[Federal Register Volume 61, Number 144 (Thursday, July 25, 1996)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 39032-39037]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 96-18922]
[[Page 39031]]
_______________________________________________________________________
Part V
Environmental Protection Agency
_______________________________________________________________________
40 CFR Part 51
_______________________________________________________________________
Inspection/Maintenance Flexibility Amendments (Ozone Transport Region);
Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 61, No. 144 / Thursday, July 25, 1996 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 39032]]
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 51
[FRL-5541-3]
RIN 2060-AG11
Inspection/Maintenance Flexibility Amendments (Ozone Transport
Region)
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency.
ACTION: Supplemental final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Today's action revises the motor vehicle Inspection/
Maintenance (I/M) requirements by adding a special low enhanced
performance standard for qualified areas in Ozone Transport Regions
(OTR). This additional performance standard applies to certain
attainment, marginal and moderate areas in the OTR. The purpose of this
action is to allow OTR qualifying areas the flexibility to implement a
broader range of I/M programs than is currently permitted.
EFFECTIVE DATE: This rule will take effect on September 23, 1996.
ADDRESSES: Materials relevant to this rulemaking are contained in the
Public Docket No. A-95-08. The docket is located at the Air Docket,
Room M-1500 (6102), Waterside Mall SW, Washington, DC 20460. The docket
may be inspected between 8:30 a.m. and 12 noon and between 1:30 p.m.
until 5:30 p.m. on weekdays. A reasonable fee may be charged for
copying docket material. Electronic copies of the preamble and the
regulatory text of this rulemaking are available on the Office of Air
Quality Planning and Standards (OAQPS) Technology Transfer Network
Bulletin Board System (TTN BBS) and the Office of Mobile Sources' World
Wide Web cite, http://www.epa.gov/OMSWWW/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Leila Cook, Office of Mobile Sources,
National Vehicle and Fuel Emissions Laboratory, 2565 Plymouth Road, Ann
Arbor, Michigan, 48105. Telephone (313) 741-7820.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Table of Contents
II. Summary of Rule
III. Authority
IV. Public Participation
A. Increased Flexibility
B. Clarification of 200,000 Population Requirement
C. Duplicate Requirements
D. Emission Reduction Credits
E. Comparability of Basic Programs
F. Effectiveness of RSD
G. Retests for RSD Failures
H. OBD Tests
I. Other Comments
V. Economic Costs and Benefits
VI. Administrative Requirements
A. Administrative Designation
B. Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirement
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Act
E. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act
II. Summary of Rule
Under the Clean Air Act as amended in 1990 (the Act), 42 U.S.C.7
401 et seq., the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) published
in the Federal Register on November 5, 1992 (40 CFR part 51, subpart S)
rules related to plans for Motor Vehicle Inspection and Maintenance (I/
M) programs (hereafter referred to as the I/M rule; see 57 FR 52950).
Today, EPA is revising this rule to provide greater flexibility to
certain Ozone Transport Region (OTR) areas.
Section 182 of the Act is prescriptive regarding the various
elements that are required as part of an enhanced Inspection/
Maintenance (I/M) performance standard. It also provides states with
flexibility in meeting the numerical performance standards for enhanced
or basic I/M programs. States in the Ozone Transport Region (OTR)
requested additional flexibility in implementing I/M in areas which are
in attainment, which are areas designated and classified as marginal
ozone areas, or which are designated and classified as moderate ozone
areas under 200,000 in population. These three types of areas would be
exempt from all I/M requirements but for their location in the OTR.
These areas are included in the OTR enhanced I/M requirements to help
achieve overall attainment and maintenance goals for the region, which
includes serious and severe ozone nonattainment areas.
