Phasedown of Hydrofluorocarbons: Restrictions on the Use of HFCs Under the AIM Act in Variable Refrigerant Flow Air Conditioning Subsector, 53373-53380 [2024-13900]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 123 / Wednesday, June 26, 2024 / Proposed Rules
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contact the person identified in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
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contact the person identified in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Khoi Nguyen, Geographic Strategies &
Modeling Section (AIR–2–2), Planning &
Analysis Branch, Air and Radiation
Division, EPA Region IX, 75 Hawthorne
Street, San Francisco, CA 94105, (415)
947–4120, or by email at nguyen.khoi@
epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On May
31, 2024 (89 FR 47398), the EPA
published the proposed rule ‘‘Partial
Approval and Disapproval of Air
Quality Implementation Plans; Arizona;
Regional Haze State Implementation
Plan for the Second Implementation
Period and Prong 4 (Visibility) for the
2015 Ozone and 2012 Particulate Matter
Standards’’ in the Federal Register. The
original deadline to submit comments
was July 1, 2024. This action extends
the comment period for 14 days in
response to requests from commenters.
Written comments must now be
received by July 15, 2024.
Dated: June 17, 2024.
Matthew Lakin,
Director, Air and Radiation Division, Region
IX.
[FR Doc. 2024–13901 Filed 6–25–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 84
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0643; FRL–11739–01–
OAR]
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Phasedown of Hydrofluorocarbons:
Restrictions on the Use of HFCs Under
the AIM Act in Variable Refrigerant
Flow Air Conditioning Subsector
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency is proposing to
amend a provision of the Technology
Transitions regulations promulgated
under the American Innovation and
SUMMARY:
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Manufacturing Act. This action allows
one additional year, until January 1,
2027, solely for the installation of new
residential and light commercial air
conditioning and heat pump variable
refrigerant flow systems that are 65,000
British thermal units per hour or greater
using components manufactured in the
U.S. or imported prior to January 1,
2026. The existing January 1, 2026,
compliance date for the installation of
certain variable refrigerant flow systems
may result in significant stranded
inventory that was intended for new
construction. EPA is promulgating this
action to mitigate the potential for
significant stranded inventory in this
subsector.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before July 26, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0643, 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–
2021–0643 in the subject line of the
message.
• Mail: U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, EPA Docket Center,
Air and Radiation 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 number for
this rulemaking. Comments received
may be posted without change to
https://www.regulations.gov, including
any personal information provided.
Do not submit any information you
consider to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) through https://
www.regulations.gov. For submission of
confidential comments, please work
with the person listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
For additional submission methods, the
full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Joshua Silver, Stratospheric Protection
Division, Office of Atmospheric
Protection (Mail Code 6205A),
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Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC
20460; telephone number: (202) 564–
2473; email address: silver.joshua@
epa.gov. You may also visit EPA’s
website at https://www.epa.gov/climatehfcs-reduction for further information.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, whenever
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ ‘‘the Agency,’’ or ‘‘our’’ is
used, we mean EPA. Acronyms that are
used in this rulemaking that may be
helpful include:
AC—Air Conditioning
AHRI—Air-Conditioning, Heating, and
Refrigeration Institute
AIM Act—American Innovation and
Manufacturing Act of 2020
The Alliance—Alliance for Responsible
Atmospheric Policy
APA—Administrative Procedure Act
BTU/h—British thermal units per hour
CAA—Clean Air Act
EPA—U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
FR—Federal Register
GWP—Global Warming Potential
HARDI—Heating, Air-conditioning &
Refrigeration Distributors International
HFC—Hydrofluorocarbon
OEM—Original Equipment Manufacturer
RACHP—Refrigeration, Air Conditioning,
and Heat Pumps
SNAP—Significant New Alternatives Policy
VRF—Variable Refrigerant Flow
VRV—Variable Refrigerant Volume
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by
this proposed rule if you manufacture,
import, export, sell or otherwise
distribute, or install residential and light
commercial air conditioning and heat
pump equipment. Potentially affected
categories, by North American Industry
Classification System code, include:
• Plumbing, Heating, and Air
Conditioning Contractors (238220).
• Air Conditioning and Warm Air
Heating Equipment and Commercial
and Industrial Refrigeration Equipment
Manufacturing (333415).
• Plumbing and Heating Equipment
and Supplies (Hydronics) Merchant
Wholesalers (423720).
• Warm Air Heating and Air
Conditioning Equipment and Supplies
Merchant Wholesalers (423730).
This list is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
for readers regarding entities that EPA
expects could potentially be affected by
this action. Other types of entities not
listed could also be affected. To
determine whether your entity may be
affected by this action, you should
carefully examine the regulatory text at
the end of this document. If you have
questions regarding the applicability of
this action to a particular entity, consult
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the person listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section.
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B. What action is the Agency taking?
This proposed rule would provide
one additional year, until January 1,
2027, for the installation of new
residential and light commercial air
conditioning and heat pump systems
using variable refrigerant volume (VRV)
or variable refrigerant flow (VRF)
technology that are 65,000 British
thermal units per hour (BTU/h) or larger
when using components that were
manufactured in the U.S. or imported
into the U.S. before January 1, 2026.
Specifically, this proposed rule would
allow for pre-2026 condensing units,
evaporators, and air handlers using R–
410A, a blend of two regulated
hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) listed in the
American Innovation and
Manufacturing Act of 2020 (AIM Act),
or other regulated substances and
blends of regulated substances not
meeting the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule’s restrictions, to be
assembled into new systems (i.e.,
installed), so long as those systems are
assembled prior to January 1, 2027.
C. What is the Agency’s authority for
taking this action?
On December 27, 2020, the AIM Act
was enacted as section 103 in Division
S, Innovation for the Environment, of
the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2021 (codified at 42 U.S.C. 7675).
Subsection (k)(1)(A) of the AIM Act
provides EPA with the authority to
promulgate necessary regulations to
carry out EPA’s functions under the Act,
including its obligations to ensure that
the Act’s requirements are satisfied.
Subsection (k)(1)(C) of the AIM Act also
provides that CAA sections 113, 114,
304, and 307 apply to the AIM Act and
any regulations EPA promulgates under
the AIM Act as though the AIM Act
were part of title VI of the CAA.
The AIM Act authorizes EPA to
address HFCs by providing new
authorities in three main areas: phasing
down the production and consumption
of listed HFCs; managing these HFCs
and their substitutes; and facilitating the
transition to next-generation
technologies by restricting use of these
HFCs in the sector or subsectors in
which they are used. This rulemaking
focuses on the third area: the transition
to next-generation technologies by
restricting use of these HFCs in the
sector or subsectors in which they are
used. Subsection (i) of the AIM Act,
‘‘Technology Transitions,’’ provides that
‘‘the Administrator may by rule restrict,
fully, partially, or on a graduated
schedule, the use of a regulated
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substance in the sector or subsector in
which the regulated substance is used.’’
42 U.S.C. 7675(i)(1). The AIM Act lists
18 HFCs, and by reference any of their
isomers not so listed, that are covered
by the statute’s provisions, referred to as
‘‘regulated substances’’ under the Act.1
(42 U.S.C. 7675(c)(1)). EPA is proposing
to amend restrictions on the use of
certain HFCs in the residential and light
commercial air conditioning and heat
pump subsector for large equipment that
use VRV or VRF technology.
A. Previous Technology Transitions
Rules
On October 24, 2023, EPA’s final rule
establishing the Technology Transitions
program was published in the Federal
Register (88 FR 73098, hereafter ‘‘2023
Technology Transitions Rule’’). That
rule restricted the use of certain HFCs
in over 40 subsectors in which they are
used by establishing limits for those
subsectors based on global warming
potential (GWP). It also prohibited,
among other things, the manufacture
and import of factory-completed
products and the installation of certain
refrigeration, air conditioning, and heat
pump systems that use HFCs above
specified GWP limits. The compliance
dates for these restrictions vary by
subsector and range from January 1,
2025, to January 1, 2028. The rule also
prohibited the sale, distribution, and
export of factory-completed products
that do not comply with the relevant
restrictions three years after the
prohibition on manufacture and import.
After issuance of the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule, manufacturers,
importers, and distributors of residential
and light commercial air conditioning
and heat pump equipment requested
clarification of the provisions of the rule
regarding two categories of equipment:
residential and light commercial air
conditioning and heat pump systems
and variable refrigerant flow (VRF)
systems. The November 13, 2023, letter
to EPA from the Air-Conditioning,
Heating, and Refrigeration Institute
(AHRI), the Alliance for Responsible
Atmospheric Policy (the Alliance), and
Heating, Air-conditioning &
Refrigeration Distributors International
(HARDI) states that these organizations
understand that components for systems
in these two categories manufactured in
the U.S. or imported into the U.S. before
January 1, 2025, and January 1, 2026,
respectively, using a regulated
substance with a GWP of 700 or more,
cannot be installed as new systems after
each such compliance date.2 The letter
states that this would be ‘‘particularly
problematic for residential new
construction, including both singlefamily and multi-family dwellings,
where builders order heating and
cooling equipment well in advance of
knowing the exact date of install. Such
equipment is not installed until
construction is nearly complete, but at
time of order builders do not know
when this date will be.’’ The letter
further articulates that allowing the use
of components manufactured in the U.S.
or imported into the U.S. prior to the
compliance date to be installed as part
of new systems for one year after the
compliance date would provide some
relief to the economic and practical
burdens.
On December 26, 2023, EPA issued an
interim final rule (88 FR 88825) that
reevaluated the specific circumstances
for residential and light commercial air
conditioning and heat pumps and
extended the installation compliance
date for that subsector from January 1,
2025, to January 1, 2026, when using
components that were manufactured in
the U.S. or imported into the U.S. prior
to January 1, 2025. EPA separately
considered comments on that rule. The
Agency is proposing a similar
adjustment to the restrictions on the
installation of VRF systems.
1 ‘‘Regulated substance’’ and ‘‘HFC’’ are used
interchangeably in this document.
