on the
grounds that it imposes an unlawful tax under State law. However,
CARB's August 13, 2021 SIP submission package includes a legal analysis
from the State Attorney General's Office \37\ that concludes that the
mitigation fee is not an unlawful tax under the California Constitution
because, as a compliance option, the fee is not compulsory.\38\ In
explaining how the mitigation fee option is not compulsory, the State
Attorney General's Office letter notes that, under Rule 2305,
``warehouse operators have numerous options to reduce their emissions
or otherwise earn compliance points. If they elect not to take actions
to reduce their emissions or environmental impacts, warehouse operators
may comply by paying the in-lieu fee. A `hallmark' of a tax is that `it
is compulsory.' The in-lieu fee is not compulsory, so it is not a
tax.'' \39\ (Internal citations omitted.) Also, even if viewed as
compulsory, the Attorney General's Office explains how the mitigation
fee option falls under two exceptions to the meaning of ``tax'' under
the relevant provisions of State law.\40\ The EPA proposes to find that
the State Attorney General's Office letter provides the necessary
assurances that State law with respect to the mitigation fee option is
not an obstacle to the SCAQMD's ability to implement Rule 2305.
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\37\ Robert Swanson, Deputy Attorney General, California
Department of Justice, letter to Ellen Peter, Chief Counsel, CARB,
dated May 6, 2021, included as an enclosure to Ellen M. Peter, Chief
Counsel, CARB, letter to Wayne Nastri, Executive Officer, SCAQMD,
dated May 6, 2021.
\38\ Id. at 12-14.
\39\ Id. at 12.
\40\ Id. at 12-14.
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With respect to Federal law, the EPA is aware of an ongoing legal
challenge by the California Trucking Association (CTA), among others,
to the SCAQMD's legal authority to implement Rule 2305 in litigation to
which the EPA is not a party.\41\ In the CTA case, plaintiff CTA and
plaintiff-intervenor Airlines for America assert that implementation
and enforcement of Rule 2305 by the SCAQMD is preempted under the CAA,
the Airline Deregulation Act (ADA) and the Federal Aviation
Administration Authorization Act (FAAAA or F4A). Based on the
information currently before the EPA at this time, the EPA proposes to
find that Rule 2305 is not preempted under the CAA, ADA or the F4A. If
the District Court were to issue a decision against the SCAQMD in the
pending litigation before the EPA takes final action on Rule 2305
pursuant to this proposal, we will take that decision into account and
evaluate appropriate action at that time.\42\
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\41\ California Trucking Association v. South Coast Air Quality
Management District, C.D. Cal., Docket #21-cv-06341 (CTA).
\42\ For instance, the EPA may re-propose action or supplement
the proposed action depending upon the implications of the decision
on the District's authority to implement and enforce the rule, among
other considerations. If an adverse decision were to be issued after
the EPA approves Rule 2305, then the EPA would consider withdrawal
of the approval, again, depending upon the implications of the
decision on the District's authority to implement and enforce the
rule, among other considerations.
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With respect to the CAA, the EPA's evaluation of Rule 2305
indicates that the SCAQMD is authorized to adopt this program for
inclusion into the California SIP. CAA section 110(a)(5) authorizes
States to include any ISR program in their SIPs. Under CAA section
110(a)(5), the EPA may not require a State to adopt an ISR program as
part of its SIP, but the EPA may approve an ISR program that a State
chooses to adopt and submit for inclusion into its approved SIP. In
this context, ``indirect source'' means a facility, building,
structure, installation, real property, road, or highway that attracts,
or may attract, mobile sources of pollution.\43\ ``Indirect source
review program'' means the facility-by-facility review of indirect
sources of air pollution, including such measures as are necessary to
assure, or assist in assuring, that a new or modified indirect source
will not attract mobile sources of air pollution, the emissions from
which would cause or contribute to air pollution concentrations--
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\43\ CAA section 110(a)(5)(C). The term ``indirect source'' as
defined in the CAA includes parking lots, and parking garages, and
other facilities subject to any measure for management of parking
supply, including regulation of existing off-street parking but such
term does not include new or existing on-street parking. ``Indirect
source'' does not include direct emissions sources or facilities at,
within, or associated with, any indirect source.
