Workshop To Inform Review of the Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards, 31200-31201 [2024-08753]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 80 / Wednesday, April 24, 2024 / Notices
the use of appropriate forms of
information technology. EPA will
consider the comments received and
amend the ICR as appropriate. The final
ICR package will then be submitted to
OMB for review and approval. At that
time, EPA will issue another Federal
Register notice to announce the
submission of the ICR to OMB and the
opportunity to submit additional
comments to OMB.
Abstract: This information collection
will provide the EPA with necessary
information about the operations of
drum reconditioners and similar
facilities that clean out and recondition
used industrial containers. The Agency
needs this information to determine
whether future regulatory or nonregulatory action is needed to address
environmental issues identified in the
EPA’s Drum Reconditioner Damage Case
Report, published in September 2022.
The data collected through this ICR will
advance the Agency’s mission of
protecting human health and the
environment by determining the current
engineering controls and standard
practices employed at these facilities,
and by collecting additional information
about the environmental impacts these
facilities may have on surrounding
communities and the wider
environment. All information submitted
to the agency in response to the ICR that
is claimed as confidential will be
managed in accordance with applicable
laws and EPA’s regulations governing
treatment of confidential business
information at 40 CFR part 2, subpart B.
Any information determined to
constitute a trade secret will be
protected under 18 U.S.C. 1905.
Form Numbers: None.
Respondents/Affected Entities: This
ICR applies to all facilities engaged in
drum and/or industrial container
reconditioning and/or recycling.
Respondent’s Obligation To Respond:
Mandatory under section 3007 of RCRA
(42 U.S.C. 6927).
Estimated Number of Respondents:
216 (total).
Frequency of Response: One-time
response.
Total Estimated Burden: 1,187 hours
(per year). Burden is defined at 5 CFR
1320.03(b).
Total Estimated Cost: $121,000 (per
year), which includes $0 annualized
capital or operation & maintenance
costs.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:48 Apr 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
Changes in the Estimates: Not
applicable; this is a new ICR, so there
is no previous burden.
Barry N. Breen,
Principal Deputy Assistant Administrator,
Office of Land and Emergency Management.
[FR Doc. 2024–07972 Filed 4–23–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[ORD–2023–0435; FRL–11881–01–ORD]
Workshop To Inform Review of the
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice of workshop.
AGENCY:
The Center for Public Health
and Environmental Assessment
(CPHEA) within U.S. EPA’s Office of
Research and Development is
announcing a workshop entitled
‘‘Workshop to Discuss Policy-Relevant
Science to Inform EPA’s Integrated Plan
for the Review of the Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standards’’. This
workshop is being organized by CPHEA
and the Office of Air Quality Planning
and Standards within U.S. EPA’s Office
of Air and Radiation. This will be a
four-day virtual workshop and will be
open to the public through a public
event registration website.
DATES: The workshop will be held on
May 13 through May 16, 2024. Start and
end times will vary each day and range
from 9:50 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. EST.
Registrants will have access to the
workshop agenda once they register.
ADDRESSES: This is a virtual workshop.
An EPA contractor, ICF International, is
providing logistical support for the
workshop. To register, please visit the
website: https://EPA-ozone-NAAQSworkshop.eventbrite.com. Interested
parties can listen and ask questions via
a virtual webinar. The pre-registration
deadline is Friday, May 10, 2024. Please
direct questions regarding workshop
registration or logistics to Joshua
Cleland at (401) 854–8675, or
joshua.cleland@icf.com. For specific
questions regarding technical aspects of
the workshop see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section in this
document.