With today's action, EPA is establishing an additional enhanced I/M
performance standard for qualified areas in the Northeast OTR,
hereafter referred to as the OTR low enhanced performance standard. The
emission reduction targets for this program are less than both the low
enhanced performance standard and the basic performance standard. There
are two qualifications to be eligible for the OTR low enhanced
performance standard. First, the standard applies only in attainment
areas, marginal ozone nonattainment areas and certain moderate ozone
nonattainment areas under 200,000 in an OTR. Moderate areas of that
size that were not previously required to, or had not in fact,
implemented a basic I/M program under the pre-1990 Act can take
advantage of the OTR low enhanced performance standard. The savings
clause in section 182(a)(2)(B)(i) requires areas that had or were
required to have I/M programs before 1990 to retain programs of at
least that stringency. Because, as explained below, EPA believes the
Act requires an enhanced I/M program to be an enhancement over
otherwise applicable I/M requirements, areas subject to basic I/M or
the savings clause cannot adopt a less stringent program. Any moderate
area with urbanized areas having a total population of over 200,000
would also be required to implement basic I/M under section 182(b)(4)
and therefore is ineligible for the OTR low enhanced performance
standard. Second, the OTR low enhanced program must be supplemented by
other measures in order to achieve emission reductions equal to or
greater than that which would have occurred had a regular low enhanced
I/M program been implemented (as defined by 40 CFR 51.351(g), see 60 FR
48029). This is because the primary goal of the Act in establishing the
OTR provisions and requiring enhanced I/M in areas with a population of
100,000 or more in the OTR was to contribute to regional attainment.
EPA believes that an area should be able to qualify for the additional
flexibility provided under the OTR low enhanced standard only if it
achieves, in some other way, the additional reductions that the
otherwise applicable low enhanced I/M program would achieve. Thus, the
total emission reductions from the OTR low enhanced I/M program plus
the additional measures must equal the tonnage reduction that a regular
low enhanced program would have generated. However, since local
reductions are not the crucial factor, a state may bubble surplus
reductions from other areas not required to implement I/M in the state.
For example, a state could implement a statewide reformulated gasoline
(RFG) program plus an OTR low enhanced I/M program in subject areas or
statewide and potentially achieve comparable reductions to a regular
low enhanced program because of the additional reductions RFG would
achieve in areas not otherwise required to have RFG. Equality of
emission reductions must be demonstrated over a time period which
aligns with the attainment deadlines of all OTR areas: from 2000
through 2007. Note that an I/M program that meets the OTR low enhanced
performance standard must be implemented even if other measures could
achieve comparable emission reductions because the Act specifically
[[Page 39033]]
requires an enhanced I/M program in metropolitan areas with 100,000
population in the OTR. Also, measures to fill the gap between OTR low
and regular low enhanced I/M may not be otherwise required by the Clean
Air Act.
The OTR low enhanced performance standard model program is composed
of the following elements: Annual testing of 1968 and newer light duty
vehicles and light duty trucks, OBD checks for 1996 and newer vehicles,
remote sensing of 1968-1995 vehicles, catalyst checks on 1975 and newer
vehicles, and PCV valve checks on pre-1975 vehicles. These elements
collectively satisfy the Act's requirements for an enhanced I/M program
performance standard. As with other performance standards, EPA does not
necessarily recommend implementing this particular program but rather
encourages states to design a program that will achieve equal or
greater emission reductions than the performance standard while
providing for the specific needs of the area.
In the proposal, EPA noted that the emission reduction targets
generated by this model program could not yet be precisely modeled but
EPA estimated the targets to be less than those for the basic I/M
program standard (which are approximately 6.3% for HC, 10.8% for CO,
and 0.7% for NOX). EPA expects to issue draft guidance on remote
sensing credits in the Summer of 1996. As soon as a final guidance is
issued, an analysis of the emission reduction targets generated by this
model program will be placed in the docket. Even though the estimated
emission reduction targets for the OTR low enhanced standard are less
than those for basic I/M, EPA believes this standard meets the
requirement of the Act for ``enhanced'' I/M. There are two important
facts to consider in this regard: first, neither the Act nor the
legislative history specifies that the emission reduction targets for
enhanced I/M must be greater than basic in all cases. EPA believes the
Act provides the agency latitude in establishing multiple performance
standards to meet a wide range of state and local needs and conditions.
Second, the areas eligible to take advantage of this performance
standard were not required to nor did they implement I/M programs prior
to 1990. So, in all cases, this standard establishes a program target
that is indeed enhanced relative to what was present or required for
the area before enactment of the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments or is
otherwise required after the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments. EPA did not
receive any public comments disagreeing with this legal interpretation.