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Exceeding any national primary ambient air quality
standard for a mobile source-related air pollutant after the primary
standard attainment date; or
Preventing maintenance of any such standard after such
date.\44\
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\44\ CAA section 110(a)(5)(D). Indirect source review programs
are not considered ``transportation control measures.'' CAA section
110(a)(5)(E).
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Rule 2305 involves the facility-by-facility review of existing and
new warehouses, which are facilities that attract mobile sources of air
pollution. Based on this review, the rule provides a list of specific
measures that, when implemented by the warehouse operator, will reduce
or offset the related mobile source emissions that contribute to the
exceedances of the NAAQS for PM2.5 and ozone in areas under
SCAQMD jurisdiction. The rule also provides options to allow the
operator of the warehouse to develop a custom WAIRE plan or pay a
mitigation fee or a combination of these options. More specifically,
under Rule 2305, warehouse operators are required, on an annual basis,
to earn or obtain WAIRE points sufficient to meet their WPCO, a value
that reflects the WATTs associated with each warehouse. As noted
previously, the WATTs parameter represents a calculated value that
reflects the number of truck trips to and from a warehouse in a given
year and serves as a proxy for overall warehouse activity and
emissions.
To earn or obtain WAIRE points, warehouse owners and operators have
the option of: (i) taking various types of actions or making variety
types of investments specified in the WAIRE menu; (ii) following an
approved Custom WAIRE Plan; (iii) paying a mitigation fee; (iv) or any
combination of such options (see section I.D of this document). The
SCAQMD anticipates that the same types of actions and investments that
are specified in Rule 2305 will also occur under the WAIRE Mitigation
Program funded by the mitigation fee option under the rule (see section
I.D of this document). As such, Rule 2305 is designed to reduce,
offset, or mitigate the emissions generated by mobile sources attracted
to warehouses in the SCAQMD. This includes the associated contribution
to area-wide exceedances of the NAAQS and to the local pollutant burden
on communities in the vicinities of warehouses.
Rule 2305 is similar to the ISR review program previously adopted
by the San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District
(SJVUAPCD) to reduce or offset emissions of NOX and PM in
the San Joaquin Valley from the construction-phase and operational-
phase of development projects through design features, on-site
measures, and through off-site measures paid through implementation of
an in-lieu mitigation fee.\45\ The SJVUAPCD ISR program was
[[Page 70622]]
upheld by the Ninth Circuit in a challenge that claimed that the
program was characterized as an ISR program but was in reality a rule
regulating emissions from nonroad equipment in violation of CAA section
209(e).\46\
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\45\ SJVUAPCD Rule 9510 (``Indirect Source Review (ISR)''),
approved by the EPA at 76 FR 26609 (May 9, 2011), and approved as
amended at 86 FR 33542 (June 25, 2021).
\46\ NAHB v. SJVUAPCD, 627 F.3d 730, 734 (9th Cir. 2010); at
739: ``The Act, by allowing states to regulate indirect sources of
pollution, necessarily contemplates imputing mobile sources of
pollution to an indirect source as a whole. If an indirect source
review program could not attribute the emissions from mobile
sources, while they are stationed at an indirect source, to the
indirect source as a whole, states could not adopt any indirect
source review program. What allows Rule 9510 to qualify as an
indirect source review program under section 110(a)(5) is precisely
what allows the Rule to avoid preemption under section 209(e)(2):
its site-based regulation of emissions. In this way, the two
sections do not conflict, but rather fit together neatly like two
interlocking puzzle pieces.''
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Commenters, objecting to Rule 2305 during its adoption, contended
that an ISR program, for the purposes of CAA section 110(a)(5), is
limited to new or modified indirect sources and that, therefore, Rule
2305 is not authorized under the CAA, at least as it applies to
existing warehouses. This contention is based on the clause in the
definition of the term ``indirect source review program'' describing
such programs as ``including such measures as are necessary to assure,
or assist in assuring, that a new or modified indirect source will not
attract mobile sources of air pollution.'' \47\
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\47\ CAA section 110(a)(5)(D).