SUMMARY:
For
technical information, contact Qingyu
Meng (919–541–2563 or meng.qinyu@
epa.gov) or Jeff Herrick (919–541–7745
or herrick.jeff@epa.gov).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Sfmt 4703
I. Information About the Project
Section 108(a) of the Clean Air Act
(CAA) directs the Administrator to
identify and to list certain air pollutants
and then to issue ‘‘air quality criteria’’
for those pollutants. These air quality
criteria are to ‘‘accurately reflect the
latest scientific knowledge useful in
indicating the kind and extent of all
identifiable effects on public health or
welfare which may be expected from the
presence of such pollutant in the
ambient air. . . .’’ Under section 109 of
the CAA, EPA is then to establish
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS) for each pollutant for which
EPA has issued criteria. Section
109(d)(1) of the CAA additionally
requires periodic review and, if
appropriate, revision of existing air
quality criteria to reflect advances in
scientific knowledge on the effects of
the pollutant on public health and
welfare. EPA is also to periodically
review and, if appropriate, revise the
NAAQS, based on the revised air quality
criteria.
Photochemical oxidants, including
ozone, are one of six ‘‘criteria’’
pollutants for which EPA has
established NAAQS, and ozone is the
current indicator for that NAAQS. In its
periodic review of the air quality criteria
for these pollutants, EPA reviews the
currently available science and prepares
an Integrated Science Assessment (ISA).
The evidence assessed and conclusions
presented in the ISA directly inform the
technical and policy assessments.
Collectively, the ISA and any technical
and policy assessments developed from
the scientific and technical bases for the
Administrator’s decisions on the
adequacy of existing NAAQS and the
appropriateness of possible alternative
standards.
On August 25, 2023, EPA released the
Call for Information on the Integrated
Science Assessment for Ozone and
Related Photochemical Oxidants to
announce the development of the Ozone
ISA (88 FR 58264). The Notice of
Workshop also seeks information from
the public regarding the design and
scope of the review of the air quality
criteria to ensure that this review
addresses key policy-relevant issues and
considers the new science relevant to
informing our understanding of these
issues. The Clean Air Scientific
Advisory Committee (CASAC), part of
EPA’s Science Advisory Board (SAB)
whose review and advisory functions
are mandated by section 109(d)(2) of the
Clean Air Act, is charged with
independent scientific review of the air
quality criteria among other
responsibilities. In conjunction with the
E:\FR\FM\24APN1.SGM
24APN1
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 80 / Wednesday, April 24, 2024 / Notices
CASAC review, the public will have an
opportunity to review and comment on
the draft ozone ISA. As the process
proceeds, in conjunction with CASAC
review, the public will have
opportunities to review and comment
on drafts of other technical and policy
assessments that are developed. These
opportunities will also be announced in
the Federal Register.
As part of this review of the ozone
NAAQS, EPA intends to sponsor a fourday workshop from May 13 through
May 16, 2024, to provide the
opportunity for internal and external
experts to highlight significant new and
emerging research on ozone and related
photochemical oxidants. Experts will be
asked to discuss how new evidence can
best be used to build upon the analyses
and scientific evidence that supported
decisions made in the last review of the
ozone NAAQS and to make
recommendations to the Agency
regarding the design and scope of the
review for the primary (health-based)
and secondary (welfare-based) ozone
standards to ensure that it addresses key
policy-relevant issues and considers the
new and emerging science that is
relevant to informing EPA’s
understanding of these issues. EPA
intends that workshop discussions will
build upon four prior publications by
the Agency:
1. Review of the Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standards: Final
Decision (85 FR 87256, December 31,
2020). The preamble to the final rule
included detailed discussions of policyrelevant issues central to the last review.
2. Integrated Science Assessment for
Ozone and Related Photochemical
Oxidants—Final Report. (EPA/600/R–
20/012, April 2020). The 2020 Ozone
ISA, completed by CPHEA, included
consideration of studies published
through January 1, 2018.
3. The final Policy Assessment for the
Review of the Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standards (EPA–452/R–20–
001, May 2020). This document presents
an evaluation, for consideration by the
EPA Administrator, of the policy
implications of the currently available
scientific information, assessed in the
ISA, any quantitative air quality,
exposure, or risk analyses based on the
ISA findings, and related limitations
and uncertainties.
