Clarifying the Scope of “Applicable Requirements” Under State Operating Permit Programs and the Federal Operating Permit Program, 1150-1189 [2023-27759]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 70 and 71
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2023–0401; FRL–9118–01–
OAR]
RIN 2060–AV61
Clarifying the Scope of ‘‘Applicable
Requirements’’ Under State Operating
Permit Programs and the Federal
Operating Permit Program
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) proposes to update its
title V operating permit program
regulations to more clearly reflect the
EPA’s existing interpretations and
policies concerning when and whether
‘‘applicable requirements’’ established
in other Clean Air Act (CAA or the Act)
programs should be reviewed, modified,
and/or implemented through the title V
operating permits program. Specifically,
this action clarifies the limited
situations in which requirements under
the New Source Review (NSR)
preconstruction permitting program
would be reviewed using the EPA’s
unique title V oversight authorities.
Additionally, this action clarifies that
requirements related to an owner or
operator’s general duty to prevent
accidental releases of hazardous
substances are not ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for title V purposes and
are not implemented through title V.
DATES: Comments: Comments must be
received on or before March 11, 2024.
Public hearing: If anyone contacts the
EPA requesting a public hearing by
January 15, 2024, the EPA will hold a
virtual public hearing. Please refer to
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
for additional information on requesting
and registering for a public hearing.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2023–0401, by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov (our
preferred method). Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email: a-and-r-docket@epa.gov.
Include Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–
2023–0401 in the subject line of the
message.
• Fax: (202) 566–9744. Attention
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2023–
0401.
• Mail: U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, EPA Docket Center,
OAR Docket, Mail Code 28221T, 1200
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SUMMARY:
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Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20460.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: EPA
Docket Center, WJC West Building,
Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20004. The Docket
Center’s hours of operations are 8:30
a.m.–4:30 p.m., Monday–Friday (except
Federal Holidays).
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Docket ID No. for this
rulemaking. Comments received may be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided. For
detailed instructions on sending
comments and additional information
on the rulemaking process, see the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Matthew Spangler, Air Quality Policy
Division, Office of Air Quality Planning
and Standards (C504–05),
Environmental Protection Agency,
Research Triangle Park, NC; telephone
number: (919) 541–0327; email address:
spangler.matthew@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Information presented in this document
is organized as follows:
B. Rationale for Proposed Action
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review, Executive Order
13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review, and Executive Order
14094: Modernizing Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
To Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations and Executive Order 14096:
Revitalizing Our Nation’s Commitment
to Environmental Justice for All
VII. Statutory Authority
I. Public Participation in This Proposed
Rulemaking
A. Does this action apply to me?
B. Where can I get a copy of this document
and other related information?
C. What should I consider as I prepare my
comments?
D. How do I request and participate in a
virtual public hearing?
II. Purpose of This Regulatory Action
III. Background on Title V Operating Permits
and CAA ‘‘Applicable Requirements’’
A. The Title V Permitting Process, Public
Participation, and the EPA’s Oversight
Role
B. Purpose and Function of Title V Permits
C. Regulatory Definition of ‘‘Applicable
Requirements’’
D. Requirements That Are Not ‘‘Applicable
Requirements’’ for Purposes of Title V
Permitting
E. Self-Implementing Applicable
Requirements (e.g., NSPS, NESHAP)
F. Requirements Defined Through Title V
Permitting
G. Applicable Requirements Related to the
NAAQS and SIPs
IV. Interface Between NSR and Title V
Permitting
A. Background: Historical and Current EPA
Positions
B. Proposed Action
C. Interaction With NSR Permitting,
Oversight, and Enforcement
D. Impacts of Proposed Action
E. Rationale for Proposed Action
F. Alternative Approaches
V. The General Duty Clause Concerning the
Prevention of Accidental Releases of
Hazardous Substances
A. Background and Summary of Proposed
Action
A. Does this action apply to me?
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I. Public Participation in This Proposed
Rulemaking
Entities potentially affected by this
proposed rulemaking include state,
local, and Tribal air pollution control
agencies that administer title V
operating permit programs (‘‘permitting
authorities’’), owners and operators of
emissions sources in all industry groups
who hold or apply for title V operating
permits, and any person or group who
participates in the title V permitting
process.
B. Where can I get a copy of this
document and other related
information?
The EPA has established a docket for
this rulemaking under Docket ID No.
EPA–HQ–OAR–2023–0401. All
documents in the docket pertaining to
this action are listed on the https://
www.regulations.gov website. Although
listed in the index, some information
may not be publicly available, e.g.,
Confidential Business Information (CBI),
Proprietary Business Information (PBI),
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
is not placed on the internet and may be
viewed with prior arrangement with the
EPA Docket Center. In addition to being
available in the docket, an electronic
copy of this Federal Register document
will be posted at https://www.epa.gov/
title-v-operating-permits/currentregulations-and-regulatory-actions.
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Additionally, a number of documents
that are relevant to this proposed
action—in particular, prior EPA orders
responding to petitions challenging
individual title V permits—are available
through the EPA’s website at https://
www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits/
title-v-petition-database.
C. What should I consider as I prepare
my comments?
Submit your comments, identified by
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2023–
0401, at https://www.regulations.gov
(our preferred method), or the other
methods identified in the ADDRESSES
section. Once submitted, comments
cannot be edited or removed from the
docket. The EPA may publish any
comment received to its public docket.
Do not submit information containing
CBI to the EPA through https://
www.regulations.gov. Clearly mark the
part or all of the information that you
claim to be CBI. For CBI information on
any digital storage media that you mail
to the EPA, mark the outside of the
digital storage media as CBI and then
identify electronically within the digital
storage media the specific information
that is claimed as CBI. In addition to
one complete version of the comments
that includes information claimed as
CBI, you must submit a copy of the
comments that does not contain the
information claimed as CBI directly to
the public docket through the
procedures outlined in Instructions. If
you submit any digital storage media
that does not contain CBI, mark the
outside of the digital storage media
clearly that it does not contain CBI.
Information not marked as CBI will be
included in the public docket and the
EPA’s electronic public docket without
prior notice. Information marked as CBI
will not be disclosed except in
accordance with procedures set forth in
40 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)
part 2. Our preferred method to receive
CBI is for it to be transmitted
electronically using email attachments,
File Transfer Protocol (FTP), or other
online file sharing services (e.g.,
Dropbox, OneDrive, Google Drive).
Electronic submissions must be
transmitted directly to the OAQPS CBI
Office using the email address,
oaqpscbi@epa.gov, and should include
clear CBI markings as described later. If
assistance is needed with submitting
large electronic files that exceed the file
size limit for email attachments, and if
you do not have your own file sharing
service, please email oaqpscbi@epa.gov
to request a file transfer link. If sending
CBI information through the postal
service, please send it to the following
address: OAQPS Document Control
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Officer (C404–02), OAQPS, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
27711, Attention Docket ID No. EPA–
HQ–OAR–2023–0401. The mailed CBI
material should be double wrapped and
clearly marked. Any CBI markings
should not show through the outer
envelope.
D. How do I request and participate in
a virtual public hearing?
To request a virtual public hearing,
contact Ms. Pam Long at (919) 541–0641
or by email at long.pam@epa.gov by
January 15, 2024. If requested, the
virtual hearing will be held on January
24, 2024. The hearing will convene at
9:00 a.m. Eastern Time (ET) and will
conclude at 3:00 p.m. ET. The EPA may
close a session 15 minutes after the last
pre-registered speaker has testified if
there are no additional speakers. The
EPA will announce further details at
https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operatingpermits.
Upon publication of this document in
the Federal Register, the EPA will begin
pre-registering speakers for the hearing,
if a hearing is requested. To register to
speak at the virtual hearing, please use
the online registration form available at
https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operatingpermits or contact Ms. Pam Long at
(919) 541–0641 or by email at
long.pam@epa.gov. The last day to preregister to speak at the hearing will be
January 22, 2024. Prior to the hearing,
the EPA will post a general agenda that
will list pre-registered speakers in
approximate order at: https://
www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits.
The EPA will make every effort to
follow the schedule as closely as
possible on the day of the hearing;
however, please plan for the hearing to
run either ahead of schedule or behind
schedule.
Each commenter will have 3 minutes
to provide oral testimony. The EPA
encourages commenters to provide the
EPA with a copy of their oral testimony
electronically (via email) by emailing it
to long.pam@epa.gov. The EPA also
recommends submitting the text of your
oral testimony as written comments to
the rulemaking docket.
The EPA may ask clarifying questions
during the oral presentations but will
not respond to the presentations at that
time. Written statements and supporting
information submitted during the
comment period will be considered
with the same weight as oral testimony
and supporting information presented at
the public hearing.
Please note that any updates made to
any aspect of the hearing will be posted
online at https://www.epa.gov/title-v-
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operating-permits. While the EPA
expects the hearing to go forward as set
forth earlier, please monitor our website
or contact Ms. Pam Long at (919) 541–
0641 or by email at long.pam@epa.gov
to determine if there are any updates.
The EPA does not intend to publish a
document in the Federal Register
announcing updates.
If you require the services of a
translator or special accommodations
such as audio description, please preregister for the hearing with Ms. Pam
Long and describe your needs by
January 16, 2024. The EPA may not be
able to arrange accommodations without
advanced notice.
II. Purpose of This Regulatory Action
This rulemaking concerns the
relationship between the CAA’s title V
operating permit program and certain
types of ‘‘applicable requirements’’
established under different sections of
the CAA. Many of the EPA’s past
statements on this topic are included
within the EPA Administrator’s
responses to citizen petitions
challenging title V permits issued to
individual facilities. Though publicly
available, these Orders may not be
widely read by members of the public
and/or permitting authorities. This
rulemaking is intended to bring greater
awareness to the EPA’s current
approach to ‘‘applicable requirements’’
within the context of title V so that the
public, permitting authorities, and the
EPA can focus their resources on using
the title V permitting process to address
issues that can be most effectively
resolved through title V. Specifically,
this proposed rule addresses three
issues that have been the source of
public interest and, at times,
misunderstanding. This rule also
proposes to update the EPA’s
regulations to better express the EPA’s
existing positions on these topics.
First, section III. of this preamble
includes background on the EPA’s
existing position regarding general
topics involving ‘‘applicable
requirements,’’ which the EPA does not
propose to change. In summary, the title
V operating permit program is a vehicle
for compiling air quality control
requirements from other CAA programs
and for providing conditions necessary
to assure compliance with such
requirements, but it is not a vehicle for
creating or changing applicable
requirements from those other
programs. The EPA has a regulatory
definition of the term ‘‘applicable
requirement’’ that guides the interaction
between title V and other CAA
programs. Some programs establish
‘‘self-implementing’’ requirements that
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can be incorporated into title V permits
without further review. Other programs
contain only general requirements that
can, in certain circumstances, be further
defined through title V. Section III.G. of
this preamble summarizes existing EPA
positions about how these concepts
affect requirements related to the
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS) and State Implementation
Plans (SIPs).
Second, Section IV. of this preamble
addresses the intersection between title
V operating permits and NSR
preconstruction permits issued under
title I of the CAA and focuses on the
limited situations in which NSR
requirements would be reviewed using
the EPA’s unique title V oversight
authorities.
Section IV.A. discusses the EPA’s
historical and current positions on the
intersection between permits issued
under title I and title V, which have
changed over time. Section IV.B.
explains in more detail the EPA’s
existing position, which the EPA
proposes to codify through this
rulemaking. In summary, the EPA’s
current position is that provided a
source obtains an NSR permit under
EPA-approved (or EPA-promulgated)
title I rules, with public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial
review, such NSR permit establishes the
NSR-related ‘‘applicable requirements’’
of the SIP (or Federal Implementation
Plan, FIP) for purposes of incorporation
into a title V permit. As with
‘‘applicable requirements’’ established
under other CAA authorities, the EPA
would not revisit those NSR permitting
decisions through the title V process.
The EPA’s framework applies similarly
regardless of: (i) the stage of the title V
permitting or oversight process at issue;
(ii) the NSR permit’s origin (i.e., from a
SIP or a FIP), (iii) the type of substantive
NSR requirement at issue (e.g., NSR
permit terms or major NSR
applicability); and (iv) the procedures
by which the NSR permit is
incorporated into the title V permit (e.g.,
sequentially or concurrently issued
permits). However, there are situations
in which the title V permitting process
is the appropriate venue for addressing
NSR permitting issues, including where
NSR requirements have not been
established through a sufficient title I
permitting process, or where NSR issues
and title V issues involve substantive
overlap. Although the EPA believes that
the existing regulations may properly be
read to support the EPA’s existing
position, the EPA proposes amendments
to make this position more explicit.
Updating the EPA’s regulations will
allow the agency to apply its existing
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approach nationwide and will resolve
issues stemming from conflicting court
decisions from two federal Courts of
Appeals.
Section IV.C. discusses the extent to
which this proposal will (or will not)
impact NSR permitting, NSR oversight
tools, and NSR enforcement tools.
Section IV.D. further discusses the
limited impacts this proposed rule is
expected to have on the EPA, permitting
authorities, regulated entities, and the
public. Overall, this proposed rule is
meant to provide clarity about the
appropriate mechanisms that should be
used to address concerns with NSR
permits. This proposed rule should
create an incentive for permitting
authorities to offer opportunities for
meaningful public involvement in NSR
permitting actions, and should
encourage the public to take advantage
of those opportunities (instead of
attempting to use title V oversight tools
to resolve concerns with NSR permits).
Section IV.E. details the EPA’s legal
and policy rationale for the EPA’s
existing (and proposed to be codified)
position. In sum, the EPA’s
interpretation is supported by the text of
title V, the structure and purpose of title
V, and the structure of the CAA as a
whole. The EPA has the discretion
under the statute to apply this approach,
which reflects better policy than
alternative approaches. This proposed
rule ensures that applicable
requirements established in different
CAA programs are treated consistently
in title V permitting. The EPA’s
proposal better accounts for procedural,
resource-related, and practical
limitations associated with title V
oversight tools while incentivizing the
use of proper title I avenues of review.
Lastly, this approach respects the
finality of NSR permitting decisions.
Section IV.F. solicits comment on
three alternative approaches that would
involve using title V permits to address
substantive NSR issues in additional,
targeted situations, while explaining
why these alternatives are not preferred
by the EPA.
Third, Section V. of this preamble
addresses a distinct and severable topic
related to the ‘‘General Duty Clause’’ of
CAA section 112(r)(1), which concerns
the prevention of accidental releases of
hazardous substances. This proposal
seeks to codify the EPA’s wellestablished position that this General
Duty Clause is not an ‘‘applicable
requirement’’ and is not implemented
through title V.
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III. Background on Title V Operating
Permits and CAA ‘‘Applicable
Requirements’’
This section of the preamble contains
background information about the title
V program and explains how different
types of ‘‘applicable requirements’’ of
the CAA are treated in title V permits.
This discussion is intended to clarify
multiple related topics that may have
been a source of confusion to the public,
regulated entities, and permitting
authorities over the years. The EPA is
not proposing any changes to the
agency’s longstanding interpretations or
policies discussed in this section. The
EPA also considers these interpretations
and policies to be consistent with, and
accurately reflected in, the EPA’s
existing regulations in 40 CFR parts 70
and 71. Thus, the EPA is not proposing
to revise the EPA’s regulations in order
to reflect these existing interpretations
and policies.1
A. The Title V Permitting Process,
Public Participation, and the EPA’s
Oversight Role
Congress amended the CAA in 1990
to add, among other provisions, title V.
CAA Amendments of 1990, Public Law
101–549, sections 501–507, 104 Stat.
2399, 2635–48 (1990) (codified at 42
U.S.C. 7661–7661f). Title V established
an operating permit program for major
sources of air pollution and certain
other sources.
The title V program, like other
provisions of the CAA, involves an
exercise of cooperative federalism,
meaning that responsibility for the
program is divided between states and
the EPA. Under title V, states were
required to develop and submit to the
EPA for approval title V permitting
programs consistent with requirements
promulgated by the EPA in 40 CFR part
70. 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b), (d).2 Most states,
certain local agencies, and one Tribe
now have approved part 70 programs.
Under these EPA-approved state
programs, permitting authorities issue
the vast majority of title V permits (this
preamble refers to such permits as
‘‘state-issued’’ permits). The EPA
directly issues title V permits only in
limited circumstances.3
1 By contrast, the EPA is proposing to revise the
EPA’s regulations to more clearly reflect the EPA’s
positions regarding the issues discussed in sections
IV. and V. of this preamble.
2 For information about EPA oversight over the
content and implementation of EPA-approved state
part 70 programs, see 42 U.S.C. 7661a(i) and 40 CFR
70.10.
3 Under 40 CFR part 71, the EPA (or an agency
delegated to issue permits on EPA’s behalf) issues
title V permits to sources in most areas of Indian
Country, on the Outer Continental Shelf,
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Most title V permit actions (including
initial permits, renewal permits, and
significant permit modifications)
involve public notice and an
opportunity for comment and a hearing
on draft permits and revisions. See 42
U.S.C. 7661a(b)(6); 40 CFR
70.4(d)(3)(iv), 70.7(h). These
opportunities are similar to those
provided in other CAA programs.
Additionally, Congress provided the
EPA and the public with unique
oversight tools for state-issued title V
permits. The CAA requires permitting
authorities to submit a proposed title V
permit to the EPA Administrator for
review for a 45-day review period before
issuing the permit as final. 42 U.S.C.
7661d(a)(1); 40 CFR 70.8(a). The
Administrator shall object to issuance of
a proposed permit within that 45-day
review period if the Administrator
determines that the permit does not
satisfy applicable requirements of the
CAA or the requirements of part 70. 42
U.S.C. 7661d(b)(1); 40 CFR 70.8(c). If the
Administrator does not object to a
permit during the 45-day EPA review
period, any person may petition the
Administrator within 60 days after the
expiration of the 45-day review period
to take such action (hereinafter ‘‘title V
petition’’ or ‘‘petition’’). 42 U.S.C.
7661d(b)(2), 40 CFR 70.8(d), 70.12,
70.13, 70.14. Many of the issues
concerning ‘‘applicable requirements’’
that are addressed in this rulemaking
have been raised, and addressed, in title
V petitions and the EPA’s orders
responding to such petitions.4
The CAA also provides the EPA with
the authority—at the agency’s
discretion—to determine that cause
exists to ‘‘terminate, modify, or revoke
and reissue’’ a state-issued title V
permit. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(e). This process
is often called ‘‘reopening for cause’’
and is described in 40 CFR 70.7(f) and
(g). Among other criteria, a permit may
be reopened for cause when necessary
to assure compliance with applicable
requirements. 40 CFR 70.7(f)(1)(iv).
Although this proposed rule is
primarily focused on the EPA’s
oversight of state-issued title V permits,
the concepts discussed in this preamble
related to ‘‘applicable requirements’’ are
relevant to nearly all aspects of the title
jurisdictions where the EPA has determined that a
state has not adequately implemented its part 70
program, and for specific sources where a state has
not satisfied an EPA objection to, or reopening of,
a state-issued permit. See 40 CFR 71.4.
4 For more information about title V petitions, see
the preambles of the proposed and final petitions
rule, 81 FR 57822 (Aug. 24, 2016) and 85 FR 6431
(Feb. 5, 2020). Copies of petitions and the EPA’s
petition orders are available on the EPA’s public
title V petitions database, https://www.epa.gov/titlev-operating-permits/title-v-petition-database.
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V permitting process in some shape or
form. For example, these concepts guide
the information that permittees must
include in title V permit applications,
the required content of title V permits
drafted and issued by permitting
authorities (including the EPA), the
scope of issues properly subject to the
public’s input during the title V
permitting process, and the scope of
issues considered by the EPA in
exercising its oversight roles (including
the EPA’s review of title V permits
issued by states and consideration of
citizen petitions on those permits).
B. Purpose and Function of Title V
Permits
The title V permitting program was
created to assist with compliance and
enforcement of air pollution controls
established under other CAA programs.
Before this program existed, the CAA
pollution control requirements that
might apply to a particular source could
be found in many different provisions of
the Act along with various federal and
state regulations and permits. One court
opinion summarized the relationship
between title V and other CAA programs
as follows:
Under the regulatory regime established by
the [CAA], emission limits for pollutants and
monitoring requirements that measure
compliance applicable to any given
stationary source of air pollution are
scattered throughout rules promulgated by
states or EPA, such as [SIPs], new source
performance standards [NSPS], and national
emission standards for hazardous air
pollutants [NESHAP]. Before 1990, regulators
and industry were left to wander through this
regulatory maze in search of the emission
limits and monitoring requirements that
might apply to a particular source. Congress
addressed this confusion in the 1990
Amendments by adding title V of the Act,
which created a national permit program that
requires many stationary sources of air
pollution to obtain permits that include
relevant emission limits and monitoring
requirements.
Sierra Club v. EPA, 536 F.3d 673, 674
(D.C. Cir. 2008) (citations omitted).
Thus, one key function of title V is to
consolidate applicable requirements
established under other CAA programs.
This consolidation function is embodied
in CAA section 504(a), which states, in
part: ‘‘Each permit issued under this
subchapter shall include enforceable
emission limitations and standards . . .
and such other conditions as are
necessary to assure compliance with
applicable requirements of this chapter,
including the requirements of the
applicable implementation plan.’’ 42
U.S.C. 7661c(a). The EPA’s regulations
implementing title V contain language
similar to the statute. See 40 CFR
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70.6(a)(1), 71.6(a)(1).5 The EPA’s
regulations also require that ‘‘The
permit shall specify and reference the
origin of and authority for each term or
condition, and identify any difference in
form as compared to the applicable
requirement upon which the term or
condition is based.’’ 40 CFR
70.1(a)(1)(i), 71.1(a)(1)(i).
In addition to consolidating existing
applicable requirements, CAA section
504 provides the EPA with the authority
to use title V permits to establish
additional requirements necessary to
assure compliance with existing
applicable requirements. For example, it
is well established that title V permits
may be used to create or supplement
monitoring requirements when
necessary in order to assure compliance
with underlying applicable
requirements that do not themselves
contain sufficient monitoring
provisions.6 Various compliance
assurance requirements are included
within title V and the EPA’s
implementing regulations; not all are
restricted to monitoring.7
Beyond title V’s consolidation and
compliance assurance functions, title V
generally does not impose new
pollution control requirements on
sources or provide a vehicle to modify
such requirements established under
other CAA programs. Thus, the EPA’s
regulations expressly provide: ‘‘All
sources subject to these regulations shall
have a permit to operate that assures
compliance by the source with all
applicable requirements. While title V
does not impose substantive new
requirements, it does require that . . .
certain procedural measures be adopted
especially with respect to compliance.’’
40 CFR 70.1(b) (emphasis added). For
5 The EPA’s regulations also define the specific
‘‘applicable requirements’’ with which each title V
permit must assure compliance. 40 CFR 70.2, 71.2.
The definition and concept of ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ are discussed in more detail later in
this preamble.
6 See 42 U.S.C. 7661c(c); 40 CFR 70.6(c)(1); Sierra
Club v. EPA, 536 F.3d 673, 674–45, 680 (D.C. Cir.
2008) (‘‘Title V did more than require the
compilation in a single document of existing
applicable emission limits and monitoring
requirements. It also mandated that ‘[e]ach permit
issued under [Title V] shall set forth . . .
monitoring . . . requirements to assure compliance
with the permit terms and conditions.’ . . . [T]he
Act requires: a permitting authority may
supplement an inadequate monitoring requirement
so that the requirement will ‘assure compliance
with the permit terms and conditions.’ ’’ (citations
omitted)); see also, e.g., In the Matter of CITGO
Refining and Chemicals Co., L.P., West Plant, Order
on Petition No. VI–2007–01 at 6–8 (May 28, 2009).
7 See 42 U.S.C. 7661c(a), (b), (c); 40 CFR
70.6(a)(1), (a)(3), (c), 71.6(a)(1), (a)(3), (c); see also,
e.g., In the Matter of Suncor Energy (U.S.A.), Inc.,
Commerce City Refinery, Plant 2 (East), Order on
Petition Nos. VIII–2022–13 & VIII–2022–14 at 13–
17 (July 31, 2023) (Suncor East Order).
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additional information about the
purpose and function of title V, see
section IV.E.2. of this preamble.
In summary, the title V operating
permit program is a vehicle for
compiling air quality control
requirements from other CAA programs
and for providing requirements
necessary to assure compliance with
such requirements, but not for creating
or changing applicable requirements.
Put simply, title V is a catch-all, not a
cure-all. The discussion throughout the
remainder of this preamble builds upon
these longstanding general principles,
which the EPA does not propose to
change through this rulemaking.
C. Regulatory Definition of ‘‘Applicable
Requirements’’
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As previously explained, CAA section
504(a) requires that title V permits
‘‘include enforceable emissions
limitations and standards . . . and such
other conditions as are necessary to
assure compliance with applicable
requirements of this chapter, including
the requirements of the applicable
implementation plan.’’ 42 U.S.C.
7661c(a).8 However, the term
‘‘applicable requirements’’ is not
defined in the Act and the statute does
not otherwise specify how to determine
the ‘‘applicable requirements of this
chapter’’ for a particular source. When
the EPA developed regulations to
implement the title V program, the
agency specifically defined the term
‘‘applicable requirement’’ as it relates to
title V permitting. This subsection of the
preamble addresses general topics
associated with this regulatory
definition. The subsections that follow
elaborate on these general concepts with
more specific examples about how these
8 Similar requirements appear in other parts of
title V. ‘‘Schedule of compliance. The term
‘schedule of compliance’ means a schedule of
remedial measures, including an enforceable
sequence of actions or operations, leading to
compliance with an applicable implementation
plan, emission standard, emission limitation, or
emission prohibition’’ 42 U.S.C. 7661(3). ‘‘Nothing
in this subsection shall be construed to alter the
applicable requirements of this chapter that a
permit be obtained before construction or
modification.’’ 42 U.S.C. 7661a(a). Permitting
authorities ‘‘have adequate authority to . . . issue
permits and assure compliance . . . with each
applicable standard, regulation, or requirement
under this chapter.’’ 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b)(5). The
regulations to implement the program shall include
a ‘‘requirement that the applicant submit with the
application a compliance plan describing how the
source will comply with all applicable
requirements under this chapter.’’ 42 U.S.C.
7661b(b). However, like section 504, these sections
do not specify the scope of the term ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ or how the permitting authority or
the EPA is to determine what the applicable
requirements are for an individual source as part of
its title V permit.
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concepts impact different types of
requirements.
As an initial matter, it is important to
recognize that ‘‘applicable requirement’’
is a legal term of art with a precise
meaning that is unique to title V. Its
meaning is closely aligned with the
primary function of title V permits: to
consolidate and assure compliance with
the substantive requirements
established under other CAA programs.
Thus, in general, the EPA’s definition of
‘‘applicable requirement’’ focuses on
those substantive requirements of other
CAA programs that must be
incorporated into a source’s title V
permit, and with which the title V
permit must assure compliance. This
means that not all CAA requirements
are considered ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for title V purposes.
However, the fact that some CAA
requirements are not considered
‘‘applicable requirements’’ for title V
purposes does not diminish the
independent enforceability or
importance of those requirements. It
simply means that those requirements
are not primarily implemented or
enforced using title V permits.
The EPA’s regulations define
‘‘applicable requirement’’ to mean ‘‘all
of the of the following as they apply to
emissions units in a part 70 source,’’ 9
followed by a list of 13 types of CAAbased requirements that qualify. 40 CFR
70.2; see 40 CFR 71.2 (similar
definition).10
Perhaps the most straightforward
aspect of this definition is that, in order
to qualify as an ‘‘applicable
requirement’’ for title V purposes, the
requirement must be based on the CAA
and, more specifically, one of the CAA
sections specifically identified in this
definition. Requirements that are not
based on (i.e., derived from) the CAA
are not ‘‘applicable requirements’’ of the
CAA with which a title V permit must
9 This definition also indicates that requirements
that have been promulgated or approved at the time
of permit issuance, but with which the source is not
yet required to comply, are applicable requirements
that must be included in a title V permit. 40 CFR
70.2, 71.2. The EPA is not aware of any issues or
confusion concerning this element of the definition,
which is not discussed further in this preamble.
10 The list includes, in summary, requirements
from: (1) SIPs and FIPs under CAA title I; (2)
preconstruction permits under CAA title I; (3) CAA
section 111 (NSPS and existing source rules); (4)
CAA section 112 (NESHAP); (5) title IV (acid rain);
(6) CAA sections 504(b) or 114(a)(3) (certain types
of enhanced monitoring); (7) CAA sections 126(a)(1)
and (c) (interstate pollution); (8) CAA section 129
(solid waste incineration); (9) CAA section 183(e)
(consumer and commercial products); (10) CAA
section 193(f) (tank vessels); (11) CAA section 328
(outer continental shelf permits); (12) CAA title VI
(stratospheric ozone); and (13) any NAAQS, but
only as it would apply to temporary sources under
CAA section 504(e).
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assure compliance. Further, not all CAA
requirements qualify as ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for title V purposes.
Some sections of the CAA were
intentionally omitted from the list of 13
types of ‘‘applicable requirements’’
because these sections either do not
apply to stationary sources that must
obtain title V permits, or these sections
are not implemented through title V for
other reasons. See section III.D.2. of this
preamble for more information.
A similarly important definitional
element is that ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ only include the listed
types of CAA requirements ‘‘as they
apply to emission units in a part 70
source.’’ Requirements of the CAA that
do not directly apply to a source’s
emission units are not ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for title V purposes, as
discussed in section III.D.3. of this
preamble.
Additionally, the requirements of title
V itself (and the EPA’s part 70 and 71
implementing regulations) are not
technically considered ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ but are nonetheless
centrally important to title V permitting.
See section III.D.4. of this preamble for
more information.
The definition of ‘‘applicable
requirement’’ can also affect the manner
in which requirements that are
considered applicable requirements are
implemented through title V. In
summary, some applicable requirements
can be described as ‘‘selfimplementing.’’ Once established, those
requirements should entail little to no
review through the title V permitting
process. Other applicable requirements
may require further site-specific
evaluation in order to define the precise
requirements that apply to individual
emission units. In certain
circumstances, the latter type of
applicable requirements may be further
defined using the title V permitting
process. These topics are discussed in
more detail in sections III.E. and III.F. of
this preamble.
D. Requirements That Are Not
‘‘Applicable Requirements’’ for
Purposes of Title V Permitting
Sources subject to title V may be
subject to a variety of requirements both
within and beyond the CAA. Not all of
these requirements are ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ that must be included in
a title V permit and with which the title
V permit must assure compliance.
Requirements that are not applicable
requirements fall into several categories,
discussed in the following subsections.
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1. Requirements Not Derived From the
CAA
Many sources subject to title V are
also subject to federal laws beyond the
CAA, including environmental laws
administered by the EPA or other
federal agencies (e.g., the Clean Water
Act (CWA); Safe Drinking Water Act;
Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act (RCRA); Comprehensive
Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act;
National Environmental Policy Act,
Emergency Planning and Community
Right-to-Know Act, Endangered Species
Act, and other statutes). Other federal
laws may also impact the decisionmaking of state permitting authorities
(e.g., the Civil Rights Act of 1964).
These other federal laws—including the
statutes and any implementing
regulations—are not ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for title V purposes. Such
requirements do not need to be included
in title V permits, and title V permits do
not need to assure compliance with
these requirements. Further, whether a
permittee or permitting authority has
satisfied those requirements is beyond
the scope of issues that the EPA can
address through its title V-based
oversight authorities, including the
EPA’s objection authority and public
petition opportunity.11 This is selfevident from the plain language of the
CAA and the EPA’s regulations, which
limit the EPA’s objection authority to
permits that ‘‘are not in compliance
with the applicable requirements of [the
CAA].’’ 42 U.S.C. 7661b(1), (2); see 40
CFR 70.8(c)(1), 70.12(a)(2). Nonetheless,
the EPA sometimes receives title V
petitions requesting the EPA’s objection
to the issuance of operating permits on
the basis of alleged violations of laws
other than the CAA. The EPA has
denied all of those petition claims.12
Other federal authorities are
sometimes invoked in the context of
title V permitting (and in particular, title
V petitions), including presidential
executive orders. Because executive
orders are not legally binding on state
permitting authorities and are generally
not based on the CAA, they do not
establish ‘‘applicable requirements’’ that
states must implement through title V
permitting. Accordingly, the EPA has
11 The EPA’s regulations provide that title V
permit issuance may be coordinated with the
issuance of permits under the CWA and RCRA, but
that does not mean those other requirements are
subject to review through title V. 40 CFR 70.1(e),
71.1(d).
12 See, e.g., In The Matter of Gateway Generating
Station, Order on Petition No. IX–2013–1 at 12–14
(Oct. 15, 2014); In the Matter of Monroe Electric
Generating Plant, Order on Petition No. 6–99–2 at
27 (June 11, 1999).
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denied title V petition claims alleging
that state permitting authorities failed to
satisfy executive orders.13
Many state permitting authorities
have air quality laws that are not
derived from the CAA and/or are not
included as part of an EPA-approved
state program.14 These ‘‘state-only’’
requirements are not, standing alone,
enforceable by the EPA and are not
applicable requirements for title V
purposes. Thus, these requirements do
not need to be included in title V
permits, title V permits do not need to
assure compliance with these
requirements, and these requirements
are beyond the scope of the EPA’s title
V oversight tools. For these reasons, the
EPA has denied numerous title V
petition claims alleging that title V
permits fail to satisfy state-only laws
and requirements.15
State permitting authorities may, at
their discretion, include requirements
based on state-only enforceable laws
within title V permits, but they are
required to designate such permit terms
as ‘‘state-only’’ or ‘‘not federally
enforceable.’’ 40 CFR 70.6(b)(2). Again,
these requirements are not ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for purposes of title V
permitting. Thus, from the EPA’s
perspective, properly labeled state-only
permit terms are not considered part of
the title V permit; they may be
physically present in the document, but
they are not legally present for purposes
of federal enforceability and oversight.
As such, these permit terms are not
subject to the EPA’s objection authority
nor the title V petition process. 40 CFR
70.6(b)(2). The EPA has denied many
title V petition claims challenging the
content of state-only permit terms.16
Note, however, that there are some
limited situations in which state-only
requirements intersect with title V
13 See, e.g., In the Matter of AK Steel Dearborn
Works, Order on Petition No. V–2016–16 at 17–19
(Jan. 15, 2021) (AK Steel Order); In the Matter of
Orange Recycling and Ethanol Production Facility,
Pencor-Masada Oxynol, LLC, Order on Petition No.
II–2000–07 at 32–33 (May 2, 2001) (Pencor-Masada
I Order). Note that federal executive orders may be
more directly relevant to EPA-issued title V permits
under part 71 (as well as other types of EPA-issued
permits).
14 This includes requirements that may be
designed to implement a CAA requirement, but
which the EPA has not yet approved (including
SIPs, state plans under CAA section 111(d), and
state programs under CAA section 112(l), and part
70 programs).
15 See, e.g., In the Matter of Salt River Project
Agricultural Improvement & Power District, Agua
Fria Generating Station, Order on Petition No. IX–
2022–4 at 14 (July 28, 2022) (SRP Agua Fria Order);
In the Matter of Shintech, Inc., Order on Petition
at 14 (Sept. 10, 1997) (Shintech I Order).
16 See, e.g., In the Matter of Harquahala
Generating Station Project, Order on Petition at 5
(July 2, 2003) (Harquahala Order).
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1155
requirements.17 Additionally, the CAA
requires states to provide the public
with an opportunity to raise concerns
with any conditions of a title V permit,
including state-only conditions, through
judicial review in state court systems.
See 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b)(6); 40 CFR
70.4(b)(3)(x)–(xii). This opportunity
exists in parallel to the unique oversight
authorities (e.g., the EPA’s objection
authority and public petition
opportunity) that extend only to
federally enforceable requirements of
title V permits.
2. CAA Requirements That Are Not
Specifically Identified in 40 CFR 70.2
The CAA is a large and complex
statute, composed of many different
programs. Not all of these programs are
implemented in the same manner
through title V or establish ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for title V purposes.
One notable example is title II of the
CAA, which concerns emission
standards for internal combustion
engines in mobile sources and nonroad
engines. Even if such emission units are
located at a stationary source, they are
not regulated as a stationary source
because they are excluded from the
definition of ‘‘stationary source.’’ See 42
U.S.C. 7602(z).18 Thus, title II
requirements with which a stationary
source must comply are not included
within the EPA’s title V-focused
17 For example, the EPA has used and will use
title V oversight tools to assess whether state laws
should be considered federally enforceable
‘‘applicable requirements’’ with which a title V
permit must assure compliance. See, e.g., In the
Matter of Georgia-Pacific Consumer Operations
LLC, Crossett Paper Operations, Order on Petition
Nos. VI–2018–3 & VI–2019–12 at 14–15 (Feb. 22,
2023). The EPA has also considered whether title
V permit terms are appropriately designated as
federally enforceable requirements or state-only
requirements. See, e.g., In the Matter of ExxonMobil
Corp., Baytown Chemical Plant, Order on Petition
No. VI–2020–9 at 24–26 (Mar. 18, 2022)
(ExxonMobil Baytown Chemical Order).
Additionally, the EPA will consider whether stateonly requirements or permit terms would impair
the effectiveness or enforceability of applicable
requirements or other federally enforceable title V
permit terms. See, e.g., Harquahala Order at 5.
Finally, note that any terms of a title V permit that
are not designated as ‘‘state only’’ or ‘‘not federally
enforceable’’ (or similar) become federally
enforceable upon permit issuance and are subject to
the part 70 requirements that govern federally
enforceable terms of title V permits, including
requirements related to monitoring, recordkeeping,
and reporting. 40 CFR 70.6(b)(1)–(2); see, e.g., In the
Matter of ExxonMobil Fuels & Lubricant Co., Baton
Rouge Refinery, Reforming Complex and Utilities
Unit, Order on Petition Nos. VI–2020–4, VI–2020–
6, VI–2021–1, & VI–2021–2 at 16 & 16 n.26 (Mar.
18, 2022).
18 Questions sometimes arise regarding whether
an internal combustion engine used at a stationary
source should be considered a nonroad engine or
a part of the stationary source. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C.
7550(10); 7602(z); 40 CFR 1068.30. This topic is
beyond the scope of the current rulemaking.
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regulatory definition of ‘‘applicable
requirement.’’
Other substantive CAA programs
relevant to stationary sources are
similarly not identified in the EPA’s
regulatory definition of ‘‘applicable
requirement’’ for title V purposes
because Congress did not intend for
them to be implemented through the
title V program. For further information
about one example—the ‘‘General Duty
Clause’’ concerning the prevention of
accidental releases of hazardous
substances under CAA section
112(r)(1)—see section V. of this
preamble. Another example is the
Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program in
40 CFR part 98. That program applies to
stationary sources and uses the
authorities provided in CAA sections
114 and 208 to collect greenhouse gas
emissions information, but it is not an
applicable requirement for title V
purposes. Similarly, the Air Emissions
Reporting Requirements program in 40
CFR part 51, subpart A imposes
information-gathering requirements that
are generally not implemented through
title V.
Some CAA provisions are more
general in nature and do not impose
substantive requirements that are
incorporated into title V permits. For
example, title III of the CAA includes
general provisions related to a number
of cross-cutting topics. See 42 U.S.C.
7601–7628. Although some of these
requirements may directly or indirectly
impact title V permitting, most
provisions within title III are not
‘‘applicable requirements’’ for title V
purposes.19
3. Requirements That Do Not Apply to
Emission Units
Not all requirements from CAA
programs identified in the EPA’s
regulatory definition of ‘‘applicable
requirement’’ are considered applicable
requirements for title V purposes. This
is because the definition only includes
such requirements ‘‘as they apply to
emission units in a part 70 source.’’ 40
CFR 70.2, 71.2. Applicable requirements
generally include the substantive
requirements from other provisions of
the Act that dictate the ongoing
operations of emission units at the
source. After all, as the name of this
program suggests, title V operating
permits are fundamentally designed to
specify the conditions under which a
source’s emission units must operate.
Further, a key purpose of the title V
19 One notable exception is the Outer Continental
Shelf permitting requirements under CAA section
328, 42 U.S.C. 7627, which are considered
applicable requirements for title V purposes. 40
CFR 70.2, 71.2.
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program is to assure that the source
complies with the requirements to
which it is subject. See 42 U.S.C.
7661a(a).
Therefore, requirements of the CAA
that do not directly apply to individual
emission units at a part 70 source are
not ‘‘applicable requirements’’ for title V
purposes. Many of the CAA provisions
that do not apply to emission units at a
title V source could be described as
programmatic or procedural in nature.
For example, CAA requirements that
specify actions that the EPA must take
in order to establish or oversee different
CAA programs (such as promulgating
rules, taking action on state rules, and
other programmatic oversight activities)
are not applicable requirements that
need to be reflected in a source’s title V
permit.20 Similarly, the CAA requires
state air agencies to undertake various
activities related to the establishment
and implementation of different CAA
programs, including attainment
planning requirements (e.g., in
developing SIPs).21 State permitting
authorities are also subject to various
requirements (mostly procedural)
related to the issuance of non-title V
permits (e.g., NSR permits).22 In general,
the EPA does not believe that Congress
intended the title V program to serve as
a vehicle to catch or correct
programmatic or procedural problems
associated with the establishment of
applicable requirements in other CAA
programs.23 Instead, again, the title V
program was designed to ensure that
regulated sources comply with all the
substantive air pollution control
requirements to which they are subject.
Thus, to the extent these requirements
only directly regulate EPA or state
actions—and do not result in
requirements directly applicable to
emission units at a title V source—they
are not applicable requirements for title
V purposes.
20 See, e.g., In the Matter of Hu Honua Bioenergy
Facility, Order on Petition No. IX–2011–1 at 6–7
(Feb. 7, 2014) (Hu Honua I Order).
21 See, e.g., In the Matter of Exxon Chemical
Americas, Baton Rouge Polyolefins Plant, Order on
Petition No. 6–00–1 at 10–11 (Apr. 12, 2000).
22 See, e.g., In the Matter of Century Aluminum
of South Carolina, Inc., Order on Petition No. IV–
2023–09 at 19–20 (November 2, 2023) (Century
Aluminum Order). However, note that there are
limited circumstances under which procedural
issues associated with other CAA programs
(namely, the issuance of NSR permits) may be
implicated in title V. See section IV.B.5.a. of this
preamble for further discussion.
23 By contrast, issues related to the procedures
used to issue a title V permit are of central
relevance to the title V program, and the unique
title V oversight tools available to the EPA and the
public generally may be used to address those
deficiencies. See section III.D.4. of this preamble for
more information on such part 70 requirements.
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Also, the CAA contains many crosscutting general provisions (e.g., in title
III of the CAA) that are not considered
applicable requirements because they
do not directly apply to emission units
at part 70 sources.24 The same is true for
various cross-cutting regulatory
provisions. To the extent these
provisions are relevant to the
implementation or enforcement of the
title V program, they are independently
enforceable and do not need to be
explicitly specified in a title V permit.
One example that often arises in the
context of title V petitions is that of
‘‘credible evidence.’’ EPA, states, and
citizens can use any credible evidence
to prove compliance and noncompliance with the CAA, including
compliance and non-compliance with
title V permits. See 42 U.S.C. 7413(a),
7604(a)(1), 7604(f)(4); 62 FR 8314 (Feb.
24, 1997). The EPA has repeatedly held
that title V permits need not include
language affirmatively restating the
existence of this principle.25
4. ‘‘Part 70 Requirements’’
As previously stated, the definition of
‘‘applicable requirement’’ in 40 CFR
70.2 and 71.2, and the manner in which
this phrase is used throughout the EPA’s
title V regulations, focus on CAA
requirements arising from other CAA
programs beyond title V. By contrast,
the requirements within title V and the
EPA’s part 70 and 71 regulations are not
technically considered ‘‘applicable
requirements.’’ 26 Instead, the EPA
generally refers to these as ‘‘part 70
requirements.’’ 27
24 These general provisions are not considered
applicable requirements for two reasons: (i) they are
not specified within the regulatory definition’s list
of 13 types of CAA requirements (as discussed in
the preceding subsection of the preamble), and (ii)
they do not apply to emission units at a source (as
discussed in this subsection).
25 See, e.g., In the Matter of Plains Marketing LP
and Four Other Facilities, Order on Petition Nos.
IV–2023–1 & IV–2023–3 at 50 (Sept. 18, 2023). Note
that EPA has also indicated that title V permits
cannot be drafted in such a way that would
preclude the use of all credible evidence in
enforcement proceedings. See, e.g., In the Matter of
Valero Refining-Texas, L.P., Valero Houston
Refinery, Order on Petition No. VI–2021–8 at 70
(June 30, 2022) (Valero Houston Order).
26 Part 70 requirements do not meet the regulatory
definition of ‘‘applicable requirement’’ because they
are not included within the definition’s list of 13
types of CAA requirements. Moreover, some part 70
requirements (e.g., procedural requirements) do not
directly apply to emission units.
27 The phrase ‘‘part 70 requirements’’ is based on
various portions of the part 70 regulations that refer
to the ‘‘requirements of this part’’ as a distinct, and
additional, source of requirements from ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ based on other CAA programs. See
40 CFR 70.4(b)(3)(v), 70.6(a)(9)(iii), 70.6(a)(10)(iii),
70.7(a)(1)(iv), 70.8(b)(2), 70.8(c)(1), 70.12(a)(2). This
concept is also relevant with respect to EPA-issued
permits under 40 CFR part 71, where a similar
distinction exists between ‘‘applicable
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This distinction is meaningful
because the regulatory use of the term
‘‘applicable requirement’’ is closely tied
to the core purpose of title V: to
consolidate and assure compliance with
the substantive requirements from other
CAA programs, but not to create or
modify such requirements. Thus, as
previously described, the title V
permitting process and title V oversight
tools are generally not used to
reevaluate the content of ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ from other CAA
programs.
By contrast, many ‘‘part 70
requirements’’ are directly implemented
through title V permitting, as these
requirements relate to the content of
title V permits and the process used to
issue them. For example, the
requirements that dictate the content of
title V permits are part 70 requirements
(not applicable requirements). These
include, for example, the requirement
that title V permits include and assure
compliance with ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ established elsewhere,
and the authority to impose, as
necessary, additional monitoring and
other compliance assurance provisions.
See, e.g., 40 CFR 70.6(a), (c). Further,
the requirements related to public
participation in title V permits, the
availability of information, and related
procedural requirements are all part 70
requirements (not applicable
requirements). See 40 CFR 70.7(h). Title
V and the part 70 regulations contain
other unique title V authorities—such as
the ‘‘permit shield’’ under CAA section
504(f) and 40 CFR 70.6(f).28 The
important distinction between these
part 70 requirements and applicable
requirements from other CAA programs
is that part 70 requirements are properly
subject to the additional oversight
mechanisms unique to title V (including
the EPA objection authority, public
petition opportunity, and other
programmatic oversight authorities).
E. Self-Implementing Applicable
Requirements (e.g., NSPS, NESHAP)
Turning to CAA provisions that are
considered ‘‘applicable requirements,’’
not all applicable requirements are
treated the same in title V permits. This
subsection addresses applicable
requirements with the most
straightforward title V implementation,
requirements’’ derived from other CAA programs
and the requirements of part 71 that are derived
from title V of the Act. See, e.g., 40 CFR 71.10(g)(1).
However, given that this issue most often arises in
the context of state-issued part 70 permits, this
preamble uses the term ‘‘part 70 requirements’’ to
refer to requirements derived from title V.
28 The permit shield is discussed in more detail
in section IV.C.3. of this preamble to the extent it
impacts NSR permitting decisions.
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often referred to as ‘‘self-implementing’’
or ‘‘self-executing’’ requirements. The
hallmark of a self-implementing
requirement is that the underlying
statutory or regulatory provision defines
the requirements applicable to a given
emission unit with enough specificity
for these requirements to be
independently and immediately
enforceable, even before going through
the permitting process.29 In other words,
these applicable requirements require
no further case-specific decisionmaking
(e.g., through a permitting process) in
order to define the precise requirements
to which a source is subject. Such
requirements consist of prescribed
emission standards, operational
limitations, testing, monitoring,
recordkeeping, reporting, and other
compliance assurance requirements.
These requirements are explicitly
identified within an EPA regulation
(e.g., NSPS under CAA section 111,
NESHAP under CAA section 112,
Federal Plan under CAA section 111(d),
similar rules under CAA section 129, or
a FIP under CAA section 110(c)) or an
EPA-approved state regulation (e.g., SIP
under CAA section 110(a) or a State
Plan under CAA sections 111(d) or 129).
Such self-implementing applicable
requirements should generally be
included in, or incorporated into, a title
V permit without further review.30 It
would not be appropriate, for example,
to use the title V permitting process to
reevaluate the stringency of a Maximum
Achievable Control Technology (MACT)
standard promulgated by the EPA
through rulemaking under CAA section
112.31 The same is true with respect to
the content of self-implementing
29 This is in contrast with some other programs
the EPA administers, such as certain requirements
under the CWA. Some new requirements under the
CWA only become effective once they are
incorporated into a source’s National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit. See,
e.g., Texas Oil & Gas Ass’n et al v. US EPA, 161
F.3d 923, 928 (5th Cir. 1998) (‘‘Despite their central
role in the framework of the CWA, [Effluent
Limitation Guidelines, or ELGs] are not selfexecuting. They cannot be enforced against
individual dischargers, and individual dischargers
are under no legal obligations to obey limits set by
ELGs. Rather, ELGs achieve their bite only after
they have been incorporated into NPDES permits.’’
(citing American Paper Inst. v. EPA, 996 F.2d 346,
350 (D.C. Cir. 1993); American Petroleum Inst., 661
F.2d 340, 344 (5th Cir. 1981)).
30 The manner in which such requirements may
be included in or incorporated by reference into, a
title V permit is beyond the scope of this
rulemaking. For more information about
incorporation by reference, see, for example,
ExxonMobil Baytown Chemical Order at 16–19 and
White Paper Number 2 for Improved
Implementation of the Part 70 Operating Permits
Program, 36–41 (Mar. 5, 1996).
31 See, e.g., In the Matter of Borden Chemical, Inc.
Formaldehyde Plant, Order on Petition No. 6–01–
1 at 48–49 (Dec. 22, 2000).
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standards contained in SIPs, as
discussed further in section III.G. of this
preamble.
Central to the concept of ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ is the fact that each
applicable requirement is established
through its own dedicated process,
which includes the ability for the public
to participate in the development of
and, if necessary, challenge the
substantive sufficiency of the
requirement. For example, the EPA
regulations referenced in preceding
paragraphs are generally undertaken
under CAA section 307, which
establishes various procedural and
public participation-related
requirements, as well as the opportunity
for judicial review of final regulations.
See 42 U.S.C. 7607(b)–(d). The
promulgation and approval of SIPs often
involves two such rulemakings—one at
the state level and one at the federal
level. Thus, the fact that selfimplementing applicable requirements
are not substantively re-evaluated
through title V does not mean the public
is without recourse; it simply means
that the title V permitting process was
not designed to collaterally attack or
reopen these previously-finalized
applicable requirements.
Given title V’s key role in
consolidating applicable requirements,
questions often arise during the
permitting process as to which CAA
requirements are applicable to a given
source or emission unit. To the extent
that applicability is clearly established
within the applicable requirement itself
(e.g., a source-specific SIP provision) or
some other type of final agency action
(e.g., a formal EPA applicability
determination under CAA sections 111,
112, or 129), applicability would not be
subject to further scrutiny through title
V.32 However, there are cases where the
applicability of a requirement—
including a requirement that could
otherwise be described as ‘‘selfimplementing’’—has not been
conclusively established prior to title V
permit issuance. In these cases, the title
V permitting process can and should be
used to determine which requirements
apply to the source, so that the title V
permit can include and assure
compliance with those requirements.
For example, determining which NSPS
32 The EPA has established formal and informal
processes for EPA to resolve questions regarding the
applicability of NSPS, NESHAP, and section 111(d)
and section 129 rules, called the ‘‘applicability
determination’’ process. See 40 CFR 60.5, 61.06,
62.02(b)(2); EPA Process Manual for Responding to
Requests Concerning Applicability and Compliance
Requirements of Certain Clean Air Act Stationary
Source Programs, Appx B (July 2020), available at
https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2020-07/
documents/111-112-129_process_manual.pdf.
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or NESHAP subpart is applicable to a
source may require further site-specific
factual analysis through the permitting
process. Additionally, within a given
NSPS or NESHAP rule, there may be
multiple different sets of requirements
that apply differently to emission units
with different characteristics. In these
situations, it may be necessary to use
the title V permitting process to decide
(and identify) which specific
requirements within a NSPS or
NESHAP rule apply to each emission
unit at a source. In these cases, the title
V permitting process can and should be
used to determine which requirements
apply to the source, so that the title V
permit can include and assure
compliance with those requirements.
Finally, even for self-implementing
applicable requirements, the title V
permitting process may be used to
determine whether additional
compliance assurance provisions (e.g.,
monitoring) are necessary. See 42 U.S.C.
7661c(c); 40 CFR 70.6(c)(1); Sierra Club
v. EPA, 536 F.3d at 680. Further
guidance on determining the sufficiency
of monitoring and other compliance
assurance provisions is beyond the
scope of this rulemaking.
F. Requirements Defined Through Title
V Permitting
Although title V generally does not
impose substantive new requirements,
title V permits sometimes serve as the
vehicle to further define applicable
requirements from other CAA programs.
This most often occurs when the
underlying applicable requirement
provides general direction and requires
further source-specific analysis to define
the precise requirements that apply to a
given source or emission unit. Some
underlying applicable requirements
expressly identify title V permits as the
vehicle for this analysis; others may be
more open-ended about the vehicle used
to define the applicable requirement;
and still others may specify a different
vehicle for establishing these
requirements (e.g., NSR permits,
discussed further in section IV. of this
preamble).
Unlike applicable requirements that
are established in full elsewhere, where
the details of an applicable requirement
are defined for the first time through the
title V permitting process, questions
about the content of such an applicable
requirement are subject to title V’s
unique oversight tools, including the
EPA’s objection authority and the public
petition opportunity.
For example, CAA section 112(g)
requires the development of case-bycase Maximum Achievable Control
Technology (MACT) limits prior to
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certain construction activities at a major
source of HAPs where there is no
NESHAP under CAA section 112(d).33
These limits can—and in some cases,
must—be established through the title V
process. In such cases where a title V
permit is used to establish a case-bycase MACT limit, questions about both
the applicability and the content of such
a limit (i.e., whether the limit properly
reflects MACT) are subject to the unique
oversight tools of title V.34
Other requirements of CAA section
112 NESHAP and section 111 NSPS
regulations may require further
definition through, for example, various
types of site-specific operational plans.
These plans are generally developed
outside of the title V permitting process,
but to the extent they are necessary to
impose or assure compliance with an
applicable requirement of the NSPS or
NESHAP, they must be included or
incorporated into title V permits.35 The
title V permitting process may also be
used for similar case-by-case decisions
based on underlying SIP provisions, as
discussed further in the following
subsection of this preamble.
In these situations, it is not the title
V permit that establishes the applicable
requirement itself. The applicable
requirement is still based on the
underlying statutory or regulatory
provision, but the title V permit defines
33 Under CAA section 112(g)(2), if the EPA has
not established a MACT standard for a source
category, the EPA or the state must establish a caseby-case MACT emission limit prior to certain
construction activities at a major source of HAPs.
Similarly, under CAA section 112(j)(2), if the EPA
has not established a MACT standard for a source
category, a new or existing major source’s title V
operating permit must include a case-by-case
MACT limit. See also 40 CFR 63.40–44
(implementing regulations for 112(g)), 63.50–56
(implementing regulations for 112(j)).
34 See 61 FR 68384, 68393, 68395 (Dec. 27, 1996)
(‘‘Where EPA determines that the MACT
determination made by the permitting authority
fails to meet any of the requirements of § 63.43
[and] where the MACT determination is made part
of a source’s part 70 permit, EPA may veto issuance
of the permit in accordance with the provisions of
40 CFR 70.8(c).’’); id. at 68395 (‘‘If, during the EPA’s
review of the section 112(g) determination, it
becomes apparent that the determination is not in
compliance with the Act, then EPA must object to
the issuance or revision of that permit.’’); In the
Matter of American Electric Power Service Corp.,
Southwest Electric Power Co., John W. Turk Plant,
Order on Petition No. VI–2008–01 at 15–16 (Dec.
15, 2009); In the Matter of Shintech Inc., PVC Plant,
Order on Petition No. 6–03–1 at 16–21 (July 3,
2003).
35 Other requirements of CAA section 111 NSPS
and section 112 NESHAP regulations may require
further definition through various types of sitespecific operational plans. These plans are
generally developed outside of the title V
permitting process, but to the extent they are
necessary to impose or assure compliance with an
applicable requirement of the NSPS or NESHAP,
they must be included or incorporated into title V
permits. See, e.g., Valero Houston Order at 25–26.
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the precise details of the applicable
requirement. Essentially, the title V
permitting process is used to develop
the specific ‘‘enforceable emission
limitations and standards . . . and such
other conditions as are necessary to
assure compliance with the [more
general underlying] applicable
requirements. . . .’’ 42 U.S.C. 7661c(a).
Absent an underlying CAA-based
authority, title V permits should
generally not be used to impose new
substantive requirements. 40 CFR
70.1(b).
G. Applicable Requirements Related to
the NAAQS and SIPs
CAA requirements associated with the
NAAQS and SIPs reflect the full
spectrum of issues discussed in the
preceding subsections of this preamble.
Some are not applicable requirements
for title V purposes; others are selfimplementing applicable requirements
that need no further review during title
V; still others may be defined through
title V permitting; and many are
established in the NSR permitting
process. Perhaps due to the variability
and complexity of issues related to the
NAAQS and SIPs, the EPA has received
numerous title V petitions raising
concerns that the EPA was not able to
address through that mechanism. The
EPA hopes that the following discussion
will help reduce confusion about the
issues that are—and are not—
redressable through title V oversight
tools.36
Beginning with the NAAQS, it is wellestablished that the NAAQS are not
themselves applicable requirements
because they do not apply directly to
sources.37 That is, the promulgation of
a NAAQS does not, in and of itself,
automatically result in emission limits
or other control measures applicable to
a source. Instead, the NAAQS create an
obligation on states to develop SIPs (and
on EPA to promulgate FIPs, as
necessary) that contain requirements
necessary to achieve and maintain the
NAAQS. 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(1), (c)(1).
36 As with essentially all other portions of this
preamble, the explanations in this section reflect
existing policies, as expressed in prior rule
preambles, guidance documents, and numerous
title V petition orders.
37 40 CFR 70.2 (defining ‘‘applicable
requirement’’ to include the NAAQS ‘‘but only as
it would apply to temporary sources’’); 57 FR at
32276 (‘‘Under the Act, NAAQS implementation is
a requirement imposed on States in the SIP; it is
not imposed directly on a source. In its final rule,
EPA clarifies that the NAAQS and the increment
and visibility requirements under part C of title I
of the Act are applicable requirements for
temporary sources only.’’); 56 FR at 21732–33 (‘‘The
EPA does not interpret compliance with the
NAAQS to be an ‘applicable requirement’ of the
Act.’’).
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The specific measures contained in each
state’s EPA-approved SIP to achieve the
NAAQS are the applicable requirements
with which sources must comply. 40
CFR 70.2. For purposes of title V
permitting, this means that a state does
not have any general obligation to
establish emission limitations or other
standards within a title V permit in
order to protect the NAAQS. Whether
such requirements are necessary is
largely dependent on the relevant terms
of the SIP.
Some applicable requirements in SIPs
could be described as ‘‘selfimplementing’’ in a manner similar to
the EPA’s NSPS and NESHAP standards
discussed in section III.E. of this
preamble. For example, a sourcespecific SIP provision may impose a
specific numerical emission limit or
operational limit on a specific source.
Or, a SIP provision, ‘‘permit by rule,’’ or
‘‘general permit’’ within the SIP may
impose similar requirements on a
category of sources or emission units.
Such requirements should be included
in the source’s title V permit without
further review (except, of course, to
ensure that the permit contains
sufficient monitoring and other
compliance assurance conditions).
Nonetheless, the EPA has received
many title V petitions challenging such
requirements contained in an EPAapproved SIP. Some petitions have
directly challenged the SIP provision
itself, asserting that the SIP requirement
was incorrectly established or failed to
satisfy certain legal requirements
governing SIPs. More often, petitions
have challenged permit terms that
repeat verbatim an approved SIP
provision; such claims effectively
challenge the SIP itself. As the EPA has
explained, if an alleged problem lies
with the content of the SIP, the proper
remedy would be a ‘‘SIP Call’’ under
CAA section 110(k), not a title V
petition. Until the EPA approves a
corrective SIP revision or issues a FIP,
the SIP provision remains an
‘‘applicable requirement’’ that should be
incorporated unchanged into the title V
permit. The EPA has consistently
denied title V petition claims on this
basis.38
Other SIP requirements are less
specific and must be further defined in
subsequent proceedings (generally
before the state) that involve a factspecific analysis of the relevant affected
38 See, e.g., In the Matter of Piedmont Green
Power, Order on Petition Number IV–2015–2 at 28–
29 (Dec. 13, 2016) (Piedmont Green Power Order);
In the Matter of Pacificorp’s Jim Bridger and
Naughton Electric Utility Steam Generating Plants,
Order on Petition No. VIII–00–1 at 23–24 (Nov. 16,
2000).
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sources and emission units.39
Depending on the nature of the SIP
provisions at issue, this analysis may
involve, for example, various methods
of qualitatively or quantitatively
assessing a source’s impact on the
NAAQS (including, but not limited to,
ambient air dispersion modeling). This
analysis may also result in case-by-case
emission limits designed to protect the
NAAQS. Determining the proper venue
for satisfying or defining these general
SIP requirements depends on the
specific language contained in the SIP,
as discussed in the following
paragraphs.
In general, most SIP provisions
provide that case-by-case decisions
necessary to fulfill general SIP
requirements will proceed either
through subsequent rulemaking
actions 40 or through the NSR permitting
process (as discussed in section IV. of
this preamble). Once established, the
more specific requirements of the SIP,
as defined through those processes, are
generally not subject to further review
during the title V permitting process.
However, some SIP requirements may
be defined for the first time in a title V
permit, in which case the contents of
these requirements are reviewable using
the unique title V oversight tools. Again,
whether a SIP-based requirement is
reviewable through the title V process
depends on the specific SIP provision at
issue. For example, the EPA has
reviewed (and granted) title V petitions
requesting analysis of a source’s impacts
on the NAAQS or case-specific emission
limits designed to protect the NAAQS in
situations where the SIP provisions at
issue specifically suggested that such
requirements would be implemented
through title V.41 In such cases, the EPA
39 See, e.g., 56 FR at 21757 (‘‘Where SIP
requirements are clear, the part 70 permit must
adopt these limitations and reestablish them as
permit conditions that implement the SIP. Where
the SIP requirements are ambiguous or absent, the
permit could provide a way of resolving questions
as to how the SIP applies and is enforced.’’).
40 See, e.g., In the Matter of TransAlta Centralia
Generation, LLC, Order on Petition at 11–12 (Apr.
28, 2011).
41 See In the Matter of In the Matter of Alabama
Power Co., Barry Generating Plant, Order on
Petition No. IV–2021–5 at 11–14 (June 14, 2022)
(granting a claim related to a SIP provision that
required owner/operators of a certain type of source
to ‘‘[d]emonstrate, to the satisfaction of the [state],
that sulfur oxides emitted, either alone or in
contribution to other sources, will not interfere with
attainment and maintenance of any primary or
secondary [NAAQS]’’); In the Matter of Duke
Energy, LLC, Asheville Steam Electric Plant, Order
on Petition No. IV–2016–06 at 11–17 (June 30,
2017) (granting claim related to a SIP requirement
that ‘‘the permit shall contain a condition
requiring’’ controls more stringent than the
applicable emission standards when necessary to
prevent a violation of the NAAQS—a provision the
state had previously relied upon to establish limits
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has generally provided the permitting
authority the opportunity to interpret
the relevant SIP provisions and to
explain the scope, timing, and
applicability of these provisions as they
relate to the source in question.
