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SECTION-BY-SECTION SUMMARY OF THE CLEAR SKIES ACT OF 2002
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The Clear Skies Act of 2002 extends and reorganizes Title IV of
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the Clean Air Act to establish new cap-and-trade programs requiring
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reductions of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and mercury
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emissions from electric generating facilities. The Clear Skies Act
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retains existing Title IV requirements until the new requirements
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take effect. Further, the Clear Skies Act amends certain provisions
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of Title I of the Clean Air Act that currently apply to the
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combustion units covered by the new Title IV emission caps.
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Title IV of the Clean Air Act
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As revised by the Clear Skies Act, Title IV has five Parts. Part
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A contains provisions common to the control of all three
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pollutants. Part B contains provisions specifically for sulfur
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dioxide emission reductions. Part C contains provisions
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specifically for nitrogen oxides emission reductions. Part D
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contains provisions specifically for mercury emission reductions.
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Part E contains performance standards for affected units and
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provisions for research, environmental monitoring, and
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assessment.
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Part A. General Provisions
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SECTION 401. Reserved.
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SECTION 402. Definitions
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Section 402 is based on the existing Section 402, modified to
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include new terms used in Parts A through D and to move to Subpart
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1 of Part B the defined terms that are unique to the Acid Rain
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Program.
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SECTION 403. Allowance System
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Section 403 is the existing Section 403, modified to apply to
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sulfur dioxide allowances, nitrogen oxides allowances, and mercury
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allowances under the new trading programs essentially the same
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allowance system provisions that apply to sulfur dioxide allowances
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under the existing Acid Rain Program. Certain provisions unique to
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the Acid Rain Program are moved to Subpart 1 of Part B. Further,
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for the Acid Rain Program and the new trading programs, the
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existing Section 403 is revised to provide that only the signature
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of the party transferring allowances (not the signatures of both
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parties to the transfer) is necessary for the transfer to be
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effective. The Administrator has already issued regulations under
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the existing Section 403 for sulfur dioxide allowances and must
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issue regulations within 24 months of enactment governing the
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issuance, transfer, recording, and tracking of the nitrogen oxides
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allowances and mercury allowances. The allocations of these three
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types of allowances, and the determination of the data used in
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making the allocations, will not be subject to judicial review.
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Like sulfur dioxide allowances, nitrogen oxides allowances and
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mercury allowances are limited authorizations to emit and are not
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property rights. Owners or operators of units or facilities must
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hold sulfur dioxide allowances, nitrogen oxides allowances, or
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mercury allowances at least equal to the emissions of sulfur
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dioxide, nitrogen oxides, or mercury respectively. Under the Acid
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Rain Program and the NOx SIP call, the owner or operator of each
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affected unit must hold allowances at least equal to annual
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emissions from the unit. Section 403 revises the existing Section
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403 to provide for facility-level, rather than unit-level
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compliance: beginning in 2008 for the sulfur dioxide and nitrogen
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oxides and beginning in 2010 for mercury, the owner or operator of
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each facility with affected units must hold allowances at least
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equal to the total annual emissions of those units.
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In order to meet the allowance holding requirements for nitrogen
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oxides starting 2008 or for sulfur dioxide or mercury starting
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2010, the owner or operator of a facility may use allowances
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purchased in a direct sale from the Administrator at a fixed price,
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i.e., $4,000 for a sulfur dioxide or nitrogen oxides allowance
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(covering one ton) and $2,187.50 for a mercury allowance (covering
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one ounce). These prices will be annually adjusted for inflation.
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For the direct sales, the Administrator will use allowances from
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future auctions. If this results in the removal of all allowances
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from the relevant auction for three consecutive years, the
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Administrator must conduct and submit to the Congress a study to
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determine whether revisions to the relevant trading program are
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necessary.
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SECTION 404. Permits and Compliance Plans
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Section 404 is the existing Section 408, modified to apply to
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the new sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and mercury trading
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programs essentially the same permit provisions that apply to the
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existing Acid Rain Program. Certain permitting provisions unique to
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the Acid Rain Program are moved to Subpart 1 of Part B or, if
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expired, are deleted. The requirements of all the trading programs
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must be reflected in permits issued to the affected facilities
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under this section and Title V of the Clean Air Act. The permits
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must prohibit (i) emissions in excess of the allowances held and
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(ii) use of allowances before the period for which the allowances
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were issued. Each permit application must include a statement that
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the owner or operator will meet the applicable allowance holding
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requirements, and such statement serves as the compliance plan
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under Title V for these trading programs. The existing Section 408
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is revised to provide that a permit application covering a unit in
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a particular trading program must be submitted to the permitting
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authority in accordance with the deadline established under Title
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V, rather than the deadline (e.g., twenty-four months before a new
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unit commences operation) under existing Section 408.
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SECTION 405. Monitoring, Reporting, and Recordkeeping
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Requirements
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Section 405 is the existing Section 412, modified to apply to
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the new sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and mercury trading
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programs essentially the same monitoring, reporting and
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recordkeeping requirements that apply to the existing Acid Rain
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Program. Continuous emissions monitoring systems (CEMS) must be
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installed and operated to monitor emissions from each affected
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unit. All units under the new trading programs must monitor the
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parameters required under the Acid Rain Program (i.e., sulfur
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dioxide, nitrogen oxides, opacity, and volumetric flow), and those
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units subject to the mercury trading program must monitor mercury
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as well. The Administrator must specify requirements for any
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alternative monitoring system shown to provide information with the
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same precision, reliability, accessibility, and timeliness as that
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provided by CEMS. Further, the Administrator may specify an
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alternative monitoring system for determining mercury emissions to
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the extent that the Administrator determines that CEMS for mercury
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with appropriate vendor guarantees are not commercially available.