As is the case with all performance standard model programs, EPA
does not necessarily recommend implementation of the model program,
since it is constrained in composition by law (e.g., EPA recommends not
testing cars until they reach 4 years of age and recommends biennial
testing as more cost-effective; by contrast, all of the enhanced I/M
performance standards are required by the Act to reflect a model
program that includes annual testing of all vehicles). In that the
emission reduction targets for the OTR low enhanced performance
standard are below the basic level, the standard provides the broadest
possible latitude in program design. For example, some states in the
OTR have existing decentralized, safety inspection programs.
Comprehensive visual checks of emission control devices, a gas cap
pressure test, the Act-mandated OBD check, and the Act-mandated on-road
testing could be added to these programs which should then meet the OTR
low enhanced standard, as long as a proper enforcement mechanism was in
place. Many other possibilities exist for program designs that could
also meet this performance standard.
While the OTR low enhanced performance standard is less demanding
than the existing performance standard applicable to the affected
areas, today's action still ensures that enhanced I/M programs in these
areas meet all statutory criteria for EPA approval. A state's OTR low
enhanced program is required, under section 182(c)(3)(C) of the Clean
Air Act, to include computerized analyzers and on-road testing devices;
computerized equipment and on-road testing devices are required by the
current rule and apply to the OTR low enhanced program. A state's OTR
low enhanced program shall also include a regulatory framework for
waivers, if waivers are to be issued, and an enforcement system through
registration denial, (except for any program in operation before
November 15, 1990 whose enforcement mechanism has been demonstrated to
be more effective than registration denial). Today's amendments leave
requirements in this regard the same as for other enhanced I/M areas.
As mandated by the Act, in an OTR low enhanced program, vehicle
emissions shall be tested annually unless biennial testing will equal
or exceed the reductions that can be obtained from annual inspections.
A program could combine biennial inspections on the vehicles equipped
with on-board diagnostic computers (OBD) with biennial evaporative
system checks to achieve the necessary additional reductions. The OTR
low enhanced performance standard is based on centralized inspections
of OBD-equipped vehicles and on-road remote sensing testing; EPA
believes that this meets the specific requirement that the performance
standard be based on centralized testing.
Today's action also establishes quality assurance requirements for
OTR low enhanced I/M programs that are commensurate with the emission
reductions which the programs are intended to achieve. In particular,
current rules require enhanced I/M programs to be evaluated by
conducting test-only IM240s on a random representative sample of the
fleet (a minimum of 0.1%) to verify that the emission reductions are
occurring. EPA believes that the emission reductions from an OTR low
enhanced program are small enough that this level of effort is not
justified. The routine quality assurance requirements of the original
I/M rule are also not necessarily appropriate in light of the low level
of benefits of the program.
This action also modifies the geographic exclusion rule for
counties within Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) in the Ozone
Transport Region. The modification allows states to exclude counties
that comprise less than 1% of the population of the MSA from program
coverage. Inclusion of such a small fraction of the population is not
worth the significant cost of expanding geographic coverage of the
program to include such a county.
This action requires that the implementation date for full testing
in areas opting for the OTR low performance standard be no later than
the latest date by which full testing can commence and still achieve
sufficient reductions for all OTR areas to meet the performance
standard by the Act's attainment and reasonable further progress
deadlines, including the end of 1999 attainment date for serious ozone
nonattainment areas. This will generally mean a start date no later
than January 1, 1999, for annual testing programs, although EPA will
accept field testing commencing as late as July 1, 1999 if the full I/M
reductions can be achieved by the serious area attainment deadline.
Note that the performance standard model program assumes a start date
of January 1, 1999 because EPA believes Congress intended that the
performance standard be based on at least one complete annual test
cycle. With the requirement to offset the emissions difference between
OTR low and regular low enhanced with other measures, this
[[Page 39034]]
date ensures that attainment in the region is not impaired.
Today's action also serves to provide other flexibilities to non-
OTR states in designing quality assurance programs. The intent is to
allow alternative quality assurance procedures that are as effective as
or better than those specified in the original I/M rule.
III. Authority
Authority for the action proposed in this notice is granted to EPA
by section 182 of the Clean Air Act as amended (42 U.S.C. 7401, et
seq.).
IV. Public Participation
A. Increased Flexibility
All the commenters agreed with EPA's effort to provide states with
greater flexibility and almost all felt that the new OTR low enhanced
performance standard was necessary to meet the unique needs of states
within the Ozone Transport Region.