2 This letter can be found in the docket at EPA
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2021–0643.
D. What are the incremental costs and
benefits of this action?
This proposed rule would reduce
regulatory burden associated with the
Technology Transitions program while
having a negligible environmental
impact. Original equipment
manufacturers (OEMs) have indicated
that large quantities of manufactured
inventory of VRF equipment could go
unsold without an extension of the
installation date. Stranding equipment
that does not meet the new restrictions
is counter to the overall approach EPA
has taken in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule. Extending the
installation date for these systems will
not have an impact on the benefits
modeled in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule because EPA is
limiting the extension to equipment
manufactured in the U.S. or imported
into the U.S. before the existing
compliance date of January 1, 2026 (88
FR 73098). Furthermore, EPA did not
analyze this subsector separately from
the broader residential and light
commercial air conditioning and heat
pump sector for which EPA has already
provided similar regulatory relief.
II. Background
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Specifically, EPA is proposing to extend
the installation compliance date for the
VRF subsector from January 1, 2026, to
January 1, 2027, when using
components that were manufactured in
the U.S. or imported into the U.S. prior
to January 1, 2026.
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B. Variable Refrigerant Flow Subsector
Variable refrigerant flow (VRF) and
variable refrigerant volume (VRV)
systems are direct expansion multi-split
systems that incorporate the following:
a split system air conditioner or heat
pump incorporating a single refrigerant
circuit that is a common piping network
to two or more indoor evaporators, each
capable of independent control, or
compressor units. VRF split systems
contain a single module outdoor unit or
combined module outdoor units with at
least one variable capacity compressor
that has three or more steps of capacity,
with air or water as the heat source.
This design is generally more energy
efficient than unitary split systems
without VRF. In this rule, EPA is
considering only those VRF systems that
are larger than 65,000 BTU/h and are
used for air conditioning.
While this technology is used in air
conditioning and heat pump equipment
of any size, the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule limited its restrictions
for this subsector to air-source VRF
systems with capacities of 65,000 BTU/
h (19 kW) or more and water-source
VRF systems of any capacity. EPA
proposed, and finalized, a compliance
date that provided one additional year
compared to the rest of the residential
and light commercial air conditioning
and heat pump subsector due to the
complexity of the design and
installation for large VRF systems. Data
released annually by AHRI show that
equipment with capacities of 65,000
BTU/h or more constitute roughly three
percent of all residential and light
commercial equipment sold. VRF
equipment of that size are a subset of
that three percent. EPA has summarized
this publicly available data and
included it in the docket for this
proposed rule.
C. Avoiding Stranded Inventory
An important consideration in the
2023 Technology Transitions Rule was
to avoid stranding inventory of existing
equipment. This includes systems that
are already installed and operating as
well as unsold equipment in the
manufacturing and distribution chain.
EPA stated that ‘‘[w]e recognize that the
production and purchase of products or
components that are unable to be sold
to consumers is an economic and
environmental outcome no parties
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desire, and the proposed rule’s forwardlooking compliance dates were intended
to allow all parties in the market supply
chain sufficient time to avoid that
outcome’’ (88 FR 73123). EPA’s goal of
avoiding the stranding of inventory is
consistent with the requirement in
subsection (i)(6) that Technology
Transition restrictions may not take
effect sooner than one year from the
date of promulgation; this provision also
serves to ensure that regulated parties
have sufficient time to prepare for and
comply with restrictions under this
provision. In response to concerns about
stranded inventory raised during the
public comment period on the proposed
rule, EPA made two significant
adjustments in the final 2023
Technology Transitions Rule.
First, EPA removed the applicability
of the rule’s use restrictions to
components. EPA explained that
components are pieces of equipment
that do not function independently and
must be assembled together in the field
in order to function for its intended
purpose. Components are replaceable
and a faulty component can be swapped
out to avoid replacing an entire system.
Recognizing the ongoing need for
servicing and updating previously
installed systems, EPA allowed for the
continued manufacture, import, sale,
distribution, offer for sale and
distribution, and export of components
that rely on regulated substances that
would not meet the new restrictions.
Aside from reporting requirements,
components are therefore not subject to
the restrictions in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule, except insofar as those
components may not be installed in new
systems on or after the installation
compliance dates.
Second, the proposed rule set a
compliance date, one year after the
manufacture and import compliance
date, by which factory-completed
products could no longer be distributed,
sold, and offered for sale or distribution
(i.e., the ‘‘sell-through’’ date). For the
purposes of the refrigeration, air
conditioning, and heat pump (RACHP)
sector, factory-completed products are
equipment which are charged at the
factory with the full and proper amount
of refrigerant needed to function. Since
the Agency received many comments on
this topic, including from those
commenters that considered one year to
be insufficient especially for certain
seasonal products, EPA extended the
sell-through period for factorycompleted products in the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule to be three
years after the manufacture and import
compliance date.
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Through these two modifications in
the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule,
EPA determined it had minimized the
potential for stranded inventory.
Specifically with respect to
components, the Agency’s view was that
there would continue to be a market for
components not meeting the GWP limit
thresholds for new systems, because
those components could continue to
enter the market to service existing
systems.
Additionally, in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule, EPA extended the
compliance dates, or raised the GWP
limit, for the installation of most fieldassembled refrigeration systems (as
compared to its proposed compliance
dates), recognizing, in part, that
refrigeration systems would require
manufacturers and importers to make
component equipment available and
that such systems can be specifically
designed for an individual facility and
would need more time to transition.3
EPA did not finalize later compliance
dates for the installation of systems in
the residential and light commercial air
conditioning and heat pump, and VRF,
subsectors in that rule.4 Subsequent to
promulgating the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule, EPA learned that
additional time, which had already been
extended to nearly all of the subsectors
covering field-assembled refrigeration
systems, was needed for those air
conditioning subsectors. EPA responded
by issuing an interim final rule
reevaluating the specific circumstances
for residential and light commercial air
conditioning and heat pumps and
extending the installation compliance
date for that subsector by one year (88
FR 88825) and by undertaking this
proposed rulemaking.
3 See 88 FR 73143 (industrial process refrigeration
systems—proposed January 1, 2025, compliance
date, finalized January 1, 2026 compliance date
(January 1, 2028, for some subsectors); 88 FR 73149
(data centers, ITEF, computer room cooling
equipment—proposed January 1, 2025, compliance
date, finalized January 1, 2027 compliance date); 88
FR 73150 (systems in retail food refrigeration
subsector—proposed January 1, 2025, compliance
date, finalized a range of compliance dates from
January 1, 2026 to January 1, 2028); 88 FR 73162
(cold storage warehouses—proposed January 1,
2025, compliance date, finalized January 1, 2026,
compliance date); 88 FR 73163 (ice rinks—retained
proposed January 1, 2025, compliance date in final
rule but increased GWP limit from 150 to 700); 88
FR 73175 (chillers-industrial process refrigeration—
proposed January 1, 2025 compliance date,
finalized compliance dates of January 1, 2026, and
January 1, 2028 depending on the system).
4 See 88 FR 73178 (residential and light
commercial air conditioning and heat pumps—
proposed January 1, 2025, compliance date,
finalized January 1, 2025, compliance date); id.
(VRF systems—proposed January 1, 2026,
compliance date, finalized January 1, 2026,
compliance date).
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EPA is reevaluating the planning,
purchasing, and installation timeframes
for new construction using VRF
equipment as referenced in the
November 13, 2023, letter from industry
stakeholders and is proposing an
extension of one additional year, which
would align with the additional time
already provided for many refrigeration
subsectors in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule and in the interim final
rule for installation of certain residential
and light commercial air conditioning
and heat pumps.
Multi-unit residential and commercial
new construction buildings must be
planned well in advance, including
plans for the heating and cooling
systems intended to be installed in that
new construction. Builders may order
those planned heating and cooling
systems in concert with the planning
process without knowing when those
systems will be installed. As noted by
stakeholders, installation of these
systems is often one of the final steps in
construction. EPA acknowledges that it
may therefore be the case that for new
construction planned to occur in 2026,
builders may have already designed and
received a permit ahead of the issuance
of the 2023 Technology Transitions
Rule, for a building that contains a
heating and cooling system that is
planned to be installed in that new
construction. Specifically, EPA
recognizes that for construction planned
to occur in 2026, components of
residential and light commercial air
conditioning and heat pump systems
using VRF with regulated substances
may have already been incorporated
into the design of the building, received
a permit from the appropriate authority
having jurisdiction, and ordered by
builders, such that the VRF system
equipment associated with these
projects are at risk of being stranded.
EPA also recognizes that as one of the
first subsectors facing a system
installation compliance date under the
new Technology Transitions program,
the ability of the VRF subsector to
comply with this deadline relies on
manufacturers, importers, and
distributors to quickly make
commercially available component parts
that comply with the GWP thresholds.
For this reason, as well, EPA has
determined it is appropriate to propose
this limited extension for compliance.
As discussed in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule, EPA established the
compliance date of January 1, 2026,
based on consideration of the AIM Act’s
subsection (i)(4) factors, and in
particular, the assessment that the VRF
subsector will be able to meet the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule’s GWP
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limit of 700, and transition from the
current use of HFCs in the subsector.
EPA’s consideration of the statutory
factors continues to support a speedy
transition for this subsector. However,
as discussed above, the Agency
recognizes that the January 1, 2026,
installation compliance date could
result in builders of new construction
being left with stranded inventory that
could not be used. Stranding inventory
is an economically and environmentally
undesirable outcome, and the issue
addressed in this proposed rule was not
brought to the Agency’s attention until
after the 2023 Technology Transitions
Rule was finalized. This action therefore
proposes to extend the January 1, 2026,
new installation compliance date to
January 1, 2027, provided the new
installation uses components that were
manufactured in the U.S. or imported
into the U.S. prior to January 1, 2026.