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In its own rulemaking process, the SCAQMD responded to this issue
by noting that the SCAQMD's authority derives from State law, not
Federal law. State law does not limit the authority of the SCAQMD to
regulating only new or modified (as opposed to existing) indirect
sources.\48\ The SCAQMD also noted that CAA section 110(a)(5) does not
prescribe limits on State authority but rather prescribes certain
limits on the EPA. Finally, the SCAQMD stated that it has authority
under CAA section 116 for this type of provision.
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\48\ Final SCAQMD Staff Report, Master Responses, 157-158.
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In reviewing Rule 2035, the EPA has specifically evaluated whether
it is consistent with the requirements of CAA section 110(a)(5). When
taking action on any SIP submission, the EPA must evaluate whether the
SIP provisions as issue meet applicable statutory and regulatory
requirements. The EPA acknowledges that there are ambiguities in the
language of section 110(a)(5). For example, section 110(a)(5)(D)
superficially appears to define the term ``indirect source review
program'' in terms of ``new or modified'' indirect sources. That
provision in relevant part defines an indirect source program as one
``including'' such measures at new or modified sources. The EPA does
not, however, interpret this definition to restrict States from having
such programs that extend to existing sources if they elect to do so.
Instead, the use of ``including'' preceding the reference to ``new or
modified indirect source'' indicates that regulation of new or modified
indirect sources is illustrative of the scope of this provision, not
limiting.
Other provisions support this interpretation. Section 110(a)(5)(C)
defines the term ``indirect source'' itself to include many things such
as a building ``which attracts, or may attract, mobile sources of
pollution.'' This definition could encompass both existing and future
structures. By contrast, with respect to parking, section 110(a)(5)(C)
expressly states that an indirect source program can include ``existing
off-street parking'' but not ``new or existing on-street parking.'' If
such an ``indirect source program'' could apply to existing off-street
parking, then it is unclear why this conceptually would not extend to
other existing sources such as existing buildings, notwithstanding the
reference to new or modified sources in the definition of ``indirect
source program.'' At most, there is a small degree of ambiguity with
respect to whether Congress actually intended the definition of
``indirect source program'' to function as a restriction on the EPA's
authority to approve a State indirect source program that extends to
existing buildings into the State's SIP. The EPA does not consider such
a restrictive reading of the provision to be reasonable or logical,
absent a clearer prohibition.
As further support for this interpretation, the EPA notes that CAA
section 116 explicitly provides that States retain authority to
regulate more stringently in SIP provisions than otherwise required by
Federal law, except where preempted from doing so. Even if Congress
anticipated that States might typically elect to adopt such programs
that would include new or modified sources, Congress did not explicitly
appear to preclude States from adopting indirect source programs that
extend to existing sources as well, except with respect to ``new or
existing on street parking.'' In other words, by defining the term
``indirect source program'' in CAA section 110(a)(5)(D), Congress was
not diminishing existing State authority under CAA section 116 to adopt
such programs that apply to existing sources, such as existing
warehouses, if they elect to do so. Thus, the EPA concludes that the
State is not precluded from regulating both existing and new warehouses
in Rule 2305, and thus this poses no issue with respect to the EPA
proposing approval of the rule into the SIP.
During the rule development process, the SCAQMD received comments
objecting to Rule 2305 on the grounds that the rule, while structured
as an ISR program, represents a de facto purchase mandate for ZE or NZE
trucks and is thus preempted under CAA section 209(a). These adverse
comments cited to the Supreme Court decision in Engine Mfrs. Ass'n v.