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Existing Section 412 is revised to provide that, consistent with
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the requirement of facility-level compliance in Section 403, the
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Administrator will not require a separate CEMS for each unit where
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two or more units utilize a single stack, unless data for
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individual units are required under another provision of the Clean
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Air Act.
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Section 405 also sets deadlines for owners or operators of units
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to install and operate continuous emissions monitoring systems to
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monitor specified emissions or parameters under the new trading
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programs. The deadlines are one year before the unit becomes
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subject to the relevant trading program. The existing deadline for
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a unit under the Acid Rain Program is retained. This section also
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retains the requirements in the existing Section 412 concerning the
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use of substitute data when emission data from a CEMS or an
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approved alternative monitoring system are not available during any
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period and the owner or operator cannot provide information,
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satisfactory to the Administrator, on emissions during that period.
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The Administrator already issued regulations implementing the
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existing Section 412 and must issue new regulations by January 1,
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2008 for monitoring of mercury.
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SECTION 406. Excess Emissions Penalty; General Compliance With
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Other Provisions; Enforcement
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Section 406 is the existing Section 411, modified to address
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excess emissions penalties with regard to emissions of sulfur
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dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and mercury. The excess emissions
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penalties reflect changes from the allowance holding requirements
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from unit-level to facility-level compliance in Section 403. For
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example, under the Acid Rain Program during 1995-2007, the owner or
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operator of a unit that fails to hold allowances covering its
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annual sulfur dioxide emissions is treated as having excess
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emissions. Starting in 2008 for sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides
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and in 2010 for mercury, the owner or operator of a facility that
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fails to hold allowances covering the annual emissions of its
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affected units is treated as having excess emissions.
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The owner or operator of a facility with excess emissions must
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both offset the excess emissions with an equal amount of allowances
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and pay a financial penalty. In contrast with the existing Section
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411, which imposes a full financial penalty starting immediately
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after the deadline for holding allowances covering emissions,
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Section 406 imposes a financial penalty that is graduated, with the
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penalty increasing the longer the period before the excess
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emissions are offset and the financial penalty is paid. If the
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offset and penalty payment are made within 30 days after the
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deadline for holding allowances, the penalty per ton or, for
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mercury, per ounce of excess emissions equals the clearing price of
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an allowance in the most recent auction. If the offset and penalty
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payment are made 31 or more days after the deadline, the penalty is
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three times the auction clearing price. For all the trading
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programs and consistent with the existing Section 411, the excess
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emissions penalty does not preclude imposition, in addition, of
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civil penalties for violations.
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Section 406 also includes the existing Section 413. As under the
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existing provision, compliance with Title IV does not affect,
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except as expressly provided, the application of other requirements
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of the Clean Air Act. Section 406 also provides that no State or
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political subdivision thereof shall restrict or interfere with the
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transfer, sale, or purchase of allowances under this title.
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Section 406 also includes the existing Section 414 and applies
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to the new sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and mercury trading
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programs essentially the same enforcement provisions that apply to
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the Acid Rain Program. Like each excess ton of sulfur dioxide, each
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ton of excess nitrogen oxides or each excess ounce of mercury is a
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separate violation.
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SECTION 407. Election For Additional Units
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Section 407 provides the option for units that are not otherwise
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subject to the new sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and mercury
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trading programs to opt into the programs if certain conditions are
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met. The units must vent all their sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides,
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and mercury emissions only through a stack or duct and must meet
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the monitoring and reporting requirements for those trading
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programs, except that each unit must be separately monitored. Each
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unit, to establish its baseline, must monitor and report its
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emissions in accordance with the monitoring and reporting
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requirements under Section 405 for one year before entering the
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programs.
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The Administrator will allocate to an opt-in unit an amount of
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allowances equal to fifty percent of: the lesser of the unit's
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baseline heat input or the unit's heat input for the year before
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the year for which the Administrator is determining the allocation;
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multiplied by the lesser of the unit's baseline emission rate, the
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unit's 2002 emissions rate, or the unit's most stringent State or
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federal emission limitation applicable to the year on which the
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unit's baseline heat input is based. Moreover, the allocation is
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subject to an increasing reduction each year (a 1 percent increase
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each year for twenty years and a 2.5 percent reduction each year
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thereafter), with a corresponding increase in the amounts of
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allowances auctioned for each year. This is analogous to how
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allowances and auctions are handled for affected electricity
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generating units (EGUs) under the trading programs.
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Once a unit opts into the trading programs, the unit will remain
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an affected unit. The only circumstance under which a unit will be
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withdrawn from the opt-in provisions is where the unit qualifies as
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an affected EGU independently of the opt-in provisions. In that
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circumstance, the unit remains subject to the trading programs but
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is covered by the non-opt-in requirements that cover all affected
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EGUs.
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SECTION 408. Clean Coal Technology Regulatory Incentives
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Section 408 is the existing Section 415, which addresses the
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Department of Energy's Clean Coal Technology Program.
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SECTION 409. Auctions
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Section 409 requires the Administrator to issue regulations
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within 36 months of enactment concerning auctions of sulfur dioxide
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allowances, nitrogen oxide allowances, and mercury allowances. The
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regulations must specify the procedures, frequency, and timing of
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auctions. Allowances may be auctioned before or during the year for
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which the allowances are issued, and auctions may be conducted one
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or more times during a year. The auctions must be open to any
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person, and there will not be any minimum price set for the
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auctions. The Administrator may, by delegation or contract, provide
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for conduct of an auction by another government agency or
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non-governmental agency, group, or organization. The proceeds from
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all auctions will be deposited in the U.S. Treasury.
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This section also establishes detailed default procedures for
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auctions. The procedures will apply if the Administrator is
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required to conduct an auction but has not yet issued regulations
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establishing procedures. The default procedures provide for the
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sale of all allowances at a single, clearing price. This contrasts
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with the auction provisions in the existing Section 416 providing
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for a declining price auction where winning bidders purchase
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allowances at their bid prices.