Stakeholders, including the authors of
the November 13, 2023, letter, have
indicated that extending the installation
compliance date by one year would
alleviate their concerns about stranded
inventory.5 EPA also heard from one
stakeholder that its concerns would be
alleviated by exempting the installation
of VRF systems in buildings from the
restrictions of the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule if those buildings
received a permit prior to finalization of
the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule
(i.e., October 24, 2023).6
EPA recognized in the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule that some
buildings had already been permitted
prior to finalization of that rule. While
permits may not always specify the
refrigerant to be used in a refrigeration
or air conditioning technology in a
building, some permits may require a
particular regulated substance or blend
of regulated substances. Recognizing
that where earlier issued permits
required a particular regulated
substance or blend, and where such
permitted systems were likely to be
highly complex and costly to redesign,
the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule
provided one additional year beyond
the final rule compliance dates for the
installation of certain field-assembled
systems. Specifically, for the installation
of refrigeration systems in four
subsectors (certain industrial process
refrigeration systems; retail food
5 The letter dated November 13, 2023, can be
found in the docket at EPA Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0643. Another letter from a stakeholder,
dated October 17, 2023, can be found in the docket
for this proposed rule.
6 The letter from this stakeholder, dated March 5,
2024, and supporting documentation that
accompanied that letter, are included in the docket
for this proposed rule.
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refrigeration—supermarkets; cold
storage warehouses; and ice rinks) if an
approved building permit was issued
before the signature date of the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule (i.e.,
October 5, 2023), and the permit
specified the use of a system containing
a particular regulated substance or
blend of regulated substances with a
GWP above the relevant GWP threshold
for that subsector (88 FR 73120; 40 CFR
84.54(d)).
EPA intended this limited flexibility
in the 2023 Technology Transitions
Rule to prevent the need to redesign
these systems and, in some cases, the
facility that houses these systems. EPA
granted this permit-based extension
selectively, as most systems are not
typically designed specifically for an
individual facility and/or most systems
have a later compliance date and thus
can make any necessary changes with
the GWP restrictions in mind.
The stakeholder that requested an
exemption of VRF systems from the
restrictions of the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule where such systems
were covered by a building permit
issued prior to finalization of the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule, is a
developer of buildings which are
hundreds of thousands of square feet.
The stakeholder described, in
information it provided to EPA, how the
time from initial permitting to final
construction can take several years.7
One of its buildings received an
approved permit in June of 2023, and
the developer expects the building to be
completed in 2028. This stakeholder
would like the VRF system in this
building to be exempted from the
restrictions of the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule, which would
otherwise have required installation of
GWP-compliant VRF systems starting on
January 1, 2026.
Included in the information this
stakeholder provided to EPA was an
attachment from the manufacturer of
VRF equipment that the developer
intends to install in its building. In this
attachment, dated March 4, 2024, the
manufacturer states that while it ‘‘has
not made available selection software or
complete engineering data for the
upcoming R–32 product to satisfy the
project’’ indicated by the developer, the
manufacturer ‘‘can confirm that on or
before the date of the mandated
transition to A2L refrigerants,
equipment will be available for design,
7 See letter from stakeholder, dated March 5,
2024, included in the docket for this proposed rule.
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manufacture, and sale in North
America.’’ 8
EPA does not agree that it would be
appropriate and consistent with
subsection (i)(4) to provide a broad,
unlimited exemption from the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule to any
project where the system had received
a building permit prior to finalization of
the rule. EPA is cognizant in
establishing these restrictions, and in
considering requested flexibilities from
stakeholders, that in some instances, the
individual costs to some regulated
entities to accommodate updated
regulations in their planning must be
balanced with the national priorities
established in the AIM Act of phasing
down HFCs on a set schedule and
transitioning away from the use of HFCs
where practicable. In this case, EPA’s
analysis under the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule was that lower-GWP
substitutes for HFCs will be available for
the component equipment needed for
these VRF installations in time for the
January 1, 2026, compliance date. One
of the primary manufacturers of this
equipment has confirmed EPA’s
assessment about availability in the
materials provided to the Agency. The
fact that such equipment may not be
available for purchase in early 2024
does not mean that projects planned for
2028 should not be expected to comply
with restrictions promulgated in 2023.
However, EPA recognizes that a
permit-based flexibility is an alternative
way to accommodate potential concerns
about compliance. We are therefore
proposing in the alternative a similar
one-year extension that was provided to
certain field-assembled systems with
building permits that specified use of a
particular HFC or blend under the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule.
Specifically, this proposal in the
alternative would extend the
compliance date for installation of new
VRF systems from January 1, 2026, to
January 1, 2027, where the building
permit both specified the HFC or HFC
blend to be used and was issued prior
to the signature date of the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule (October 5,
2023). This alternative proposal is
consistent with the permit-based
flexibility provided to the four
previously mentioned refrigeration
subsectors (88 FR 73120; 40 CFR
84.54(d)). However, it is likely that
fewer projects would meet the criteria
for this permit-based extension
compared to the number of projects
potentially impacted by EPA’s primary
8 See Attachment A, after the letter from
stakeholder, dated March 5, 2024, (page 10),
included in the docket for this proposed rule.
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proposal of extending the compliance
date to January 1, 2027, for installation
of all VRF systems using components
manufactured in the U.S. or imported
into the U.S. by January 1, 2026.
D. Limiting the Environmental Impact of
This Action
EPA is narrowly tailoring this
proposal to respond to stakeholder
concerns about stranded inventory in
this subsector while maintaining the
human health and environmental
benefits of the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule. To do so, EPA is
proposing to extend the installation
compliance date by one year to January
1, 2027, only for new VRF systems
installed from specified components
(e.g., condensing units and indoor
evaporators) that were manufactured in
the U.S. or imported into the U.S. prior
to January 1, 2026. This restriction
means that the total number of VRF
systems using HFCs or HFC blends with
a GWP above 700 installed in 2025 and
2026 would match what the Agency
modeled for installation in 2025. The
extra year for installation would not
increase demand for HFCs in this
subsector but rather could shift some of
the demand from 2025 into 2026.
EPA is proposing to extend the
original compliance date for new
installations in this subsector to January
1, 2027, when using components
manufactured in the U.S. or imported
into the U.S. on or after January 1, 2026.
These components remain subject to the
original restrictions of the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule.
Specifically, if they contain an HFC
with a GWP of 700 or greater, their use
is limited to servicing previously
installed systems. As elaborated on
more below, all the existing labeling,
reporting, and recordkeeping
requirements also continue to apply to
components using, or intended to use,
any regulated substance. Consideration
of extending the compliance date for all
installations in the subsector by one
year is not warranted based on EPA’s
prior analysis of the availability of
substitutes within this subsector, as
described in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule and supporting
documents in the docket for that rule.9
EPA finds that this proposed
approach of providing additional time
for installation effectively responds to
stakeholder concerns about stranded
inventory while remaining protective of
the environment. This approach was
suggested by industry stakeholders in
their letter dated November 13, 2023,
9 This refers to EPA Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2021–0643.
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53377
and it aligns with industry’s plans to
transition in this subsector.
This proposed rule would provide an
additional year for installation only if
all ‘‘specified components’’ of that
system are manufactured in the U.S. or
imported into the U.S. prior to January
1, 2026. The term ‘‘specified
component’’ is defined under the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule as
‘‘condensing units, condensers,
compressors, evaporator units, and
evaporators’’ (88 FR 73112). Other
components of an air conditioning or
heat pump system such as valves or
refrigerant piping are not restricted by
the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule
and can be installed regardless of
manufacture or import date.
E. How would the labeling,
recordkeeping, and reporting provisions
apply?
The 2023 Technology Transitions
Rule requires labels on products and
certain components that use HFCs. The
labeling requirement takes effect for
each subsector at the same time as the
manufacture and import prohibition for
products or the installation prohibition
for systems. This timing reflects the
primary purpose of the labels, which is
for assessing compliance of products
and systems in sectors and subsectors
with active HFC restrictions.
This action would not require any
specific labeling for components that are
manufactured in the U.S. or imported
into the U.S. prior to January 1, 2026.
Nameplates typically include the date
that a component is manufactured,
which would be sufficient for the
purposes of this action. Furthermore, it
would be impractical to require entities
that are not OEMs to relabel
components that are already within the
distribution chain.
This action would not change the
existing labeling requirements related to
components that are effective January 1,
2026. For specified components of
systems, the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule required labels as of
the applicable installation compliance
date. This means that for specified
components manufactured in the U.S. or
imported into the U.S. on or after
January 1, 2026, the requirements of the
2023 Technology Transitions Rule
continue to apply. These requirements
include, among others, that such
components must be labeled with the
statement ‘‘For servicing existing
equipment only.’’ This labeling is
particularly important to distinguish
components manufactured in the U.S. or
imported into the U.S. before January 1,
2026, from those that are not.
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The 2023 Technology Transitions
Rule established recordkeeping and
reporting requirements for any entity
that manufactures or imports products
or specified components that use or are
intended to use HFCs in the sectors and
subsectors covered in that rule. The
reporting period for all sectors and
subsectors starts on January 1, 2025, and
the first reports must be submitted to
the Agency by March 31, 2026. This
action does not add to nor modify the
existing reporting and recordkeeping
requirements for specified components.
EPA is not proposing to establish new
reporting and recordkeeping
requirements related to the sale or
installation of components
manufactured in the U.S. or imported
into the U.S. prior to January 1, 2025.
Reporting and recordkeeping would still
be required for specified VRF
components that are manufactured in
the U.S. or imported into the U.S. on or
after January 1, 2025.
F. Evaluation of the Subsection (i)(4)
Factors
Subsection (i)(4) of the AIM Act
directs EPA to factor in, to the extent
practicable and using best available
data, various considerations when
carrying out a rulemaking under
subsection (i). As discussed in detail in
the preamble to the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule, EPA views subsection
(i)(4)(A) through (D) as providing
overarching direction for setting
restrictions under subsection (i) (88 FR
73129–73141). In this action, EPA is not
reconsidering the interpretations
provided in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule regarding how it
considers the factors laid out in
subsection (i)(4). Nor is the Agency
revisiting its analysis of the (i)(4) factors
with respect to the residential and light
commercial air conditioning and heat
pump subsector that uses VRF
technology as set forth in the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule preamble
(88 FR 73177–73180). However, in
proposing this narrow adjustment to the
January 1, 2026, compliance date for the
residential and light commercial air
conditioning and heat pump VRF
subsector, we have considered the (i)(4)
factors to the extent practicable, as
applicable to the Agency’s adjustment of
that compliance date.