The EPA has also addressed other,
more general SIP provisions that do not
explicitly require any specific action
during the title V process. These
provisions often take the form of broad,
general prohibitions on air pollution,
and these SIP provisions are not always
directly tied to the NAAQS or any
specific federal requirements. The EPA
has explained that states have discretion
under these general SIP provisions to
determine that it is not necessary to
impose source-specific limits through
title V permits.42 However, this does not
prevent states from using title V to
address such general requirements.43
Although uncommon, some SIP
provisions expressly identify title V
permits as a vehicle for establishing or
modifying SIP-based limits. For
example, some SIP provisions based on
the EPA’s Plantwide Applicability Limit
(PAL) rules expressly identify title V
renewal permits as a potential vehicle
for adjusting a PAL.44 Where the title V
process is specifically identified in a SIP
as a means of establishing or defining an
applicable requirement of the SIP,
questions related to these requirements
maybe properly raised during the title V
permitting process.
in individual permits); In the Matter of Duke
Energy, LLC, Roxboro Steam Electric Plant, Order
on Petition No. IV–2016–07 at 10–15 (June 30,
2017) (same as Duke Asheville); In the Matter of
Public Service of New Hampshire, Schiller Station,
Order on Petition No. VI2014–04 at 8–13 (July 28,
2015) (granting claim related to a SIP requirement
to ‘‘apply special emission limits to the stationary
sources on a case-by-case basis to insure [sic] that
their air quality impacts’’ do not interfere with
NAAQS attainment in adjacent states).
42 See In the Matter of EME Homer City
Generation LP and First Energy Generation Corp.,
Order on Petition Nos. III2012–06, III–2012–07, and
III–2013–02 at 15–16 (July 30, 2014) (SIP provision
stated ‘‘No person may permit air pollution as that
term is defined in the act’’); In the Matter of
TransAlta Centralia Generation, LLC, Order on
Petition at 7 (April 28, 2011) (SIP provision
prohibited ‘‘emissions detrimental to persons or
property’’); In the Matter of Hercules, Inc., Order on
Petition at 8 (Nov. 10, 2004) (SIP provision
prohibited emissions that would cause injury or
unreasonably interfere with enjoyment of life or use
of property).
43 See, e.g., In the Matter of Oxbow Calcining LLC,
Order on Petition No. VI–2020–11 at 10–12 (June
14, 2022) (addressing a situation where a state
permitting authority took enforcement action
against a source that allegedly caused a violation of
a NAAQS, on the basis that this alleged violation
also violated permit terms reflecting a general SIP
provision prohibiting air pollution).
44 See, e.g., 51.166(w)(10)(v); ExxonMobil
Baytown Chemical Order 9 at 13–14.
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IV. Interface Between NSR and Title V
Permitting
Since the title V program was created
in the early 1990s, the EPA, state
permitting authorities, and other
interested stakeholders have grappled
with questions related to the
intersection of the title I (NSR) 45
preconstruction permitting programs
and the title V operating permit
program. Among other issues, one has
persisted: in what situations, and to
what extent, should the unique title V
oversight tools (e.g., the EPA’s objection
authority and the public petition
opportunity) be used to address alleged
deficiencies related to title I permitting
decisions? This issue implicates various
questions about the relationship
between title V permits and applicable
requirements established in other CAA
programs. For example, when is an
applicable requirement considered
established, such that it should be
incorporated into a title V permit
without further substantive review?
Should applicable requirements
established under NSR permitting
programs be treated the same as
applicable requirements established
under other CAA programs? The EPA’s
answer to these questions has changed
over time, and two federal circuit courts
have reached differing conclusions on
the matter, as discussed in section
IV.A.3. of this preamble.
This action proposes to codify the
reasonable approach that the EPA has
implemented on a case-by-case basis
since 2017, as further described and
justified in sections IV.A.3., IV.B., and
IV.E. of this preamble. In short,
provided a source obtains an NSR
permit under EPA-approved (or EPApromulgated) title I rules, with public
notice and the opportunity for comment
and judicial review, that NSR permit
establishes and defines the relevant
NSR-related applicable requirements of
the SIP (or FIP) for purposes of title V.
As with applicable requirements
established under other CAA authorities
(e.g., NSPS, NESHAP), the EPA would
not revisit those NSR decisions through
the title V process.
This approach creates an incentive for
permitting authorities to provide
opportunities for meaningful public
involvement through the most
appropriate venue—the NSR permitting
process. However, to the extent that the
public is deprived of the opportunity to
participate in the NSR permitting
45 For purposes of this preamble, the terms ‘‘title
I permit’’ and ‘‘NSR permit’’ are used
interchangeably to describe a preconstruction
permit issued to satisfy the NSR-related
requirements of title I of the Clean Air Act.
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process, the title V process will serve as
a backstop to ensure that each title V
permit contains all applicable
requirements. In other words, even
under the EPA’s current (and proposed)
framework, there are certain situations
in which the EPA would review
substantive NSR issues through the title
V permitting process, as explained in
more detail in section IV.B.5. of this
preamble.
The EPA is also soliciting comment
on alternative approaches, presented in
section IV.F. of this preamble, that
would involve using title V to review
NSR decisions in more situations.
The proposed regulatory changes
related to NSR permitting are distinct
and severable from the proposed change
related to the general duty clause under
CAA section 112(r)(1), discussed in
section V. of this preamble.
A. Background: Historical and Current
EPA Positions
1. NSR Programs (1977–Present)
The title I (NSR) preconstruction
permitting program was established
before the title V operating permits
program. The NSR program is based on
the 1977 Amendments to the CAA. The
overall NSR program is comprised of
three sub-programs, as discussed later.
The NSR program was designed to
protect public health and welfare from
the effects of air pollution and to
preserve and/or improve air quality
throughout the nation. See 42 U.S.C.
7470(1), (2), (4). The NSR program
requires certain stationary sources of air
pollution to obtain air pollution permits
prior to beginning construction.
Construction of new sources and the
modification of certain sources with
emissions above statutory and/or
regulatory thresholds are subject to
‘‘major source’’ NSR requirements. New
sources and modifications below the
relevant emissions thresholds may be
subject to minor NSR requirements or
excluded from NSR altogether.
The major NSR program includes two
distinct programs that each have unique
requirements for new or modified
sources. The applicability of these two
programs depends on whether the area
where the source is located is exceeding
the NAAQS for one or more pollutants.
The PSD program, based on
requirements in part C of title I of the
CAA, applies to pollutants for which the
area is not exceeding the NAAQS (areas
designated as attainment or
unclassifiable) and to regulated NSR
pollutants for which there are no
NAAQS. 42 U.S.C. 7470–7479. The
Nonattainment NSR (NNSR) program,
based on part D of title I of the CAA,
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applies to pollutants for which the area
is not meeting the NAAQS (areas
designated as nonattainment). 42 U.S.C.
7501–7515.
To implement the CAA requirements
for these programs, most states have
EPA-approved SIPs containing PSD and
NNSR preconstruction permitting
programs that meet the minimum
requirements reflected in the EPA’s
major NSR program regulations at 40
CFR 51.166 and 51.165. Upon EPA
approval of a SIP, the state or local air
agency becomes the permitting
authority for major NSR permits for
sources within its boundaries and issues
permits under state law. Currently, state
and local air agencies issue the vast
majority of major NSR permits each
year. When a state or local air agency
does not have an approved NSR
program, federal regulations (40 CFR
52.21, through incorporation into a FIP)
apply and either the EPA issues the
major NSR permits or a state or local air
agency issues the major NSR permits on
behalf of the EPA by way of a delegation
agreement. For sources located in Indian
Country, 18 U.S.C. 1151, the EPA is the
permitting authority for major NSR.
The permitting program for
construction of new and modified nonmajor sources and minor modifications
to major sources is known as the minor
NSR program. In addition to the specific
major NSR requirements in CAA
sections 165 and 173, CAA section
110(a)(2)(C) requires states to develop a
program to regulate the construction
and modification of any stationary
source ‘‘as necessary to assure that
[NAAQS] are achieved.’’ 42 U.S.C.
7410(a)(2)(C). The CAA and the EPA’s
regulations are less prescriptive
regarding minimum requirements for
minor NSR, so air agencies generally
have more flexibility in designing minor
NSR programs in their EPA-approved
SIPs. See 40 CFR 51.160–51.164. Minor
NSR permits are almost exclusively
issued by state and local air agencies,
although the EPA issues minor NSR
permits in many areas of Indian
Country. See 40 CFR 49.151–49.165.
The applicability of the PSD, NNSR,
and/or minor NSR programs to a
stationary source must be determined in
advance of construction and is a
pollutant-specific determination. Thus,
a stationary source may be subject to the
PSD program for certain pollutants,
NNSR for some pollutants, and minor
NSR for others.
2. Original Title V Approach to NSR
(1990–1997)
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As noted previously, the title V
program was established in the 1990
CAA Amendments. The legislative
history articulates Congress’s intent
that, notwithstanding the enactment of
title V, NSR permits would continue to
be issued as they had for over a decade,
and that title V permits would be used
to incorporate those requirements, but
not to alter or impose additional NSRrelated requirements.46 The text of the
CAA implicitly reflects this paradigm.
However, the statute does not
unambiguously prescribe the details of
how EPA should approach the
intersection of the NSR and title V
permitting programs.
Thus, when the EPA promulgated the
original title V implementing
regulations in 1991 and 1992, the
agency sought to provide clarity through
multiple regulatory provisions, both of
which were introduced earlier in this
preamble. Again, 40 CFR 70.1(b) states:
‘‘All sources subject to these regulations
shall have a permit to operate that
assures compliance by the source with
all applicable requirements. While title
V does not impose substantive new
requirements, it does require that . . .
certain procedural measures be adopted
especially with respect to compliance.’’
Additionally, the EPA created a
definition of ‘‘applicable requirement’’
in 40 CFR 70.2 (and later, 71.2) that
includes, in relevant part: ‘‘all of the
following as they apply to emissions
units in a part 70 source . . . (1) Any
standard or other requirement provided
for in the applicable implementation
plan approved or promulgated by EPA
through rulemaking under title I of the
Act that implements the relevant
requirements of the Act, including any
revisions to that plan promulgated in
part 52 of this chapter; (2) Any term or
condition of any preconstruction
permits issued pursuant to regulations
approved or promulgated through
rulemaking under title I, including parts
C or D, of the Act.’’
In the preamble of this initial part 70
rulemaking effort, the agency spoke
directly to the intersection of title V and
title I permitting. The EPA did not
express an intention to use the title V
permitting process to review the
substance of applicable requirements
established in preconstruction
permitting programs under title I of the
CAA. To the contrary, the EPA stated
that ‘‘[a]ny requirements established
during the preconstruction review
process also apply to the source for
purposes of implementing title V. If the
source meets the limits in its NSR
46 See sections IV.E.2. and IV.E.3. of this preamble
for further discussion of legislative intent.
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permit, the title V operating permit
would incorporate these limits without
further review.’’ 56 FR 21712, 21738–39
(May 10, 1991) (emphasis added). The
EPA stated clearly that ‘‘[t]he intent of
title V is not to second-guess the results
of any State NSR program.’’ Id. at 21739
(emphasis added). The EPA stated that
‘‘[d]ecisions made under the NSR and/
or PSD programs (e.g., Best Available
Control Technology [BACT]) define
applicable SIP requirements for the title
V source and, if they are not otherwise
changed, can be incorporated without
further review into the operating permit
for the source.’’ Id. at 21721 (emphasis
added). The preamble to the final rule
further confirms that ‘‘[d]ecisions made
under the NSR and/or PSD programs
define certain applicable SIP
requirements for the title V source.’’ 57
FR 32250, 32259 (July 21, 1992)
(emphasis added).
3. Revised Title V Approach to NSR
(1997–2017)
Once state permitting authorities
began issuing title V permits in the midto-late-1990s, the EPA began receiving
public petitions challenging those
permits. Some of the earliest title V
petitions included challenges to various
types of NSR permitting decisions,
proving a test to the statements the EPA
made when promulgating its part 70
rules. The EPA’s approach ultimately
differed depending on whether the
underlying NSR permit was issued
under the EPA’s federal PSD rules (40
CFR 52.21, administration of which was
delegated to many states at the time) or
under EPA-approved SIP rules.
For NSR permits issued under the
federal rules, the EPA’s petition
responses from 1997 onward followed
the agency’s interpretations and
statements of intent from the early
1990s. In other words, the EPA declined
to use the title V petition process to
review the merits of NSR permits issued
by the EPA or a delegated agency under
a FIP. The EPA’s reasoning at the time
was that appeals of such NSR permits
are governed by 40 CFR 124.19 and are
heard exclusively by the EPA
Environmental Appeals Board (EAB).
Thus, the EPA concluded that it need
not entertain claims that such permits
are deficient when raised in a petition
to object to a title V permit.47 The EPA
consistently reiterated the same or
47 See In the Matter of Maui Electric Co., Ltd.,
Order on Petition (June 16, 1999) In the Matter of
Hawaii Electric Light Co. Ltd., Order on Petition
(Apr. 3, 1998); In the Matter of Kawaihae
Cogeneration, Order on Petition (Mar. 10, 1997)
(Kawaihae Order).
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1161
similar statements in the decades that
followed.48
However, starting in 1997, the EPA
adopted a different approach to title V
permitting with respect to NSR permits
issued by state permitting authorities
under EPA-approved SIP rules.49 The
EPA began to interpret section (1) of the
definition of ‘‘applicable requirement’’
to allow the EPA, states, and the public
to use the title V permitting process to
examine the propriety of prior title I
permitting decisions. For instance, in
the 1997 Shintech I Order, the EPA
stated:
Where a state or local government has a
SIP-approved PSD program, the merits of
PSD issues can be ripe for consideration in
a timely petition to object under Title V.
Under 40 CFR 70.1(b), ‘‘all sources subject to
Title V must have a permit to operate that
assures compliance by the source with all
applicable requirements.’’ Applicable
requirements are defined in section 70.2 to
include ‘‘(1) any standard or other
requirement provided for in the applicable
implementation plan approved or
promulgated by EPA through rulemaking
under Title I of the [Clean Air] Act . . . .’’
The [state] defines ‘‘federal applicable
requirement,’’ in relevant part, to include
‘‘any standard or other requirement provided
for in the Louisiana [SIP] approved or
promulgated by EPA through rulemaking
under title I of the Clean Air Act that
implements the relevant requirements of the
Clean Air Act, including any revisions to that
plan promulgated in 40 CFR part 52, subpart
T.’’ Thus, the applicable requirements of the
Shintech Permits include the requirement to
obtain a PSD permit that in turn complies
with the applicable PSD requirements under
the Act, EPA regulations, and the Louisiana
SIP.50
In a 1999 letter responding to requests
from permitting authorities, the Director
of the EPA Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards articulated the
agency’s then-current understanding of
the interaction of title I and title V.51
The letter stated that ‘‘applicable
requirements include the requirement to
48 See, e.g., In the Matter of East Kentucky Power
Cooperative, Inc., Hugh L. Spurlock Generating
Station, Order on Petition, 5 n.2 (Aug. 30, 2007)
(Spurlock I Order); In the Matter of Carmeuse Lime
and Stone, Order on Petition No. V–2010–1 at 7 n.1
(Nov. 4, 2011); see also Hu Honua I Order at 3 n.4.
49 For example, within the 1997 Kawaihae Order,
in which the EPA declined to review the merits of
a PSD permit issued under delegated federal
authority, the EPA also announced the following
(without explanation): ‘‘In contrast, where a state or
local government has a SIP-approved PSD program
and the [EAB] lacks jurisdiction to entertain PSD
permit appeals, the merits of PSD issues are ripe for
consideration in a timely veto petition under Title
V.’’ Kawaihae Order at 3.
50 Shintech I Order at 3 n.2 (emphasis added)
(citation omitted).
51 Letter from John S. Seitz, U.S. EPA, to Robert
Hodanbosi, STAPPA/ALAPCO (May 20, 1999),
available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/
files/2015-08/documents/hodan7.pdf.
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obtain preconstruction permits that
comply with applicable preconstruction
review requirements under the Act, EPA
regulations, and SIP’s.’’ The letter
expressed the view that section 505(b)
of the Act provides a form of corrective
action in addition to all the other
enforcement authorities the EPA has
under the Act. It stated that generally
the agency will not object to a title V
permit for NSR determinations ‘‘made
long ago during a prior preconstruction
permitting process.’’ However, regarding
recently issued NSR permits, the EPA
indicated it may object to improper NSR
determinations. Additionally, the letter
said that the EPA could object to a title
V permit where ‘‘EPA believes that an
emission unit has not gone through the
proper preconstruction permitting
process.’’
The EPA has also used this reading of
the agency’s oversight authority under
title V as part of the justification for
approving state PSD programs.52 In
these approvals, the EPA pointed to its
authority under title I, sections 113 and
167, and stated that title V ‘‘has added
new tools’’ for addressing concerns with
implementation of PSD requirements by
allowing for objection to title V permits
under section 505(b) of the Act.
However, the authority to revisit an
issued preconstruction permit does not
appear to have been dispositive to the
approval of these PSD programs, as EPA
could still conduct oversight using its
title I-based authorities.
The EPA implicitly or explicitly
followed this approach in responding to
title V petitions between 1997 and 2017.
In general, the petition claims at issue
alleged two types of defects related to
NSR: First, some claims alleged flaws
with the terms of major NSR permits
issued by a state permitting authority—
for example, that BACT limits in a PSD
permit were not stringent enough. The
EPA refers to these claims as addressing
‘‘NSR permit content.’’ Second, other
claims alleged that a facility should
have received a major NSR permit,
instead of a minor NSR permit, to
authorize the construction of a new
source or modification. The EPA refers
to these claims as addressing ‘‘NSR
applicability.’’ For both types of issues,
the EPA indicated that the agency could
review whether preconstruction
permitting decisions complied with the
requirements of the SIP.
During this time period, the EPA often
limited or qualified its use of title V
52 See, e.g., Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; Oregon, 68 FR 2891, 2899
(Jan. 22, 2003); see also Approval and Promulgation
of Implementation Plans; Idaho; Designation of
Areas for Air Quality Planning Purposes; Idaho, 68
FR 2217, 2221 (Jan. 16, 2003).
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authorities to address substantive NSR
permitting issues. For example, in 1999,
the agency stated:
In determining BACT under a minor NSR
program, as in implementing other aspects of
SIP preconstruction review programs, a State
exercises considerable discretion. Thus, EPA
lacks authority to take corrective action
merely because the Agency disagrees with a
State’s lawful exercise of discretion in
making BACT-related determinations. State
discretion is bounded, however, by the
fundamental requirements of administrative
law that agency decisions not be arbitrary or
capricious, be beyond statutory authority, or
fail to comply with applicable procedures.53
Applying this framework, the EPA has
also drawn an analogy between this
approach and the standard used by the
EAB in reviewing EPA-issued PSD
permits, described as a ‘‘clearly
erroneous’’ standard.54 More recently,
the agency summarized this framework
as follows:
Where a petitioner’s request that the
Administrator object to the issuance of a title
V permit is based in whole, or in part, on a
permitting authority’s alleged failure to
comply with the requirements of its
approved PSD program (as with other
allegations of inconsistency with the Act),
the burden is on the petitioner to
demonstrate to the Administrator that the
permitting decision was not in compliance
with the requirements of the Act, including
the requirements of the SIP. As the EPA has
explained in describing its authority to
oversee the implementation of the PSD
program in states with approved programs,
such requirements include that the
permitting authority: (1) follow the required
procedures in the SIP; (2) make PSD
determinations on reasonable grounds
properly supported on the record; and (3)
describe the determinations in enforceable
53 In the Matter of Roosevelt Regional Landfill,
Order on Petition, 9 (May 4, 1999).
54 See, e.g., Spurlock I Order at 4–5 (Aug. 30,
2007) (‘‘The standard of review applied by the EAB
in its review of federal PSD permits has been
explained in numerous orders of the EAB. In short,
in such appeals, the burden is on a petitioner to
demonstrate that review is warranted. Ordinarily, a
PSD permit will not be reviewed by the EAB unless
the decision of the permitting authority was based
on either a clearly erroneous finding of fact or
conclusion of law, or involves an important matter
of policy or exercise of discretion that warrants
review. Thus, when a response to a petition to
object to a title V permit requires the Administrator
to determine whether an approved state’s PSD
permitting decision was adequately explained and
meets the requirements of its SIP, EPA believes it
is appropriate to apply a similar standard of review
to that employed by the EAB in its review of federal
PSD permits. When EPA promulgated the
regulations governing the EAB’s exercise of its
review authority, the Agency noted that the power
of review ‘should be only sparingly exercised.’
Similar deference to the permitting authority is also
justified in the case of a PSD permit issued by a
state with an approved PSD program, as is the case
here.’’ (quoting 45 FR 33290, 33412 (May 19, 1980);
citing In re Prairie State Generating Company, 13
E.A.D. 1 (EAB 2006); In re Kawaihae Cogeneration,
7 E.A.D. 107 (EAB 1997)).
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terms. As the permitting authority for [the
state’s] SIP-approved PSD program, [the state
agency] has substantial discretion in issuing
PSD permits. Given this discretion, in
reviewing a PSD permitting decision in the
title V petition context, the EPA generally
will not substitute its own judgment for that
of [the state]. Rather, consistent with the
decision in Alaska Dep’t of Envt’l
Conservation v. EPA, 540 U.S. 461 (2004), in
reviewing a petition to object to a title V
permit raising concerns regarding a state’s
PSD permitting decision, the EPA generally
will look to see whether the petitioner has
shown that the state did not comply with its
SIP-approved regulations governing PSD
permitting, or whether the state’s exercise of
discretion under such regulations was
unreasonable or arbitrary.55
Between 1997 and 2017, the EPA
occasionally articulated further
restrictions on the use of title V
oversight tools to address title I
permitting issues. For example, on at
least three occasions, the EPA indicated
that ‘‘the Agency generally does not
object to the issuance of a title V permit
due to concerns over BACT or related
determinations made long ago during a
prior preconstruction permitting
process.’’ 56
Additionally, on at least one occasion,
the EPA suggested that the title V
petition demonstration burden may
require a final determination that NSR
applies before the EPA can use the title
V process to overturn an NSR
applicability decision made by the
permitting authority. The EPA found
‘‘that [the state] has not reached a final
determination in this permitting context
that PSD is an applicable requirement
for these sources, that the USEPA has
not determined otherwise, and that a
court has not issued a determination in
the litigation context. Accordingly, there
is no requirement under the facts of this
case for the permits to include either
PSD limits or a compliance schedule for
the source to come into compliance
with such limits at this time.’’ The EPA
concluded that ‘‘even if [the state] were
to recognize that the potential for
noncompliance [with title I
preconstruction permitting
requirements] exists, it is not required to
pursue inquiries further in the title V
context,’’ but instead could pursue the
55 In the Matter of Appleton Coated, LLC, Order
on Petition Nos. V–2013–12 & V–2013–15 at 5 (Oct.
14, 2016) (Appleton Order) (citations omitted).
56 In the Matter of Georgia Pacific Consumer
Products LP Plant, Order on Petition No. V–2011–
1 at 17 (July 23, 2012); Spurlock I Order at 19; see
In the Matter of Chevron Products Company,
Richmond, California Facility, Order on Petition
No. IX–2004–08 at 9 (Mar. 15, 2005). Note that this
statement is based on the EPA policy articulated in
the 1999 letter discussed in footnote 51.
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matter through title I enforcement
mechanisms.57
Further, the EPA stated:
4. Current Title V Approach to NSR
(2017–Present)
Beginning in 2017, the EPA adopted
a more nuanced view that, in the EPA’s
present opinion, better reflects not only
the statute and Congress’s intent, but
also the EPA’s regulatory definition of
‘‘applicable requirement’’ and the
manner in which the title V permitting
program interacts with other types of
CAA requirements. As with many of the
EPA’s views on this topic, the EPA’s
updated view was articulated within
Administrator-signed orders responding
to title V petitions on individual title V
permits.
The first such order was the 2017
PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order.58 There, the
EPA interpreted the CAA and the EPA’s
title V regulations to not require
permitting authorities (including the
EPA) to examine the merits of certain
title I permitting decisions in the title V
permitting context. Specifically, in
response to a petition claiming that a
PSD permit (instead of a minor NSR
permit) was required for certain changes
that occurred at the facility at issue
approximately 20 years prior, the EPA
explained:
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In circumstances such as those present
here where a preconstruction permit has
been duly obtained, . . . when a permitting
authority has made a source-specific
permitting decision with respect to a
particular construction project under title I,
those decisions ‘‘define certain applicable
SIP requirements for the title V source’’ for
purposes of title V permitting. 57 FR 32250,
32259 (July 21, 1992). The EPA is now
interpreting the regulations to mean that the
issuance of a[n NSR] permit defines the
applicability of preconstruction requirements
under section (1) of the definition of
‘‘applicable requirement’’ for the approved
construction activities for the purposes of
permitting under title V of the Act. . . .
These source-specific permitting actions take
the general preconstruction permitting
requirements of the SIP—the requirement to
obtain a particular type of permit and the
substantive requirements that must be
included in each type of permit—and
evaluate at the time of the permitting
decision whether and how to apply them to
a proposed construction or modification.59
57 In the Matter of Midwest Generation-Joliet
Generating Station and Will County Generating
Stations, Order on Petition No. V–2005–2 at 9–10
(June 14, 2007).
58 In the Matter of PacifiCorp Energy, Hunter
Power Plant, Order on Petition No. VIII–2016–4
(Oct. 16, 2017).
59 PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 10–11. As the EPA
explained: ‘‘This interpretation applies to the facts
of this Claim, where a permitting authority issued
a source-specific title I preconstruction permit
subject to public notice and comment and for which
judicial review was available.’’ Id. at 11 n.21.
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Consistent with this reading, permitting
agencies and the EPA need not reevaluate—
in the context of title V permitting, oversight,
or petition responses—previously issued
final preconstruction permits, especially
those that have already been subject to public
notice and comment and an opportunity for
judicial review. Concerns with these final
preconstruction permits should instead be
handled under the authorities found in title
I of the Act. Where a final preconstruction
permit has been issued, whether it is a major
or minor NSR permit, the terms and
conditions of that permit should be
incorporated as ‘‘applicable requirements’’
and the permitting authority and the EPA
should limit its review to whether the title
V permit has accurately incorporated those
terms and conditions and whether the title V
permit includes adequate monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting requirements to
assure compliance with the terms and
conditions of the preconstruction permit.60
Shortly after issuing the PacifiCorpHunter I Order, the EPA issued the Big
River Steel Order,61 which applied
similar statutory and regulatory
interpretations to a different set of facts.
In Big River Steel, the EPA declined to
use the title V petition process to review
whether a PSD permit satisfied the
relevant SIP requirements governing
PSD permit content (including BACT)
and modeling related to the NAAQS.
The EPA did so notwithstanding the fact
that the PSD permit at issue, and the
title V permit being petitioned, were
issued at the same time and in the same
physical permit document. The EPA’s
rationale was fully expressed within the
PacifiCorp-Hunter I and Big River Steel
Orders. To the extent those or similar
rationales are relevant to this proposed
rulemaking, they are presented in
section IV.E. of this preamble.
Since the 2017 PacifiCorp-Hunter I
and Big River Steel Orders, the EPA has
issued approximately 20 other title V
petition orders addressing similar issues
under different fact patterns. Although
the EPA has consistently followed the
overarching interpretations and policies
articulated in the PacifiCorp-Hunter I
and Big River Steel Orders, each
decision about whether those
interpretations were applicable
depended on the specific facts at
issue.62 Through these case-by-case
60 PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 19 (citing 42
U.S.C. 7661c(a); 40 CFR 70.6(a)(3), 70.6(c)(1)).
61 In the Matter of Big River Steel, LLC, Order on
Petition No. VI–2013–10 (Oct. 31, 2017).
62 See, e.g., PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 11 n.21
(‘‘This interpretation applies to the facts of this
Claim, where a permitting authority issued a
source-specific title I preconstruction permit subject
to public notice and comment and for which
judicial review was available. The EPA is not
considering at this time whether other
circumstances may warrant a different approach.’’);
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1163
decisions, the EPA has clarified various
aspects of the EPA’s interpretation of
the title V provisions. However, because
those decisions are spread across many
different orders, the EPA understands
that not all stakeholders—including
permitting authorities, permittees, and
members of the public—may fully
understand the EPA’s views about
which types of issues are, or are not,
subject to review through title V.63 This
preamble summarizes the most relevant
aspects of these prior decisions in order
to provide additional clarity about the
EPA’s current views.
In some of these decisions, the EPA
concluded that NSR permitting actions
established the relevant ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for title V purposes, and
the EPA declined to review the
substance of those applicable
requirements in the title V petition
context. The EPA applied this approach
to many different types of issues,
including the sufficiency of major NSR
permit terms,64 the sufficiency of minor
NSR permit terms,65 issues related to
modeling and the NAAQS,66 procedures
used to issue NSR permits,67 whether
major NSR is applicable,68 and other
Sierra Club v. EPA, 926 F.3d 844, 850 (D.C. Cir.
2019) (emphasizing the case-specific nature the
EPA’s decision to apply the interpretation at issue
in PacifiCorp-Hunter I, as well as the case-specific
nature of any future EPA decisions to apply or not
apply the same interpretation to different fact
patterns).
63 In recent permitting decisions and title V
petitions, the EPA has observed that both state
permitting authorities and public petitioners have
often misapplied, misinterpreted, or ignored the
interpretations and policies expressed in these
orders.
64 AK Steel Order at 9–13; In the Matter of
Riverview Energy Corp., Order on Petition No. V–
2019–10 at 19–29 (Mar. 26, 2020) (Riverview Order);
In the Matter of South Louisiana Methanol, LP, St.
James Methanol Plant, Order on Petition Nos. VI–
2016–24 & VI–2017–014 at 8–10 (May 29, 2018)
(South Louisiana Methanol Order); Big River Steel
Order at 8–20.
65 In the Matter of Delaware City Refining
Company, LLC, Delaware City Refinery, Order on
Petition No. III–2022–10 at 26 (July 5, 2023)
(Delaware City Refinery Order); In the Matter of
Valero Refining-Texas, L.P., Valero Houston
Refinery, Order on Petition No. VI–2021–8 at 65–
66 (June 30, 2022) (Valero Houston Order); In the
Matters of Superior Silica Sands & Wisconsin
Proppants, LLC, Order on Petition Nos. V–2016–18
& V–2017–2 at 14–15 (Feb. 26, 2018) (SSS/WP
Order); In the Matter of Tennessee Valley Authority,
Gallatin Fossil Plant, Order on Petition Nos. IV–
2016–11 & IV–2017–17 at 19–20 (January 30, 2018)
(TVA Gallatin II Order).
66 Riverview Order at 19–21; Big River Steel Order
at 8–20.
67 AK Steel Order at 9–13.
68 In the Matter of Waelz Sustainable Products,
LLC, Order on Petition No. V–2021–10 at 9–16 (Mar.
14, 2023) (Waelz Order); In the Matter of Yuhuang
Chemical Inc. Methanol Plant, Order on Petition
Nos. VI–2017–5 & VI–2017–13 at 7–8 (Apr. 2, 2018)
(Yuhuang II Order); In the Matter of ExxonMobil
Corp., Baytown Olefins Plant, Order on Petition No.
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NSR-related issues.69 Some of these
orders involved situations where NSR
permits were issued well before the title
V permits being challenged,70 while
others involved more contemporaneous
NSR and title V permitting decisions.71
In other orders with materially
different factual underpinnings, the EPA
determined that it would be appropriate
to review certain NSR-related issues
through the title V permitting process.
For example, the EPA substantively
engaged with title V petition claims
concerning the sufficiency of
monitoring established in NSR
permits,72 requirements involving an
explicit overlap between NSR and title
V,73 and other NSR issues where no
underlying NSR permit was issued 74 or
where the underlying NSR permit did
not involve public notice and the
opportunity for comment.75
Two of the EPA’s petition orders—the
PacifiCorp Hunter I Order and the
ExxonMobil Baytown Olefins Order—
were challenged in different federal
circuit courts. The U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit issued the
first ruling, upholding the ExxonMobil
Baytown Olefins Order. Env’t Integrity
Project v. EPA, 969 F.3d 529 (5th Cir.
2020). There, the court found persuasive
the ‘‘EPA’s view that Title V permitting
is not the appropriate vehicle for
reexamining the substantive validity of
VI–2016–12 at 9–12 (ExxonMobil Baytown Olefins
Order); PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 8–20.
69 In the Matter of ExxonMobil Corp., Baytown
Refinery, Order on Petition No. VI–2016–14 at 12–
13 (ExxonMobil Baytown Refinery Order);
ExxonMobil Baytown Olefins Order at 9–12 .
70 Delaware City Refinery Order at 16; Valero
Houston Order at 65–66; ExxonMobil Baytown
Refinery Order at 12–13, ExxonMobil Baytown
Olefins Order at 9–12; TVA Gallatin II Order at 19–
20.
71 Waelz Order at 13–15; Riverview Order at 24–
28; South Louisiana Methanol Order at 9; Yuhuang
II Order at 7–8; SSS/WP Order at 14–15; Big River
Steel Order at 8–20.
72 In the Matter of Gulf Coast Growth Ventures,
LLC, Olefins, Derivative, & Utilities Plant, Order on
Petition No. VI–2021–3 at 17–19 (May 12, 2022)
(Gulf Coast Growth Ventures Order); ExxonMobil
Baytown Chemical Order at 20–21; South Louisiana
Methanol Order at 10–11; Yuhuang II Order at 8;
see also, e.g., Big River Steel Order at 17, 17 n.30,
19 n.32, 20; PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 16, 17, 18,
18 n.33, 19.
73 Suncor East Order at 53–54; ExxonMobil
Baytown Chemical Order at 13–14; In the Matter of
Coyote Station Power Plant, Order on Petition Nos.
VIII–2019–1 & VIII–2020–8 at 12–13 (January 15,
202) (Coyote Station Order).
74 Suncor East Order at 45–48, 54–55; SRP Agua
Fria Order at 11 n.18; In the Matter of Salt River
Project Agricultural Improvement & Power District,
Desert Basin Generating Station, Order on Petition
No. IX–2022–3 at 12 n.20 (July 28, 2022) (SRP
Desert Basin Order); In the Matter of BP Products
North America, Inc., Whiting Business Unit, Order
on Petition No. V–2021–9 at 13 n.24 (Mar. 4, 2022)
(BP Whiting II Order).
75 Suncor East Order at 48; Coyote Station Order
at 12.
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underlying Title I preconstruction
permits.’’ Id. at 253. The court’s
conclusion was ‘‘based principally on
Title V’s text, Title V’s structure and
purpose, and the structure of the Act as
a whole.’’ Id. at 249.76
Shortly thereafter, the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Tenth Circuit issued a
ruling vacating and remanding the
PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order. Sierra Club
v. EPA, 964 F.3d 882 (10th Cir. 2020).
Unlike the Fifth Circuit, the Tenth
Circuit did not address the EPA’s
statutory interpretation but instead
rejected the EPA’s reasoning as
inconsistent with the EPA’s regulations.
Id. at 897. According to the Tenth
Circuit, the EPA’s regulations require
that title V permits ensure compliance
with all ‘‘applicable requirements,’’
which the court interpreted to include
all requirements in the SIP, including
those related to major NSR. Id. at 885–
86, 890–91.
Because these two courts ruled on
different grounds (with the Fifth Circuit
focusing on the statute, and the Tenth
Circuit focusing on the EPA’s existing
regulations), the legal reasoning
underlying their holdings is not in
direct conflict. However, for practical
purposes, the differing rulings have
made it difficult for the EPA to apply a
uniform interpretation of its current title
V regulations nationwide.
Within the Tenth Circuit’s
jurisdiction, in the EPA’s subsequent
responses to petitions on the PacifiCorpHunter permit (PacifiCorp-Hunter II 77
and PacifiCorp-Hunter III 78), the EPA
reviewed whether a source should have
obtained a major NSR permit for
projects previously authorized by a
76 The court stated its conclusion several ways, as
the following examples illustrate: ‘‘Concluding
EPA’s interpretation of the Title V program is
independently persuasive and therefore entitled to
the mild form of deference recognized by Skidmore
v. Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134 (1944), we deny the
petition.’’ 969 F.3d at 242. ‘‘[W]e find [the EPA’s]
reasoning persuasive as a construction of the
relevant provisions of Title V and its implementing
regulations.’’ Id. at 247. ‘‘Applying Skidmore, we
ask whether EPA’s interpretation of Title V and its
implementing regulations in the Hunter Order is
persuasive. Specifically, we inquire into the
persuasiveness of EPA’s current view that the Title
V permitting process does not require substantive
reevaluation of the underlying Title I
preconstruction permits applicable to a pollution
source. As we read it, the Hunter Order defends the
agency’s interpretation based principally on Title
V’s text, Title V’s structure and purpose, and the
structure of the Act as a whole. Having examined
these reasons and found them persuasive, we
conclude that EPA’s current approach to Title V
merits Skidmore deference.’’ Id. at 249.
77 In the Matter of PacifiCorp Energy, Hunter
Power Plant, Order on Petition Nos. VIII–2016–4 &
VIII–2020–10 (Jan. 13, 2021).
78 In the Matter of PacifiCorp Energy, Hunter
Power Plant, Order on Petition No. VIII–2022–2
(Sept. 27, 2022).
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minor NSR permit. This review was
based on the Tenth Circuit’s decision on
the PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order.
In title V petition orders regarding
permits issued by states outside of the
Tenth Circuit, however, the EPA has
followed a different approach. As the
EPA has explained:
EPA continues to believe that the
interpretation of the CAA upheld by the Fifth
Circuit’s decision in Environmental Integrity
Project v. EPA, 969 F.3d 529 (5th Cir. 2020),
is correct. EPA thus intends, where
supported by the facts of individual permits,
to continue to apply the reasoning of In re
Big River Steel, LLC, Order on Petition No.
VI–2013–10 (October 31, 2017), when issuing
and reviewing title V permits and reviewing
petitions on permits for sources in states
outside of the Tenth Circuit. That is, where
EPA has approved a state’s title I permitting
program, duly issued preconstruction
permits establish the NSR-related ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for the purposes of title V. As
with ‘‘applicable requirements’’ established
through other CAA authorities, the terms and
conditions of those permits should be
incorporated into a source’s title V permit
without a further round of substantive review
as part of the title V process.79
Thus, when reviewing permits issued
by permitting authorities in states
beyond the Tenth Circuit’s jurisdiction,
the EPA has continued to apply its
approach dating back to 2017 and has,
in many instances, declined to use the
title V process to review the substance
of NSR permitting decisions. In the
situations outside the Tenth Circuit
where the EPA decided that it was
appropriate to use the title V process to
review certain NSR issues, these
decisions were not based on the Tenth
Circuit’s interpretation of the EPA’s
regulations, but rather on factual
distinctions that, in the EPA’s view,
provided a basis for reviewing such
issues under EPA’s post-2017
interpretation of the regulations.80
As explained in the next section of
this preamble, the EPA continues to
maintain that the Big River Steel Order
and subsequent title V orders reflect the
best interpretation not only of the
relevant statutory provisions, but also of
the existing regulations. Nonetheless, in
light of the differing circuit court
decisions, the EPA considers it prudent
to update the EPA’s regulations to
reflect its interpretation of the statute.
The changes proposed in this
rulemaking will allow the EPA to apply
a single framework across the nation by
amending the text in the regulations.
79 PacifiCorp-Hunter III Order at 16 n.29; see also
PacifiCorp-Hunter II Order at 15 n.26.
80 See Suncor East Order at 46 n.61; Gulf Coast
Growth Ventures Order at 17 n.28; ExxonMobil
Baytown Chemical Order at 14 n.27; BP Whiting II
Order at 13 n.24; Coyote Station Order at 12.
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This action thus addresses the ruling
from the Tenth Circuit by amending the
regulatory language that it found to be
in conflict with the EPA’s current
interpretation. It also more clearly aligns
the EPA’s regulations with the EPA’s
statutory interpretation endorsed by the
Fifth Circuit.
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B. Proposed Action
The EPA proposes to update its
regulations to more closely reflect the
agency’s current view regarding the
intersection between title I permitting
and title V permitting. In sum: provided
a source obtains an NSR permit under
EPA-approved (or EPA-promulgated)
title I rules, with public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial
review, such NSR permit establishes the
NSR-related ‘‘applicable requirements’’
of the SIP (or FIP) for purposes of title
V. As with ‘‘applicable requirements’’
established under other CAA authorities
(e.g., NSPS, NESHAP), the EPA would
not revisit those NSR decisions through
the title V process.
The following subsections of this
preamble explore the situations in
which NSR-related applicable
requirements of the SIP (or FIP) would
effectively be established through the
NSR process, as well as situations in
which the title V process could be used
to further address or define those
requirements. Determining the extent to
which title V should be used to address
NSR-related requirements inherently
requires a fact-specific, case-by-case
analysis of multiple variables associated
with both title I and title V permitting.
However, in general, the EPA’s
framework applies similarly regardless
of: (i) the stage of the title V permitting
or oversight process at issue; (ii) the
NSR permit’s origin (i.e., from a SIP or
a FIP), (iii) the type of substantive NSR
requirement at issue (e.g., NSR permit
terms or major NSR applicability); and
(iv) the procedures by which the NSR
permit is incorporated into the title V
permit (e.g., sequentially or
concurrently issued permits).
1. Different Stages of the Title V
Permitting and Oversight Process
The EPA’s views regarding the NSRtitle V interface have primarily been
discussed in the context of one specific
oversight tool: the EPA’s responses to
title V petitions. This rulemaking would
further codify the scope of issues that
would be within, or beyond, the scope
of the EPA’s review in responding to
title V petitions. However, the concepts
underlying the EPA’s current view—as
well as this proposed rule—are not
confined to title V petitions, but extend
to other aspects of title V permitting.
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Specifically, the EPA’s approach is
equally relevant: (i) when prospective
permittees prepare title V permit
applications; (ii) when permitting
authorities (including EPA, where
applicable) develop title V permits and
respond to public comments on draft
title V permits, (iii) when EPA reviews
and decides whether to object to
proposed title V permits during its 45day review period; (iv) when EPA
considers reopening title V permits for
cause; and (v) when EPA considers
other programmatic oversight actions
under, for example, 40 CFR 70.10.
2. Different Origins of NSR Permits
As described earlier in this preamble,
the EPA’s approach to reviewing NSR
issues through title V diverged in the
late-1990s, depending on whether the
underlying NSR permit was issued
under a state’s EPA-approved SIP rules
(which the EPA would review) or EPApromulgated FIP rules (which the EPA
would not review). At the time, this
distinction was based on the differing
routes to review such NSR permitting
actions; appeals of SIP-based NSR
permits were reviewed through the state
court system, while appeals of FIPbased NSR permits proceeded through
the EAB and federal court system.
Instead of presenting a basis to treat
SIP-based and FIP-based title I permits
differently, these NSR permit appeal
pathways highlight why they should be
treated similarly. Both SIP-based and
FIP-based appeal pathways promote
public involvement and ensure the
substantive validity of the underlying
NSR permitting decisions. Both
pathways are similar to those used to
establish (and, if necessary, challenge)
other types of applicable requirements
of the CAA. See section IV.E.4.a. of this
preamble for additional information.
The fact that one pathway leads to the
state courts, and the other pathway
leads to the federal courts, simply
reflects the cooperative federalism
system established by Congress for the
NSR program.81
Overall, the EPA does not view the
difference between NSR-based
requirements established pursuant to a
SIP, or NSR-based requirements
established pursuant a FIP, to be
meaningful insofar as title V is
concerned. Both processes effectively
establish and define the NSR-related
requirements of title I for title V
purposes. Accordingly, the EPA’s
proposed rule would codify the EPA’s
81 For additional information about how the
EPA’s approach to SIP-based NSR permits comports
with the structure of the CAA and congressional
intent, see sections IV.E.2. and IV.E.3. of this
preamble.
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current approach, which does not
differentiate between NSR permits
issued pursuant to a SIP or a FIP.82
3. Different Types of NSR Requirements
The EPA’s current (and proposed)
approach applies regardless of the types
of NSR requirements involved. That is,
once an NSR permit has been issued
under EPA-approved (or EPApromulgated) title I rules, with public
notice and the opportunity for comment
and judicial review, that NSR permit
defines the NSR-related requirements of
the SIP (or FIP) that are applicable to the
construction of the new source or
modification that was the subject of the
permit. The terms of both major and
minor NSR permits are applicable
requirements that must be included in
title V permits.83 These permit
conditions are not derived or created
within or through the title V process.
Thus, the title V permitting process
should not be used to reevaluate the
terms of such major NSR or minor NSR
permits, including questions about (i)
the content of the NSR permit (e.g.,
whether the permit limits reflect BACT),
(ii) whether additional requirements
(e.g., major NSR requirements) should
have been applicable to the
construction, and (iii) other types of
NSR requirements (e.g., whether the
permitting authority correctly
determined that the construction would
not cause or contribute to a violation of
the NAAQS).
This principle is perhaps most
intuitive with respect to permit content.
When a permitting authority authorizes
construction by issuing either a major
NSR permit or minor NSR permit, it
establishes emission limits and other
82 This is consistent with the existing regulatory
definition of ‘‘applicable requirement,’’ which treats
SIP-based and FIP-based requirements the same.
See 40 CFR 70.2, 71.2 (definition of applicable
requirement, items (1) and (2)).
83 The EPA’s existing regulations reflect this fact.
The current definition of ‘‘applicable requirement’’
includes ‘‘Any term or condition of any
preconstruction permits issued pursuant to
regulations approved or promulgated through
rulemaking under title I, including Parts C or D, of
the Act.’’ 40 CFR 70.2 (emphasis added). This
definition includes not only the specifically listed
major NSR permits (required under parts C or D),
but also minor NSR permits issued under a SIP.
This language, included in the 1992 final rule,
reflects a change from the language in the 1991
proposed rule, which only included major NSR
permits. See 57 FR at 32276; 56 FR at 21768.
Nonetheless, in order to provide maximum clarity
to the public, the EPA proposes a small change to
make the inclusion of minor NSR permit
requirements more explicit. Note that not every
single term of every single NSR permit is an
‘‘applicable requirement’’ that must be included in
a title V permit. Some terms of NSR permits may
no longer be applicable because, for example, they
are obsolete or extraneous. See White Paper for
Streamlined Development of Part 70 Permit
Applications, 7–16 (July 10, 1995).
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standards necessary to satisfy the SIP
requirements relevant to either major or
minor NSR. For example, PSD permits
must include emission limits reflecting
BACT; NNSR permits must include
emission limits reflecting the Lowest
Achievable Emissions Rate (LAER), and
minor NSR permits may contain
analogous requirements depending on
the terms of the SIP. Although SIPs
contain general criteria for establishing
those limits, individual permit actions
are necessary to specifically define the
limits for each source subject to NSR.
Once these limitations are established
through the NSR permitting process, the
title V process should not be used to reevaluate whether the resulting limits
reflect the general SIP requirements
related to BACT, LAER, or other similar
requirements.
Similar concepts apply to questions
about NSR applicability. SIPs contain
general criteria and thresholds for
determining the applicability of
different SIP requirements. However,
determining which specific
requirements apply to individual
emission units requires a fact-specific
permitting exercise. When a permitting
authority authorizes construction by
issuing either a minor NSR permit or
major NSR permit, it decides which
NSR-related SIP requirements are
applicable to different aspects of the
project on a pollutant-by-pollutant
basis. The resulting NSR permit might
include PSD requirements (e.g., BACT)
for some pollutants, NNSR requirements
(e.g., LAER) for other pollutants, and/or
minor NSR requirements for yet other
pollutants. In this manner, within a
single NSR permit action, questions
about the applicability of different NSR
requirements may be inextricably linked
with questions about the content of the
NSR permit. Further, questions about
NSR permit content and NSR
applicability are fundamentally similar
because both questions seek to answer
whether permit limits are set at a level
stringent enough to satisfy the relevant
general SIP requirements, and both
questions require a highly technical
application of general SIP criteria to
specific circumstances at the source.84
Thus, once an NSR permit is issued, the
limitations and other terms of that
permit establish all relevant NSR-related
requirements of the SIP (whether major
or minor NSR) that apply to
construction or modification of the
84 For example, questions about whether (i) an
emission limit that purports to satisfy BACT should
instead be made more stringent in order to satisfy
BACT are similar to questions about whether (ii) an
emission limit that purports to satisfy minor NSR
requirements should instead be made more
stringent in order to satisfy BACT.
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source, and should be incorporated into
the title V permit without further
review.85
Permitting authorities satisfy other
types of NSR requirements in a SIP
when issuing NSR permits. One
requirement that frequently arises in the
context of title V petitions involves
determining that the new source or
modification will not cause or
contribute to a violation of the NAAQS.
Again, to satisfy this requirement, the
state must undertake a fact-specific
analysis through the NSR permitting
process. This analysis may (but does not
always) involve atmospheric dispersion
modeling, and this may (but does not
always) result in the imposition of
additional permit terms that restrict
emissions in order to protect the
NAAQS.86 In all cases, the NSR
permitting process is designed to ensure
that the NSR permit ultimately contains
whatever specific conditions are
necessary to satisfy this NSR SIP
requirement. Similar principles hold
true for a variety of other substantive
NSR requirements in SIPs, including a
variety of requirements that are unique
to NNSR.
Overall, substantive issues concerning
NSR permit content, NSR applicability,
and other NSR requirements are
fundamentally similar. Each of these
decisions require a state to derive
specific requirements for an individual
source from general criteria in the NSR
portion of the SIP (e.g., requirements to
include limits reflecting certain
technology-based criteria, to issue major
NSR permits to projects meeting certain
applicability criteria, or to ensure that
permits meet certain criteria relevant to
the NAAQS). Each of these
determinations involve relatively
complex, fact-specific decisionmaking,
which occurs during the NSR permitting
process. Once that process concludes,
the state issues an NSR permit that
contains these source-specific
applicable requirements of the SIP for
the construction project being
authorized. Thus, under the EPA’s
current (and proposed) approach, all
types of different NSR-related issues are
generally treated the same for purposes
of title V review. The merit and validity
85 See
section IV.E.4.a. of this preamble for
additional discussion about how the EPA’s
treatment of NSR applicability issues aligns with
the EPA’s treatment of other types of CAA
applicability issues.
86 In this manner, not all NSR-based SIP
requirements related to the NAAQS result in the
imposition of requirements that apply to emission
units at a source. As discussed previously, only
those requirements that ‘‘apply to emissions units
in a part 70 source’’ qualify as ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for title V purposes. 40 CFR 70.2; see
40 CFR 71.2.
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of these substantive requirements are
subject to review and correction through
the available mechanisms for appeal of
the NSR permit, and need not be further
reviewed by a state permitting authority
or the EPA through title V.
Note that compliance with procedural
requirements associated with the
issuance of NSR permits are also subject
to review in appeals of NSR permits and
are also not directly reviewable through
title V. However, the latter is for reasons
not directly related to the interpretation
of ‘‘applicable requirements’’ at issue in
this proposed rule. Under the statute
and the EPA’s existing regulations, the
EPA can object to a title V permit that
does not comply with ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ of the CAA (as that term
is defined in EPA regulations) or
requirements of part 70, including
procedural requirements of part 70. See
42 U.S.C. 7661d(b); 40 CFR 70.8(c)(1),
70.12(a)(2), (a)(2)(ii)–(iv). Notably, the
EPA’s authority to object under CAA
section 505(b) only extends to the
particular proposed title V permit before
the agency for review.87 Procedural
requirements associated with NSR
permit issuance are not ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for title V purposes
because they do not ‘‘apply to emissions
units at a part 70 source.’’ 40 CFR 70.2.
Rather, they dictate the behavior of
permitting authorities in issuing NSR
permits. Procedural requirements
associated with NSR permit issuance are
also not part 70 requirements because
they are not related to title V or the part
70 regulations governing the issuance of
a specific title V permit. Thus, alleged
violations of procedural requirements
associated with NSR permit issuance
generally would not provide an
independent basis for the EPA to object
to a title V permit that incorporates such
an NSR permit.88 Nonetheless, although
procedural flaws with the issuance of an
NSR permit would not provide a direct
basis for the EPA to object to a title V
permit, such procedural issues could
impact whether other more substantive
NSR issues should be reviewed through
the title V process. See section IV.B.5.a.
of this preamble for further information.
87 The references within CAA section 505(b) to
‘‘any permit,’’ ‘‘the proposed permit,’’ ‘‘a permit,’’
‘‘the permit,’’ etc. apply to the title V permit that
a permitting authority proposes to issue and
transmits to EPA under CAA section 505(a)(1). 42
U.S.C. 7661d(a), (b)(1), (b)(2); see also 40 CFR
70.8(c)(1), (d) (similar language and cross-references
as the statute), 70.12(a)(1) (requirement that
petitioners identify the specific title V permit action
on which the petition is based), 70.12(a)(2) (petition
claims must be based on alleged deficiencies in the
‘‘permit process’’ associated with the title V permit
being petitioned).
88 See Century Aluminum Order at 19–20.
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4. Different Procedures for Incorporating
NSR Permits Into Title V Permits
In most cases, the EPA’s current (and
proposed) approach applies in the same
way regardless of the procedures by
which a state permitting authority
incorporates the terms of an NSR permit
into a title V permit. In other words, as
long as a permitting authority formally
issues an identifiable NSR permit that
has the force of law 89—and regardless
of whether the NSR and title V permits
are issued sequentially,
contemporaneously, or even in the same
physical document—the unique title V
oversight tools should not be used to
review the NSR-related decisionmaking
underlying that NSR permit.
The EPA’s approach is most
straightforward when an NSR permit is
issued in final form prior to the
initiation of any title V permitting
action, or when an NSR permit has
already been included in a previous
version of a title V permit that is up for
renewal. This is the default approach, as
the EPA’s regulations allow regulated
entities subject to major NSR
preconstruction permitting
requirements to submit a title V permit
application within 1 year after
beginning operation, in most cases. 40
CFR 70.5(a)(1)(ii); 71.5(a)(1)(ii).
Additionally, where new requirements
become applicable to a source,
including by virtue of a change to the
source (e.g., minor NSR requirements),
the timeline for reopening a source’s
title V permit to include such
requirements depends on the amount of
time left in the title V permit; required
revisions would either need to be
completed within 18 months or at the
next permit renewal. 40 CFR
70.7(f)(1)(i), 71.1(f)(1)(i). Regardless of
the specific timing, it should be
straightforward in these instances to
simply incorporate the applicable
requirements from the previously
finalized NSR permit into the title V
permit.
Not all NSR and title V permits are
processed sequentially. Before
discussing more streamlined permit
issuance mechanisms, it is important to
recognize that the NSR and title V
permitting programs are based on
distinct federal and state statutory and
89 Because it is the NSR permit that establishes
the ‘‘applicable requirements’’ for title V purposes,
the EPA has long explained that title V permits do
not supersede title I permits—which must remain
in effect to authorize construction and/or
operations—even after the terms of a title I permit
are incorporated into a title V permit. See, e.g., 69
FR 10167, 10170 (Mar. 4, 2004); 66 FR 64039, 64040
(Dec. 11, 2001); Letter from John S. Seitz, EPA, to
Robert Hodanbosi & Charles Lagges, STAPPA/
ALAPCO, Encl. A at 4 (May 20, 1999).
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regulatory authorities and feature
significant differences in both their
substantive and procedural
requirements. However, the two
programs do feature some overlapping
public participation requirements,
including requirements for public
notice, the opportunity for public
comment, and the opportunity for
judicial review. Accordingly, some state
permitting authorities choose to
streamline permit issuance by
conducting one process that satisfies
both sets of overlapping requirements.
Based on the EPA’s experience, the
mechanisms that state permitting
authorities use to streamline the
permitting processes vary considerably
across the nation. Different streamlining
mechanisms have received various
labels, including ‘‘combined,’’
‘‘merged,’’ or ‘‘unified’’ permits.90 This
preamble addresses three of the more
common forms of streamlining. For
example, some permitting authorities
streamline NSR and title V permit
issuance by processing the two permits
concurrently, subject to overlapping
public participation opportunities.91
There are two basic variations to this
theme. First, the permitting authority
could concurrently issue the NSR
permit as a standalone document
containing only NSR permit terms, and
also issue a title V permit containing all
existing title V permit terms as well as
the new NSR permit terms. Or, second,
the permitting authority could issue one
permit document that contains both the
NSR permit and title V permit
conditions. Some permitting authorities
employ a third mechanism, whereby the
NSR permit is first issued with
enhanced procedural and substantive
requirements (based on title V
requirements), and then the NSR permit
requirements are subsequently
incorporated into a title V permit
through an administrative amendment
process that does not require public
participation.
The first approach—featuring separate
NSR and title V permit documents
issued at or around the same time—is
undoubtedly the clearest of the various
90 The EPA considers it more appropriate to refer
to the results of such streamlining as a combined
‘‘permit,’’ as opposed to a combined ‘‘program.’’
This is because, although a single permit document
may be used to satisfy both NSR and title V
permitting requirements, the requirements of the
NSR and title V programs are legally distinct. See
Riverview Order at 25–26.
91 This process is similar to another mechanism
for permit streamlining (not directly implicated by
this rulemaking), under which a permitting
authority may consolidate two procedures
associated with title V permit issuance: the public’s
review of a draft permit and the EPA’s review of
a proposed permit. See 40 CFR 70.8(a)(1)(ii).
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streamlining approaches. There can be
no mistaking the fact that there are two
legally distinct permit actions, and it is
simple to identify which requirements
are based on the NSR regulations (and
thus not subject to additional review
through title V).92
The second approach is also viable,
provided the underlying authority for
the NSR aspects of the permit document
are readily ascertainable from the
permit(s) and permit record(s). See 40
CFR 70.6(a)(1)(i). As explained in detail
in several petition orders,93 even where
NSR and title V permit authorizations
are contained within one permit
document, such a permit action actually
reflects two legally distinct permit
actions by the state: (i) a preconstruction
permit issued under the EPA-approved
title I SIP regulations governing NSR,
and (ii) an operating permit under EPAapproved part 70 regulations governing
title V. Again, NSR permits and title V
permits are based on differing statutory
and regulatory schemes, and although
the two programs feature similarities,
they also feature important substantive
and procedural differences. A
permitting authority’s decision to
increase administrative efficiency by
issuing a single permit document to
satisfy the legal requirements of two
distinct permitting programs does not
alter the applicability of requirements
associated with each respective
program. For example, substantive
requirements unique to NSR would not
be applied to establish or evaluate nonNSR-based title V permit terms.
Likewise, procedural requirements
unique to title V (including the EPA’s
objection authority and public petition
opportunity, among other things) would
not be extended to review substantive
elements of the permit action unique to
the NSR permitting process. The EPA’s
objection authority, and the public’s
ability to petition EPA to object, are
confined by the CAA to title V permits.
See 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b). Combining the
procedures by which a permitting
authority issues NSR and title V permits
does not alter this basic principle.
The EPA appreciates that the
combined-permit approach has the
potential to introduce more confusion
about which types of issues can be
raised through different public
participation avenues. In general,
provided the permitting authority
complies with existing regulatory
requirements, the EPA believes this
92 See South Louisiana Methanol Order at 9; SSS/
WP Order at 14–15.
93 See Waelz Order at 13–15; Riverview Order at
24–28; Yuhuang II Order at 7–8; Big River Steel
Order at 11–12.
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confusion can be minimized. First, the
public could comment on all portions of
a combined permit document during the
comment period associated with the
combined permit document. Similarly,
all portions of a combined permit
document could be challenged in a state
court appeal of the final permit action.94
Beyond that, the available mechanisms
to challenge different permitting
decisions would diverge. The EPA’s 45day review of the proposed permit, and
the subsequent public petition
opportunity, would apply only to title
V-related aspects of the permit action.
Likewise, unique oversight tools
associated with title I permits (e.g., the
EPA’s authority under CAA section 167
to order a stop in work) would only
apply to title I-related aspects of the
permit action.
Differentiating between NSR-based
and title V-based permit terms in a
combined permit should be
straightforward, as all title V permits
‘‘shall specify and reference the origin
of and authority for each term or
condition, and identify any difference in
form as compared to the applicable
requirement upon which the term or
condition is based.’’ 40 CFR
70.6(a)(1)(i).95 Thus, any NSR-related
terms should be readily distinguishable
from any non-NSR-related terms (or any
title V-related terms related to
monitoring and compliance assurance).
The substance of appropriately
designated NSR-based permit terms
should not be subject to additional
scrutiny through the unique title V
oversight tools.
Although the EPA’s approach
generally applies the same regardless of
whether NSR and title V permits are
sequentially or concurrently issued,
there are important qualifications to this
principle. Most notably, NSR permits
must be finalized by the time the title
V permit is finalized in order to
establish the ‘‘applicable requirements’’
for title V purposes.96 Moreover, it is
94 Provisions governing the right to appeal final
title V permits in state court is provided by 42
U.S.C. 7661a(b)(6) and 40 CFR 70.4(b)(3)(x)–(xii).
For a discussion of equivalent opportunities to
challenge title I permits in state court, see section
IV.C.2. of this preamble.
95 This requirement is important in all situations
where NSR permit terms (and permit terms derived
from other CAA programs) are incorporated into a
title V permit. However, it is especially important
when NSR permit authorizations are issued within
the same document as a title V permit in the first
instance.
96 Although the regulatory definition of
‘‘applicable requirement’’ includes ‘‘requirements
that have been promulgated or approved by EPA
through rulemaking at the time of issuance but have
future-effective compliance dates,’’ 40 CFR 70.2,
71.2, this only covers future-effective requirements
that have already been finalized at the time of title
V permit issuance.
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critically important that concurrently
issued permits (including combined
permit documents) are clear as to the
nature of, and the legal authority
underlying, the permit actions reflected
therein. This principle applies to the
public notice announcing such permit
action, other portions of the permit
record available for public review, and
the terms of the permit(s). See, e.g., 40
CFR 70.7(h)(2), 70.7(a)(5), 70.6(a)(1)(i).
Where NSR and title V permit
documents have been merged to such an
extent that it is impossible to legally
distinguish the NSR permit action from
the title V permit action, it may be
necessary to use the title V process to
review whether the NSR-related
requirements of the SIP are included in
the title V permit. The next subsection
elaborates on these and other situations
in which NSR issues would be subject
to review through title V oversight tools.
A third process used by some
permitting authorities is often described
as ‘‘enhanced NSR.’’ The EPA’s existing
regulations allow requirements from an
NSR permit issued with certain
enhancements to be incorporated into a
title V permit via administrative
amendment procedures (instead of a
significant modification or minor
modification procedures, which would
otherwise be required). To qualify for
this type of streamlined processing, the
NSR permit would need to be issued
following ‘‘procedural requirements
substantially equivalent to the
requirements of [40 CFR] 70.7 and 70.8
. . . that would be applicable to the
change if it were subject to review as a
permit modification, and compliance
requirements substantially equivalent to
those contained in [40 CFR] 70.6.’’ 40
CFR 70.7(d)(1)(v); see 71.7(d)(1)(v).
This third pathway has the potential
to create confusion—and to conflict
with the EPA’s current (and proposed)
approach—because the language quoted
earlier may be read to mean that the
EPA’s objection authority and the public
petition opportunity in 70.8(d) apply to
the issuance of the NSR permit.97 This
result is problematic for multiple
reasons. For one, the CAA only provides
the EPA with authority to object to the
issuance of title V permits, not NSR
permits. Similarly, the statutory
obligation for the EPA Administrator to
respond to petitions under CAA section
97 The EPA observes that some permitting
authorities have EPA-approved SIP and/or title V
program rules that differ from the EPA’s regulations
in this respect. Specifically, some EPA-approved
state rules reserve the EPA’s objection authority and
public petition opportunity until the title V permit
is administratively amended. This arrangement
features less potential for confusion and less
conflict with the EPA’s current (and proposed)
approach. See AK Steel Order at 10–12.
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505(b)(2) only applies to petitions on
title V permits. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b)(2).
Moreover, even if the EPA were to
object to the issuance of an NSR permit,
the EPA generally lacks authority to
enforce such objection, as the EPA
cannot issue the NSR permit if the state
does not resolve the EPA’s objection.
Again, the authority to do so only
relates to title V permits. 42 U.S.C.
7661d(c). Further, the existence of this
process creates more confusion about
the scope of issues properly subject to
review during the NSR permitting
action than the other two streamlined
pathways. This is because it may be
more difficult to distinguish title I and
title V components within a single
‘‘enhanced NSR’’ permit.98 Based on the
preamble of the EPA’s 1992 title V rules,
it appears that the EPA’s original
intention when promulgating this
mechanism was to generally confine
EPA’s review to the title V-based
components of the enhanced NSR
permit (i.e., the compliance
requirements in 40 CFR 70.6).99
However, contradictory positions taken
by EPA in subsequent years has created
confusion.100
Although this third pathway reflected
the EPA’s attempt to allow for the
streamlining of NSR and title V permit
procedures, it raises more issues than it
solves, and ultimately it is not
necessary. The other two streamlining
mechanisms—concurrent issuance of
NSR and title V permits either in
separate documents or in a single
combined permit document—cause
fewer problems and provide more
advantages. Specifically, concurrent
issuance mechanisms are compatible
with the EPA’s current (and proposed)
approach to the title I/title V interface,
while the ‘‘enhanced NSR’’ mechanism
appears to erroneously suggest that the
EPA has authority to directly object to
title I permits. Additionally, concurrent
98 For similar reasons, this process could cause
difficulties with respect to allocating title V permit
fees consistent with 40 CFR 70.9.