B. Clarification of 200,000 Population Requirement
1. Summary of Proposal
The proposal allowed attainment areas, marginal ozone nonattainment
areas and moderate ozone nonattainment areas with a 1980 Census
population of less than 200,000 in the urbanized area to use the new
OTR low enhanced performance standard.
2. Summary of Comments
One commenter asked for clarification of how the 200,000 urbanized
area population criteria would be applied. Specifically, the commenter
asked whether the population criteria applied to urbanized areas within
each Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) or urbanized areas within the
entire attainment or non-attainment area.
3. Response to Comments
Within the OTR, enhanced I/M programs are required in MSA's with
populations of 100,000 or more. However, the OTR, like the rest of the
country, is also subject to the basic I/M requirements that an
urbanized area with a population of 200,000 or more that is classified
as moderate ozone nonattainment must implement a basic I/M program.
Thus, moderate ozone areas in the OTR with an MSA population of greater
than 100,000 but an urbanized area population of less than 200,000 are
eligible for the OTR low enhanced performance standard. In contrast,
moderate ozone areas with MSA populations of greater than 100,000 and
urbanized area populations of greater than 200,000 must meet the basic
performance standard. If a state within the OTR falls into this later
category which has to implement a basic I/M program in the urbanized
area (with a population of 200,000 or more) it can still implement an
OTR low enhanced program in any portion of the MSA which falls into an
urbanized area with a population of less than 200,000.
C. Duplicate Requirements
1. Summary of Proposal
The proposal did not exempt states that implement an OTR low
enhanced performance program from most of the general requirements for
enhanced I/M programs in the original I/M rule.
2. Summary of Comments
Two commenters addressed this issue. The first felt that the
inclusion of on-road testing and OBD testing in the OTR low enhanced
performance standard is duplicative of the on-road and OBD testing
requirements in the original rule, 40 CFR 51.351 (b) and (c). The
second commenter felt that several sections of the I/M rule dealing
with data collection and data analysis and reporting, 40 CFR 51.365 and
51.366, should not be applicable to OTR low enhanced programs.
3. Response to Comments
The Clean Air Act requires OBD as part of any basic or enhanced
performance standard. Additionally, RSD is required as part of any
enhanced I/M performance standard. Section 51.351(b) requires that on-
road testing of either 0.5% of the subject vehicle population or 20,000
vehicles (whichever is less) be included in any enhanced I/M
performance standard. The OBD requirements were reserved by EPA in the
original I/M rule and are expected to be published in 1996. EPA
cautions commenters to remember that performance standards merely
establish the minimum target a certain program must meet. They do not
conclusively establish the elements of the program. Thus, the
Sec. 51.351(h)(6) establishment of RSD and OBD as the exhaust emission
test types under the OTR low enhanced performance standard is not a
duplication of Secs. 51.351 (b) and (c) because these are separate
standards which OTR low areas do not otherwise have to meet.
EPA agrees with the comment that certain portions of sections
51.365 and 51.366 regarding data collection, analysis and reporting are
inapplicable to OTR low enhanced performance states. Certain ``high''
enhanced program elements, such as evaporative system checks, will not
apply in an OTR low enhanced program. However, the Clean Air Act and
the I/M rule require each state to report emissions reductions
achieved, based on data collected during the inspection and repair of
vehicles. Furthermore, depending on the program design which these
areas elect to implement, varying types of data and reporting might or
might not apply. Obviously a state cannot collect, analyze and report
data which its program does not generate. Therefore, while the data
collection and reporting requirements of sections 51.365 and 51.366
must still apply to OTR low enhanced areas, states need only submit
program-applicable data and reports.
D. Emission Reduction Credits
1. Summary of Proposal
The preamble for the proposal acknowledged that EPA had not
finalized emission reduction credits for the OTR low enhanced
performance standard because EPA is still in the process of finalizing
the credits for RSD. However, the preamble did note that EPA expected
these benefits to be less than those achieved by the basic performance
standard.
2. Summary of Comments
Several commenters noted that it is difficult for a state to
finalize an OTR low enhanced program until EPA issues emission
reduction credits for the program.
3. Response to Comments
EPA is preparing to issue a draft guidance on RSD credits in the
Summer of 1996. After the draft guidance is issued, EPA will take
public comments before issuing final guidance. While EPA cannot give a
specific date by which final guidance will be issued, stakeholders can
be assured that EPA realizes the importance of issuing RSD credits and
is working to issue them as soon as possible.