The issue being addressed by this
proposal was brought to the Agency’s
attention by stakeholders impacted by
the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule.
As noted in EPA’s discussion of
subsection (i)(4)(A), in addition to
information generated by other
governing bodies and agencies, the
Agency does also take into account
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information provided by industry,
environmental non-governmental
organizations, trade associations,
academia, standard-setting bodies, and
more (88 FR 73129). We acknowledge
that in some cases, regulated entities
may be best situated to identify best
available information regarding
implementation challenges. As part of
this proposed rule, EPA is providing an
opportunity for comment and invites
stakeholders who may have information
relevant to this action to weigh in.
With respect to the Agency’s
evaluation of the availability of
substitutes under subsection (i)(4)(B),
EPA previously determined that
substitutes with a GWP less than 700 are
available effective January 1, 2026, for
the residential and light commercial air
conditioning and heat pump VRF
subsector. EPA is not proposing to
change that determination and
continues to find that substitutes with a
GWP less than 700 will be available
January 1, 2026, for this subsector.
Manufacturers in this subsector are
currently making air conditioning and
heat pump systems and components
with lower-GWP refrigerants for other
markets and are prepared to meet the
January 1, 2026, installation compliance
date for such systems. This action is not
proposing to reconsider the Agency’s
prior evaluation of the availability of
substitutes for meeting the use
restrictions issued in the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule for this
subsector; rather, this action is narrowly
tailored to address the disposition of
components manufactured in the U.S. or
imported into the U.S. prior to January
1, 2026.
This proposal to adjust the
installation compliance date for large
VRF systems is motivated by the policy
goal of avoiding stranding inventory
where possible, while recognizing that
the AIM Act directs the Agency to
establish use restrictions where
appropriate for sectors and subsectors to
move away from the use of high-GWP
HFCs. We believe these goals to be
consistent with the direction in
subsection (i)(4)(C), which instructs the
Agency to factor in, to the extent
practicable, overall economic costs and
environmental impacts, as compared to
historical trends. As discussed in the
2023 Technology Transitions Rule, EPA
interprets (i)(4)(C) as purposefully
accommodating different types and
degrees of analysis of economic costs
and environmental impacts, including
costs and impacts that may be difficult
to quantify (88 FR 73138). The narrow
adjustment being proposed would
reduce the potential to unintentionally
strand large VRF components, while
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still achieving a prompt transition for
this subsector. Specifically, even with
the adjustments in this proposed rule,
manufacturers and importers of
components for new VRF systems will
be required in the very near term (i.e.,
before January 1, 2026) to transition
from using R–410A and other higherGWP regulated substances in those
components, and developers and
builders will not be permitted to install
new systems that use R–410A or other
non-compliant HFCs or HFC blends
beginning January 1, 2027. This
proposed action would not affect the
overall consumption of HFCs because
EPA does not anticipate a change in the
amount of new VRF equipment that
would be manufactured in the U.S. or
imported into the U.S prior to January
1, 2026. Further discussion of
environmental impacts can be found in
section III.B.
EPA requests comment on the
incremental costs and benefits
associated with this action, including
avoiding impacts such as stranded
inventory (e.g., number and type of
units affected) and on the incremental
impacts to regulated entities regarding
compliance (e.g., avoiding redistribution
of equipment, avoiding revisions or new
permits to replace previously secured
building permits).
Finally, subsection (i)(4)(D) directs
the Agency to factor in, to the extent
practicable, the remaining phasedown
period for regulated substances under
the allowance allocation program. The
reduction in the supply of HFCs is an
important factor supporting compliance
dates and GWP limits that are as
stringent as feasible under the analysis
of all the (i)(4) factors. EPA finds that
this proposed rule would not materially
affect the demand for HFCs because it
limits installations to components that
were manufactured in the U.S. or
imported into the U.S. prior to January
1, 2026. The effect of this proposed rule
would be to extend the installations that
EPA modeled to occur in 2025 over the
two-year period of 2025 and 2026.
However, given the small size of this
subsector, at a subset of roughly three
percent of all equipment sold in the
residential and light commercial
subsector, EPA did not independently
model this subsector in the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule’s
Regulatory Impact Assessment
Addendum.
G. Negotiated Rulemaking
Prior to proposing a rule, subsection
(i)(2)(A) of the Act directs EPA to
consider negotiating with stakeholders
in the sector or subsector subject to the
potential rule in accordance with
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negotiated rulemaking procedures
established under subchapter III of
chapter 5 of title 5, United States Code
(commonly known as the ‘‘Negotiated
Rulemaking Act of 1990’’). If EPA makes
a determination to use the negotiated
rulemaking procedures, subsection
(i)(2)(B) requires that EPA, to the extent
practicable, give priority to completing
that rulemaking over completing
rulemakings under subsection (i) that
are not using that procedure. If EPA
does not use the negotiated rulemaking
process, subsection (i)(2)(C) requires the
Agency to publish an explanation of the
decision not to use that procedure
before commencement of the
rulemaking process.
EPA noted in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule that, where
appropriate, EPA will consider recent
Agency actions and decisions related to
restrictions on the use of HFCs in
sectors and subsectors when
considering using negotiated
rulemaking procedures. EPA provided
the example of not issuing a separate
notice to consider using negotiated
rulemaking for four petitions received
after a first round of petitions had
received public notice. EPA’s reasoning
was that these petitions were received
well ahead of the final action and the
requested restrictions are in the same
sectors and subsectors contained in
petitions for which a determination had
already been made. EPA stated that
nothing in those four petitions caused
EPA to reconsider that decision and that
it was unnecessary for the Agency to
reconsider whether to use negotiated
rulemaking procedures.
Upon considering recent Agency
action, specifically the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule, this proposed
rulemaking does not merit a
reconsideration of the prior
determination not to use negotiated
rulemaking procedures. This proposal is
a direct and immediate response to a
specific concern arising from the recent
Agency action to establish a compliance
date for the installation of certain
systems within the residential and light
commercial air conditioning and heat
pump VRF subsector. EPA is not
proposing to address a new subsector
nor establish a new restriction. Instead,
this proposed rule would provide
targeted relief to address concerns about
stranded inventory in a single subsector
subject to a recently finalized
restriction.
Furthermore, this action was
requested through a November 13, 2023,
letter signed jointly by AHRI, the
Alliance, and HARDI, which together
represents a majority of the stakeholders
in the subsector subject to the rule. The
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groups did not request the use of the
negotiated rulemaking procedure in
their letter, and EPA does not believe
that the rule would benefit from the
negotiated rulemaking procedure
especially because timeliness is a
concern universally shared by
stakeholders in this subsector.
III. 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 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 an
information collection burden under the
PRA because it does not contain any
information collection activities.
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. In making this
determination, EPA concludes that the
impact of concern for this proposed rule
is any significant adverse economic
impact on small entities and that the
Agency is certifying that this proposed
rule would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities because the
proposed rule would relieve regulatory
burden on the small entities subject to
the rule. This proposed rule would
prevent the stranding of components
used to install residential and light
commercial air conditioning and heat
pump systems using variable refrigerant
flow technology. We have therefore
concluded that this action would relieve
regulatory burden for all directly
regulated small entities.
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
tribal governments or the private sector.
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53379
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial
direct effects on the states, on the
relationship between the national
government and the states, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action does not have tribal
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13175. It will not have substantial
direct effects on tribal governments, on
the relationship between the Federal
government and Indian tribes, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
government and Indian tribes, as
specified in Executive Order 13175.
Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not
apply to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
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. This action is narrowly
tailored to prevent the stranding of
certain air conditioning and heat pump
equipment using variable refrigerant
flow technology while not affecting the
demand for HFCs. 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, 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 (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
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J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations and Executive
Order 14096: Revitalizing Our Nation’s
Commitment to Environmental Justice
for All
EPA believes that this type of action
does not concern human health or
environmental conditions and therefore
cannot be evaluated with respect to
potentially disproportionate and
adverse effects on communities with
environmental justice concerns. This
action is narrowly tailored to prevent
the stranding of inventory of air
conditioning and heat pump equipment
using variable refrigerant flow
technology while not affecting the
demand for HFCs.
Although this action does not concern
human health or environmental
conditions, EPA identified and
addressed environmental justice
concerns within the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule (88 FR 73098; October
24, 2023).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 84
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Chemicals,
Climate change, Emissions, Imports,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, EPA proposes to amend 40
CFR part 84 as follows:
1. The authority citation for part 84
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Pub. L. 116–260, Division S,
Sec. 103.
Subpart B—Restrictions on the Use of
Hydrofluorocarbons
2. Amend § 84.54 by revising
paragraph (c)(2) to read as follows:
■
§ 84.54 Restrictions on the use of
hydrofluorocarbons.
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*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) Effective January 1, 2026, variable
refrigerant flow systems for use as
residential or light commercial airconditioning or heat pumps, using a
regulated substance, or a blend
containing a regulated substance, with a
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[FR Doc. 2024–13900 Filed 6–25–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
SPACE ADMINISTRATION
48 CFR Part 40
[FAR Case 2023–008; Docket No. FAR–
2023–0008; Sequence No. 1]
RIN 9000–AO56
Federal Acquisition Regulation:
Prohibition on Certain Semiconductor
Products and Services
Department of Defense (DoD),
General Services Administration (GSA),
and National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA).
ACTION: Advanced notice of proposed
rulemaking; extension of comment
period.