4. The draft document titled, Policy
Assessment for the Reconsideration of
the Ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, External Review Draft
Version 2 (EPA–452/P–23–002, March
2023). This draft document was
prepared as a part of the reconsideration
of the 2020 final decision on the ozone
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:48 Apr 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
NAAQS, which has been incorporated
into this review.
Workshop participants are
encouraged to review these documents
thoroughly before the meeting, as they
provide important background
information on the scientific findings
and analytical approaches considered in
the previous review, as well as insights
into the key policy-relevant questions
from that review. Participants may also
want to review related documents
including:
1. Technical memos considered by the
CASAC Ozone Panel as part of the
reconsideration of the 2020 decision
(available on the CASAC website under
‘‘meeting materials’’ at https://
casac.epa.gov/ords/sab/r/sab_apex/
casac/meeting?p19_id=976&clear=
19&session=15138357514835).
2. Letter from Elizabeth A. Sheppard,
Chair, Clean Air Scientific Advisory
Committee, to Administrator Michael S.
Regan. Re: CASAC Review of the EPA’s
Integrated Science Assessment (ISA) for
Ozone and Related Photochemical
Oxidants (Final Report—April 2020).
November 22, 2022. EPA–CASAC–23–
001. Available at: https://casac.epa.gov/
ords/sab/f?p=105:18:8476900499267
:::RP,18:P18_ID:2614.
3. Letter from Elizabeth A. Sheppard,
Chair, Clean Air Scientific Advisory
Committee, to Administrator Michael S.
Regan. Re: CASAC Review of the EPA’s
Policy Assessment (PA) for the
Reconsideration of the Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standards
(External Review Draft Version 2) (June
9, 2023) (EPA–CASAC–23–002).
Available at https://casac.epa.gov/ords/
sab/f?p=113:18:7093179574667:::
RP,18:P18_ID:2636#meeting.
Following the workshop, EPA will
develop a workshop proceedings
document and a three-volume Integrated
Review Plan (IRP) for the review of the
ozone NAAQS. Volume 1 will provide
background on the ozone NAAQS.
Volume 2 is the planning document for
the review and the ISA, and will outline
the schedule, process, and approaches
for evaluating the relevant scientific
information and addressing the key
policy-relevant issues to be considered
in this review. Lastly, Volume 3 is the
planning document for technical air
quality, exposure, and risk analyses.
CASAC will be asked to consult with
the Agency on Volumes 2 and 3, and the
public will also have the opportunity to
comment. The IRP, with input received
from the CASAC and the public, will
provide the framework to guide the
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
31201
review and development of the draft
ISA and policy assessments.
Wayne Cascio,
Director, Center for Public Health and
Environmental Assessment.
[FR Doc. 2024–08753 Filed 4–23–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2024–0134; FRL–11831–01–
OAR]
Opportunity for Stakeholder
Engagement in the ENERGY STAR
Products Program Plans
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Notice.
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is announcing an
opportunity for public input on
ENERGY STAR product specification
development activities. Since its
creation in 1992, the ENERGY STAR
program has grown to designate highly
efficient products in more than 75
categories, all of which are
independently certified. EPA relies on
broad stakeholder engagement to
develop and maintain its ENERGY
STAR product specifications and grow
and evolve the products portfolio.
Through its products work, the Agency
also looks for innovative ways to
accelerate market movement to greater
efficiency. The ENERGY STAR products
specification 2024 annual workplan is
posted on the ENERGY STAR website at
https://www.energystar.gov/partner_
resources/products_partner_resources/
brand-owner/spec-dev-efforts to allow
interested parties to determine how they
wish to engage with the EPA to track
progress and share feedback. If you are
not an ENERGY STAR partner and wish
to stay informed about these
specification development activities,
please email join@energystar.gov to be
added to the mailing list. The general
public may also track specific
opportunities for public input on our
products public notices web page—
https://www.energystar.gov/partner_
resources/products_partner_resources/
public-notices.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kathleen Vokes, Acting Supervisor
ENERGY STAR Product Specifications
Branch, Office of Atmospheric Programs
(6202A), Environmental Protection
Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW,
Washington, DC 20460; telephone
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24APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 80 (Wednesday, April 24, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 31200-31201]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-08753]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[ORD-2023-0435; FRL-11881-01-ORD]
Workshop To Inform Review of the Ozone National Ambient Air
Quality Standards
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice of workshop.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Center for Public Health and Environmental Assessment
(CPHEA) within U.S. EPA's Office of Research and Development is
announcing a workshop entitled ``Workshop to Discuss Policy-Relevant
Science to Inform EPA's Integrated Plan for the Review of the Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standards''. This workshop is being
organized by CPHEA and the Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards
within U.S. EPA's Office of Air and Radiation. This will be a four-day
virtual workshop and will be open to the public through a public event
registration website.