S. Coast Air Quality Mgmt. Dist, 541 U.S. 246 (2004) (EMA). In EMA, the
Supreme Court held that a ``standard'' under CAA section 209(a), which
the Court described as ``a requirement that a vehicle or engine not
emit more than a certain amount of pollutant, be equipped with a
certain type of pollution-control device, or have some other design
feature related to the control of emissions,'' is preempted under
Section 209(a) whether applied to manufacturers through a sales mandate
or to buyers through a purchase mandate.\49\
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\49\ Engine Manufacturers Ass'n v. South Coast Air Quality
Management District, 541 U.S. 246, 253-255 (2004).
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As noted above, the question of whether an ISR program is preempted
under Section 209 of the CAA was squarely addressed by the Ninth
Circuit in NAHB v. SJVUAPCD. The EPA agrees with the Ninth Circuit's
interpretation of the statute on this point and proposes to find that
Rule 2305 is similar in relevant respects to the ISR program the Court
determined in NAHB was not preempted. Most critically, Rule 2305
regulates at the level of the indirect source, and not at the level of
mobile sources the indirect source may attract. In Rule 2305 ``[t]the
`baseline' amount of emissions, and the required reduction in emissions
from that baseline, are both calculated in terms of the [indirect
source site] as a whole.'' \50\ This ``site-based'' approach to
regulating emissions ``is precisely what allows the Rule to avoid
preemption under section 209(e)(2).'' \51\ That Rule 2305 is properly
characterized as an ISR program under Section 110(a)(5) distinguishes
it from the vehicle purchase mandate at issue in the Supreme Court EMA
case.\52\
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\50\ NAHB v. SJVUAPCD, 627 F.3d 730, 737.
\51\ Id., 739.
\52\ ``Rule 9510 escapes preemption because its regulation of
construction equipment is indirect. Rule 9510 does not measure
emissions by fleets or groups of vehicles; it measures emissions on
a ``facility-by-facility'' basis. 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(5)(D). Its unit
of measurement is the indirect source, not the fleet. It regulates
development sites directly, but as the term ``indirect source''
implies, it regulates mobile emissions only indirectly. For that
reason, the fleet-based regulations [that were at issue in EMA] are
not analogous to Rule 9510.'' NAHB v. SJVUAPCD, 627 F.3d 740.
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[[Page 70623]]
The EPA has previously acknowledged the possibility that a rule
styled as an ISR program may in effect be a regulation of direct
sources, including motor vehicles or nonroad sources. In other words,
the EPA is not obligated merely to accept at face value a State or
local authority's characterization, but may consider how the program
will work in practice. In its 2011 final approval action on the
SJVUAPCD ISR, the EPA noted factors that might indicate a rule
ostensibly measuring emissions from a site was a de facto regulation of
nonroad engines.\53\ As explained below, Rule 2305 lacks the indicia of
a de facto regulation of either motor vehicles or nonroad vehicles or
engines.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ ``[I]n the TSD, EPA evaluates the potential for Rule 9510,
as an ISR rule otherwise authorized under CAA section 110(a)(5), to
nevertheless run afoul of CAA section 209(e), and in so doing, EPA
identified two ways that an ISR rule that on its face is authorized
under CAA section 110(a)(5) could nonetheless be preempted. First,
the ISR rule could be preempted if the rule in practice as applied
acts to compel the manufacturer or user of a nonroad engine or
vehicle to change the emission control design of the engine or
vehicle, or second, an ISR rule could be preempted if it creates
incentives so onerous as to be in effect a purchase mandate.'' 76 FR
26609, 26611 (May 9, 2011).
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As explained in section I.D above, Rule 2305 applies to warehouse
operators and provides multiple options for meeting the annual WPCO. As
noted by the SCAQMD in response to comments on proposed Rule 2305,
``the WPCO is not based on truck emissions; it is based on truck trips.
The proposed rule uses truck trips as a proxy for total warehouse
emissions when setting the compliance obligation because the number of
truck visits is representative of the total activity at, and emissions
associated with, a warehouse.'' \54\ The various options available
(WAIRE Menu, Custom WAIRE Plan, or Mitigation Fee) to warehouse
operators that do not involve acquisition of, or contracting for, ZE or
NZE trucks to earn WAIRE Points support a conclusion that in Rule 2305,
the SCAQMD has not adopted or attempted to enforce any standard
relating to the control of emissions from new motor vehicles or new
motor vehicle engines for the purposes of CAA section 209(a).\55\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 160.