E. Comparability of Basic Programs
1. In the proposal, EPA stated that the emission reductions from
the new OTR low enhanced performance standard will actually be less
than the emission reductions obtained from a basic I/M program. EPA
noted that the Act in no way prohibits the creation of multiple
enhanced performance standards to meet a wide variety of state and
local needs and conditions. In fact, the Clean Air Act does not require
emission reductions targets for enhanced I/M programs to be greater
than those for basic programs. Furthermore, all the areas eligible to
use the OTR low enhanced performance standard were
[[Page 39035]]
not required and did not implement I/M programs before 1990. Thus, the
OTR low enhanced performance standard is an enhancement for these areas
compared to what was required and present before the 1990 amendments to
the Act.
2. Summary of Comments
One commenter believes that any existing basic program in an
attainment or marginal non-attainment area should meet the OTR low
enhanced performance standard. This commenter did not believe that
existing programs should have to be supplemented to meet the new
performance standard.
3. Response to Comments
From an emission reduction point of view, any existing basic
program that meets the basic performance standard will also meet the
emission reduction targets established by the OTR low enhanced
performance standard. The only changes existing programs will have to
make is to include any element which is required for an enhanced
program which it currently does not include; for instance, OBD checks
and 0.5% on-road testing.
F. Effectiveness of RSD
1. Summary of Rule
The performance standard created by today's action requires RSD
testing of 1968 to 1995 vehicles beginning in 1999.
2. Summary of Comments
One commenter was very concerned that RSD testing will actually
increase consumer inconvenience if RSD has a high false failure rate.
If this is the case and the state requires retests for vehicles that
fail the RSD test, many consumers may be needlessly required to go to a
test station to get another emission test.
3. Response to Comments
The goal of this action is to increase flexibility to the states so
that they can design an I/M program which they feel is most effective
for their area and convenient for their citizens. This performance
standard merely establishes the target level of emission reductions
that an OTR low enhanced program must achieve and in no way mandates
the type of test a state must implement. Thus, states concerned about
false failures need not rely heavily on RSD testing. States may
implement any type of test they choose so long as it meets the emission
reduction target of the OTR low enhanced performance standard. The
requirement to perform on-road testing on at least 0.5% of the fleet
remains, although RSD is not required for this purpose.
G. Retests for RSD Failures
1. Summary of Proposal
The OTR low enhanced performance standard requires RSD testing of
1968-1995 vehicles with a carbon monoxide standard of 7.5%. A vehicle
must have two separate readings above 7.5% to establish a failure
thereby requiring a retest.
2. Summary of Comments
One commenter noted their opinion that RSD is useful at targeting
vehicles with excess emissions but that RSD cannot substitute for a
traditional tail-pipe exhaust test. Therefore, the commenter believed
that RSD must be used in conjunction with a traditional exhaust
emissions re-test.
3. Response to Comments
EPA agrees with this comment but again points out that this rule
only establishes a performance standard and is not guidance or a
mandate for RSD usage. EPA believes that it would be unwise for states
to require emission related repairs based solely on an RSD reading.
Indeed, EPA believes that states are aware of this and will perform
confirmatory emission re-tests using proven methods on vehicles that
fail RSD in order to avoid useless repairs.
H. OBD tests
1. Summary of Rule
Among other requirements, the OTR low enhanced performance standard
requires a start date of January 1, 1999 and OBD tests on all 1996 and
newer vehicles.
2. Summary of Comments
One state commented that it was reluctant to require repairs based
solely on OBD test failure in 1999 because of the relative newness of
OBD technology. The state commented that it preferred to wait and not
require repairs based on OBD test failure until there is more data
available on OBD's effectiveness at correctly identifying emission
component failures.
3. Response to Comments
EPA proposed an OBD rule in the Federal Register on August 18, 1995
(60 FR 43092). Currently, EPA is finalizing the OBD rule which is
expected to be published in the Summer of 1996. In the OBD rule, EPA
will address the concerns of this and several other comments about the
novelty of OBD and the need for a phase-in period prior to requiring
repairs.
I. Other Comments
EPA received several other comments which dealt with I/M issues
that were not specific to this rulemaking. EPA responded to these
unrelated comments in a response document which it placed in the
docket.