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SECTION 410. Evaluation of Limitations on Total Sulfur Dioxide,
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Nitrogen Oxides, And Mercury Emissions That Start in 2018.
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Section 410 establishes criteria and the process by which the
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Administrator reviews and makes recommendations to Congress as to
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whether the limitations on the total amounts of allowances
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available starting in 2018 for sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and
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mercury (whether through allocation or auction) should be adjusted.
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The Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary of Energy,
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must conduct a study that addresses a number of specific factors
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regarding, among other things: the need for further reductions of
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these pollutants from affected EGUs and other sources to attain or
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maintain the national ambient air quality standards; whether
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adjusting any of the limitations would have benefits that would
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justify the costs of such adjustment; the relative marginal cost
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effectiveness of the reductions from affected EGUs; and the
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feasibility of attaining the limitations and any alternative
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limitations. In addition, the study must address the most current
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scientific information relating to emissions, transformation, and
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deposition of these pollutants. Any documents considered in such a
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study must be independently peer-reviewed no later than July 1,
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2008. The results of the study itself must be independently
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peer-reviewed no later than January 1, 2009. The Administrator must
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make any recommendations to Congress no later than July 1, 2009 and
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may submit separate recommendations addressing sulfur oxides,
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nitrogen oxides, or mercury at any time after the study and the
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peer review have been completed.
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Part B. Sulfur Dioxide Emission Reductions
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Subpart 1 of Part B retains the requirements of the existing
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Acid Rain Program, with a few relatively minor changes, through
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December 31, 2009. Subpart 2 establishes a new trading program with
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a requirement to hold allowances covering emissions beginning
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January 1, 2010. Subpart 3 establishes a back-stop trading program
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for States in the Western Regional Air Partnership.
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Subpart 1. Acid Rain Sulfur Dioxide Program
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SECTION 411. Definitions
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Section 411 contains the definitions unique to the Acid Rain
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Program.
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SECTION 412. Allowance Allocation
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Section 412 includes, with no substantive changes, certain
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provisions from existing Sections 403 and 408 that apply only to
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the Acid Rain Program. The remaining provisions from existing
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Sections 403 and 408, which apply, as modified, to Parts B, C, and
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D, have been retained in Part A, Sections 403 and 404.
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SECTION 413. Phase I Sulfur Dioxide Requirements
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Section 413 is existing Section 404, containing without change
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the Phase I sulfur dioxide allocations and modified to set a new
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deadline for new applications for allowances from the Conservation
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and Renewable Energy Reserve. The existing deadline (i.e., December
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31, 1999) for completion of all actions for which allowances from
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the Reserve may be earned has passed. The existing deadline for
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entities to submit new applications based on those actions is moved
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up from January 1, 2010 to one year after enactment. Any remaining
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allowances in the Reserve at that time will be allocated to
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existing units subject to the Acid Rain Program.
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SECTION 414. Phase II Sulfur Dioxide Requirements
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Section 414 is existing Section 405, which contains the Phase II
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sulfur dioxide allocation formulas with no substantive changes,
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except to take account of the fact that compliance starting in 2008
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will be at the facility (not the unit) level.
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SECTION 415. Allowances for States with Emissions Rates at or
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Below 0.80 lbs/mmBtu Section 415 is existing Section 406, which
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provides additional formulations for Phase II allocations with no
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substantive changes.
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SECTION 416. Election for Additional Sources
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Section 416 is existing Section 410, modified to reduce the
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allocations for opt-in units in the Acid Rain Program to 50 percent
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for applications submitted to EPA after January 1, 2002. In
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addition, the provisions requiring issuance of rules to allow
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process sources to opt in and establishing the small diesel
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refinery allowance allocation program (which ended in 1999) are
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removed.
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SECTION 417. Auctions, Reserve
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Section 417 is existing Section 416, modified to remove direct
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sales of allowances (which have already been terminated by rule)
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and to terminate the private sales of allowances through the annual
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sulfur dioxide allowance auction. Section 417 also reduces the
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amount of allowances in the annual auction to account for the fact
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that sulfur dioxide allowances for the year 2010 and beyond will no
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longer be auctioned under this Subpart.
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SECTION 418. Industrial SO2 Emissions
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Section 418 is existing Section 406 of the Clean Air Act
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Amendments of 1990, which was not previously incorporated into the
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Clean Air Act and sets a cap on sulfur dioxide emissions from
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certain industrial sources. There are no substantive changes to the
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existing Section 406.
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SECTION 419. Termination
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Section 419 provides that owners or operators, starting January
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1, 2010, are no longer subject to Sections 412 through 417 of this
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part. Beginning January 1, 2010, the requirements of Subpart 2 of
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this Part will apply.
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Subpart 2. Sulfur Dioxide Allowance Program
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SECTION 421. Definitions
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Section 421 contains the definitions unique to the new sulfur
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dioxide trading program. The definition of the term "affected EGU"
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establishes which electricity generating units are covered by the
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new trading program. The program covers units in the U.S. and its
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territories. The program includes existing fossil fuel-fired
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electricity generating boilers and turbines and integrated
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gasification combined cycle plants with generators having a
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nameplate capacity of greater than 25 MW. The program also includes
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new fossil fuel-fired electricity generating boilers and turbines
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and integrated gasification combined cycle plants regardless of
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size, except for gas-fired units serving one or more generators
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with total nameplate capacity of 25 MW or less. In addition,
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certain existing and new cogeneration units are exempt, as well as
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solid waste incineration units and units for treatment, storage, or
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disposal of hazardous waste.