AGENCY:
DoD, GSA, and NASA issued
an advance notice of proposed
rulemaking (ANPR) on May 3, 2024,
with considerations for amending the
Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) to
implement paragraphs (a), (b), and (h) in
section 5949 of the James M. Inhofe
National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2023 that prohibits
executive agencies from procuring or
obtaining certain products and services
that include covered semiconductor
products or services effective December
23, 2027. The deadline for submitting
comments is being extended from July
2, 2024, to August 2, 2024, to provide
additional time for interested parties to
provide comments on the ANPR.
Additionally, DoD, GSA, and NASA are
providing instructions on how to submit
business confidential information
within a public comment, for this ANPR
only.
SUMMARY:
PART 84—PHASEDOWN OF
HYDROFLUOROCARBONS
*
global warming potential of 700 or
greater. New variable refrigerant flow
systems using a regulated substance, or
a blend containing a regulated
substance, with a global warming
potential of 700 or greater may be
installed prior to January 1, 2027, where
all specified components of that system
are manufactured in the U.S. or
imported into the U.S. prior to January
1, 2026.
*
*
*
*
*
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For the advanced notice of
proposed rulemaking published on May
3, 2024 (89 FR 36738), submit
comments by August 2, 2024.
DATES:
Submit comments in
response to FAR Case 2023–008 to the
Federal eRulemaking portal at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
‘‘FAR Case 2023–008’’. Select the link
‘‘Comment Now’’ that corresponds with
‘‘FAR Case 2023–008’’. Follow the
instructions provided on the ‘‘Comment
Now’’ screen. Please include your name,
company name (if any), and ‘‘FAR Case
2023–008’’ on your attached document.
If your comment cannot be submitted
using https://www.regulations.gov, call
or email the points of contact in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this document for alternate instructions.
Instructions: Please submit comments
only and cite ‘‘FAR Case 2023–008’’ in
all correspondence related to this case.
Public comments may be submitted as
an individual, as an organization, or
anonymously (see frequently asked
questions at https://
www.regulations.gov/faq). Comments
submitted in response to this ANPR will
be made publicly available and are
subject to disclosure under the Freedom
of Information Act. For this reason,
please do not include in your comments
information of a confidential nature,
such as sensitive personal information
or proprietary information, or any
information that you would not want
publicly disclosed unless you follow the
instructions below for confidential
comments. Summary information of the
public comments received, including
any specific comments, will be posted
on regulations.gov.
All filers using the portal should use
the name of the person or entity
submitting comments as the name of
their files, in accordance with the
instructions below. Anyone submitting
business confidential/proprietary
information should clearly identify any
business confidential/proprietary
portion at the time of submission, file a
statement justifying nondisclosure and
referencing the specific legal authority
claimed, and provide a nonconfidential/non-proprietary version of
the submission. Any business
confidential information should be in an
uploaded file that has a file name
beginning with the characters ‘‘BC.’’
Any page containing business
confidential information must be clearly
marked ‘‘BUSINESS CONFIDENTIAL/
PROPRIETARY’’ on the top of that page.
ADDRESSES:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 123 (Wednesday, June 26, 2024)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 53373-53380]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-13900]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 84
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0643; FRL-11739-01-OAR]
Phasedown of Hydrofluorocarbons: Restrictions on the Use of HFCs
Under the AIM Act in Variable Refrigerant Flow Air Conditioning
Subsector
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is proposing to amend
a provision of the Technology Transitions regulations promulgated under
the American Innovation and Manufacturing Act. This action allows one
additional year, until January 1, 2027, solely for the installation of
new residential and light commercial air conditioning and heat pump
variable refrigerant flow systems that are 65,000 British thermal units
per hour or greater using components manufactured in the U.S. or
imported prior to January 1, 2026. The existing January 1, 2026,
compliance date for the installation of certain variable refrigerant
flow systems may result in significant stranded inventory that was
intended for new construction. EPA is promulgating this action to
mitigate the potential for significant stranded inventory in this
subsector.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before July 26, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2021-0643, 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-2021-0643 in the subject line of the message.
Mail: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA Docket
Center, Air and Radiation 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
number for this rulemaking. Comments received may be posted without
change to https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal
information provided.
Do not submit any information you consider to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) through https://www.regulations.gov. For
submission of confidential comments, please work with the person listed
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section. For additional
submission methods, the full EPA public comment policy, information
about CBI or multimedia submissions, and general guidance on making
effective comments, please visit https://www.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joshua Silver, Stratospheric
Protection Division, Office of Atmospheric Protection (Mail Code
6205A), Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW,
Washington, DC 20460; telephone number: (202) 564-2473; email address:
[email protected]. You may also visit EPA's website at https://www.epa.gov/climate-hfcs-reduction for further information.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, whenever ``we,'' ``us,'' ``the Agency,''
or ``our'' is used, we mean EPA. Acronyms that are used in this
rulemaking that may be helpful include:
AC--Air Conditioning
AHRI--Air-Conditioning, Heating, and Refrigeration Institute
AIM Act--American Innovation and Manufacturing Act of 2020
The Alliance--Alliance for Responsible Atmospheric Policy
APA--Administrative Procedure Act
BTU/h--British thermal units per hour
CAA--Clean Air Act
EPA--U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
FR--Federal Register
GWP--Global Warming Potential
HARDI--Heating, Air-conditioning & Refrigeration Distributors
International
HFC--Hydrofluorocarbon
OEM--Original Equipment Manufacturer
RACHP--Refrigeration, Air Conditioning, and Heat Pumps
SNAP--Significant New Alternatives Policy
VRF--Variable Refrigerant Flow
VRV--Variable Refrigerant Volume
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by this proposed rule if you
manufacture, import, export, sell or otherwise distribute, or install
residential and light commercial air conditioning and heat pump
equipment. Potentially affected categories, by North American Industry
Classification System code, include:
Plumbing, Heating, and Air Conditioning Contractors
(238220).
Air Conditioning and Warm Air Heating Equipment and
Commercial and Industrial Refrigeration Equipment Manufacturing
(333415).
Plumbing and Heating Equipment and Supplies (Hydronics)
Merchant Wholesalers (423720).
Warm Air Heating and Air Conditioning Equipment and
Supplies Merchant Wholesalers (423730).
This list is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a
guide for readers regarding entities that EPA expects could potentially
be affected by this action. Other types of entities not listed could
also be affected. To determine whether your entity may be affected by
this action, you should carefully examine the regulatory text at the
end of this document. If you have questions regarding the applicability
of this action to a particular entity, consult
[[Page 53374]]
the person listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
B. What action is the Agency taking?
This proposed rule would provide one additional year, until January
1, 2027, for the installation of new residential and light commercial
air conditioning and heat pump systems using variable refrigerant
volume (VRV) or variable refrigerant flow (VRF) technology that are
65,000 British thermal units per hour (BTU/h) or larger when using
components that were manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the U.S.
before January 1, 2026. Specifically, this proposed rule would allow
for pre-2026 condensing units, evaporators, and air handlers using R-
410A, a blend of two regulated hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) listed in the
American Innovation and Manufacturing Act of 2020 (AIM Act), or other
regulated substances and blends of regulated substances not meeting the
2023 Technology Transitions Rule's restrictions, to be assembled into
new systems (i.e., installed), so long as those systems are assembled
prior to January 1, 2027.
C. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?
On December 27, 2020, the AIM Act was enacted as section 103 in
Division S, Innovation for the Environment, of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2021 (codified at 42 U.S.C. 7675). Subsection
(k)(1)(A) of the AIM Act provides EPA with the authority to promulgate
necessary regulations to carry out EPA's functions under the Act,
including its obligations to ensure that the Act's requirements are
satisfied. Subsection (k)(1)(C) of the AIM Act also provides that CAA
sections 113, 114, 304, and 307 apply to the AIM Act and any
regulations EPA promulgates under the AIM Act as though the AIM Act
were part of title VI of the CAA.
The AIM Act authorizes EPA to address HFCs by providing new
authorities in three main areas: phasing down the production and
consumption of listed HFCs; managing these HFCs and their substitutes;
and facilitating the transition to next-generation technologies by
restricting use of these HFCs in the sector or subsectors in which they
are used. This rulemaking focuses on the third area: the transition to
next-generation technologies by restricting use of these HFCs in the
sector or subsectors in which they are used. Subsection (i) of the AIM
Act, ``Technology Transitions,'' provides that ``the Administrator may
by rule restrict, fully, partially, or on a graduated schedule, the use
of a regulated substance in the sector or subsector in which the
regulated substance is used.'' 42 U.S.C. 7675(i)(1). The AIM Act lists
18 HFCs, and by reference any of their isomers not so listed, that are
covered by the statute's provisions, referred to as ``regulated
substances'' under the Act.\1\ (42 U.S.C. 7675(c)(1)). EPA is proposing
to amend restrictions on the use of certain HFCs in the residential and
light commercial air conditioning and heat pump subsector for large
equipment that use VRV or VRF technology.
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\1\ ``Regulated substance'' and ``HFC'' are used interchangeably
in this document.
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D. What are the incremental costs and benefits of this action?
This proposed rule would reduce regulatory burden associated with
the Technology Transitions program while having a negligible
environmental impact. Original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) have
indicated that large quantities of manufactured inventory of VRF
equipment could go unsold without an extension of the installation
date. Stranding equipment that does not meet the new restrictions is
counter to the overall approach EPA has taken in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule. Extending the installation date for these systems
will not have an impact on the benefits modeled in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule because EPA is limiting the extension to equipment
manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the U.S. before the existing
compliance date of January 1, 2026 (88 FR 73098). Furthermore, EPA did
not analyze this subsector separately from the broader residential and
light commercial air conditioning and heat pump sector for which EPA
has already provided similar regulatory relief.