\55\ SCAQMD's Final Socioeconomic Impact Assessment for Proposed
Rule 2305--Warehouse Indirect Source Rule--Warehouse Actions and
Investments to Reduce Emissions (WAIRE) Program and Proposed Rule
316--Fees for Rule 2305 (May 2021), particularly pages ES-5--ES-7,
and table 18, indicates that the ZE/NEZ non-acquisition (or
contracting) scenarios are generally 4 to 5 times more costly (in
terms of average annual dollars per square foot) than the ZE/NZE
acquisition (or contracting) scenarios so as to incentive
acquisition and use of ZE/NZE trucks over the non-acquisition
options. However, the scenarios were developed to identify the
widest range of possible costs assuming that warehouse owners and
operators would only comply with a single scenario approach from
2022 through 2031. The EPA expects warehouse operators will select
multiple points-earning actions or investments along with mitigation
fees to meet the annual compliance obligation, and that the
selection will change over the years in light of the ever-changing
circumstances of individual businesses and the composition of
vehicle fleets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters objecting to the SCAQMD's adoption of Rule 2305
contended that the requirements are preempted under the ADA and F4A.
Under the ADA, with certain exceptions not applicable here, a State or
political subdivision of a State may not enact or enforce a law,
regulation, or other provision having the force and effect of law
related to a price, route, or service of an air carrier or carrier
affiliated with a direct air carrier through common controlling
ownership when such carrier is transporting property by aircraft or by
motor vehicle (whether or not such property has had or will have a
prior or subsequent air movement).\56\ The F4A extends the same
preemptive language to any motor carrier (``common carrier'') or any
motor private carrier, broker, or freight forwarder with respect to the
transportation of property.\57\ Rule 2305 applies to owners and
operators of warehouses greater than 100,000 square feet of indoor
floor space in a single building, and both air carriers and common
carriers are subject to the requirements of Rule 2305 because both
types of carriers own or operate such warehouses in the SCAQMD.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ 49 U.S.C. 41713(b).
\57\ 49 U.S.C. 14501(c)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The EPA does not consider the requirements under Rule 2305 as
relating directly to the ``price, route, or service'' of any air
carrier or common carrier but do recognize that an indirect effect on
price is a foreseeable consequence of the additional costs borne by
warehouse owners or operators to comply with the annual WAIRE points
compliance obligation. However, the EPA proposes to find that Rule 2305
is not preempted under either the ADA or F4A because any price effect
is indirect and remote. Moreover, the District is acting under its
delegated police powers to protect public health in a way that is
explicitly authorized under CAA section 110(a)(5) and CAA section 116.
Any incremental increase in price for delivery services due to
compliance with Rule 2305 internalizes costs otherwise borne by the
public, particularly members of the public living and working in the
vicinities of warehouses, through the types of health effects
associated with elevated concentrations of PM.
3. Is the rule enforceable as required under CAA section 110(a)(2)?
The EPA has evaluated the enforceability of Rule 2305 with respect
to applicability and exemptions; standard of conduct; compliance dates;
sunset provisions; discretionary provisions; and test methods,
recordkeeping and reporting,\58\ and the EPA believes, for the reasons
given below, that the regulation is generally enforceable for the
purposes of CAA section 110(a)(2) but with certain deficiencies.
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\58\ These concepts are discussed in detail in an EPA memorandum
dated from September 23,1987, from J. Craig Potter, EPA Assistant
Administrator for Air and Radiation, et al., to Addressees, Subject:
``Review of State Implementation Plans and Revisions for
Enforceability and Legal Sufficiency.''