99 See 57 FR at 32289 (‘‘The primary intent of
these ‘enhancements’ of the NSR process is to allow
the permitting authority to consolidate NSR and
title V permit revision procedures. As stated in the
May 10, 1991 proposal, it is not to second-guess the
results of any State NSR determination. For
example, if a State does provide for EPA’s 45-day
review in its NSR program, EPA would only be
reviewing whether the State had conducted a BACT
analysis, if applicable, and whether that analysis is
faithfully incorporated in the title V permit. The
EPA will not use its review period to object to or
attempt to revise the State’s BACT determination.
Correspondingly, EPA’s failure to object to the
substance of the BACT determination will not limit
any remedies EPA might-otherwise have under the
Act to address a faulty BACT determination.’’).
100 See, e.g., In the Matter of Alon USA,
Bakersfield Refinery, Order on Petition No. IX–
2014–15 at 2–7 (Dec. 21, 2016).
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issuance mechanisms allow permitting
authorities to more clearly delineate the
title I and title V permit actions,
providing more clarity to the public
about which issues may be challenged
through different review pathways.
Finally, concurrent issuance
mechanisms are more efficient than the
enhanced NSR mechanism, as
permitting authorities need not take an
additional, separate title V
administrative amendment action after
issuing an NSR permit.
For the foregoing reasons, the EPA
proposes to remove from its regulations
the provisions relating to enhanced NSR
permitting and related title V
administrative amendments. The EPA
solicits comment on whether state
permitting authorities should remove
equivalent regulations from their EPAapproved program rules, although the
EPA does not anticipate such actions
will be necessary. Instead, it should be
sufficient for permitting authorities to
simply stop using this mechanism in a
manner that purports to provide an EPA
objection authority and public petition
opportunity directly on an NSR permit.
In any case, the EPA generally will not
use its objection authority to address the
substance of NSR permitting decisions
made through this process.
The EPA specifically requests
comments regarding additional
mechanisms that permitting authorities
use to streamline the issuance of NSR
and title V permits. The EPA requests
comments about how these differing
approaches might impact, or be
impacted by, the EPA’s current (and
proposed) approach.
5. Situations in Which the Title V
Process Will Be Used To Review NSR
Issues
There are certain situations in which
the title V permitting process is the
appropriate venue for addressing NSR
permitting issues. This conclusion is
supported by the same statutory and
regulatory interpretations underlying
situations in which the title V
permitting process is not appropriate for
addressing NSR permitting issues. In
sum, as explained further in the
following subsections, where applicable
requirements are conclusively
established under another CAA
program, they are not substantively
addressed through title V. Where
applicable requirements are not
conclusively established under another
CAA program, they are substantively
addressed through title V. Where the
requirements of another CAA program
and the requirements of title V feature
substantive overlap, such areas of
overlap are addressed through title V.
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a. No Permit Issued Through a Title I
Permitting Process With Public Notice
and the Opportunity for Comment and
Judicial Review
Under the EPA’s current (and
proposed) framework, title I permits
issued with public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial
review conclusively establish NSRrelated ‘‘applicable requirements’’ of the
SIP (or FIP) for title V purposes. But if
NSR permitting decisions are not
developed through a formal process that
involves public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial
review, the public and the EPA have no
opportunity to provide input on, or
appeal, whether the relevant NSR
requirements were properly established.
In this circumstance, it would be
inappropriate to simply incorporate any
such NSR requirements into a title V
permit without further review. In other
words, where NSR-related requirements
are not established through a public title
I permitting process with an
opportunity for judicial review, the
applicable requirements of the SIP (or
FIP) relevant to the construction project
at issue are not yet conclusively defined
for title V purposes.101 In such a
situation, the title V process can and
should be used to assure compliance
with the relevant underlying NSRrelated applicable requirements of the
SIP (or FIP). This approach is similar to
how the title V process is used to define
the specific requirements necessary to
assure compliance with general
requirements of other CAA programs
that are not definitively established
through a separate rulemaking or
permitting process, as discussed in
section III.F. of this preamble.
The title V process can be used to
review NSR issues in various situations,
some of which the EPA has confronted
in recent years. For example, the EPA
has reviewed, and will continue to
review, substantive NSR issues where
no title I permit is issued to authorize
the projects at issue.102 The title V
101 As explained further in section IV.C.1. of this
preamble, this view relates only to how an NSR
permit is treated during the title V permitting
process. It does not in any way affect the
independent enforceability of the NSR permit itself.
102 See Suncor East Order at 45–48, 54–55
(reviewing NSR issues where the state ‘‘has not
issued any title I NSR permits that would establish
the NSR-related ‘applicable requirements’ of the
SIP’’); SRP Agua Fria Order at 11 n.18 (reviewing
NSR applicability issues where no NSR permit had
been issued); SRP Desert Basin Order at 12 n.20
(same); BP Whiting II Order at 13 n.24 (reviewing
an NSR-related emission limit that was established
in a title V, as opposed to an NSR, permit action).
Additionally, within a portion of the EPA’s 2017
PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order that was not challenged
and not subject to the Tenth Circuit’s partial
vacatur, the EPA addressed the merits of a petition
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1169
process can be used to ensure that any
new or modified sources that do not
obtain an NSR permit (sometimes called
‘‘unpermitted projects’’) comply with all
relevant NSR-related requirements of
the SIP (or FIP).
If a preconstruction permit is issued,
but not issued under title I—that is, not
issued under NSR permitting rules that
have been approved by EPA and
incorporated into the SIP or FIP—then
such a permit would not establish the
NSR requirements of the SIP (or FIP)
that apply to an individual source.
Issuance of a non-title I permit does not
reflect a determination as to which of
the NSR requirements in a SIP (or FIP)
apply to construction and thus does not
fulfill any NSR requirements in the SIP
(or FIP). In this situation, it would thus
be appropriate to use the title V
permitting process to assess whether
there are NSR requirements in the SIP
(or FIP) that apply to a construction
project covered by a non-title I permit.
Moreover, it would be appropriate to
use the title V permitting process to
explore whether a preconstruction
permit was issued under a title I-based
authority, as opposed to a non-title I
authority.103
The EPA has also reviewed, and will
continue to review, substantive NSR
issues where the underlying NSR permit
was not issued following public notice
and the opportunity for comment and
judicial review.104 As previously
explained, this is because an NSR
permit that is not issued following such
procedures does not provide the title V
claim involving allegedly unpermitted
modifications. See PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 26–
31.
103 For example, within a portion of the EPA’s
2017 PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order that was not
challenged and not subject to the Tenth Circuit’s
partial vacatur, the EPA addressed the merits of a
petition claim involving a NSR permit that was
allegedly not issued under EPA-approved SIP rules.
See PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 24. Determining
the authority underlying a preconstruction permit
could also be relevant in other title V contexts. For
example, states may issue preconstruction permits
under state-only-enforceable laws (as opposed to
federally-approved and federally-enforceable state
laws, or federal laws). Such state-only permit
requirements may be included in title V permits,
but they must be labeled as ‘‘state-only’’ or ‘‘not
federally enforceable’’ within a title V permit. 40
CFR 70.6(b)(2). Questions about the authority
underlying such permits would therefore be
relevant to determining whether 40 CFR 70.6(b)(2)
was satisfied. See, e.g., In the Matter of Phillips 66
Co., Borger Refinery, Order on Petition No. VI–
2017–16 at 8–10 (Sept. 22, 2021).
104 See Suncor East Order at 48 (reviewing NSRrelated issues where ‘‘the current title V renewal
proceeding is the first permit action in which these
NSR issues have been subject either to public notice
and comment or the opportunity for judicial
review,’’ among other reasons); Coyote Station
Order at 12 (reviewing NSR-related issues ‘‘where
no public notice was provided of the underlying
NSR permit action,’’ among other reasons).
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permit writer or public with sufficient
assurance that the preconstruction
permitting process has conclusively
established the applicable NSR
requirements of the SIP (or FIP) for that
source for title V purposes. Thus,
questions about the procedures used to
issue NSR permits may be indirectly
relevant to the EPA’s review of title V
permits or public petitions on title V
petitions.105 Specifically, such
questions may inform whether it is
appropriate to use the title V process to
review the substance of that NSR permit
in order to ensure that the title V permit
reflects, and assures compliance with,
all relevant NSR applicable
requirements of the SIP (or FIP). It is
important to recognize that procedural
problems associated with the issuance
of an NSR permit would simply present
a basis for EPA to review the underlying
NSR issues; such procedural problems
would not present an independent basis
for the EPA’s objection to the title V
permit.106
It is also important to recognize that,
in proposing to add text to parts 70 and
71 referencing ‘‘public notice and the
opportunity for public comment and
judicial review’’ of NSR permits, this
proposed rule would simply establish a
precondition relevant to whether
underlying NSR permits are insulated
from, or subject to, additional review
through title V. These proposed
regulatory revisions will not impose any
binding procedural requirements
governing a permitting authority’s
issuance of NSR permits. Rather, such
procedural requirements are found in
the relevant statutory and regulatory
authorities governing NSR, and the SIP
regulations that implement them. See,
e.g., 42 U.S.C. 7475(a)(2); 40 CFR
51.161, 51.165(i), 51.166(q). Although
the proposed additions to parts 70 and
71 use language similar to existing
requirements in the NSR rules, this
proposed rule does not seek to define
those concepts in the context of NSR.
Rather, outside of this title V proposed
rule, the EPA is reviewing opportunities
for public participation in minor NSR
permitting.
For title V purposes, provided an NSR
permit is issued following public notice,
105 To the extent the public raises procedural
issues related to NSR permit issuance in a title V
petition, petitioners have the burden to demonstrate
that the correct process was not followed, similar
to all other title V petition issues. 42 U.S.C.
7661d(b)(2); see 40 CFR 70.12(a)(2).
106 As explained in section IV.B.3. of this
preamble, procedural requirements associated with
NSR permit issuance are neither ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for title V purposes (because they do
not apply to emission units at a part 70 source), nor
are they part 70 requirements (because they are not
related to the issuance of a specific title V permit).
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the opportunity to comment, and the
opportunity for judicial review, the EPA
will consider that NSR permit as
establishing the relevant applicable
requirements of the SIP with respect to
the activities being permitted.
Accordingly, the title V permitting
process will not be used to second-guess
the substance of those requirements. By
codifying such criteria through the
current proposed rule, the EPA’s intent
is not to create new requirements on
NSR permitting, but rather to create an
incentive for permitting authorities to
offer robust opportunities for public
involvement on NSR permit actions. In
this manner, this proposed rule will
reinforce existing requirements
governing public participation on NSR
permits and will complement the EPA’s
ongoing efforts to improve public
participation in minor NSR permitting
decisions.
b. Issues Involving Overlapping Title V
and NSR Requirements
The EPA has reviewed (and will
continue to review) issues involving an
overlap of title V and NSR requirements.
The most notable example involves
using title V to evaluate the sufficiency
of monitoring and related compliance
assurance requirements associated with
more substantive NSR permit
requirements. As the EPA explained in
one title V petition order:
Unlike the BACT determination claims
discussed above, claims concerning whether
a title V permit contains enforceable permit
terms, supported by monitoring sufficient to
assure compliance with an applicable
requirement or permit term (such as an
emission limit established in a PSD permit),
are properly reviewed during title V
permitting. The statutory obligations to
ensure that each title V permit contains
‘‘enforceable emission limitations and
standards’’ supported by ‘‘monitoring . . .
requirements to assure compliance with the
permit terms and conditions,’’ 42 U.S.C.
7661c(a), (c), apply independently from and
in addition to the underlying regulations and
permit actions that give rise to the emission
limits and standards that are included in a
title V permit. Therefore, the EPA will
address the merits of those portions of the
Petition that challenge the enforceability of
emission limits and the sufficiency of
monitoring conditions in the Permit.107
The EPA has also considered (and
will continue to consider) other issues
involving an explicit overlap between
NSR and title V. Examples addressed to
date include situations where a state’s
107 South Louisiana Methanol Order at 10–11; see
Gulf Coast Growth Ventures Order at 17–19;
ExxonMobil Baytown Chemical Order at 20–21;
Yuhuang II Order at 8; see also, e.g., Big River Steel
Order at 17, 17 n.30, 19 n.32, 20; PacifiCorp-Hunter
I Order at 16, 17, 18, 18 n.33, 19.
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SIP rules and part 70 program rules
explicitly require consideration of
NAAQS impacts in a title V permit
proceeding; 108 where both SIP and part
70 rules require an evaluation of the
scope of the ‘‘stationary source’’ or
‘‘major source’’ subject to permitting
requirements; 109 and where SIP rules
explicitly require consideration of
adjustments to a PAL (a type of NSR
permitting mechanism) in a title V
renewal permit action.110
Notably, the EPA’s consideration of
NSR-related issues within these past
actions did not involve reevaluating or
second-guessing the content of
applicable requirements established in
NSR permitting actions. Instead, the
EPA’s consideration of those issues was
based either on unique requirements of
title V (e.g., to add supplemental
monitoring to the requirements in
underlying applicable requirements) or
on directives within the SIP itself,
which effectively provided a mandate to
further define applicable requirements
of the SIP through the title V process
(instead of the NSR process). Thus, the
limited situations in which the EPA
does use (and proposes to continue
using) the title V process to address
NSR-related issues is wholly consistent
with the EPA’s position that, in general,
the title V process should not be used
to second-guess or alter substantive
applicable requirements that are
established through a title I permitting
process with public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial
review.
6. Summary of Proposed Regulatory
Changes
In order to more clearly express the
EPA’s current approach to the interface
between NSR permits and title V
permits, the EPA proposes the following
amendments to the EPA’s regulations.
The EPA proposes to update
paragraphs (1) and (2) of the definition
of ‘‘applicable requirement’’ in 40 CFR
70.2 and 71.2. Paragraph (1) addresses
SIP (and FIP) requirements more
generally. This rule would add text to
paragraph (1) to clarify that, for
purposes of title V, where an NSR
permit is issued under an EPA-approved
or EPA-promulgated title I program (i.e.,
SIP or FIP), with public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial
review, then the terms and conditions of
that preconstruction permit define the
NSR-related applicable requirements of
the SIP or FIP that apply to the activities
108 Suncor
East Order at 53–54.
Station Order at 12–13.
110 ExxonMobil Baytown Chemical Order at 13–
14.
109 Coyote
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authorized by such a preconstruction
permit.
This rule would also add text to
paragraph (2) to clarify that, for
purposes of title V, the relevant terms
and conditions of all types of NSR
permits issued under a SIP or FIP—
including minor NSR permits—are
applicable requirements that must be
included in a title V permit, regardless
of whether the procedures referenced in
paragraph (1) are followed.
The EPA also proposes to remove the
provisions in 40 CFR 70.7(d)(1)(v),
70.7(d)(4), 71.7(d)(1)(v), and 71.7(d)(4)
that relate to the ‘‘enhanced NSR’’ and
title V administrative amendment
procedures, as discussed in section
IV.B.4. of this preamble.
The EPA does not believe any
additional changes to the regulations are
necessary. However, the EPA requests
comments on other changes to the
regulatory text that would be necessary
to fully effectuate the EPA’s proposed
approach.
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C. Interaction With NSR Permitting,
Oversight, and Enforcement
Although this rulemaking addresses
the intersection of the NSR and title V
permitting programs, the EPA’s
proposed approach only directly affects
implementation of the title V permitting
program. More specifically, this
rulemaking only affects the extent to
which the title V permitting process will
be used to assess whether issuance of an
NSR permit complies with the NSRrelated requirements of a SIP (or FIP).
Thus, as explained in the following
paragraphs, the EPA’s proposed
approach for limiting review of NSR
permitting decisions through the title V
process does not affect the independent
validity or enforceability of NSR permit
terms or the SIP (or FIP) requirements
upon which they are based.
1. No Impact on the Independent
Validity or Enforceability of NSR
Permits
As discussed throughout this
preamble, where an NSR permit is
issued following public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial
review, the terms and conditions of
such a permit establish the NSR-related
applicable requirements of the SIP (or
FIP) for title V purposes. Although these
permit terms should generally be
incorporated into the title V permit
without further substantive review, an
EPA decision not to conduct that review
in the title V process does not mean that
the EPA agrees that the state action
complies with NSR requirements. It
merely indicates that a title V permit is
not the appropriate venue to correct any
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deficiencies in the NSR permit. Thus,
even if EPA might find an error upon
reviewing a preconstruction permitting
decision made by the permitting
authority, for purposes of the title V
operating permit, the terms of the NSR
permit should be incorporated into the
title V operating permit until such time
that there is a final action to revise,
reopen, suspend, revoke, reissue,
terminate, or invalidate the
preconstruction permit, such as a court
order in a state court appeal or through
an enforcement action.111
By the same token, if an NSR permit
is not issued through a process that
included public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial
review, this proposed rule would not
address whether such a permit is valid
or enforceable in its own right. Rather,
this proposed rule would only affect
how such a permit is treated through
title V. The terms of such a permit
would still need to be included in the
title V permit under item (2) of the
EPA’s regulatory definition of
‘‘applicable requirement.’’ However, any
such permit terms (and underlying
permit decisions) would not be
sufficient to conclusively define the
NSR-related ‘‘applicable requirements’’
of the SIP under item (1) of the EPA’s
regulatory definition. Therefore,
questions about the whether the NSR
permit satisfied the requirements of the
SIP would be subject to review through
the title V process. But that is the only
consequence insofar as this proposed
rule is concerned. Any relevant
requirements of the SIP would remain
fully enforceable, and the independent
enforceability of any NSR permit issued
without an opportunity for comment
and judicial review would be
determined on the basis of those
requirements.
2. Title I Oversight and Enforcement
Authorities
Under the EPA’s proposed approach
for considering NSR permitting
decisions through the title V permitting
process, there are meaningful
opportunities for the EPA and the
111 As explained previously, this approach is
analogous to how the EPA treats potential defects
in other types of applicable requirements, including
(non-NSR) requirements of the SIP. For instance,
even when the EPA has made a determination that
a provision of the SIP is not in compliance with the
Act, the EPA will not object to a permit that
includes that provision until there is final action to
remove it from the SIP. See, e.g., Piedmont Green
Power Order at 28–29. EPA’s lack of objection to the
inclusion of that requirement in the title V permit
does not indicate that the EPA agrees that it
complies with the Act or applicable regulations; it
merely indicates that a title V permit is not the
appropriate venue to correct any such flaws in the
SIP.
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1171
public to review NSR preconstruction
permitting decisions under title I of the
CAA.112 Congress provided various
mechanisms for EPA and public
oversight of NSR permitting decisions.
Specifically, Congress gave the EPA
programmatic oversight authority under
title I to disapprove state NSR
permitting programs and call for
revisions to those programs if the state’s
program does not satisfy federal
statutory and regulatory authorities
governing NSR. 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(C),
7410(k)(5). Further, if a state fails to
properly implement its NSR program,
the EPA can take additional actions. 42
U.S.C 7413(a)(2), (a)(5).
In terms of reviewing individual title
I permits, each SIP must provide for
public notice and an opportunity for
comment on proposed NSR permits in
its preconstruction permit program. 42
U.S.C. 7475(a)(2); 40 CFR 51.161,
51.165(i), 51.166(q). The EPA may
provide feedback on state-issued NSR
permits through this process.113
Inherent in this title I permitting
scheme—and reflected in the
congressional record for the 1977 CAA
Amendments—is the understanding that
the adequacy of state NSR permitting
decisions would be subject to review in
state administrative and judicial
forums.114
Congress also provided EPA and the
public with various enforcement
mechanisms to address non-compliance
with title I permitting requirements on
a facility-by-facility basis. The EPA
possesses the authority to issue
112 If anything, this action has the potential to
increase the availability of certain enforcement
opportunities, as discussed in Section IV.C.4. of this
preamble.
113 Title I of the CAA specifically contemplates
that the ‘‘interested persons’’ who may comment on
state-issued PSD permits include ‘‘representatives
of the Administrator.’’ 42 U.S.C. 7475(a)(2).
114 ‘‘In order to challenge the legality of a permit
which a State has actually issued . . . a citizen
must seek administrative remedies under the State
permit consideration process, or judicial review of
the permit in State court.’’ Staff of the
Subcommittee on Environmental Pollution of the
Senate Committee on Environment and Public
Works, 95th Congress, 1st Session, A Section-bySection Analysis of S. 252 and S. 253, Clean Air Act
Amendments 36 (1977), reprinted in 5 Legislative
History of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1977
3892 (1977). Note that the U.S. Supreme Court has
also acknowledged the primacy of state courts to
adjudicate disputes over NSR permit terms. See
Alaska Dep’t of Env’t Conservation v. EPA, 540 U.S.
461, 490 n.14 (2004); see also id. at 491–94
(addressing the relationship between state court
review of NSR permits and federal oversight tools
related to NSR permits). The EPA has expressed
similar views when approving individual NSR SIPs.
See, e,g., 77 FR 65305, 65306 (Oct. 26, 2012) (The
EPA ‘‘interpret[s] the CAA to require an
opportunity for judicial review of a decision to
grant or deny a PSD permit, whether issued by EPA
or by a State under a SIP-approved or delegated
PSD program.’’).
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injunctive orders to halt construction.
42 U.S.C. 7413(a)(5)(A), 7477. The EPA
may also pursue various types of civil
or criminal enforcement actions
pursuant to sections 113 and 167 of the
Act. 42 U.S.C. 7413, 7477. Under title III
of the CAA, Congress also provided
authority for citizens to bring
enforcement actions seeking civil
penalties and injunctive relief against a
source that has violated certain NSR
requirements. Id. 7604(a)(1), (a)(3).
These enforcement-based tools can be
used to address situations where a
source failed to obtain a required major
NSR permit (even if it obtained a minor
source permit). See e.g., U.S. v. S. Ind.
Gas & Elec. Co., No. IP99–1692–CM/F,
2002 WL 1760699, at *3–5 (S.D. Ind.
July 26, 2002); United States v. Ford
Motor Co., 736 F. Supp. 1539, 1550
(W.D. Mo. 1990). They can also be used
to ensure that decisions made in
establishing the terms of a major NSR
permit, such as BACT limits, were made
on reasonable grounds properly
supported by the record. See, e.g.,
Alaska Dep’t of Env’t Conservation v.
EPA, 540 U.S. 461 (2004) (affirming
application of section 167 of the CAA in
this context).
3. Title V Permit Shields
The incorporation of the terms and
conditions of an NSR permit into a title
V permit does not, by itself, diminish
the ability of the EPA or citizens to
enforce preconstruction permitting
requirements. However, enforcement
could be affected by a title V ‘‘permit
shield’’ imposed under CAA section
504(f) and 40 CFR 70.6(f) and 71.6(f). A
permit shield, if part of an approved
title V program and expressly included
in a title V permit,115 may provide a
sufficient defense from enforcement
actions under certain circumstances.
This proposed rule does not change the
agency’s interpretation or enlarge the
scope of a permit shield.
There are two types of permit shields
under title V. The first, default permit
shield states that compliance with the
title V permit ‘‘shall be deemed
compliance with’’ title V. 42 U.S.C.
7661c(f). Where a facility is entitled
only to this default permit shield,
requirements of the CAA outside of title
V (including NSR requirements) are still
independently enforceable against the
facility.
A permitting authority may go further
to provide a facility with a second, more
expansive type of permit shield. This
more expansive permit shield has two
115 ‘‘A part 70 permit that does not expressly state
that a permit shield exists shall be presumed not
to provide such a shield.’’ 40 CFR 70.6(f)(2).
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prongs. Under the first prong of an
expanded permit shield, a permitting
authority can provide that compliance
with the title V permit ‘‘shall be deemed
compliance with other [non-title V]
applicable provisions,’’ but only if ‘‘the
permit includes the applicable
requirements of such provisions.’’ 42
U.S.C. 7661c(f)(1); see 40 CFR
70.6(f)(1)(i). Where a title V permit
includes this type of permit shield and
also incorporates the terms of an NSR
permit, the permit shield would provide
that compliance with the title V permit
would be deemed compliance with the
specific applicable requirements
reflected in the NSR permit. However,
compliance with such a title V permit
would not be deemed compliance with
any other requirements that are not
contained in the NSR permit. For
example, if a source obtained a minor
NSR permit for a project and the title V
permit included this type of permit
shield, compliance with the title V
permit would not preclude an
enforcement action alleging a violation
of title I of the Act for failure to obtain
a major NSR permit.
Under the second prong of an
expanded permit shield, a permitting
authority can only provide a shield from
requirements it has expressly
determined to be non-applicable. The
statute and regulations say this shield is
available if the state, ‘‘in acting on the
[title V] permit application[,] makes a
determination relating to the permittee
that such other provisions (which shall
be referred to in such determination) are
not applicable and the permit includes
the determination or a concise summary
thereof.’’ 42 U.S.C. 7661c(f)(2); see 40
CFR 70.6(f)(1)(ii). In other words, this
type of permit shield requires that the
permitting authority make a written
non-applicability determination during
the title V permitting process and
memorialize this determination within
the title V permit record.
Further, if a permitting authority
chooses to include a title V permit
shield that expressly covers NSR
requirements that either are, or are not,
applicable to a particular construction
project, that decision would be based on
title V authority and part of the title V
permit action. As such, the NSR
requirements covered by the title V
permit shield would be subject to
review and oversight through title V,
including being subject to the EPA’s
objection authority and the public
petition opportunity. The availability of
these title V oversight tools is important
because an express title V permit shield
effectively precludes enforcement
through the federal court system under
CAA sections 113 or 304. By including
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an express permit shield through title V,
that enforcement-based oversight tool is
replaced by oversight through the title V
permitting process, which provides an
alternative pathway to the federal
courts.116
4. Other Enforcement Considerations
As one federal Court of Appeals
explained: ‘‘Title V itself reserves the
EPA’s ability to bring an enforcement
action for violations of the CAA unless
an express ‘shield’ on the face of the
permit bars that action. This provision
would hardly be necessary if the EPA
was supposed to resolve all alleged
violations of the CAA in the permitting
process.’’ Citizens Against Ruining the
Environment v. EPA, 535 F. 3d 670, 678
(7th Cir. 2008) (quoting 42 U.S.C.
7661c(f)). However, other circuit courts
have barred enforcement actions that
they viewed as impermissible collateral
attacks on permits.117 In these cases, the
courts’ decisions were premised upon
the notion that the EPA would assess
the substantive validity or applicability
of certain CAA requirements (including
NSR requirements 118) through the title
V petition process, and that the EPA
Administrator’s decision in response to
a title V petition could be challenged in
federal court. Based on that premise,
these courts decided that the
jurisdictional bar in CAA section
307(b)(2) against ‘‘[a]ctions of the
Administrator with respect to which
review could have been obtained’’
applies to bar enforcement of these the
substantive requirements underlying
those enforcement actions. 42 U.S.C.
7607(b)(2). These decisions, however,
did not identify statutory or regulatory
text to support this premise; they may
have been implicitly based on EPA
practice from 1997 to 2017.
In light of the EPA’s position since
2017 with respect to certain NSR
permits, the premise underlying those
cases no longer applies. Based on the
interpretation of the title V provisions
discussed in this proposal, the EPA’s
view is that the title V process does not
operate to bar enforcement of the NSR
permitting requirements on the basis of
116 Specifically, if the EPA does not object to a
title V permit on its own volition, and subsequently
denies a petition requesting that the EPA object to
the permit, such denial may be appealed to the
relevant U.S. Court of Appeals. 42 U.S.C.
7661d(b)(2), 7607(b)(1).
117 See Nucor Steel-Arkansas v. Big River Steel,
LLC, 825 F.3d 444 (8th Cir. 2016); EPA v. EME
Homer City Generation, LP, 727 F.3d 274 (3rd Cir.
2013); Sierra Club v. Otter Tail Power Co., 615 F.3d
1008 (8th Cir. 2010); Romoland School Dist. v.
Inland Empire Energy Center, LLC, 548 F.3d 738
(9th Cir. 2008).
118 See Nucor, 825 F.3d at 452–53; Romoland, 548
F.3d at 754–56.
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section 307(b)(2). This proposed rule
will codify the EPA’s current view that
certain NSR issues are not subject to
review through title V processes,
including the petition process. Because
the EPA Administrator will not consider
or take any action concerning the
substantive validity of these NSR
permitting decisions through title V,
there is no opportunity for federal
judicial review of these issues through
title V, and therefore the statutory bar in
CAA section 307(b)(2) simply does not
apply. Therefore, enforcement of certain
NSR-related requirements in the district
court should no longer be viewed as a
collateral attack on an Administrator’s
action (or lack thereof) through title V
for which review could have been
obtained in an appellate court. At least
one court that considered this issue
since the EPA revised its interpretation
in 2017 has declined to impose such a
jurisdictional bar.119
D. Impacts of Proposed Action
This proposed rule is primarily
procedural in nature and does not
impose any specific or direct
requirements on any potentially affected
stakeholders. Additionally, given that
this proposed rule seeks to codify the
EPA’s existing policies and
interpretations that have been in place
since 2017, most of these effects will not
arise from this regulatory action itself.
The following paragraphs summarize
the anticipated indirect impacts of
EPA’s current and proposed approach.
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1. Impacts on the EPA
This action most directly affects the
EPA itself, and specifically the EPA’s
actions in overseeing both the title V
and NSR permitting programs. This
action will codify the EPA’s current
framework regarding the scope of issues
that EPA will—and will not—review
through unique title V permitting
mechanisms, including the EPA’s 45day review of title V permits and the
EPA’s responses to citizen petitions
challenging title V permits. Reflecting
this existing approach more directly in
regulations will provide consistency
119 See Sierra Club v. Entergy Arkansas LLC, 503
F.Supp.3d 821, 847–48 (2020) (‘‘In addition,
plaintiffs maintain that the EPA’s interpretation of
statutory language such that it will no longer
oversee state Title I permit decisions through Title
V petitions provides an additional basis upon
which the Court should decline to find and impose
an exhaustion requirement. The Court has
examined the allegations in the amended complaint
and the briefing with respect to the specific
provisions of the CAA under which plaintiffs bring
claims and the alleged requirements for bringing
those claims in federal court. The Court is satisfied
at this stage of the litigation that the Court has
subject matter jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ claims in
their amended complaint.’’).
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across the country and ensure that the
EPA’s permitting oversight resources are
most effectively focused on the issues
where such oversight can achieve the
greatest results. For example, by not
reviewing complex NSR issues through
its title V oversight tools, the EPA can
prioritize using those tools to ensure
that title V permits assure compliance
with substantive requirements
established in other CAA programs,
such as by requiring additional
monitoring, recordkeeping, and
reporting when necessary. This action
further emphasizes the EPA’s
commitment to using its existing title I
oversight tools to address title I
permitting issues. As discussed in
section IV.E.4.b. of this preamble, those
title I oversight tools are more effective
means of addressing title I issues than
the EPA’s title V oversight tools.
2. Impacts on State, Local, and Tribal
Permitting Authorities
This rule may also impact state, local,
and Tribal permitting authorities that
issue title V and/or NSR permits. From
the EPA’s experience, it appears that
many, if not most, permitting authorities
already implement their title V and NSR
programs in a manner consistent with
the EPA’s current (and proposed)
approach. That is, these permitting
authorities do not use the title V
permitting process to revisit NSR
permitting decisions that they
themselves previously made. For
permitting authorities that have not
been implementing the EPA’s current
approach, this action is expected to
decrease administrative burdens.
Permitting authorities should generally
only have to address NSR-related
permitting issues once: during the NSR
permitting process.
The EPA does not expect it will be
necessary for most permitting
authorities to revise their regulations or
to submit revised part 70 regulations or
SIP regulations for EPA approval as a
result of this proposed rule. The EPA
views its existing part 70 and part 71
regulations—and, by extension, the
equivalent regulations in EPA-approved
state rules—to be consistent with the
EPA’s existing (and proposed) approach.
This proposed rule is intended to make
EPA’s regulations clearer. Nonetheless,
permitting authorities that desire the
greater certainty associated with the rule
revisions proposed in this action are
welcome to make changes to their
regulations similar to those the EPA is
proposing.120 The EPA specifically
120 For example, states within the Tenth Circuit’s
jurisdiction may currently have language that
matches the language in the EPA’s regulation that
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1173
solicits comments from permitting
authorities about their ability (or
inability) to implement the EPA’s
proposed approach without changes to
their EPA-approved part 70 program
rules.
The current proposed rule does not
itself mandate any requirements
governing the issuance of NSR permits.
However, permitting authorities may
choose to change some of their NSR
permitting practices in order to realize
benefits in their permitting programs.
For example, in order to ensure that the
EPA will not use its title V oversight
tools to revisit a permitting authority’s
NSR permitting decisions, permitting
authorities may increase the amount of
public participation opportunities
offered on minor NSR permit actions.
The EPA strongly encourages permitting
authorities to provide for robust and
meaningful public participation
opportunities on NSR permitting
actions, consistent with existing
statutory and regulatory requirements
and EPA guidance.
Permitting authorities that currently
process NSR and title permit actions
through streamlined processes should
consider the best way to achieve their
administrative efficiency goals while
maintaining the maximum amount of
clarity regarding the distinctions
between title I and title V permit
actions. In particular, the EPA strongly
encourages permitting authorities that
currently employ an ‘‘enhanced NSR’’
framework to stop using such
procedures and instead consider other
mechanisms for streamlining. See
section IV.B.4. of this preamble for
additional information about how
different streamlined permit issuance
procedures impact the EPA’s review of
NSR issues through its title V
authorities.
3. Impacts on Regulated Entities
As far as regulated entities are
concerned, the approach described in
this action increases certainty in final
preconstruction permitting decisions.
The additional regulatory text that EPA
proposes to codify in this rulemaking
should further increase such certainty.
In order to take advantage of this
increased certainty, the EPA expects
that sources subject to both title V and
NSR permitting programs will have an
the court considered in Sierra Club v. EPA, 964
F.3d 882 (10th Cir. 2020). Once the EPA revises its
own regulations, this should provide those states
the certainty that the EPA will not use the title V
process to address NSR issues, even within this
jurisdiction. However, such states may wish to
consider the extent to which the Tenth Circuit’s
reading of the same language affects their state law
obligations with respect to the title V and NSR
permitting interface.
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incentive to work with their permitting
authorities to ensure that all relevant
NSR permit actions are subject to robust
and meaningful public participation
opportunities.
4. Impacts on the Public
The EPA expects that the public at
large, including communities impacted
by pollution from facilities regulated
under the title V and NSR programs,
will benefit from the increased clarity
provided in this rulemaking, as well as
from more effective engagement in NSR
permitting decisions. A central focus of
this effort is to more clearly define the
most appropriate and effective routes for
the public to participate in—and, if
necessary, challenge—different types of
CAA permitting decisions. In this
manner, this rule does not limit
meaningful public participation, but
rather encourages more meaningful
public participation by directing the
public to the pathways that can be used
to most effectively provide oversight
over different types of permits.
This rule will allow the public,
permitting authorities, and the EPA to
focus their title V-based efforts on issues
that can be more fully and effectively
addressed through title V, such as
supplementing monitoring when
necessary to assure compliance with
underlying applicable requirements.
As explained in section IV.E.4.b. of
this preamble, the title V permitting
process has proven a generally
ineffective mechanism to address
deficiencies in NSR permitting actions.
The available title I permitting and title
III enforcement mechanisms are better
tools for the public to utilize in
addressing issues with NSR permitting
decisions. The EPA’s pre-2017 policies
that ostensibly allowed the public to
challenge NSR permit decisions through
the title V process created a misleading
incentive for the public to forego those
more appropriate and effective title I
appeal mechanisms. This process often
resulted in the public investing
considerable resources in pursuing title
V-based challenges, which had limited
effect on the permit terms at issue. As
this proposed rule makes clear, the
public’s attention and resources would
be more effectively deployed in
challenges to NSR permits through the
appropriate title I permitting and title III
enforcement channels.
Additionally, the public should
benefit from the incentives that this rule
will create for states and regulated
entities to ensure that relevant NSR
permit actions involve public notice and
the opportunity for comment and
judicial review. These incentives will
complement the related (but separate)
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actions that the EPA is considering with
respect to minor NSR programs.
Collectively, these actions should
encourage increased public
participation in the NSR permitting
process.
To the extent that the public is
deprived of meaningful opportunities to
address NSR permit deficiencies, the
title V permitting process should serve
as a backstop so that the public (and the
EPA) have the ability to ensure that title
V permits contain the necessary NSRrelated requirements.
The EPA solicits comment on
examples of past situations (not
hypothetical) where the EPA’s objection
to a title V permit helped address NSRrelated issues that the public either did,
or did not, have a chance to address
through the NSR permitting process.
E. Rationale for Proposed Action
As explained in the following
subsections, title V of the CAA does not
compel the EPA or state permitting
authorities to use the title V operating
permit process to review the substance
of decisions made during the title I
(NSR) preconstruction permitting
process. The statute requires that title V
permits assure compliance with
‘‘applicable requirements’’ of the CAA,
but the statute does not define this term
or expressly require that permitting
authorities revisit NSR permitting
decisions. The EPA interprets the
statute to mean that the terms and
conditions of a NSR permit issued
under EPA-approved (or EPApromulgated) title I rules, with public
notice and the opportunity for comment
and judicial review, define the relevant
NSR-related applicable requirements of
the SIP (or FIP) for purposes of title V
permitting.
The EPA’s interpretation is supported
by the structure and purpose of title V.
Congress designed title V to consolidate,
assure compliance with, and improve
the enforceability of applicable
requirements established under other
CAA programs. The title V program was
not intended to create new substantive
requirements or modify substantive
requirements added in those other
programs (other than to include
supplemental compliance assurance
measures, when necessary). This
understanding of the purpose of title
V—both in general and as it relates to
the intersection of title V and NSR
permitting—is reflected in the statute
and regulations, the legislative history,
EPA statements contemporaneous with
the promulgation of the initial title V
regulations, and various federal court
decisions and EPA statements since that
time.
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The EPA’s interpretation is also
consistent with the structure of the CAA
as a whole. The EPA’s current (and
proposed) approach gives weight to the
title I mechanisms that Congress
provided to establish the specific NSRrelated requirements of SIPs, as well as
the title I and title III procedures for
evaluating, challenging, and enforcing
title I permitting requirements. It also
respects the system of cooperative
federalism reflected in the NSR and title
V permitting programs.
The EPA’s current (and proposed)
approach also reflects better policy than
alternative interpretations because it:
ensures that applicable requirements
established in different CAA programs
are treated consistently in title V
permitting; better accounts for
procedural, resource-related, and
practical limitations associated with
title V oversight tools; incentivizes the
use of robust title I avenues of review;
and respects the finality of NSR
permitting decisions.
1. Statutory Text and Interpretation
The text of title V alone does not
conclusively define the scope of issues
subject to review (or re-review) during
the title V permitting process. In
relevant part, the CAA requires that title
V permits ‘‘include enforceable
emissions limitations and standards
. . . and such other conditions as are
necessary to assure compliance with
applicable requirements of [the CAA],
including the requirements of the
applicable implementation plan,’’ i.e.,
the SIP or FIP. 42 U.S.C. 7661c(a).
Similarly, if the EPA determines that a
title V permit is ‘‘not in compliance
with the applicable requirements of [the
CAA], including the requirements of an
applicable implementation plan,’’ the
EPA must object, and if the EPA does
not, any person may petition the EPA to
do so. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b)(1)–(2).121
121 Similar requirements appear in other parts of
title V. For example: ‘‘The term ‘schedule of
compliance’ means a schedule of remedial
measures, including an enforceable sequence of
actions or operations, leading to compliance with
an applicable implementation plan, emission
standard, emission limitation, or emission
prohibition.’’ 42 U.S.C. 7661(3). ‘‘Nothing in this
subsection shall be construed to alter the applicable
requirements of this chapter that a permit be
obtained before construction or modification.’’ 42
U.S.C. 7661a(a). Permitting authorities ‘‘have
adequate authority to . . . issue permits and assure
compliance . . . with each applicable standard,
regulation, or requirement under this chapter.’’ 42
U.S.C. 7661a(b)(5). The regulations to implement
the program shall include a ‘‘requirement that the
applicant submit with the application a compliance
plan describing how the source will comply with
all applicable requirements under this chapter.’’ 42
U.S.C. 7661b(b). However, like section 504, these
sections do not specify the scope of the term
‘‘applicable requirements’’ or how the permitting
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However, the term ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ is not defined in the Act,
and the statute does not otherwise
specify how to determine the applicable
requirements of the CAA or the SIP (or
FIP) for a particular source.
With respect to title I preconstruction
permits, the statutory term ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ is particularly
ambiguous. As explained further in
section IV.E.3.a. of this preamble,
during the preconstruction permitting
process, permitting authorities
determine which NSR requirements in
the SIP (or FIP) are applicable (e.g.,
major NSR or minor NSR requirements)
to new or modified sources, and derive
the specific permit conditions (e.g.,
emission limitations and other
standards) applicable to a given source
or modification based on the general
direction in the SIP. The public has the
opportunity to provide comment on
draft permits and also to seek review in
state court. At the end of this NSR
permitting process, the NSR permit
terms reflect the NSR-related
requirements of the SIP (or FIP)
applicable to the new or modified
source.
The question, then, is whether the
title V permitting process should be
used to double-check—and re-check
during every subsequent title V renewal
permit—the substantive adequacy of
applicable requirements established
through NSR permitting decisions. In
other words, the question is whether
title V should be used to assess whether
the requirements embodied in an NSR
permit were properly derived from the
general, overarching SIP (or FIP)
provisions governing NSR.
Title V of the CAA contains no
language expressly mandating such a reevaluation through title V. Notably, the
Fifth Circuit found the CAA’s silence on
this topic a persuasive reason for
upholding the EPA interpretation that is
the basis for this proposed rule. Env’t
Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 248–49.122
The statute’s silence on this topic stands
in contrast to the presence of more
specific statutory mandates, such as the
requirement that title V permits be used
to add compliance assurance measures
like monitoring, recordkeeping, and
reporting requirements. 42 U.S.C.
7661c(c); see 40 CFR 70.6(c)(1); Sierra
Club v. EPA, 536 F.3d at 680.
Moreover, the CAA’s references to
‘‘applicable requirements’’ do not
compel such a re-evaluation. Notably,
the Fifth Circuit rejected the notion that
this general term should be construed as
‘‘broad and sweeping,’’ or that this term
should be read to mandate using title V
to review of whether requirements in an
NSR permit accurately reflect the
requirements of a SIP. See Env’t
Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 249–250
(‘‘[Petitioners] would effectively rewrite
the clause to read: ‘a de novo
reconsideration of the source’s
preconstruction permitting.’ Surely,
Congress would not have hidden that
regulatory elephant in this residual
mousehole.’’).
In light of the statute’s ambiguity, the
EPA has adopted an interpretation of
the statutory terms ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ and ‘‘requirements of the
applicable implementation plan.’’ 123
The EPA’s interpretation is that the
terms and conditions of an NSR permit
issued under EPA-approved (or EPApromulgated) title I rules, with public
notice and the opportunity for comment
and judicial review, define the relevant
set of ‘‘applicable requirements’’ for
purposes of title V permitting. That is,
the ‘‘requirements of an applicable
implementation plan’’ relevant to a
particular construction project are the
requirements that the permitting
authority determined to be applicable
during the NSR permitting process, as
reflected in the terms of such an NSR
permit. Not only is this interpretation
consistent with the statutory text, but
the EPA also considers this to be the
best interpretation in light of the
authority or the EPA is to determine what the
applicable requirements are for an individual
source as part of its title V permit.
122 Specifically, the court stated the following:
‘‘We find persuasive EPA’s position that Title V
lacks a specific textual mandate requiring the
agency to revisit the Title I adequacy of
preconstruction permits. Our own review of Title V
confirms that it contains no such explicit
requirement, nor any language guiding the agency
on how to perform a review of that nature. The
principle that a matter not covered is not covered
is so obvious that it seems absurd to recite it. A
number of cases have identified the casus omissus
pro omisso habendus est canon, under which a
statute should not be read to include matter it does
not include. Here, Title V does not tell EPA to
reconsider [NSR] in the course of Title V
permitting. We reject Petitioners’ position because
there is a basic difference between filling a gap left
by Congress’ silence and rewriting rules that
Congress has affirmatively and specifically
enacted.’’ Env’t Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 248–
49 (cleaned up) (citing Lamie v. U.S. Tr., 540 U.S.
526, 538 (2004); Iselin v. United States, 270 U.S.
245, 251 (1926); Yates v. Collier, 868 F.3d 354, 369
(5th Cir. 2017); In re Miller, 570 F.3d 633, 638–39
(5th Cir. 2009)).
123 This interpretation is reflected, in part, in the
EPA’s existing regulations. 40 CFR 70.2, 71.2. These
existing regulations can be read to support the
statutory interpretation explained in this preamble.
However, in light of the Tenth Circuit’s ruling
(which held that the EPA’s regulatory definition of
‘‘applicable requirement’’ precluded the EPA’s
approach), the EPA is proposing to amend the
EPA’s regulations to more clearly reflect the EPA’s
statutory interpretation. For further discussion of
the EPA’s interpretation of its existing regulations,
see Big River Steel Order at 9–11.
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structure and purpose of title V, the
structure of the CAA as a whole, and
other policy reasons, as explained in the
following subsections of this preamble.
2. Structure and Purpose of Title V
The EPA’s interpretation of
‘‘applicable requirements’’ in the
context of title V and NSR permitting is
supported by the structure and purpose
of the title V program—namely, to
consolidate, assure compliance with,
and improve the enforceability of
applicable requirements established
under other CAA programs. The title V
program was not intended to establish
new substantive requirements or modify
substantive requirements created in
other programs (other than to include
supplemental compliance assurance
measures, when necessary). This
purpose is reflected in the statute and
regulations, the legislative history
associated with Congress’s enactment of
title V, EPA statements
contemporaneous with the
promulgation of the initial title V
regulations, and various federal court
decisions and EPA statements since that
time.
As introduced in section III.B. of this
preamble, a core purpose and function
of title V is to identify, consolidate, and
assure compliance with the
requirements applicable to individual
sources from other, more substantive
CAA programs. This function is
embodied primarily within CAA section
504 and 40 CFR 70.6(a) and (c), which
generally require that title V permits
include conditions that assure an
individual source’s compliance with all
CAA applicable requirements.
When Congress enacted title V in
1990, it explained this purpose as
follows:
The first benefit of the title V permit
program is that . . . it will clarify and make
more readily enforceable a source’s pollution
control requirements. Currently, in many
cases, the source’s pollution control
obligations . . . are scattered throughout
numerous, often hard-to-find provisions of
the SIP or other Federal regulations. . . .
The air permit program will ensure that all
of a source’s obligations . . . will be
contained in one permit document.
S. Rep. No. 101–228 at 347 (Dec. 20,
1989), reprinted in 5 Legislative History
of the Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990 (CAA Legislative History) at 8687
(1998).124
In addition to identifying and
consolidating existing requirements
124 Other portions of the history of this legislation
describe the purpose of title V in similar terms. See,
e.g., Conf. Rep. on S. 1630, Speech of Rep. Michael
Bilirakis (Oct. 26, 1990), 6 CAA Legislative History
at 10768 (1998).
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applicable to a source, CAA section 504
provides the authority to use title V
permits to establish additional
requirements relating to compliance
assurance. For example, it is wellestablished that title V permits may be
used to create or supplement monitoring
requirements when necessary to assure
an individual source’s compliance with
underlying applicable requirements that
do not themselves contain sufficient
monitoring provisions.125 This
exception proves the rule; where
Congress intended title V to serve as a
vehicle for the reevaluation of existing
requirements or for imposing new
requirements, it expressly said so.
Beyond title V’s consolidation and
compliance assurance functions, it is
axiomatic that title V generally does not
impose new pollution control
requirements on sources or provide a
vehicle to modify such requirements
established under other CAA programs.
As stated in the congressional record:
The permit provisions of title V provide a
focus for this harmonization [of other titles
of the CAA], although title V does not
change, and gives EPA no authority to
modify, the substantive provisions of these
other titles. . . . [T]itle V does not change,
and gives EPA no authority to modify, the
substantive provisions of these other
titles. . . . Title V creates no new
substantive emission control requirements.
Nothing in the permitting title should be read
to increase the stringency of any control
requirement nor to delay or accelerate the
effectiveness of such requirements, except as
expressly provided in titles I, III, and IV.
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Conf. Rep. on S. 1630, Speech of Rep.
Michael Bilirakis (Oct. 26, 1990), 6 CAA
Legislative History at 10768 (1998).
Recognizing the core functions of the
title V program, the EPA’s regulations
have provided since 1992: ‘‘All sources
125 See 42 U.S.C. 7661c(c); 40 CFR 70.6(c)(1);
Sierra Club v. EPA, 536 F.3d 673, 674–45, 680 (D.C.
Cir. 2008) (‘‘Title V did more than require the
compilation in a single document of existing
applicable emission limits and monitoring
requirements. It also mandated that ‘[e]ach permit
issued under [Title V] shall set forth . . .
monitoring . . . requirements to assure compliance
with the permit terms and conditions.’ . . . [T]he
Act requires: a permitting authority may
supplement an inadequate monitoring requirement
so that the requirement will ‘assure compliance
with the permit terms and conditions.’ ’’ (citations
omitted)); see also, e.g., In the Matter of CITGO
Refining and Chemicals Co., L.P., West Plant, Order
on Petition No. VI–2007–01 at 6–8 (May 28, 2009).
This additional purpose is similarly reflected in the
legislative history. See, e.g., S. Rep. No. 101–228 at
347, 5 CAA Legislative History at 8687. Various
compliance assurance requirements are included
within title V and the EPA’s implementing
regulations; not all are restricted to monitoring. See
42 U.S.C. 7661c(a), (b), (c); 40 CFR 70.6(a)(1), (a)(3),
(c), 71.6(a)(1), (a)(3), (c); see also, e.g., In the Matter
of Suncor Energy (U.S.A.), Inc., Commerce City
Refinery, Plant 2 (East), Order on Petition Nos. VIII–
2022–13 & VIII–2022–14 at 13–17 (July 31, 2023).
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subject to these regulations shall have a
permit to operate that assures
compliance by the source with all
applicable requirements. While title V
does not impose substantive new
requirements, it does require that fees be
imposed on sources and that certain
procedural measures be adopted
especially with respect to compliance.’’
40 CFR 70.1(b) (emphasis added). These
principles are further explained in EPA
statements contemporaneous with the
initial 1992 title V regulations,126
subsequent rulemakings,127 and in
numerous orders responding to
petitions challenging individual title V
permits.128 Likewise, federal courts
across the nation have acknowledged
and reiterated these general
principles.129
126 See 57 FR at 32251 (‘‘While title V generally
does not impose substantive new requirements, it
does require that . . . certain procedural measures
be followed, especially with respect to determining
compliance with underlying applicable
requirements. The program will generally clarify, in
a single document, which requirements apply to a
source and, thus, should enhance compliance with
the requirements of the Act. . . . The title V permit
program will enable the source, States, EPA, and
the public to understand better the requirements to
which the source is subject, and whether the source
is meeting those requirements. Increased source
accountability and better enforcement should
result.’’); id. at 32284 (‘‘As discussed above, title V
is primarily procedural, and is not generally
intended to create any new substantive
requirements. . . . The title V permit is intended
to record in a single document the substantive
requirements derived from elsewhere in the Act.
Therefore, in most cases the only emissions limits
contained in the permit will be emissions limits
that are imposed to comply with the substantive
requirements of the Act (including SIP
requirements).’’).
127 See 81 FR 57822, 57826–27 (Aug. 24, 2016)
(‘‘For the most part, title V of the CAA does not
impose new pollution control requirements on
sources. The definition of ‘applicable requirements’
in the part 70 regulations includes many standards
and requirements that are established through other
CAA programs, such as standards and requirements
under sections 111 and 112 of the Act, and terms
and conditions of preconstruction permits issued
under the New Source Review programs. 40 CFR
70.2. Once those air quality control requirements
are established in those other programs, they are
incorporated into a source’s title V permits as
appropriate. . . . [I]n providing an opportunity for
harmonization through title V of the CAA, Congress
did not replace or remove the procedures and
requirements for establishing substantive
requirements that exist in other provisions of the
CAA.’’).
128 Hundreds of EPA petition orders include
background discussion reiterating this core function
of title V. Electronic copies of these orders are
available on the EPA’s public database, https://
www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits/title-vpetition-database. To the extent individual petition
orders contain particularly relevant discussion, they
are discussed elsewhere in this preamble.
129 See, e.g., Utility Air Reg. Group v. EPA, 573
U.S. 302, 309 (2014) (‘‘Unlike the PSD program,
Title V generally does not impose any substantive
pollution-control requirements.’’); Env’t Integrity
Project, 960 F. 3d at 250 (‘‘By all accounts, Title V’s
purpose was to simplify and streamline sources’
compliance with the Act’s substantive
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Not only were these general
principles well-established at the
inception of the title V program, but
both Congress and the EPA specifically
spoke to the manner in which these
general principles would guide the
interaction between title V and title I
permitting programs. For example, a
Senate Report accompanying title V
explained:
New and modified major sources are
already required to obtain construction
permits under the [NSR] and [PSD]
provisions of the current Act. EPA should
avoid imposing additional construction
permit requirements under title V. Thus,
construction permits may continue to be
issued under the existing provisions of the
Act, but title V will apply with respect to
existing source requirements not otherwise
required in the construction permit, e.g., fees.
S. Rep. No. 101–228 at 349, 5 CAA
Legislative History at 8689 (emphasis
added).130 Thus, the legislative history
articulates Congress’s intent that,
notwithstanding the enactment of title
V, NSR permits would continue to be
issued as they had for over a decade.
Title V permits would be used to
incorporate the requirements of NSR
permits, but not to alter or impose
additional NSR-related requirements.
As previously noted, in the 1991 and
1992 preambles to the EPA’s initial title
V rules, the agency announced a similar
understanding of the intersection of title
V and title I permitting. The EPA did
not express an intention to use the title
V permitting process to review the
applicable requirements established in
preconstruction permitting programs
under title I of the CAA. To the
contrary, the EPA stated: ‘‘Any
requirements established during the
preconstruction review process also
apply to the source for purposes of
implementing title V. If the source
meets the limits in its NSR permit, the
title V operating permit would
requirements. Rather than subject sources to new
substantive requirements—or new methods of
reviewing old requirements—the intent of Title V
was to consolidate into a single document (the
operating permit) all of the clean air requirements
applicable to a particular source of air pollution.’’
(cleaned up)); id. at 244; see also, e.g., U.S. Sugar
Corp. v. EPA, 830 F.3d 579, 597 (D.C. Cir. 2016);
US v. EME Homer City Generation, LP, 727 F. 3d
274, 280 (3rd Cir. 2013); Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541
F.3d 1257, 1260 (11th Cir. 2008); Sierra Club v.
Leavitt, 368 F.3d 1300, 1302 (11th Cir. 2004);
Appalachian Power Co. v. EPA, 208 F. 3d 1015,
1026–27 (D.C. Cir. 2000).
130 Similarly, one lawmaker involved in the
statute’s enactment explained: ‘‘In the past, some
provisions of the Clean Air Act—for example, the
nonattainment and PSD new source requirements—
were, and will continue to be, implemented through
preconstruction permits.’’ Conf. Rep. on S. 1630,
Speech of Rep. Michael Bilirakis (Oct. 26, 1990), 6
CAA Legislative History at 10768 (1998) (emphasis
added).
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incorporate these limits without further
review.’’ 56 FR 21712, 21738–39 (May
10, 1991) (emphasis added). Similarly,
the EPA explained: ‘‘The intent of title
V is not to second-guess the results of
any State NSR program.’’ Id. at 21739
(emphasis added). Further, ‘‘Decisions
made under the NSR and/or PSD
programs (e.g., [BACT]) define
applicable SIP requirements for the title
V source and, if they are not otherwise
changed, can be incorporated without
further review into the operating permit
for the source. The title V program is not
intended to interfere in any way with
the expeditious processing of new
source permits.’’ Id. at 21721 (emphasis
added). The preamble to the final rule
further confirms that ‘‘[d]ecisions made
under the NSR and/or PSD programs
define certain applicable SIP
requirements for the title V source.’’ 57
FR at 32259 (emphasis added).
The EPA’s contemporaneous
interpretation of the statute (and the
regulations implementing this statute),
should be afforded great weight, as the
Fifth Circuit acknowledged in Env’t
Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 251 (‘‘We
also agree with EPA that the language in
part 70’s preamble is probative of Title
V’s purpose as a whole.’’).131 Although
the EPA departed from this
interpretation during the 2000s, the
EPA’s return to this interpretation
reflects a better construction of the
statute and congressional intent.132 As
the Fifth Circuit stated: ‘‘We find
persuasive EPA’s view that, because
Title V was not intended to add new
substantive requirements to the Act, it
should not be interpreted as Petitioners
urge. . . . This goal, as EPA argues, is
at cross-purposes with using the Title V
process to reevaluate preconstruction
permits.’’ Id. at 250–51.
Other statutory provisions within title
V further support the EPA’s
interpretation. In enacting title V,
Congress directed the EPA to ‘‘develop
streamlined procedures in cases where
131 An agency’s contemporaneous interpretation
is often given great weight in understanding the
meaning of a statute. See e.g., Good Samaritan
Hosp. v. Shalala, 508 U.S. 402, 414 (1993) (‘‘Of
particular relevance is the agency’s
contemporaneous construction which ‘we have
allowed . . . to carry the day against doubts that
might exist from a reading of the bare words of a
statute.’ ’’ (quoting FHA v. The Darlington, Inc., 358
U.S. 84, 90 (1958))).
132 See Env’t Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 251
(‘‘We recognize that EPA has reverted to its original
interpretation of § 70.2, reflecting its changing
views of Title V. We take the agency’s change of
position into account in determining whether to
defer to its position. But even when ‘the agency has
embraced a variety of approaches’ we may still
defer to its present position, ‘especially’ when the
current view ‘closely fits the design of the statute
as a whole.’ ’’ (quoting Shahala, 508 U.S. at 417–
18; additional citation omitted)).
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the permit simply incorporates without
changing[ ] existing requirements found
in the SIP or in other provisions of the
Act.’’ S. Rep. No. 101–228 at 353, 5 CAA
Legislative History at 8693. Reflecting
this directive, title V requires state
programs to have ‘‘[a]dequate,
streamlined, and reasonable procedures
. . . for expeditious review of permit
actions . . . .’’ 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b)(6).
Requiring a permitting authority, or the
EPA, to go back and review final
permitting decisions that have already
been subject to the safeguards of public
notice and judicial review would
frustrate the goal of ‘‘expeditious review
of permit actions.’’
Similarly, Congress provided
abbreviated timeframes for the EPA to
review a proposed title V permit: 45
days for the EPA’s independent review,
and 60 days if confronted with a
petition to object. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b);
see 40 CFR 70.8(c), (d). Based on ‘‘the
abbreviated timeline Congress gave
EPA,’’ the Fifth Circuit in Env’t Integrity
Project concluded ‘‘that these timelines
are inconsistent with an in-depth and
searching review of every permitting
decision regarding a given source.’’
Env’t Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at
251.133 This point is compounded by
the fact that title V permits must be
renewed every 5 years. 42 U.S.C.
7661a(b)(5)(B), (b)(6); see, e.g., 40 CFR
70.6(a)(2). As the Fifth Circuit stated,
‘‘the fact that Title V permits must be
renewed every 5 years tends to support
the agency’s view that Title V was not
intended to serve as a vehicle for reexamining the underlying substance of
preconstruction permits. Subjecting a
source’s preconstruction permit to
periodic new scrutiny, without any
changes to the source’s pollution
output, would be inconsistent with Title
V’s goal of giving sources more security
in their ability to comply with the Act.’’
Env’t Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 251–
52.
In summary, neither the structure of
title V nor the congressional record
indicate that Congress intended the EPA
to reevaluate and rewrite substantive
title I preconstruction requirements
through the title V process. Title V was
133 See also Env’t Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 253
(‘‘Title I [includes] more detailed procedures for indepth oversight of case-specific permitting
decisions. Such permitting decisions follow state
appeals or enforcement actions authorized by other
provisions of the Act, including citizen suits under
Title III. Those mechanisms are better structured to
provide agency and citizen oversight of
preconstruction permitting. . . . Title V contains
none of the procedures that would guide those
challenges, as Titles I and III do. . . . And those
avenues provide more time for development and
consideration of the potential issues.’’ (internal
citations and quotations omitted)).
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enacted largely to identify and
consolidate the variety of requirements
applicable to each facility and assure
compliance with these requirements
through provisions like monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting.
Reexamining title I permits through title
V would not help address either of these
objectives. Moreover, congressional
intent for efficiency would be
undermined if permitting authorities
were required to second-guess complex
decisions reflected in state-issued title I
permits during title V review, and then
re-check these decisions during each
subsequent title V renewal. Such a
review would also be generally
incompatible with the limited
timeframes that Congress provided for
EPA’s review of title V permits. These
considerations related to the structure
and purpose of title V align with the
EPA’s interpretations of the statute from
the early 1990s, as well as the opinions
of federal courts.
All indications of congressional intent
suggest that the EPA’s role in oversight
over the issuance of title V permits
should be limited. In the case of
preconstruction permitting
requirements derived from title I of the
Act, the purpose of title V is to ensure
that the terms and conditions of the
preconstruction permit are properly
included as ‘‘applicable requirements,’’
and that the permit contains monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting sufficient
to assure compliance with those permit
terms and conditions. See 42 U.S.C.
7661c(a), (c); 40 CFR 70.6(a)(1), (a)(3),
70.6(c)(1).
3. Structure of the CAA as a Whole
The EPA’s interpretation of
‘‘applicable requirements’’ as that term
relates to the interface of title I and title
V permits is supported by the structure
of the CAA as a whole. See Utility Air
Reg. Group v. EPA, 573 U.S. 302, 320
(2014) (acknowledging the
‘‘fundamental canon of statutory
construction that the words of a statute
must be read in their context and with
a view to their place in the overall
statutory scheme’’ (internal citations
and quotation marks omitted)).
Specifically, the EPA’s interpretation is
consistent with the title I permitting
mechanisms that Congress provided to
establish and define the NSR-related
requirements of SIPs; the title I and title
III procedures for evaluating,
challenging, and enforcing title I
permitting requirements; and the
overarching system of cooperative
federalism reflected in the NSR and title
V permitting programs.
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a. Implementation of SIP Requirements
Through Title I NSR Permits
States must submit SIPs containing
NSR permitting programs to EPA for
approval. 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(C).134
States then determine and define the
specific NSR-related requirements of
SIPs that apply to individual
construction projects by issuing NSR
permits to individual facilities. This
two-step process under title I is central
to the EPA’s interpretation of the
statutory term ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ as it relates to the
interface between title I and title V
permits. It also differentiates NSR-based
applicable requirements from other
types of applicable requirements.
Section III. of this preamble discusses
how different types of ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ are implemented to
greater or lesser extents through title V
permitting. In summary, some
applicable requirements are selfimplementing, in that the specific
emission limitations or standards
applicable to an individual source (or
entire source category) are expressly
identified within in the underlying
regulation (e.g., a SIP, FIP, NSPS, or
NESHAP regulation). These types of
self-implementing requirements are
incorporated into title V permits
without further review, other than to
ensure that the title V permit contains
sufficient conditions to assure
compliance with those requirements. By
contrast, other CAA-based requirements
may be written in more general terms,
requiring additional steps to define the
specific requirements that are applicable
to a given facility. In some situations—
such as where the underlying regulation
contains no direction about the
mechanism that must be used to further
define such requirements—those
requirements may be defined through
the title V permitting process. NSR
requirements are unique, as they fall
between these two examples.
The portions of a SIP addressing NSR
are general in nature. SIPs require new
and modified sources to obtain certain
permits before beginning construction;
SIPs specify thresholds and other
methods to determine what type of
permit a source must obtain; SIPs
identify other preconditions to
obtaining a permit (including
requirements related to the NAAQS);
and SIPs establish guidelines for
establishing specific limitations and
other conditions that must be included
in a permit. Because the NSR-related
134 This section primarily discusses the issuance
of NSR permits under an EPA-approved SIP.