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SECTION 422. Applicability
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Section 422 provides that the owner or operator must hold
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allowances for all the affected EGUs at a facility at least equal
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to the total sulfur dioxide emissions for those units during the
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year. Compliance with the requirement to hold allowances covering
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sulfur dioxide emissions will thus be determined on a facility-wide
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basis. This is reflected in the monitoring and reporting
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requirements, which provide that units sharing a common stack do
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not need to be separately monitored and must collect sufficient
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information to determine compliance.
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SECTION 423. Limitations on Total Emissions
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Section 423 establishes the annual caps on sulfur dioxide
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emissions for affected EGUs: 4,500,000 tons starting in 2010 and
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3,000,000 tons starting in 2018. During the first year of the new
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trading program, 99% of the allowances will be allocated to
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affected EGUs with an auction for the remaining 1%. Each subsequent
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year, an additional 1% of the allowances for twenty years, and then
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an additional 2.5% thereafter, will be auctioned until eventually
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all the allowances are auctioned. Auction proceeds will go into the
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U.S. Treasury.
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SECTION 424. EGU Allocations
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Section 424 requires the Administrator to determine individual
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EGU allocations, which will set on a one-time basis and therefore
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will remain the same each year. Ninety-five percent of the total
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amount of sulfur dioxide allowances allocated each year under
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Section 423 will be allocated based on the amount of sulfur dioxide
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allowances allocated under the Acid Rain Program for 2010 and
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thereafter and that are held in allowance accounts in the Allowance
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Tracking System on the date 180 days after enactment. In
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determining the amount of allowances in each unit account and
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general account as of that deadline, the Administrator will
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discount allowances allocated for 2011 or later at a rate of seven
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percent per year to reflect the time value of allowances.
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The remaining allowances are allocated to units that do not
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receive allowances under the Acid Rain Program, whether because
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they are subject to the program and have a zero allocation or
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because they are simply not subject to the program. Three and
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one-half percent of the total amount of sulfur dioxide allowances
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allocated each year will be allocated to such units that are
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affected EGUs under the new trading program as of December 31, 2004
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and commenced operation before January 1, 2001. One and one-half
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percent of the total amount of sulfur dioxide allowances will be
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allocated to units that are affected EGUs as of December 31, 2004
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and commence operation during the period January 1, 2001- December
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31, 2004. Allowances will be allocated based on the units' baseline
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heat input multiplied by standard emission rates that vary
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depending on the fuel combusted by the units. Standard emission
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rates are established for three categories of units: coal-fired
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units; oil-fired units; and other units. For each of the above
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three allowance pools, each facility's allocation will be adjusted
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to ensure that the total amount of allowances allocated does not
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exceed the applicable total of allowances available for allocation
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for the year.
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The Allowance Tracking System for sulfur dioxide allowances was
402
already established for the Acid Rain Program, and essentially the
403
same system will be used for the new sulfur dioxide trading
404
program. However, the Administrator must still promulgate
405
regulations determining the individual unit allocations for a given
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year. In the event that the Administrator is unable, for any
407
reason, to promulgate allocation regulations on a timely basis,
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Section 424 provides a default method for distributing the
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allowances, without promulgation of regulations, in advance of the
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year for which the allowances are necessary so that owners and
411
operators can plan for compliance. Under the default method, eighty
412
percent of the total amount of sulfur dioxide allowances available
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for allocation each year will be allocated to Acid Rain Program
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units with coal as their primary or secondary fuel or residual oil
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as their primary fuel, listed in the Administrator's Emissions
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Scorecard 2000, Appendix B (2000 Data for SO2, NOx, CO2, Heat
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Input, and Other Parameters), Table B1 (All 2000 Data for All
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Units). The allocations will be based on the heat input of those
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units as set forth in the Emissions Scorecard 2000, which
420
summarizes the emissions data received by EPA for those units for
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2000. In addition, five percent of the total amount of sulfur
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dioxide allowances available for allocation each year will be
423
auctioned. The remaining fifteen percent of the allowances will not
424
be made available, whether through allocation or auction.
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SECTION 425. Disposition of SO2 Allowances Allocated Under
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Subpart 1
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Under Section 425, after the Administrator allocates allowances
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under the new trading program, the Administrator will remove from
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the Allowance Tracking System accounts all sulfur dioxide
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allowances for the year 2010 and later that were allocated under
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Subpart 1 of this Part. The Administrator will promulgate
432
regulations to allow use of any banked pre-2009 sulfur dioxide
433
allowances in the new nationwide sulfur dioxide program.
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SECTION 426. Incentives For Sulfur Dioxide Emission Control
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Technology
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Section 426 establishes a reserve of 250,000 allowances for
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affected EGUs that combusted Eastern bituminous and that, before
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2008, install and operate sulfur dioxide control technology and
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continue to combust such coal. A procedure is established for
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submission of applications by owners and operators and approval of
441
applications and award of allowances by the Administrator. The
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procedure is designed to ensure that the Administrator will approve
443
those qualified projects that will result in the largest amount of
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sulfur dioxide emission reductions achieved per allowance
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awarded.
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Subpart 3. Western Regional Air Partnership (WRAP)
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This Subpart establishes a back-stop trading program that will
448
go into effect if the States in the WRAP (i.e., Arizona,
449
California, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, and
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Wyoming) are unable to meet the sulfur dioxide emission level
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(271,000 tons) that they established for 2018 for electricity
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generating units emitting over 100 tons of sulfur dioxide per year.
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In general, if that emission level is exceeded in 2018 or later,
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the trading program, which reflects the back-stop trading program
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already developed by the WRAP and is modeled after the new
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nationwide sulfur dioxide trading program, will require a separate
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set of allowances for affected EGUs in the WRAP State to be held
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covering emissions starting the third year after the level is
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exceeded. The WRAP and nationwide programs are separate: sulfur
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dioxide allowances in the WRAP program may not be used in the
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nationwide program; and the sulfur dioxide allowances in the
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nationwide program may not be used in the WRAP program.