II. Background
A. Previous Technology Transitions Rules
On October 24, 2023, EPA's final rule establishing the Technology
Transitions program was published in the Federal Register (88 FR 73098,
hereafter ``2023 Technology Transitions Rule''). That rule restricted
the use of certain HFCs in over 40 subsectors in which they are used by
establishing limits for those subsectors based on global warming
potential (GWP). It also prohibited, among other things, the
manufacture and import of factory-completed products and the
installation of certain refrigeration, air conditioning, and heat pump
systems that use HFCs above specified GWP limits. The compliance dates
for these restrictions vary by subsector and range from January 1,
2025, to January 1, 2028. The rule also prohibited the sale,
distribution, and export of factory-completed products that do not
comply with the relevant restrictions three years after the prohibition
on manufacture and import.
After issuance of the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule,
manufacturers, importers, and distributors of residential and light
commercial air conditioning and heat pump equipment requested
clarification of the provisions of the rule regarding two categories of
equipment: residential and light commercial air conditioning and heat
pump systems and variable refrigerant flow (VRF) systems. The November
13, 2023, letter to EPA from the Air-Conditioning, Heating, and
Refrigeration Institute (AHRI), the Alliance for Responsible
Atmospheric Policy (the Alliance), and Heating, Air-conditioning &
Refrigeration Distributors International (HARDI) states that these
organizations understand that components for systems in these two
categories manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the U.S. before
January 1, 2025, and January 1, 2026, respectively, using a regulated
substance with a GWP of 700 or more, cannot be installed as new systems
after each such compliance date.\2\ The letter states that this would
be ``particularly problematic for residential new construction,
including both single-family and multi-family dwellings, where builders
order heating and cooling equipment well in advance of knowing the
exact date of install. Such equipment is not installed until
construction is nearly complete, but at time of order builders do not
know when this date will be.'' The letter further articulates that
allowing the use of components manufactured in the U.S. or imported
into the U.S. prior to the compliance date to be installed as part of
new systems for one year after the compliance date would provide some
relief to the economic and practical burdens.
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\2\ This letter can be found in the docket at EPA Docket ID No.
EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0643.
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On December 26, 2023, EPA issued an interim final rule (88 FR
88825) that reevaluated the specific circumstances for residential and
light commercial air conditioning and heat pumps and extended the
installation compliance date for that subsector from January 1, 2025,
to January 1, 2026, when using components that were manufactured in the
U.S. or imported into the U.S. prior to January 1, 2025. EPA separately
considered comments on that rule. The Agency is proposing a similar
adjustment to the restrictions on the installation of VRF systems.
[[Page 53375]]
Specifically, EPA is proposing to extend the installation compliance
date for the VRF subsector from January 1, 2026, to January 1, 2027,
when using components that were manufactured in the U.S. or imported
into the U.S. prior to January 1, 2026.
B. Variable Refrigerant Flow Subsector
Variable refrigerant flow (VRF) and variable refrigerant volume
(VRV) systems are direct expansion multi-split systems that incorporate
the following: a split system air conditioner or heat pump
incorporating a single refrigerant circuit that is a common piping
network to two or more indoor evaporators, each capable of independent
control, or compressor units. VRF split systems contain a single module
outdoor unit or combined module outdoor units with at least one
variable capacity compressor that has three or more steps of capacity,
with air or water as the heat source. This design is generally more
energy efficient than unitary split systems without VRF. In this rule,
EPA is considering only those VRF systems that are larger than 65,000
BTU/h and are used for air conditioning.
While this technology is used in air conditioning and heat pump
equipment of any size, the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule limited its
restrictions for this subsector to air-source VRF systems with
capacities of 65,000 BTU/h (19 kW) or more and water-source VRF systems
of any capacity. EPA proposed, and finalized, a compliance date that
provided one additional year compared to the rest of the residential
and light commercial air conditioning and heat pump subsector due to
the complexity of the design and installation for large VRF systems.
Data released annually by AHRI show that equipment with capacities of
65,000 BTU/h or more constitute roughly three percent of all
residential and light commercial equipment sold. VRF equipment of that
size are a subset of that three percent. EPA has summarized this
publicly available data and included it in the docket for this proposed
rule.
C. Avoiding Stranded Inventory
An important consideration in the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule
was to avoid stranding inventory of existing equipment. This includes
systems that are already installed and operating as well as unsold
equipment in the manufacturing and distribution chain. EPA stated that
``[w]e recognize that the production and purchase of products or
components that are unable to be sold to consumers is an economic and
environmental outcome no parties desire, and the proposed rule's
forward-looking compliance dates were intended to allow all parties in
the market supply chain sufficient time to avoid that outcome'' (88 FR
73123). EPA's goal of avoiding the stranding of inventory is consistent
with the requirement in subsection (i)(6) that Technology Transition
restrictions may not take effect sooner than one year from the date of
promulgation; this provision also serves to ensure that regulated
parties have sufficient time to prepare for and comply with
restrictions under this provision. In response to concerns about
stranded inventory raised during the public comment period on the
proposed rule, EPA made two significant adjustments in the final 2023
Technology Transitions Rule.
First, EPA removed the applicability of the rule's use restrictions
to components. EPA explained that components are pieces of equipment
that do not function independently and must be assembled together in
the field in order to function for its intended purpose. Components are
replaceable and a faulty component can be swapped out to avoid
replacing an entire system. Recognizing the ongoing need for servicing
and updating previously installed systems, EPA allowed for the
continued manufacture, import, sale, distribution, offer for sale and
distribution, and export of components that rely on regulated
substances that would not meet the new restrictions. Aside from
reporting requirements, components are therefore not subject to the
restrictions in the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule, except insofar as
those components may not be installed in new systems on or after the
installation compliance dates.
Second, the proposed rule set a compliance date, one year after the
manufacture and import compliance date, by which factory-completed
products could no longer be distributed, sold, and offered for sale or
distribution (i.e., the ``sell-through'' date). For the purposes of the
refrigeration, air conditioning, and heat pump (RACHP) sector, factory-
completed products are equipment which are charged at the factory with
the full and proper amount of refrigerant needed to function. Since the
Agency received many comments on this topic, including from those
commenters that considered one year to be insufficient especially for
certain seasonal products, EPA extended the sell-through period for
factory-completed products in the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule to
be three years after the manufacture and import compliance date.
Through these two modifications in the 2023 Technology Transitions
Rule, EPA determined it had minimized the potential for stranded
inventory. Specifically with respect to components, the Agency's view
was that there would continue to be a market for components not meeting
the GWP limit thresholds for new systems, because those components
could continue to enter the market to service existing systems.
Additionally, in the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule, EPA extended
the compliance dates, or raised the GWP limit, for the installation of
most field-assembled refrigeration systems (as compared to its proposed
compliance dates), recognizing, in part, that refrigeration systems
would require manufacturers and importers to make component equipment
available and that such systems can be specifically designed for an
individual facility and would need more time to transition.\3\ EPA did
not finalize later compliance dates for the installation of systems in
the residential and light commercial air conditioning and heat pump,
and VRF, subsectors in that rule.\4\ Subsequent to promulgating the
2023 Technology Transitions Rule, EPA learned that additional time,
which had already been extended to nearly all of the subsectors
covering field-assembled refrigeration systems, was needed for those
air conditioning subsectors. EPA responded by issuing an interim final
rule reevaluating the specific circumstances for residential and light
commercial air conditioning and heat pumps and extending the
installation compliance date for that subsector by one year (88 FR
88825) and by undertaking this proposed rulemaking.
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\3\ See 88 FR 73143 (industrial process refrigeration systems--
proposed January 1, 2025, compliance date, finalized January 1, 2026
compliance date (January 1, 2028, for some subsectors); 88 FR 73149
(data centers, ITEF, computer room cooling equipment--proposed
January 1, 2025, compliance date, finalized January 1, 2027
compliance date); 88 FR 73150 (systems in retail food refrigeration
subsector--proposed January 1, 2025, compliance date, finalized a
range of compliance dates from January 1, 2026 to January 1, 2028);
88 FR 73162 (cold storage warehouses--proposed January 1, 2025,
compliance date, finalized January 1, 2026, compliance date); 88 FR
73163 (ice rinks--retained proposed January 1, 2025, compliance date
in final rule but increased GWP limit from 150 to 700); 88 FR 73175
(chillers-industrial process refrigeration--proposed January 1, 2025
compliance date, finalized compliance dates of January 1, 2026, and
January 1, 2028 depending on the system).
\4\ See 88 FR 73178 (residential and light commercial air
conditioning and heat pumps--proposed January 1, 2025, compliance
date, finalized January 1, 2025, compliance date); id. (VRF
systems--proposed January 1, 2026, compliance date, finalized
January 1, 2026, compliance date).
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[[Page 53376]]
EPA is reevaluating the planning, purchasing, and installation
timeframes for new construction using VRF equipment as referenced in
the November 13, 2023, letter from industry stakeholders and is
proposing an extension of one additional year, which would align with
the additional time already provided for many refrigeration subsectors
in the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule and in the interim final rule
for installation of certain residential and light commercial air
conditioning and heat pumps.
Multi-unit residential and commercial new construction buildings
must be planned well in advance, including plans for the heating and
cooling systems intended to be installed in that new construction.
Builders may order those planned heating and cooling systems in concert
with the planning process without knowing when those systems will be
installed. As noted by stakeholders, installation of these systems is
often one of the final steps in construction. EPA acknowledges that it
may therefore be the case that for new construction planned to occur in
2026, builders may have already designed and received a permit ahead of
the issuance of the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule, for a building
that contains a heating and cooling system that is planned to be
installed in that new construction. Specifically, EPA recognizes that
for construction planned to occur in 2026, components of residential
and light commercial air conditioning and heat pump systems using VRF
with regulated substances may have already been incorporated into the
design of the building, received a permit from the appropriate
authority having jurisdiction, and ordered by builders, such that the
VRF system equipment associated with these projects are at risk of
being stranded. EPA also recognizes that as one of the first subsectors
facing a system installation compliance date under the new Technology
Transitions program, the ability of the VRF subsector to comply with
this deadline relies on manufacturers, importers, and distributors to
quickly make commercially available component parts that comply with
the GWP thresholds. For this reason, as well, EPA has determined it is
appropriate to propose this limited extension for compliance.