Similar principles apply to the issuance of NSR
permits under an EPA-promulgated FIP.
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provisions within a SIP are necessarily
general, they are not self-implementing,
and further fact-specific analysis is
required to develop the specific
requirements applicable to a particular
new or modified source.
The question then becomes: is title V
the appropriate mechanism to establish
(or revisit) the specific NSR-related SIP
requirements that are applicable to
construction activities at a particular
source? As noted earlier, title V of the
CAA does not mandate this outcome.
And the structure of title I makes clear
that this was not Congress’s intent.
Congress required in title I that SIPs
regulate construction and require
preconstruction permits. See, e.g., 42
U.S.C. 7475(a)(1), 7502(c)(5); see 42
U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(C).135 It thus follows
that the preconstruction permitting
requirements for individual sources are
established under these programs in the
SIP, not through title V. The SIPs
identify the title I permitting process as
the mechanism by which the more
general SIP requirements applicable to
construction of stationary sources will
be defined for each new or modified
source. During that title I permitting
process, a permitting authority
determines which NSR-related
requirements of the SIP are applicable
and designs specific permit terms and
conditions to satisfy these more general
SIP requirements. This process also
includes the opportunity for the public
to evaluate and challenge the state’s
decisions. Overall, the process is
designed to result in an NSR permit that
contains all terms and conditions
necessary to satisfy the NSR-related
requirements of the SIP. Thus, it is the
title I permitting process—not the
general requirements within the SIP
itself—that defines the ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ of the CAA related to
NSR, at least insofar as title V is
concerned.
In summary, the NSR requirements of
a SIP are not self-implementing, but
they also do not depend on the title V
process to be defined. Instead, the
applicable NSR-related requirements of
SIPs are established through a dedicated
title I-based mechanism with its own
public participation opportunities and
135 Although Congress did not specifically require
that the minor NSR program be implemented
through permitting, nearly all SIPs across the nation
implement minor NSR through permitting. This
distinction is not relevant to the approach proposed
in this rule, because if a source does not obtain a
title I permit to authorize construction, then there
would be no permit to establish the ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ for title V purposes, and the EPA
would review whether the title V permit assures
compliance with the relevant requirements of the
SIP. See section IV.B.5. of this preamble for further
discussion.
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EPA oversight authority: the NSR
permitting process.
The CAA requires that title V permits
assure compliance with ‘‘requirements
of an applicable [SIP].’’ But the CAA
does not specify that title V be used to
re-create or re-evaluate the requirements
of the SIP that were already defined
through the specific mechanism
Congress designed to define them: the
NSR permitting process. Again, the
purpose of title V is not to create or alter
the substantive requirements from other
parts of the CAA, but instead to identify,
consolidate, and assure compliance
with those requirements established in
these other programs that apply to each
individual source.
b. Oversight of Title I Programs and
Permitting Decisions
The many programmatic and casespecific oversight tools contained
within title I demonstrate that it is not
necessary—and Congress did not
intend—to use additional title V permit
oversight tools to second-guess the
results of title I permitting decisions.136
As introduced in section IV.C.2. of this
preamble, title I provides opportunities
for programmatic oversight, oversight
over individual permitting decisions,
and oversight through enforcement.
Through the review of SIP
submissions, the EPA ensures that states
have programs in place that provide the
authority to issue substantively sound
preconstruction permits, while
respecting Congress’s intended role for
the states. Congress gave the EPA
authority under title I to disapprove any
proposed SIPs that are inconsistent with
federal statutory and regulatory
authorities governing NSR. 42 U.S.C.
7410(k). For example, if a state submits
a proposed SIP containing rules to
calculate major source emissions
thresholds, and those rules are
inconsistent with the CAA or its
implementing regulations, the EPA
cannot approve the SIP. Id. If the state’s
program subsequently fails to meet
statutory or regulatory requirements
related to NSR, the EPA can call for a
revision of the SIP. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k)(5).
Further, if a state fails to properly
implement its NSR program, the EPA
can take additional actions, including
orders, administrative penalties, and
civil actions. 42 U.S.C. 7413(a)(2), (5).
136 As stated in section IV.C. of this preamble, the
EPA’s view that reevaluation of NSR permits is not
appropriate in the title V permitting context does
not mean that the EPA agrees that the state reached
the proper decision when setting terms and
conditions of such an NSR permit, nor does it
diminish the opportunities to review NSR
preconstruction permitting decisions under title I of
the CAA. See Env’t Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at
253.
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The availability of these title I-based
authorities obviates the need to use title
V-based oversight tools to address
programmatic issues associated with
state NSR programs.
In terms of reviewing individual title
I permits, each SIP must provide for
public notice and an opportunity for
comment on proposed NSR permits in
its preconstruction permit program. 42
U.S.C. 7475(a)(2); 40 CFR 51.161;
51.165(i), 51.166(q). The EPA may
provide feedback on state-issued NSR
permits through this process.137 Thus,
both the public and the EPA can seek to
correct potential errors in proposed
preconstruction permits, including
threshold determinations about whether
a source or modification is minor or
major, and can also challenge the
content of permit terms. Should a state
permitting authority fail to address
legitimate comments, either the public
or the EPA can seek review of
preconstruction permits in state
administrative and judicial forums.138
Congress also provided the EPA and
the public with various enforcement
mechanisms to address title I permitting
issues on a facility-by-facility basis. The
EPA possesses the authority to issue
injunctive orders to halt construction.
42 U.S.C. 7413(a)(5)(A), 7477. The EPA
may also pursue various types of civil
or criminal enforcement actions
pursuant to sections 113 and 167 of the
Act. 42 U.S.C. 7413, 7477. In title III of
the CAA, Congress also provided
authority for citizens to bring
enforcement actions seeking civil
penalties and injunctive relief against a
source that has violated certain NSR
requirements. 42 U.S.C. 7604(a)(1),
(a)(3). The enforcement-based tools
available to the EPA and members of the
public can be used to ensure that
decisions made in establishing the terms
of a major NSR permit, such as BACT
limits, were made on reasonable
grounds properly supported by the
record. See, e.g., Alaska Dep’t of Env’t
Conservation v. EPA, 540 U.S. 461
(2004). Additionally, they can be used
to address situations where a source
failed to obtain a required major NSR
permit (even where it obtained a minor
source permit). See, e.g., U.S. v. S. Ind.
Gas & Elec. Co., No. IP99–1692–CM/F,
2002 WL 1760699, at *3–5 (S.D. Ind.
July 26, 2002); United States v. Ford
Motor Co., 736 F. Supp. 1539, 1550
(W.D. Mo. 1990). These powerful
enforcement tools enable the EPA and
the public to directly correct the
behavior of facilities that pursue illegal
construction.
137 See
138 See
supra note 113 and accompanying text.
supra note 114 and accompanying text.
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Overall, the availability of title I
oversight tools weighs against using title
V oversight tools to address alleged
defects with NSR permitting decisions.
As the Fifth Circuit explained:
EPA contrasts Title V’s silence on this front
with more stringent oversight authority
provided in Title I, arguing that this supports
reading the title V provision to supply a more
limited oversight role for the EPA with regard
to state implementation of preconstruction
permitting programs. The agency explains
that Title I is better geared for in-depth
oversight of case-specific state permitting
decisions such as through the state appeal
process or an order or action under section[ ]
113 or section 167. And, the agency urges,
the absence of such schemes in Title V shows
Congress did not intend to recapitulate the
Title I process in Title V. We find this
reasoning persuasive.
Env’t Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 249
(internal quotations and citations
omitted)). Further, these title I-based
oversight tools are more effective than
the more limited title V oversight tools.
See section IV.E.4.b. of this preamble for
further discussion of the practical
considerations and other policy reasons
why title V oversight tools are not wellsuited to resolving complex NSR
permitting issues.
c. Cooperative Federalism and
Congressional Intent
Congress, the EPA, and the courts
have often described the CAA (like
many other environmental statutes) as a
program of cooperative federalism. See,
e.g., 42 U.S.C. 7401(a)(3)–(4); Env’t
Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 252. The
EPA and the states work together to
realize the goals of the CAA, but they
have different roles. States have the
‘‘primary responsibility’’ for developing
SIPs, 42 U.S.C. 7407, as well as issuing
title I permits under SIP programs.
There is no indication that, in
enacting title V, Congress intended to
change the balance of state
responsibility and federal oversight of
title I permitting programs.139 To the
contrary, the fact that Congress
specifically provided a title I-based
mechanism to establish the applicable
NSR-related requirements, as well as
title I- and title III-based tools for the
EPA and citizens to oversee this
program, weighs against using title V to
re-evaluate, re-establish, or otherwise
oversee those title I requirements.
Congress ‘‘does not alter the
fundamental details of a regulatory
scheme in vague terms or ancillary
139 In fact, as noted in section IV.E.2. of this
preamble, the legislative history surrounding the
1990 CAA Amendments suggests that Congress did
not intend for the title V program to change the
implementation of title I permits.
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1179
provisions—it does not, one might say,
hide elephants in mouseholes.’’
Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass’ns, 531
U.S. 457, 468 (2001). A reading of title
V that would transform it into an
opportunity to reevaluate previous
preconstruction approvals, instead of
simply incorporating existing air
pollution requirements into one
document, would inappropriately ‘‘alter
the fundamental details’’ of the
oversight authorities the EPA has under
title I of the Act.
The text of the Act does not indicate
that Congress intended to create this
type of additional administrative
oversight mechanism for
preconstruction permitting actions in an
operating permit program designed to
consolidate and make existing
requirements enforceable. While there is
language in title V requiring that a
permit ‘‘assure compliance with
applicable requirements of this
chapter,’’ e.g., 42 U.S.C. 7661c(a), and
similarly broad language in other parts
of title V, this type of general language
does not clearly or specifically say that
a title V permitting authority must
reevaluate preconstruction permitting
decisions that have already been made
under title I each time that it issues or
renews a title V permit. Instead, this
general language in the statute should
be read to mean that the title V permit
must include conditions to assure
compliance with the terms and
conditions of the source-specific
preconstruction permits.
In summary, as the Fifth Circuit
concluded in its close examination of
Title V:
Beyond the structure of Title V, EPA also
persuasively grounds its interpretation in the
structure of the Act as a whole. According to
EPA, when Congress added preconstruction
permitting requirements to Title I in 1977, it
understood that the adequacy of state
preconstruction permitting decisions would
be subject to review in state administrative
and judicial forums. It gave EPA oversight
authority over preconstruction permitting
only in specific ways, to do specific things.
For example, Congress delineated the
processes EPA must go through to approve
SIPs. When it enacted Title V thirteen years
later, Congress granted EPA no such
authority. Congress gave no clear indication
that it intended to alter the balance of
oversight EPA has over state permitting
processes. Section 7661c(a)’s requirement
that a Title V permit assure compliance with
applicable requirements is general and broad
and does not clearly or specifically require
the revisiting of preconstruction permitting
decisions. Once again, the elephants in
mouseholes canon supports this reading.
Env’t Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 252
(cleaned up).
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4. Policy Reasons
In addition to the textual and legal
interpretations supporting this action,
several policy considerations also
support this proposed rule. The EPA’s
current (and proposed) approach:
ensures that applicable requirements
established in different CAA programs
are treated consistently in title V
permitting; better accounts for
procedural, resource-based, and
practical limitations associated with
title V oversight tools; incentivizes the
use of proper title I avenues of review;
and respects the finality of NSR
permitting decisions.
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a. Consistent Treatment of Applicable
Requirements From Other CAA
Programs
The EPA’s current (and proposed)
approach aligns the EPA’s treatment of
preconstruction permits with how the
EPA has consistently treated other
‘‘applicable requirements’’ under title V.
As detailed in section III.E. of this
preamble, for many other applicable
requirements, permitting authorities do
not reconsider the content of those
requirements in title V permits, nor does
the EPA in its oversight role of title V
permitting. For instance, the EPA would
not allow a permitting authority to
revise the self-implementing substantive
requirements of an NSPS established
under CAA section 111 or a NESHAP
established under CAA section 112.
Similarly, it would not be appropriate
for the EPA to review or revise any selfimplementing requirements of a SIP
approved under CAA section 110. In
fact, as explained in Section III.G of this
preamble, even if the EPA disagrees
with the content of a SIP, until the EPA
approves a corrective SIP revision or
issues a FIP, the SIP requirement
remains an ‘‘applicable requirement’’
that should be incorporated unchanged
into the title V permit.
For purposes of establishing
‘‘applicable requirements’’ for title V
permitting, it is logical and appropriate
to treat decisions that go through similar
processes similarly. Each of the
applicable requirements addressed in
the previous paragraph were established
pursuant to a process that included
public notice and the opportunity for
comment and judicial review. Once they
are established following these
procedures, it would be inappropriate to
reevaluate the substance of these
requirements in title V permitting.
Likewise, most source-specific NSR
permitting decisions must go through a
similar process at the state level. Once
established through the appropriate
procedures, and unless and until the
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terms and conditions of an NSR permit
are revised, reopened, suspended,
revoked, reissued, terminated,
augmented, or invalidated through some
other mechanism (such as a state court
appeal or enforcement action), the
‘‘applicable requirements’’ remain the
terms and conditions of the issued NSR
permit. These requirements should be
incorporated into the title V permit
without further review, just like all
other similarly established applicable
requirements.
Any differences between NSR-based
applicable requirements and other types
of applicable requirements do not
provide a convincing reason to treat
NSR requirements differently. For
example, the fact that NSR permits are
reviewed through the state courts, as
opposed to federal courts, is not
material. As discussed in section IV.B.2.
of this preamble, regardless of the
jurisdiction involved, both processes are
functionally similar and offer similar
levels of public involvement and
measured decisionmaking.140
Additionally, as discussed in section
IV.E.3.a. of this preamble, the NSRrelated requirements of the SIP are often
general and would not be described as
‘‘self-implementing’’ in the same
manner as NSPS, NESHAP, or certain
source-specific SIP requirements.
However, after a source goes through the
preconstruction permitting process and
emerges with a final NSR permit, the
terms of that NSR permit are legally
effective in the same manner as any
NSPS, NESHAP, or source-specific SIP
provision. That is, those NSR permit
terms are immediately applicable and
enforceable and require no further
substantive refinement through, for
example, title V permitting.
The EPA’s current (and proposed)
approach also standardizes the EPA’s
treatment of questions related to the
applicability of different types of CAA
requirements. Identifying which
requirements apply to a source (i.e.,
which requirements must be included
in the title V permit) is a key function
of the title V permitting process.
However, it is only necessary and
appropriate to use title V to
substantively address questions
regarding applicability when such
questions have not already been
resolved by the underlying applicable
requirement itself and when such
questions require further site-specific
140 To
the extent federal court review of NSR
decisions offers independent value beyond that
which may be achieved through state courts, the
CAA specifically provides for various means by
which the EPA or the public can raise NSR issues
to federal courts. See sections IV.C.2. and IV.E.3.b.
of this preamble for additional information.
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factual analysis. For example, it would
be appropriate to use the title V
permitting process to determine
whether—or which specific
requirements within—a generally
applicable NSPS, NESHAP, or SIP
requirement applies to a particular
source or piece of equipment, provided
such a decision was not reflected in
some other final action. Likewise, title
V could be used to address whether a
source should have obtained either a
minor or major NSR permit where such
a decision had not already been made
following the appropriate title I
permitting process.
By contrast, if the applicability of a
SIP requirement is established on the
face of the SIP itself (e.g., in a sourcespecific SIP provision), the EPA would
not re-evaluate this question through
title V. Or, if the EPA has already issued
a formal determination regarding the
applicability of an NSPS or NESHAP
standard, the EPA would not re-evaluate
the same issues through title V.141
Provided a minor NSR permit has been
issued following sufficient procedures,
major NSR applicability questions are
similar to the latter two examples. That
is, where an NSR applicability
determination has already been made
through the title I process—where a
state decides that major NSR does not
apply to new or modified source and
therefore issues a minor NSR permit—
that applicability determination
establishes the relevant requirements of
the SIP that are applicable to the source
or project. Any further action by EPA
through title V would involve
reconsidering that final title I action
relevant to applicability. Moreover, if
EPA were to conclude that major NSR
requirements were applicable (as
opposed to minor NSR requirements),
such a determination would effectively
require revising the substantive
applicable requirements established in
the final minor NSR permit (since major
NSR requirements are generally more
stringent than minor NSR
requirements). Neither of these
outcomes are consistent with how the
EPA treats applicable requirements and
applicability determinations under
other CAA programs. Accordingly, the
EPA considers it better policy to afford
NSR applicability decisions the same
finality as applicability decisions under
other CAA programs.
b. Procedural, Resource-Based, and
Other Practical Limitations of Title V
Oversight Tools
In the EPA’s experience, NSR
permitting issues are among the most
141 See
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factually and legally complicated issues
raised during the title V permitting (and
petition) process. For multiple reasons,
the oversight tools associated with title
V permitting process are a poor fit for
resolving NSR permitting issues.
Compared to the available title I
avenues for review, the title V process
features limited timelines and
procedural opportunities to fully
evaluate complex title I issues.
Reviewing complex NSR issues through
title V involves a considerable resource
burden and often is impracticable for
decisions made years ago. Even where
title V can be used to review NSR
issues, the EPA’s authority to resolve
such issues is indirect, at best.
Procedural constraints associated
with title V oversight tools weigh
against using these tools to resolve
complex NSR issues. Congress provided
the EPA with only 45 days to review
proposed title V permits, followed by a
60-day period for the public to petition
the EPA to object, followed by a 60-day
period for the EPA to rule on a petition
to object. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b)(1)–(2).
These brief title V review periods are
inconsistent with an in-depth and
searching review of potentially every
source-specific preconstruction
permitting decision that has been made
by the permitting authority. By contrast,
available title I review mechanisms—
state court appeals and enforcement
actions—are not subject to the same
time constraints and allow more time
for development and consideration of
NSR permitting decisions.
In addition to time constraints, the
title V permitting and petition processes
involve fewer opportunities to develop
the factual record necessary for a
complete review of complex NSR
permitting issues. For example, by the
time the EPA receives a title V petition,
the EPA’s review is generally limited to
the record developed by the permitting
authority up to that point. See 40 CFR
70.13. By contrast, some state permit
appeal and enforcement processes
provide more in-depth oversight than
title V could afford. Some states have
administrative appeal processes that
enable additional factual development
before a final decision is reached on the
permit. In addition, ‘‘unlike the
permitting process, the enforcement
process allows for discovery, hearings,
cross-examination of witnesses, and
expert testimony,’’ all of which aid the
fact-finder in deciding whether major or
minor source preconstruction
requirements apply to a facility, or
whether such requirements were
correctly established. Citizens Against
Ruining the Envt. v. EPA, 535 F.3d 670,
678 (7th Cir. 2008).
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Moreover, once a title V petition is
filed, there are no formal opportunities
for other affected parties, such as the
permitted source or the state permitting
authority, to directly participate in the
review process; their opportunity to
develop their position occurs earlier in
the permitting process. See 85 FR 6431,
6442 (February 5, 2020). These other
affected stakeholders have more
procedural safeguards in state appeal
processes and enforcement actions than
in the title V petition process. For
example, they may be parties to the
action and appear before neutral
arbiters, and have the opportunity to
contest points raised by public
challengers through briefs or other
filings. Overall, title V oversight
processes contain fewer mechanisms
than title I oversight processes to fully
consider and resolve complex NSR
issues.142
Title V’s limited effectiveness in
addressing NSR issues is compounded
by the fact that title V permits must be
renewed every 5 years. This fact, along
with the EPA’s longstanding position
that all aspects of a title V permit are
subject to review during renewal permit
proceedings,143 gives rise to the
possibility that, in the absence of the
EPA’s current (and proposed) approach,
the public will seek to use title V
oversight tools to review long-past NSR
permit decisions. For example, in the
2016 PacifiCorp-Hunter I petition that
precipitated the EPA’s current
interpretation, public interest groups
challenged an NSR applicability
decision made nearly 20 years prior.
Given state and federal record retention
schedules, staff turnover at state
permitting authorities, and similar
practical constraints associated with the
passage of time, it may simply be
impossible in a title V permitting action
for a state to recreate a complete,
defensible administrative record to
support complex, substantive NSR
permitting decisions, particularly those
made long ago. Instead of pursuing
142 See Env’t Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 253
(‘‘We are persuaded by the agency’s contrasting
Title V against Title I’s more detailed procedures for
in-depth oversight of case-specific permitting
decisions. Such permitting decisions follow state
appeals or enforcement actions authorized by other
provisions of the Act, including citizen suits under
Title III. Those mechanisms are better structured to
provide agency and citizen oversight of
preconstruction permitting. . . . Title V contains
none of the procedures that would guide those
challenges, as Titles I and III do. . . . And those
avenues provide more time for development and
consideration of the potential issues.’’ (internal
citations and quotations omitted)).
143 See, e.g., In the Matter of Wisconsin Public
Service Corporation, Weston Generating Station,
Order on Petition No. V–2006–4 at 5–7 (December
19, 2007).
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challenges to NSR permitting decisions
when a state incorporates a
preconstruction permit into a title V
permit, or during subsequent title V
renewals, interested parties can obtain
more direct and timely relief through
state permit appeals and enforcement
actions at the tile a title I permit is
issued.
Some of the constraints on the EPA’s
and state’s ability to address NSR issues
through title V may be mitigated by the
fact that Congress placed the burden on
petitioners to demonstrate to the EPA’s
satisfaction that a title V permit does not
satisfy the CAA. In other words, in the
situations where NSR issues are
properly within the scope of the EPA’s
title V review, the EPA is not required
to undertake an exhaustive independent
review of a state’s NSR decisions.
Instead, petitioners are required to
provide sufficient evidence to EPA to
demonstrate that the state’s NSR
permitting decisions did not comply
with its SIP-approved regulations or that
the state’s exercise of discretion under
such regulations was unreasonable or
arbitrary.144 Although this
demonstration requirement reduces
some of the EPA’s resource burdens, it
places these burdens on the public, who
are subject to similarly tight timelines
and the other procedural limitations
discussed in the preceding paragraphs.
As a result of these constraints,
combined with the complexity of NSR
permitting decisions, it has historically
been relatively uncommon for
petitioners to successfully demonstrate
that an NSR-related deficiency warrants
the EPA’s objection to a title V permit.
As discussed throughout this preamble,
the EPA believes the public would be
better served to develop any challenges
to NSR permitting decisions using title
I avenues.
Title V mechanisms are poorly suited
not only for considering NSR-related
issues, but also for resolving NSRrelated issues. The relief that the EPA
can provide through title V to correct an
NSR deficiency is limited and indirect.
When the EPA objects to a title V permit
on the grounds that NSR requirements
were not properly established by a state,
such objection does not directly
invalidate an NSR permit or stop the
initial construction or operation of a
particular source authorized by an NSR
permit. This is true not only when the
NSR permit was issued long ago and
construction has already been
completed,145 but also when the NSR
144 See,
e.g., Appleton Order at 5.
explained previously, the EPA’s
regulations allow sources subject to major NSR
145 As
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permit was issued more recently and
construction has not yet begun. An EPA
objection similarly cannot directly
require the state to amend an NSR
permit. Instead, the EPA’s authority to
object to a title V permit reaches only
the terms of the title V permit itself. For
example, the EPA could direct a state to
include a compliance schedule in the
title V permit directing the source to
apply for a new NSR permit. Resolving
such an objection would generally
require some type of additional, and
legally distinct, NSR permitting action
by the state permitting authority. If the
state ultimately failed to update the title
V permit in a manner sufficient to
resolve the EPA’s objection, then the
EPA could then assume responsibility to
issue the title V permit. 42 U.S.C.
7661d(c).146 But even so, the EPA would
remain unable to directly change the
terms of the underlying NSR permit, or
to issue a new NSR permit to the source,
without first pursuing title I-based
oversight authorities.147 Thus, no matter
what the EPA might do with respect to
a title V permit, the EPA lacks title Vbased authority to directly intercede and
fix issues in NSR permits. Thus, even in
cases where the EPA entertained NSRrelated claims in title V petitions, the
resulting orders rarely resulted in a
change to the NSR permit or additional
NSR requirements.
Given that the title V oversight tools
provide an ill-suited forum for
considering and resolving the complex
problems associated with NSR
permitting, it makes sense that title V
permitting authorities and the EPA
should only consider whether the terms
and conditions of an NSR permit have
preconstruction permitting requirements to apply
for a title V permit within 1 year after beginning
operation (well after beginning and completing
construction), in most cases. 40 CFR 70.5(a)(1)(ii);
71.5(a)(1)(ii). The CAA similarly allows sources to
apply for a title V permit up to 12 months after
becoming subject to title V. 42 U.S.C. 7661b(c). This
shows that Congress did not intend for the title V
permitting process to be used to prevent the
construction of a source authorized under title I.
146 The EPA could also assume responsibility to
issue title V permits within a jurisdiction after
determining, for example, that the state failed to
properly administer and enforce its title V program.
See 42 U.S.C. 7661a(i)(4); 40 CFR 70.10(b)(4), (c),
71.4(c).
147 To directly mandate changes to an NSR permit
issued by a state under an EPA-approved SIP, the
EPA would need to pursue title I remedies. For
example, a court order following a state court
appeal, or an enforcement action, could directly
mandate that the state permitting authority revise
specific NSR permit terms or issue a different type
of NSR permit. Alternatively, if the EPA wanted to
directly issue an NSR permit to a source that was
previously subject to a state permitting authority’s
jurisdiction, the EPA would first have to issue a
‘‘SIP Call’’ under CAA section 110(k) and ultimately
impose a FIP, after which the EPA would retake the
legal authority to issue NSR permits.
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been properly included in a title V
operating permit, and whether there is
sufficient monitoring, recordkeeping,
and reporting to assure compliance with
those terms and conditions. It is more
efficient for state permitting authorities,
the public, and the EPA to focus on
these core title V issues—which are
more clearly redressable through title V
oversight tools—when preparing title V
permits, challenging title V permits, and
reviewing title V permits.
c. Incentivizing Title I Avenues of
Review
The EPA’s current (and proposed)
approach not only recognizes the
limitations on using title V to review
NSR issues, but also emphasizes the
importance of public involvement in the
title I permitting process to address
these issues. This approach encourages
the public to engage contemporaneously
at the state level to appeal
preconstruction permitting decisions
that they believe to be incorrect.
As explained in the preceding
subsection, the title I permitting process
(and other oversight opportunities
under titles I and III of the CAA) is
better suited to addressing public
concerns than the title V permitting
process. From a policy standpoint, the
EPA’s view that the title V permitting
process should not be used to
reconsider final NSR permitting
decisions relies heavily on the
opportunity for the public to participate
in the title I permitting process. The
proposed revisions to the EPA’s
regulations include criteria relevant to
public participation in the title I
permitting process. Provided these
criteria are satisfied in the issuance of
a title I permit, NSR-related decisions
associated with that permit would not
be subject to further review through title
V. The EPA expects that codifying this
existing framework will create a strong
incentive for state permitting authorities
to ensure meaningful public access to
NSR permitting actions, particularly for
minor NSR permitting actions that may
have limited public participation
opportunities.148 This rulemaking is
expected to complement related ongoing
efforts by the EPA to promote increased
implementation of existing
requirements related to public
148 Similarly, the EPA expects that permittees will
have an incentive to request that state permitting
authorities provide such opportunities for the
public to participate in the title I permitting
process, so as to avoid the potential that title I
permitting decisions will be subsequently
overturned using the EPA’s title V review
authorities.
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participation in minor NSR permit
actions.
This approach not only creates an
incentive for states to offer more
opportunities for public access in NSR
permitting, but also for the public to use
such processes. During the time period
in which the EPA nominally considered
the merits of NSR issues through the
title V permitting and petition process,
the EPA observed that many petitioners
would only raise their NSR-related
concerns through the title V process and
would not seek relief through title I
mechanisms. By doing this, citizens
bypassed an available public
participation opportunity and denied
the state an opportunity to hear and
remedy public concerns
contemporaneous with the state action.
Moreover, given the inherent difficulty
in demonstrating NSR permit flaws and
the lack of effective relief available
through the title V permitting process,
use of title V (rather than NSR appeal
processes) may have ultimately been
less effective at fostering sound NSR
permitting decisions. The EPA believes
it is better policy to encourage the
public to use title I venues to address
NSR-related concerns at the time these
permits are issued, and to reserve the
title V permitting process for issues that
may be more effectively addressed
through title V authorities (e.g.,
monitoring).149
d. Respecting Finality and Fostering
Certainty in Title I Permitting Decisions
Declining to review title I permitting
decisions in title V review avoids
duplication and inefficiency, respects
the finality of NSR permitting decisions
that are subject to public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial
review, and acknowledges regulated
entities’ need for certainty when
investing in the construction and
modification of sources.
The availability of public notice, the
opportunity for comment, and the
opportunity for judicial review of
underlying NSR permit actions weigh
heavily against the need to repeat all
these procedures through title V
permitting. This allows an unnecessary
and inefficient ‘‘second bite at the
apple,’’ along with a potentially
unlimited number of additional ‘‘bites’’
each time a title V permit is reviewed.
149 Of course, as explained in section IV.B.5.a. of
this preamble, where the public is denied
meaningful opportunities to participate in title I
permitting decisions, title V will serve as a backstop
to ensure that the public has an opportunity to
ensure that a source’s title V permit assures
compliance with the relevant NSR-related
requirements.
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The EPA’s current (and proposed)
approach respects the finality of a
permitting authority’s title I permitting
decisions, provided such decisions were
made with the requisite level of
formality, consideration, and public
process (i.e., issued under title I
authorities following public notice and
the opportunity for comment and
judicial review). By contrast, allowing
NSR permitting decisions to be
collaterally attacked using the title V
permitting process would significantly
undermine the finality of state title I
permitting decisions. This would
decrease the relative importance of
states in the cooperative federalist
system established by Congress.
The EPA believes that the best policy
(and best reading of the Act as a whole,
as described in section IV.E.3. of this
preamble) is that the public should
directly participate in state
preconstruction permitting decisions
and, if necessary, seek review in state
court immediately thereafter. This is a
more direct and timely way to identify
and correct errors in preconstruction
permits. It provides for such review
before sources reasonably begin relying
on those permits to invest substantial
resources in a facility. Thus, the EPA’s
current (and proposed) approach fosters
certainty and avoids upsetting settled
expectations and reliance interests of
sources that have obtained a legally
enforceable preconstruction permit
under title I. By contrast, under the
EPA’s former approach, stakeholders
would always face the possibility that
the EPA could identify errors with the
state preconstruction permitting
decisions during title V permit issuance
or renewal. In such a circumstance,
discovery of errors could come years
after the fact, long after a source is
constructed and operating, either when
a title V permit first incorporates the
relevant NSR requirements, or decades
after the fact, when the title V permits
is subsequently renewed.150 This would
increase uncertainty for the regulated
community. It would also increase the
burden on EPA, state agencies, and the
courts to consider such long-distant
issues. As summarized by the Fifth
Circuit in examining EPA’s current
approach:
EPA’s position also respects the finality of
the preconstruction permitting decision. The
agency reasoned that it would be inefficient
to allow review via the Title V permitting
process even after the preconstruction
permits had been subject to public notice and
comment and an opportunity for judicial
150 See
section IV.B.4. of this preamble for
additional information about the timing of NSR and
title V permit actions.
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review. And those avenues provide more
time for development and consideration of
the potential issues. We are persuaded that
EPA’s construction of Title V respects the
finality of state preconstruction permitting
decisions, which is consistent with the Act’s
cooperative federalism. Petitioners’ contrary
view of Title V would allow a federal agency
to upset states’ permitting decisions with no
clear mandate from Congress to do so.
Env’t Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 253
(internal citations and quotations
omitted).
F. Alternative Approaches
The EPA believes that the agency’s
existing interpretations and policies
reflect the best approach from both a
legal and policy standpoint, for the
reasons discussed previously. Thus, the
EPA is proposing to codify its existing
approach. However, the EPA also
solicits comment on the following
alternative approaches that would
involve using title V permits to address
substantive NSR issues in additional,
targeted situations. Each of the
alternatives presented features some
level of intuitive appeal but also suffers
from legal and/or policy drawbacks.
Thus, the EPA specifically requests
comments that would provide further
legal and/or policy support for applying
these alternatives as opposed to the
EPA’s preferred approach. The EPA also
specifically requests comments on how
such alternatives could be reflected in
the regulatory text.
As discussed in the following
subsections, the alternatives that the
EPA is considering include: (i) using
title V to review contemporaneous or
recent NSR permitting decisions; (ii)
using title V to review issues related to
major NSR applicability, and (iii) using
title V to review contemporaneous or
recent NSR permitting decisions related
to major NSR applicability.
1. Using Title V To Review
Contemporaneous or Recent NSR
Permitting Decisions
Under the first alternative approach,
the title V permitting process could be
used to review contemporaneous or
recent NSR permitting decisions, but
not older NSR permitting decisions.151
Within this alternative, there are
multiple potential variations based on
the time frame chosen to differentiate
between NSR decisions that would, and
would not, be reviewed. For example,
the narrowest version of this alternative
would involve using title V to review
NSR-related decisions that are made
151 This approach is similar to prior EPA
statements that the EPA would not review NSR
decisions made long ago. See supra notes 51 and
56 and accompanying text.
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1183
contemporaneously with the issuance of
a title V permit. Broader versions of this
alternative would involve reviewing
NSR permitting decisions finalized
within a certain period of time before a
title V permit is issued.
This alternative approach has some
appeal because it avoids some of the
practical challenges that motivated, and
which support, the EPA’s current
approach. For example, this alternative
would avoid problems associated with
the EPA and states being expected to
confront long-past NSR decisions
without a fully accessible record. This
alternative is also less likely to upset
settled expectations, particularly if
review is restricted to
contemporaneously issued NSR and
title V permits. However, this
alternative would not address other
important policy considerations to the
same extent as the EPA’s proposed
approach. For example, this alternative
would not address the limited scope
and timing available for reviewing
complex NSR issues through title V.
Additionally, this alternative would
give rise to its own set of problems. For
example, reviewing NSR decisions
based on a defined timing element
would involve a difficult line-drawing
exercise. Would it be appropriate to
review only NSR decisions finalized at
the exact same time as a title V permit
issuance, or NSR decisions finalized
shortly before a title V permit is
finalized, or within the same year, or
within five or six years, or some other
period of time? The EPA solicits
comments on how to define this timing
element under this alternative.
Moreover, to the extent this
alternative would be applied narrowly
to allow title V review of only
contemporaneous NSR permitting
decisions, this approach could
disincentivize states from taking
advantage of streamlined permit
issuance procedures (which many states
currently employ), such as the
concurrent permit issuance process
described in section IV.B.4. of this
preamble. Disincentivizing streamlined
permitting could increase
administrative burdens and costs for
states and could lead to unnecessary
delays in title V permit issuance,
counter to the CAA’s directive to
develop ‘‘[a]dequate, streamlined, and
reasonable procedures for
expeditiously’’ issuing permits. 42
U.S.C 7661a(b)(6).
In addition to these policy
considerations, it is not clear what legal
basis would support an alternative
approach based exclusively on the
timing of NSR and title V permit
issuance. As discussed extensively
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earlier in this preamble, the relationship
between NSR and title V permits is
closely tied to the concept of
‘‘applicable requirements’’ that are
established under other CAA programs.
This concept has generally been timeneutral, such that requirements that are
properly established under another EPA
program—regardless of when they are
established—define the applicable
requirements that must be included in
a title V permit. To the extent the EPA
has addressed timing considerations, is
has been to ensure that the definition of
‘‘applicable requirement’’ is
overinclusive with respect to
requirements that have already been
promulgated but are not yet effective.
See 40 CFR 70.2 (definition of
‘‘applicable requirement’’). This
alternative approach would require the
opposite position, excluding recent NSR
permitting decisions from establishing
applicable requirements just because
they were undertaken more recently.
That position would conflict with the
EPA’s treatment of applicable
requirements under all other types of
CAA programs. It is not clear to the EPA
that such an approach is compatible
with the structure and purpose of the
title V program.
Further information explaining why
the EPA does not prefer this alternative
is included in section IV.B.4. of this
preamble (which explains why the
EPA’s approach applies the same
regardless of when an NSR permit was
issued).
2. Using Title V To Review Issues
Related to Major NSR Applicability
The second alternative approach
under consideration would involve
using the title V permitting process to
review issues related to major NSR
applicability (i.e., whether a source
should have received a major NSR
permit instead of a minor NSR permit).
However, the EPA would not review
challenges to other types of substantive
NSR issues (e.g., BACT determinations
or the results of modeling). This
alternative would apply the same
regardless of the timing of NSR permit
issuance and title V permit issuance.
This alternative approach would
provide some of the same policy
benefits as the EPA’s proposed
approach, in that it would avoid using
title V to reevaluate the content of NSR
permits (e.g., whether permit limits
correctly reflect BACT). However, given
that major NSR applicability questions
are among the most complicated NSRrelated issues to address, this approach
would do little to resolve the resourcerelated and practical problems that
partly motivated the EPA’s current (and
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proposed) approach. For the reasons
discussed in section IV.E.4.b. of this
preamble, the EPA does not consider the
title V permitting process well-suited to
resolving these complex questions
involving major NSR applicability.
One might argue that this alternative
approach is consistent with the view
that the title V process can be used to
determine which requirements are
applicable to a source, even if it should
not be used to second-guess the content
of such requirements.152 However,
where an NSR applicability
determination has already been made
through the NSR process and a minor
NSR permit is issued, any further action
through title V related to major NSR
applicability would likely require
changes to emissions limits and other
applicable requirements established
through that NSR process. In other
words, using title V to revisit NSR
applicability questions would
inherently upset not only the NSR
applicability decisions, but also NSR
permit content decisions. The EPA does
not view this result as consistent with
the key function of title V.
Further information explaining why
the EPA does not prefer this alternative
is included in section IV.B.3. of this
preamble (which contains the EPA’s
justification for applying its approach
uniformly regardless of the type of
substantive NSR requirements at issue)
and section IV.E.4.a. of this preamble
(which explains why the EPA’s
proposed approach is more consistent
wih how applicability questions are
treated with respect to other CAA
programs).
3. Using Title V To Review
Contemporaneous or Recent NSR
Permitting Decisions Related to Major
NSR Applicability
The third and final alternative
approach under consideration would
involve using title V to review
contemporaneous or recent NSR
permitting decisions related to major
NSR applicability, but not any older
NSR decisions or any NSR decisions
related to NSR permit content. This
approach is a combination of the
preceding two alternatives, and is
consequently narrower than either two
alternatives—that is, it would involve
the use of title V to review NSR issues
in fewer situations. See the preceding
subsections for considerations relevant
to this alternative.
152 This line of reasoning, based on certain
statements made when the EPA promulgated the
part 70 rules, featured in the Tenth Circuit’s
interpretation of the current regulatory definition of
‘‘applicable requirement.’’ See Sierra Club v. EPA,
964 F.3d at 893–895.
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V. The General Duty Clause Concerning
the Prevention of Accidental Releases
of Hazardous Substances
A. Background and Summary of
Proposed Action
On two occasions in recent years, the
EPA received title V petitions requesting
that individual title V permits include
requirements designed to assure
compliance with the ‘‘General Duty
Clause’’ of CAA 112(r)(1), which
concerns the prevention of accidental
releases of hazardous substances. These
petitions were premised upon the
suggestion that the General Duty Clause
is an ‘‘applicable requirement’’ for title
V purposes. However, as the EPA
explained in the Hazlehurst and OwensBrockway Orders denying both of these
petitions, the General Duty Clause is not
an applicable requirement for title V.153
The basis for this position is fully
explained in the EPA’s Hazlehurst and
Owens-Brockway Orders. However, for
the sake of transparency, section V.B. of
this preamble restates salient points
from those orders.
Moreover, although the current
definition of ‘‘applicable requirement’’
in the EPA’s part 70 and part 71
regulations may reasonably be read to
exclude requirements of the General
Duty Clause, the EPA intends to provide
further clarity to the public by making
this exclusion explicit in the EPA’s
regulations.
This proposed change to the rules is
not expected to have any impacts on
state permitting authorities, regulated
entities, the public, or other
stakeholders, as it simply clarifies an
element of the title V program that has
been understood and implemented in
the same way since the inception of the
title V program in the early 1990s.
This proposed change is distinct and
severable from the proposed changes
related to the interface between title V
permits and NSR permits, discussed in
section IV. of this preamble.
B. Rationale for Proposed Action
1. Statutory Provisions
The General Duty Clause provides:
The owners and operators of stationary
sources producing, processing, handling or
storing such substances have a general duty
in the same manner and to the same extent
as section 654 of title 29 to identify hazards
which may result from such releases using
appropriate hazard assessment techniques, to
design and maintain a safe facility taking
153 In the Matter of Owens-Brockway Glass
Container Inc., Order on Petition No. X–2020–2 at
21–28 (May 10, 2021) (Owens-Brockway Order); In
the Matter of Hazlehurst Wood Pellets, LLC, Order
on Petition No. IV–2020–5 at 7–14 (Dec. 31, 2020)
(Hazlehurst Order).
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such steps as are necessary to prevent
releases, and to minimize the consequences
of accidental releases which do occur. For
purposes of this paragraph, the provisions of
section 7604 of this title shall not be
available to any person or otherwise be
construed to be applicable to this paragraph.
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42 U.S.C. 7412(r)(1) (emphasis added).
The last sentence contains a key
limitation of the General Duty Clause: it
means that citizen suits under CAA
section 304 shall not be available to
enforce the requirements of the General
Duty Clause; instead, this clause may
only be enforced by the EPA under CAA
section 113.
This enforcement prohibition also
effectively restricts the implementation
of the General Duty Clause requirements
through title V permitting. The CAA
provides that all standards and
limitations in title V permits are
enforceable by citizens under section
304.154 Thus, if the requirements of the
General Duty Clause were included in
title V permits, they would ostensibly be
enforceable through enforcement of the
title V permit itself. However, this
would be in direct conflict with the
unambiguous statutory prohibition on
citizen enforcement of the General Duty
Clause under section 304.155 To avoid
this conflict, the General Duty Clause
must not be considered an ‘‘applicable
requirement’’ that is implemented
through title V permitting.
Other text within the General Duty
Clause further evinces congressional
intent that the General Duty Clause
would not be implemented through
permitting. The statute indicates that
the CAA section 112(r)(1) general duty
shall be ‘‘in the same manner and to the
same extent as section 654 of title 29’’—
that is, the general duty clause within
the Occupational Safety and Health Act
(OSH Act). The OSH Act provision,
enacted in 1970, is not implemented
through site-specific permits, nor are
citizen suits authorized to enforce it.
See generally 29 U.S.C. 651–678. If
Congress had intended the CAA General
154 This is because any person may, under CAA
section 304(a)(1), bring a suit ‘‘against any person
. . . who is alleged to have violated . . . or be in
violation of (A) an emission standard or limitation
under this chapter . . . .’’ In turn, ‘‘emission
standard or limitation’’ is defined to include, inter
alia, ‘‘any other standard, limitation, or schedule
established under any permit issued pursuant to
subchapter V of this chapter . . . .’’ 42 U.S.C.
7604(f)(4); see also 40 CFR 70.6(b)(1); see United
States v. Gonzales, 520 U.S. 1, 5 (1997). As
discussed later, the EPA’s regulations contain a
limited exception to this principle, which is not
applicable to the General Duty Clause.
155 The specific prohibition on enforcement of the
General Duty Clause by citizen suit must govern
over the general enforceability of title V permits.
See Nitro-Lift Technologies L.L.C. v. Howard, 568
U.S. 17, 21 (2012).
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Duty clause to be implemented in a
fundamentally different manner than
the OSH Act provision on which it was
explicitly modeled—e.g., through a
permitting program that could be
enforced by citizens—it could have
specifically said so. However, instead,
Congress precluded citizen enforcement
under the CAA General Duty Clause,
and nowhere did Congress imply that it
would be implemented through
permitting.
Additionally, the CAA requires that
states have the authority to enforce title
V permits in order to receive EPA
approval of their permitting programs.
42 U.S.C. 7661a(b)(5); see also 40 CFR
70.4(b)(3). However, the CAA General
Duty Clause is enforceable only by the
federal government. The EPA has not
delegated authority to implement or
enforce the General Duty Clause to state
or local air agencies.156 Were the
requirements of the General Duty Clause
considered ‘‘applicable requirements’’
to be included within individual title V
permits, states would be unable to
enforce these new permit provisions,
which would contradict CAA section
502(b)(5). This would mean that all state
and local title V programs would be
fundamentally flawed—an absurd result
Congress could not have intended.
Notably, each of the relevant statutory
provisions discussed earlier—the
General Duty Clause of section 112(r)(1),
the relevant portion of section 304
authorizing citizen suits to enforce title
V permit terms, and the entirety of title
V—were promulgated in the same
legislative package: the 1990 CAA
Amendments. Accordingly, the
statutory conflict between these
provisions is best understood as
reflecting an intentional choice by
Congress to fundamentally distinguish
the General Duty Clause in section
112(r)(1) from other CAA requirements
that would be implemented through the
title V permitting program.157
156 Because
CAA section 304 is the only federal
authority through which citizens and state or local
air agencies could enforce this type of CAA
requirement, neither citizens nor state and local air
agencies may enforce the General Duty Clause
under the CAA. Additionally, some states are
prohibited by state law from having general duty
authorities. 58 FR 62262, 62278 (Nov. 26, 1993).
157 See Maracich v. Spears, 570 U.S. 48, 65 (2013)
(‘‘It is necessary and required that an interpretation
of a phrase of uncertain reach is not confined to a
single sentence when the text of the whole statute
gives instruction as to its meaning.’’); see also
Erlenbaugh v. United States, 409 U.S. 239, 243–45
(1972) (‘‘[In pari materia] is but a logical extension
of the principle that individual sections of a single
statute should be construed together . . . . [T]he
rule’s application certainly makes the most sense
when the statutes were enacted by the same
legislative body at the same time.’’); United States
v. Ron Pair Enterprises, 489 U.S. 235, 242 (1989)
(‘‘The plain meaning of legislation should be
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1185
2. Regulatory Provisions
Following the statutory text, the
EPA’s regulations provide: ‘‘All terms
and conditions in a part 70 permit . . .
are enforceable by the Administrator
and citizens under the Act.’’ 40 CFR
70.6(b)(1).158 Additionally, in order to
be approvable by the EPA, state
programs under part 70 must
demonstrate authority to enforce
permits. 40 CFR 70.4(b)(3)(vii). Neither
of these regulatory requirements are
compatible with the view that the
General Duty Clause—which is
enforceable only by the EPA—should be
included in title V permits.
The EPA must read its regulations in
a manner consistent with the statute. As
explained in the Hazlehurst and OwensBrockway petition orders, the existing
definition of ‘‘applicable requirement’’
can reasonably be read to exclude the
General Duty Clause of CAA section
112(r)(1).159 Nonetheless, in order to
provide maximum clarity to the public,
the EPA is proposing to revise the
definition of ‘‘applicable requirement’’
in 40 CFR 70.1 and 71.2 to make this
more explicit.
3. EPA Guidance and Implementation
Excluding the General Duty Clause
from the regulatory definition of
‘‘applicable requirement’’ is consistent
with how the EPA has described and
implemented both the title V and 112(r)
programs since their inception in the
early 1990s.160 In various rulemaking
actions, the EPA has consistently
indicated that the only applicable
requirements related to 112(r) that need
to be satisfied through title V are those
related to section 112(r)(7) risk
management plans under 40 CFR part
68. See, e.g., 57 FR at 32275–76; 60 FR
13526, 13526, 13535–36 (Mar. 13, 1995);
61 FR 31668, 31688–89 (June 20,
conclusive, except in the rare cases in which the
literal application of a statute will produce a result
demonstrably at odds with the intentions of its
drafters.’’ (internal quotation omitted)).
158 This principle is subject to one exception:
certain terms in a title V permit that are not based
on the CAA may be labeled as ‘‘state-only’’
requirements that are not federally enforceable or
enforceable by citizens through section 304. 40 CFR
70.6(b)(2). The General Duty Clause, which is
contained within the CAA, is not eligible for this
treatment. Beyond this limited exception, neither
the statute nor regulations contemplate other means
by which the enforceability of title V permit terms
could be restricted in a manner consistent with the
limitations in the General Duty Clause discussed
earlier.
159 See Hazlehurst Order at 9–10; OwensBrockway Order at 23–24.
160 The EPA understands that most, and perhaps
all, permitting authorities implementing part 70
programs have historically followed the same view.
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1996).161 The EPA has made similar
determinations in early title V petition
orders. For example, in the 1997
Shintech I Order, the EPA concluded
that ‘‘compliance with the provisions of
40 CFR 68.215 . . . is sufficient to
satisfy the legal obligations of section
112(r) for purposes of part 70.’’ 162 The
EPA therefore specifically rejected the
petitioners’ request for additional
permit terms related to section 112(r)(l),
while noting the independent
enforceability of the General Duty
Clause.163 These principles hold true
regardless of whether a source is subject
to risk management plan requirements
under part 68. For example, in the 2001
Pencor-Masada I Order, the EPA
applied similar principles to a source
that was not subject to part 68. There,
the EPA reiterated that a source’s
obligations under the General Duty
Clause are unaffected by compliance
with part 68 or the terms of a source’s
title V permit.164 The EPA has made
similar statements concerning title V
161 This proposed rule does not affect the risk
management plan program under section 112(r)(7)
or part 68 in any way. However, the limited
intersection between section 112(r)(7) risk
management plans and title V permits provides
context for the EPA’s position on the section
112(r)(1) General Duty Clause. The EPA has,
through rulemaking, limited the extent to which
even the 112(r)(7)-related ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ would be implemented through title
V. Specifically, when the EPA promulgated the
final part 68 risk management plan rules in 1996,
the agency determined that ‘‘generic terms in [title
V] permits and certain minimal oversight activities’’
would assure compliance with risk management
plan requirements. 61 FR at 31689; see also 57 FR
at 32275 (‘‘The EPA recognizes, however, that an
RMP is not in any sense a ‘permit’ to release
substances addressed therein, and that section
112(r) was not intended to be primarily
implemented or enforced through title V.’’ (citing
42 U.S.C. 7412(r)(7)(F)). For sources subject to both
part 68 and title V, these permit content and state
oversight requirements are codified at 40 CFR
68.215. For additional information concerning the
limited intersection between risk management
plans and title V permits, see In the Matter of
Newark Bay, Order on Petition No. II–2019–4 at 9–
16 (Aug. 16, 2019). Requiring title V permits to
include permit terms related to the General Duty
Clause that are even more specific than those the
EPA has established for risk management plans
would go well beyond the EPA’s long-held view of
the scope of section 112(r)-related ‘‘applicable
requirements’’ that would be implemented through
title V.
162 In the Matter of Shintech Inc., PVC Plant,
Order on Petition, 12 (Sept. 10, 1997).
163 Specifically, the EPA emphasized that
‘‘compliance with the requirements of part 68 does
not relieve Shintech of its legal obligation to meet
the general duty requirements of section 112(r)(1)
of the Act . . . . Section 112(r)(1) remains a selfimplementing requirement of the Act, and EPA
expects and requires all covered sources to comply
with the general duty provisions of 112(r)(1).’’
Shintech I Order at 12 n.9. The EPA also explained
that it would be improper to shield a source from
liability under the General Duty Clause using a title
V permit shield. Id.
164 See Pencor-Masada I Order at 31–32 n.38.
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and CAA section 112(r) in other
guidance documents.165
Similar to the EPA’s title V guidance,
the EPA’s longstanding guidance
concerning the implementation of the
General Duty Clause similarly suggests
that the General Duty Clause is not to be
implemented through title V. Notably,
in the EPA’s comprehensive Guidance
for Implementation of the General Duty
Clause (‘‘GDC Guidance’’),166 the EPA
details the mechanisms through which
the General Duty Clause would be
implemented and enforced, and never
once mentions permitting as an
available mechanism.
4. Additional Policy Considerations
If the EPA were to consider the
General Duty Clause an applicable
requirement with which title V permit
must assure compliance, this would
have significant programmatic impacts,
upsetting the administration of both the
title V and General Duty Clause
programs nationwide. For example, The
EPA expects that the majority of major
sources subject to the title V program
may, at some time or another, also have
obligations under the General Duty
Clause. If the General Duty Clause was
considered an applicable requirement,
thousands of title V permits nationwide
would need to be reopened to include
conditions necessary to identify and
assure compliance with the clause. Such
an enormous resource burden on the
permitting authorities that implement
the title V program would hardly make
sense given that these same permitting
authorities cannot enforce the General
Duty Clause.167 This is clearly not an
outcome that either Congress or the EPA
envisioned when establishing these two
programs.168
Other practical concerns—closely
related to the legal issues discussed
165 See, e.g., Memorandum, Title V Program
Approval Criteria for Section 112 Activities (April
13, 1993), available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/
production/files/2015-08/documents/t5-112.pdf;
Memorandum, Relationship between the Part 70
Operating Permit Program and Section 112(r) (June
24, 1994), available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/
production/files/2015-08/documents/opp112r.pdf.
166 Guidance for Implementation of the General
Duty Clause, Clean Air Act Section 112(r)(1), EPA
550–B00–002 (May 2000), available at https://
www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/documents/
gendutyclause-rpt.pdf.
167 No statutory or regulatory mechanism
currently exists for the EPA to establish General
Duty Clause requirements for all title V sources
nationwide. Even if it did, implementation of any
such mechanism this would present an even greater
resource issue for the EPA, and would run against
Congress’s intent that the title V program is to be
primarily implemented by the states, not the EPA.
See 42 U.S.C. 7661a; see, e.g., Env’t Integrity Project,
969 F.3d at 536, 545.
168 The EPA, like Congress, does not ‘‘hide
elephants in mouseholes.’’ See Whitman v. Am.
Trucking Ass’ns, 531 U.S. 457, 468 (2001).
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previously—weigh against
implementing the General Duty Clause
through title V. For example, how could
a title V permit containing General Duty
Clause requirements be structured in
order to avoid the statutory constraints
on enforcement discussed earlier?
Neither the Act nor the EPA’s
regulations provide that certain portions
of the title V permit can be labeled
‘‘enforceable only by the EPA.’’ To the
contrary, all federally-enforceable
permit terms must necessarily be
enforceable by the state agencies issuing
the permits as well as the public at
large. See 42 U.S.C. 7604(a)(1), (f)(4),
7661a(b)(5)(E), 7661c(c); 40 CFR
70.4(b)(3)(vii), 70.6(b)(1). Additionally,
if the General Duty Clause were
considered an ‘‘applicable requirement’’
that states have no authority to enforce,
the EPA could face pressure to issue
notices of deficiency to all 117 state,
local, and Tribal permitting authorities
nationwide for their failure to enforce
all aspects of the title V program. See 40
CFR 70.10(b), (c)(1), Appx A. Moreover,
the EPA could face pressure to take over
the issuance of all title V permits, or to
issue partial permits to nearly every title
V source to cover these sources’ General
Duty Clause obligations. See 40 CFR
70.10(b)(2)(iii); see also 40 CFR part 71.
These are clearly not reasonable
propositions,169 but nonetheless ones
that could inevitably follow if the EPA
were to consider the General Duty
Clause an ‘‘applicable requirement’’ for
title V purposes.
In addition to these untenable impacts
to title V permitting, determining that
the General Duty Clause must be
included in title V permits would
fundamentally alter the EPA’s
implementation and enforcement of the
General Duty Clause itself. The EPA has
historically described the General Duty
Clause as a ‘‘self-executing
requirement.’’ 61 FR 31668, 31680 (June
20, 1996).170 This means, quite simply,
169 Such outcomes would be contrary to
congressional intent for the title V program to be
primarily administered by states.
170 The EPA has also described the General Duty
Clause as a ‘‘self-enabling’’ or ‘‘self-implementing’’
requirement. See Letter from Mathy Stanislaus,
Assistant Administrator, EPA Office of Solid Waste
and Emergency Response, to Hon. Mike Pompeo,
U.S. House of Representatives (Aug. 1, 2013))
(Stanislaus-Pompeo Letter); Owens-Brockway Order
at 27; Hazlehurst Order at 12; Pencor-Masada I
Order at 32 n.38; Shintech I Order at 12 n.9. As
discussed in section III.E. of this preamble, the EPA
has also used the term ‘‘self-implementing’’ to refer
to certain types of requirements in other CAA
programs, including NSPS and NESHAP standards.
The intent of this phrase is slightly different in the
context of the General Duty Clause than in the
context of NSPS and NESHAP standards. The
requirements of the General Duty Clause flow
directly from the statute and are implemented in
the absence of implementing regulations. By
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that the General Duty Clause is meant to
be implemented and enforced
independently as a direct requirement
of the CAA, beyond the strictures of any
set of regulations or the title V
permitting program.
Although the title V permitting
program offers clear benefits for
identifying and assuring compliance
with other types of more typical
emission standard-based requirements
under regulations promulgated under
the CAA, the title V program is a
particularly poor fit for implementing
the General Duty Clause. The General
Duty Clause is, as its name suggests, a
general duty. Identifying specific
obligations within each source’s title V
permit would conflict with the notion of
a general duty. Moreover, determining
whether an individual source has
satisfied this general duty is highly
circumstance-specific. The EPA
interprets the General Duty Clause to
generally require owners and operators
to adhere to recognized industry
practices and standards in addition to
any applicable government regulations.
GDC Guidance at 2, 11–12. However,
there may be situations where
circumstances make a particular
industry standard or municipal code
inapplicable, unsuitable, or insufficient
for a given source, and there may be
other ways to abate hazards than those
listed in a particular industry standard
or municipal code. Each source’s
obligations are dependent on the
detailed knowledge of each individual
source. Even in the absence of an
industry standard, a source’s knowledge
of a potential hazard and a feasible
means to abate it is relevant to its
general duty under CAA section
112(r)(1). See GDC Guidance at 12.
Should a source learn of a hazard and
a feasible means to abate it after its
permit is written, the General Duty
Clause would ordinarily hold the source
responsible for its knowledge. Given
that the factual circumstances and
knowledge at the source, as well as any
relevant industry guidelines, can change
frequently, the source’s obligation under
the General Duty Clause are necessarily
fluid. If General Duty Clause obligations
were to be included in title V permits
as applicable requirements, the relevant
permit terms would need to be
constantly updated to accurately reflect
a source’s obligations. Overall,
identifying specific General Duty Clause
requirements would not only curtail the
contrast, emission standards like NSPS or NESHAP
standards are generally ‘‘self-implementing’’ once
regulations are promulgated. The similarity is that
in both situations, the self-implementing
requirements are enforceable regardless of whether
they are reflected in a title V permit.
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flexibilities rightly available to a source,
but it would also undermine the General
Duty Clause by limiting the scope of a
source’s potential obligations to those
specific requirements contained in the
permit.171 For these reasons, the EPA
has rejected requests to define and
restrict General Duty Clause obligations
through rulemaking.172 It would be
similarly inappropriate to define and
restrict these obligations through title V
permit terms.
In summary, the CAA specifically
prohibits the General Duty Clause from
being enforced through the citizen suit
provision in section 304 that is available
for all standards and limitations
included in title V permits. Therefore,
the EPA must draft and interpret its
regulations such that the General Duty
Clause is not an applicable requirement
for purposes of title V permitting.
Although the current part 70 and 71
regulations can be interpreted as
consistent with this position, the EPA
proposes to amend the regulations to
make this more explicit. This change is
consistent with the EPA’s
implementation of both the title V and
General Duty Clause programs since
their inception in the early 1990s.
Moreover, this proposed amendment is
consistent with sound policy and avoids
nationwide programmatic impacts that
would follow if the EPA attempted to
implement the General Duty Clause
through title V.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Additional information about these
statutes and Executive Orders can be
found at https://www.epa.gov/lawsregulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review, Executive Order
13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review, and Executive Order
14094: Modernizing Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant
regulatory action as defined in
Executive Order 12866, as amended by
Executive Order 14094, and was
therefore not subject to a requirement
for Executive Order 12866 review.
171 Were the General Duty Clause treated as a
permit term, a source could argue it was shielded
from its duty by the terms of the permit for hazards
identified after the permit was issued. The potential
for sources to request a title V permit shield to
cover General Duty Clause obligations would
exacerbate these concerns, notwithstanding that
such a permit shield would not be appropriate, as
the EPA has previously explained. See Shintech I
Order at 12 n.9.
172 E.g., Stanislaus-Pompeo Letter.
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B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose any new
information collection burden under the
PRA. OMB has previously approved the
information collection activities
contained in the existing regulations
and has assigned OMB control numbers
2060–0243 (for the part 70 state
operating permit programs) and 2060–
0336 (for the part 71 federal operating
permit program). The clarifications to
the regulations proposed in this action
do not directly change any of the
information collection activities
previously approved by OMB. To the
extent that the proposed action impacts
permitting authorities or permittees, any
impacts would fall under, and
potentially reduce the burden of
completing, the activities already
accounted for in the supporting
statement for these information
collection requests.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA. This action will not
directly impose any requirements on
small entities. This proposed rule
primarily concerns the EPA’s exercise of
the agency’s oversight obligations when
reviewing title V permits issued by
state, local, and Tribal permitting
authorities, when reviewing title V
petitions submitted by any person, and
when issuing title V permits under 40
CFR part 71. This action would not
directly impose any requirements on the
entities involved in these processes
(including permitting authorities,
permittees, and members of the public).
Although those entities could
eventually be affected by case-by-case
decisions made when the EPA exercises
its oversight and/or permitting
authorities, the economic impact of any
such future decisions on any small
entities is expected to be minimal and
not adverse. For example, the proposed
rule would reduce uncertainty, and
potentially cost, for small entities that
obtain both NSR and title V permits by
clarifying the limited circumstances
under which NSR permitting decisions
would be subject to additional EPA
scrutiny through the title V permitting
process.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does
not significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. The action imposes no
enforceable duty on any state, local or
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Tribal governments, or the private
sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial
direct effect on the states, on the
relationship between the national
government and the states, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Additional
information about how this action could
indirectly impact states is included in
section IV.D.2. of this preamble.
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F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action has Tribal implications.
However, it will neither impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
federally recognized Tribal
governments, nor preempt Tribal law.
One Tribal government (the Southern
Ute Indian Tribe) currently administers
an approved part 70 operating permit
program, and one Tribal government
(the Navajo Nation) currently
administers a part 71 operating permit
program pursuant to a delegation
agreement with the EPA. This
rulemaking does not require those
entities to take any specific actions, as
described in section IV.D.2. of this
preamble. The EPA informally engaged
with Tribal officials under the EPA
Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribes early in
the process of developing this regulation
to permit them to have meaningful and
timely input into its development.
Specifically, prior to issuing this
proposed rule, the EPA conducted
outreach with Tribal representatives
through a call with the National Tribal
Air Association. Further, the Agency
offered to further discuss this action
with the Southern Ute Indian Tribe and
Navajo Nation. The EPA also solicits
comment from affected Tribal
governments on the implications of this
rulemaking.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order
13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern
environmental health or safety risks that
EPA has reason to believe may
disproportionately affect children, per
the definition of ‘‘covered regulatory
action’’ in section 2–202 of the
Executive Order.
Therefore, this action is not subject to
Executive Order 13045 because it does
not concern an environmental health
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risk or safety risk. Since this action does
not concern human health, the EPA’s
Policy on Children’s Health also does
not apply.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13211, because it is not a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations and Executive
Order 14096: Revitalizing Our Nation’s
Commitment to Environmental Justice
for All
The EPA finds that it is not
practicable to assess whether the human
health or environmental conditions that
exist prior to this action result in
disproportionate and adverse effects on
communities with environmental justice
concerns. The issues addressed in this
rulemaking neither directly impact the
levels of pollution that regulated entities
subject to title V and/or NSR permitting
may emit, nor the distribution of such
regulated entities relative to
communities with environmental justice
interests. Rather, the issues in this rule
are primarily procedural and apply
uniformly across the nation.
This proposed rule seeks to codify the
EPA’s existing positions, so impacts are
expected to be generally minimal across
the board. To the extent this action may
impact communities with
environmental justice concerns, such
impacts are expected to mirror those
affecting the public at large. These
expected impacts on the public are
explained in section IV.D.4. of this
preamble. In summary, this rule will
provide more clarity to the public about
the most appropriate, and most
effective, avenues in which they can
raise concerns with different types of
permitting decisions. It will also
incentivize states to offer more
meaningful public engagement on NSR
permitting decisions.