V. Economic Costs and Benefits
Today's revisions provide states additional flexibility that
lessens rather than increases the potential burden on states.
Furthermore, states are under no obligation, legal or otherwise, to
modify existing plans meeting the previously applicable requirements as
a result of today's action.
VI. Administrative Requirements
A. Administrative Designation
It has been determined that this amendment to the I/M rule is not a
significant regulatory action under the terms of Executive Order 12866
and has been waived from OMB review. Any impacts associated with these
revisions do not constitute additional burdens when compared to the
existing I/M requirements published in the Federal Register on November
5, 1992 (57 FR 52950) as amended. Nor do today's amendments create an
annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or otherwise
adversely affect the economy or the environment. It is not inconsistent
with, nor does it interfere with, actions by other agencies. It does
not alter budgetary impacts of entitlements or other programs, and it
does not raise any new or unusual legal or policy issues.
B. Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirement
There are no information requirements in this supplemental final
rule which require the approval of the Office of Management and Budget
under the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5
U.S.C. 605(b), the Administrator certifies that this action will not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities and, therefore, is not subject to the requirement of a
Regulatory Impact Analysis. A small entity may include a small
government entity or jurisdiction. A small government jurisdiction is
defined as ``governments of cities, counties, towns, townships,
villages, school districts, or special districts, with a population of
less than 50,000.'' This certification is based on the fact that the I/
M areas
[[Page 39036]]
impacted by this rulemaking do not meet the definition of a small
government jurisdiction, that is, ``governments of cities, counties,
towns, townships, villages, school districts, or special districts,
with a population of less than 50,000.'' Furthermore, the impact
created by this action does not increase the pre-existing burden which
this proposal seeks to amend.
D. Unfunded Mandates Act
Under Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(``Unfunded Mandates Act''), signed into law on March 22, 1995, EPA
must prepare a budgetary impact statement to accompany any proposed or
final rule where the estimated costs to State, local, or tribal
governments, or to the private sector, will be $100 million or more.
Under Section 205, EPA must select the most cost-effective and least
burdensome alternative that achieves the objective of the rule and is
consistent with statutory requirements. Section 203 requires EPA to
establish a plan for informing and advising any small governments that
may be significantly impacted by the rule.
To the extent that the rules in this action would impose any
mandate at all as defined in Section 101 of the Unfunded Mandates Act
upon the state, local, or tribal governments, or the private sector, as
explained above, this rule is not estimated to impose costs in excess
of $100 million. Therefore, EPA has not prepared a statement with
respect to budgetary impacts. As noted above, this rule offers
opportunities to states that would enable them to lower economic
burdens from those resulting from the currently existing I/M rule.
E. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
Under section 801(a)(1)(A) of the Administrative Procedures Act
(APA) as amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996, EPA submitted a report containing this rule and other
required information to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives and the Comptroller General of the General Accounting
Office prior to publication of the rule in today's Federal Register.
This rule is not a ``major rule'' as defined by section 804(2) of the
APA as amended.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 51
Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Carbon monoxide, Transportation.
Dated: July 16, 1960.
Fred Hansen,
Acting Administrator.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, part 51 of title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations is amended to read as follows:
PART 51--[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 51 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 740l-7671q.
2. Section 51.350 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(1) and by
adding paragraph (b)(5) to read as follows:
Sec. 51.350 Applicability.
* * * * *
(b) * * * (1) In an ozone transport region, the program shall cover
all counties within subject MSAs or subject portions of MSAs, as
defined by OMB in 1990, except largely rural counties having a
population density of less than 200 persons per square mile based on
the 1990 Census and counties with less than 1% of the population in the
MSA may be excluded provided that at least 50% of the MSA population is
included in the program. This provision does not preclude the voluntary
inclusion of portions of an excluded county. Non-urbanized islands not
connected to the mainland by roads, bridges, or tunnels may be excluded
without regard to population.
* * * * *
(5) Notwithstanding the limitation in paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, in an ozone transport region, states which opt for a program
which meets the performance standard described in Sec. 51.351(h) and
claim in their SIP less emission reduction credit than the basic
performance standard for one or more pollutants, may apply a geographic
bubble covering areas in the state not otherwise subject to an I/M
requirement to achieve emission reductions from other measures equal to
or greater than what would have been achieved if the low enhanced
performance standard were met in the subject I/M areas. Emissions
reductions from non-I/M measures shall not be counted towards the OTR
low enhanced performance standard.