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First, with respect to applicability, the EPA generally finds that
Rule 2305 is sufficiently clear as to which entities are subject to the
requirements in the regulation and which entities are exempt.\59\ The
EPA finds that Rule 2305 is sufficiently specific so that the persons
affected by the regulation are fairly on notice as to what the
requirements and related compliance dates are.\60\ To a large extent,
the EPA has already described the substantive requirements and
compliance dates set forth in Rule 2305 in section I.D of this
document. The EPA notes, however, that two definitions in Rule 2305
cite to sections of the California Code of Regulations (CCR), and thus,
the two definitions in Rule 2305 would be ambiguous for the purposes of
enforcement of the SIP unless the CCR sections on which Rule 2305
relies are submitted and approved into the SIP.\61\ The CCR sections on
which Rule 2305 relies are included in two new CARB mobile source
regulations that the EPA anticipates that CARB will submit to the EPA
for approval as part of the California SIP. If these two CCR sections
are submitted and the EPA subsequently approves them into the SIP, then
Rule 2305 will avoid this particular potential ambiguity and the
related implications for enforceability.
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\59\ 13 CCR 2023.
\60\ 13 CCR 2023.1.
\61\ The definitions in Rule 2305 of ``Near Zero-Emission''
truck and ``Zero-Emission'' truck cite to 13 CCR 1956.8 and 1963,
respectively.
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Second, with respect to compliance dates, the EPA notes that all
warehouses subject to the rule will be required to meet their WAIRE
points annual compliance obligation requirements beginning with
calendar year 2024. This is consistent with achieving emission
reductions in advance of the July 20,
[[Page 70624]]
2032 attainment deadline for the South Coast Air Basin and Coachella
Valley Extreme nonattainment areas for the 2008 ozone NAAQS. By
extension, Rule 2305 compliance dates are compatible with the
applicable attainment deadlines for the 2015 ozone NAAQS: August 3,
2033, for the Coachella Valley ``Severe'' nonattainment area; and
August 3, 2038, for the South Coast Air Basin ``Extreme'' nonattainment
area. The compliance dates in Rule 2305 are also consistent with
providing emission reductions in advance of the applicable attainment
deadlines in the South Coast of October 16, 2025 for the 2006 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS and December 31, 2025 for the 2012 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS.\62\
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\62\ See 85 FR 57733 (September 16, 2020) and 40 CFR
51.1004(a)(3) (2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS); and 85 FR 71264
(November 9, 2020) and 40 CFR 51.1004(a)(2) (2012 annual
PM2.5 NAAQS).
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Third, Rule 2305 includes a sunset provision.\63\ Specifically,
Rule 2305 provides that the WAIRE points annual compliance obligation
requirements expire in the year following the determinations by the EPA
that the South Coast Air Basin and Coachella Valley have attained the
2015 ozone NAAQS and the determinations by CARB that the South Coast
Air Basin and Coachella Valley have attained the State ambient air
quality standard for ozone (which is numerically the same as the 2015
ozone NAAQS). Generally, the EPA finds sunset provisions in SIP rules
to be a deficiency that must be addressed for full approval because of
the potential to interfere with reasonable further progress (RFP) or
attainment of the NAAQS, and potential inconsistency with CAA section
110(l) requirements through purported elimination of existing control
requirements without a sufficient demonstration at that future date. In
this instance, we are not crediting Rule 2305 at this time with a
specific level of emissions reductions for RFP or attainment
demonstration purposes. This does not mean that the rule would not
achieve emissions reductions in practice over the near-term and well
into the future and, therefore, does not mean that sunsetting the rule
would not result in foregone emissions reductions that would be
relevant for both the ozone and PM2.5 NAAQS at that future
time. We recommend that SCAQMD amend Rule 2305 to eliminate the sunset
clause. The SCAQMD is free to rescind the rule at any time, but a
future rescission of Rule 2305 must be effectuated though adoption and
submission of the rescission as a SIP revision to the EPA for review
and action under CAA section 110(k), and consistent with CAA section
110(l), at that time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ SCAQMD Rule 2305(h).