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SECTION 431. Definitions
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Section 431 contains the definitions unique to the new WRAP
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trading program. The definition of the term "affected EGU"
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establishes which electricity generating units are covered by the
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new WRAP trading program. The program covers those units covered by
468
the new nationwide sulfur dioxide trading program that are located
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in the States in the WRAP and that, in any year starting in 2000,
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emit more than 100 tons of sulfur dioxide and are used to produce
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electricity for sale.
472
The definition of "covered year" establishes when the new WRAP
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trading program will begin. Generally, the trading program and the
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requirement to hold allowances will begin the third year after the
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first year (starting 2018) in which the total emissions of affected
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EGUs exceed 271,000 tons. However, the WRAP States may unanimously
477
petition the Administrator to determine that the total emissions of
478
affected EGUs are reasonably projected to exceed 271,000 tons in
479
2018 or a later year and to make affected EGUs subject to the
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requirements of the new WRAP trading program. Based on such a
481
petition, the Administrator may by regulation make affected EGUs
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subject to the requirement to hold allowances starting the third
483
year after the first year (starting 2013) when the Administrator
484
makes such a determination. The term "covered year" also includes
485
each year after the year in which the requirement to hold
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allowances begins.
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SECTION 432. Applicability
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Section 432 provides that the owner or operator must hold
489
allowances for all the affected EGUs at a facility at least equal
490
to the total sulfur dioxide emissions for those units during each
491
covered year. As in the new nationwide sulfur dioxide trading
492
program, compliance with the requirement to hold allowances will
493
thus be determined on a facility-wide basis.
494
SECTION 433. Limitations on Total Emissions
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Section 433 establishes the annual cap on sulfur dioxide
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emissions for affected EGUs of
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271,000 tons in each covered year.
498
SECTION 434. EGU Allocations
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Section 434 establishes the procedures for determining
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allocations for individual units that are affected EGUs as of
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December 31 of the fourth year before the covered year. The
502
allocations will be set on a one-time basis and therefore will
503
remain the same each year. Allowances will be allocated based on
504
the units' baseline heat input multiplied by standard emission
505
rates that vary depending on the fuel combusted by the units.
506
Standard emission rates are set forth for three categories of
507
units: coal-fired units; oil-fired units; and other units. Each
508
facility's allocation will be adjusted to ensure that the total
509
amount of allowances allocated does not exceed 271,000 tons per
510
year.
511
The Allowance Tracking System for sulfur dioxide allowances was
512
already established for the Acid Rain Program, and essentially the
513
same system will be used for the new WRAP trading program. However,
514
the Administrator must still promulgate regulations determining the
515
individual unit allocations for a given year. In the event that the
516
Administrator is unable, for any reason, to promulgate allocation
517
regulations on a timely basis, Section 434 provides a default
518
methodology analogous to that for the new nationwide sulfur dioxide
519
trading program for distributing the allowances, without
520
promulgation of regulations, in advance of the year for which the
521
allowances are necessary. Eighty percent of the total amount of
522
allowances available for allocation for the year will be allocated
523
based on heat input in 2000 to affected EGUs that are Acid Rain
524
Program units with coal as their primary or secondary fuel or
525
residual oil as their primary fuel, listed in the Administrator's
526
Emissions Scorecard 2000. Five percent of the allowances available
527
for allocation will be auctioned. The remaining fifteen percent of
528
allowances will not be made available.
529
Part C. Nitrogen Oxides Allowance Program
530
Subpart 1 of Part C retains the requirements, until 2008, of the
531
existing Acid Rain Program for nitrogen oxides reduction. Subpart 2
532
establishes, beginning January 1, 2008, a new nitrogen oxides
533
trading program. Two trading zones are established, and, only
534
allowances allocated or auctioned for a given zone may be used by
535
facilities within that zone to meet the requirement to hold
536
allowances covering emissions. Subpart 3 codifies the budgets and
537
other requirements in EPA's rulemaking (known as the NOx SIP call)
538
concerning ozone transport in the Eastern U.S., which requires that
539
certain Eastern States revise their state implementation plans to
540
reduce NOx emissions.
541
Subpart 1. Nitrogen Oxides Emission Reduction Program
542
SECTION 441. Nitrogen Oxides Emission Rate Reduction Program
543
Section 441 is the existing Section 407, which includes the
544
emission rate limitations and other
545
requirements for nitrogen oxides under the Acid Rain Program.
546
The existing emission rate limitations for individual boilers,
547
which are based on boiler type, are not changed.
548
SECTION 442. Termination
549
Section 442 terminates the existing Acid Rain Program nitrogen
550
oxides provisions in Section 441 on January 1, 2008 when the new
551
nitrogen oxides trading program begins.
552
553
554
Subpart 2. Nitrogen Oxides Allowance Program
555
SECTION 451. Definitions
556
Section 451 contains the definitions unique to the new nitrogen
557
oxides trading program. The definition of the term "affected EGU"
558
establishes which electricity generating units are covered by the
559
new nitrogen oxides trading program, which are the same electricity
560
generating units as are covered in the U.S. and territories by the
561
new nationwide sulfur dioxide trading program.
562
SECTION 452. Applicability
563
Section 452 provides that the owner or operator must hold
564
allowances for all the EGUs units at a facility at least equal to
565
the total nitrogen oxides emissions for those units during the
566
year. As in the new nationwide sulfur dioxide trading program,
567
compliance with the requirement to hold allowances will thus be
568
determined on a facility-wide basis.