The EPA provided pre-proposal
outreach to community and
environmental justice groups during a
regularly scheduled National
Environmental Justice Community
Engagement teleconference and plans to
offer more detailed outreach after this
proposal is published.
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VII. Statutory Authority
The statutory authority for this action
is provided by 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
More specifically, CAA sections 502(b)
and 502(d)(3), 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b) &
(d)(3), which direct the Administrator of
the EPA to promulgate regulations
establishing state operating permit
programs and give the Administrator the
authority to establish a federal operating
permit program. Additionally, the
Administrator determines that this
proposed action is subject to the
provisions of CAA section 307(d),
which establish procedural
requirements specific to rulemaking
under the CAA. CAA section
307(d)(1)(V) provides that the
provisions of CAA section 307(d) apply
to ‘‘such other actions as the
Administrator may determine.’’ 42
U.S.C. 7607(d)(1)(V).
List of Subjects
40 CFR Part 70
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
40 CFR Part 71
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the EPA proposes to amend
40 CFR parts 70 and 71 as follows:
PART 70—STATE OPERATING PERMIT
PROGRAMS
1. The authority citation for part 70
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
2. Amend § 70.2 by revising
paragraphs (1), (2), and (4) for the
definition ‘‘Applicable requirement’’ to
read as follows:
■
§ 70.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Applicable requirement * * *
(1) Any standard or other requirement
provided for in the applicable
implementation plan approved or
promulgated by EPA through
rulemaking under title I of the Act that
implements the relevant requirements of
the Act, including any revisions to that
plan promulgated in part 52 of this
chapter, provided that where a
preconstruction permit described in
paragraph (2) of this definition is issued
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with public notice and the opportunity
for comment and judicial review, the
terms and conditions of such a permit
establish and define, for purposes of this
paragraph, the applicable requirements
of the implementation plan that apply to
the activities authorized by such a
preconstruction permit;
(2) Any term or condition of any
preconstruction permits issued pursuant
to regulations approved or promulgated
through rulemaking under title I,
including parts C or D or section
110(a)(2)(C), of the Act;
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Any standard or other requirement
under section 112 of the Act, including
any requirement concerning accident
prevention under section 112(r)(7) of the
Act, but not including any requirement
under section 112(r)(1) of the Act;
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 70.7 by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (d)(1)(iv);
■ b. Removing and reserving paragraph
(d)(1)(v); and
■ c. Removing paragraph (d)(4).
The revision reads as follows:
§ 70.7 Permit issuance, renewal,
reopenings, and revisions.
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) Allows for a change in ownership
or operational control of a source where
the permitting authority determines that
no other change in the permit is
necessary, provided that a written
agreement containing a specific date for
transfer of permit responsibility,
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*
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coverage, and liability between the
current and new permittee has been
submitted to the permitting authority; or
(v) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
PART 71—FEDERAL OPERATING
PERMIT PROGRAMS
4. The authority citation for part 71
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
5. Amend § 71.2 by revising
paragraphs (1), (2), and (4) for the
definition ‘‘Applicable requirement’’ to
read as follows:
■
§ 71.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Applicable requirement * * *
(1) Any standard or other requirement
provided for in the applicable
implementation plan approved or
promulgated by EPA through
rulemaking under title I of the Act that
implements the relevant requirements of
the Act, including any revisions to that
plan promulgated in part 52 of this
chapter, provided that where a
preconstruction permit described in
paragraph (2) of this definition is issued
with public notice and the opportunity
for comment and judicial review, the
terms and conditions of such a permit
establish and define, for purposes of this
paragraph, the applicable requirements
of the implementation plan that apply to
the activities authorized by such a
preconstruction permit;
(2) Any term or condition of any
preconstruction permits issued pursuant
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
1189
to regulations approved or promulgated
through rulemaking under title I,
including parts C or D or section
110(a)(2)(C), of the Act;
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Any standard or other requirement
under section 112 of the Act, including
any requirement concerning accident
prevention under section 112(r)(7) of the
Act, but not including any requirement
under section 112(r)(1) of the Act;
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. Amend § 71.7 by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (d)(1)(iv);
■ b. Removing and reserving paragraph
(d)(1)(v); and
■ c. Removing paragraph (d)(4).
The revision reads as follows:
§ 71.7 Permit issuance, renewal,
reopenings, and revisions.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) Allows for a change in ownership
or operational control of a source where
the permitting authority determines that
no other change in the permit is
necessary, provided that a written
agreement containing a specific date for
transfer of permit responsibility,
coverage, and liability between the
current and new permittee has been
submitted to the permitting authority; or
(v) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2023–27759 Filed 1–8–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
E:\FR\FM\09JAP2.SGM
09JAP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 6 (Tuesday, January 9, 2024)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 1150-1189]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-27759]
[[Page 1149]]
Vol. 89
Tuesday,
No. 6
January 9, 2024
Part II
Environmental Protection Agency
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40 CFR Parts 70 and 71
Clarifying the Scope of ``Applicable Requirements'' Under State
Operating Permit Programs and the Federal Operating Permit Program;
Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 89 , No. 6 / Tuesday, January 9, 2024 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 1150]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 70 and 71
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2023-0401; FRL-9118-01-OAR]
RIN 2060-AV61
Clarifying the Scope of ``Applicable Requirements'' Under State
Operating Permit Programs and the Federal Operating Permit Program
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposes to update
its title V operating permit program regulations to more clearly
reflect the EPA's existing interpretations and policies concerning when
and whether ``applicable requirements'' established in other Clean Air
Act (CAA or the Act) programs should be reviewed, modified, and/or
implemented through the title V operating permits program.
Specifically, this action clarifies the limited situations in which
requirements under the New Source Review (NSR) preconstruction
permitting program would be reviewed using the EPA's unique title V
oversight authorities. Additionally, this action clarifies that
requirements related to an owner or operator's general duty to prevent
accidental releases of hazardous substances are not ``applicable
requirements'' for title V purposes and are not implemented through
title V.
DATES: Comments: Comments must be received on or before March 11, 2024.
Public hearing: If anyone contacts the EPA requesting a public hearing
by January 15, 2024, the EPA will hold a virtual public hearing. Please
refer to the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for additional
information on requesting and registering for a public hearing.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2023-0401, by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov
(our preferred method). Follow the online instructions for submitting
comments.
Email: [email protected]. Include Docket ID No. EPA-
HQ-OAR-2023-0401 in the subject line of the message.
Fax: (202) 566-9744. Attention Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-
2023-0401.
Mail: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA Docket
Center, OAR Docket, Mail Code 28221T, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20460.
Hand Delivery or Courier: EPA Docket Center, WJC West
Building, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20004.
The Docket Center's hours of operations are 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.,
Monday-Friday (except Federal Holidays).
Instructions: All submissions received must include the Docket ID
No. for this rulemaking. Comments received may be posted without change
to https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information
provided. For detailed instructions on sending comments and additional
information on the rulemaking process, see the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Matthew Spangler, Air Quality
Policy Division, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards (C504-
05), Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC;
telephone number: (919) 541-0327; email address:
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Information presented in this document
is organized as follows:
I. Public Participation in This Proposed Rulemaking
A. Does this action apply to me?
B. Where can I get a copy of this document and other related
information?
C. What should I consider as I prepare my comments?
D. How do I request and participate in a virtual public hearing?
II. Purpose of This Regulatory Action
III. Background on Title V Operating Permits and CAA ``Applicable
Requirements''
A. The Title V Permitting Process, Public Participation, and the
EPA's Oversight Role
B. Purpose and Function of Title V Permits
C. Regulatory Definition of ``Applicable Requirements''
D. Requirements That Are Not ``Applicable Requirements'' for
Purposes of Title V Permitting
E. Self-Implementing Applicable Requirements (e.g., NSPS,
NESHAP)
F. Requirements Defined Through Title V Permitting
G. Applicable Requirements Related to the NAAQS and SIPs
IV. Interface Between NSR and Title V Permitting
A. Background: Historical and Current EPA Positions
B. Proposed Action
C. Interaction With NSR Permitting, Oversight, and Enforcement
D. Impacts of Proposed Action
E. Rationale for Proposed Action
F. Alternative Approaches
V. The General Duty Clause Concerning the Prevention of Accidental
Releases of Hazardous Substances
A. Background and Summary of Proposed Action
B. Rationale for Proposed Action
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review,
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,
and Executive Order 14094: Modernizing Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations and Executive Order 14096: Revitalizing Our Nation's
Commitment to Environmental Justice for All
VII. Statutory Authority
I. Public Participation in This Proposed Rulemaking
A. Does this action apply to me?
Entities potentially affected by this proposed rulemaking include
state, local, and Tribal air pollution control agencies that administer
title V operating permit programs (``permitting authorities''), owners
and operators of emissions sources in all industry groups who hold or
apply for title V operating permits, and any person or group who
participates in the title V permitting process.
B. Where can I get a copy of this document and other related
information?
The EPA has established a docket for this rulemaking under Docket
ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2023-0401. All documents in the docket pertaining to
this action are listed on the https://www.regulations.gov website.
Although listed in the index, some information may not be publicly
available, e.g., Confidential Business Information (CBI), Proprietary
Business Information (PBI), or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted
material, is not placed on the internet and may be viewed with prior
arrangement with the EPA Docket Center. In addition to being available
in the docket, an electronic copy of this Federal Register document
will be posted at https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits/current-regulations-and-regulatory-actions.
[[Page 1151]]
Additionally, a number of documents that are relevant to this proposed
action--in particular, prior EPA orders responding to petitions
challenging individual title V permits--are available through the EPA's
website at https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits/title-v-petition-database.
C. What should I consider as I prepare my comments?
Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2023-
0401, at https://www.regulations.gov (our preferred method), or the
other methods identified in the ADDRESSES section. Once submitted,
comments cannot be edited or removed from the docket. The EPA may
publish any comment received to its public docket.
Do not submit information containing CBI to the EPA through https://www.regulations.gov. Clearly mark the part or all of the information
that you claim to be CBI. For CBI information on any digital storage
media that you mail to the EPA, mark the outside of the digital storage
media as CBI and then identify electronically within the digital
storage media the specific information that is claimed as CBI. In
addition to one complete version of the comments that includes
information claimed as CBI, you must submit a copy of the comments that
does not contain the information claimed as CBI directly to the public
docket through the procedures outlined in Instructions. If you submit
any digital storage media that does not contain CBI, mark the outside
of the digital storage media clearly that it does not contain CBI.
Information not marked as CBI will be included in the public docket and
the EPA's electronic public docket without prior notice. Information
marked as CBI will not be disclosed except in accordance with
procedures set forth in 40 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) part 2.
Our preferred method to receive CBI is for it to be transmitted
electronically using email attachments, File Transfer Protocol (FTP),
or other online file sharing services (e.g., Dropbox, OneDrive, Google
Drive). Electronic submissions must be transmitted directly to the
OAQPS CBI Office using the email address, [email protected], and should
include clear CBI markings as described later. If assistance is needed
with submitting large electronic files that exceed the file size limit
for email attachments, and if you do not have your own file sharing
service, please email [email protected] to request a file transfer link.
If sending CBI information through the postal service, please send it
to the following address: OAQPS Document Control Officer (C404-02),
OAQPS, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park,
North Carolina 27711, Attention Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2023-0401. The
mailed CBI material should be double wrapped and clearly marked. Any
CBI markings should not show through the outer envelope.
D. How do I request and participate in a virtual public hearing?
To request a virtual public hearing, contact Ms. Pam Long at (919)
541-0641 or by email at [email protected] by January 15, 2024. If
requested, the virtual hearing will be held on January 24, 2024. The
hearing will convene at 9:00 a.m. Eastern Time (ET) and will conclude
at 3:00 p.m. ET. The EPA may close a session 15 minutes after the last
pre-registered speaker has testified if there are no additional
speakers. The EPA will announce further details at https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits.
Upon publication of this document in the Federal Register, the EPA
will begin pre-registering speakers for the hearing, if a hearing is
requested. To register to speak at the virtual hearing, please use the
online registration form available at https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits or contact Ms. Pam Long at (919) 541-0641 or by email
at [email protected]. The last day to pre-register to speak at the
hearing will be January 22, 2024. Prior to the hearing, the EPA will
post a general agenda that will list pre-registered speakers in
approximate order at: https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits.
The EPA will make every effort to follow the schedule as closely as
possible on the day of the hearing; however, please plan for the
hearing to run either ahead of schedule or behind schedule.
Each commenter will have 3 minutes to provide oral testimony. The
EPA encourages commenters to provide the EPA with a copy of their oral
testimony electronically (via email) by emailing it to
[email protected]. The EPA also recommends submitting the text of your
oral testimony as written comments to the rulemaking docket.
The EPA may ask clarifying questions during the oral presentations
but will not respond to the presentations at that time. Written
statements and supporting information submitted during the comment
period will be considered with the same weight as oral testimony and
supporting information presented at the public hearing.
Please note that any updates made to any aspect of the hearing will
be posted online at https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits.
While the EPA expects the hearing to go forward as set forth earlier,
please monitor our website or contact Ms. Pam Long at (919) 541-0641 or
by email at [email protected] to determine if there are any updates. The
EPA does not intend to publish a document in the Federal Register
announcing updates.
If you require the services of a translator or special
accommodations such as audio description, please pre-register for the
hearing with Ms. Pam Long and describe your needs by January 16, 2024.
The EPA may not be able to arrange accommodations without advanced
notice.
II. Purpose of This Regulatory Action
This rulemaking concerns the relationship between the CAA's title V
operating permit program and certain types of ``applicable
requirements'' established under different sections of the CAA. Many of
the EPA's past statements on this topic are included within the EPA
Administrator's responses to citizen petitions challenging title V
permits issued to individual facilities. Though publicly available,
these Orders may not be widely read by members of the public and/or
permitting authorities. This rulemaking is intended to bring greater
awareness to the EPA's current approach to ``applicable requirements''
within the context of title V so that the public, permitting
authorities, and the EPA can focus their resources on using the title V
permitting process to address issues that can be most effectively
resolved through title V. Specifically, this proposed rule addresses
three issues that have been the source of public interest and, at
times, misunderstanding. This rule also proposes to update the EPA's
regulations to better express the EPA's existing positions on these
topics.
First, section III. of this preamble includes background on the
EPA's existing position regarding general topics involving ``applicable
requirements,'' which the EPA does not propose to change. In summary,
the title V operating permit program is a vehicle for compiling air
quality control requirements from other CAA programs and for providing
conditions necessary to assure compliance with such requirements, but
it is not a vehicle for creating or changing applicable requirements
from those other programs. The EPA has a regulatory definition of the
term ``applicable requirement'' that guides the interaction between
title V and other CAA programs. Some programs establish ``self-
implementing'' requirements that
[[Page 1152]]
can be incorporated into title V permits without further review. Other
programs contain only general requirements that can, in certain
circumstances, be further defined through title V. Section III.G. of
this preamble summarizes existing EPA positions about how these
concepts affect requirements related to the National Ambient Air
Quality Standards (NAAQS) and State Implementation Plans (SIPs).
Second, Section IV. of this preamble addresses the intersection
between title V operating permits and NSR preconstruction permits
issued under title I of the CAA and focuses on the limited situations
in which NSR requirements would be reviewed using the EPA's unique
title V oversight authorities.
Section IV.A. discusses the EPA's historical and current positions
on the intersection between permits issued under title I and title V,
which have changed over time. Section IV.B. explains in more detail the
EPA's existing position, which the EPA proposes to codify through this
rulemaking. In summary, the EPA's current position is that provided a
source obtains an NSR permit under EPA-approved (or EPA-promulgated)
title I rules, with public notice and the opportunity for comment and
judicial review, such NSR permit establishes the NSR-related
``applicable requirements'' of the SIP (or Federal Implementation Plan,
FIP) for purposes of incorporation into a title V permit. As with
``applicable requirements'' established under other CAA authorities,
the EPA would not revisit those NSR permitting decisions through the
title V process. The EPA's framework applies similarly regardless of:
(i) the stage of the title V permitting or oversight process at issue;
(ii) the NSR permit's origin (i.e., from a SIP or a FIP), (iii) the
type of substantive NSR requirement at issue (e.g., NSR permit terms or
major NSR applicability); and (iv) the procedures by which the NSR
permit is incorporated into the title V permit (e.g., sequentially or
concurrently issued permits). However, there are situations in which
the title V permitting process is the appropriate venue for addressing
NSR permitting issues, including where NSR requirements have not been
established through a sufficient title I permitting process, or where
NSR issues and title V issues involve substantive overlap. Although the
EPA believes that the existing regulations may properly be read to
support the EPA's existing position, the EPA proposes amendments to
make this position more explicit. Updating the EPA's regulations will
allow the agency to apply its existing approach nationwide and will
resolve issues stemming from conflicting court decisions from two
federal Courts of Appeals.
Section IV.C. discusses the extent to which this proposal will (or
will not) impact NSR permitting, NSR oversight tools, and NSR
enforcement tools. Section IV.D. further discusses the limited impacts
this proposed rule is expected to have on the EPA, permitting
authorities, regulated entities, and the public. Overall, this proposed
rule is meant to provide clarity about the appropriate mechanisms that
should be used to address concerns with NSR permits. This proposed rule
should create an incentive for permitting authorities to offer
opportunities for meaningful public involvement in NSR permitting
actions, and should encourage the public to take advantage of those
opportunities (instead of attempting to use title V oversight tools to
resolve concerns with NSR permits).
Section IV.E. details the EPA's legal and policy rationale for the
EPA's existing (and proposed to be codified) position. In sum, the
EPA's interpretation is supported by the text of title V, the structure
and purpose of title V, and the structure of the CAA as a whole. The
EPA has the discretion under the statute to apply this approach, which
reflects better policy than alternative approaches. This proposed rule
ensures that applicable requirements established in different CAA
programs are treated consistently in title V permitting. The EPA's
proposal better accounts for procedural, resource-related, and
practical limitations associated with title V oversight tools while
incentivizing the use of proper title I avenues of review. Lastly, this
approach respects the finality of NSR permitting decisions.
Section IV.F. solicits comment on three alternative approaches that
would involve using title V permits to address substantive NSR issues
in additional, targeted situations, while explaining why these
alternatives are not preferred by the EPA.
Third, Section V. of this preamble addresses a distinct and
severable topic related to the ``General Duty Clause'' of CAA section
112(r)(1), which concerns the prevention of accidental releases of
hazardous substances. This proposal seeks to codify the EPA's well-
established position that this General Duty Clause is not an
``applicable requirement'' and is not implemented through title V.
III. Background on Title V Operating Permits and CAA ``Applicable
Requirements''
This section of the preamble contains background information about
the title V program and explains how different types of ``applicable
requirements'' of the CAA are treated in title V permits. This
discussion is intended to clarify multiple related topics that may have
been a source of confusion to the public, regulated entities, and
permitting authorities over the years. The EPA is not proposing any
changes to the agency's longstanding interpretations or policies
discussed in this section. The EPA also considers these interpretations
and policies to be consistent with, and accurately reflected in, the
EPA's existing regulations in 40 CFR parts 70 and 71. Thus, the EPA is
not proposing to revise the EPA's regulations in order to reflect these
existing interpretations and policies.\1\
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\1\ By contrast, the EPA is proposing to revise the EPA's
regulations to more clearly reflect the EPA's positions regarding
the issues discussed in sections IV. and V. of this preamble.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. The Title V Permitting Process, Public Participation, and the EPA's
Oversight Role
Congress amended the CAA in 1990 to add, among other provisions,
title V. CAA Amendments of 1990, Public Law 101-549, sections 501-507,
104 Stat. 2399, 2635-48 (1990) (codified at 42 U.S.C. 7661-7661f).
Title V established an operating permit program for major sources of
air pollution and certain other sources.
The title V program, like other provisions of the CAA, involves an
exercise of cooperative federalism, meaning that responsibility for the
program is divided between states and the EPA. Under title V, states
were required to develop and submit to the EPA for approval title V
permitting programs consistent with requirements promulgated by the EPA
in 40 CFR part 70. 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b), (d).\2\ Most states, certain
local agencies, and one Tribe now have approved part 70 programs. Under
these EPA-approved state programs, permitting authorities issue the
vast majority of title V permits (this preamble refers to such permits
as ``state-issued'' permits). The EPA directly issues title V permits
only in limited circumstances.\3\
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\2\ For information about EPA oversight over the content and
implementation of EPA-approved state part 70 programs, see 42 U.S.C.
7661a(i) and 40 CFR 70.10.
\3\ Under 40 CFR part 71, the EPA (or an agency delegated to
issue permits on EPA's behalf) issues title V permits to sources in
most areas of Indian Country, on the Outer Continental Shelf,
jurisdictions where the EPA has determined that a state has not
adequately implemented its part 70 program, and for specific sources
where a state has not satisfied an EPA objection to, or reopening
of, a state-issued permit. See 40 CFR 71.4.
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[[Page 1153]]
Most title V permit actions (including initial permits, renewal
permits, and significant permit modifications) involve public notice
and an opportunity for comment and a hearing on draft permits and
revisions. See 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b)(6); 40 CFR 70.4(d)(3)(iv), 70.7(h).
These opportunities are similar to those provided in other CAA
programs.
Additionally, Congress provided the EPA and the public with unique
oversight tools for state-issued title V permits. The CAA requires
permitting authorities to submit a proposed title V permit to the EPA
Administrator for review for a 45-day review period before issuing the
permit as final. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(a)(1); 40 CFR 70.8(a). The
Administrator shall object to issuance of a proposed permit within that
45-day review period if the Administrator determines that the permit
does not satisfy applicable requirements of the CAA or the requirements
of part 70. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b)(1); 40 CFR 70.8(c). If the Administrator
does not object to a permit during the 45-day EPA review period, any
person may petition the Administrator within 60 days after the
expiration of the 45-day review period to take such action (hereinafter
``title V petition'' or ``petition''). 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b)(2), 40 CFR
70.8(d), 70.12, 70.13, 70.14. Many of the issues concerning
``applicable requirements'' that are addressed in this rulemaking have
been raised, and addressed, in title V petitions and the EPA's orders
responding to such petitions.\4\
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\4\ For more information about title V petitions, see the
preambles of the proposed and final petitions rule, 81 FR 57822
(Aug. 24, 2016) and 85 FR 6431 (Feb. 5, 2020). Copies of petitions
and the EPA's petition orders are available on the EPA's public
title V petitions database, https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits/title-v-petition-database.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CAA also provides the EPA with the authority--at the agency's
discretion--to determine that cause exists to ``terminate, modify, or
revoke and reissue'' a state-issued title V permit. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(e).
This process is often called ``reopening for cause'' and is described
in 40 CFR 70.7(f) and (g). Among other criteria, a permit may be
reopened for cause when necessary to assure compliance with applicable
requirements. 40 CFR 70.7(f)(1)(iv).
Although this proposed rule is primarily focused on the EPA's
oversight of state-issued title V permits, the concepts discussed in
this preamble related to ``applicable requirements'' are relevant to
nearly all aspects of the title V permitting process in some shape or
form. For example, these concepts guide the information that permittees
must include in title V permit applications, the required content of
title V permits drafted and issued by permitting authorities (including
the EPA), the scope of issues properly subject to the public's input
during the title V permitting process, and the scope of issues
considered by the EPA in exercising its oversight roles (including the
EPA's review of title V permits issued by states and consideration of
citizen petitions on those permits).
B. Purpose and Function of Title V Permits
The title V permitting program was created to assist with
compliance and enforcement of air pollution controls established under
other CAA programs. Before this program existed, the CAA pollution
control requirements that might apply to a particular source could be
found in many different provisions of the Act along with various
federal and state regulations and permits. One court opinion summarized
the relationship between title V and other CAA programs as follows:
Under the regulatory regime established by the [CAA], emission
limits for pollutants and monitoring requirements that measure
compliance applicable to any given stationary source of air
pollution are scattered throughout rules promulgated by states or
EPA, such as [SIPs], new source performance standards [NSPS], and
national emission standards for hazardous air pollutants [NESHAP].
Before 1990, regulators and industry were left to wander through
this regulatory maze in search of the emission limits and monitoring
requirements that might apply to a particular source. Congress
addressed this confusion in the 1990 Amendments by adding title V of
the Act, which created a national permit program that requires many
stationary sources of air pollution to obtain permits that include
relevant emission limits and monitoring requirements.
Sierra Club v. EPA, 536 F.3d 673, 674 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (citations
omitted).
Thus, one key function of title V is to consolidate applicable
requirements established under other CAA programs. This consolidation
function is embodied in CAA section 504(a), which states, in part:
``Each permit issued under this subchapter shall include enforceable
emission limitations and standards . . . and such other conditions as
are necessary to assure compliance with applicable requirements of this
chapter, including the requirements of the applicable implementation
plan.'' 42 U.S.C. 7661c(a). The EPA's regulations implementing title V
contain language similar to the statute. See 40 CFR 70.6(a)(1),
71.6(a)(1).\5\ The EPA's regulations also require that ``The permit
shall specify and reference the origin of and authority for each term
or condition, and identify any difference in form as compared to the
applicable requirement upon which the term or condition is based.'' 40
CFR 70.1(a)(1)(i), 71.1(a)(1)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The EPA's regulations also define the specific ``applicable
requirements'' with which each title V permit must assure
compliance. 40 CFR 70.2, 71.2. The definition and concept of
``applicable requirements'' are discussed in more detail later in
this preamble.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to consolidating existing applicable requirements, CAA
section 504 provides the EPA with the authority to use title V permits
to establish additional requirements necessary to assure compliance
with existing applicable requirements. For example, it is well
established that title V permits may be used to create or supplement
monitoring requirements when necessary in order to assure compliance
with underlying applicable requirements that do not themselves contain
sufficient monitoring provisions.\6\ Various compliance assurance
requirements are included within title V and the EPA's implementing
regulations; not all are restricted to monitoring.\7\
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\6\ See 42 U.S.C. 7661c(c); 40 CFR 70.6(c)(1); Sierra Club v.
EPA, 536 F.3d 673, 674-45, 680 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (``Title V did more
than require the compilation in a single document of existing
applicable emission limits and monitoring requirements. It also
mandated that `[e]ach permit issued under [Title V] shall set forth
. . . monitoring . . . requirements to assure compliance with the
permit terms and conditions.' . . . [T]he Act requires: a permitting
authority may supplement an inadequate monitoring requirement so
that the requirement will `assure compliance with the permit terms
and conditions.' '' (citations omitted)); see also, e.g., In the
Matter of CITGO Refining and Chemicals Co., L.P., West Plant, Order
on Petition No. VI-2007-01 at 6-8 (May 28, 2009).
\7\ See 42 U.S.C. 7661c(a), (b), (c); 40 CFR 70.6(a)(1), (a)(3),
(c), 71.6(a)(1), (a)(3), (c); see also, e.g., In the Matter of
Suncor Energy (U.S.A.), Inc., Commerce City Refinery, Plant 2
(East), Order on Petition Nos. VIII-2022-13 & VIII-2022-14 at 13-17
(July 31, 2023) (Suncor East Order).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beyond title V's consolidation and compliance assurance functions,
title V generally does not impose new pollution control requirements on
sources or provide a vehicle to modify such requirements established
under other CAA programs. Thus, the EPA's regulations expressly
provide: ``All sources subject to these regulations shall have a permit
to operate that assures compliance by the source with all applicable
requirements. While title V does not impose substantive new
requirements, it does require that . . . certain procedural measures be
adopted especially with respect to compliance.'' 40 CFR 70.1(b)
(emphasis added). For
[[Page 1154]]
additional information about the purpose and function of title V, see
section IV.E.2. of this preamble.
In summary, the title V operating permit program is a vehicle for
compiling air quality control requirements from other CAA programs and
for providing requirements necessary to assure compliance with such
requirements, but not for creating or changing applicable requirements.
Put simply, title V is a catch-all, not a cure-all. The discussion
throughout the remainder of this preamble builds upon these
longstanding general principles, which the EPA does not propose to
change through this rulemaking.
C. Regulatory Definition of ``Applicable Requirements''
As previously explained, CAA section 504(a) requires that title V
permits ``include enforceable emissions limitations and standards . . .
and such other conditions as are necessary to assure compliance with
applicable requirements of this chapter, including the requirements of
the applicable implementation plan.'' 42 U.S.C. 7661c(a).\8\ However,
the term ``applicable requirements'' is not defined in the Act and the
statute does not otherwise specify how to determine the ``applicable
requirements of this chapter'' for a particular source. When the EPA
developed regulations to implement the title V program, the agency
specifically defined the term ``applicable requirement'' as it relates
to title V permitting. This subsection of the preamble addresses
general topics associated with this regulatory definition. The
subsections that follow elaborate on these general concepts with more
specific examples about how these concepts impact different types of
requirements.
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\8\ Similar requirements appear in other parts of title V.
``Schedule of compliance. The term `schedule of compliance' means a
schedule of remedial measures, including an enforceable sequence of
actions or operations, leading to compliance with an applicable
implementation plan, emission standard, emission limitation, or
emission prohibition'' 42 U.S.C. 7661(3). ``Nothing in this
subsection shall be construed to alter the applicable requirements
of this chapter that a permit be obtained before construction or
modification.'' 42 U.S.C. 7661a(a). Permitting authorities ``have
adequate authority to . . . issue permits and assure compliance . .
. with each applicable standard, regulation, or requirement under
this chapter.'' 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b)(5). The regulations to implement
the program shall include a ``requirement that the applicant submit
with the application a compliance plan describing how the source
will comply with all applicable requirements under this chapter.''
42 U.S.C. 7661b(b). However, like section 504, these sections do not
specify the scope of the term ``applicable requirements'' or how the
permitting authority or the EPA is to determine what the applicable
requirements are for an individual source as part of its title V
permit.
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As an initial matter, it is important to recognize that
``applicable requirement'' is a legal term of art with a precise
meaning that is unique to title V. Its meaning is closely aligned with
the primary function of title V permits: to consolidate and assure
compliance with the substantive requirements established under other
CAA programs. Thus, in general, the EPA's definition of ``applicable
requirement'' focuses on those substantive requirements of other CAA
programs that must be incorporated into a source's title V permit, and
with which the title V permit must assure compliance. This means that
not all CAA requirements are considered ``applicable requirements'' for
title V purposes. However, the fact that some CAA requirements are not
considered ``applicable requirements'' for title V purposes does not
diminish the independent enforceability or importance of those
requirements. It simply means that those requirements are not primarily
implemented or enforced using title V permits.
The EPA's regulations define ``applicable requirement'' to mean
``all of the of the following as they apply to emissions units in a
part 70 source,'' \9\ followed by a list of 13 types of CAA-based
requirements that qualify. 40 CFR 70.2; see 40 CFR 71.2 (similar
definition).\10\
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\9\ This definition also indicates that requirements that have
been promulgated or approved at the time of permit issuance, but
with which the source is not yet required to comply, are applicable
requirements that must be included in a title V permit. 40 CFR 70.2,
71.2. The EPA is not aware of any issues or confusion concerning
this element of the definition, which is not discussed further in
this preamble.
\10\ The list includes, in summary, requirements from: (1) SIPs
and FIPs under CAA title I; (2) preconstruction permits under CAA
title I; (3) CAA section 111 (NSPS and existing source rules); (4)
CAA section 112 (NESHAP); (5) title IV (acid rain); (6) CAA sections
504(b) or 114(a)(3) (certain types of enhanced monitoring); (7) CAA
sections 126(a)(1) and (c) (interstate pollution); (8) CAA section
129 (solid waste incineration); (9) CAA section 183(e) (consumer and
commercial products); (10) CAA section 193(f) (tank vessels); (11)
CAA section 328 (outer continental shelf permits); (12) CAA title VI
(stratospheric ozone); and (13) any NAAQS, but only as it would
apply to temporary sources under CAA section 504(e).
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Perhaps the most straightforward aspect of this definition is that,
in order to qualify as an ``applicable requirement'' for title V
purposes, the requirement must be based on the CAA and, more
specifically, one of the CAA sections specifically identified in this
definition. Requirements that are not based on (i.e., derived from) the
CAA are not ``applicable requirements'' of the CAA with which a title V
permit must assure compliance. Further, not all CAA requirements
qualify as ``applicable requirements'' for title V purposes. Some
sections of the CAA were intentionally omitted from the list of 13
types of ``applicable requirements'' because these sections either do
not apply to stationary sources that must obtain title V permits, or
these sections are not implemented through title V for other reasons.
See section III.D.2. of this preamble for more information.
A similarly important definitional element is that ``applicable
requirements'' only include the listed types of CAA requirements ``as
they apply to emission units in a part 70 source.'' Requirements of the
CAA that do not directly apply to a source's emission units are not
``applicable requirements'' for title V purposes, as discussed in
section III.D.3. of this preamble.
Additionally, the requirements of title V itself (and the EPA's
part 70 and 71 implementing regulations) are not technically considered
``applicable requirements'' but are nonetheless centrally important to
title V permitting. See section III.D.4. of this preamble for more
information.
The definition of ``applicable requirement'' can also affect the
manner in which requirements that are considered applicable
requirements are implemented through title V. In summary, some
applicable requirements can be described as ``self-implementing.'' Once
established, those requirements should entail little to no review
through the title V permitting process. Other applicable requirements
may require further site-specific evaluation in order to define the
precise requirements that apply to individual emission units. In
certain circumstances, the latter type of applicable requirements may
be further defined using the title V permitting process. These topics
are discussed in more detail in sections III.E. and III.F. of this
preamble.
D. Requirements That Are Not ``Applicable Requirements'' for Purposes
of Title V Permitting
Sources subject to title V may be subject to a variety of
requirements both within and beyond the CAA. Not all of these
requirements are ``applicable requirements'' that must be included in a
title V permit and with which the title V permit must assure
compliance. Requirements that are not applicable requirements fall into
several categories, discussed in the following subsections.
[[Page 1155]]
1. Requirements Not Derived From the CAA
Many sources subject to title V are also subject to federal laws
beyond the CAA, including environmental laws administered by the EPA or
other federal agencies (e.g., the Clean Water Act (CWA); Safe Drinking
Water Act; Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA); Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act; National
Environmental Policy Act, Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-
Know Act, Endangered Species Act, and other statutes). Other federal
laws may also impact the decision-making of state permitting
authorities (e.g., the Civil Rights Act of 1964). These other federal
laws--including the statutes and any implementing regulations--are not
``applicable requirements'' for title V purposes. Such requirements do
not need to be included in title V permits, and title V permits do not
need to assure compliance with these requirements. Further, whether a
permittee or permitting authority has satisfied those requirements is
beyond the scope of issues that the EPA can address through its title
V-based oversight authorities, including the EPA's objection authority
and public petition opportunity.\11\ This is self-evident from the
plain language of the CAA and the EPA's regulations, which limit the
EPA's objection authority to permits that ``are not in compliance with
the applicable requirements of [the CAA].'' 42 U.S.C. 7661b(1), (2);
see 40 CFR 70.8(c)(1), 70.12(a)(2). Nonetheless, the EPA sometimes
receives title V petitions requesting the EPA's objection to the
issuance of operating permits on the basis of alleged violations of
laws other than the CAA. The EPA has denied all of those petition
claims.\12\
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\11\ The EPA's regulations provide that title V permit issuance
may be coordinated with the issuance of permits under the CWA and
RCRA, but that does not mean those other requirements are subject to
review through title V. 40 CFR 70.1(e), 71.1(d).
\12\ See, e.g., In The Matter of Gateway Generating Station,
Order on Petition No. IX-2013-1 at 12-14 (Oct. 15, 2014); In the
Matter of Monroe Electric Generating Plant, Order on Petition No. 6-
99-2 at 27 (June 11, 1999).
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Other federal authorities are sometimes invoked in the context of
title V permitting (and in particular, title V petitions), including
presidential executive orders. Because executive orders are not legally
binding on state permitting authorities and are generally not based on
the CAA, they do not establish ``applicable requirements'' that states
must implement through title V permitting. Accordingly, the EPA has
denied title V petition claims alleging that state permitting
authorities failed to satisfy executive orders.\13\
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\13\ See, e.g., In the Matter of AK Steel Dearborn Works, Order
on Petition No. V-2016-16 at 17-19 (Jan. 15, 2021) (AK Steel Order);
In the Matter of Orange Recycling and Ethanol Production Facility,
Pencor-Masada Oxynol, LLC, Order on Petition No. II-2000-07 at 32-33
(May 2, 2001) (Pencor-Masada I Order). Note that federal executive
orders may be more directly relevant to EPA-issued title V permits
under part 71 (as well as other types of EPA-issued permits).
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Many state permitting authorities have air quality laws that are
not derived from the CAA and/or are not included as part of an EPA-
approved state program.\14\ These ``state-only'' requirements are not,
standing alone, enforceable by the EPA and are not applicable
requirements for title V purposes. Thus, these requirements do not need
to be included in title V permits, title V permits do not need to
assure compliance with these requirements, and these requirements are
beyond the scope of the EPA's title V oversight tools. For these
reasons, the EPA has denied numerous title V petition claims alleging
that title V permits fail to satisfy state-only laws and
requirements.\15\
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\14\ This includes requirements that may be designed to
implement a CAA requirement, but which the EPA has not yet approved
(including SIPs, state plans under CAA section 111(d), and state
programs under CAA section 112(l), and part 70 programs).
\15\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Salt River Project Agricultural
Improvement & Power District, Agua Fria Generating Station, Order on
Petition No. IX-2022-4 at 14 (July 28, 2022) (SRP Agua Fria Order);
In the Matter of Shintech, Inc., Order on Petition at 14 (Sept. 10,
1997) (Shintech I Order).
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State permitting authorities may, at their discretion, include
requirements based on state-only enforceable laws within title V
permits, but they are required to designate such permit terms as
``state-only'' or ``not federally enforceable.'' 40 CFR 70.6(b)(2).
Again, these requirements are not ``applicable requirements'' for
purposes of title V permitting. Thus, from the EPA's perspective,
properly labeled state-only permit terms are not considered part of the
title V permit; they may be physically present in the document, but
they are not legally present for purposes of federal enforceability and
oversight. As such, these permit terms are not subject to the EPA's
objection authority nor the title V petition process. 40 CFR
70.6(b)(2). The EPA has denied many title V petition claims challenging
the content of state-only permit terms.\16\ Note, however, that there
are some limited situations in which state-only requirements intersect
with title V requirements.\17\ Additionally, the CAA requires states to
provide the public with an opportunity to raise concerns with any
conditions of a title V permit, including state-only conditions,
through judicial review in state court systems. See 42 U.S.C.
7661a(b)(6); 40 CFR 70.4(b)(3)(x)-(xii). This opportunity exists in
parallel to the unique oversight authorities (e.g., the EPA's objection
authority and public petition opportunity) that extend only to
federally enforceable requirements of title V permits.
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\16\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Harquahala Generating Station
Project, Order on Petition at 5 (July 2, 2003) (Harquahala Order).
\17\ For example, the EPA has used and will use title V
oversight tools to assess whether state laws should be considered
federally enforceable ``applicable requirements'' with which a title
V permit must assure compliance. See, e.g., In the Matter of
Georgia-Pacific Consumer Operations LLC, Crossett Paper Operations,
Order on Petition Nos. VI-2018-3 & VI-2019-12 at 14-15 (Feb. 22,
2023). The EPA has also considered whether title V permit terms are
appropriately designated as federally enforceable requirements or
state-only requirements. See, e.g., In the Matter of ExxonMobil
Corp., Baytown Chemical Plant, Order on Petition No. VI-2020-9 at
24-26 (Mar. 18, 2022) (ExxonMobil Baytown Chemical Order).
Additionally, the EPA will consider whether state-only requirements
or permit terms would impair the effectiveness or enforceability of
applicable requirements or other federally enforceable title V
permit terms. See, e.g., Harquahala Order at 5. Finally, note that
any terms of a title V permit that are not designated as ``state
only'' or ``not federally enforceable'' (or similar) become
federally enforceable upon permit issuance and are subject to the
part 70 requirements that govern federally enforceable terms of
title V permits, including requirements related to monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting. 40 CFR 70.6(b)(1)-(2); see, e.g., In
the Matter of ExxonMobil Fuels & Lubricant Co., Baton Rouge
Refinery, Reforming Complex and Utilities Unit, Order on Petition
Nos. VI-2020-4, VI-2020-6, VI-2021-1, & VI-2021-2 at 16 & 16 n.26
(Mar. 18, 2022).
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2. CAA Requirements That Are Not Specifically Identified in 40 CFR 70.2
The CAA is a large and complex statute, composed of many different
programs. Not all of these programs are implemented in the same manner
through title V or establish ``applicable requirements'' for title V
purposes.
One notable example is title II of the CAA, which concerns emission
standards for internal combustion engines in mobile sources and nonroad
engines. Even if such emission units are located at a stationary
source, they are not regulated as a stationary source because they are
excluded from the definition of ``stationary source.'' See 42 U.S.C.
7602(z).\18\ Thus, title II requirements with which a stationary source
must comply are not included within the EPA's title V-focused
[[Page 1156]]
regulatory definition of ``applicable requirement.''
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\18\ Questions sometimes arise regarding whether an internal
combustion engine used at a stationary source should be considered a
nonroad engine or a part of the stationary source. See, e.g., 42
U.S.C. 7550(10); 7602(z); 40 CFR 1068.30. This topic is beyond the
scope of the current rulemaking.
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Other substantive CAA programs relevant to stationary sources are
similarly not identified in the EPA's regulatory definition of
``applicable requirement'' for title V purposes because Congress did
not intend for them to be implemented through the title V program. For
further information about one example--the ``General Duty Clause''
concerning the prevention of accidental releases of hazardous
substances under CAA section 112(r)(1)--see section V. of this
preamble. Another example is the Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program in 40
CFR part 98. That program applies to stationary sources and uses the
authorities provided in CAA sections 114 and 208 to collect greenhouse
gas emissions information, but it is not an applicable requirement for
title V purposes. Similarly, the Air Emissions Reporting Requirements
program in 40 CFR part 51, subpart A imposes information-gathering
requirements that are generally not implemented through title V.
Some CAA provisions are more general in nature and do not impose
substantive requirements that are incorporated into title V permits.
For example, title III of the CAA includes general provisions related
to a number of cross-cutting topics. See 42 U.S.C. 7601-7628. Although
some of these requirements may directly or indirectly impact title V
permitting, most provisions within title III are not ``applicable
requirements'' for title V purposes.\19\
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\19\ One notable exception is the Outer Continental Shelf
permitting requirements under CAA section 328, 42 U.S.C. 7627, which
are considered applicable requirements for title V purposes. 40 CFR
70.2, 71.2.
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3. Requirements That Do Not Apply to Emission Units
Not all requirements from CAA programs identified in the EPA's
regulatory definition of ``applicable requirement'' are considered
applicable requirements for title V purposes. This is because the
definition only includes such requirements ``as they apply to emission
units in a part 70 source.'' 40 CFR 70.2, 71.2. Applicable requirements
generally include the substantive requirements from other provisions of
the Act that dictate the ongoing operations of emission units at the
source. After all, as the name of this program suggests, title V
operating permits are fundamentally designed to specify the conditions
under which a source's emission units must operate. Further, a key
purpose of the title V program is to assure that the source complies
with the requirements to which it is subject. See 42 U.S.C. 7661a(a).
Therefore, requirements of the CAA that do not directly apply to
individual emission units at a part 70 source are not ``applicable
requirements'' for title V purposes. Many of the CAA provisions that do
not apply to emission units at a title V source could be described as
programmatic or procedural in nature. For example, CAA requirements
that specify actions that the EPA must take in order to establish or
oversee different CAA programs (such as promulgating rules, taking
action on state rules, and other programmatic oversight activities) are
not applicable requirements that need to be reflected in a source's
title V permit.\20\ Similarly, the CAA requires state air agencies to
undertake various activities related to the establishment and
implementation of different CAA programs, including attainment planning
requirements (e.g., in developing SIPs).\21\ State permitting
authorities are also subject to various requirements (mostly
procedural) related to the issuance of non-title V permits (e.g., NSR
permits).\22\ In general, the EPA does not believe that Congress
intended the title V program to serve as a vehicle to catch or correct
programmatic or procedural problems associated with the establishment
of applicable requirements in other CAA programs.\23\ Instead, again,
the title V program was designed to ensure that regulated sources
comply with all the substantive air pollution control requirements to
which they are subject. Thus, to the extent these requirements only
directly regulate EPA or state actions--and do not result in
requirements directly applicable to emission units at a title V
source--they are not applicable requirements for title V purposes.
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\20\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Hu Honua Bioenergy Facility,
Order on Petition No. IX-2011-1 at 6-7 (Feb. 7, 2014) (Hu Honua I
Order).
\21\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Exxon Chemical Americas, Baton
Rouge Polyolefins Plant, Order on Petition No. 6-00-1 at 10-11 (Apr.
12, 2000).
\22\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Century Aluminum of South
Carolina, Inc., Order on Petition No. IV-2023-09 at 19-20 (November
2, 2023) (Century Aluminum Order). However, note that there are
limited circumstances under which procedural issues associated with
other CAA programs (namely, the issuance of NSR permits) may be
implicated in title V. See section IV.B.5.a. of this preamble for
further discussion.
\23\ By contrast, issues related to the procedures used to issue
a title V permit are of central relevance to the title V program,
and the unique title V oversight tools available to the EPA and the
public generally may be used to address those deficiencies. See
section III.D.4. of this preamble for more information on such part
70 requirements.
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Also, the CAA contains many cross-cutting general provisions (e.g.,
in title III of the CAA) that are not considered applicable
requirements because they do not directly apply to emission units at
part 70 sources.\24\ The same is true for various cross-cutting
regulatory provisions. To the extent these provisions are relevant to
the implementation or enforcement of the title V program, they are
independently enforceable and do not need to be explicitly specified in
a title V permit. One example that often arises in the context of title
V petitions is that of ``credible evidence.'' EPA, states, and citizens
can use any credible evidence to prove compliance and non-compliance
with the CAA, including compliance and non-compliance with title V
permits. See 42 U.S.C. 7413(a), 7604(a)(1), 7604(f)(4); 62 FR 8314
(Feb. 24, 1997). The EPA has repeatedly held that title V permits need
not include language affirmatively restating the existence of this
principle.\25\
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\24\ These general provisions are not considered applicable
requirements for two reasons: (i) they are not specified within the
regulatory definition's list of 13 types of CAA requirements (as
discussed in the preceding subsection of the preamble), and (ii)
they do not apply to emission units at a source (as discussed in
this subsection).
\25\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Plains Marketing LP and Four
Other Facilities, Order on Petition Nos. IV-2023-1 & IV-2023-3 at 50
(Sept. 18, 2023). Note that EPA has also indicated that title V
permits cannot be drafted in such a way that would preclude the use
of all credible evidence in enforcement proceedings. See, e.g., In
the Matter of Valero Refining-Texas, L.P., Valero Houston Refinery,
Order on Petition No. VI-2021-8 at 70 (June 30, 2022) (Valero
Houston Order).
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4. ``Part 70 Requirements''
As previously stated, the definition of ``applicable requirement''
in 40 CFR 70.2 and 71.2, and the manner in which this phrase is used
throughout the EPA's title V regulations, focus on CAA requirements
arising from other CAA programs beyond title V. By contrast, the
requirements within title V and the EPA's part 70 and 71 regulations
are not technically considered ``applicable requirements.'' \26\
Instead, the EPA generally refers to these as ``part 70 requirements.''
\27\
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\26\ Part 70 requirements do not meet the regulatory definition
of ``applicable requirement'' because they are not included within
the definition's list of 13 types of CAA requirements. Moreover,
some part 70 requirements (e.g., procedural requirements) do not
directly apply to emission units.
\27\ The phrase ``part 70 requirements'' is based on various
portions of the part 70 regulations that refer to the ``requirements
of this part'' as a distinct, and additional, source of requirements
from ``applicable requirements'' based on other CAA programs. See 40
CFR 70.4(b)(3)(v), 70.6(a)(9)(iii), 70.6(a)(10)(iii),
70.7(a)(1)(iv), 70.8(b)(2), 70.8(c)(1), 70.12(a)(2). This concept is
also relevant with respect to EPA-issued permits under 40 CFR part
71, where a similar distinction exists between ``applicable
requirements'' derived from other CAA programs and the requirements
of part 71 that are derived from title V of the Act. See, e.g., 40
CFR 71.10(g)(1). However, given that this issue most often arises in
the context of state-issued part 70 permits, this preamble uses the
term ``part 70 requirements'' to refer to requirements derived from
title V.
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[[Page 1157]]
This distinction is meaningful because the regulatory use of the
term ``applicable requirement'' is closely tied to the core purpose of
title V: to consolidate and assure compliance with the substantive
requirements from other CAA programs, but not to create or modify such
requirements. Thus, as previously described, the title V permitting
process and title V oversight tools are generally not used to
reevaluate the content of ``applicable requirements'' from other CAA
programs.
By contrast, many ``part 70 requirements'' are directly implemented
through title V permitting, as these requirements relate to the content
of title V permits and the process used to issue them. For example, the
requirements that dictate the content of title V permits are part 70
requirements (not applicable requirements). These include, for example,
the requirement that title V permits include and assure compliance with
``applicable requirements'' established elsewhere, and the authority to
impose, as necessary, additional monitoring and other compliance
assurance provisions. See, e.g., 40 CFR 70.6(a), (c). Further, the
requirements related to public participation in title V permits, the
availability of information, and related procedural requirements are
all part 70 requirements (not applicable requirements). See 40 CFR
70.7(h). Title V and the part 70 regulations contain other unique title
V authorities--such as the ``permit shield'' under CAA section 504(f)
and 40 CFR 70.6(f).\28\ The important distinction between these part 70
requirements and applicable requirements from other CAA programs is
that part 70 requirements are properly subject to the additional
oversight mechanisms unique to title V (including the EPA objection
authority, public petition opportunity, and other programmatic
oversight authorities).
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\28\ The permit shield is discussed in more detail in section
IV.C.3. of this preamble to the extent it impacts NSR permitting
decisions.
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E. Self-Implementing Applicable Requirements (e.g., NSPS, NESHAP)
Turning to CAA provisions that are considered ``applicable
requirements,'' not all applicable requirements are treated the same in
title V permits. This subsection addresses applicable requirements with
the most straightforward title V implementation, often referred to as
``self-implementing'' or ``self-executing'' requirements. The hallmark
of a self-implementing requirement is that the underlying statutory or
regulatory provision defines the requirements applicable to a given
emission unit with enough specificity for these requirements to be
independently and immediately enforceable, even before going through
the permitting process.\29\ In other words, these applicable
requirements require no further case-specific decisionmaking (e.g.,
through a permitting process) in order to define the precise
requirements to which a source is subject. Such requirements consist of
prescribed emission standards, operational limitations, testing,
monitoring, recordkeeping, reporting, and other compliance assurance
requirements. These requirements are explicitly identified within an
EPA regulation (e.g., NSPS under CAA section 111, NESHAP under CAA
section 112, Federal Plan under CAA section 111(d), similar rules under
CAA section 129, or a FIP under CAA section 110(c)) or an EPA-approved
state regulation (e.g., SIP under CAA section 110(a) or a State Plan
under CAA sections 111(d) or 129).
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\29\ This is in contrast with some other programs the EPA
administers, such as certain requirements under the CWA. Some new
requirements under the CWA only become effective once they are
incorporated into a source's National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES) permit. See, e.g., Texas Oil & Gas Ass'n
et al v. US EPA, 161 F.3d 923, 928 (5th Cir. 1998) (``Despite their
central role in the framework of the CWA, [Effluent Limitation
Guidelines, or ELGs] are not self-executing. They cannot be enforced
against individual dischargers, and individual dischargers are under
no legal obligations to obey limits set by ELGs. Rather, ELGs
achieve their bite only after they have been incorporated into NPDES
permits.'' (citing American Paper Inst. v. EPA, 996 F.2d 346, 350
(D.C. Cir. 1993); American Petroleum Inst., 661 F.2d 340, 344 (5th
Cir. 1981)).
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Such self-implementing applicable requirements should generally be
included in, or incorporated into, a title V permit without further
review.\30\ It would not be appropriate, for example, to use the title
V permitting process to reevaluate the stringency of a Maximum
Achievable Control Technology (MACT) standard promulgated by the EPA
through rulemaking under CAA section 112.\31\ The same is true with
respect to the content of self-implementing standards contained in
SIPs, as discussed further in section III.G. of this preamble.
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\30\ The manner in which such requirements may be included in or
incorporated by reference into, a title V permit is beyond the scope
of this rulemaking. For more information about incorporation by
reference, see, for example, ExxonMobil Baytown Chemical Order at
16-19 and White Paper Number 2 for Improved Implementation of the
Part 70 Operating Permits Program, 36-41 (Mar. 5, 1996).
\31\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Borden Chemical, Inc.
Formaldehyde Plant, Order on Petition No. 6-01-1 at 48-49 (Dec. 22,
2000).
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Central to the concept of ``applicable requirements'' is the fact
that each applicable requirement is established through its own
dedicated process, which includes the ability for the public to
participate in the development of and, if necessary, challenge the
substantive sufficiency of the requirement. For example, the EPA
regulations referenced in preceding paragraphs are generally undertaken
under CAA section 307, which establishes various procedural and public
participation-related requirements, as well as the opportunity for
judicial review of final regulations. See 42 U.S.C. 7607(b)-(d). The
promulgation and approval of SIPs often involves two such rulemakings--
one at the state level and one at the federal level. Thus, the fact
that self-implementing applicable requirements are not substantively
re-evaluated through title V does not mean the public is without
recourse; it simply means that the title V permitting process was not
designed to collaterally attack or reopen these previously-finalized
applicable requirements.
Given title V's key role in consolidating applicable requirements,
questions often arise during the permitting process as to which CAA
requirements are applicable to a given source or emission unit. To the
extent that applicability is clearly established within the applicable
requirement itself (e.g., a source-specific SIP provision) or some
other type of final agency action (e.g., a formal EPA applicability
determination under CAA sections 111, 112, or 129), applicability would
not be subject to further scrutiny through title V.\32\ However, there
are cases where the applicability of a requirement--including a
requirement that could otherwise be described as ``self-
implementing''--has not been conclusively established prior to title V
permit issuance. In these cases, the title V permitting process can and
should be used to determine which requirements apply to the source, so
that the title V permit can include and assure compliance with those
requirements. For example, determining which NSPS
[[Page 1158]]
or NESHAP subpart is applicable to a source may require further site-
specific factual analysis through the permitting process. Additionally,
within a given NSPS or NESHAP rule, there may be multiple different
sets of requirements that apply differently to emission units with
different characteristics. In these situations, it may be necessary to
use the title V permitting process to decide (and identify) which
specific requirements within a NSPS or NESHAP rule apply to each
emission unit at a source. In these cases, the title V permitting
process can and should be used to determine which requirements apply to
the source, so that the title V permit can include and assure
compliance with those requirements.
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\32\ The EPA has established formal and informal processes for
EPA to resolve questions regarding the applicability of NSPS,
NESHAP, and section 111(d) and section 129 rules, called the
``applicability determination'' process. See 40 CFR 60.5, 61.06,
62.02(b)(2); EPA Process Manual for Responding to Requests
Concerning Applicability and Compliance Requirements of Certain
Clean Air Act Stationary Source Programs, Appx B (July 2020),
available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2020-07/documents/111-112-129_process_manual.pdf.
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Finally, even for self-implementing applicable requirements, the
title V permitting process may be used to determine whether additional
compliance assurance provisions (e.g., monitoring) are necessary. See
42 U.S.C. 7661c(c); 40 CFR 70.6(c)(1); Sierra Club v. EPA, 536 F.3d at
680. Further guidance on determining the sufficiency of monitoring and
other compliance assurance provisions is beyond the scope of this
rulemaking.
F. Requirements Defined Through Title V Permitting
Although title V generally does not impose substantive new
requirements, title V permits sometimes serve as the vehicle to further
define applicable requirements from other CAA programs. This most often
occurs when the underlying applicable requirement provides general
direction and requires further source-specific analysis to define the
precise requirements that apply to a given source or emission unit.
Some underlying applicable requirements expressly identify title V
permits as the vehicle for this analysis; others may be more open-ended
about the vehicle used to define the applicable requirement; and still
others may specify a different vehicle for establishing these
requirements (e.g., NSR permits, discussed further in section IV. of
this preamble).
Unlike applicable requirements that are established in full
elsewhere, where the details of an applicable requirement are defined
for the first time through the title V permitting process, questions
about the content of such an applicable requirement are subject to
title V's unique oversight tools, including the EPA's objection
authority and the public petition opportunity.
For example, CAA section 112(g) requires the development of case-
by-case Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) limits prior to
certain construction activities at a major source of HAPs where there
is no NESHAP under CAA section 112(d).\33\ These limits can--and in
some cases, must--be established through the title V process. In such
cases where a title V permit is used to establish a case-by-case MACT
limit, questions about both the applicability and the content of such a
limit (i.e., whether the limit properly reflects MACT) are subject to
the unique oversight tools of title V.\34\
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\33\ Under CAA section 112(g)(2), if the EPA has not established
a MACT standard for a source category, the EPA or the state must
establish a case-by-case MACT emission limit prior to certain
construction activities at a major source of HAPs. Similarly, under
CAA section 112(j)(2), if the EPA has not established a MACT
standard for a source category, a new or existing major source's
title V operating permit must include a case-by-case MACT limit. See
also 40 CFR 63.40-44 (implementing regulations for 112(g)), 63.50-56
(implementing regulations for 112(j)).
\34\ See 61 FR 68384, 68393, 68395 (Dec. 27, 1996) (``Where EPA
determines that the MACT determination made by the permitting
authority fails to meet any of the requirements of Sec. 63.43 [and]
where the MACT determination is made part of a source's part 70
permit, EPA may veto issuance of the permit in accordance with the
provisions of 40 CFR 70.8(c).''); id. at 68395 (``If, during the
EPA's review of the section 112(g) determination, it becomes
apparent that the determination is not in compliance with the Act,
then EPA must object to the issuance or revision of that permit.'');
In the Matter of American Electric Power Service Corp., Southwest
Electric Power Co., John W. Turk Plant, Order on Petition No. VI-
2008-01 at 15-16 (Dec. 15, 2009); In the Matter of Shintech Inc.,
PVC Plant, Order on Petition No. 6-03-1 at 16-21 (July 3, 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other requirements of CAA section 112 NESHAP and section 111 NSPS
regulations may require further definition through, for example,
various types of site-specific operational plans. These plans are
generally developed outside of the title V permitting process, but to
the extent they are necessary to impose or assure compliance with an
applicable requirement of the NSPS or NESHAP, they must be included or
incorporated into title V permits.\35\ The title V permitting process
may also be used for similar case-by-case decisions based on underlying
SIP provisions, as discussed further in the following subsection of
this preamble.
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\35\ Other requirements of CAA section 111 NSPS and section 112
NESHAP regulations may require further definition through various
types of site-specific operational plans. These plans are generally
developed outside of the title V permitting process, but to the
extent they are necessary to impose or assure compliance with an
applicable requirement of the NSPS or NESHAP, they must be included
or incorporated into title V permits. See, e.g., Valero Houston
Order at 25-26.
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In these situations, it is not the title V permit that establishes
the applicable requirement itself. The applicable requirement is still
based on the underlying statutory or regulatory provision, but the
title V permit defines the precise details of the applicable
requirement. Essentially, the title V permitting process is used to
develop the specific ``enforceable emission limitations and standards .
. . and such other conditions as are necessary to assure compliance
with the [more general underlying] applicable requirements. . . .'' 42
U.S.C. 7661c(a). Absent an underlying CAA-based authority, title V
permits should generally not be used to impose new substantive
requirements. 40 CFR 70.1(b).
G. Applicable Requirements Related to the NAAQS and SIPs
CAA requirements associated with the NAAQS and SIPs reflect the
full spectrum of issues discussed in the preceding subsections of this
preamble. Some are not applicable requirements for title V purposes;
others are self-implementing applicable requirements that need no
further review during title V; still others may be defined through
title V permitting; and many are established in the NSR permitting
process. Perhaps due to the variability and complexity of issues
related to the NAAQS and SIPs, the EPA has received numerous title V
petitions raising concerns that the EPA was not able to address through
that mechanism. The EPA hopes that the following discussion will help
reduce confusion about the issues that are--and are not--redressable
through title V oversight tools.\36\
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\36\ As with essentially all other portions of this preamble,
the explanations in this section reflect existing policies, as
expressed in prior rule preambles, guidance documents, and numerous
title V petition orders.
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Beginning with the NAAQS, it is well-established that the NAAQS are
not themselves applicable requirements because they do not apply
directly to sources.\37\ That is, the promulgation of a NAAQS does not,
in and of itself, automatically result in emission limits or other
control measures applicable to a source. Instead, the NAAQS create an
obligation on states to develop SIPs (and on EPA to promulgate FIPs, as
necessary) that contain requirements necessary to achieve and maintain
the NAAQS. 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(1), (c)(1).
[[Page 1159]]
The specific measures contained in each state's EPA-approved SIP to
achieve the NAAQS are the applicable requirements with which sources
must comply. 40 CFR 70.2. For purposes of title V permitting, this
means that a state does not have any general obligation to establish
emission limitations or other standards within a title V permit in
order to protect the NAAQS. Whether such requirements are necessary is
largely dependent on the relevant terms of the SIP.
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\37\ 40 CFR 70.2 (defining ``applicable requirement'' to include
the NAAQS ``but only as it would apply to temporary sources''); 57
FR at 32276 (``Under the Act, NAAQS implementation is a requirement
imposed on States in the SIP; it is not imposed directly on a
source. In its final rule, EPA clarifies that the NAAQS and the
increment and visibility requirements under part C of title I of the
Act are applicable requirements for temporary sources only.''); 56
FR at 21732-33 (``The EPA does not interpret compliance with the
NAAQS to be an `applicable requirement' of the Act.'').
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Some applicable requirements in SIPs could be described as ``self-
implementing'' in a manner similar to the EPA's NSPS and NESHAP
standards discussed in section III.E. of this preamble. For example, a
source-specific SIP provision may impose a specific numerical emission
limit or operational limit on a specific source. Or, a SIP provision,
``permit by rule,'' or ``general permit'' within the SIP may impose
similar requirements on a category of sources or emission units. Such
requirements should be included in the source's title V permit without
further review (except, of course, to ensure that the permit contains
sufficient monitoring and other compliance assurance conditions).
Nonetheless, the EPA has received many title V petitions challenging
such requirements contained in an EPA-approved SIP. Some petitions have
directly challenged the SIP provision itself, asserting that the SIP
requirement was incorrectly established or failed to satisfy certain
legal requirements governing SIPs. More often, petitions have
challenged permit terms that repeat verbatim an approved SIP provision;
such claims effectively challenge the SIP itself. As the EPA has
explained, if an alleged problem lies with the content of the SIP, the
proper remedy would be a ``SIP Call'' under CAA section 110(k), not a
title V petition. Until the EPA approves a corrective SIP revision or
issues a FIP, the SIP provision remains an ``applicable requirement''
that should be incorporated unchanged into the title V permit. The EPA
has consistently denied title V petition claims on this basis.\38\
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\38\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Piedmont Green Power, Order on
Petition Number IV-2015-2 at 28-29 (Dec. 13, 2016) (Piedmont Green
Power Order); In the Matter of Pacificorp's Jim Bridger and Naughton
Electric Utility Steam Generating Plants, Order on Petition No.
VIII-00-1 at 23-24 (Nov. 16, 2000).
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Other SIP requirements are less specific and must be further
defined in subsequent proceedings (generally before the state) that
involve a fact-specific analysis of the relevant affected sources and
emission units.\39\ Depending on the nature of the SIP provisions at
issue, this analysis may involve, for example, various methods of
qualitatively or quantitatively assessing a source's impact on the
NAAQS (including, but not limited to, ambient air dispersion modeling).
This analysis may also result in case-by-case emission limits designed
to protect the NAAQS. Determining the proper venue for satisfying or
defining these general SIP requirements depends on the specific
language contained in the SIP, as discussed in the following
paragraphs.
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\39\ See, e.g., 56 FR at 21757 (``Where SIP requirements are
clear, the part 70 permit must adopt these limitations and
reestablish them as permit conditions that implement the SIP. Where
the SIP requirements are ambiguous or absent, the permit could
provide a way of resolving questions as to how the SIP applies and
is enforced.'').