* * * * *
3. Section 51.351 is amended by adding paragraph (h) to read as
follows:
Sec. 51.351 Enhanced I/M performance standards.
* * * * *
(h) Ozone Transport Region Low-Enhanced Performance Standard. An
attainment area, marginal ozone area, or moderate ozone area with a
1980 Census population of less than 200,000 in the urbanized area, in
an ozone transport region, that is required to implement enhanced I/M
under section 184(b)(1)(A) of the Clean Air Act, but was not previously
required to or did not in fact implement basic I/M under the Clean Air
Act as enacted prior to 1990 and is not subject to the requirements for
basic I/M programs in this subpart, may select the performance standard
described below in lieu of the standard described in paragraph (f) or
(g) of this section as long as the difference in emission reductions
between the program described in paragraph (g) and this paragraph are
made up with other measures, as provided in Sec. 51.350(b)(5).
Offsetting measures shall not include those otherwise required by the
Clean Air Act in the areas from which credit is bubbled. The program
elements for this alternate OTR enhanced I/M performance standard are:
(1) Network type. Centralized testing.
(2) Start date. January 1, 1999.
(3) Test frequency. Annual testing.
(4) Model year coverage. Testing of 1968 and newer vehicles.
(5) Vehicle type coverage. Light duty vehicles, and light duty
trucks, rated up to 8,500 pounds GVWR.
(6) Exhaust emission test type. Remote sensing measurements on
1968-1995 vehicles; on-board diagnostic system checks on 1996 and newer
vehicles.
(7) Emission standards. For remote sensing measurements, a carbon
monoxide standard of 7.5% (with at least two separate readings above
this level to establish a failure).
(8) Emission control device inspections. Visual inspection of the
catalytic converter on 1975 and newer vehicles and visual inspection of
the positive crankcase ventilation valve on 1968-1974 vehicles.
(9) Waiver rate. A 3% waiver rate, as a percentage of failed
vehicles.
(10) Compliance rate. A 96% compliance rate.
(11) Evaluation dates. Enhanced I/M program areas subject to the
provisions of this paragraph shall be shown to obtain the same or lower
VOC and NOX emission levels as the model program described in this
paragraph by January 1, 2000, 2003, 2006, and 2007. Equality of
substituted emission reductions to the benefits of the low enhanced
performance standard must be demonstrated for the same evaluation
dates.
4. Section 51.353 is amended by adding paragraph (c)(5) to read as
follows:
[[Page 39037]]
Sec. 51.353 Network type and program evaluation.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(5) Areas that qualify for and choose to implement an OTR low
enhanced I/M program, as established in Sec. 51.351(h), and that
claim in their SIP less emission reduction credit than the basic
performance standard for one or more pollutants, are exempt from the
requirements of paragraphs (c)(1) through (c)(4) of this section. The
reports required under Sec. 51.366 of this part shall be sufficient in
these areas to satisfy the requirements of Clean Air Act for program
reporting.
* * * * *
5. Section 51.364 is amended by adding paragraphs (e) and (f) to
read as follows:
Sec. 51.364 Enforcement against contractors, stations and inspectors.
* * * * *
(e) Alternative quality assurance procedures or frequencies that
achieve equivalent or better results may be approved by the
Administrator. Statistical process control shall be used whenever
possible to demonstrate the efficacy of alternatives.
(f) Areas that qualify for and choose to implement an OTR low
enhanced I/M program, as established in Sec. 51.351(h), and that claim
in their SIP less emission reduction credit than the basic performance
standard for one or more pollutants, are not required to meet the
oversight specifications of this section.
6. Section 51.373 is amended by adding paragraph (f) to read as
follows:
Sec. 51.373 Implementation deadlines.
* * * * *
(f) Areas that choose to implement an enhanced I/M program only
meeting the requirements of Sec. 51.351(h) shall fully implement the
program no later than July 1, 1999. The availability and use of this
late start date does not relieve the area of the obligation to meet the
requirements of Sec. 51.351(h)(11) by the end of 1999.
[FR Doc. 96-18922 Filed 7-24-96; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P