569
SECTION 453. Limitations on total emissions
570
Section 453 establishes the annual caps on nitrogen oxides
571
emissions affected EGUs: 1.562 million tons starting in 2008 and
572
1.162 million tons starting in 2018 for Zone 1; and 538,000 tons
573
starting in 2008 for Zone 2. During the first year of the new
574
trading program, 99% of the allowances will be allocated to
575
affected units with an auction for the remaining 1%. Each
576
subsequent year, an additional 1% of the allowances for twenty
577
years, and then an additional 2.5% thereafter, will be auctioned
578
until eventually all the allowances are auctioned. Auction proceeds
579
will go into the U.S. Treasury.
580
SECTION 454. EGU Allocations
581
Section 454 establishes the procedures for determining
582
allocations for individual units that are affected EGUs as of
583
December 31, 2004. The allocations will be set on a one-time basis
584
and therefore will remain the same each year. Allowances will be
585
allocated to a facility in a given zone in proportion to the sum of
586
the baseline heat input values of affected EGUs at the facility as
587
compared to the total baseline heat input of all affected EGUs in
588
the respective zone. Thus, the two separate allowances pools for
589
the two zones are separately allocated. Each facility's allocation
590
will be adjusted to ensure that the total amount of allowances
591
allocated does not exceed the applicable total amount of allowances
592
available for allocation for the zone for the year involved.
593
While the Allowance Tracking System for sulfur dioxide
594
allowances was already established for the Acid Rain Program, the
595
Administrator must, under Section 403, establish by regulation the
596
Allowance Tracking System for nitrogen oxides allowances. Further,
597
the Administrator must also promulgate regulations determining the
598
individual unit allocations for a given year. In the event that the
599
Administrator is unable, for any reason, to promulgate allocation
600
regulations on a timely basis, Section 454 provides two default
601
methods for compliance, both of which are implemented separately
602
for the two zones. The first default method, which is analogous to
603
the default under the new sulfur dioxide trading program, applies
604
if the Allowance Tracking System regulations are timely promulgated
605
but not the allocation regulations. Eighty percent of the total
606
amount of nitrogen oxides allowances available for allocation each
607
year will be allocated to Acid Rain Program units with coal as
608
their primary or secondary fuel or residual oil as their primary
609
fuel, listed in the Administrator's Emissions Scorecard 2000. Five
610
percent of the total amount of allowances available for allocation
611
will be auctioned, and the remaining fifteen percent will not be
612
made available. However, if neither the Allowance Tracking System
613
regulations nor the allocation regulations are timely promulgated,
614
then the second default applies under which each affected EGU is
615
required for the year involved to meet an emission rate limit of
616
0.14 lb/mmBtu for units in Zone 1 or 0.25 lb/mmBtu for units in
617
Zone 2.
618
619
620
Subpart 3. Ozone Season NOx Budget Program
621
SECTION 461. Definitions
622
Section 461 contains definitions unique to the NOx SIP call.
623
SECTION 462. General Provisions
624
Section 462 provides that the general provisions in Sections 402
625
through 406 and Section 409 of Part A do not apply to this Subpart.
626
This is because the NOx SIP call itself, and the state
627
implementation plans approved under the NOx SIP call, already
628
include provisions concerning the matters addressed in these
629
general provisions in Part A, such as tracking and transferring of
630
allowances, permitting, monitoring and reporting, and
631
compliance.
632
SECTION 463. Applicable Implementation Plan
633
Section 463 requires implementation of the requirements of the
634
NOx SIP call beginning in 2004 including requirements contained in
635
a proposed rulemaking by EPA concerning: the amounts of the State
636
trading budgets; the criteria for classifying cogeneration units as
637
EGUs and non-EGUs; and the treatment of States that are only
638
partially in the NOx SIP call area.
639
SECTION 464. Termination of NOx Trading Program for Clear Skies
640
Units
641
Section 464 terminates the obligation of the Administrator to
642
administer the ozone season NOx budget trading program under the
643
NOx SIP call on January 1, 2008. The section allows States to
644
continue, and to administer, such a program in their state
645
implement plans under the NOx SIP call for 2008 and thereafter.
646
However, it is intended that affected units under the new nitrogen
647
oxides trading program will generally not be subject to the
648
requirements of the NOx SIP call starting January 1, 2008.
649
SECTION 465. Carryforward of Pre-2008 Nitrogen Oxides
650
Allowances
651
Section 465 requires the Administrator to promulgate regulations
652
allowing owners and operators to carry over, into the new nitrogen
653
oxides trading program under Subpart 2, any banked pre-2008
654
allowances under the NOx budget trading program administered by the
655
Administrator under the NOx SIP call.
656
Part D. Mercury Emissions Reductions
657
Part D establishes a new trading program for mercury, with a
658
requirement to hold allowances covering emissions beginning January
659
1, 2010.
660
SECTION 471. Definitions
661
Section 471 contains the definitions unique to the new mercury
662
trading program. The definition of the term "affected EGU"
663
establishes which electricity generating units are covered by the
664
new trading program. The new mercury trading program covers
665
coal-fired units that are covered by the new sulfur dioxide and
666
nitrogen oxides trading programs. The definition for "adjusted
667
baseline heat input" establishes a modified baseline heat input
668
value, which, for units with an operating history, is adjusted by a
669
standard factor to reflect the types of coal that were combusted.
670
Standard factors are set forth for several categories of coal: 3.0
671
for lignite; 1.25 for subbituminous; and 1.0 for bituminous or
672
other fuel.
673
SECTION 472. Applicability
674
Section 472 provides that the owner or operator must hold
675
allowances for all the affected EGUs at a facility at least equal
676
to the total mercury emissions for those units during the year. As
677
in the new sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides trading programs,
678
compliance with the requirement to hold allowances will thus be
679
determined on a facility-wide basis.
680
SECTION 473. Limitations on Total Emissions Section 463
681
establishes the annual caps on mercury emissions for affected EGUs:
682
26 tons starting in 2010 and 15 tons starting in 2018. During the
683
first year of the new trading program, 99% of the allowances will
684
be allocated to affected units with an auction for the remaining
685
1%. Each subsequent year, an additional 1% of the allowances for
686
twenty years, and then an additional 2.5% thereafter, will be
687
auctioned until eventually all the allowances are auctioned.