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The EPA notes that Rule 2305 includes provisions that allow for
discretion on the part of the SCAQMD's Executive Officer. Such
``director's discretion'' provisions can undermine enforceability of a
SIP regulation, and thus prevent full approval by EPA. In the case of
Rule 2305, it allows for director's discretion in connection with the
determination of whether WAIRE Points from a Custom WAIRE Plan are
quantifiable, verifiable, and real and the determination of whether the
warehouse owner or operator is making adequate progress to complete an
approved Custom WAIRE Plan.\64\ Inclusion of such provisions that in
effect give a State official, unilateral, and unbounded authority to
make decisions concerning whether a regulated entity is, or is not, in
compliance that bind the EPA or other parties are inconsistent with
basic SIP requirements.
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\64\ SCAQMD Rule 2305(d)(4)(A)(iii) and (d)(4)(D).
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Lastly, Rule 2305 includes recordkeeping and reporting requirements
that are sufficient to ensure compliance with the applicable
requirements.\65\ The EPA notes that, in adopting Rule 2305, the SCAQMD
Board directed the Executive Officer to develop an online portal for
the purpose of submitting required reports and documents as required by
Rule 2305. The online portal (WAIRE POP) will provide the public
information about how warehouse operators and owners are complying with
Rule 2305 and how WAIRE Mitigation Program funds are spent.\66\ The
SCAQMD has since developed a WAIRE program tab under Rules & Compliance
portion of the District's website. It includes a portal to the WAIRE
POP for warehouse operators to submit reports and includes general
information on the program such as the implementation guidelines,
applications, guidance, and analytical tools, among other things.
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\65\ 13 CCR 2023.8 and 2023.9.
\66\ SCAQMD Resolution 21-9, 7.
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4. Does the rule interfere with reasonable further progress (RFP) and
attainment or any other applicable requirement of the Act?
The SCAQMD adopted Rule 2305 in part to meet a commitment in the
2016 South Coast AQMP to assess and identify potential actions to
further reduce emissions associated with emission sources operating in
and out of warehouse distribution centers. While the EPA is not
proposing to credit Rule 2305 with achieving a specific amount of
emissions reductions, the EPA's evaluation of Rule 2305 indicates that
the rule will achieve additional emission reductions. These additional
reductions will incrementally contribute to the overall reductions
needed to attain the NAAQS in the South Coast Air Basin and Coachella
Valley air quality planning areas.
However, as discussed previously, we find that the sunset clause in
Rule 2305 could interfere with attainment or reasonable further
progress by foregoing emissions reductions that may be needed for
attainment or maintenance of the NAAQS. Thus, the EPA recommends that
the SCAQMD remove the sunset clause and follow the normal course of
action in rescinding rules from the SIP, i.e., through a SIP revision
and EPA approval under CAA section 110(k) and section 110(l).
5. Will the State have adequate personnel and funding for the rule?
The SCAQMD adopted a specific rule, Rule 316 (``Fees for Rule
2305''), for the purpose of recovering the SCAQMD's costs associated
with implementing Rule 2305. In light of the adoption of Rule 316, the
EPA finds that the SCAQMD will have adequate personnel and funding to
implement Rule 2305.
6. EPA's Rule Evaluation Conclusion
Based on the above discussion, the EPA believes Rule 2305 is
consistent with the relevant CAA requirements, policies, and guidance,
except as otherwise noted. As an ISR program under CAA section
110(a)(5), Rule 2305 is not a required submission. The EPA proposes to
find that the District has the authority to implement and enforce Rule
2305 and is not prohibited from doing so by any State or Federal law.
While Rule 2305, as stated previously, will reduce emissions associated
with warehouses, the EPA proposes to find that the rule is not fully
enforceable, and that the amount of associated emissions reductions is
not sufficiently quantifiable for credit at the present time. The EPA
proposes to find that Rule 2305 is SIP-strengthening and proposes to
approve it on this basis. A recent decision by the Ninth Circuit upheld
the EPA's approval of a SIP submission for the San Joaquin Valley on
SIP strengthening grounds.\67\ In that case, like our proposed action
on Rule 2305, the EPA deemed the SIP provision at issue not fully
enforceable and accordingly granted no SIP credit for
[[Page 70625]]
emissions reductions from the provision.