DATES: The workshop will be held on May 13 through May 16, 2024. Start
and end times will vary each day and range from 9:50 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
EST. Registrants will have access to the workshop agenda once they
register.
ADDRESSES: This is a virtual workshop. An EPA contractor, ICF
International, is providing logistical support for the workshop. To
register, please visit the website: https://EPA-ozone-NAAQS-workshop.eventbrite.com. Interested parties can listen and ask
questions via a virtual webinar. The pre-registration deadline is
Friday, May 10, 2024. Please direct questions regarding workshop
registration or logistics to Joshua Cleland at (401) 854-8675, or
[email protected]. For specific questions regarding technical
aspects of the workshop see For Further Information Contact section in
this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For technical information, contact
Qingyu Meng (919-541-2563 or [email protected]) or Jeff Herrick (919-
541-7745 or [email protected]).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Information About the Project
Section 108(a) of the Clean Air Act (CAA) directs the Administrator
to identify and to list certain air pollutants and then to issue ``air
quality criteria'' for those pollutants. These air quality criteria are
to ``accurately reflect the latest scientific knowledge useful in
indicating the kind and extent of all identifiable effects on public
health or welfare which may be expected from the presence of such
pollutant in the ambient air. . . .'' Under section 109 of the CAA, EPA
is then to establish National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for
each pollutant for which EPA has issued criteria. Section 109(d)(1) of
the CAA additionally requires periodic review and, if appropriate,
revision of existing air quality criteria to reflect advances in
scientific knowledge on the effects of the pollutant on public health
and welfare. EPA is also to periodically review and, if appropriate,
revise the NAAQS, based on the revised air quality criteria.
Photochemical oxidants, including ozone, are one of six
``criteria'' pollutants for which EPA has established NAAQS, and ozone
is the current indicator for that NAAQS. In its periodic review of the
air quality criteria for these pollutants, EPA reviews the currently
available science and prepares an Integrated Science Assessment (ISA).
The evidence assessed and conclusions presented in the ISA directly
inform the technical and policy assessments. Collectively, the ISA and
any technical and policy assessments developed from the scientific and
technical bases for the Administrator's decisions on the adequacy of
existing NAAQS and the appropriateness of possible alternative
standards.
On August 25, 2023, EPA released the Call for Information on the
Integrated Science Assessment for Ozone and Related Photochemical
Oxidants to announce the development of the Ozone ISA (88 FR 58264).
The Notice of Workshop also seeks information from the public regarding
the design and scope of the review of the air quality criteria to
ensure that this review addresses key policy-relevant issues and
considers the new science relevant to informing our understanding of
these issues. The Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC), part
of EPA's Science Advisory Board (SAB) whose review and advisory
functions are mandated by section 109(d)(2) of the Clean Air Act, is
charged with independent scientific review of the air quality criteria
among other responsibilities. In conjunction with the
[[Page 31201]]
CASAC review, the public will have an opportunity to review and comment
on the draft ozone ISA. As the process proceeds, in conjunction with
CASAC review, the public will have opportunities to review and comment
on drafts of other technical and policy assessments that are developed.
These opportunities will also be announced in the Federal Register.
As part of this review of the ozone NAAQS, EPA intends to sponsor a
four-day workshop from May 13 through May 16, 2024, to provide the
opportunity for internal and external experts to highlight significant
new and emerging research on ozone and related photochemical oxidants.