688
Auction proceeds will go into the U.S. Treasury.
689
SECTION 474. EGU Allocations
690
Section 434 establishes the procedures for determining
691
allocations for individual units that are affected EGUs as of
692
December 31, 2004. The allocations will be set on a one-time basis
693
and therefore will remain the same each year. Allowances will be
694
allocated based on the units' baseline heat input, which, for units
695
with an operating history, is adjusted by a standard factor to
696
reflect the types of coal that were combusted. Each facility's
697
allocation will be adjusted to ensure that the total amount of
698
allowances allocated does not exceed the applicable amount of
699
allowances available for allocation for the year.
700
While the Allowance Tracking System for sulfur dioxide
701
allowances was already established for the Acid Rain Program, the
702
Administrator must, under section 403, establish by regulation the
703
Allowance Tracking System for mercury allowances. Further, the
704
Administrator must also promulgate regulations determining the
705
individual unit allocations for a given year. In the event that the
706
Administrator is unable, for any reason, to promulgate allocation
707
regulations on a timely basis, Section 474 provides two default
708
methods for compliance analogous to those under the new nitrogen
709
oxides trading program. Under the first default, eighty percent of
710
the total amount of mercury allowances allocated each year will be
711
allocated to Acid Rain Program coal-fired units listed in the
712
Administrator's Emissions Scorecard 2000. Five percent of the total
713
amount of allowances available for allocation will be auctioned,
714
and the remaining fifteen percent will not be made available.
715
However, if neither the Allowance Tracking System regulations nor
716
the allocation regulations are timely promulgated, then the second
717
default applies under which each affected EGU must comply with an
718
emission limit of 30 percent of the mercury content (in ounces per
719
mmBtu) of the coal and coal-derived fuel combusted by the unit.
720
Part E. National Emission Standards; Research; Environmental
721
Accountability
722
SECTION 481. National Emission Standards for Affected Units
723
Section 481 establishes performance standards for all new
724
boilers, combustion turbines, and integrated gasification combined
725
cycle plants that are affected units under the new trading
726
programs. "New" units are those that commence construction or
727
reconstruction after enactment.
728
These statutory performance standards include emission limits
729
for four air pollutants: nitrogen oxides; sulfur dioxide; mercury;
730
and particulate matter. The mercury emission limits apply only to
731
coal-fired units. A particulate matter emission limit is
732
established for existing oil-fired boilers that will also reduce
733
emissions of nickel from such units. All units subject to a
734
performance standard are required to monitor emissions using
735
continuous emissions monitoring systems and to use averaging times
736
similar to those under the existing new source performance
737
standards.
738
Boilers and integrated gasification combined cycle plants are
739
subject to a sulfur dioxide emission limit of 2.0 lb/MWh, a
740
nitrogen oxides emission limit of 1.0 lb/MWh, and a particulate
741
matter emission limit of 0.20 lb/MWh. Coal-fired boilers and
742
integrated gasification combined cycle plants are also subject to a
743
mercury emission limit of 0.015 lb/GWh, but alternative standards
744
apply in some circumstances. Coal-fired combustion turbines are
745
subject to the same emission limits as coal-fired boilers and
746
integrated gasification combined cycle plants. (The term
747
"coal-fired" is defined to include units that burn any coal or
748
coal-derived fuel.) Gas-fired combustion turbines are subject to
749
nitrogen oxides emission limits ranging from 0.084 lb/MWh to 0.56
750
lb/MWh. Combustion turbines that are not coal- or gas-fired are
751
subject to nitrogen oxides emission limits ranging from 0.289
752
lb/MWh to 1.01 lb/MWh, a sulfur dioxide emission limit of 2.0
753
lb/MWh, and a particulate matter emission limit of 0.20 lb/MWh.
754
Existing oil-fired boilers are subject to a particulate matter
755
emission limit of 0.30 lb/MWh.
756
The Administrator is required, at least every eight years, to
757
review and, if appropriate revise, these performance standards to
758
reflect the degree of emission limitation achievable through
759
application of the best system of emission reduction which the
760
Administrator determines has been adequately demonstrated. However,
761
such review is not required if the Administrator determines that
762
review is not appropriate in light of readily available information
763
on the efficacy of the standard. New affected units subject to the
764
performance standards are not subject to standards under Section
765
111.
766
SECTION 482. Research, Environmental Monitoring, and
767
Assessment
768
Section 482 contains provisions for evaluating and reporting the
769
efficacy of the new sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and mercury
770
trading programs and conducting scientific and technical research
771
and development. One of the purposes of these provisions is
772
production of peerreviewed scientific and technology information in
773
time to inform the review of emissions levels as specified in
774
Section 410.
775
SECTION 483. Exemption from Major Source Reconstruction Review
776
Requirements and Best Available Retrofit Control Technology
777
Requirements
778
Section 483 exempts affected units under the new trading
779
programs from the requirements of new source review (NSR) and best
780
available retrofit technology (BART). Affected units under the
781
exemption are no longer considered "major emitting facilities" or
782
"major stationary sources" for purposes of Parts C and D of Title I
783
of the Clean Air Act. Permits issued in the past to comply with the
784
requirements of Part C and D of Title I, however, will remain in
785
effect.
786
To qualify for the exemption from NSR and BART, an existing
787
affected unit must meet certain requirements concerning particulate
788
matter and carbon monoxide emissions. Where there is a modification
789
of the existing affected unit (which is defined as a change that
790
will result in an increase in the hourly emissions of a pollutant
791
at the unit's maximum capacity), the unit must comply with either
792
best available control technology (BACT) for that pollutant or the
793
performance standards for nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, mercury,
794
and particulate matter under Section 481. In addition, new affected
795
units constructed after enactment will be required to meet the
796
performance standards under Section 481, and no additional,
797
case-by-case review of the appropriate control technology, such as
798
BACT or the lowest achievable emission rate (LAER), will be
799
required.
