1 / 27

Ozone Regulation under the Clean Air Act

Ozone Regulation under the Clean Air Act. Darcy J. Anderson AZ Dept. of Environmental Quality. Presentation Outline. 8-Hour Ozone Standard – Background / Timeline 8-Hour Ozone Standard – Designation Process Arizona Designation Process – Examples

boyd
Télécharger la présentation

Ozone Regulation under the Clean Air Act

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ozone Regulation under the Clean Air Act Darcy J. Anderson AZ Dept. of Environmental Quality

  2. Presentation Outline • 8-Hour Ozone Standard – Background / Timeline • 8-Hour Ozone Standard – Designation Process • Arizona Designation Process – Examples • Potential Impacts of 8-Hour Ozone Designations on Tribes • Next Steps in 8-Hour Ozone Process

  3. NAAQS for Ozone • 1-hr standard 0.12 ppm (parts per million) • 8-hr standard0.08 ppm

  4. The 8-Hr Rolling Average • Average of 8 consecutive hours • EPA ozone standard requires that 4th highest 8-hr average be ≤ 0.084ppm • Actual standard is 0.080ppm, but anything ≤ 0.084 is truncated to 0.080 • Small-group activity on this today at 1:45

  5. 8-Hour Ozone Standard – Background / Timeline • July 1997: EPA issued revised 8-hour health-based standard for ozone. • Studies show that long-term, low exposure to ozone as harmful to human health as short-term, high exposure. • New standard more protective for longer exposure

  6. 8-Hour Ozone Standard – Background / Timeline • 2000: EPA issues guidance documents • February 2001: • U.S. Supreme Court upheld 8-hour ozone standard • Directed EPA to develop implementation approach

  7. Comparison of Ozone Standards *Because of rounding convention, 0.085 ppm considered level of violation

  8. 8-Hour Ozone Standard - Designation Process • November 2002: lawsuit settlement • EPA & environmental groups agree on schedule for EPA to promulgate 8-hour ozone designations

  9. 8-Hour Ozone Standard - Designation Process (cont.) • February 27, 2003: EPA memorandum on 8-hour ozone designations • Extended deadline for states to submit recommendations for designating areas • New deadline July 15, 2003

  10. 8-Hour Ozone Standard - Designation Process (cont.) • June 2003: EPA proposes rule for implementing 8-hour NAAQS • Final rule for implementing 8-hour NAAQS expected early 2004

  11. 8-Hour Ozone Standard - Designation Process (cont.) • July 15, 2003: State recommendations for area designations submitted to EPA • Tribes could also submit recommendations by this date • Options • Attainment / unclassifiable • Nonattainment

  12. 8-Hour Ozone Standard - Designation Process(cont.) • July 2003: Governor’s recommendation for AZ submitted to EPA • Recommended all areas of state attainment / unclassifiable for 8-hour standard except Phoenix metro area • No state jurisdiction / recommendation for Indian reservations • Some Arizona tribes submitted their recommendations

  13. Arizona Designation Process: Examples • Monitoring data – exceedances, violations • Location of emission sources • Meteorology, geography, and jurisdictional boundaries • Population • Traffic and commuting patterns

  14. Potential Impacts of 8-Hour Ozone Designations on Tribes • Boundary / background / transport • Tribes can provide valuable ozone data for urban nonattainment areas • Tribes can conduct additional ozone and NOx monitoring to assist with model verification • Public information / outreach (API) • Ozone mapping – AIRNOW

  15. Next Steps in 8-Hour Ozone Process • February 6, 2004: Revised nonattainment area recommendations due to EPA • EPA looking at 2003 ozone monitoring data to determine effect on recommended area designations • Designations and classifications published in FR by April 30, 2004

  16. Next Steps: Ozone Implementation Plan • June 2, 2003 – EPA proposed rule to implement 8-hour NAAQS • Option 1: All areas under Subpart 2 • Option 2: Separate areas based on whether they meet the 1-hour standard • Regulate areas meeting the 1-hour standard under Subpart 1 • Regulate areas exceeding the 1-hour standard under Subpart 2 • Subpart 1 - more flexible, minimal mandated controls • Subpart 2 - proscriptive (attainment dates based on classification [marginal, moderate, serious, etc]

  17. Next Steps: Ozone Implementation Plan (cont.) • Anticipate implementation of new standard for Phoenix area either under subpart 1 or marginal under subpart 2 • Subpart 1 option - Attainment demonstration due 2007; attainment required 2009 • Subpart 2 option – Attainment required 2007 • New control measures may be necessary to meet proposed attainment date

  18. Next Steps in 8-Hour OzoneProcess: NOx Waiver • What is a NOx waiver? • Draft rule proposes NOx waiver under CAA Section 182(f) apply to any area designated nonattainment for 8-hour standard • Requires new analysis to obtain waiver under 8-hour guidance

  19. NOx Waiver (cont.) • NSR & RACT requirements for major stationary VOC sources also apply to major NOx sources • Unless NOx waiver provision implemented

  20. For More Detail • Refer to full text outline in manual • Outline follows PowerPoint slide pages

More Related