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In general, most SIP provisions provide that case-by-case decisions
necessary to fulfill general SIP requirements will proceed either
through subsequent rulemaking actions \40\ or through the NSR
permitting process (as discussed in section IV. of this preamble). Once
established, the more specific requirements of the SIP, as defined
through those processes, are generally not subject to further review
during the title V permitting process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ See, e.g., In the Matter of TransAlta Centralia Generation,
LLC, Order on Petition at 11-12 (Apr. 28, 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, some SIP requirements may be defined for the first time in
a title V permit, in which case the contents of these requirements are
reviewable using the unique title V oversight tools. Again, whether a
SIP-based requirement is reviewable through the title V process depends
on the specific SIP provision at issue. For example, the EPA has
reviewed (and granted) title V petitions requesting analysis of a
source's impacts on the NAAQS or case-specific emission limits designed
to protect the NAAQS in situations where the SIP provisions at issue
specifically suggested that such requirements would be implemented
through title V.\41\ In such cases, the EPA has generally provided the
permitting authority the opportunity to interpret the relevant SIP
provisions and to explain the scope, timing, and applicability of these
provisions as they relate to the source in question.
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\41\ See In the Matter of In the Matter of Alabama Power Co.,
Barry Generating Plant, Order on Petition No. IV-2021-5 at 11-14
(June 14, 2022) (granting a claim related to a SIP provision that
required owner/operators of a certain type of source to
``[d]emonstrate, to the satisfaction of the [state], that sulfur
oxides emitted, either alone or in contribution to other sources,
will not interfere with attainment and maintenance of any primary or
secondary [NAAQS]''); In the Matter of Duke Energy, LLC, Asheville
Steam Electric Plant, Order on Petition No. IV-2016-06 at 11-17
(June 30, 2017) (granting claim related to a SIP requirement that
``the permit shall contain a condition requiring'' controls more
stringent than the applicable emission standards when necessary to
prevent a violation of the NAAQS--a provision the state had
previously relied upon to establish limits in individual permits);
In the Matter of Duke Energy, LLC, Roxboro Steam Electric Plant,
Order on Petition No. IV-2016-07 at 10-15 (June 30, 2017) (same as
Duke Asheville); In the Matter of Public Service of New Hampshire,
Schiller Station, Order on Petition No. VI2014-04 at 8-13 (July 28,
2015) (granting claim related to a SIP requirement to ``apply
special emission limits to the stationary sources on a case-by-case
basis to insure [sic] that their air quality impacts'' do not
interfere with NAAQS attainment in adjacent states).
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The EPA has also addressed other, more general SIP provisions that
do not explicitly require any specific action during the title V
process. These provisions often take the form of broad, general
prohibitions on air pollution, and these SIP provisions are not always
directly tied to the NAAQS or any specific federal requirements. The
EPA has explained that states have discretion under these general SIP
provisions to determine that it is not necessary to impose source-
specific limits through title V permits.\42\ However, this does not
prevent states from using title V to address such general
requirements.\43\
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\42\ See In the Matter of EME Homer City Generation LP and First
Energy Generation Corp., Order on Petition Nos. III2012-06, III-
2012-07, and III-2013-02 at 15-16 (July 30, 2014) (SIP provision
stated ``No person may permit air pollution as that term is defined
in the act''); In the Matter of TransAlta Centralia Generation, LLC,
Order on Petition at 7 (April 28, 2011) (SIP provision prohibited
``emissions detrimental to persons or property''); In the Matter of
Hercules, Inc., Order on Petition at 8 (Nov. 10, 2004) (SIP
provision prohibited emissions that would cause injury or
unreasonably interfere with enjoyment of life or use of property).
\43\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Oxbow Calcining LLC, Order on
Petition No. VI-2020-11 at 10-12 (June 14, 2022) (addressing a
situation where a state permitting authority took enforcement action
against a source that allegedly caused a violation of a NAAQS, on
the basis that this alleged violation also violated permit terms
reflecting a general SIP provision prohibiting air pollution).
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Although uncommon, some SIP provisions expressly identify title V
permits as a vehicle for establishing or modifying SIP-based limits.
For example, some SIP provisions based on the EPA's Plantwide
Applicability Limit (PAL) rules expressly identify title V renewal
permits as a potential vehicle for adjusting a PAL.\44\ Where the title
V process is specifically identified in a SIP as a means of
establishing or defining an applicable requirement of the SIP,
questions related to these requirements maybe properly raised during
the title V permitting process.
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\44\ See, e.g., 51.166(w)(10)(v); ExxonMobil Baytown Chemical
Order 9 at 13-14.
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[[Page 1160]]
IV. Interface Between NSR and Title V Permitting
Since the title V program was created in the early 1990s, the EPA,
state permitting authorities, and other interested stakeholders have
grappled with questions related to the intersection of the title I
(NSR) \45\ preconstruction permitting programs and the title V
operating permit program. Among other issues, one has persisted: in
what situations, and to what extent, should the unique title V
oversight tools (e.g., the EPA's objection authority and the public
petition opportunity) be used to address alleged deficiencies related
to title I permitting decisions? This issue implicates various
questions about the relationship between title V permits and applicable
requirements established in other CAA programs. For example, when is an
applicable requirement considered established, such that it should be
incorporated into a title V permit without further substantive review?
Should applicable requirements established under NSR permitting
programs be treated the same as applicable requirements established
under other CAA programs? The EPA's answer to these questions has
changed over time, and two federal circuit courts have reached
differing conclusions on the matter, as discussed in section IV.A.3. of
this preamble.
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\45\ For purposes of this preamble, the terms ``title I permit''
and ``NSR permit'' are used interchangeably to describe a
preconstruction permit issued to satisfy the NSR-related
requirements of title I of the Clean Air Act.
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This action proposes to codify the reasonable approach that the EPA
has implemented on a case-by-case basis since 2017, as further
described and justified in sections IV.A.3., IV.B., and IV.E. of this
preamble. In short, provided a source obtains an NSR permit under EPA-
approved (or EPA-promulgated) title I rules, with public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial review, that NSR permit
establishes and defines the relevant NSR-related applicable
requirements of the SIP (or FIP) for purposes of title V. As with
applicable requirements established under other CAA authorities (e.g.,
NSPS, NESHAP), the EPA would not revisit those NSR decisions through
the title V process.
This approach creates an incentive for permitting authorities to
provide opportunities for meaningful public involvement through the
most appropriate venue--the NSR permitting process. However, to the
extent that the public is deprived of the opportunity to participate in
the NSR permitting process, the title V process will serve as a
backstop to ensure that each title V permit contains all applicable
requirements. In other words, even under the EPA's current (and
proposed) framework, there are certain situations in which the EPA
would review substantive NSR issues through the title V permitting
process, as explained in more detail in section IV.B.5. of this
preamble.
The EPA is also soliciting comment on alternative approaches,
presented in section IV.F. of this preamble, that would involve using
title V to review NSR decisions in more situations.
The proposed regulatory changes related to NSR permitting are
distinct and severable from the proposed change related to the general
duty clause under CAA section 112(r)(1), discussed in section V. of
this preamble.
A. Background: Historical and Current EPA Positions
1. NSR Programs (1977-Present)
The title I (NSR) preconstruction permitting program was
established before the title V operating permits program. The NSR
program is based on the 1977 Amendments to the CAA. The overall NSR
program is comprised of three sub-programs, as discussed later.
The NSR program was designed to protect public health and welfare
from the effects of air pollution and to preserve and/or improve air
quality throughout the nation. See 42 U.S.C. 7470(1), (2), (4). The NSR
program requires certain stationary sources of air pollution to obtain
air pollution permits prior to beginning construction. Construction of
new sources and the modification of certain sources with emissions
above statutory and/or regulatory thresholds are subject to ``major
source'' NSR requirements. New sources and modifications below the
relevant emissions thresholds may be subject to minor NSR requirements
or excluded from NSR altogether.
The major NSR program includes two distinct programs that each have
unique requirements for new or modified sources. The applicability of
these two programs depends on whether the area where the source is
located is exceeding the NAAQS for one or more pollutants. The PSD
program, based on requirements in part C of title I of the CAA, applies
to pollutants for which the area is not exceeding the NAAQS (areas
designated as attainment or unclassifiable) and to regulated NSR
pollutants for which there are no NAAQS. 42 U.S.C. 7470-7479. The
Nonattainment NSR (NNSR) program, based on part D of title I of the
CAA, applies to pollutants for which the area is not meeting the NAAQS
(areas designated as nonattainment). 42 U.S.C. 7501-7515.
To implement the CAA requirements for these programs, most states
have EPA-approved SIPs containing PSD and NNSR preconstruction
permitting programs that meet the minimum requirements reflected in the
EPA's major NSR program regulations at 40 CFR 51.166 and 51.165. Upon
EPA approval of a SIP, the state or local air agency becomes the
permitting authority for major NSR permits for sources within its
boundaries and issues permits under state law. Currently, state and
local air agencies issue the vast majority of major NSR permits each
year. When a state or local air agency does not have an approved NSR
program, federal regulations (40 CFR 52.21, through incorporation into
a FIP) apply and either the EPA issues the major NSR permits or a state
or local air agency issues the major NSR permits on behalf of the EPA
by way of a delegation agreement. For sources located in Indian
Country, 18 U.S.C. 1151, the EPA is the permitting authority for major
NSR.
The permitting program for construction of new and modified non-
major sources and minor modifications to major sources is known as the
minor NSR program. In addition to the specific major NSR requirements
in CAA sections 165 and 173, CAA section 110(a)(2)(C) requires states
to develop a program to regulate the construction and modification of
any stationary source ``as necessary to assure that [NAAQS] are
achieved.'' 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(C). The CAA and the EPA's regulations
are less prescriptive regarding minimum requirements for minor NSR, so
air agencies generally have more flexibility in designing minor NSR
programs in their EPA-approved SIPs. See 40 CFR 51.160-51.164. Minor
NSR permits are almost exclusively issued by state and local air
agencies, although the EPA issues minor NSR permits in many areas of
Indian Country. See 40 CFR 49.151-49.165.
The applicability of the PSD, NNSR, and/or minor NSR programs to a
stationary source must be determined in advance of construction and is
a pollutant-specific determination. Thus, a stationary source may be
subject to the PSD program for certain pollutants, NNSR for some
pollutants, and minor NSR for others.
2. Original Title V Approach to NSR (1990-1997)
[[Page 1161]]
As noted previously, the title V program was established in the
1990 CAA Amendments. The legislative history articulates Congress's
intent that, notwithstanding the enactment of title V, NSR permits
would continue to be issued as they had for over a decade, and that
title V permits would be used to incorporate those requirements, but
not to alter or impose additional NSR-related requirements.\46\ The
text of the CAA implicitly reflects this paradigm. However, the statute
does not unambiguously prescribe the details of how EPA should approach
the intersection of the NSR and title V permitting programs.
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\46\ See sections IV.E.2. and IV.E.3. of this preamble for
further discussion of legislative intent.
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Thus, when the EPA promulgated the original title V implementing
regulations in 1991 and 1992, the agency sought to provide clarity
through multiple regulatory provisions, both of which were introduced
earlier in this preamble. Again, 40 CFR 70.1(b) states: ``All sources
subject to these regulations shall have a permit to operate that
assures compliance by the source with all applicable requirements.
While title V does not impose substantive new requirements, it does
require that . . . certain procedural measures be adopted especially
with respect to compliance.'' Additionally, the EPA created a
definition of ``applicable requirement'' in 40 CFR 70.2 (and later,
71.2) that includes, in relevant part: ``all of the following as they
apply to emissions units in a part 70 source . . . (1) Any standard or
other requirement provided for in the applicable implementation plan
approved or promulgated by EPA through rulemaking under title I of the
Act that implements the relevant requirements of the Act, including any
revisions to that plan promulgated in part 52 of this chapter; (2) Any
term or condition of any preconstruction permits issued pursuant to
regulations approved or promulgated through rulemaking under title I,
including parts C or D, of the Act.''
In the preamble of this initial part 70 rulemaking effort, the
agency spoke directly to the intersection of title V and title I
permitting. The EPA did not express an intention to use the title V
permitting process to review the substance of applicable requirements
established in preconstruction permitting programs under title I of the
CAA. To the contrary, the EPA stated that ``[a]ny requirements
established during the preconstruction review process also apply to the
source for purposes of implementing title V. If the source meets the
limits in its NSR permit, the title V operating permit would
incorporate these limits without further review.'' 56 FR 21712, 21738-
39 (May 10, 1991) (emphasis added). The EPA stated clearly that ``[t]he
intent of title V is not to second-guess the results of any State NSR
program.'' Id. at 21739 (emphasis added). The EPA stated that
``[d]ecisions made under the NSR and/or PSD programs (e.g., Best
Available Control Technology [BACT]) define applicable SIP requirements
for the title V source and, if they are not otherwise changed, can be
incorporated without further review into the operating permit for the
source.'' Id. at 21721 (emphasis added). The preamble to the final rule
further confirms that ``[d]ecisions made under the NSR and/or PSD
programs define certain applicable SIP requirements for the title V
source.'' 57 FR 32250, 32259 (July 21, 1992) (emphasis added).
3. Revised Title V Approach to NSR (1997-2017)
Once state permitting authorities began issuing title V permits in
the mid-to-late-1990s, the EPA began receiving public petitions
challenging those permits. Some of the earliest title V petitions
included challenges to various types of NSR permitting decisions,
proving a test to the statements the EPA made when promulgating its
part 70 rules. The EPA's approach ultimately differed depending on
whether the underlying NSR permit was issued under the EPA's federal
PSD rules (40 CFR 52.21, administration of which was delegated to many
states at the time) or under EPA-approved SIP rules.
For NSR permits issued under the federal rules, the EPA's petition
responses from 1997 onward followed the agency's interpretations and
statements of intent from the early 1990s. In other words, the EPA
declined to use the title V petition process to review the merits of
NSR permits issued by the EPA or a delegated agency under a FIP. The
EPA's reasoning at the time was that appeals of such NSR permits are
governed by 40 CFR 124.19 and are heard exclusively by the EPA
Environmental Appeals Board (EAB). Thus, the EPA concluded that it need
not entertain claims that such permits are deficient when raised in a
petition to object to a title V permit.\47\ The EPA consistently
reiterated the same or similar statements in the decades that
followed.\48\
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\47\ See In the Matter of Maui Electric Co., Ltd., Order on
Petition (June 16, 1999) In the Matter of Hawaii Electric Light Co.
Ltd., Order on Petition (Apr. 3, 1998); In the Matter of Kawaihae
Cogeneration, Order on Petition (Mar. 10, 1997) (Kawaihae Order).
\48\ See, e.g., In the Matter of East Kentucky Power
Cooperative, Inc., Hugh L. Spurlock Generating Station, Order on
Petition, 5 n.2 (Aug. 30, 2007) (Spurlock I Order); In the Matter of
Carmeuse Lime and Stone, Order on Petition No. V-2010-1 at 7 n.1
(Nov. 4, 2011); see also Hu Honua I Order at 3 n.4.
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However, starting in 1997, the EPA adopted a different approach to
title V permitting with respect to NSR permits issued by state
permitting authorities under EPA-approved SIP rules.\49\ The EPA began
to interpret section (1) of the definition of ``applicable
requirement'' to allow the EPA, states, and the public to use the title
V permitting process to examine the propriety of prior title I
permitting decisions. For instance, in the 1997 Shintech I Order, the
EPA stated:
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\49\ For example, within the 1997 Kawaihae Order, in which the
EPA declined to review the merits of a PSD permit issued under
delegated federal authority, the EPA also announced the following
(without explanation): ``In contrast, where a state or local
government has a SIP-approved PSD program and the [EAB] lacks
jurisdiction to entertain PSD permit appeals, the merits of PSD
issues are ripe for consideration in a timely veto petition under
Title V.'' Kawaihae Order at 3.
Where a state or local government has a SIP-approved PSD
program, the merits of PSD issues can be ripe for consideration in a
timely petition to object under Title V. Under 40 CFR 70.1(b), ``all
sources subject to Title V must have a permit to operate that
assures compliance by the source with all applicable requirements.''
Applicable requirements are defined in section 70.2 to include ``(1)
any standard or other requirement provided for in the applicable
implementation plan approved or promulgated by EPA through
rulemaking under Title I of the [Clean Air] Act . . . .'' The
[state] defines ``federal applicable requirement,'' in relevant
part, to include ``any standard or other requirement provided for in
the Louisiana [SIP] approved or promulgated by EPA through
rulemaking under title I of the Clean Air Act that implements the
relevant requirements of the Clean Air Act, including any revisions
to that plan promulgated in 40 CFR part 52, subpart T.'' Thus, the
applicable requirements of the Shintech Permits include the
requirement to obtain a PSD permit that in turn complies with the
applicable PSD requirements under the Act, EPA regulations, and the
Louisiana SIP.\50\
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\50\ Shintech I Order at 3 n.2 (emphasis added) (citation
omitted).
In a 1999 letter responding to requests from permitting
authorities, the Director of the EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards articulated the agency's then-current understanding of the
interaction of title I and title V.\51\ The letter stated that
``applicable requirements include the requirement to
[[Page 1162]]
obtain preconstruction permits that comply with applicable
preconstruction review requirements under the Act, EPA regulations, and
SIP's.'' The letter expressed the view that section 505(b) of the Act
provides a form of corrective action in addition to all the other
enforcement authorities the EPA has under the Act. It stated that
generally the agency will not object to a title V permit for NSR
determinations ``made long ago during a prior preconstruction
permitting process.'' However, regarding recently issued NSR permits,
the EPA indicated it may object to improper NSR determinations.
Additionally, the letter said that the EPA could object to a title V
permit where ``EPA believes that an emission unit has not gone through
the proper preconstruction permitting process.''
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\51\ Letter from John S. Seitz, U.S. EPA, to Robert Hodanbosi,
STAPPA/ALAPCO (May 20, 1999), available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-08/documents/hodan7.pdf.
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The EPA has also used this reading of the agency's oversight
authority under title V as part of the justification for approving
state PSD programs.\52\ In these approvals, the EPA pointed to its
authority under title I, sections 113 and 167, and stated that title V
``has added new tools'' for addressing concerns with implementation of
PSD requirements by allowing for objection to title V permits under
section 505(b) of the Act. However, the authority to revisit an issued
preconstruction permit does not appear to have been dispositive to the
approval of these PSD programs, as EPA could still conduct oversight
using its title I-based authorities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ See, e.g., Approval and Promulgation of Implementation
Plans; Oregon, 68 FR 2891, 2899 (Jan. 22, 2003); see also Approval
and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Idaho; Designation of
Areas for Air Quality Planning Purposes; Idaho, 68 FR 2217, 2221
(Jan. 16, 2003).
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The EPA implicitly or explicitly followed this approach in
responding to title V petitions between 1997 and 2017. In general, the
petition claims at issue alleged two types of defects related to NSR:
First, some claims alleged flaws with the terms of major NSR permits
issued by a state permitting authority--for example, that BACT limits
in a PSD permit were not stringent enough. The EPA refers to these
claims as addressing ``NSR permit content.'' Second, other claims
alleged that a facility should have received a major NSR permit,
instead of a minor NSR permit, to authorize the construction of a new
source or modification. The EPA refers to these claims as addressing
``NSR applicability.'' For both types of issues, the EPA indicated that
the agency could review whether preconstruction permitting decisions
complied with the requirements of the SIP.
During this time period, the EPA often limited or qualified its use
of title V authorities to address substantive NSR permitting issues.
For example, in 1999, the agency stated:
In determining BACT under a minor NSR program, as in
implementing other aspects of SIP preconstruction review programs, a
State exercises considerable discretion. Thus, EPA lacks authority
to take corrective action merely because the Agency disagrees with a
State's lawful exercise of discretion in making BACT-related
determinations. State discretion is bounded, however, by the
fundamental requirements of administrative law that agency decisions
not be arbitrary or capricious, be beyond statutory authority, or
fail to comply with applicable procedures.\53\
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\53\ In the Matter of Roosevelt Regional Landfill, Order on
Petition, 9 (May 4, 1999).
Applying this framework, the EPA has also drawn an analogy between
this approach and the standard used by the EAB in reviewing EPA-issued
PSD permits, described as a ``clearly erroneous'' standard.\54\ More
recently, the agency summarized this framework as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ See, e.g., Spurlock I Order at 4-5 (Aug. 30, 2007) (``The
standard of review applied by the EAB in its review of federal PSD
permits has been explained in numerous orders of the EAB. In short,
in such appeals, the burden is on a petitioner to demonstrate that
review is warranted. Ordinarily, a PSD permit will not be reviewed
by the EAB unless the decision of the permitting authority was based
on either a clearly erroneous finding of fact or conclusion of law,
or involves an important matter of policy or exercise of discretion
that warrants review. Thus, when a response to a petition to object
to a title V permit requires the Administrator to determine whether
an approved state's PSD permitting decision was adequately explained
and meets the requirements of its SIP, EPA believes it is
appropriate to apply a similar standard of review to that employed
by the EAB in its review of federal PSD permits. When EPA
promulgated the regulations governing the EAB's exercise of its
review authority, the Agency noted that the power of review `should
be only sparingly exercised.' Similar deference to the permitting
authority is also justified in the case of a PSD permit issued by a
state with an approved PSD program, as is the case here.'' (quoting
45 FR 33290, 33412 (May 19, 1980); citing In re Prairie State
Generating Company, 13 E.A.D. 1 (EAB 2006); In re Kawaihae
Cogeneration, 7 E.A.D. 107 (EAB 1997)).
Where a petitioner's request that the Administrator object to
the issuance of a title V permit is based in whole, or in part, on a
permitting authority's alleged failure to comply with the
requirements of its approved PSD program (as with other allegations
of inconsistency with the Act), the burden is on the petitioner to
demonstrate to the Administrator that the permitting decision was
not in compliance with the requirements of the Act, including the
requirements of the SIP. As the EPA has explained in describing its
authority to oversee the implementation of the PSD program in states
with approved programs, such requirements include that the
permitting authority: (1) follow the required procedures in the SIP;
(2) make PSD determinations on reasonable grounds properly supported
on the record; and (3) describe the determinations in enforceable
terms. As the permitting authority for [the state's] SIP-approved
PSD program, [the state agency] has substantial discretion in
issuing PSD permits. Given this discretion, in reviewing a PSD
permitting decision in the title V petition context, the EPA
generally will not substitute its own judgment for that of [the
state]. Rather, consistent with the decision in Alaska Dep't of
Envt'l Conservation v. EPA, 540 U.S. 461 (2004), in reviewing a
petition to object to a title V permit raising concerns regarding a
state's PSD permitting decision, the EPA generally will look to see
whether the petitioner has shown that the state did not comply with
its SIP-approved regulations governing PSD permitting, or whether
the state's exercise of discretion under such regulations was
unreasonable or arbitrary.\55\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ In the Matter of Appleton Coated, LLC, Order on Petition
Nos. V-2013-12 & V-2013-15 at 5 (Oct. 14, 2016) (Appleton Order)
(citations omitted).
Between 1997 and 2017, the EPA occasionally articulated further
restrictions on the use of title V oversight tools to address title I
permitting issues. For example, on at least three occasions, the EPA
indicated that ``the Agency generally does not object to the issuance
of a title V permit due to concerns over BACT or related determinations
made long ago during a prior preconstruction permitting process.'' \56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ In the Matter of Georgia Pacific Consumer Products LP
Plant, Order on Petition No. V-2011-1 at 17 (July 23, 2012);
Spurlock I Order at 19; see In the Matter of Chevron Products
Company, Richmond, California Facility, Order on Petition No. IX-
2004-08 at 9 (Mar. 15, 2005). Note that this statement is based on
the EPA policy articulated in the 1999 letter discussed in footnote
51.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, on at least one occasion, the EPA suggested that the
title V petition demonstration burden may require a final determination
that NSR applies before the EPA can use the title V process to overturn
an NSR applicability decision made by the permitting authority. The EPA
found ``that [the state] has not reached a final determination in this
permitting context that PSD is an applicable requirement for these
sources, that the USEPA has not determined otherwise, and that a court
has not issued a determination in the litigation context. Accordingly,
there is no requirement under the facts of this case for the permits to
include either PSD limits or a compliance schedule for the source to
come into compliance with such limits at this time.'' The EPA concluded
that ``even if [the state] were to recognize that the potential for
noncompliance [with title I preconstruction permitting requirements]
exists, it is not required to pursue inquiries further in the title V
context,'' but instead could pursue the
[[Page 1163]]
matter through title I enforcement mechanisms.\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ In the Matter of Midwest Generation-Joliet Generating
Station and Will County Generating Stations, Order on Petition No.
V-2005-2 at 9-10 (June 14, 2007).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Current Title V Approach to NSR (2017-Present)
Beginning in 2017, the EPA adopted a more nuanced view that, in the
EPA's present opinion, better reflects not only the statute and
Congress's intent, but also the EPA's regulatory definition of
``applicable requirement'' and the manner in which the title V
permitting program interacts with other types of CAA requirements. As
with many of the EPA's views on this topic, the EPA's updated view was
articulated within Administrator-signed orders responding to title V
petitions on individual title V permits.
The first such order was the 2017 PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order.\58\
There, the EPA interpreted the CAA and the EPA's title V regulations to
not require permitting authorities (including the EPA) to examine the
merits of certain title I permitting decisions in the title V
permitting context. Specifically, in response to a petition claiming
that a PSD permit (instead of a minor NSR permit) was required for
certain changes that occurred at the facility at issue approximately 20
years prior, the EPA explained:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ In the Matter of PacifiCorp Energy, Hunter Power Plant,
Order on Petition No. VIII-2016-4 (Oct. 16, 2017).
In circumstances such as those present here where a
preconstruction permit has been duly obtained, . . . when a
permitting authority has made a source-specific permitting decision
with respect to a particular construction project under title I,
those decisions ``define certain applicable SIP requirements for the
title V source'' for purposes of title V permitting. 57 FR 32250,
32259 (July 21, 1992). The EPA is now interpreting the regulations
to mean that the issuance of a[n NSR] permit defines the
applicability of preconstruction requirements under section (1) of
the definition of ``applicable requirement'' for the approved
construction activities for the purposes of permitting under title V
of the Act. . . . These source-specific permitting actions take the
general preconstruction permitting requirements of the SIP--the
requirement to obtain a particular type of permit and the
substantive requirements that must be included in each type of
permit--and evaluate at the time of the permitting decision whether
and how to apply them to a proposed construction or
modification.\59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 10-11. As the EPA explained:
``This interpretation applies to the facts of this Claim, where a
permitting authority issued a source-specific title I
preconstruction permit subject to public notice and comment and for
which judicial review was available.'' Id. at 11 n.21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, the EPA stated:
Consistent with this reading, permitting agencies and the EPA
need not reevaluate--in the context of title V permitting,
oversight, or petition responses--previously issued final
preconstruction permits, especially those that have already been
subject to public notice and comment and an opportunity for judicial
review. Concerns with these final preconstruction permits should
instead be handled under the authorities found in title I of the
Act. Where a final preconstruction permit has been issued, whether
it is a major or minor NSR permit, the terms and conditions of that
permit should be incorporated as ``applicable requirements'' and the
permitting authority and the EPA should limit its review to whether
the title V permit has accurately incorporated those terms and
conditions and whether the title V permit includes adequate
monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting requirements to assure
compliance with the terms and conditions of the preconstruction
permit.\60\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 19 (citing 42 U.S.C. 7661c(a);
40 CFR 70.6(a)(3), 70.6(c)(1)).
Shortly after issuing the PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order, the EPA issued
the Big River Steel Order,\61\ which applied similar statutory and
regulatory interpretations to a different set of facts. In Big River
Steel, the EPA declined to use the title V petition process to review
whether a PSD permit satisfied the relevant SIP requirements governing
PSD permit content (including BACT) and modeling related to the NAAQS.
The EPA did so notwithstanding the fact that the PSD permit at issue,
and the title V permit being petitioned, were issued at the same time
and in the same physical permit document. The EPA's rationale was fully
expressed within the PacifiCorp-Hunter I and Big River Steel Orders. To
the extent those or similar rationales are relevant to this proposed
rulemaking, they are presented in section IV.E. of this preamble.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ In the Matter of Big River Steel, LLC, Order on Petition
No. VI-2013-10 (Oct. 31, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the 2017 PacifiCorp-Hunter I and Big River Steel Orders, the
EPA has issued approximately 20 other title V petition orders
addressing similar issues under different fact patterns. Although the
EPA has consistently followed the overarching interpretations and
policies articulated in the PacifiCorp-Hunter I and Big River Steel
Orders, each decision about whether those interpretations were
applicable depended on the specific facts at issue.\62\ Through these
case-by-case decisions, the EPA has clarified various aspects of the
EPA's interpretation of the title V provisions. However, because those
decisions are spread across many different orders, the EPA understands
that not all stakeholders--including permitting authorities,
permittees, and members of the public--may fully understand the EPA's
views about which types of issues are, or are not, subject to review
through title V.\63\ This preamble summarizes the most relevant aspects
of these prior decisions in order to provide additional clarity about
the EPA's current views.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ See, e.g., PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 11 n.21 (``This
interpretation applies to the facts of this Claim, where a
permitting authority issued a source-specific title I
preconstruction permit subject to public notice and comment and for
which judicial review was available. The EPA is not considering at
this time whether other circumstances may warrant a different
approach.''); Sierra Club v. EPA, 926 F.3d 844, 850 (D.C. Cir. 2019)
(emphasizing the case-specific nature the EPA's decision to apply
the interpretation at issue in PacifiCorp-Hunter I, as well as the
case-specific nature of any future EPA decisions to apply or not
apply the same interpretation to different fact patterns).
\63\ In recent permitting decisions and title V petitions, the
EPA has observed that both state permitting authorities and public
petitioners have often misapplied, misinterpreted, or ignored the
interpretations and policies expressed in these orders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In some of these decisions, the EPA concluded that NSR permitting
actions established the relevant ``applicable requirements'' for title
V purposes, and the EPA declined to review the substance of those
applicable requirements in the title V petition context. The EPA
applied this approach to many different types of issues, including the
sufficiency of major NSR permit terms,\64\ the sufficiency of minor NSR
permit terms,\65\ issues related to modeling and the NAAQS,\66\
procedures used to issue NSR permits,\67\ whether major NSR is
applicable,\68\ and other
[[Page 1164]]
NSR-related issues.\69\ Some of these orders involved situations where
NSR permits were issued well before the title V permits being
challenged,\70\ while others involved more contemporaneous NSR and
title V permitting decisions.\71\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ AK Steel Order at 9-13; In the Matter of Riverview Energy
Corp., Order on Petition No. V-2019-10 at 19-29 (Mar. 26, 2020)
(Riverview Order); In the Matter of South Louisiana Methanol, LP,
St. James Methanol Plant, Order on Petition Nos. VI-2016-24 & VI-
2017-014 at 8-10 (May 29, 2018) (South Louisiana Methanol Order);
Big River Steel Order at 8-20.
\65\ In the Matter of Delaware City Refining Company, LLC,
Delaware City Refinery, Order on Petition No. III-2022-10 at 26
(July 5, 2023) (Delaware City Refinery Order); In the Matter of
Valero Refining-Texas, L.P., Valero Houston Refinery, Order on
Petition No. VI-2021-8 at 65-66 (June 30, 2022) (Valero Houston
Order); In the Matters of Superior Silica Sands & Wisconsin
Proppants, LLC, Order on Petition Nos. V-2016-18 & V-2017-2 at 14-15
(Feb. 26, 2018) (SSS/WP Order); In the Matter of Tennessee Valley
Authority, Gallatin Fossil Plant, Order on Petition Nos. IV-2016-11
& IV-2017-17 at 19-20 (January 30, 2018) (TVA Gallatin II Order).
\66\ Riverview Order at 19-21; Big River Steel Order at 8-20.
\67\ AK Steel Order at 9-13.
\68\ In the Matter of Waelz Sustainable Products, LLC, Order on
Petition No. V-2021-10 at 9-16 (Mar. 14, 2023) (Waelz Order); In the
Matter of Yuhuang Chemical Inc. Methanol Plant, Order on Petition
Nos. VI-2017-5 & VI-2017-13 at 7-8 (Apr. 2, 2018) (Yuhuang II
Order); In the Matter of ExxonMobil Corp., Baytown Olefins Plant,
Order on Petition No. VI-2016-12 at 9-12 (ExxonMobil Baytown Olefins
Order); PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 8-20.
\69\ In the Matter of ExxonMobil Corp., Baytown Refinery, Order
on Petition No. VI-2016-14 at 12-13 (ExxonMobil Baytown Refinery
Order); ExxonMobil Baytown Olefins Order at 9-12 .
\70\ Delaware City Refinery Order at 16; Valero Houston Order at
65-66; ExxonMobil Baytown Refinery Order at 12-13, ExxonMobil
Baytown Olefins Order at 9-12; TVA Gallatin II Order at 19-20.
\71\ Waelz Order at 13-15; Riverview Order at 24-28; South
Louisiana Methanol Order at 9; Yuhuang II Order at 7-8; SSS/WP Order
at 14-15; Big River Steel Order at 8-20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In other orders with materially different factual underpinnings,
the EPA determined that it would be appropriate to review certain NSR-
related issues through the title V permitting process. For example, the
EPA substantively engaged with title V petition claims concerning the
sufficiency of monitoring established in NSR permits,\72\ requirements
involving an explicit overlap between NSR and title V,\73\ and other
NSR issues where no underlying NSR permit was issued \74\ or where the
underlying NSR permit did not involve public notice and the opportunity
for comment.\75\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ In the Matter of Gulf Coast Growth Ventures, LLC, Olefins,
Derivative, & Utilities Plant, Order on Petition No. VI-2021-3 at
17-19 (May 12, 2022) (Gulf Coast Growth Ventures Order); ExxonMobil
Baytown Chemical Order at 20-21; South Louisiana Methanol Order at
10-11; Yuhuang II Order at 8; see also, e.g., Big River Steel Order
at 17, 17 n.30, 19 n.32, 20; PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 16, 17,
18, 18 n.33, 19.
\73\ Suncor East Order at 53-54; ExxonMobil Baytown Chemical
Order at 13-14; In the Matter of Coyote Station Power Plant, Order
on Petition Nos. VIII-2019-1 & VIII-2020-8 at 12-13 (January 15,
202) (Coyote Station Order).
\74\ Suncor East Order at 45-48, 54-55; SRP Agua Fria Order at
11 n.18; In the Matter of Salt River Project Agricultural
Improvement & Power District, Desert Basin Generating Station, Order
on Petition No. IX-2022-3 at 12 n.20 (July 28, 2022) (SRP Desert
Basin Order); In the Matter of BP Products North America, Inc.,
Whiting Business Unit, Order on Petition No. V-2021-9 at 13 n.24
(Mar. 4, 2022) (BP Whiting II Order).
\75\ Suncor East Order at 48; Coyote Station Order at 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two of the EPA's petition orders--the PacifiCorp Hunter I Order and
the ExxonMobil Baytown Olefins Order--were challenged in different
federal circuit courts. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
issued the first ruling, upholding the ExxonMobil Baytown Olefins
Order. Env't Integrity Project v. EPA, 969 F.3d 529 (5th Cir. 2020).
There, the court found persuasive the ``EPA's view that Title V
permitting is not the appropriate vehicle for reexamining the
substantive validity of underlying Title I preconstruction permits.''
Id. at 253. The court's conclusion was ``based principally on Title V's
text, Title V's structure and purpose, and the structure of the Act as
a whole.'' Id. at 249.\76\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\76\ The court stated its conclusion several ways, as the
following examples illustrate: ``Concluding EPA's interpretation of
the Title V program is independently persuasive and therefore
entitled to the mild form of deference recognized by Skidmore v.
Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134 (1944), we deny the petition.'' 969 F.3d
at 242. ``[W]e find [the EPA's] reasoning persuasive as a
construction of the relevant provisions of Title V and its
implementing regulations.'' Id. at 247. ``Applying Skidmore, we ask
whether EPA's interpretation of Title V and its implementing
regulations in the Hunter Order is persuasive. Specifically, we
inquire into the persuasiveness of EPA's current view that the Title
V permitting process does not require substantive reevaluation of
the underlying Title I preconstruction permits applicable to a
pollution source. As we read it, the Hunter Order defends the
agency's interpretation based principally on Title V's text, Title
V's structure and purpose, and the structure of the Act as a whole.
Having examined these reasons and found them persuasive, we conclude
that EPA's current approach to Title V merits Skidmore deference.''
Id. at 249.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shortly thereafter, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
issued a ruling vacating and remanding the PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order.
Sierra Club v. EPA, 964 F.3d 882 (10th Cir. 2020). Unlike the Fifth
Circuit, the Tenth Circuit did not address the EPA's statutory
interpretation but instead rejected the EPA's reasoning as inconsistent
with the EPA's regulations. Id. at 897. According to the Tenth Circuit,
the EPA's regulations require that title V permits ensure compliance
with all ``applicable requirements,'' which the court interpreted to
include all requirements in the SIP, including those related to major
NSR. Id. at 885-86, 890-91.
Because these two courts ruled on different grounds (with the Fifth
Circuit focusing on the statute, and the Tenth Circuit focusing on the
EPA's existing regulations), the legal reasoning underlying their
holdings is not in direct conflict. However, for practical purposes,
the differing rulings have made it difficult for the EPA to apply a
uniform interpretation of its current title V regulations nationwide.
Within the Tenth Circuit's jurisdiction, in the EPA's subsequent
responses to petitions on the PacifiCorp-Hunter permit (PacifiCorp-
Hunter II 77 and PacifiCorp-Hunter III \78\), the EPA
reviewed whether a source should have obtained a major NSR permit for
projects previously authorized by a minor NSR permit. This review was
based on the Tenth Circuit's decision on the PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\77\ In the Matter of PacifiCorp Energy, Hunter Power Plant,
Order on Petition Nos. VIII-2016-4 & VIII-2020-10 (Jan. 13, 2021).
\78\ In the Matter of PacifiCorp Energy, Hunter Power Plant,
Order on Petition No. VIII-2022-2 (Sept. 27, 2022).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In title V petition orders regarding permits issued by states
outside of the Tenth Circuit, however, the EPA has followed a different
approach. As the EPA has explained:
EPA continues to believe that the interpretation of the CAA
upheld by the Fifth Circuit's decision in Environmental Integrity
Project v. EPA, 969 F.3d 529 (5th Cir. 2020), is correct. EPA thus
intends, where supported by the facts of individual permits, to
continue to apply the reasoning of In re Big River Steel, LLC, Order
on Petition No. VI-2013-10 (October 31, 2017), when issuing and
reviewing title V permits and reviewing petitions on permits for
sources in states outside of the Tenth Circuit. That is, where EPA
has approved a state's title I permitting program, duly issued
preconstruction permits establish the NSR-related ``applicable
requirements'' for the purposes of title V. As with ``applicable
requirements'' established through other CAA authorities, the terms
and conditions of those permits should be incorporated into a
source's title V permit without a further round of substantive
review as part of the title V process.\79\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ PacifiCorp-Hunter III Order at 16 n.29; see also
PacifiCorp-Hunter II Order at 15 n.26.
Thus, when reviewing permits issued by permitting authorities in
states beyond the Tenth Circuit's jurisdiction, the EPA has continued
to apply its approach dating back to 2017 and has, in many instances,
declined to use the title V process to review the substance of NSR
permitting decisions. In the situations outside the Tenth Circuit where
the EPA decided that it was appropriate to use the title V process to
review certain NSR issues, these decisions were not based on the Tenth
Circuit's interpretation of the EPA's regulations, but rather on
factual distinctions that, in the EPA's view, provided a basis for
reviewing such issues under EPA's post-2017 interpretation of the
regulations.\80\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\80\ See Suncor East Order at 46 n.61; Gulf Coast Growth
Ventures Order at 17 n.28; ExxonMobil Baytown Chemical Order at 14
n.27; BP Whiting II Order at 13 n.24; Coyote Station Order at 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As explained in the next section of this preamble, the EPA
continues to maintain that the Big River Steel Order and subsequent
title V orders reflect the best interpretation not only of the relevant
statutory provisions, but also of the existing regulations.
Nonetheless, in light of the differing circuit court decisions, the EPA
considers it prudent to update the EPA's regulations to reflect its
interpretation of the statute. The changes proposed in this rulemaking
will allow the EPA to apply a single framework across the nation by
amending the text in the regulations.
[[Page 1165]]
This action thus addresses the ruling from the Tenth Circuit by
amending the regulatory language that it found to be in conflict with
the EPA's current interpretation. It also more clearly aligns the EPA's
regulations with the EPA's statutory interpretation endorsed by the
Fifth Circuit.
B. Proposed Action
The EPA proposes to update its regulations to more closely reflect
the agency's current view regarding the intersection between title I
permitting and title V permitting. In sum: provided a source obtains an
NSR permit under EPA-approved (or EPA-promulgated) title I rules, with
public notice and the opportunity for comment and judicial review, such
NSR permit establishes the NSR-related ``applicable requirements'' of
the SIP (or FIP) for purposes of title V. As with ``applicable
requirements'' established under other CAA authorities (e.g., NSPS,
NESHAP), the EPA would not revisit those NSR decisions through the
title V process.
The following subsections of this preamble explore the situations
in which NSR-related applicable requirements of the SIP (or FIP) would
effectively be established through the NSR process, as well as
situations in which the title V process could be used to further
address or define those requirements. Determining the extent to which
title V should be used to address NSR-related requirements inherently
requires a fact-specific, case-by-case analysis of multiple variables
associated with both title I and title V permitting. However, in
general, the EPA's framework applies similarly regardless of: (i) the
stage of the title V permitting or oversight process at issue; (ii) the
NSR permit's origin (i.e., from a SIP or a FIP), (iii) the type of
substantive NSR requirement at issue (e.g., NSR permit terms or major
NSR applicability); and (iv) the procedures by which the NSR permit is
incorporated into the title V permit (e.g., sequentially or
concurrently issued permits).
1. Different Stages of the Title V Permitting and Oversight Process
The EPA's views regarding the NSR-title V interface have primarily
been discussed in the context of one specific oversight tool: the EPA's
responses to title V petitions. This rulemaking would further codify
the scope of issues that would be within, or beyond, the scope of the
EPA's review in responding to title V petitions. However, the concepts
underlying the EPA's current view--as well as this proposed rule--are
not confined to title V petitions, but extend to other aspects of title
V permitting. Specifically, the EPA's approach is equally relevant: (i)
when prospective permittees prepare title V permit applications; (ii)
when permitting authorities (including EPA, where applicable) develop
title V permits and respond to public comments on draft title V
permits, (iii) when EPA reviews and decides whether to object to
proposed title V permits during its 45-day review period; (iv) when EPA
considers reopening title V permits for cause; and (v) when EPA
considers other programmatic oversight actions under, for example, 40
CFR 70.10.
2. Different Origins of NSR Permits
As described earlier in this preamble, the EPA's approach to
reviewing NSR issues through title V diverged in the late-1990s,
depending on whether the underlying NSR permit was issued under a
state's EPA-approved SIP rules (which the EPA would review) or EPA-
promulgated FIP rules (which the EPA would not review). At the time,
this distinction was based on the differing routes to review such NSR
permitting actions; appeals of SIP-based NSR permits were reviewed
through the state court system, while appeals of FIP-based NSR permits
proceeded through the EAB and federal court system.
Instead of presenting a basis to treat SIP-based and FIP-based
title I permits differently, these NSR permit appeal pathways highlight
why they should be treated similarly. Both SIP-based and FIP-based
appeal pathways promote public involvement and ensure the substantive
validity of the underlying NSR permitting decisions. Both pathways are
similar to those used to establish (and, if necessary, challenge) other
types of applicable requirements of the CAA. See section IV.E.4.a. of
this preamble for additional information. The fact that one pathway
leads to the state courts, and the other pathway leads to the federal
courts, simply reflects the cooperative federalism system established
by Congress for the NSR program.\81\
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\81\ For additional information about how the EPA's approach to
SIP-based NSR permits comports with the structure of the CAA and
congressional intent, see sections IV.E.2. and IV.E.3. of this
preamble.
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Overall, the EPA does not view the difference between NSR-based
requirements established pursuant to a SIP, or NSR-based requirements
established pursuant a FIP, to be meaningful insofar as title V is
concerned. Both processes effectively establish and define the NSR-
related requirements of title I for title V purposes. Accordingly, the
EPA's proposed rule would codify the EPA's current approach, which does
not differentiate between NSR permits issued pursuant to a SIP or a
FIP.\82\
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\82\ This is consistent with the existing regulatory definition
of ``applicable requirement,'' which treats SIP-based and FIP-based
requirements the same. See 40 CFR 70.2, 71.2 (definition of
applicable requirement, items (1) and (2)).
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3. Different Types of NSR Requirements
The EPA's current (and proposed) approach applies regardless of the
types of NSR requirements involved. That is, once an NSR permit has
been issued under EPA-approved (or EPA-promulgated) title I rules, with
public notice and the opportunity for comment and judicial review, that
NSR permit defines the NSR-related requirements of the SIP (or FIP)
that are applicable to the construction of the new source or
modification that was the subject of the permit. The terms of both
major and minor NSR permits are applicable requirements that must be
included in title V permits.\83\ These permit conditions are not
derived or created within or through the title V process. Thus, the
title V permitting process should not be used to reevaluate the terms
of such major NSR or minor NSR permits, including questions about (i)
the content of the NSR permit (e.g., whether the permit limits reflect
BACT), (ii) whether additional requirements (e.g., major NSR
requirements) should have been applicable to the construction, and
(iii) other types of NSR requirements (e.g., whether the permitting
authority correctly determined that the construction would not cause or
contribute to a violation of the NAAQS).
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\83\ The EPA's existing regulations reflect this fact. The
current definition of ``applicable requirement'' includes ``Any term
or condition of any preconstruction permits issued pursuant to
regulations approved or promulgated through rulemaking under title
I, including Parts C or D, of the Act.'' 40 CFR 70.2 (emphasis
added). This definition includes not only the specifically listed
major NSR permits (required under parts C or D), but also minor NSR
permits issued under a SIP. This language, included in the 1992
final rule, reflects a change from the language in the 1991 proposed
rule, which only included major NSR permits. See 57 FR at 32276; 56
FR at 21768. Nonetheless, in order to provide maximum clarity to the
public, the EPA proposes a small change to make the inclusion of
minor NSR permit requirements more explicit. Note that not every
single term of every single NSR permit is an ``applicable
requirement'' that must be included in a title V permit. Some terms
of NSR permits may no longer be applicable because, for example,
they are obsolete or extraneous. See White Paper for Streamlined
Development of Part 70 Permit Applications, 7-16 (July 10, 1995).
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This principle is perhaps most intuitive with respect to permit
content. When a permitting authority authorizes construction by issuing
either a major NSR permit or minor NSR permit, it establishes emission
limits and other
[[Page 1166]]
standards necessary to satisfy the SIP requirements relevant to either
major or minor NSR. For example, PSD permits must include emission
limits reflecting BACT; NNSR permits must include emission limits
reflecting the Lowest Achievable Emissions Rate (LAER), and minor NSR
permits may contain analogous requirements depending on the terms of
the SIP. Although SIPs contain general criteria for establishing those
limits, individual permit actions are necessary to specifically define
the limits for each source subject to NSR. Once these limitations are
established through the NSR permitting process, the title V process
should not be used to re-evaluate whether the resulting limits reflect
the general SIP requirements related to BACT, LAER, or other similar
requirements.
Similar concepts apply to questions about NSR applicability. SIPs
contain general criteria and thresholds for determining the
applicability of different SIP requirements. However, determining which
specific requirements apply to individual emission units requires a
fact-specific permitting exercise. When a permitting authority
authorizes construction by issuing either a minor NSR permit or major
NSR permit, it decides which NSR-related SIP requirements are
applicable to different aspects of the project on a pollutant-by-
pollutant basis. The resulting NSR permit might include PSD
requirements (e.g., BACT) for some pollutants, NNSR requirements (e.g.,
LAER) for other pollutants, and/or minor NSR requirements for yet other
pollutants. In this manner, within a single NSR permit action,
questions about the applicability of different NSR requirements may be
inextricably linked with questions about the content of the NSR permit.
Further, questions about NSR permit content and NSR applicability are
fundamentally similar because both questions seek to answer whether
permit limits are set at a level stringent enough to satisfy the
relevant general SIP requirements, and both questions require a highly
technical application of general SIP criteria to specific circumstances
at the source.\84\ Thus, once an NSR permit is issued, the limitations
and other terms of that permit establish all relevant NSR-related
requirements of the SIP (whether major or minor NSR) that apply to
construction or modification of the source, and should be incorporated
into the title V permit without further review.\85\
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\84\ For example, questions about whether (i) an emission limit
that purports to satisfy BACT should instead be made more stringent
in order to satisfy BACT are similar to questions about whether (ii)
an emission limit that purports to satisfy minor NSR requirements
should instead be made more stringent in order to satisfy BACT.
\85\ See section IV.E.4.a. of this preamble for additional
discussion about how the EPA's treatment of NSR applicability issues
aligns with the EPA's treatment of other types of CAA applicability
issues.
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Permitting authorities satisfy other types of NSR requirements in a
SIP when issuing NSR permits. One requirement that frequently arises in
the context of title V petitions involves determining that the new
source or modification will not cause or contribute to a violation of
the NAAQS. Again, to satisfy this requirement, the state must undertake
a fact-specific analysis through the NSR permitting process. This
analysis may (but does not always) involve atmospheric dispersion
modeling, and this may (but does not always) result in the imposition
of additional permit terms that restrict emissions in order to protect
the NAAQS.\86\ In all cases, the NSR permitting process is designed to
ensure that the NSR permit ultimately contains whatever specific
conditions are necessary to satisfy this NSR SIP requirement. Similar
principles hold true for a variety of other substantive NSR
requirements in SIPs, including a variety of requirements that are
unique to NNSR.
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\86\ In this manner, not all NSR-based SIP requirements related
to the NAAQS result in the imposition of requirements that apply to
emission units at a source. As discussed previously, only those
requirements that ``apply to emissions units in a part 70 source''
qualify as ``applicable requirements'' for title V purposes. 40 CFR
70.2; see 40 CFR 71.2.
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Overall, substantive issues concerning NSR permit content, NSR
applicability, and other NSR requirements are fundamentally similar.
Each of these decisions require a state to derive specific requirements
for an individual source from general criteria in the NSR portion of
the SIP (e.g., requirements to include limits reflecting certain
technology-based criteria, to issue major NSR permits to projects
meeting certain applicability criteria, or to ensure that permits meet
certain criteria relevant to the NAAQS). Each of these determinations
involve relatively complex, fact-specific decisionmaking, which occurs
during the NSR permitting process. Once that process concludes, the
state issues an NSR permit that contains these source-specific
applicable requirements of the SIP for the construction project being
authorized. Thus, under the EPA's current (and proposed) approach, all
types of different NSR-related issues are generally treated the same
for purposes of title V review. The merit and validity of these
substantive requirements are subject to review and correction through
the available mechanisms for appeal of the NSR permit, and need not be
further reviewed by a state permitting authority or the EPA through
title V.
Note that compliance with procedural requirements associated with
the issuance of NSR permits are also subject to review in appeals of
NSR permits and are also not directly reviewable through title V.
However, the latter is for reasons not directly related to the
interpretation of ``applicable requirements'' at issue in this proposed
rule. Under the statute and the EPA's existing regulations, the EPA can
object to a title V permit that does not comply with ``applicable
requirements'' of the CAA (as that term is defined in EPA regulations)
or requirements of part 70, including procedural requirements of part
70. See 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b); 40 CFR 70.8(c)(1), 70.12(a)(2), (a)(2)(ii)-
(iv). Notably, the EPA's authority to object under CAA section 505(b)
only extends to the particular proposed title V permit before the
agency for review.\87\ Procedural requirements associated with NSR
permit issuance are not ``applicable requirements'' for title V
purposes because they do not ``apply to emissions units at a part 70
source.'' 40 CFR 70.2. Rather, they dictate the behavior of permitting
authorities in issuing NSR permits. Procedural requirements associated
with NSR permit issuance are also not part 70 requirements because they
are not related to title V or the part 70 regulations governing the
issuance of a specific title V permit. Thus, alleged violations of
procedural requirements associated with NSR permit issuance generally
would not provide an independent basis for the EPA to object to a title
V permit that incorporates such an NSR permit.\88\ Nonetheless,
although procedural flaws with the issuance of an NSR permit would not
provide a direct basis for the EPA to object to a title V permit, such
procedural issues could impact whether other more substantive NSR
issues should be reviewed through the title V process. See section
IV.B.5.a. of this preamble for further information.
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\87\ The references within CAA section 505(b) to ``any permit,''
``the proposed permit,'' ``a permit,'' ``the permit,'' etc. apply to
the title V permit that a permitting authority proposes to issue and
transmits to EPA under CAA section 505(a)(1). 42 U.S.C. 7661d(a),
(b)(1), (b)(2); see also 40 CFR 70.8(c)(1), (d) (similar language
and cross-references as the statute), 70.12(a)(1) (requirement that
petitioners identify the specific title V permit action on which the
petition is based), 70.12(a)(2) (petition claims must be based on
alleged deficiencies in the ``permit process'' associated with the
title V permit being petitioned).
\88\ See Century Aluminum Order at 19-20.
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[[Page 1167]]
4. Different Procedures for Incorporating NSR Permits Into Title V
Permits
In most cases, the EPA's current (and proposed) approach applies in
the same way regardless of the procedures by which a state permitting
authority incorporates the terms of an NSR permit into a title V
permit. In other words, as long as a permitting authority formally
issues an identifiable NSR permit that has the force of law \89\--and
regardless of whether the NSR and title V permits are issued
sequentially, contemporaneously, or even in the same physical
document--the unique title V oversight tools should not be used to
review the NSR-related decisionmaking underlying that NSR permit.
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\89\ Because it is the NSR permit that establishes the
``applicable requirements'' for title V purposes, the EPA has long
explained that title V permits do not supersede title I permits--
which must remain in effect to authorize construction and/or
operations--even after the terms of a title I permit are
incorporated into a title V permit. See, e.g., 69 FR 10167, 10170
(Mar. 4, 2004); 66 FR 64039, 64040 (Dec. 11, 2001); Letter from John
S. Seitz, EPA, to Robert Hodanbosi & Charles Lagges, STAPPA/ALAPCO,
Encl. A at 4 (May 20, 1999).
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The EPA's approach is most straightforward when an NSR permit is
issued in final form prior to the initiation of any title V permitting
action, or when an NSR permit has already been included in a previous
version of a title V permit that is up for renewal. This is the default
approach, as the EPA's regulations allow regulated entities subject to
major NSR preconstruction permitting requirements to submit a title V
permit application within 1 year after beginning operation, in most
cases. 40 CFR 70.5(a)(1)(ii); 71.5(a)(1)(ii). Additionally, where new
requirements become applicable to a source, including by virtue of a
change to the source (e.g., minor NSR requirements), the timeline for
reopening a source's title V permit to include such requirements
depends on the amount of time left in the title V permit; required
revisions would either need to be completed within 18 months or at the
next permit renewal. 40 CFR 70.7(f)(1)(i), 71.1(f)(1)(i). Regardless of
the specific timing, it should be straightforward in these instances to
simply incorporate the applicable requirements from the previously
finalized NSR permit into the title V permit.
Not all NSR and title V permits are processed sequentially. Before
discussing more streamlined permit issuance mechanisms, it is important
to recognize that the NSR and title V permitting programs are based on
distinct federal and state statutory and regulatory authorities and
feature significant differences in both their substantive and
procedural requirements. However, the two programs do feature some
overlapping public participation requirements, including requirements
for public notice, the opportunity for public comment, and the
opportunity for judicial review. Accordingly, some state permitting
authorities choose to streamline permit issuance by conducting one
process that satisfies both sets of overlapping requirements. Based on
the EPA's experience, the mechanisms that state permitting authorities
use to streamline the permitting processes vary considerably across the
nation. Different streamlining mechanisms have received various labels,
including ``combined,'' ``merged,'' or ``unified'' permits.\90\ This
preamble addresses three of the more common forms of streamlining. For
example, some permitting authorities streamline NSR and title V permit
issuance by processing the two permits concurrently, subject to
overlapping public participation opportunities.\91\ There are two basic
variations to this theme. First, the permitting authority could
concurrently issue the NSR permit as a standalone document containing
only NSR permit terms, and also issue a title V permit containing all
existing title V permit terms as well as the new NSR permit terms. Or,
second, the permitting authority could issue one permit document that
contains both the NSR permit and title V permit conditions. Some
permitting authorities employ a third mechanism, whereby the NSR permit
is first issued with enhanced procedural and substantive requirements
(based on title V requirements), and then the NSR permit requirements
are subsequently incorporated into a title V permit through an
administrative amendment process that does not require public
participation.
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\90\ The EPA considers it more appropriate to refer to the
results of such streamlining as a combined ``permit,'' as opposed to
a combined ``program.'' This is because, although a single permit
document may be used to satisfy both NSR and title V permitting
requirements, the requirements of the NSR and title V programs are
legally distinct. See Riverview Order at 25-26.
\91\ This process is similar to another mechanism for permit
streamlining (not directly implicated by this rulemaking), under
which a permitting authority may consolidate two procedures
associated with title V permit issuance: the public's review of a
draft permit and the EPA's review of a proposed permit. See 40 CFR
70.8(a)(1)(ii).
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The first approach--featuring separate NSR and title V permit
documents issued at or around the same time--is undoubtedly the
clearest of the various streamlining approaches. There can be no
mistaking the fact that there are two legally distinct permit actions,
and it is simple to identify which requirements are based on the NSR
regulations (and thus not subject to additional review through title
V).\92\
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\92\ See South Louisiana Methanol Order at 9; SSS/WP Order at
14-15.
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The second approach is also viable, provided the underlying
authority for the NSR aspects of the permit document are readily
ascertainable from the permit(s) and permit record(s). See 40 CFR
70.6(a)(1)(i). As explained in detail in several petition orders,\93\
even where NSR and title V permit authorizations are contained within
one permit document, such a permit action actually reflects two legally
distinct permit actions by the state: (i) a preconstruction permit
issued under the EPA-approved title I SIP regulations governing NSR,
and (ii) an operating permit under EPA-approved part 70 regulations
governing title V. Again, NSR permits and title V permits are based on
differing statutory and regulatory schemes, and although the two
programs feature similarities, they also feature important substantive
and procedural differences. A permitting authority's decision to
increase administrative efficiency by issuing a single permit document
to satisfy the legal requirements of two distinct permitting programs
does not alter the applicability of requirements associated with each
respective program. For example, substantive requirements unique to NSR
would not be applied to establish or evaluate non-NSR-based title V
permit terms. Likewise, procedural requirements unique to title V
(including the EPA's objection authority and public petition
opportunity, among other things) would not be extended to review
substantive elements of the permit action unique to the NSR permitting
process. The EPA's objection authority, and the public's ability to
petition EPA to object, are confined by the CAA to title V permits. See
42 U.S.C. 7661d(b). Combining the procedures by which a permitting
authority issues NSR and title V permits does not alter this basic
principle.
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\93\ See Waelz Order at 13-15; Riverview Order at 24-28; Yuhuang
II Order at 7-8; Big River Steel Order at 11-12.
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The EPA appreciates that the combined-permit approach has the
potential to introduce more confusion about which types of issues can
be raised through different public participation avenues. In general,
provided the permitting authority complies with existing regulatory
requirements, the EPA believes this
[[Page 1168]]
confusion can be minimized. First, the public could comment on all
portions of a combined permit document during the comment period
associated with the combined permit document. Similarly, all portions
of a combined permit document could be challenged in a state court
appeal of the final permit action.\94\ Beyond that, the available
mechanisms to challenge different permitting decisions would diverge.
The EPA's 45-day review of the proposed permit, and the subsequent
public petition opportunity, would apply only to title V-related
aspects of the permit action. Likewise, unique oversight tools
associated with title I permits (e.g., the EPA's authority under CAA
section 167 to order a stop in work) would only apply to title I-
related aspects of the permit action.
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\94\ Provisions governing the right to appeal final title V
permits in state court is provided by 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b)(6) and 40
CFR 70.4(b)(3)(x)-(xii). For a discussion of equivalent
opportunities to challenge title I permits in state court, see
section IV.C.2. of this preamble.
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Differentiating between NSR-based and title V-based permit terms in
a combined permit should be straightforward, as all title V permits
``shall specify and reference the origin of and authority for each term
or condition, and identify any difference in form as compared to the
applicable requirement upon which the term or condition is based.'' 40
CFR 70.6(a)(1)(i).\95\ Thus, any NSR-related terms should be readily
distinguishable from any non-NSR-related terms (or any title V-related
terms related to monitoring and compliance assurance). The substance of
appropriately designated NSR-based permit terms should not be subject
to additional scrutiny through the unique title V oversight tools.
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\95\ This requirement is important in all situations where NSR
permit terms (and permit terms derived from other CAA programs) are
incorporated into a title V permit. However, it is especially
important when NSR permit authorizations are issued within the same
document as a title V permit in the first instance.
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Although the EPA's approach generally applies the same regardless
of whether NSR and title V permits are sequentially or concurrently
issued, there are important qualifications to this principle. Most
notably, NSR permits must be finalized by the time the title V permit
is finalized in order to establish the ``applicable requirements'' for
title V purposes.\96\ Moreover, it is critically important that
concurrently issued permits (including combined permit documents) are
clear as to the nature of, and the legal authority underlying, the
permit actions reflected therein. This principle applies to the public
notice announcing such permit action, other portions of the permit
record available for public review, and the terms of the permit(s).
See, e.g., 40 CFR 70.7(h)(2), 70.7(a)(5), 70.6(a)(1)(i). Where NSR and
title V permit documents have been merged to such an extent that it is
impossible to legally distinguish the NSR permit action from the title
V permit action, it may be necessary to use the title V process to
review whether the NSR-related requirements of the SIP are included in
the title V permit. The next subsection elaborates on these and other
situations in which NSR issues would be subject to review through title
V oversight tools.
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\96\ Although the regulatory definition of ``applicable
requirement'' includes ``requirements that have been promulgated or
approved by EPA through rulemaking at the time of issuance but have
future-effective compliance dates,'' 40 CFR 70.2, 71.2, this only
covers future-effective requirements that have already been
finalized at the time of title V permit issuance.
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A third process used by some permitting authorities is often
described as ``enhanced NSR.'' The EPA's existing regulations allow
requirements from an NSR permit issued with certain enhancements to be
incorporated into a title V permit via administrative amendment
procedures (instead of a significant modification or minor modification
procedures, which would otherwise be required). To qualify for this
type of streamlined processing, the NSR permit would need to be issued
following ``procedural requirements substantially equivalent to the
requirements of [40 CFR] 70.7 and 70.8 . . . that would be applicable
to the change if it were subject to review as a permit modification,
and compliance requirements substantially equivalent to those contained
in [40 CFR] 70.6.'' 40 CFR 70.7(d)(1)(v); see 71.7(d)(1)(v).
This third pathway has the potential to create confusion--and to
conflict with the EPA's current (and proposed) approach--because the
language quoted earlier may be read to mean that the EPA's objection
authority and the public petition opportunity in 70.8(d) apply to the
issuance of the NSR permit.\97\ This result is problematic for multiple
reasons. For one, the CAA only provides the EPA with authority to
object to the issuance of title V permits, not NSR permits. Similarly,
the statutory obligation for the EPA Administrator to respond to
petitions under CAA section 505(b)(2) only applies to petitions on
title V permits. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b)(2). Moreover, even if the EPA were
to object to the issuance of an NSR permit, the EPA generally lacks
authority to enforce such objection, as the EPA cannot issue the NSR
permit if the state does not resolve the EPA's objection. Again, the
authority to do so only relates to title V permits. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(c).
Further, the existence of this process creates more confusion about the
scope of issues properly subject to review during the NSR permitting
action than the other two streamlined pathways. This is because it may
be more difficult to distinguish title I and title V components within
a single ``enhanced NSR'' permit.\98\ Based on the preamble of the
EPA's 1992 title V rules, it appears that the EPA's original intention
when promulgating this mechanism was to generally confine EPA's review
to the title V-based components of the enhanced NSR permit (i.e., the
compliance requirements in 40 CFR 70.6).\99\ However, contradictory
positions taken by EPA in subsequent years has created confusion.\100\
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\97\ The EPA observes that some permitting authorities have EPA-
approved SIP and/or title V program rules that differ from the EPA's
regulations in this respect. Specifically, some EPA-approved state
rules reserve the EPA's objection authority and public petition
opportunity until the title V permit is administratively amended.
This arrangement features less potential for confusion and less
conflict with the EPA's current (and proposed) approach. See AK
Steel Order at 10-12.
\98\ For similar reasons, this process could cause difficulties
with respect to allocating title V permit fees consistent with 40
CFR 70.9.