800
An affected unit located within 50 km of Class I areas will
801
remain subject to the requirements in Part C of Title I for the
802
protection of such areas. For example, emissions resulting from the
803
construction of such a new or modified unit may not cause or
804
contribute to the violation of a Class I increment unless the
805
federal land manager certifies that the emissions from the facility
806
will have no adverse impact on the air quality related values of
807
the Class I area. Further, as provided under Section 110(a)(2)(C),
808
States must still ensure that the construction of a new or modified
809
affected unit will not cause or contribute to a violation of the
810
national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) or interfere with
811
the programs to assure that the NAAQS are met. States must provide
812
the public with an opportunity to comment on the impact of the new
813
or modified affected unit on the NAAQS or on any Class I areas
814
within 50 km of the unit.
815
816
817
Title I of the Clean Air Act
818
SECTION 107. Transitional Areas
819
The Clear Skies Act revises Section 107 of the Clean Air Act to
820
authorize the Administrator to designate as transitional an area
821
for which EPA-performed modeling demonstrates that the area will
822
attain the 8-hour ozone or fine particles NAAQS no later than
823
December 31, 2015 through the controls provided under the Clear
824
Skies Act and any other federal controls that have been
825
promulgated. In addition, an area may be classified as transitional
826
if the State performs EPAapproved modeling demonstrating that the
827
area will attain the 8-hour ozone or fine particles NAAQS by no
828
later than December 31, 2015 through a combination of reductions
829
achieved through controls established through the Clear Skies Act
830
and any other federal controls that have been promulgated, together
831
with any necessary local controls that the State adopts in its
832
state implementation plan no later than December 31, 2004.
833
Areas designated as transitional will not be subject to certain
834
local planning obligations that apply to areas designated
835
nonattainment, such as conformity and new source review. These
836
areas are subject to the new source program that applies in
837
attainment and maintenance areas. In addition, these areas need to
838
ensure that growth in emissions following the time of designation
839
does not negatively affect their ability to attain the standard.
840
Finally, if an area fails to attain the standard by December 31,
841
2015, the Administrator will be required to redesignate the area to
842
nonattainment and the area will then be subject to the
843
nonattainment planning requirements, including conformity and new
844
source review.
845
In addition, the time frames for States to recommend, and EPA to
846
promulgate, designations for the 8-hour ozone and fine particles
847
NAAQS are revised to align the time frames for EPA to designate
848
areas for these standards.
849
SECTIONS 110, 126. Ozone Transport Provisions
850
The Clear Skies Act restricts the applicability of petitions
851
under Section 126 of the Clean Air Act, and the requirements of the
852
state implementation plan (SIP) "good neighbor" provisions of
853
Section 110(a)(2)(D) of the Clean Air Act, to affected units under
854
the new trading programs.
855
In general, Section 126 authorizes downwind States or political
856
subdivisions to petition the Administrator to find that certain
857
upwind sources emit air pollutants in amounts that contribute
858
significantly to the petitioner's air pollution problems. If the
859
Administrator grants the finding, the sources must either shut down
860
or implement controls that the Administrator may mandate within a
861
specified period, but no later than three years from the date of
862
the finding. The Clear Skies Act revises Section 126 to provide
863
that if any State submits a Section 126 petition concerning
864
emissions from an affected unit, the Administrator may not grant
865
any finding prior to January 1, 2009, although the Administrator
866
must take final action during January, 2009 on any petition
867
submitted prior to January 1, 2007. Further, if the Administrator
868
grants a requested finding, then the Administrator must assure that
869
the compliance and implementation deadlines are extended beyond
870
December 31, 2011.
871
The Clear Skies Act further requires that, in addressing a
872
petition submitted after enactment that requests a finding for any
873
affected unit under the new trading programs, the Administrator
874
must consider, among other factors, any emissions reductions
875
required to occur by any applicable attainment dates for any
876
relevant nonattainment areas. In addition, as conditions for making
877
a finding concerning affected units, the Administrator must
878
determine that the required emissions reductions from the affected
879
units are at least as cost-effective, and will improve air quality
880
in the petitioners' nonattainment areas at least as
881
cost-effectively, as emissions reductions from each other principal
882
category of sources in areas upwind of the petitioner. The
883
Administrator must develop an appropriate peer-reviewed methodology
884
for making the necessary determinations by December 31, 2006.
885
Corresponding changes are made in the SIP requirements of Section
886
110(a)(2)(D). The Clear Skies Act makes clear that these changes do
887
not affect the NOx SIP call rulemaking concerning ozone transport
888
in the Eastern U.S., which requires that certain Eastern States
889
revise their SIPs to reduce NOx emissions.
890
Several corrections are also made to Section 126, including
891
correction of an erroneous crossreference.
892
SECTION 112. Maximum Achievable Control Technology
893
The Clear Skies Act revises Section 112 of the Clean Air Act to
894
preclude regulation through maximum achievable control technology
895
(MACT) standards of the emission of hazardous air pollutants by
896
electric utility steam generating units. The Administrator retains
897
the authority to address any non-mercury hazardous air pollutants
898
from electricity generating units in accordance with the regime set
899
forth under the existing residual risk authority provisions of
900
Section 112(f)(2) through (4).
901
Title VIII of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990
902
SECTION 821. Monitoring
903
The Clear Skies Act revises Section 821(a) of the Clean Air Act
904
Amendments of 1990 to retain the existing carbon dioxide monitoring
905
and reporting requirements for units subject to the existing Acid
906
Rain Program.
907
908
909
910
911