As discussed in the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule, EPA
established the compliance date of January 1, 2026, based on
consideration of the AIM Act's subsection (i)(4) factors, and in
particular, the assessment that the VRF subsector will be able to meet
the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule's GWP limit of 700, and transition
from the current use of HFCs in the subsector. EPA's consideration of
the statutory factors continues to support a speedy transition for this
subsector. However, as discussed above, the Agency recognizes that the
January 1, 2026, installation compliance date could result in builders
of new construction being left with stranded inventory that could not
be used. Stranding inventory is an economically and environmentally
undesirable outcome, and the issue addressed in this proposed rule was
not brought to the Agency's attention until after the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule was finalized. This action therefore proposes to
extend the January 1, 2026, new installation compliance date to January
1, 2027, provided the new installation uses components that were
manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the U.S. prior to January 1,
2026.
Stakeholders, including the authors of the November 13, 2023,
letter, have indicated that extending the installation compliance date
by one year would alleviate their concerns about stranded inventory.\5\
EPA also heard from one stakeholder that its concerns would be
alleviated by exempting the installation of VRF systems in buildings
from the restrictions of the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule if those
buildings received a permit prior to finalization of the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule (i.e., October 24, 2023).\6\
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\5\ The letter dated November 13, 2023, can be found in the
docket at EPA Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0643. Another letter
from a stakeholder, dated October 17, 2023, can be found in the
docket for this proposed rule.
\6\ The letter from this stakeholder, dated March 5, 2024, and
supporting documentation that accompanied that letter, are included
in the docket for this proposed rule.
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EPA recognized in the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule that some
buildings had already been permitted prior to finalization of that
rule. While permits may not always specify the refrigerant to be used
in a refrigeration or air conditioning technology in a building, some
permits may require a particular regulated substance or blend of
regulated substances. Recognizing that where earlier issued permits
required a particular regulated substance or blend, and where such
permitted systems were likely to be highly complex and costly to
redesign, the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule provided one additional
year beyond the final rule compliance dates for the installation of
certain field-assembled systems. Specifically, for the installation of
refrigeration systems in four subsectors (certain industrial process
refrigeration systems; retail food refrigeration--supermarkets; cold
storage warehouses; and ice rinks) if an approved building permit was
issued before the signature date of the 2023 Technology Transitions
Rule (i.e., October 5, 2023), and the permit specified the use of a
system containing a particular regulated substance or blend of
regulated substances with a GWP above the relevant GWP threshold for
that subsector (88 FR 73120; 40 CFR 84.54(d)).
EPA intended this limited flexibility in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule to prevent the need to redesign these systems and, in
some cases, the facility that houses these systems. EPA granted this
permit-based extension selectively, as most systems are not typically
designed specifically for an individual facility and/or most systems
have a later compliance date and thus can make any necessary changes
with the GWP restrictions in mind.
The stakeholder that requested an exemption of VRF systems from the
restrictions of the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule where such systems
were covered by a building permit issued prior to finalization of the
2023 Technology Transitions Rule, is a developer of buildings which are
hundreds of thousands of square feet. The stakeholder described, in
information it provided to EPA, how the time from initial permitting to
final construction can take several years.\7\ One of its buildings
received an approved permit in June of 2023, and the developer expects
the building to be completed in 2028. This stakeholder would like the
VRF system in this building to be exempted from the restrictions of the
2023 Technology Transitions Rule, which would otherwise have required
installation of GWP-compliant VRF systems starting on January 1, 2026.
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\7\ See letter from stakeholder, dated March 5, 2024, included
in the docket for this proposed rule.
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Included in the information this stakeholder provided to EPA was an
attachment from the manufacturer of VRF equipment that the developer
intends to install in its building. In this attachment, dated March 4,
2024, the manufacturer states that while it ``has not made available
selection software or complete engineering data for the upcoming R-32
product to satisfy the project'' indicated by the developer, the
manufacturer ``can confirm that on or before the date of the mandated
transition to A2L refrigerants, equipment will be available for design,
[[Page 53377]]
manufacture, and sale in North America.'' \8\
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\8\ See Attachment A, after the letter from stakeholder, dated
March 5, 2024, (page 10), included in the docket for this proposed
rule.
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EPA does not agree that it would be appropriate and consistent with
subsection (i)(4) to provide a broad, unlimited exemption from the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule to any project where the system had
received a building permit prior to finalization of the rule. EPA is
cognizant in establishing these restrictions, and in considering
requested flexibilities from stakeholders, that in some instances, the
individual costs to some regulated entities to accommodate updated
regulations in their planning must be balanced with the national
priorities established in the AIM Act of phasing down HFCs on a set
schedule and transitioning away from the use of HFCs where practicable.
In this case, EPA's analysis under the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule
was that lower-GWP substitutes for HFCs will be available for the
component equipment needed for these VRF installations in time for the
January 1, 2026, compliance date. One of the primary manufacturers of
this equipment has confirmed EPA's assessment about availability in the
materials provided to the Agency. The fact that such equipment may not
be available for purchase in early 2024 does not mean that projects
planned for 2028 should not be expected to comply with restrictions
promulgated in 2023.
However, EPA recognizes that a permit-based flexibility is an
alternative way to accommodate potential concerns about compliance. We
are therefore proposing in the alternative a similar one-year extension
that was provided to certain field-assembled systems with building
permits that specified use of a particular HFC or blend under the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule. Specifically, this proposal in the
alternative would extend the compliance date for installation of new
VRF systems from January 1, 2026, to January 1, 2027, where the
building permit both specified the HFC or HFC blend to be used and was
issued prior to the signature date of the 2023 Technology Transitions
Rule (October 5, 2023). This alternative proposal is consistent with
the permit-based flexibility provided to the four previously mentioned
refrigeration subsectors (88 FR 73120; 40 CFR 84.54(d)). However, it is
likely that fewer projects would meet the criteria for this permit-
based extension compared to the number of projects potentially impacted
by EPA's primary proposal of extending the compliance date to January
1, 2027, for installation of all VRF systems using components
manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the U.S. by January 1, 2026.
D. Limiting the Environmental Impact of This Action
EPA is narrowly tailoring this proposal to respond to stakeholder
concerns about stranded inventory in this subsector while maintaining
the human health and environmental benefits of the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule. To do so, EPA is proposing to extend the installation
compliance date by one year to January 1, 2027, only for new VRF
systems installed from specified components (e.g., condensing units and
indoor evaporators) that were manufactured in the U.S. or imported into
the U.S. prior to January 1, 2026. This restriction means that the
total number of VRF systems using HFCs or HFC blends with a GWP above
700 installed in 2025 and 2026 would match what the Agency modeled for
installation in 2025. The extra year for installation would not
increase demand for HFCs in this subsector but rather could shift some
of the demand from 2025 into 2026.
EPA is proposing to extend the original compliance date for new
installations in this subsector to January 1, 2027, when using
components manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the U.S. on or
after January 1, 2026. These components remain subject to the original
restrictions of the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule. Specifically, if
they contain an HFC with a GWP of 700 or greater, their use is limited
to servicing previously installed systems. As elaborated on more below,
all the existing labeling, reporting, and recordkeeping requirements
also continue to apply to components using, or intended to use, any
regulated substance. Consideration of extending the compliance date for
all installations in the subsector by one year is not warranted based
on EPA's prior analysis of the availability of substitutes within this
subsector, as described in the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule and
supporting documents in the docket for that rule.\9\
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\9\ This refers to EPA Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2021-0643.
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EPA finds that this proposed approach of providing additional time
for installation effectively responds to stakeholder concerns about
stranded inventory while remaining protective of the environment. This
approach was suggested by industry stakeholders in their letter dated
November 13, 2023, and it aligns with industry's plans to transition in
this subsector.
This proposed rule would provide an additional year for
installation only if all ``specified components'' of that system are
manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the U.S. prior to January 1,
2026. The term ``specified component'' is defined under the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule as ``condensing units, condensers,
compressors, evaporator units, and evaporators'' (88 FR 73112). Other
components of an air conditioning or heat pump system such as valves or
refrigerant piping are not restricted by the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule and can be installed regardless of manufacture or
import date.
E. How would the labeling, recordkeeping, and reporting provisions
apply?
The 2023 Technology Transitions Rule requires labels on products
and certain components that use HFCs. The labeling requirement takes
effect for each subsector at the same time as the manufacture and
import prohibition for products or the installation prohibition for
systems. This timing reflects the primary purpose of the labels, which
is for assessing compliance of products and systems in sectors and
subsectors with active HFC restrictions.
This action would not require any specific labeling for components
that are manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the U.S. prior to
January 1, 2026. Nameplates typically include the date that a component
is manufactured, which would be sufficient for the purposes of this
action. Furthermore, it would be impractical to require entities that
are not OEMs to relabel components that are already within the
distribution chain.
This action would not change the existing labeling requirements
related to components that are effective January 1, 2026. For specified
components of systems, the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule required
labels as of the applicable installation compliance date. This means
that for specified components manufactured in the U.S. or imported into
the U.S. on or after January 1, 2026, the requirements of the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule continue to apply. These requirements
include, among others, that such components must be labeled with the
statement ``For servicing existing equipment only.'' This labeling is
particularly important to distinguish components manufactured in the
U.S. or imported into the U.S. before January 1, 2026, from those that
are not.
[[Page 53378]]
The 2023 Technology Transitions Rule established recordkeeping and
reporting requirements for any entity that manufactures or imports
products or specified components that use or are intended to use HFCs
in the sectors and subsectors covered in that rule. The reporting
period for all sectors and subsectors starts on January 1, 2025, and
the first reports must be submitted to the Agency by March 31, 2026.
This action does not add to nor modify the existing reporting and
recordkeeping requirements for specified components. EPA is not
proposing to establish new reporting and recordkeeping requirements
related to the sale or installation of components manufactured in the
U.S. or imported into the U.S. prior to January 1, 2025. Reporting and
recordkeeping would still be required for specified VRF components that
are manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the U.S. on or after
January 1, 2025.