\99\ See 57 FR at 32289 (``The primary intent of these
`enhancements' of the NSR process is to allow the permitting
authority to consolidate NSR and title V permit revision procedures.
As stated in the May 10, 1991 proposal, it is not to second-guess
the results of any State NSR determination. For example, if a State
does provide for EPA's 45-day review in its NSR program, EPA would
only be reviewing whether the State had conducted a BACT analysis,
if applicable, and whether that analysis is faithfully incorporated
in the title V permit. The EPA will not use its review period to
object to or attempt to revise the State's BACT determination.
Correspondingly, EPA's failure to object to the substance of the
BACT determination will not limit any remedies EPA might-otherwise
have under the Act to address a faulty BACT determination.'').
\100\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Alon USA, Bakersfield
Refinery, Order on Petition No. IX-2014-15 at 2-7 (Dec. 21, 2016).
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Although this third pathway reflected the EPA's attempt to allow
for the streamlining of NSR and title V permit procedures, it raises
more issues than it solves, and ultimately it is not necessary. The
other two streamlining mechanisms--concurrent issuance of NSR and title
V permits either in separate documents or in a single combined permit
document--cause fewer problems and provide more advantages.
Specifically, concurrent issuance mechanisms are compatible with the
EPA's current (and proposed) approach to the title I/title V interface,
while the ``enhanced NSR'' mechanism appears to erroneously suggest
that the EPA has authority to directly object to title I permits.
Additionally, concurrent
[[Page 1169]]
issuance mechanisms allow permitting authorities to more clearly
delineate the title I and title V permit actions, providing more
clarity to the public about which issues may be challenged through
different review pathways. Finally, concurrent issuance mechanisms are
more efficient than the enhanced NSR mechanism, as permitting
authorities need not take an additional, separate title V
administrative amendment action after issuing an NSR permit.
For the foregoing reasons, the EPA proposes to remove from its
regulations the provisions relating to enhanced NSR permitting and
related title V administrative amendments. The EPA solicits comment on
whether state permitting authorities should remove equivalent
regulations from their EPA-approved program rules, although the EPA
does not anticipate such actions will be necessary. Instead, it should
be sufficient for permitting authorities to simply stop using this
mechanism in a manner that purports to provide an EPA objection
authority and public petition opportunity directly on an NSR permit. In
any case, the EPA generally will not use its objection authority to
address the substance of NSR permitting decisions made through this
process.
The EPA specifically requests comments regarding additional
mechanisms that permitting authorities use to streamline the issuance
of NSR and title V permits. The EPA requests comments about how these
differing approaches might impact, or be impacted by, the EPA's current
(and proposed) approach.
5. Situations in Which the Title V Process Will Be Used To Review NSR
Issues
There are certain situations in which the title V permitting
process is the appropriate venue for addressing NSR permitting issues.
This conclusion is supported by the same statutory and regulatory
interpretations underlying situations in which the title V permitting
process is not appropriate for addressing NSR permitting issues. In
sum, as explained further in the following subsections, where
applicable requirements are conclusively established under another CAA
program, they are not substantively addressed through title V. Where
applicable requirements are not conclusively established under another
CAA program, they are substantively addressed through title V. Where
the requirements of another CAA program and the requirements of title V
feature substantive overlap, such areas of overlap are addressed
through title V.
a. No Permit Issued Through a Title I Permitting Process With Public
Notice and the Opportunity for Comment and Judicial Review
Under the EPA's current (and proposed) framework, title I permits
issued with public notice and the opportunity for comment and judicial
review conclusively establish NSR-related ``applicable requirements''
of the SIP (or FIP) for title V purposes. But if NSR permitting
decisions are not developed through a formal process that involves
public notice and the opportunity for comment and judicial review, the
public and the EPA have no opportunity to provide input on, or appeal,
whether the relevant NSR requirements were properly established. In
this circumstance, it would be inappropriate to simply incorporate any
such NSR requirements into a title V permit without further review. In
other words, where NSR-related requirements are not established through
a public title I permitting process with an opportunity for judicial
review, the applicable requirements of the SIP (or FIP) relevant to the
construction project at issue are not yet conclusively defined for
title V purposes.\101\ In such a situation, the title V process can and
should be used to assure compliance with the relevant underlying NSR-
related applicable requirements of the SIP (or FIP). This approach is
similar to how the title V process is used to define the specific
requirements necessary to assure compliance with general requirements
of other CAA programs that are not definitively established through a
separate rulemaking or permitting process, as discussed in section
III.F. of this preamble.
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\101\ As explained further in section IV.C.1. of this preamble,
this view relates only to how an NSR permit is treated during the
title V permitting process. It does not in any way affect the
independent enforceability of the NSR permit itself.
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The title V process can be used to review NSR issues in various
situations, some of which the EPA has confronted in recent years. For
example, the EPA has reviewed, and will continue to review, substantive
NSR issues where no title I permit is issued to authorize the projects
at issue.\102\ The title V process can be used to ensure that any new
or modified sources that do not obtain an NSR permit (sometimes called
``unpermitted projects'') comply with all relevant NSR-related
requirements of the SIP (or FIP).
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\102\ See Suncor East Order at 45-48, 54-55 (reviewing NSR
issues where the state ``has not issued any title I NSR permits that
would establish the NSR-related `applicable requirements' of the
SIP''); SRP Agua Fria Order at 11 n.18 (reviewing NSR applicability
issues where no NSR permit had been issued); SRP Desert Basin Order
at 12 n.20 (same); BP Whiting II Order at 13 n.24 (reviewing an NSR-
related emission limit that was established in a title V, as opposed
to an NSR, permit action). Additionally, within a portion of the
EPA's 2017 PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order that was not challenged and not
subject to the Tenth Circuit's partial vacatur, the EPA addressed
the merits of a petition claim involving allegedly unpermitted
modifications. See PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 26-31.
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If a preconstruction permit is issued, but not issued under title
I--that is, not issued under NSR permitting rules that have been
approved by EPA and incorporated into the SIP or FIP--then such a
permit would not establish the NSR requirements of the SIP (or FIP)
that apply to an individual source. Issuance of a non-title I permit
does not reflect a determination as to which of the NSR requirements in
a SIP (or FIP) apply to construction and thus does not fulfill any NSR
requirements in the SIP (or FIP). In this situation, it would thus be
appropriate to use the title V permitting process to assess whether
there are NSR requirements in the SIP (or FIP) that apply to a
construction project covered by a non-title I permit. Moreover, it
would be appropriate to use the title V permitting process to explore
whether a preconstruction permit was issued under a title I-based
authority, as opposed to a non-title I authority.\103\
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\103\ For example, within a portion of the EPA's 2017
PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order that was not challenged and not subject to
the Tenth Circuit's partial vacatur, the EPA addressed the merits of
a petition claim involving a NSR permit that was allegedly not
issued under EPA-approved SIP rules. See PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order
at 24. Determining the authority underlying a preconstruction permit
could also be relevant in other title V contexts. For example,
states may issue preconstruction permits under state-only-
enforceable laws (as opposed to federally-approved and federally-
enforceable state laws, or federal laws). Such state-only permit
requirements may be included in title V permits, but they must be
labeled as ``state-only'' or ``not federally enforceable'' within a
title V permit. 40 CFR 70.6(b)(2). Questions about the authority
underlying such permits would therefore be relevant to determining
whether 40 CFR 70.6(b)(2) was satisfied. See, e.g., In the Matter of
Phillips 66 Co., Borger Refinery, Order on Petition No. VI-2017-16
at 8-10 (Sept. 22, 2021).
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The EPA has also reviewed, and will continue to review, substantive
NSR issues where the underlying NSR permit was not issued following
public notice and the opportunity for comment and judicial review.\104\
As previously explained, this is because an NSR permit that is not
issued following such procedures does not provide the title V
[[Page 1170]]
permit writer or public with sufficient assurance that the
preconstruction permitting process has conclusively established the
applicable NSR requirements of the SIP (or FIP) for that source for
title V purposes. Thus, questions about the procedures used to issue
NSR permits may be indirectly relevant to the EPA's review of title V
permits or public petitions on title V petitions.\105\ Specifically,
such questions may inform whether it is appropriate to use the title V
process to review the substance of that NSR permit in order to ensure
that the title V permit reflects, and assures compliance with, all
relevant NSR applicable requirements of the SIP (or FIP). It is
important to recognize that procedural problems associated with the
issuance of an NSR permit would simply present a basis for EPA to
review the underlying NSR issues; such procedural problems would not
present an independent basis for the EPA's objection to the title V
permit.\106\
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\104\ See Suncor East Order at 48 (reviewing NSR-related issues
where ``the current title V renewal proceeding is the first permit
action in which these NSR issues have been subject either to public
notice and comment or the opportunity for judicial review,'' among
other reasons); Coyote Station Order at 12 (reviewing NSR-related
issues ``where no public notice was provided of the underlying NSR
permit action,'' among other reasons).
\105\ To the extent the public raises procedural issues related
to NSR permit issuance in a title V petition, petitioners have the
burden to demonstrate that the correct process was not followed,
similar to all other title V petition issues. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b)(2);
see 40 CFR 70.12(a)(2).
\106\ As explained in section IV.B.3. of this preamble,
procedural requirements associated with NSR permit issuance are
neither ``applicable requirements'' for title V purposes (because
they do not apply to emission units at a part 70 source), nor are
they part 70 requirements (because they are not related to the
issuance of a specific title V permit).
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It is also important to recognize that, in proposing to add text to
parts 70 and 71 referencing ``public notice and the opportunity for
public comment and judicial review'' of NSR permits, this proposed rule
would simply establish a precondition relevant to whether underlying
NSR permits are insulated from, or subject to, additional review
through title V. These proposed regulatory revisions will not impose
any binding procedural requirements governing a permitting authority's
issuance of NSR permits. Rather, such procedural requirements are found
in the relevant statutory and regulatory authorities governing NSR, and
the SIP regulations that implement them. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C.
7475(a)(2); 40 CFR 51.161, 51.165(i), 51.166(q). Although the proposed
additions to parts 70 and 71 use language similar to existing
requirements in the NSR rules, this proposed rule does not seek to
define those concepts in the context of NSR. Rather, outside of this
title V proposed rule, the EPA is reviewing opportunities for public
participation in minor NSR permitting.
For title V purposes, provided an NSR permit is issued following
public notice, the opportunity to comment, and the opportunity for
judicial review, the EPA will consider that NSR permit as establishing
the relevant applicable requirements of the SIP with respect to the
activities being permitted. Accordingly, the title V permitting process
will not be used to second-guess the substance of those requirements.
By codifying such criteria through the current proposed rule, the EPA's
intent is not to create new requirements on NSR permitting, but rather
to create an incentive for permitting authorities to offer robust
opportunities for public involvement on NSR permit actions. In this
manner, this proposed rule will reinforce existing requirements
governing public participation on NSR permits and will complement the
EPA's ongoing efforts to improve public participation in minor NSR
permitting decisions.
b. Issues Involving Overlapping Title V and NSR Requirements
The EPA has reviewed (and will continue to review) issues involving
an overlap of title V and NSR requirements. The most notable example
involves using title V to evaluate the sufficiency of monitoring and
related compliance assurance requirements associated with more
substantive NSR permit requirements. As the EPA explained in one title
V petition order:
Unlike the BACT determination claims discussed above, claims
concerning whether a title V permit contains enforceable permit
terms, supported by monitoring sufficient to assure compliance with
an applicable requirement or permit term (such as an emission limit
established in a PSD permit), are properly reviewed during title V
permitting. The statutory obligations to ensure that each title V
permit contains ``enforceable emission limitations and standards''
supported by ``monitoring . . . requirements to assure compliance
with the permit terms and conditions,'' 42 U.S.C. 7661c(a), (c),
apply independently from and in addition to the underlying
regulations and permit actions that give rise to the emission limits
and standards that are included in a title V permit. Therefore, the
EPA will address the merits of those portions of the Petition that
challenge the enforceability of emission limits and the sufficiency
of monitoring conditions in the Permit.\107\
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\107\ South Louisiana Methanol Order at 10-11; see Gulf Coast
Growth Ventures Order at 17-19; ExxonMobil Baytown Chemical Order at
20-21; Yuhuang II Order at 8; see also, e.g., Big River Steel Order
at 17, 17 n.30, 19 n.32, 20; PacifiCorp-Hunter I Order at 16, 17,
18, 18 n.33, 19.
The EPA has also considered (and will continue to consider) other
issues involving an explicit overlap between NSR and title V. Examples
addressed to date include situations where a state's SIP rules and part
70 program rules explicitly require consideration of NAAQS impacts in a
title V permit proceeding; \108\ where both SIP and part 70 rules
require an evaluation of the scope of the ``stationary source'' or
``major source'' subject to permitting requirements; \109\ and where
SIP rules explicitly require consideration of adjustments to a PAL (a
type of NSR permitting mechanism) in a title V renewal permit
action.\110\
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\108\ Suncor East Order at 53-54.
\109\ Coyote Station Order at 12-13.
\110\ ExxonMobil Baytown Chemical Order at 13-14.
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Notably, the EPA's consideration of NSR-related issues within these
past actions did not involve reevaluating or second-guessing the
content of applicable requirements established in NSR permitting
actions. Instead, the EPA's consideration of those issues was based
either on unique requirements of title V (e.g., to add supplemental
monitoring to the requirements in underlying applicable requirements)
or on directives within the SIP itself, which effectively provided a
mandate to further define applicable requirements of the SIP through
the title V process (instead of the NSR process). Thus, the limited
situations in which the EPA does use (and proposes to continue using)
the title V process to address NSR-related issues is wholly consistent
with the EPA's position that, in general, the title V process should
not be used to second-guess or alter substantive applicable
requirements that are established through a title I permitting process
with public notice and the opportunity for comment and judicial review.
6. Summary of Proposed Regulatory Changes
In order to more clearly express the EPA's current approach to the
interface between NSR permits and title V permits, the EPA proposes the
following amendments to the EPA's regulations.
The EPA proposes to update paragraphs (1) and (2) of the definition
of ``applicable requirement'' in 40 CFR 70.2 and 71.2. Paragraph (1)
addresses SIP (and FIP) requirements more generally. This rule would
add text to paragraph (1) to clarify that, for purposes of title V,
where an NSR permit is issued under an EPA-approved or EPA-promulgated
title I program (i.e., SIP or FIP), with public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial review, then the terms and
conditions of that preconstruction permit define the NSR-related
applicable requirements of the SIP or FIP that apply to the activities
[[Page 1171]]
authorized by such a preconstruction permit.
This rule would also add text to paragraph (2) to clarify that, for
purposes of title V, the relevant terms and conditions of all types of
NSR permits issued under a SIP or FIP--including minor NSR permits--are
applicable requirements that must be included in a title V permit,
regardless of whether the procedures referenced in paragraph (1) are
followed.
The EPA also proposes to remove the provisions in 40 CFR
70.7(d)(1)(v), 70.7(d)(4), 71.7(d)(1)(v), and 71.7(d)(4) that relate to
the ``enhanced NSR'' and title V administrative amendment procedures,
as discussed in section IV.B.4. of this preamble.
The EPA does not believe any additional changes to the regulations
are necessary. However, the EPA requests comments on other changes to
the regulatory text that would be necessary to fully effectuate the
EPA's proposed approach.
C. Interaction With NSR Permitting, Oversight, and Enforcement
Although this rulemaking addresses the intersection of the NSR and
title V permitting programs, the EPA's proposed approach only directly
affects implementation of the title V permitting program. More
specifically, this rulemaking only affects the extent to which the
title V permitting process will be used to assess whether issuance of
an NSR permit complies with the NSR-related requirements of a SIP (or
FIP). Thus, as explained in the following paragraphs, the EPA's
proposed approach for limiting review of NSR permitting decisions
through the title V process does not affect the independent validity or
enforceability of NSR permit terms or the SIP (or FIP) requirements
upon which they are based.
1. No Impact on the Independent Validity or Enforceability of NSR
Permits
As discussed throughout this preamble, where an NSR permit is
issued following public notice and the opportunity for comment and
judicial review, the terms and conditions of such a permit establish
the NSR-related applicable requirements of the SIP (or FIP) for title V
purposes. Although these permit terms should generally be incorporated
into the title V permit without further substantive review, an EPA
decision not to conduct that review in the title V process does not
mean that the EPA agrees that the state action complies with NSR
requirements. It merely indicates that a title V permit is not the
appropriate venue to correct any deficiencies in the NSR permit. Thus,
even if EPA might find an error upon reviewing a preconstruction
permitting decision made by the permitting authority, for purposes of
the title V operating permit, the terms of the NSR permit should be
incorporated into the title V operating permit until such time that
there is a final action to revise, reopen, suspend, revoke, reissue,
terminate, or invalidate the preconstruction permit, such as a court
order in a state court appeal or through an enforcement action.\111\
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\111\ As explained previously, this approach is analogous to how
the EPA treats potential defects in other types of applicable
requirements, including (non-NSR) requirements of the SIP. For
instance, even when the EPA has made a determination that a
provision of the SIP is not in compliance with the Act, the EPA will
not object to a permit that includes that provision until there is
final action to remove it from the SIP. See, e.g., Piedmont Green
Power Order at 28-29. EPA's lack of objection to the inclusion of
that requirement in the title V permit does not indicate that the
EPA agrees that it complies with the Act or applicable regulations;
it merely indicates that a title V permit is not the appropriate
venue to correct any such flaws in the SIP.
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By the same token, if an NSR permit is not issued through a process
that included public notice and the opportunity for comment and
judicial review, this proposed rule would not address whether such a
permit is valid or enforceable in its own right. Rather, this proposed
rule would only affect how such a permit is treated through title V.
The terms of such a permit would still need to be included in the title
V permit under item (2) of the EPA's regulatory definition of
``applicable requirement.'' However, any such permit terms (and
underlying permit decisions) would not be sufficient to conclusively
define the NSR-related ``applicable requirements'' of the SIP under
item (1) of the EPA's regulatory definition. Therefore, questions about
the whether the NSR permit satisfied the requirements of the SIP would
be subject to review through the title V process. But that is the only
consequence insofar as this proposed rule is concerned. Any relevant
requirements of the SIP would remain fully enforceable, and the
independent enforceability of any NSR permit issued without an
opportunity for comment and judicial review would be determined on the
basis of those requirements.
2. Title I Oversight and Enforcement Authorities
Under the EPA's proposed approach for considering NSR permitting
decisions through the title V permitting process, there are meaningful
opportunities for the EPA and the public to review NSR preconstruction
permitting decisions under title I of the CAA.\112\ Congress provided
various mechanisms for EPA and public oversight of NSR permitting
decisions.
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\112\ If anything, this action has the potential to increase the
availability of certain enforcement opportunities, as discussed in
Section IV.C.4. of this preamble.
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Specifically, Congress gave the EPA programmatic oversight
authority under title I to disapprove state NSR permitting programs and
call for revisions to those programs if the state's program does not
satisfy federal statutory and regulatory authorities governing NSR. 42
U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(C), 7410(k)(5). Further, if a state fails to properly
implement its NSR program, the EPA can take additional actions. 42
U.S.C 7413(a)(2), (a)(5).
In terms of reviewing individual title I permits, each SIP must
provide for public notice and an opportunity for comment on proposed
NSR permits in its preconstruction permit program. 42 U.S.C.
7475(a)(2); 40 CFR 51.161, 51.165(i), 51.166(q). The EPA may provide
feedback on state-issued NSR permits through this process.\113\
Inherent in this title I permitting scheme--and reflected in the
congressional record for the 1977 CAA Amendments--is the understanding
that the adequacy of state NSR permitting decisions would be subject to
review in state administrative and judicial forums.\114\
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\113\ Title I of the CAA specifically contemplates that the
``interested persons'' who may comment on state-issued PSD permits
include ``representatives of the Administrator.'' 42 U.S.C.
7475(a)(2).
\114\ ``In order to challenge the legality of a permit which a
State has actually issued . . . a citizen must seek administrative
remedies under the State permit consideration process, or judicial
review of the permit in State court.'' Staff of the Subcommittee on
Environmental Pollution of the Senate Committee on Environment and
Public Works, 95th Congress, 1st Session, A Section-by-Section
Analysis of S. 252 and S. 253, Clean Air Act Amendments 36 (1977),
reprinted in 5 Legislative History of the Clean Air Act Amendments
of 1977 3892 (1977). Note that the U.S. Supreme Court has also
acknowledged the primacy of state courts to adjudicate disputes over
NSR permit terms. See Alaska Dep't of Env't Conservation v. EPA, 540
U.S. 461, 490 n.14 (2004); see also id. at 491-94 (addressing the
relationship between state court review of NSR permits and federal
oversight tools related to NSR permits). The EPA has expressed
similar views when approving individual NSR SIPs. See, e,g., 77 FR
65305, 65306 (Oct. 26, 2012) (The EPA ``interpret[s] the CAA to
require an opportunity for judicial review of a decision to grant or
deny a PSD permit, whether issued by EPA or by a State under a SIP-
approved or delegated PSD program.'').
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Congress also provided EPA and the public with various enforcement
mechanisms to address non-compliance with title I permitting
requirements on a facility-by-facility basis. The EPA possesses the
authority to issue
[[Page 1172]]
injunctive orders to halt construction. 42 U.S.C. 7413(a)(5)(A), 7477.
The EPA may also pursue various types of civil or criminal enforcement
actions pursuant to sections 113 and 167 of the Act. 42 U.S.C. 7413,
7477. Under title III of the CAA, Congress also provided authority for
citizens to bring enforcement actions seeking civil penalties and
injunctive relief against a source that has violated certain NSR
requirements. Id. 7604(a)(1), (a)(3). These enforcement-based tools can
be used to address situations where a source failed to obtain a
required major NSR permit (even if it obtained a minor source permit).
See e.g., U.S. v. S. Ind. Gas & Elec. Co., No. IP99-1692-CM/F, 2002 WL
1760699, at *3-5 (S.D. Ind. July 26, 2002); United States v. Ford Motor
Co., 736 F. Supp. 1539, 1550 (W.D. Mo. 1990). They can also be used to
ensure that decisions made in establishing the terms of a major NSR
permit, such as BACT limits, were made on reasonable grounds properly
supported by the record. See, e.g., Alaska Dep't of Env't Conservation
v. EPA, 540 U.S. 461 (2004) (affirming application of section 167 of
the CAA in this context).
3. Title V Permit Shields
The incorporation of the terms and conditions of an NSR permit into
a title V permit does not, by itself, diminish the ability of the EPA
or citizens to enforce preconstruction permitting requirements.
However, enforcement could be affected by a title V ``permit shield''
imposed under CAA section 504(f) and 40 CFR 70.6(f) and 71.6(f). A
permit shield, if part of an approved title V program and expressly
included in a title V permit,\115\ may provide a sufficient defense
from enforcement actions under certain circumstances. This proposed
rule does not change the agency's interpretation or enlarge the scope
of a permit shield.
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\115\ ``A part 70 permit that does not expressly state that a
permit shield exists shall be presumed not to provide such a
shield.'' 40 CFR 70.6(f)(2).
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There are two types of permit shields under title V. The first,
default permit shield states that compliance with the title V permit
``shall be deemed compliance with'' title V. 42 U.S.C. 7661c(f). Where
a facility is entitled only to this default permit shield, requirements
of the CAA outside of title V (including NSR requirements) are still
independently enforceable against the facility.
A permitting authority may go further to provide a facility with a
second, more expansive type of permit shield. This more expansive
permit shield has two prongs. Under the first prong of an expanded
permit shield, a permitting authority can provide that compliance with
the title V permit ``shall be deemed compliance with other [non-title
V] applicable provisions,'' but only if ``the permit includes the
applicable requirements of such provisions.'' 42 U.S.C. 7661c(f)(1);
see 40 CFR 70.6(f)(1)(i). Where a title V permit includes this type of
permit shield and also incorporates the terms of an NSR permit, the
permit shield would provide that compliance with the title V permit
would be deemed compliance with the specific applicable requirements
reflected in the NSR permit. However, compliance with such a title V
permit would not be deemed compliance with any other requirements that
are not contained in the NSR permit. For example, if a source obtained
a minor NSR permit for a project and the title V permit included this
type of permit shield, compliance with the title V permit would not
preclude an enforcement action alleging a violation of title I of the
Act for failure to obtain a major NSR permit.
Under the second prong of an expanded permit shield, a permitting
authority can only provide a shield from requirements it has expressly
determined to be non-applicable. The statute and regulations say this
shield is available if the state, ``in acting on the [title V] permit
application[,] makes a determination relating to the permittee that
such other provisions (which shall be referred to in such
determination) are not applicable and the permit includes the
determination or a concise summary thereof.'' 42 U.S.C. 7661c(f)(2);
see 40 CFR 70.6(f)(1)(ii). In other words, this type of permit shield
requires that the permitting authority make a written non-applicability
determination during the title V permitting process and memorialize
this determination within the title V permit record.
Further, if a permitting authority chooses to include a title V
permit shield that expressly covers NSR requirements that either are,
or are not, applicable to a particular construction project, that
decision would be based on title V authority and part of the title V
permit action. As such, the NSR requirements covered by the title V
permit shield would be subject to review and oversight through title V,
including being subject to the EPA's objection authority and the public
petition opportunity. The availability of these title V oversight tools
is important because an express title V permit shield effectively
precludes enforcement through the federal court system under CAA
sections 113 or 304. By including an express permit shield through
title V, that enforcement-based oversight tool is replaced by oversight
through the title V permitting process, which provides an alternative
pathway to the federal courts.\116\
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\116\ Specifically, if the EPA does not object to a title V
permit on its own volition, and subsequently denies a petition
requesting that the EPA object to the permit, such denial may be
appealed to the relevant U.S. Court of Appeals. 42 U.S.C.
7661d(b)(2), 7607(b)(1).
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4. Other Enforcement Considerations
As one federal Court of Appeals explained: ``Title V itself
reserves the EPA's ability to bring an enforcement action for
violations of the CAA unless an express `shield' on the face of the
permit bars that action. This provision would hardly be necessary if
the EPA was supposed to resolve all alleged violations of the CAA in
the permitting process.'' Citizens Against Ruining the Environment v.
EPA, 535 F. 3d 670, 678 (7th Cir. 2008) (quoting 42 U.S.C. 7661c(f)).
However, other circuit courts have barred enforcement actions that they
viewed as impermissible collateral attacks on permits.\117\ In these
cases, the courts' decisions were premised upon the notion that the EPA
would assess the substantive validity or applicability of certain CAA
requirements (including NSR requirements \118\) through the title V
petition process, and that the EPA Administrator's decision in response
to a title V petition could be challenged in federal court. Based on
that premise, these courts decided that the jurisdictional bar in CAA
section 307(b)(2) against ``[a]ctions of the Administrator with respect
to which review could have been obtained'' applies to bar enforcement
of these the substantive requirements underlying those enforcement
actions. 42 U.S.C. 7607(b)(2). These decisions, however, did not
identify statutory or regulatory text to support this premise; they may
have been implicitly based on EPA practice from 1997 to 2017.
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\117\ See Nucor Steel-Arkansas v. Big River Steel, LLC, 825 F.3d
444 (8th Cir. 2016); EPA v. EME Homer City Generation, LP, 727 F.3d
274 (3rd Cir. 2013); Sierra Club v. Otter Tail Power Co., 615 F.3d
1008 (8th Cir. 2010); Romoland School Dist. v. Inland Empire Energy
Center, LLC, 548 F.3d 738 (9th Cir. 2008).
\118\ See Nucor, 825 F.3d at 452-53; Romoland, 548 F.3d at 754-
56.
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In light of the EPA's position since 2017 with respect to certain
NSR permits, the premise underlying those cases no longer applies.
Based on the interpretation of the title V provisions discussed in this
proposal, the EPA's view is that the title V process does not operate
to bar enforcement of the NSR permitting requirements on the basis of
[[Page 1173]]
section 307(b)(2). This proposed rule will codify the EPA's current
view that certain NSR issues are not subject to review through title V
processes, including the petition process. Because the EPA
Administrator will not consider or take any action concerning the
substantive validity of these NSR permitting decisions through title V,
there is no opportunity for federal judicial review of these issues
through title V, and therefore the statutory bar in CAA section
307(b)(2) simply does not apply. Therefore, enforcement of certain NSR-
related requirements in the district court should no longer be viewed
as a collateral attack on an Administrator's action (or lack thereof)
through title V for which review could have been obtained in an
appellate court. At least one court that considered this issue since
the EPA revised its interpretation in 2017 has declined to impose such
a jurisdictional bar.\119\
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\119\ See Sierra Club v. Entergy Arkansas LLC, 503 F.Supp.3d
821, 847-48 (2020) (``In addition, plaintiffs maintain that the
EPA's interpretation of statutory language such that it will no
longer oversee state Title I permit decisions through Title V
petitions provides an additional basis upon which the Court should
decline to find and impose an exhaustion requirement. The Court has
examined the allegations in the amended complaint and the briefing
with respect to the specific provisions of the CAA under which
plaintiffs bring claims and the alleged requirements for bringing
those claims in federal court. The Court is satisfied at this stage
of the litigation that the Court has subject matter jurisdiction
over plaintiffs' claims in their amended complaint.'').
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D. Impacts of Proposed Action
This proposed rule is primarily procedural in nature and does not
impose any specific or direct requirements on any potentially affected
stakeholders. Additionally, given that this proposed rule seeks to
codify the EPA's existing policies and interpretations that have been
in place since 2017, most of these effects will not arise from this
regulatory action itself. The following paragraphs summarize the
anticipated indirect impacts of EPA's current and proposed approach.
1. Impacts on the EPA
This action most directly affects the EPA itself, and specifically
the EPA's actions in overseeing both the title V and NSR permitting
programs. This action will codify the EPA's current framework regarding
the scope of issues that EPA will--and will not--review through unique
title V permitting mechanisms, including the EPA's 45-day review of
title V permits and the EPA's responses to citizen petitions
challenging title V permits. Reflecting this existing approach more
directly in regulations will provide consistency across the country and
ensure that the EPA's permitting oversight resources are most
effectively focused on the issues where such oversight can achieve the
greatest results. For example, by not reviewing complex NSR issues
through its title V oversight tools, the EPA can prioritize using those
tools to ensure that title V permits assure compliance with substantive
requirements established in other CAA programs, such as by requiring
additional monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting when necessary.
This action further emphasizes the EPA's commitment to using its
existing title I oversight tools to address title I permitting issues.
As discussed in section IV.E.4.b. of this preamble, those title I
oversight tools are more effective means of addressing title I issues
than the EPA's title V oversight tools.
2. Impacts on State, Local, and Tribal Permitting Authorities
This rule may also impact state, local, and Tribal permitting
authorities that issue title V and/or NSR permits. From the EPA's
experience, it appears that many, if not most, permitting authorities
already implement their title V and NSR programs in a manner consistent
with the EPA's current (and proposed) approach. That is, these
permitting authorities do not use the title V permitting process to
revisit NSR permitting decisions that they themselves previously made.
For permitting authorities that have not been implementing the EPA's
current approach, this action is expected to decrease administrative
burdens. Permitting authorities should generally only have to address
NSR-related permitting issues once: during the NSR permitting process.
The EPA does not expect it will be necessary for most permitting
authorities to revise their regulations or to submit revised part 70
regulations or SIP regulations for EPA approval as a result of this
proposed rule. The EPA views its existing part 70 and part 71
regulations--and, by extension, the equivalent regulations in EPA-
approved state rules--to be consistent with the EPA's existing (and
proposed) approach. This proposed rule is intended to make EPA's
regulations clearer. Nonetheless, permitting authorities that desire
the greater certainty associated with the rule revisions proposed in
this action are welcome to make changes to their regulations similar to
those the EPA is proposing.\120\ The EPA specifically solicits comments
from permitting authorities about their ability (or inability) to
implement the EPA's proposed approach without changes to their EPA-
approved part 70 program rules.
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\120\ For example, states within the Tenth Circuit's
jurisdiction may currently have language that matches the language
in the EPA's regulation that the court considered in Sierra Club v.
EPA, 964 F.3d 882 (10th Cir. 2020). Once the EPA revises its own
regulations, this should provide those states the certainty that the
EPA will not use the title V process to address NSR issues, even
within this jurisdiction. However, such states may wish to consider
the extent to which the Tenth Circuit's reading of the same language
affects their state law obligations with respect to the title V and
NSR permitting interface.
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The current proposed rule does not itself mandate any requirements
governing the issuance of NSR permits. However, permitting authorities
may choose to change some of their NSR permitting practices in order to
realize benefits in their permitting programs. For example, in order to
ensure that the EPA will not use its title V oversight tools to revisit
a permitting authority's NSR permitting decisions, permitting
authorities may increase the amount of public participation
opportunities offered on minor NSR permit actions. The EPA strongly
encourages permitting authorities to provide for robust and meaningful
public participation opportunities on NSR permitting actions,
consistent with existing statutory and regulatory requirements and EPA
guidance.
Permitting authorities that currently process NSR and title permit
actions through streamlined processes should consider the best way to
achieve their administrative efficiency goals while maintaining the
maximum amount of clarity regarding the distinctions between title I
and title V permit actions. In particular, the EPA strongly encourages
permitting authorities that currently employ an ``enhanced NSR''
framework to stop using such procedures and instead consider other
mechanisms for streamlining. See section IV.B.4. of this preamble for
additional information about how different streamlined permit issuance
procedures impact the EPA's review of NSR issues through its title V
authorities.
3. Impacts on Regulated Entities
As far as regulated entities are concerned, the approach described
in this action increases certainty in final preconstruction permitting
decisions. The additional regulatory text that EPA proposes to codify
in this rulemaking should further increase such certainty. In order to
take advantage of this increased certainty, the EPA expects that
sources subject to both title V and NSR permitting programs will have
an
[[Page 1174]]
incentive to work with their permitting authorities to ensure that all
relevant NSR permit actions are subject to robust and meaningful public
participation opportunities.
4. Impacts on the Public
The EPA expects that the public at large, including communities
impacted by pollution from facilities regulated under the title V and
NSR programs, will benefit from the increased clarity provided in this
rulemaking, as well as from more effective engagement in NSR permitting
decisions. A central focus of this effort is to more clearly define the
most appropriate and effective routes for the public to participate
in--and, if necessary, challenge--different types of CAA permitting
decisions. In this manner, this rule does not limit meaningful public
participation, but rather encourages more meaningful public
participation by directing the public to the pathways that can be used
to most effectively provide oversight over different types of permits.
This rule will allow the public, permitting authorities, and the
EPA to focus their title V-based efforts on issues that can be more
fully and effectively addressed through title V, such as supplementing
monitoring when necessary to assure compliance with underlying
applicable requirements.
As explained in section IV.E.4.b. of this preamble, the title V
permitting process has proven a generally ineffective mechanism to
address deficiencies in NSR permitting actions. The available title I
permitting and title III enforcement mechanisms are better tools for
the public to utilize in addressing issues with NSR permitting
decisions. The EPA's pre-2017 policies that ostensibly allowed the
public to challenge NSR permit decisions through the title V process
created a misleading incentive for the public to forego those more
appropriate and effective title I appeal mechanisms. This process often
resulted in the public investing considerable resources in pursuing
title V-based challenges, which had limited effect on the permit terms
at issue. As this proposed rule makes clear, the public's attention and
resources would be more effectively deployed in challenges to NSR
permits through the appropriate title I permitting and title III
enforcement channels.
Additionally, the public should benefit from the incentives that
this rule will create for states and regulated entities to ensure that
relevant NSR permit actions involve public notice and the opportunity
for comment and judicial review. These incentives will complement the
related (but separate) actions that the EPA is considering with respect
to minor NSR programs. Collectively, these actions should encourage
increased public participation in the NSR permitting process.
To the extent that the public is deprived of meaningful
opportunities to address NSR permit deficiencies, the title V
permitting process should serve as a backstop so that the public (and
the EPA) have the ability to ensure that title V permits contain the
necessary NSR-related requirements.
The EPA solicits comment on examples of past situations (not
hypothetical) where the EPA's objection to a title V permit helped
address NSR-related issues that the public either did, or did not, have
a chance to address through the NSR permitting process.
E. Rationale for Proposed Action
As explained in the following subsections, title V of the CAA does
not compel the EPA or state permitting authorities to use the title V
operating permit process to review the substance of decisions made
during the title I (NSR) preconstruction permitting process. The
statute requires that title V permits assure compliance with
``applicable requirements'' of the CAA, but the statute does not define
this term or expressly require that permitting authorities revisit NSR
permitting decisions. The EPA interprets the statute to mean that the
terms and conditions of a NSR permit issued under EPA-approved (or EPA-
promulgated) title I rules, with public notice and the opportunity for
comment and judicial review, define the relevant NSR-related applicable
requirements of the SIP (or FIP) for purposes of title V permitting.
The EPA's interpretation is supported by the structure and purpose
of title V. Congress designed title V to consolidate, assure compliance
with, and improve the enforceability of applicable requirements
established under other CAA programs. The title V program was not
intended to create new substantive requirements or modify substantive
requirements added in those other programs (other than to include
supplemental compliance assurance measures, when necessary). This
understanding of the purpose of title V--both in general and as it
relates to the intersection of title V and NSR permitting--is reflected
in the statute and regulations, the legislative history, EPA statements
contemporaneous with the promulgation of the initial title V
regulations, and various federal court decisions and EPA statements
since that time.
The EPA's interpretation is also consistent with the structure of
the CAA as a whole. The EPA's current (and proposed) approach gives
weight to the title I mechanisms that Congress provided to establish
the specific NSR-related requirements of SIPs, as well as the title I
and title III procedures for evaluating, challenging, and enforcing
title I permitting requirements. It also respects the system of
cooperative federalism reflected in the NSR and title V permitting
programs.
The EPA's current (and proposed) approach also reflects better
policy than alternative interpretations because it: ensures that
applicable requirements established in different CAA programs are
treated consistently in title V permitting; better accounts for
procedural, resource-related, and practical limitations associated with
title V oversight tools; incentivizes the use of robust title I avenues
of review; and respects the finality of NSR permitting decisions.
1. Statutory Text and Interpretation
The text of title V alone does not conclusively define the scope of
issues subject to review (or re-review) during the title V permitting
process. In relevant part, the CAA requires that title V permits
``include enforceable emissions limitations and standards . . . and
such other conditions as are necessary to assure compliance with
applicable requirements of [the CAA], including the requirements of the
applicable implementation plan,'' i.e., the SIP or FIP. 42 U.S.C.
7661c(a). Similarly, if the EPA determines that a title V permit is
``not in compliance with the applicable requirements of [the CAA],
including the requirements of an applicable implementation plan,'' the
EPA must object, and if the EPA does not, any person may petition the
EPA to do so. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b)(1)-(2).\121\
[[Page 1175]]
However, the term ``applicable requirements'' is not defined in the
Act, and the statute does not otherwise specify how to determine the
applicable requirements of the CAA or the SIP (or FIP) for a particular
source.
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\121\ Similar requirements appear in other parts of title V. For
example: ``The term `schedule of compliance' means a schedule of
remedial measures, including an enforceable sequence of actions or
operations, leading to compliance with an applicable implementation
plan, emission standard, emission limitation, or emission
prohibition.'' 42 U.S.C. 7661(3). ``Nothing in this subsection shall
be construed to alter the applicable requirements of this chapter
that a permit be obtained before construction or modification.'' 42
U.S.C. 7661a(a). Permitting authorities ``have adequate authority to
. . . issue permits and assure compliance . . . with each applicable
standard, regulation, or requirement under this chapter.'' 42 U.S.C.
7661a(b)(5). The regulations to implement the program shall include
a ``requirement that the applicant submit with the application a
compliance plan describing how the source will comply with all
applicable requirements under this chapter.'' 42 U.S.C. 7661b(b).
However, like section 504, these sections do not specify the scope
of the term ``applicable requirements'' or how the permitting
authority or the EPA is to determine what the applicable
requirements are for an individual source as part of its title V
permit.
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With respect to title I preconstruction permits, the statutory term
``applicable requirements'' is particularly ambiguous. As explained
further in section IV.E.3.a. of this preamble, during the
preconstruction permitting process, permitting authorities determine
which NSR requirements in the SIP (or FIP) are applicable (e.g., major
NSR or minor NSR requirements) to new or modified sources, and derive
the specific permit conditions (e.g., emission limitations and other
standards) applicable to a given source or modification based on the
general direction in the SIP. The public has the opportunity to provide
comment on draft permits and also to seek review in state court. At the
end of this NSR permitting process, the NSR permit terms reflect the
NSR-related requirements of the SIP (or FIP) applicable to the new or
modified source.
The question, then, is whether the title V permitting process
should be used to double-check--and re-check during every subsequent
title V renewal permit--the substantive adequacy of applicable
requirements established through NSR permitting decisions. In other
words, the question is whether title V should be used to assess whether
the requirements embodied in an NSR permit were properly derived from
the general, overarching SIP (or FIP) provisions governing NSR.
Title V of the CAA contains no language expressly mandating such a
re-evaluation through title V. Notably, the Fifth Circuit found the
CAA's silence on this topic a persuasive reason for upholding the EPA
interpretation that is the basis for this proposed rule. Env't
Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 248-49.\122\ The statute's silence on
this topic stands in contrast to the presence of more specific
statutory mandates, such as the requirement that title V permits be
used to add compliance assurance measures like monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting requirements. 42 U.S.C. 7661c(c); see 40
CFR 70.6(c)(1); Sierra Club v. EPA, 536 F.3d at 680.
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\122\ Specifically, the court stated the following: ``We find
persuasive EPA's position that Title V lacks a specific textual
mandate requiring the agency to revisit the Title I adequacy of
preconstruction permits. Our own review of Title V confirms that it
contains no such explicit requirement, nor any language guiding the
agency on how to perform a review of that nature. The principle that
a matter not covered is not covered is so obvious that it seems
absurd to recite it. A number of cases have identified the casus
omissus pro omisso habendus est canon, under which a statute should
not be read to include matter it does not include. Here, Title V
does not tell EPA to reconsider [NSR] in the course of Title V
permitting. We reject Petitioners' position because there is a basic
difference between filling a gap left by Congress' silence and
rewriting rules that Congress has affirmatively and specifically
enacted.'' Env't Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 248-49 (cleaned up)
(citing Lamie v. U.S. Tr., 540 U.S. 526, 538 (2004); Iselin v.
United States, 270 U.S. 245, 251 (1926); Yates v. Collier, 868 F.3d
354, 369 (5th Cir. 2017); In re Miller, 570 F.3d 633, 638-39 (5th
Cir. 2009)).
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Moreover, the CAA's references to ``applicable requirements'' do
not compel such a re-evaluation. Notably, the Fifth Circuit rejected
the notion that this general term should be construed as ``broad and
sweeping,'' or that this term should be read to mandate using title V
to review of whether requirements in an NSR permit accurately reflect
the requirements of a SIP. See Env't Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at
249-250 (``[Petitioners] would effectively rewrite the clause to read:
`a de novo reconsideration of the source's preconstruction permitting.'
Surely, Congress would not have hidden that regulatory elephant in this
residual mousehole.'').
In light of the statute's ambiguity, the EPA has adopted an
interpretation of the statutory terms ``applicable requirements'' and
``requirements of the applicable implementation plan.'' \123\ The EPA's
interpretation is that the terms and conditions of an NSR permit issued
under EPA-approved (or EPA-promulgated) title I rules, with public
notice and the opportunity for comment and judicial review, define the
relevant set of ``applicable requirements'' for purposes of title V
permitting. That is, the ``requirements of an applicable implementation
plan'' relevant to a particular construction project are the
requirements that the permitting authority determined to be applicable
during the NSR permitting process, as reflected in the terms of such an
NSR permit. Not only is this interpretation consistent with the
statutory text, but the EPA also considers this to be the best
interpretation in light of the structure and purpose of title V, the
structure of the CAA as a whole, and other policy reasons, as explained
in the following subsections of this preamble.
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\123\ This interpretation is reflected, in part, in the EPA's
existing regulations. 40 CFR 70.2, 71.2. These existing regulations
can be read to support the statutory interpretation explained in
this preamble. However, in light of the Tenth Circuit's ruling
(which held that the EPA's regulatory definition of ``applicable
requirement'' precluded the EPA's approach), the EPA is proposing to
amend the EPA's regulations to more clearly reflect the EPA's
statutory interpretation. For further discussion of the EPA's
interpretation of its existing regulations, see Big River Steel
Order at 9-11.
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2. Structure and Purpose of Title V
The EPA's interpretation of ``applicable requirements'' in the
context of title V and NSR permitting is supported by the structure and
purpose of the title V program--namely, to consolidate, assure
compliance with, and improve the enforceability of applicable
requirements established under other CAA programs. The title V program
was not intended to establish new substantive requirements or modify
substantive requirements created in other programs (other than to
include supplemental compliance assurance measures, when necessary).
This purpose is reflected in the statute and regulations, the
legislative history associated with Congress's enactment of title V,
EPA statements contemporaneous with the promulgation of the initial
title V regulations, and various federal court decisions and EPA
statements since that time.
As introduced in section III.B. of this preamble, a core purpose
and function of title V is to identify, consolidate, and assure
compliance with the requirements applicable to individual sources from
other, more substantive CAA programs. This function is embodied
primarily within CAA section 504 and 40 CFR 70.6(a) and (c), which
generally require that title V permits include conditions that assure
an individual source's compliance with all CAA applicable requirements.
When Congress enacted title V in 1990, it explained this purpose as
follows:
The first benefit of the title V permit program is that . . . it
will clarify and make more readily enforceable a source's pollution
control requirements. Currently, in many cases, the source's
pollution control obligations . . . are scattered throughout
numerous, often hard-to-find provisions of the SIP or other Federal
regulations. . . . The air permit program will ensure that all of a
source's obligations . . . will be contained in one permit document.
S. Rep. No. 101-228 at 347 (Dec. 20, 1989), reprinted in 5 Legislative
History of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 (CAA Legislative
History) at 8687 (1998).\124\
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\124\ Other portions of the history of this legislation describe
the purpose of title V in similar terms. See, e.g., Conf. Rep. on S.
1630, Speech of Rep. Michael Bilirakis (Oct. 26, 1990), 6 CAA
Legislative History at 10768 (1998).
In addition to identifying and consolidating existing requirements
[[Page 1176]]
applicable to a source, CAA section 504 provides the authority to use
title V permits to establish additional requirements relating to
compliance assurance. For example, it is well-established that title V
permits may be used to create or supplement monitoring requirements
when necessary to assure an individual source's compliance with
underlying applicable requirements that do not themselves contain
sufficient monitoring provisions.\125\ This exception proves the rule;
where Congress intended title V to serve as a vehicle for the
reevaluation of existing requirements or for imposing new requirements,
it expressly said so.
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\125\ See 42 U.S.C. 7661c(c); 40 CFR 70.6(c)(1); Sierra Club v.
EPA, 536 F.3d 673, 674-45, 680 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (``Title V did more
than require the compilation in a single document of existing
applicable emission limits and monitoring requirements. It also
mandated that `[e]ach permit issued under [Title V] shall set forth
. . . monitoring . . . requirements to assure compliance with the
permit terms and conditions.' . . . [T]he Act requires: a permitting
authority may supplement an inadequate monitoring requirement so
that the requirement will `assure compliance with the permit terms
and conditions.' '' (citations omitted)); see also, e.g., In the
Matter of CITGO Refining and Chemicals Co., L.P., West Plant, Order
on Petition No. VI-2007-01 at 6-8 (May 28, 2009). This additional
purpose is similarly reflected in the legislative history. See,
e.g., S. Rep. No. 101-228 at 347, 5 CAA Legislative History at 8687.
Various compliance assurance requirements are included within title
V and the EPA's implementing regulations; not all are restricted to
monitoring. See 42 U.S.C. 7661c(a), (b), (c); 40 CFR 70.6(a)(1),
(a)(3), (c), 71.6(a)(1), (a)(3), (c); see also, e.g., In the Matter
of Suncor Energy (U.S.A.), Inc., Commerce City Refinery, Plant 2
(East), Order on Petition Nos. VIII-2022-13 & VIII-2022-14 at 13-17
(July 31, 2023).
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Beyond title V's consolidation and compliance assurance functions,
it is axiomatic that title V generally does not impose new pollution
control requirements on sources or provide a vehicle to modify such
requirements established under other CAA programs. As stated in the
congressional record:
The permit provisions of title V provide a focus for this
harmonization [of other titles of the CAA], although title V does
not change, and gives EPA no authority to modify, the substantive
provisions of these other titles. . . . [T]itle V does not change,
and gives EPA no authority to modify, the substantive provisions of
these other titles. . . . Title V creates no new substantive
emission control requirements. Nothing in the permitting title
should be read to increase the stringency of any control requirement
nor to delay or accelerate the effectiveness of such requirements,
except as expressly provided in titles I, III, and IV.
Conf. Rep. on S. 1630, Speech of Rep. Michael Bilirakis (Oct. 26,
1990), 6 CAA Legislative History at 10768 (1998).
Recognizing the core functions of the title V program, the EPA's
regulations have provided since 1992: ``All sources subject to these
regulations shall have a permit to operate that assures compliance by
the source with all applicable requirements. While title V does not
impose substantive new requirements, it does require that fees be
imposed on sources and that certain procedural measures be adopted
especially with respect to compliance.'' 40 CFR 70.1(b) (emphasis
added). These principles are further explained in EPA statements
contemporaneous with the initial 1992 title V regulations,\126\
subsequent rulemakings,\127\ and in numerous orders responding to
petitions challenging individual title V permits.\128\ Likewise,
federal courts across the nation have acknowledged and reiterated these
general principles.\129\
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\126\ See 57 FR at 32251 (``While title V generally does not
impose substantive new requirements, it does require that . . .
certain procedural measures be followed, especially with respect to
determining compliance with underlying applicable requirements. The
program will generally clarify, in a single document, which
requirements apply to a source and, thus, should enhance compliance
with the requirements of the Act. . . . The title V permit program
will enable the source, States, EPA, and the public to understand
better the requirements to which the source is subject, and whether
the source is meeting those requirements. Increased source
accountability and better enforcement should result.''); id. at
32284 (``As discussed above, title V is primarily procedural, and is
not generally intended to create any new substantive requirements. .
. . The title V permit is intended to record in a single document
the substantive requirements derived from elsewhere in the Act.
Therefore, in most cases the only emissions limits contained in the
permit will be emissions limits that are imposed to comply with the
substantive requirements of the Act (including SIP
requirements).'').
\127\ See 81 FR 57822, 57826-27 (Aug. 24, 2016) (``For the most
part, title V of the CAA does not impose new pollution control
requirements on sources. The definition of `applicable requirements'
in the part 70 regulations includes many standards and requirements
that are established through other CAA programs, such as standards
and requirements under sections 111 and 112 of the Act, and terms
and conditions of preconstruction permits issued under the New
Source Review programs. 40 CFR 70.2. Once those air quality control
requirements are established in those other programs, they are
incorporated into a source's title V permits as appropriate. . . .
[I]n providing an opportunity for harmonization through title V of
the CAA, Congress did not replace or remove the procedures and
requirements for establishing substantive requirements that exist in
other provisions of the CAA.'').
\128\ Hundreds of EPA petition orders include background
discussion reiterating this core function of title V. Electronic
copies of these orders are available on the EPA's public database,
https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits/title-v-petition-database. To the extent individual petition orders contain
particularly relevant discussion, they are discussed elsewhere in
this preamble.
\129\ See, e.g., Utility Air Reg. Group v. EPA, 573 U.S. 302,
309 (2014) (``Unlike the PSD program, Title V generally does not
impose any substantive pollution-control requirements.''); Env't
Integrity Project, 960 F. 3d at 250 (``By all accounts, Title V's
purpose was to simplify and streamline sources' compliance with the
Act's substantive requirements. Rather than subject sources to new
substantive requirements--or new methods of reviewing old
requirements--the intent of Title V was to consolidate into a single
document (the operating permit) all of the clean air requirements
applicable to a particular source of air pollution.'' (cleaned up));
id. at 244; see also, e.g., U.S. Sugar Corp. v. EPA, 830 F.3d 579,
597 (D.C. Cir. 2016); US v. EME Homer City Generation, LP, 727 F. 3d
274, 280 (3rd Cir. 2013); Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d 1257,
1260 (11th Cir. 2008); Sierra Club v. Leavitt, 368 F.3d 1300, 1302
(11th Cir. 2004); Appalachian Power Co. v. EPA, 208 F. 3d 1015,
1026-27 (D.C. Cir. 2000).
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Not only were these general principles well-established at the
inception of the title V program, but both Congress and the EPA
specifically spoke to the manner in which these general principles
would guide the interaction between title V and title I permitting
programs. For example, a Senate Report accompanying title V explained:
New and modified major sources are already required to obtain
construction permits under the [NSR] and [PSD] provisions of the
current Act. EPA should avoid imposing additional construction
permit requirements under title V. Thus, construction permits may
continue to be issued under the existing provisions of the Act, but
title V will apply with respect to existing source requirements not
otherwise required in the construction permit, e.g., fees.
S. Rep. No. 101-228 at 349, 5 CAA Legislative History at 8689 (emphasis
added).\130\ Thus, the legislative history articulates Congress's
intent that, notwithstanding the enactment of title V, NSR permits
would continue to be issued as they had for over a decade. Title V
permits would be used to incorporate the requirements of NSR permits,
but not to alter or impose additional NSR-related requirements.
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\130\ Similarly, one lawmaker involved in the statute's
enactment explained: ``In the past, some provisions of the Clean Air
Act--for example, the nonattainment and PSD new source
requirements--were, and will continue to be, implemented through
preconstruction permits.'' Conf. Rep. on S. 1630, Speech of Rep.
Michael Bilirakis (Oct. 26, 1990), 6 CAA Legislative History at
10768 (1998) (emphasis added).
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As previously noted, in the 1991 and 1992 preambles to the EPA's
initial title V rules, the agency announced a similar understanding of
the intersection of title V and title I permitting. The EPA did not
express an intention to use the title V permitting process to review
the applicable requirements established in preconstruction permitting
programs under title I of the CAA. To the contrary, the EPA stated:
``Any requirements established during the preconstruction review
process also apply to the source for purposes of implementing title V.
If the source meets the limits in its NSR permit, the title V operating
permit would
[[Page 1177]]
incorporate these limits without further review.'' 56 FR 21712, 21738-
39 (May 10, 1991) (emphasis added). Similarly, the EPA explained: ``The
intent of title V is not to second-guess the results of any State NSR
program.'' Id. at 21739 (emphasis added). Further, ``Decisions made
under the NSR and/or PSD programs (e.g., [BACT]) define applicable SIP
requirements for the title V source and, if they are not otherwise
changed, can be incorporated without further review into the operating
permit for the source. The title V program is not intended to interfere
in any way with the expeditious processing of new source permits.'' Id.
at 21721 (emphasis added). The preamble to the final rule further
confirms that ``[d]ecisions made under the NSR and/or PSD programs
define certain applicable SIP requirements for the title V source.'' 57
FR at 32259 (emphasis added).
The EPA's contemporaneous interpretation of the statute (and the
regulations implementing this statute), should be afforded great
weight, as the Fifth Circuit acknowledged in Env't Integrity Project,
960 F.3d at 251 (``We also agree with EPA that the language in part
70's preamble is probative of Title V's purpose as a whole.'').\131\
Although the EPA departed from this interpretation during the 2000s,
the EPA's return to this interpretation reflects a better construction
of the statute and congressional intent.\132\ As the Fifth Circuit
stated: ``We find persuasive EPA's view that, because Title V was not
intended to add new substantive requirements to the Act, it should not
be interpreted as Petitioners urge. . . . This goal, as EPA argues, is
at cross-purposes with using the Title V process to reevaluate
preconstruction permits.'' Id. at 250-51.
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\131\ An agency's contemporaneous interpretation is often given
great weight in understanding the meaning of a statute. See e.g.,
Good Samaritan Hosp. v. Shalala, 508 U.S. 402, 414 (1993) (``Of
particular relevance is the agency's contemporaneous construction
which `we have allowed . . . to carry the day against doubts that
might exist from a reading of the bare words of a statute.' ''
(quoting FHA v. The Darlington, Inc., 358 U.S. 84, 90 (1958))).
\132\ See Env't Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 251 (``We
recognize that EPA has reverted to its original interpretation of
Sec. 70.2, reflecting its changing views of Title V. We take the
agency's change of position into account in determining whether to
defer to its position. But even when `the agency has embraced a
variety of approaches' we may still defer to its present position,
`especially' when the current view `closely fits the design of the
statute as a whole.' '' (quoting Shahala, 508 U.S. at 417-18;
additional citation omitted)).
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Other statutory provisions within title V further support the EPA's
interpretation. In enacting title V, Congress directed the EPA to
``develop streamlined procedures in cases where the permit simply
incorporates without changing[ ] existing requirements found in the SIP
or in other provisions of the Act.'' S. Rep. No. 101-228 at 353, 5 CAA
Legislative History at 8693. Reflecting this directive, title V
requires state programs to have ``[a]dequate, streamlined, and
reasonable procedures . . . for expeditious review of permit actions .
. . .'' 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b)(6). Requiring a permitting authority, or the
EPA, to go back and review final permitting decisions that have already
been subject to the safeguards of public notice and judicial review
would frustrate the goal of ``expeditious review of permit actions.''
Similarly, Congress provided abbreviated timeframes for the EPA to
review a proposed title V permit: 45 days for the EPA's independent
review, and 60 days if confronted with a petition to object. 42 U.S.C.
7661d(b); see 40 CFR 70.8(c), (d). Based on ``the abbreviated timeline
Congress gave EPA,'' the Fifth Circuit in Env't Integrity Project
concluded ``that these timelines are inconsistent with an in-depth and
searching review of every permitting decision regarding a given
source.'' Env't Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 251.\133\ This point is
compounded by the fact that title V permits must be renewed every 5
years. 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b)(5)(B), (b)(6); see, e.g., 40 CFR 70.6(a)(2).
As the Fifth Circuit stated, ``the fact that Title V permits must be
renewed every 5 years tends to support the agency's view that Title V
was not intended to serve as a vehicle for re-examining the underlying
substance of preconstruction permits. Subjecting a source's
preconstruction permit to periodic new scrutiny, without any changes to
the source's pollution output, would be inconsistent with Title V's
goal of giving sources more security in their ability to comply with
the Act.'' Env't Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 251-52.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\133\ See also Env't Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 253 (``Title
I [includes] more detailed procedures for in-depth oversight of
case-specific permitting decisions. Such permitting decisions follow
state appeals or enforcement actions authorized by other provisions
of the Act, including citizen suits under Title III. Those
mechanisms are better structured to provide agency and citizen
oversight of preconstruction permitting. . . . Title V contains none
of the procedures that would guide those challenges, as Titles I and
III do. . . . And those avenues provide more time for development
and consideration of the potential issues.'' (internal citations and
quotations omitted)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In summary, neither the structure of title V nor the congressional
record indicate that Congress intended the EPA to reevaluate and
rewrite substantive title I preconstruction requirements through the
title V process. Title V was enacted largely to identify and
consolidate the variety of requirements applicable to each facility and
assure compliance with these requirements through provisions like
monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting. Reexamining title I permits
through title V would not help address either of these objectives.
Moreover, congressional intent for efficiency would be undermined if
permitting authorities were required to second-guess complex decisions
reflected in state-issued title I permits during title V review, and
then re-check these decisions during each subsequent title V renewal.
Such a review would also be generally incompatible with the limited
timeframes that Congress provided for EPA's review of title V permits.
These considerations related to the structure and purpose of title V
align with the EPA's interpretations of the statute from the early
1990s, as well as the opinions of federal courts.
All indications of congressional intent suggest that the EPA's role
in oversight over the issuance of title V permits should be limited. In
the case of preconstruction permitting requirements derived from title
I of the Act, the purpose of title V is to ensure that the terms and
conditions of the preconstruction permit are properly included as
``applicable requirements,'' and that the permit contains monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting sufficient to assure compliance with those
permit terms and conditions. See 42 U.S.C. 7661c(a), (c); 40 CFR
70.6(a)(1), (a)(3), 70.6(c)(1).
3. Structure of the CAA as a Whole
The EPA's interpretation of ``applicable requirements'' as that
term relates to the interface of title I and title V permits is
supported by the structure of the CAA as a whole. See Utility Air Reg.
Group v. EPA, 573 U.S. 302, 320 (2014) (acknowledging the ``fundamental
canon of statutory construction that the words of a statute must be
read in their context and with a view to their place in the overall
statutory scheme'' (internal citations and quotation marks omitted)).
Specifically, the EPA's interpretation is consistent with the title I
permitting mechanisms that Congress provided to establish and define
the NSR-related requirements of SIPs; the title I and title III
procedures for evaluating, challenging, and enforcing title I
permitting requirements; and the overarching system of cooperative
federalism reflected in the NSR and title V permitting programs.
[[Page 1178]]
a. Implementation of SIP Requirements Through Title I NSR Permits
States must submit SIPs containing NSR permitting programs to EPA
for approval. 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(C).\134\ States then determine and
define the specific NSR-related requirements of SIPs that apply to
individual construction projects by issuing NSR permits to individual
facilities. This two-step process under title I is central to the EPA's
interpretation of the statutory term ``applicable requirements'' as it
relates to the interface between title I and title V permits. It also
differentiates NSR-based applicable requirements from other types of
applicable requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\134\ This section primarily discusses the issuance of NSR
permits under an EPA-approved SIP. Similar principles apply to the
issuance of NSR permits under an EPA-promulgated FIP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section III. of this preamble discusses how different types of
``applicable requirements'' are implemented to greater or lesser
extents through title V permitting. In summary, some applicable
requirements are self-implementing, in that the specific emission
limitations or standards applicable to an individual source (or entire
source category) are expressly identified within in the underlying
regulation (e.g., a SIP, FIP, NSPS, or NESHAP regulation). These types
of self-implementing requirements are incorporated into title V permits
without further review, other than to ensure that the title V permit
contains sufficient conditions to assure compliance with those
requirements. By contrast, other CAA-based requirements may be written
in more general terms, requiring additional steps to define the
specific requirements that are applicable to a given facility. In some
situations--such as where the underlying regulation contains no
direction about the mechanism that must be used to further define such
requirements--those requirements may be defined through the title V
permitting process. NSR requirements are unique, as they fall between
these two examples.
The portions of a SIP addressing NSR are general in nature. SIPs
require new and modified sources to obtain certain permits before
beginning construction; SIPs specify thresholds and other methods to
determine what type of permit a source must obtain; SIPs identify other
preconditions to obtaining a permit (including requirements related to
the NAAQS); and SIPs establish guidelines for establishing specific
limitations and other conditions that must be included in a permit.
Because the NSR-related provisions within a SIP are necessarily
general, they are not self-implementing, and further fact-specific
analysis is required to develop the specific requirements applicable to
a particular new or modified source.
The question then becomes: is title V the appropriate mechanism to
establish (or revisit) the specific NSR-related SIP requirements that
are applicable to construction activities at a particular source? As
noted earlier, title V of the CAA does not mandate this outcome. And
the structure of title I makes clear that this was not Congress's
intent. Congress required in title I that SIPs regulate construction
and require preconstruction permits. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. 7475(a)(1),
7502(c)(5); see 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2)(C).\135\ It thus follows that the
preconstruction permitting requirements for individual sources are
established under these programs in the SIP, not through title V. The
SIPs identify the title I permitting process as the mechanism by which
the more general SIP requirements applicable to construction of
stationary sources will be defined for each new or modified source.
During that title I permitting process, a permitting authority
determines which NSR-related requirements of the SIP are applicable and
designs specific permit terms and conditions to satisfy these more
general SIP requirements. This process also includes the opportunity
for the public to evaluate and challenge the state's decisions.
Overall, the process is designed to result in an NSR permit that
contains all terms and conditions necessary to satisfy the NSR-related
requirements of the SIP. Thus, it is the title I permitting process--
not the general requirements within the SIP itself--that defines the
``applicable requirements'' of the CAA related to NSR, at least insofar
as title V is concerned.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\135\ Although Congress did not specifically require that the
minor NSR program be implemented through permitting, nearly all SIPs
across the nation implement minor NSR through permitting. This
distinction is not relevant to the approach proposed in this rule,
because if a source does not obtain a title I permit to authorize
construction, then there would be no permit to establish the
``applicable requirements'' for title V purposes, and the EPA would
review whether the title V permit assures compliance with the
relevant requirements of the SIP. See section IV.B.5. of this
preamble for further discussion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In summary, the NSR requirements of a SIP are not self-
implementing, but they also do not depend on the title V process to be
defined. Instead, the applicable NSR-related requirements of SIPs are
established through a dedicated title I-based mechanism with its own
public participation opportunities and EPA oversight authority: the NSR
permitting process.
