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This report provides an overview of the state of air quality in South Carolina, including the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS), pollutant designations, impacts of non-attainment, the State Implementation Plan (SIP) process, and voluntary measures to improve air quality.
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State of the Air Quality in South Carolina Rhonda B. Thompson, P.E. Assistant Bureau Chief Bureau of Air Quality
National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) • Clean Air Act requires EPA to review NAAQS every 5 years • Litigation, court-order deadlines, accelerated schedules • Six Criteria Pollutants: • Ozone (O3) • Particulate Matter (PM) • Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) • Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) • Lead (Pb) • Carbon Monoxide (CO) • States have primary responsibility for ensuring attainment (compliance) of NAAQS once established by EPA
NAAQS Standards • Primary Standards – protect public health with an ample margin of safety (especially children, the elderly, and persons with respiratory problems) • Secondary Standards – protect public welfare (soil, water, visibility wildlife, crops, vegetation, national monuments, buildings)
NAAQS Designations & Boundaries • Designations • “Attainment”, “Non-attainment”, “Unclassifiable” • Ambient monitoring stations (3-year averages) • Boundaries • partial counties, metropolitan planning organization (MPO) boundaries, entire county, metropolitan statistical areas (MSA), or larger • Can cross state lines (NC, GA)
Designations • “Attainment” • Meeting the standard, in compliance • “Unclassifiable” • Cannot be classified, lack of available data • “Non-attainment” • Not meeting the standard, non-compliance • Classifications: extreme, severe, moderate, marginal
Non-attainment Designation Impacts • Public Health Impacts • Respiratory illnesses, irritations • Sensitive populations most at risk • Air Permitting Impacts • More stringent control devices ($) • Purchase offsets within area • Economic Impact • Vehicle Inspection & Maintenance (I&M) program • Transportation Conformity • Possibly less industry growth
SIP Process • State Implementation Plan (SIP) • Written plan showing how State will get back into attainment, continue to attain standards • Available Tools: • National/federal measures – mobile sources (fuel economy standards, etc) and industry standards • State standards, revisions • Air permit restrictions • Voluntary measures – working with local government, industry, public
Voluntary Measures • Lawn mower exchanges • Gas can exchanges • Car Care events • Anti-open burning campaigns • Anti-idling campaigns • Carpooling/Rideshare programs • School bus retrofits (grant funding, enforcement settlements)
Ozone NAAQS • How formed? VOC and NOx react in the presence of heat and sunlight, also known as “smog” • March 2008: EPA reduced standard from 0.08 ppm to 0.075 ppm • September 2009: New EPA Administration announced it would reconsider 2008 standard • Outside CASAC’s recommended range • January 19, 2010 – new proposed range • Primary: 0.060 – 0.070 ppm • Secondary: 7-15 ppm
Ozone NAAQS • August 31, 2010 – EPA finalizes standards • January 2011 – States must submit recommended non-attainment/ attainment boundaries • April 2011 – EPA will propose boundaries in Federal Register • August 2011 – EPA finalizes boundaries in Federal Register • December 2013 – SIPs due to EPA • 2014 – 2031 – States demonstrate attainment (depending on severity)
PM2.5 NAAQS • Particulate matter with a diameter < 2.5 microns in size (also called “PM fine”) • Not visible to naked eye, penetrate deep in lungs, more harmful than PM10 • Combustion sources (stationary and mobile) • Current Standard • Primary Annual average: 15 ug/m3 • Primary 24-hr average: 35 ug/m3 • Secondary: Same as primary • No South Carolina monitor currently exceeding daily or annual standard (1 “unclassifiable” area)
PM2.5 NAAQS • Next proposed standard 11/2010 • Finalize standard 07/2011 • Suggested Proposed Scenarios • Annual: 12 – 13 µg/m3 (range) • 24-hr: stay at 35 µg/m3; or 30 - 35 µg/m3 (range) OR • Annual: 10 – 11 µg/m3 (range) • 24-hr: 25 - 30 µg/m3 (range)
NO2 NAAQS • Largest contributors: mobile vehicles, power plants, industrial sources burning fuel • New standard finalized January 22, 2010; effective April 12, 2010 • New 1-hr standard (100 ppb); annual standard retained (53 ppb) • South Carolina currently attaining the standard statewide • Additional monitors in largest metropolitan areas ($$) • Possible “near road” monitors near busiest interstates ($$, safety) • Many facilities having difficulty meeting 1-hr modeling requirements for air permits
SO2 NAAQS • December 2009: New SO2 1-hr standard proposed range (50 – 100 ppb) • June 2, 2010: SO2 final rule (75 ppb); effective August 1, 2010 • Irmo monitor reading ~ 80 ppb • New hybrid monitor/modeling approach: states may use refined modeling to demonstrate compliance • Areas deemed “unclassifiable” without adequate monitoring data or modeling • Additional monitors may be needed in Charlotte and Augusta areas
Lead NAAQS • Largest contributors: lead-based fuels (aviation), lead processing industries • November 2008: New lead standard; 10-fold decrease – 150 ng/m3 (new standard) • South Carolina attaining the standard statewide • Additional monitoring at Parklane (Columbia) • Large lead emitters (emissions > 1 ton/year) require site-specific monitor (proposed rule to lower site-specific monitoring threshold to ½ ton/year) • Some new facilities will require site-specific monitors
CO NAAQS • All areas in South Carolina meet current standard • October 29, 2010: New CO standard will be proposed • May 12, 2011: EPA finalizes new CO standard
What you can do now? • Review all proposed standards and submit written comments to the EPA • Push for national multi-pollutant strategies • Participate in local partnerships/stakeholder groups • Participate in upcoming boundary meetings • Take actions to reduce emissions • Voluntary measures • Reduce energy consumption
Questions Rhonda B. Thompson, P.E. Assistant Bureau Chief Bureau of Air Quality – SCDHEC (803)898-4391 thompsrb@dhec.sc.gov