Experts will be asked to discuss how new evidence can best be used to
build upon the analyses and scientific evidence that supported
decisions made in the last review of the ozone NAAQS and to make
recommendations to the Agency regarding the design and scope of the
review for the primary (health-based) and secondary (welfare-based)
ozone standards to ensure that it addresses key policy-relevant issues
and considers the new and emerging science that is relevant to
informing EPA's understanding of these issues. EPA intends that
workshop discussions will build upon four prior publications by the
Agency:
1. Review of the Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards:
Final Decision (85 FR 87256, December 31, 2020). The preamble to the
final rule included detailed discussions of policy-relevant issues
central to the last review.
2. Integrated Science Assessment for Ozone and Related
Photochemical Oxidants--Final Report. (EPA/600/R-20/012, April 2020).
The 2020 Ozone ISA, completed by CPHEA, included consideration of
studies published through January 1, 2018.
3. The final Policy Assessment for the Review of the Ozone National
Ambient Air Quality Standards (EPA-452/R-20-001, May 2020). This
document presents an evaluation, for consideration by the EPA
Administrator, of the policy implications of the currently available
scientific information, assessed in the ISA, any quantitative air
quality, exposure, or risk analyses based on the ISA findings, and
related limitations and uncertainties.
4. The draft document titled, Policy Assessment for the
Reconsideration of the Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards,
External Review Draft Version 2 (EPA-452/P-23-002, March 2023). This
draft document was prepared as a part of the reconsideration of the
2020 final decision on the ozone NAAQS, which has been incorporated
into this review.
Workshop participants are encouraged to review these documents
thoroughly before the meeting, as they provide important background
information on the scientific findings and analytical approaches
considered in the previous review, as well as insights into the key
policy-relevant questions from that review. Participants may also want
to review related documents including:
1. Technical memos considered by the CASAC Ozone Panel as part of
the reconsideration of the 2020 decision (available on the CASAC
website under ``meeting materials'' at https://casac.epa.gov/ords/sab/r/sab_apex/casac/meeting?p19_id=976&clear=19&session=15138357514835).
2. Letter from Elizabeth A. Sheppard, Chair, Clean Air Scientific
Advisory Committee, to Administrator Michael S. Regan. Re: CASAC Review
of the EPA's Integrated Science Assessment (ISA) for Ozone and Related
Photochemical Oxidants (Final Report--April 2020). November 22, 2022.
EPA-CASAC-23-001. Available at: https://casac.epa.gov/ords/sab/f?p=105:18:8476900499267:::RP,18:P18_ID:2614.
3. Letter from Elizabeth A. Sheppard, Chair, Clean Air Scientific
Advisory Committee, to Administrator Michael S. Regan. Re: CASAC Review
of the EPA's Policy Assessment (PA) for the Reconsideration of the
Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards (External Review Draft
Version 2) (June 9, 2023) (EPA-CASAC-23-002). Available at https://casac.epa.gov/ords/sab/f?p=113:18:7093179574667:::RP,18:P18_ID:2636#meeting.
Following the workshop, EPA will develop a workshop proceedings
document and a three-volume Integrated Review Plan (IRP) for the review
of the ozone NAAQS. Volume 1 will provide background on the ozone
NAAQS. Volume 2 is the planning document for the review and the ISA,
and will outline the schedule, process, and approaches for evaluating
the relevant scientific information and addressing the key policy-
relevant issues to be considered in this review. Lastly, Volume 3 is
the planning document for technical air quality, exposure, and risk
analyses. CASAC will be asked to consult with the Agency on Volumes 2
and 3, and the public will also have the opportunity to comment. The
IRP, with input received from the CASAC and the public, will provide
the framework to guide the review and development of the draft ISA and
policy assessments.
Wayne Cascio,
Director, Center for Public Health and Environmental Assessment.
[FR Doc. 2024-08753 Filed 4-23-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P