The CAA requires that title V permits assure compliance with
``requirements of an applicable [SIP].'' But the CAA does not specify
that title V be used to re-create or re-evaluate the requirements of
the SIP that were already defined through the specific mechanism
Congress designed to define them: the NSR permitting process. Again,
the purpose of title V is not to create or alter the substantive
requirements from other parts of the CAA, but instead to identify,
consolidate, and assure compliance with those requirements established
in these other programs that apply to each individual source.
b. Oversight of Title I Programs and Permitting Decisions
The many programmatic and case-specific oversight tools contained
within title I demonstrate that it is not necessary--and Congress did
not intend--to use additional title V permit oversight tools to second-
guess the results of title I permitting decisions.\136\ As introduced
in section IV.C.2. of this preamble, title I provides opportunities for
programmatic oversight, oversight over individual permitting decisions,
and oversight through enforcement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\136\ As stated in section IV.C. of this preamble, the EPA's
view that reevaluation of NSR permits is not appropriate in the
title V permitting context does not mean that the EPA agrees that
the state reached the proper decision when setting terms and
conditions of such an NSR permit, nor does it diminish the
opportunities to review NSR preconstruction permitting decisions
under title I of the CAA. See Env't Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at
253.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Through the review of SIP submissions, the EPA ensures that states
have programs in place that provide the authority to issue
substantively sound preconstruction permits, while respecting
Congress's intended role for the states. Congress gave the EPA
authority under title I to disapprove any proposed SIPs that are
inconsistent with federal statutory and regulatory authorities
governing NSR. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k). For example, if a state submits a
proposed SIP containing rules to calculate major source emissions
thresholds, and those rules are inconsistent with the CAA or its
implementing regulations, the EPA cannot approve the SIP. Id. If the
state's program subsequently fails to meet statutory or regulatory
requirements related to NSR, the EPA can call for a revision of the
SIP. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k)(5). Further, if a state fails to properly
implement its NSR program, the EPA can take additional actions,
including orders, administrative penalties, and civil actions. 42
U.S.C. 7413(a)(2), (5).
[[Page 1179]]
The availability of these title I-based authorities obviates the need
to use title V-based oversight tools to address programmatic issues
associated with state NSR programs.
In terms of reviewing individual title I permits, each SIP must
provide for public notice and an opportunity for comment on proposed
NSR permits in its preconstruction permit program. 42 U.S.C.
7475(a)(2); 40 CFR 51.161; 51.165(i), 51.166(q). The EPA may provide
feedback on state-issued NSR permits through this process.\137\ Thus,
both the public and the EPA can seek to correct potential errors in
proposed preconstruction permits, including threshold determinations
about whether a source or modification is minor or major, and can also
challenge the content of permit terms. Should a state permitting
authority fail to address legitimate comments, either the public or the
EPA can seek review of preconstruction permits in state administrative
and judicial forums.\138\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\137\ See supra note 113 and accompanying text.
\138\ See supra note 114 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Congress also provided the EPA and the public with various
enforcement mechanisms to address title I permitting issues on a
facility-by-facility basis. The EPA possesses the authority to issue
injunctive orders to halt construction. 42 U.S.C. 7413(a)(5)(A), 7477.
The EPA may also pursue various types of civil or criminal enforcement
actions pursuant to sections 113 and 167 of the Act. 42 U.S.C. 7413,
7477. In title III of the CAA, Congress also provided authority for
citizens to bring enforcement actions seeking civil penalties and
injunctive relief against a source that has violated certain NSR
requirements. 42 U.S.C. 7604(a)(1), (a)(3). The enforcement-based tools
available to the EPA and members of the public can be used to ensure
that decisions made in establishing the terms of a major NSR permit,
such as BACT limits, were made on reasonable grounds properly supported
by the record. See, e.g., Alaska Dep't of Env't Conservation v. EPA,
540 U.S. 461 (2004). Additionally, they can be used to address
situations where a source failed to obtain a required major NSR permit
(even where it obtained a minor source permit). See, e.g., U.S. v. S.
Ind. Gas & Elec. Co., No. IP99-1692-CM/F, 2002 WL 1760699, at *3-5
(S.D. Ind. July 26, 2002); United States v. Ford Motor Co., 736 F.
Supp. 1539, 1550 (W.D. Mo. 1990). These powerful enforcement tools
enable the EPA and the public to directly correct the behavior of
facilities that pursue illegal construction.
Overall, the availability of title I oversight tools weighs against
using title V oversight tools to address alleged defects with NSR
permitting decisions. As the Fifth Circuit explained:
EPA contrasts Title V's silence on this front with more
stringent oversight authority provided in Title I, arguing that this
supports reading the title V provision to supply a more limited
oversight role for the EPA with regard to state implementation of
preconstruction permitting programs. The agency explains that Title
I is better geared for in-depth oversight of case-specific state
permitting decisions such as through the state appeal process or an
order or action under section[ ] 113 or section 167. And, the agency
urges, the absence of such schemes in Title V shows Congress did not
intend to recapitulate the Title I process in Title V. We find this
reasoning persuasive.
Env't Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 249 (internal quotations and
citations omitted)). Further, these title I-based oversight tools are
more effective than the more limited title V oversight tools. See
section IV.E.4.b. of this preamble for further discussion of the
practical considerations and other policy reasons why title V oversight
tools are not well-suited to resolving complex NSR permitting issues.
c. Cooperative Federalism and Congressional Intent
Congress, the EPA, and the courts have often described the CAA
(like many other environmental statutes) as a program of cooperative
federalism. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. 7401(a)(3)-(4); Env't Integrity
Project, 960 F.3d at 252. The EPA and the states work together to
realize the goals of the CAA, but they have different roles. States
have the ``primary responsibility'' for developing SIPs, 42 U.S.C.
7407, as well as issuing title I permits under SIP programs.
There is no indication that, in enacting title V, Congress intended
to change the balance of state responsibility and federal oversight of
title I permitting programs.\139\ To the contrary, the fact that
Congress specifically provided a title I-based mechanism to establish
the applicable NSR-related requirements, as well as title I- and title
III-based tools for the EPA and citizens to oversee this program,
weighs against using title V to re-evaluate, re-establish, or otherwise
oversee those title I requirements. Congress ``does not alter the
fundamental details of a regulatory scheme in vague terms or ancillary
provisions--it does not, one might say, hide elephants in mouseholes.''
Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass'ns, 531 U.S. 457, 468 (2001). A reading of
title V that would transform it into an opportunity to reevaluate
previous preconstruction approvals, instead of simply incorporating
existing air pollution requirements into one document, would
inappropriately ``alter the fundamental details'' of the oversight
authorities the EPA has under title I of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\139\ In fact, as noted in section IV.E.2. of this preamble, the
legislative history surrounding the 1990 CAA Amendments suggests
that Congress did not intend for the title V program to change the
implementation of title I permits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The text of the Act does not indicate that Congress intended to
create this type of additional administrative oversight mechanism for
preconstruction permitting actions in an operating permit program
designed to consolidate and make existing requirements enforceable.
While there is language in title V requiring that a permit ``assure
compliance with applicable requirements of this chapter,'' e.g., 42
U.S.C. 7661c(a), and similarly broad language in other parts of title
V, this type of general language does not clearly or specifically say
that a title V permitting authority must reevaluate preconstruction
permitting decisions that have already been made under title I each
time that it issues or renews a title V permit. Instead, this general
language in the statute should be read to mean that the title V permit
must include conditions to assure compliance with the terms and
conditions of the source-specific preconstruction permits.
In summary, as the Fifth Circuit concluded in its close examination
of Title V:
Beyond the structure of Title V, EPA also persuasively grounds
its interpretation in the structure of the Act as a whole. According
to EPA, when Congress added preconstruction permitting requirements
to Title I in 1977, it understood that the adequacy of state
preconstruction permitting decisions would be subject to review in
state administrative and judicial forums. It gave EPA oversight
authority over preconstruction permitting only in specific ways, to
do specific things. For example, Congress delineated the processes
EPA must go through to approve SIPs. When it enacted Title V
thirteen years later, Congress granted EPA no such authority.
Congress gave no clear indication that it intended to alter the
balance of oversight EPA has over state permitting processes.
Section 7661c(a)'s requirement that a Title V permit assure
compliance with applicable requirements is general and broad and
does not clearly or specifically require the revisiting of
preconstruction permitting decisions. Once again, the elephants in
mouseholes canon supports this reading.
Env't Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 252 (cleaned up).
[[Page 1180]]
4. Policy Reasons
In addition to the textual and legal interpretations supporting
this action, several policy considerations also support this proposed
rule. The EPA's current (and proposed) approach: ensures that
applicable requirements established in different CAA programs are
treated consistently in title V permitting; better accounts for
procedural, resource-based, and practical limitations associated with
title V oversight tools; incentivizes the use of proper title I avenues
of review; and respects the finality of NSR permitting decisions.
a. Consistent Treatment of Applicable Requirements From Other CAA
Programs
The EPA's current (and proposed) approach aligns the EPA's
treatment of preconstruction permits with how the EPA has consistently
treated other ``applicable requirements'' under title V. As detailed in
section III.E. of this preamble, for many other applicable
requirements, permitting authorities do not reconsider the content of
those requirements in title V permits, nor does the EPA in its
oversight role of title V permitting. For instance, the EPA would not
allow a permitting authority to revise the self-implementing
substantive requirements of an NSPS established under CAA section 111
or a NESHAP established under CAA section 112. Similarly, it would not
be appropriate for the EPA to review or revise any self-implementing
requirements of a SIP approved under CAA section 110. In fact, as
explained in Section III.G of this preamble, even if the EPA disagrees
with the content of a SIP, until the EPA approves a corrective SIP
revision or issues a FIP, the SIP requirement remains an ``applicable
requirement'' that should be incorporated unchanged into the title V
permit.
For purposes of establishing ``applicable requirements'' for title
V permitting, it is logical and appropriate to treat decisions that go
through similar processes similarly. Each of the applicable
requirements addressed in the previous paragraph were established
pursuant to a process that included public notice and the opportunity
for comment and judicial review. Once they are established following
these procedures, it would be inappropriate to reevaluate the substance
of these requirements in title V permitting. Likewise, most source-
specific NSR permitting decisions must go through a similar process at
the state level. Once established through the appropriate procedures,
and unless and until the terms and conditions of an NSR permit are
revised, reopened, suspended, revoked, reissued, terminated, augmented,
or invalidated through some other mechanism (such as a state court
appeal or enforcement action), the ``applicable requirements'' remain
the terms and conditions of the issued NSR permit. These requirements
should be incorporated into the title V permit without further review,
just like all other similarly established applicable requirements.
Any differences between NSR-based applicable requirements and other
types of applicable requirements do not provide a convincing reason to
treat NSR requirements differently. For example, the fact that NSR
permits are reviewed through the state courts, as opposed to federal
courts, is not material. As discussed in section IV.B.2. of this
preamble, regardless of the jurisdiction involved, both processes are
functionally similar and offer similar levels of public involvement and
measured decisionmaking.\140\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\140\ To the extent federal court review of NSR decisions offers
independent value beyond that which may be achieved through state
courts, the CAA specifically provides for various means by which the
EPA or the public can raise NSR issues to federal courts. See
sections IV.C.2. and IV.E.3.b. of this preamble for additional
information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, as discussed in section IV.E.3.a. of this preamble,
the NSR-related requirements of the SIP are often general and would not
be described as ``self-implementing'' in the same manner as NSPS,
NESHAP, or certain source-specific SIP requirements. However, after a
source goes through the preconstruction permitting process and emerges
with a final NSR permit, the terms of that NSR permit are legally
effective in the same manner as any NSPS, NESHAP, or source-specific
SIP provision. That is, those NSR permit terms are immediately
applicable and enforceable and require no further substantive
refinement through, for example, title V permitting.
The EPA's current (and proposed) approach also standardizes the
EPA's treatment of questions related to the applicability of different
types of CAA requirements. Identifying which requirements apply to a
source (i.e., which requirements must be included in the title V
permit) is a key function of the title V permitting process. However,
it is only necessary and appropriate to use title V to substantively
address questions regarding applicability when such questions have not
already been resolved by the underlying applicable requirement itself
and when such questions require further site-specific factual analysis.
For example, it would be appropriate to use the title V permitting
process to determine whether--or which specific requirements within--a
generally applicable NSPS, NESHAP, or SIP requirement applies to a
particular source or piece of equipment, provided such a decision was
not reflected in some other final action. Likewise, title V could be
used to address whether a source should have obtained either a minor or
major NSR permit where such a decision had not already been made
following the appropriate title I permitting process.
By contrast, if the applicability of a SIP requirement is
established on the face of the SIP itself (e.g., in a source-specific
SIP provision), the EPA would not re-evaluate this question through
title V. Or, if the EPA has already issued a formal determination
regarding the applicability of an NSPS or NESHAP standard, the EPA
would not re-evaluate the same issues through title V.\141\ Provided a
minor NSR permit has been issued following sufficient procedures, major
NSR applicability questions are similar to the latter two examples.
That is, where an NSR applicability determination has already been made
through the title I process--where a state decides that major NSR does
not apply to new or modified source and therefore issues a minor NSR
permit--that applicability determination establishes the relevant
requirements of the SIP that are applicable to the source or project.
Any further action by EPA through title V would involve reconsidering
that final title I action relevant to applicability. Moreover, if EPA
were to conclude that major NSR requirements were applicable (as
opposed to minor NSR requirements), such a determination would
effectively require revising the substantive applicable requirements
established in the final minor NSR permit (since major NSR requirements
are generally more stringent than minor NSR requirements). Neither of
these outcomes are consistent with how the EPA treats applicable
requirements and applicability determinations under other CAA programs.
Accordingly, the EPA considers it better policy to afford NSR
applicability decisions the same finality as applicability decisions
under other CAA programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\141\ See supra note 32 and accompanying text.
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b. Procedural, Resource-Based, and Other Practical Limitations of Title
V Oversight Tools
In the EPA's experience, NSR permitting issues are among the most
[[Page 1181]]
factually and legally complicated issues raised during the title V
permitting (and petition) process. For multiple reasons, the oversight
tools associated with title V permitting process are a poor fit for
resolving NSR permitting issues. Compared to the available title I
avenues for review, the title V process features limited timelines and
procedural opportunities to fully evaluate complex title I issues.
Reviewing complex NSR issues through title V involves a considerable
resource burden and often is impracticable for decisions made years
ago. Even where title V can be used to review NSR issues, the EPA's
authority to resolve such issues is indirect, at best.
Procedural constraints associated with title V oversight tools
weigh against using these tools to resolve complex NSR issues. Congress
provided the EPA with only 45 days to review proposed title V permits,
followed by a 60-day period for the public to petition the EPA to
object, followed by a 60-day period for the EPA to rule on a petition
to object. 42 U.S.C. 7661d(b)(1)-(2). These brief title V review
periods are inconsistent with an in-depth and searching review of
potentially every source-specific preconstruction permitting decision
that has been made by the permitting authority. By contrast, available
title I review mechanisms--state court appeals and enforcement
actions--are not subject to the same time constraints and allow more
time for development and consideration of NSR permitting decisions.
In addition to time constraints, the title V permitting and
petition processes involve fewer opportunities to develop the factual
record necessary for a complete review of complex NSR permitting
issues. For example, by the time the EPA receives a title V petition,
the EPA's review is generally limited to the record developed by the
permitting authority up to that point. See 40 CFR 70.13. By contrast,
some state permit appeal and enforcement processes provide more in-
depth oversight than title V could afford. Some states have
administrative appeal processes that enable additional factual
development before a final decision is reached on the permit. In
addition, ``unlike the permitting process, the enforcement process
allows for discovery, hearings, cross-examination of witnesses, and
expert testimony,'' all of which aid the fact-finder in deciding
whether major or minor source preconstruction requirements apply to a
facility, or whether such requirements were correctly established.
Citizens Against Ruining the Envt. v. EPA, 535 F.3d 670, 678 (7th Cir.
2008).
Moreover, once a title V petition is filed, there are no formal
opportunities for other affected parties, such as the permitted source
or the state permitting authority, to directly participate in the
review process; their opportunity to develop their position occurs
earlier in the permitting process. See 85 FR 6431, 6442 (February 5,
2020). These other affected stakeholders have more procedural
safeguards in state appeal processes and enforcement actions than in
the title V petition process. For example, they may be parties to the
action and appear before neutral arbiters, and have the opportunity to
contest points raised by public challengers through briefs or other
filings. Overall, title V oversight processes contain fewer mechanisms
than title I oversight processes to fully consider and resolve complex
NSR issues.\142\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\142\ See Env't Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 253 (``We are
persuaded by the agency's contrasting Title V against Title I's more
detailed procedures for in-depth oversight of case-specific
permitting decisions. Such permitting decisions follow state appeals
or enforcement actions authorized by other provisions of the Act,
including citizen suits under Title III. Those mechanisms are better
structured to provide agency and citizen oversight of
preconstruction permitting. . . . Title V contains none of the
procedures that would guide those challenges, as Titles I and III
do. . . . And those avenues provide more time for development and
consideration of the potential issues.'' (internal citations and
quotations omitted)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title V's limited effectiveness in addressing NSR issues is
compounded by the fact that title V permits must be renewed every 5
years. This fact, along with the EPA's longstanding position that all
aspects of a title V permit are subject to review during renewal permit
proceedings,\143\ gives rise to the possibility that, in the absence of
the EPA's current (and proposed) approach, the public will seek to use
title V oversight tools to review long-past NSR permit decisions. For
example, in the 2016 PacifiCorp-Hunter I petition that precipitated the
EPA's current interpretation, public interest groups challenged an NSR
applicability decision made nearly 20 years prior. Given state and
federal record retention schedules, staff turnover at state permitting
authorities, and similar practical constraints associated with the
passage of time, it may simply be impossible in a title V permitting
action for a state to recreate a complete, defensible administrative
record to support complex, substantive NSR permitting decisions,
particularly those made long ago. Instead of pursuing challenges to NSR
permitting decisions when a state incorporates a preconstruction permit
into a title V permit, or during subsequent title V renewals,
interested parties can obtain more direct and timely relief through
state permit appeals and enforcement actions at the tile a title I
permit is issued.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\143\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Wisconsin Public Service
Corporation, Weston Generating Station, Order on Petition No. V-
2006-4 at 5-7 (December 19, 2007).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some of the constraints on the EPA's and state's ability to address
NSR issues through title V may be mitigated by the fact that Congress
placed the burden on petitioners to demonstrate to the EPA's
satisfaction that a title V permit does not satisfy the CAA. In other
words, in the situations where NSR issues are properly within the scope
of the EPA's title V review, the EPA is not required to undertake an
exhaustive independent review of a state's NSR decisions. Instead,
petitioners are required to provide sufficient evidence to EPA to
demonstrate that the state's NSR permitting decisions did not comply
with its SIP-approved regulations or that the state's exercise of
discretion under such regulations was unreasonable or arbitrary.\144\
Although this demonstration requirement reduces some of the EPA's
resource burdens, it places these burdens on the public, who are
subject to similarly tight timelines and the other procedural
limitations discussed in the preceding paragraphs. As a result of these
constraints, combined with the complexity of NSR permitting decisions,
it has historically been relatively uncommon for petitioners to
successfully demonstrate that an NSR-related deficiency warrants the
EPA's objection to a title V permit. As discussed throughout this
preamble, the EPA believes the public would be better served to develop
any challenges to NSR permitting decisions using title I avenues.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\144\ See, e.g., Appleton Order at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title V mechanisms are poorly suited not only for considering NSR-
related issues, but also for resolving NSR-related issues. The relief
that the EPA can provide through title V to correct an NSR deficiency
is limited and indirect. When the EPA objects to a title V permit on
the grounds that NSR requirements were not properly established by a
state, such objection does not directly invalidate an NSR permit or
stop the initial construction or operation of a particular source
authorized by an NSR permit. This is true not only when the NSR permit
was issued long ago and construction has already been completed,\145\
but also when the NSR
[[Page 1182]]
permit was issued more recently and construction has not yet begun. An
EPA objection similarly cannot directly require the state to amend an
NSR permit. Instead, the EPA's authority to object to a title V permit
reaches only the terms of the title V permit itself. For example, the
EPA could direct a state to include a compliance schedule in the title
V permit directing the source to apply for a new NSR permit. Resolving
such an objection would generally require some type of additional, and
legally distinct, NSR permitting action by the state permitting
authority. If the state ultimately failed to update the title V permit
in a manner sufficient to resolve the EPA's objection, then the EPA
could then assume responsibility to issue the title V permit. 42 U.S.C.
7661d(c).\146\ But even so, the EPA would remain unable to directly
change the terms of the underlying NSR permit, or to issue a new NSR
permit to the source, without first pursuing title I-based oversight
authorities.\147\ Thus, no matter what the EPA might do with respect to
a title V permit, the EPA lacks title V-based authority to directly
intercede and fix issues in NSR permits. Thus, even in cases where the
EPA entertained NSR-related claims in title V petitions, the resulting
orders rarely resulted in a change to the NSR permit or additional NSR
requirements.
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\145\ As explained previously, the EPA's regulations allow
sources subject to major NSR preconstruction permitting requirements
to apply for a title V permit within 1 year after beginning
operation (well after beginning and completing construction), in
most cases. 40 CFR 70.5(a)(1)(ii); 71.5(a)(1)(ii). The CAA similarly
allows sources to apply for a title V permit up to 12 months after
becoming subject to title V. 42 U.S.C. 7661b(c). This shows that
Congress did not intend for the title V permitting process to be
used to prevent the construction of a source authorized under title
I.
\146\ The EPA could also assume responsibility to issue title V
permits within a jurisdiction after determining, for example, that
the state failed to properly administer and enforce its title V
program. See 42 U.S.C. 7661a(i)(4); 40 CFR 70.10(b)(4), (c),
71.4(c).
\147\ To directly mandate changes to an NSR permit issued by a
state under an EPA-approved SIP, the EPA would need to pursue title
I remedies. For example, a court order following a state court
appeal, or an enforcement action, could directly mandate that the
state permitting authority revise specific NSR permit terms or issue
a different type of NSR permit. Alternatively, if the EPA wanted to
directly issue an NSR permit to a source that was previously subject
to a state permitting authority's jurisdiction, the EPA would first
have to issue a ``SIP Call'' under CAA section 110(k) and ultimately
impose a FIP, after which the EPA would retake the legal authority
to issue NSR permits.
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Given that the title V oversight tools provide an ill-suited forum
for considering and resolving the complex problems associated with NSR
permitting, it makes sense that title V permitting authorities and the
EPA should only consider whether the terms and conditions of an NSR
permit have been properly included in a title V operating permit, and
whether there is sufficient monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting to
assure compliance with those terms and conditions. It is more efficient
for state permitting authorities, the public, and the EPA to focus on
these core title V issues--which are more clearly redressable through
title V oversight tools--when preparing title V permits, challenging
title V permits, and reviewing title V permits.
c. Incentivizing Title I Avenues of Review
The EPA's current (and proposed) approach not only recognizes the
limitations on using title V to review NSR issues, but also emphasizes
the importance of public involvement in the title I permitting process
to address these issues. This approach encourages the public to engage
contemporaneously at the state level to appeal preconstruction
permitting decisions that they believe to be incorrect.
As explained in the preceding subsection, the title I permitting
process (and other oversight opportunities under titles I and III of
the CAA) is better suited to addressing public concerns than the title
V permitting process. From a policy standpoint, the EPA's view that the
title V permitting process should not be used to reconsider final NSR
permitting decisions relies heavily on the opportunity for the public
to participate in the title I permitting process. The proposed
revisions to the EPA's regulations include criteria relevant to public
participation in the title I permitting process. Provided these
criteria are satisfied in the issuance of a title I permit, NSR-related
decisions associated with that permit would not be subject to further
review through title V. The EPA expects that codifying this existing
framework will create a strong incentive for state permitting
authorities to ensure meaningful public access to NSR permitting
actions, particularly for minor NSR permitting actions that may have
limited public participation opportunities.\148\ This rulemaking is
expected to complement related ongoing efforts by the EPA to promote
increased implementation of existing requirements related to public
participation in minor NSR permit actions.
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\148\ Similarly, the EPA expects that permittees will have an
incentive to request that state permitting authorities provide such
opportunities for the public to participate in the title I
permitting process, so as to avoid the potential that title I
permitting decisions will be subsequently overturned using the EPA's
title V review authorities.
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This approach not only creates an incentive for states to offer
more opportunities for public access in NSR permitting, but also for
the public to use such processes. During the time period in which the
EPA nominally considered the merits of NSR issues through the title V
permitting and petition process, the EPA observed that many petitioners
would only raise their NSR-related concerns through the title V process
and would not seek relief through title I mechanisms. By doing this,
citizens bypassed an available public participation opportunity and
denied the state an opportunity to hear and remedy public concerns
contemporaneous with the state action. Moreover, given the inherent
difficulty in demonstrating NSR permit flaws and the lack of effective
relief available through the title V permitting process, use of title V
(rather than NSR appeal processes) may have ultimately been less
effective at fostering sound NSR permitting decisions. The EPA believes
it is better policy to encourage the public to use title I venues to
address NSR-related concerns at the time these permits are issued, and
to reserve the title V permitting process for issues that may be more
effectively addressed through title V authorities (e.g.,
monitoring).\149\
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\149\ Of course, as explained in section IV.B.5.a. of this
preamble, where the public is denied meaningful opportunities to
participate in title I permitting decisions, title V will serve as a
backstop to ensure that the public has an opportunity to ensure that
a source's title V permit assures compliance with the relevant NSR-
related requirements.
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d. Respecting Finality and Fostering Certainty in Title I Permitting
Decisions
Declining to review title I permitting decisions in title V review
avoids duplication and inefficiency, respects the finality of NSR
permitting decisions that are subject to public notice and the
opportunity for comment and judicial review, and acknowledges regulated
entities' need for certainty when investing in the construction and
modification of sources.
The availability of public notice, the opportunity for comment, and
the opportunity for judicial review of underlying NSR permit actions
weigh heavily against the need to repeat all these procedures through
title V permitting. This allows an unnecessary and inefficient ``second
bite at the apple,'' along with a potentially unlimited number of
additional ``bites'' each time a title V permit is reviewed.
[[Page 1183]]
The EPA's current (and proposed) approach respects the finality of
a permitting authority's title I permitting decisions, provided such
decisions were made with the requisite level of formality,
consideration, and public process (i.e., issued under title I
authorities following public notice and the opportunity for comment and
judicial review). By contrast, allowing NSR permitting decisions to be
collaterally attacked using the title V permitting process would
significantly undermine the finality of state title I permitting
decisions. This would decrease the relative importance of states in the
cooperative federalist system established by Congress.
The EPA believes that the best policy (and best reading of the Act
as a whole, as described in section IV.E.3. of this preamble) is that
the public should directly participate in state preconstruction
permitting decisions and, if necessary, seek review in state court
immediately thereafter. This is a more direct and timely way to
identify and correct errors in preconstruction permits. It provides for
such review before sources reasonably begin relying on those permits to
invest substantial resources in a facility. Thus, the EPA's current
(and proposed) approach fosters certainty and avoids upsetting settled
expectations and reliance interests of sources that have obtained a
legally enforceable preconstruction permit under title I. By contrast,
under the EPA's former approach, stakeholders would always face the
possibility that the EPA could identify errors with the state
preconstruction permitting decisions during title V permit issuance or
renewal. In such a circumstance, discovery of errors could come years
after the fact, long after a source is constructed and operating,
either when a title V permit first incorporates the relevant NSR
requirements, or decades after the fact, when the title V permits is
subsequently renewed.\150\ This would increase uncertainty for the
regulated community. It would also increase the burden on EPA, state
agencies, and the courts to consider such long-distant issues. As
summarized by the Fifth Circuit in examining EPA's current approach:
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\150\ See section IV.B.4. of this preamble for additional
information about the timing of NSR and title V permit actions.
EPA's position also respects the finality of the preconstruction
permitting decision. The agency reasoned that it would be
inefficient to allow review via the Title V permitting process even
after the preconstruction permits had been subject to public notice
and comment and an opportunity for judicial review. And those
avenues provide more time for development and consideration of the
potential issues. We are persuaded that EPA's construction of Title
V respects the finality of state preconstruction permitting
decisions, which is consistent with the Act's cooperative
federalism. Petitioners' contrary view of Title V would allow a
federal agency to upset states' permitting decisions with no clear
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mandate from Congress to do so.
Env't Integrity Project, 960 F.3d at 253 (internal citations and
quotations omitted).
F. Alternative Approaches
The EPA believes that the agency's existing interpretations and
policies reflect the best approach from both a legal and policy
standpoint, for the reasons discussed previously. Thus, the EPA is
proposing to codify its existing approach. However, the EPA also
solicits comment on the following alternative approaches that would
involve using title V permits to address substantive NSR issues in
additional, targeted situations. Each of the alternatives presented
features some level of intuitive appeal but also suffers from legal
and/or policy drawbacks. Thus, the EPA specifically requests comments
that would provide further legal and/or policy support for applying
these alternatives as opposed to the EPA's preferred approach. The EPA
also specifically requests comments on how such alternatives could be
reflected in the regulatory text.
As discussed in the following subsections, the alternatives that
the EPA is considering include: (i) using title V to review
contemporaneous or recent NSR permitting decisions; (ii) using title V
to review issues related to major NSR applicability, and (iii) using
title V to review contemporaneous or recent NSR permitting decisions
related to major NSR applicability.
1. Using Title V To Review Contemporaneous or Recent NSR Permitting
Decisions
Under the first alternative approach, the title V permitting
process could be used to review contemporaneous or recent NSR
permitting decisions, but not older NSR permitting decisions.\151\
Within this alternative, there are multiple potential variations based
on the time frame chosen to differentiate between NSR decisions that
would, and would not, be reviewed. For example, the narrowest version
of this alternative would involve using title V to review NSR-related
decisions that are made contemporaneously with the issuance of a title
V permit. Broader versions of this alternative would involve reviewing
NSR permitting decisions finalized within a certain period of time
before a title V permit is issued.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\151\ This approach is similar to prior EPA statements that the
EPA would not review NSR decisions made long ago. See supra notes 51
and 56 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This alternative approach has some appeal because it avoids some of
the practical challenges that motivated, and which support, the EPA's
current approach. For example, this alternative would avoid problems
associated with the EPA and states being expected to confront long-past
NSR decisions without a fully accessible record. This alternative is
also less likely to upset settled expectations, particularly if review
is restricted to contemporaneously issued NSR and title V permits.
However, this alternative would not address other important policy
considerations to the same extent as the EPA's proposed approach. For
example, this alternative would not address the limited scope and
timing available for reviewing complex NSR issues through title V.
Additionally, this alternative would give rise to its own set of
problems. For example, reviewing NSR decisions based on a defined
timing element would involve a difficult line-drawing exercise. Would
it be appropriate to review only NSR decisions finalized at the exact
same time as a title V permit issuance, or NSR decisions finalized
shortly before a title V permit is finalized, or within the same year,
or within five or six years, or some other period of time? The EPA
solicits comments on how to define this timing element under this
alternative.
Moreover, to the extent this alternative would be applied narrowly
to allow title V review of only contemporaneous NSR permitting
decisions, this approach could disincentivize states from taking
advantage of streamlined permit issuance procedures (which many states
currently employ), such as the concurrent permit issuance process
described in section IV.B.4. of this preamble. Disincentivizing
streamlined permitting could increase administrative burdens and costs
for states and could lead to unnecessary delays in title V permit
issuance, counter to the CAA's directive to develop ``[a]dequate,
streamlined, and reasonable procedures for expeditiously'' issuing
permits. 42 U.S.C 7661a(b)(6).
In addition to these policy considerations, it is not clear what
legal basis would support an alternative approach based exclusively on
the timing of NSR and title V permit issuance. As discussed extensively
[[Page 1184]]
earlier in this preamble, the relationship between NSR and title V
permits is closely tied to the concept of ``applicable requirements''
that are established under other CAA programs. This concept has
generally been time-neutral, such that requirements that are properly
established under another EPA program--regardless of when they are
established--define the applicable requirements that must be included
in a title V permit. To the extent the EPA has addressed timing
considerations, is has been to ensure that the definition of
``applicable requirement'' is overinclusive with respect to
requirements that have already been promulgated but are not yet
effective. See 40 CFR 70.2 (definition of ``applicable requirement'').
This alternative approach would require the opposite position,
excluding recent NSR permitting decisions from establishing applicable
requirements just because they were undertaken more recently. That
position would conflict with the EPA's treatment of applicable
requirements under all other types of CAA programs. It is not clear to
the EPA that such an approach is compatible with the structure and
purpose of the title V program.
Further information explaining why the EPA does not prefer this
alternative is included in section IV.B.4. of this preamble (which
explains why the EPA's approach applies the same regardless of when an
NSR permit was issued).
2. Using Title V To Review Issues Related to Major NSR Applicability
The second alternative approach under consideration would involve
using the title V permitting process to review issues related to major
NSR applicability (i.e., whether a source should have received a major
NSR permit instead of a minor NSR permit). However, the EPA would not
review challenges to other types of substantive NSR issues (e.g., BACT
determinations or the results of modeling). This alternative would
apply the same regardless of the timing of NSR permit issuance and
title V permit issuance.
This alternative approach would provide some of the same policy
benefits as the EPA's proposed approach, in that it would avoid using
title V to reevaluate the content of NSR permits (e.g., whether permit
limits correctly reflect BACT). However, given that major NSR
applicability questions are among the most complicated NSR-related
issues to address, this approach would do little to resolve the
resource-related and practical problems that partly motivated the EPA's
current (and proposed) approach. For the reasons discussed in section
IV.E.4.b. of this preamble, the EPA does not consider the title V
permitting process well-suited to resolving these complex questions
involving major NSR applicability.
One might argue that this alternative approach is consistent with
the view that the title V process can be used to determine which
requirements are applicable to a source, even if it should not be used
to second-guess the content of such requirements.\152\ However, where
an NSR applicability determination has already been made through the
NSR process and a minor NSR permit is issued, any further action
through title V related to major NSR applicability would likely require
changes to emissions limits and other applicable requirements
established through that NSR process. In other words, using title V to
revisit NSR applicability questions would inherently upset not only the
NSR applicability decisions, but also NSR permit content decisions. The
EPA does not view this result as consistent with the key function of
title V.
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\152\ This line of reasoning, based on certain statements made
when the EPA promulgated the part 70 rules, featured in the Tenth
Circuit's interpretation of the current regulatory definition of
``applicable requirement.'' See Sierra Club v. EPA, 964 F.3d at 893-
895.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further information explaining why the EPA does not prefer this
alternative is included in section IV.B.3. of this preamble (which
contains the EPA's justification for applying its approach uniformly
regardless of the type of substantive NSR requirements at issue) and
section IV.E.4.a. of this preamble (which explains why the EPA's
proposed approach is more consistent wih how applicability questions
are treated with respect to other CAA programs).
3. Using Title V To Review Contemporaneous or Recent NSR Permitting
Decisions Related to Major NSR Applicability
The third and final alternative approach under consideration would
involve using title V to review contemporaneous or recent NSR
permitting decisions related to major NSR applicability, but not any
older NSR decisions or any NSR decisions related to NSR permit content.
This approach is a combination of the preceding two alternatives, and
is consequently narrower than either two alternatives--that is, it
would involve the use of title V to review NSR issues in fewer
situations. See the preceding subsections for considerations relevant
to this alternative.
V. The General Duty Clause Concerning the Prevention of Accidental
Releases of Hazardous Substances
A. Background and Summary of Proposed Action
On two occasions in recent years, the EPA received title V
petitions requesting that individual title V permits include
requirements designed to assure compliance with the ``General Duty
Clause'' of CAA 112(r)(1), which concerns the prevention of accidental
releases of hazardous substances. These petitions were premised upon
the suggestion that the General Duty Clause is an ``applicable
requirement'' for title V purposes. However, as the EPA explained in
the Hazlehurst and Owens-Brockway Orders denying both of these
petitions, the General Duty Clause is not an applicable requirement for
title V.\153\ The basis for this position is fully explained in the
EPA's Hazlehurst and Owens-Brockway Orders. However, for the sake of
transparency, section V.B. of this preamble restates salient points
from those orders.
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\153\ In the Matter of Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc.,
Order on Petition No. X-2020-2 at 21-28 (May 10, 2021) (Owens-
Brockway Order); In the Matter of Hazlehurst Wood Pellets, LLC,
Order on Petition No. IV-2020-5 at 7-14 (Dec. 31, 2020) (Hazlehurst
Order).
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Moreover, although the current definition of ``applicable
requirement'' in the EPA's part 70 and part 71 regulations may
reasonably be read to exclude requirements of the General Duty Clause,
the EPA intends to provide further clarity to the public by making this
exclusion explicit in the EPA's regulations.
This proposed change to the rules is not expected to have any
impacts on state permitting authorities, regulated entities, the
public, or other stakeholders, as it simply clarifies an element of the
title V program that has been understood and implemented in the same
way since the inception of the title V program in the early 1990s.
This proposed change is distinct and severable from the proposed
changes related to the interface between title V permits and NSR
permits, discussed in section IV. of this preamble.
B. Rationale for Proposed Action
1. Statutory Provisions
The General Duty Clause provides:
The owners and operators of stationary sources producing,
processing, handling or storing such substances have a general duty
in the same manner and to the same extent as section 654 of title 29
to identify hazards which may result from such releases using
appropriate hazard assessment techniques, to design and maintain a
safe facility taking
[[Page 1185]]
such steps as are necessary to prevent releases, and to minimize the
consequences of accidental releases which do occur. For purposes of
this paragraph, the provisions of section 7604 of this title shall
not be available to any person or otherwise be construed to be
applicable to this paragraph.
42 U.S.C. 7412(r)(1) (emphasis added). The last sentence contains a key
limitation of the General Duty Clause: it means that citizen suits
under CAA section 304 shall not be available to enforce the
requirements of the General Duty Clause; instead, this clause may only
be enforced by the EPA under CAA section 113.
This enforcement prohibition also effectively restricts the
implementation of the General Duty Clause requirements through title V
permitting. The CAA provides that all standards and limitations in
title V permits are enforceable by citizens under section 304.\154\
Thus, if the requirements of the General Duty Clause were included in
title V permits, they would ostensibly be enforceable through
enforcement of the title V permit itself. However, this would be in
direct conflict with the unambiguous statutory prohibition on citizen
enforcement of the General Duty Clause under section 304.\155\ To avoid
this conflict, the General Duty Clause must not be considered an
``applicable requirement'' that is implemented through title V
permitting.
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\154\ This is because any person may, under CAA section
304(a)(1), bring a suit ``against any person . . . who is alleged to
have violated . . . or be in violation of (A) an emission standard
or limitation under this chapter . . . .'' In turn, ``emission
standard or limitation'' is defined to include, inter alia, ``any
other standard, limitation, or schedule established under any permit
issued pursuant to subchapter V of this chapter . . . .'' 42 U.S.C.
7604(f)(4); see also 40 CFR 70.6(b)(1); see United States v.
Gonzales, 520 U.S. 1, 5 (1997). As discussed later, the EPA's
regulations contain a limited exception to this principle, which is
not applicable to the General Duty Clause.
\155\ The specific prohibition on enforcement of the General
Duty Clause by citizen suit must govern over the general
enforceability of title V permits. See Nitro-Lift Technologies
L.L.C. v. Howard, 568 U.S. 17, 21 (2012).
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Other text within the General Duty Clause further evinces
congressional intent that the General Duty Clause would not be
implemented through permitting. The statute indicates that the CAA
section 112(r)(1) general duty shall be ``in the same manner and to the
same extent as section 654 of title 29''--that is, the general duty
clause within the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act). The OSH
Act provision, enacted in 1970, is not implemented through site-
specific permits, nor are citizen suits authorized to enforce it. See
generally 29 U.S.C. 651-678. If Congress had intended the CAA General
Duty clause to be implemented in a fundamentally different manner than
the OSH Act provision on which it was explicitly modeled--e.g., through
a permitting program that could be enforced by citizens--it could have
specifically said so. However, instead, Congress precluded citizen
enforcement under the CAA General Duty Clause, and nowhere did Congress
imply that it would be implemented through permitting.
Additionally, the CAA requires that states have the authority to
enforce title V permits in order to receive EPA approval of their
permitting programs. 42 U.S.C. 7661a(b)(5); see also 40 CFR 70.4(b)(3).
However, the CAA General Duty Clause is enforceable only by the federal
government. The EPA has not delegated authority to implement or enforce
the General Duty Clause to state or local air agencies.\156\ Were the
requirements of the General Duty Clause considered ``applicable
requirements'' to be included within individual title V permits, states
would be unable to enforce these new permit provisions, which would
contradict CAA section 502(b)(5). This would mean that all state and
local title V programs would be fundamentally flawed--an absurd result
Congress could not have intended.
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\156\ Because CAA section 304 is the only federal authority
through which citizens and state or local air agencies could enforce
this type of CAA requirement, neither citizens nor state and local
air agencies may enforce the General Duty Clause under the CAA.
Additionally, some states are prohibited by state law from having
general duty authorities. 58 FR 62262, 62278 (Nov. 26, 1993).
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Notably, each of the relevant statutory provisions discussed
earlier--the General Duty Clause of section 112(r)(1), the relevant
portion of section 304 authorizing citizen suits to enforce title V
permit terms, and the entirety of title V--were promulgated in the same
legislative package: the 1990 CAA Amendments. Accordingly, the
statutory conflict between these provisions is best understood as
reflecting an intentional choice by Congress to fundamentally
distinguish the General Duty Clause in section 112(r)(1) from other CAA
requirements that would be implemented through the title V permitting
program.\157\
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\157\ See Maracich v. Spears, 570 U.S. 48, 65 (2013) (``It is
necessary and required that an interpretation of a phrase of
uncertain reach is not confined to a single sentence when the text
of the whole statute gives instruction as to its meaning.''); see
also Erlenbaugh v. United States, 409 U.S. 239, 243-45 (1972) (``[In
pari materia] is but a logical extension of the principle that
individual sections of a single statute should be construed together
. . . . [T]he rule's application certainly makes the most sense when
the statutes were enacted by the same legislative body at the same
time.''); United States v. Ron Pair Enterprises, 489 U.S. 235, 242
(1989) (``The plain meaning of legislation should be conclusive,
except in the rare cases in which the literal application of a
statute will produce a result demonstrably at odds with the
intentions of its drafters.'' (internal quotation omitted)).
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2. Regulatory Provisions
Following the statutory text, the EPA's regulations provide: ``All
terms and conditions in a part 70 permit . . . are enforceable by the
Administrator and citizens under the Act.'' 40 CFR 70.6(b)(1).\158\
Additionally, in order to be approvable by the EPA, state programs
under part 70 must demonstrate authority to enforce permits. 40 CFR
70.4(b)(3)(vii). Neither of these regulatory requirements are
compatible with the view that the General Duty Clause--which is
enforceable only by the EPA--should be included in title V permits.
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\158\ This principle is subject to one exception: certain terms
in a title V permit that are not based on the CAA may be labeled as
``state-only'' requirements that are not federally enforceable or
enforceable by citizens through section 304. 40 CFR 70.6(b)(2). The
General Duty Clause, which is contained within the CAA, is not
eligible for this treatment. Beyond this limited exception, neither
the statute nor regulations contemplate other means by which the
enforceability of title V permit terms could be restricted in a
manner consistent with the limitations in the General Duty Clause
discussed earlier.
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The EPA must read its regulations in a manner consistent with the
statute. As explained in the Hazlehurst and Owens-Brockway petition
orders, the existing definition of ``applicable requirement'' can
reasonably be read to exclude the General Duty Clause of CAA section
112(r)(1).\159\ Nonetheless, in order to provide maximum clarity to the
public, the EPA is proposing to revise the definition of ``applicable
requirement'' in 40 CFR 70.1 and 71.2 to make this more explicit.
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\159\ See Hazlehurst Order at 9-10; Owens-Brockway Order at 23-
24.
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3. EPA Guidance and Implementation
Excluding the General Duty Clause from the regulatory definition of
``applicable requirement'' is consistent with how the EPA has described
and implemented both the title V and 112(r) programs since their
inception in the early 1990s.\160\ In various rulemaking actions, the
EPA has consistently indicated that the only applicable requirements
related to 112(r) that need to be satisfied through title V are those
related to section 112(r)(7) risk management plans under 40 CFR part
68. See, e.g., 57 FR at 32275-76; 60 FR 13526, 13526, 13535-36 (Mar.
13, 1995); 61 FR 31668, 31688-89 (June 20,
[[Page 1186]]
1996).\161\ The EPA has made similar determinations in early title V
petition orders. For example, in the 1997 Shintech I Order, the EPA
concluded that ``compliance with the provisions of 40 CFR 68.215 . . .
is sufficient to satisfy the legal obligations of section 112(r) for
purposes of part 70.'' \162\ The EPA therefore specifically rejected
the petitioners' request for additional permit terms related to section
112(r)(l), while noting the independent enforceability of the General
Duty Clause.\163\ These principles hold true regardless of whether a
source is subject to risk management plan requirements under part 68.
For example, in the 2001 Pencor-Masada I Order, the EPA applied similar
principles to a source that was not subject to part 68. There, the EPA
reiterated that a source's obligations under the General Duty Clause
are unaffected by compliance with part 68 or the terms of a source's
title V permit.\164\ The EPA has made similar statements concerning
title V and CAA section 112(r) in other guidance documents.\165\
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\160\ The EPA understands that most, and perhaps all, permitting
authorities implementing part 70 programs have historically followed
the same view.
\161\ This proposed rule does not affect the risk management
plan program under section 112(r)(7) or part 68 in any way. However,
the limited intersection between section 112(r)(7) risk management
plans and title V permits provides context for the EPA's position on
the section 112(r)(1) General Duty Clause. The EPA has, through
rulemaking, limited the extent to which even the 112(r)(7)-related
``applicable requirements'' would be implemented through title V.
Specifically, when the EPA promulgated the final part 68 risk
management plan rules in 1996, the agency determined that ``generic
terms in [title V] permits and certain minimal oversight
activities'' would assure compliance with risk management plan
requirements. 61 FR at 31689; see also 57 FR at 32275 (``The EPA
recognizes, however, that an RMP is not in any sense a `permit' to
release substances addressed therein, and that section 112(r) was
not intended to be primarily implemented or enforced through title
V.'' (citing 42 U.S.C. 7412(r)(7)(F)). For sources subject to both
part 68 and title V, these permit content and state oversight
requirements are codified at 40 CFR 68.215. For additional
information concerning the limited intersection between risk
management plans and title V permits, see In the Matter of Newark
Bay, Order on Petition No. II-2019-4 at 9-16 (Aug. 16, 2019).
Requiring title V permits to include permit terms related to the
General Duty Clause that are even more specific than those the EPA
has established for risk management plans would go well beyond the
EPA's long-held view of the scope of section 112(r)-related
``applicable requirements'' that would be implemented through title
V.
\162\ In the Matter of Shintech Inc., PVC Plant, Order on
Petition, 12 (Sept. 10, 1997).
\163\ Specifically, the EPA emphasized that ``compliance with
the requirements of part 68 does not relieve Shintech of its legal
obligation to meet the general duty requirements of section
112(r)(1) of the Act . . . . Section 112(r)(1) remains a self-
implementing requirement of the Act, and EPA expects and requires
all covered sources to comply with the general duty provisions of
112(r)(1).'' Shintech I Order at 12 n.9. The EPA also explained that
it would be improper to shield a source from liability under the
General Duty Clause using a title V permit shield. Id.
\164\ See Pencor-Masada I Order at 31-32 n.38.
\165\ See, e.g., Memorandum, Title V Program Approval Criteria
for Section 112 Activities (April 13, 1993), available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-08/documents/t5-112.pdf;
Memorandum, Relationship between the Part 70 Operating Permit
Program and Section 112(r) (June 24, 1994), available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-08/documents/opp112r.pdf.
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Similar to the EPA's title V guidance, the EPA's longstanding
guidance concerning the implementation of the General Duty Clause
similarly suggests that the General Duty Clause is not to be
implemented through title V. Notably, in the EPA's comprehensive
Guidance for Implementation of the General Duty Clause (``GDC
Guidance''),\166\ the EPA details the mechanisms through which the
General Duty Clause would be implemented and enforced, and never once
mentions permitting as an available mechanism.
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\166\ Guidance for Implementation of the General Duty Clause,
Clean Air Act Section 112(r)(1), EPA 550-B00-002 (May 2000),
available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/documents/gendutyclause-rpt.pdf.
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4. Additional Policy Considerations
If the EPA were to consider the General Duty Clause an applicable
requirement with which title V permit must assure compliance, this
would have significant programmatic impacts, upsetting the
administration of both the title V and General Duty Clause programs
nationwide. For example, The EPA expects that the majority of major
sources subject to the title V program may, at some time or another,
also have obligations under the General Duty Clause. If the General
Duty Clause was considered an applicable requirement, thousands of
title V permits nationwide would need to be reopened to include
conditions necessary to identify and assure compliance with the clause.
Such an enormous resource burden on the permitting authorities that
implement the title V program would hardly make sense given that these
same permitting authorities cannot enforce the General Duty
Clause.\167\ This is clearly not an outcome that either Congress or the
EPA envisioned when establishing these two programs.\168\
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\167\ No statutory or regulatory mechanism currently exists for
the EPA to establish General Duty Clause requirements for all title
V sources nationwide. Even if it did, implementation of any such
mechanism this would present an even greater resource issue for the
EPA, and would run against Congress's intent that the title V
program is to be primarily implemented by the states, not the EPA.
See 42 U.S.C. 7661a; see, e.g., Env't Integrity Project, 969 F.3d at
536, 545.
\168\ The EPA, like Congress, does not ``hide elephants in
mouseholes.'' See Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass'ns, 531 U.S. 457, 468
(2001).
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Other practical concerns--closely related to the legal issues
discussed previously--weigh against implementing the General Duty
Clause through title V. For example, how could a title V permit
containing General Duty Clause requirements be structured in order to
avoid the statutory constraints on enforcement discussed earlier?
Neither the Act nor the EPA's regulations provide that certain portions
of the title V permit can be labeled ``enforceable only by the EPA.''
To the contrary, all federally-enforceable permit terms must
necessarily be enforceable by the state agencies issuing the permits as
well as the public at large. See 42 U.S.C. 7604(a)(1), (f)(4),
7661a(b)(5)(E), 7661c(c); 40 CFR 70.4(b)(3)(vii), 70.6(b)(1).
Additionally, if the General Duty Clause were considered an
``applicable requirement'' that states have no authority to enforce,
the EPA could face pressure to issue notices of deficiency to all 117
state, local, and Tribal permitting authorities nationwide for their
failure to enforce all aspects of the title V program. See 40 CFR
70.10(b), (c)(1), Appx A. Moreover, the EPA could face pressure to take
over the issuance of all title V permits, or to issue partial permits
to nearly every title V source to cover these sources' General Duty
Clause obligations. See 40 CFR 70.10(b)(2)(iii); see also 40 CFR part
71. These are clearly not reasonable propositions,\169\ but nonetheless
ones that could inevitably follow if the EPA were to consider the
General Duty Clause an ``applicable requirement'' for title V purposes.
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\169\ Such outcomes would be contrary to congressional intent
for the title V program to be primarily administered by states.
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In addition to these untenable impacts to title V permitting,
determining that the General Duty Clause must be included in title V
permits would fundamentally alter the EPA's implementation and
enforcement of the General Duty Clause itself. The EPA has historically
described the General Duty Clause as a ``self-executing requirement.''
61 FR 31668, 31680 (June 20, 1996).\170\ This means, quite simply,
[[Page 1187]]
that the General Duty Clause is meant to be implemented and enforced
independently as a direct requirement of the CAA, beyond the strictures
of any set of regulations or the title V permitting program.
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\170\ The EPA has also described the General Duty Clause as a
``self-enabling'' or ``self-implementing'' requirement. See Letter
from Mathy Stanislaus, Assistant Administrator, EPA Office of Solid
Waste and Emergency Response, to Hon. Mike Pompeo, U.S. House of
Representatives (Aug. 1, 2013)) (Stanislaus-Pompeo Letter); Owens-
Brockway Order at 27; Hazlehurst Order at 12; Pencor-Masada I Order
at 32 n.38; Shintech I Order at 12 n.9. As discussed in section
III.E. of this preamble, the EPA has also used the term ``self-
implementing'' to refer to certain types of requirements in other
CAA programs, including NSPS and NESHAP standards. The intent of
this phrase is slightly different in the context of the General Duty
Clause than in the context of NSPS and NESHAP standards. The
requirements of the General Duty Clause flow directly from the
statute and are implemented in the absence of implementing
regulations. By contrast, emission standards like NSPS or NESHAP
standards are generally ``self-implementing'' once regulations are
promulgated. The similarity is that in both situations, the self-
implementing requirements are enforceable regardless of whether they
are reflected in a title V permit.
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Although the title V permitting program offers clear benefits for
identifying and assuring compliance with other types of more typical
emission standard-based requirements under regulations promulgated
under the CAA, the title V program is a particularly poor fit for
implementing the General Duty Clause. The General Duty Clause is, as
its name suggests, a general duty. Identifying specific obligations
within each source's title V permit would conflict with the notion of a
general duty. Moreover, determining whether an individual source has
satisfied this general duty is highly circumstance-specific. The EPA
interprets the General Duty Clause to generally require owners and
operators to adhere to recognized industry practices and standards in
addition to any applicable government regulations. GDC Guidance at 2,
11-12. However, there may be situations where circumstances make a
particular industry standard or municipal code inapplicable,
unsuitable, or insufficient for a given source, and there may be other
ways to abate hazards than those listed in a particular industry
standard or municipal code. Each source's obligations are dependent on
the detailed knowledge of each individual source. Even in the absence
of an industry standard, a source's knowledge of a potential hazard and
a feasible means to abate it is relevant to its general duty under CAA
section 112(r)(1). See GDC Guidance at 12. Should a source learn of a
hazard and a feasible means to abate it after its permit is written,
the General Duty Clause would ordinarily hold the source responsible
for its knowledge. Given that the factual circumstances and knowledge
at the source, as well as any relevant industry guidelines, can change
frequently, the source's obligation under the General Duty Clause are
necessarily fluid. If General Duty Clause obligations were to be
included in title V permits as applicable requirements, the relevant
permit terms would need to be constantly updated to accurately reflect
a source's obligations. Overall, identifying specific General Duty
Clause requirements would not only curtail the flexibilities rightly
available to a source, but it would also undermine the General Duty
Clause by limiting the scope of a source's potential obligations to
those specific requirements contained in the permit.\171\ For these
reasons, the EPA has rejected requests to define and restrict General
Duty Clause obligations through rulemaking.\172\ It would be similarly
inappropriate to define and restrict these obligations through title V
permit terms.
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\171\ Were the General Duty Clause treated as a permit term, a
source could argue it was shielded from its duty by the terms of the
permit for hazards identified after the permit was issued. The
potential for sources to request a title V permit shield to cover
General Duty Clause obligations would exacerbate these concerns,
notwithstanding that such a permit shield would not be appropriate,
as the EPA has previously explained. See Shintech I Order at 12 n.9.
\172\ E.g., Stanislaus-Pompeo Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In summary, the CAA specifically prohibits the General Duty Clause
from being enforced through the citizen suit provision in section 304
that is available for all standards and limitations included in title V
permits. Therefore, the EPA must draft and interpret its regulations
such that the General Duty Clause is not an applicable requirement for
purposes of title V permitting. Although the current part 70 and 71
regulations can be interpreted as consistent with this position, the
EPA proposes to amend the regulations to make this more explicit. This
change is consistent with the EPA's implementation of both the title V
and General Duty Clause programs since their inception in the early
1990s. Moreover, this proposed amendment is consistent with sound
policy and avoids nationwide programmatic impacts that would follow if
the EPA attempted to implement the General Duty Clause through title V.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Additional information about these statutes and Executive Orders
can be found at https://www.epa.gov/laws-regulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review, Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review, and Executive
Order 14094: Modernizing Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant regulatory action as defined in
Executive Order 12866, as amended by Executive Order 14094, and was
therefore not subject to a requirement for Executive Order 12866
review.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose any new information collection burden
under the PRA. OMB has previously approved the information collection
activities contained in the existing regulations and has assigned OMB
control numbers 2060-0243 (for the part 70 state operating permit
programs) and 2060-0336 (for the part 71 federal operating permit
program). The clarifications to the regulations proposed in this action
do not directly change any of the information collection activities
previously approved by OMB. To the extent that the proposed action
impacts permitting authorities or permittees, any impacts would fall
under, and potentially reduce the burden of completing, the activities
already accounted for in the supporting statement for these information
collection requests.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. This
action will not directly impose any requirements on small entities.
This proposed rule primarily concerns the EPA's exercise of the
agency's oversight obligations when reviewing title V permits issued by
state, local, and Tribal permitting authorities, when reviewing title V
petitions submitted by any person, and when issuing title V permits
under 40 CFR part 71. This action would not directly impose any
requirements on the entities involved in these processes (including
permitting authorities, permittees, and members of the public).
Although those entities could eventually be affected by case-by-case
decisions made when the EPA exercises its oversight and/or permitting
authorities, the economic impact of any such future decisions on any
small entities is expected to be minimal and not adverse. For example,
the proposed rule would reduce uncertainty, and potentially cost, for
small entities that obtain both NSR and title V permits by clarifying
the limited circumstances under which NSR permitting decisions would be
subject to additional EPA scrutiny through the title V permitting
process.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments. The action imposes no enforceable duty on any state,
local or
[[Page 1188]]
Tribal governments, or the private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have
substantial direct effect on the states, on the relationship between
the national government and the states, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government. Additional
information about how this action could indirectly impact states is
included in section IV.D.2. of this preamble.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action has Tribal implications. However, it will neither
impose substantial direct compliance costs on federally recognized
Tribal governments, nor preempt Tribal law. One Tribal government (the
Southern Ute Indian Tribe) currently administers an approved part 70
operating permit program, and one Tribal government (the Navajo Nation)
currently administers a part 71 operating permit program pursuant to a
delegation agreement with the EPA. This rulemaking does not require
those entities to take any specific actions, as described in section
IV.D.2. of this preamble. The EPA informally engaged with Tribal
officials under the EPA Policy on Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribes early in the process of developing this regulation to
permit them to have meaningful and timely input into its development.
Specifically, prior to issuing this proposed rule, the EPA conducted
outreach with Tribal representatives through a call with the National
Tribal Air Association. Further, the Agency offered to further discuss
this action with the Southern Ute Indian Tribe and Navajo Nation. The
EPA also solicits comment from affected Tribal governments on the
implications of this rulemaking.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying only to those
regulatory actions that concern environmental health or safety risks
that EPA has reason to believe may disproportionately affect children,
per the definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in section 2-202 of
the Executive Order.
Therefore, this action is not subject to Executive Order 13045
because it does not concern an environmental health risk or safety
risk. Since this action does not concern human health, the EPA's Policy
on Children's Health also does not apply.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13211, because it is
not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations and
Executive Order 14096: Revitalizing Our Nation's Commitment to
Environmental Justice for All
The EPA finds that it is not practicable to assess whether the
human health or environmental conditions that exist prior to this
action result in disproportionate and adverse effects on communities
with environmental justice concerns. The issues addressed in this
rulemaking neither directly impact the levels of pollution that
regulated entities subject to title V and/or NSR permitting may emit,
nor the distribution of such regulated entities relative to communities
with environmental justice interests. Rather, the issues in this rule
are primarily procedural and apply uniformly across the nation.
This proposed rule seeks to codify the EPA's existing positions, so
impacts are expected to be generally minimal across the board. To the
extent this action may impact communities with environmental justice
concerns, such impacts are expected to mirror those affecting the
public at large. These expected impacts on the public are explained in
section IV.D.4. of this preamble. In summary, this rule will provide
more clarity to the public about the most appropriate, and most
effective, avenues in which they can raise concerns with different
types of permitting decisions. It will also incentivize states to offer
more meaningful public engagement on NSR permitting decisions.
The EPA provided pre-proposal outreach to community and
environmental justice groups during a regularly scheduled National
Environmental Justice Community Engagement teleconference and plans to
offer more detailed outreach after this proposal is published.
VII. Statutory Authority
The statutory authority for this action is provided by 42 U.S.C.
7401 et seq. More specifically, CAA sections 502(b) and 502(d)(3), 42
U.S.C. 7661a(b) & (d)(3), which direct the Administrator of the EPA to
promulgate regulations establishing state operating permit programs and
give the Administrator the authority to establish a federal operating
permit program. Additionally, the Administrator determines that this
proposed action is subject to the provisions of CAA section 307(d),
which establish procedural requirements specific to rulemaking under
the CAA. CAA section 307(d)(1)(V) provides that the provisions of CAA
section 307(d) apply to ``such other actions as the Administrator may
determine.'' 42 U.S.C. 7607(d)(1)(V).
List of Subjects
40 CFR Part 70
Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Intergovernmental relations, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
40 CFR Part 71
Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the EPA proposes to
amend 40 CFR parts 70 and 71 as follows:
PART 70--STATE OPERATING PERMIT PROGRAMS
0
1. The authority citation for part 70 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
0
2. Amend Sec. 70.2 by revising paragraphs (1), (2), and (4) for the
definition ``Applicable requirement'' to read as follows:
Sec. 70.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Applicable requirement * * *
(1) Any standard or other requirement provided for in the
applicable implementation plan approved or promulgated by EPA through
rulemaking under title I of the Act that implements the relevant
requirements of the Act, including any revisions to that plan
promulgated in part 52 of this chapter, provided that where a
preconstruction permit described in paragraph (2) of this definition is
issued
[[Page 1189]]
with public notice and the opportunity for comment and judicial review,
the terms and conditions of such a permit establish and define, for
purposes of this paragraph, the applicable requirements of the
implementation plan that apply to the activities authorized by such a
preconstruction permit;
(2) Any term or condition of any preconstruction permits issued
pursuant to regulations approved or promulgated through rulemaking
under title I, including parts C or D or section 110(a)(2)(C), of the
Act;
* * * * *
(4) Any standard or other requirement under section 112 of the Act,
including any requirement concerning accident prevention under section
112(r)(7) of the Act, but not including any requirement under section
112(r)(1) of the Act;
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 70.7 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (d)(1)(iv);
0
b. Removing and reserving paragraph (d)(1)(v); and
0
c. Removing paragraph (d)(4).
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 70.7 Permit issuance, renewal, reopenings, and revisions.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) Allows for a change in ownership or operational control of a
source where the permitting authority determines that no other change
in the permit is necessary, provided that a written agreement
containing a specific date for transfer of permit responsibility,
coverage, and liability between the current and new permittee has been
submitted to the permitting authority; or
(v) [Reserved]
* * * * *
PART 71--FEDERAL OPERATING PERMIT PROGRAMS
0
4. The authority citation for part 71 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
0
5. Amend Sec. 71.2 by revising paragraphs (1), (2), and (4) for the
definition ``Applicable requirement'' to read as follows:
Sec. 71.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Applicable requirement * * *
(1) Any standard or other requirement provided for in the
applicable implementation plan approved or promulgated by EPA through
rulemaking under title I of the Act that implements the relevant
requirements of the Act, including any revisions to that plan
promulgated in part 52 of this chapter, provided that where a
preconstruction permit described in paragraph (2) of this definition is
issued with public notice and the opportunity for comment and judicial
review, the terms and conditions of such a permit establish and define,
for purposes of this paragraph, the applicable requirements of the
implementation plan that apply to the activities authorized by such a
preconstruction permit;
(2) Any term or condition of any preconstruction permits issued
pursuant to regulations approved or promulgated through rulemaking
under title I, including parts C or D or section 110(a)(2)(C), of the
Act;
* * * * *
(4) Any standard or other requirement under section 112 of the Act,
including any requirement concerning accident prevention under section
112(r)(7) of the Act, but not including any requirement under section
112(r)(1) of the Act;
* * * * *
0
6. Amend Sec. 71.7 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (d)(1)(iv);
0
b. Removing and reserving paragraph (d)(1)(v); and
0
c. Removing paragraph (d)(4).
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 71.7 Permit issuance, renewal, reopenings, and revisions.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) Allows for a change in ownership or operational control of a
source where the permitting authority determines that no other change
in the permit is necessary, provided that a written agreement
containing a specific date for transfer of permit responsibility,
coverage, and liability between the current and new permittee has been
submitted to the permitting authority; or
(v) [Reserved]
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2023-27759 Filed 1-8-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P