F. Evaluation of the Subsection (i)(4) Factors
Subsection (i)(4) of the AIM Act directs EPA to factor in, to the
extent practicable and using best available data, various
considerations when carrying out a rulemaking under subsection (i). As
discussed in detail in the preamble to the 2023 Technology Transitions
Rule, EPA views subsection (i)(4)(A) through (D) as providing
overarching direction for setting restrictions under subsection (i) (88
FR 73129-73141). In this action, EPA is not reconsidering the
interpretations provided in the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule
regarding how it considers the factors laid out in subsection (i)(4).
Nor is the Agency revisiting its analysis of the (i)(4) factors with
respect to the residential and light commercial air conditioning and
heat pump subsector that uses VRF technology as set forth in the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule preamble (88 FR 73177-73180). However, in
proposing this narrow adjustment to the January 1, 2026, compliance
date for the residential and light commercial air conditioning and heat
pump VRF subsector, we have considered the (i)(4) factors to the extent
practicable, as applicable to the Agency's adjustment of that
compliance date.
The issue being addressed by this proposal was brought to the
Agency's attention by stakeholders impacted by the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule. As noted in EPA's discussion of subsection (i)(4)(A),
in addition to information generated by other governing bodies and
agencies, the Agency does also take into account information provided
by industry, environmental non-governmental organizations, trade
associations, academia, standard-setting bodies, and more (88 FR
73129). We acknowledge that in some cases, regulated entities may be
best situated to identify best available information regarding
implementation challenges. As part of this proposed rule, EPA is
providing an opportunity for comment and invites stakeholders who may
have information relevant to this action to weigh in.
With respect to the Agency's evaluation of the availability of
substitutes under subsection (i)(4)(B), EPA previously determined that
substitutes with a GWP less than 700 are available effective January 1,
2026, for the residential and light commercial air conditioning and
heat pump VRF subsector. EPA is not proposing to change that
determination and continues to find that substitutes with a GWP less
than 700 will be available January 1, 2026, for this subsector.
Manufacturers in this subsector are currently making air conditioning
and heat pump systems and components with lower-GWP refrigerants for
other markets and are prepared to meet the January 1, 2026,
installation compliance date for such systems. This action is not
proposing to reconsider the Agency's prior evaluation of the
availability of substitutes for meeting the use restrictions issued in
the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule for this subsector; rather, this
action is narrowly tailored to address the disposition of components
manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the U.S. prior to January 1,
2026.
This proposal to adjust the installation compliance date for large
VRF systems is motivated by the policy goal of avoiding stranding
inventory where possible, while recognizing that the AIM Act directs
the Agency to establish use restrictions where appropriate for sectors
and subsectors to move away from the use of high-GWP HFCs. We believe
these goals to be consistent with the direction in subsection
(i)(4)(C), which instructs the Agency to factor in, to the extent
practicable, overall economic costs and environmental impacts, as
compared to historical trends. As discussed in the 2023 Technology
Transitions Rule, EPA interprets (i)(4)(C) as purposefully
accommodating different types and degrees of analysis of economic costs
and environmental impacts, including costs and impacts that may be
difficult to quantify (88 FR 73138). The narrow adjustment being
proposed would reduce the potential to unintentionally strand large VRF
components, while still achieving a prompt transition for this
subsector. Specifically, even with the adjustments in this proposed
rule, manufacturers and importers of components for new VRF systems
will be required in the very near term (i.e., before January 1, 2026)
to transition from using R-410A and other higher-GWP regulated
substances in those components, and developers and builders will not be
permitted to install new systems that use R-410A or other non-compliant
HFCs or HFC blends beginning January 1, 2027. This proposed action
would not affect the overall consumption of HFCs because EPA does not
anticipate a change in the amount of new VRF equipment that would be
manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the U.S prior to January 1,
2026. Further discussion of environmental impacts can be found in
section III.B.
EPA requests comment on the incremental costs and benefits
associated with this action, including avoiding impacts such as
stranded inventory (e.g., number and type of units affected) and on the
incremental impacts to regulated entities regarding compliance (e.g.,
avoiding redistribution of equipment, avoiding revisions or new permits
to replace previously secured building permits).
Finally, subsection (i)(4)(D) directs the Agency to factor in, to
the extent practicable, the remaining phasedown period for regulated
substances under the allowance allocation program. The reduction in the
supply of HFCs is an important factor supporting compliance dates and
GWP limits that are as stringent as feasible under the analysis of all
the (i)(4) factors. EPA finds that this proposed rule would not
materially affect the demand for HFCs because it limits installations
to components that were manufactured in the U.S. or imported into the
U.S. prior to January 1, 2026. The effect of this proposed rule would
be to extend the installations that EPA modeled to occur in 2025 over
the two-year period of 2025 and 2026. However, given the small size of
this subsector, at a subset of roughly three percent of all equipment
sold in the residential and light commercial subsector, EPA did not
independently model this subsector in the 2023 Technology Transitions
Rule's Regulatory Impact Assessment Addendum.
G. Negotiated Rulemaking
Prior to proposing a rule, subsection (i)(2)(A) of the Act directs
EPA to consider negotiating with stakeholders in the sector or
subsector subject to the potential rule in accordance with
[[Page 53379]]
negotiated rulemaking procedures established under subchapter III of
chapter 5 of title 5, United States Code (commonly known as the
``Negotiated Rulemaking Act of 1990''). If EPA makes a determination to
use the negotiated rulemaking procedures, subsection (i)(2)(B) requires
that EPA, to the extent practicable, give priority to completing that
rulemaking over completing rulemakings under subsection (i) that are
not using that procedure. If EPA does not use the negotiated rulemaking
process, subsection (i)(2)(C) requires the Agency to publish an
explanation of the decision not to use that procedure before
commencement of the rulemaking process.
EPA noted in the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule that, where
appropriate, EPA will consider recent Agency actions and decisions
related to restrictions on the use of HFCs in sectors and subsectors
when considering using negotiated rulemaking procedures. EPA provided
the example of not issuing a separate notice to consider using
negotiated rulemaking for four petitions received after a first round
of petitions had received public notice. EPA's reasoning was that these
petitions were received well ahead of the final action and the
requested restrictions are in the same sectors and subsectors contained
in petitions for which a determination had already been made. EPA
stated that nothing in those four petitions caused EPA to reconsider
that decision and that it was unnecessary for the Agency to reconsider
whether to use negotiated rulemaking procedures.
Upon considering recent Agency action, specifically the 2023
Technology Transitions Rule, this proposed rulemaking does not merit a
reconsideration of the prior determination not to use negotiated
rulemaking procedures. This proposal is a direct and immediate response
to a specific concern arising from the recent Agency action to
establish a compliance date for the installation of certain systems
within the residential and light commercial air conditioning and heat
pump VRF subsector. EPA is not proposing to address a new subsector nor
establish a new restriction. Instead, this proposed rule would provide
targeted relief to address concerns about stranded inventory in a
single subsector subject to a recently finalized restriction.
Furthermore, this action was requested through a November 13, 2023,
letter signed jointly by AHRI, the Alliance, and HARDI, which together
represents a majority of the stakeholders in the subsector subject to
the rule. The groups did not request the use of the negotiated
rulemaking procedure in their letter, and EPA does not believe that the
rule would benefit from the negotiated rulemaking procedure especially
because timeliness is a concern universally shared by stakeholders in
this subsector.
III. 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 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 an information collection burden under
the PRA because it does not contain any information collection
activities.
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. In
making this determination, EPA concludes that the impact of concern for
this proposed rule is any significant adverse economic impact on small
entities and that the Agency is certifying that this proposed rule
would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities because the proposed rule would relieve regulatory
burden on the small entities subject to the rule. This proposed rule
would prevent the stranding of components used to install residential
and light commercial air conditioning and heat pump systems using
variable refrigerant flow technology. We have therefore concluded that
this action would relieve regulatory burden for all directly regulated
small entities.
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 tribal governments or the private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have
substantial direct effects on the states, on the relationship between
the national government and the states, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal implications as specified in
Executive Order 13175. It will not have substantial direct effects on
tribal governments, on the relationship between the Federal government
and Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
between the Federal government and Indian tribes, as specified in
Executive Order 13175. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not apply to
this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health and Safety Risks
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. This action is narrowly tailored to prevent the
stranding of certain air conditioning and heat pump equipment using
variable refrigerant flow technology while not affecting the demand for
HFCs. 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, 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 (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
[[Page 53380]]
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
EPA believes that this type of action does not concern human health
or environmental conditions and therefore cannot be evaluated with
respect to potentially disproportionate and adverse effects on
communities with environmental justice concerns. This action is
narrowly tailored to prevent the stranding of inventory of air
conditioning and heat pump equipment using variable refrigerant flow
technology while not affecting the demand for HFCs.
Although this action does not concern human health or environmental
conditions, EPA identified and addressed environmental justice concerns
within the 2023 Technology Transitions Rule (88 FR 73098; October 24,
2023).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 84
Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Chemicals, Climate change, Emissions, Imports,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, EPA proposes to amend 40
CFR part 84 as follows:
PART 84--PHASEDOWN OF HYDROFLUOROCARBONS
0
1. The authority citation for part 84 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Pub. L. 116-260, Division S, Sec. 103.
Subpart B--Restrictions on the Use of Hydrofluorocarbons
0
2. Amend Sec. 84.54 by revising paragraph (c)(2) to read as follows:
Sec. 84.54 Restrictions on the use of hydrofluorocarbons.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) Effective January 1, 2026, variable refrigerant flow systems
for use as residential or light commercial air-conditioning or heat
pumps, using a regulated substance, or a blend containing a regulated
substance, with a global warming potential of 700 or greater. New
variable refrigerant flow systems using a regulated substance, or a
blend containing a regulated substance, with a global warming potential
of 700 or greater may be installed prior to January 1, 2027, where all
specified components of that system are manufactured in the U.S. or
imported into the U.S. prior to January 1, 2026.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2024-13900 Filed 6-25-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P