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\67\ Association of Irritated Residents v. EPA, 10 F.4th 937
(9th Cir. 2021).
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C. Public Comment and Proposed Action
As authorized in section 110(k)(3) of the Act, the EPA proposes to
approve the submitted rule. The EPA concludes that, while SCAQMD Rule
2305 does not meet all the evaluation criteria for enforceability, we
are proposing approval because the submitted rule is not a required SIP
element and would strengthen the SIP. In light of the deficiencies
identified above, however, the EPA concludes that the submitted rule
should not be credited in any attainment and rate of progress/
reasonable further progress demonstrations.
We will accept comments from the public on the proposed action, the
rationale and basis for the proposed action, and other relevant matters
until November 13, 2023. If the EPA takes final action to approve the
submitted rule, the final action will incorporate this rule into the
federally enforceable SIP.
III. Incorporation by Reference
In this rule, the EPA is proposing to include in a final EPA rule
regulatory text that includes incorporation by reference. In accordance
with requirements of 1 CFR 51.5, the EPA is proposing to incorporate by
reference SCAQMD Rule 2305, adopted on May 7, 2021, that establishes an
ISR program for certain warehouse owners and operators, as described in
section I of this preamble. The EPA has made, and will continue to
make, these materials available through https://www.regulations.gov and
at the EPA Region IX Office (please contact the person identified in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this preamble for more
information).
IV. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the provisions of the Act and
applicable Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions, the EPA's role is to approve State
choices, provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this proposed action merely proposes to approve State law
as meeting Federal requirements and does not impose additional
requirements beyond those imposed by State law. For that reason, this
proposed action:
Is not a ``significant regulatory action'' subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Orders
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21,
2011) and 14094 (88 FR 21879, April 11, 2023);
Does not impose an information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
Is certified as not having a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
Does not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4);
Does not have federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
Is not an economically significant regulatory action based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
Is not a significant regulatory action subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001); and
Is not subject to requirements of Section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent
with the Clean Air Act.
Executive Order 12898 (Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations, 59 FR 7629,
Feb. 16, 1994) directs Federal agencies to identify and address
``disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental
effects'' of their actions on minority populations and low-income
populations to the greatest extent practicable and permitted by law.
The EPA defines environmental justice (EJ) as ``the fair treatment and
meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color,
national origin, or income with respect to the development,
implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and
policies.'' The EPA further defines the term fair treatment to mean
that ``no group of people should bear a disproportionate burden of
environmental harms and risks, including those resulting from the
negative environmental consequences of industrial, governmental, and
commercial operations or programs and policies.''
The SCAQMD did not evaluate environmental justice considerations as
part of its SIP submittal; the CAA and applicable implementing
regulations neither prohibit nor require such an evaluation. However,
the Community Steering Committees for four environmental justice
communities admitted into the State's AB 617 program in the affected
area requested development of a warehouse ISR rule due to concerns
regarding air pollution impacts from trucks and DPM.\68\ The EPA did
not perform an EJ analysis and did not consider EJ in this action. Due
to the nature of the action being proposed here, this proposed action
is expected to have a neutral to positive impact on the air quality of
the affected area. Consideration of EJ is not required as part of this
action, and there is no information in the record inconsistent with the
stated goal of E.O. 12898 of achieving environmental justice for people
of color, low-income populations, and Indigenous peoples.
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\68\ SCAQMD Final Staff Report, 9 and 10.
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Lastly, the SIP is not approved to apply on any Indian reservation
land or in any other area where the EPA or an Indian tribe has
demonstrated that a tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of Indian
country, the proposed rule does not have tribal implications and will
not impose substantial direct costs on tribal governments or preempt
tribal law as specified by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November
9, 2000).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone,
Particulate matter, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: October 5, 2023.
Martha Guzman Aceves,
Regional Administrator, Region IX.
[FR Doc. 2023-22518 Filed 10-11-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P