97-22803. Regulation of Fuels and Fuel Additives: Baseline Requirements for Gasoline Produced by Foreign Refiners  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 167 (Thursday, August 28, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 45533-45568]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-22803]
    
    
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    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    40 CFR Part 80
    
    [FRL-5883-3]
    RIN 2060-AH48
    
    
    Regulation of Fuels and Fuel Additives: Baseline Requirements for 
    Gasoline Produced by Foreign Refiners
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This final rule revises the requirements for imported 
    conventional gasoline. The Agency has revised the rules for 
    conventional gasoline (59 FR 7716, February 16, 1994) to allow a 
    foreign refiner to choose to petition EPA to establish an individual 
    baseline reflecting the quality and quantity of gasoline produced at a 
    foreign refinery in 1990 that was shipped to the United States. The 
    foreign refiner is required to meet the same requirements relating to 
    the establishment and use of individual refinery baselines as are met 
    by domestic refiners. This final action also includes additional 
    requirements that address issues that are unique to refiners and 
    refineries located outside the United States, namely those related to 
    tracking the movement of gasoline from the refinery to the United 
    States border, monitoring compliance with the requirements applicable 
    to foreign refiners, and imposition of appropriate sanctions for 
    violations. EPA will monitor the quality of imported conventional 
    gasoline, and if it exceeds a specified benchmark, EPA will apply 
    appropriate remedial action. Under this final action, the baseline for 
    gasoline imported from refiners without an individual baseline would be 
    adjusted to remedy the exceedance.
        EPA believes this final rulemaking is consistent with the Agency's 
    commitment to fully protect public health and the environment, and with 
    the U.S. commitment to comply with its obligations under the World 
    Trade Organization agreement.
    
    DATES: This final rule is effective August 27, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Materials relevant to the final rule have been placed in 
    Public Docket A-97-26 at the address below. Additional materials can be 
    found in Public Dockets A-91-02 and A-92-12, A-94-25 and A-96-33 
    located at Room M-1500, Waterside Mall (ground floor), U.S. 
    Environmental Protection Agency, 401 M Street S.W., Washington, DC 
    20460. The docket may be inspected from 8 a.m. until 5:30 p.m. Monday 
    through Friday. A reasonable fee may be charged by EPA for copying 
    docket materials.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Karen Smith, Fuels and Energy 
    Division, U.S. EPA (6406J), 401 M Street, SW., Washington, DC 20460, 
    Telephone: (202) 233-9674.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Availability on the TTNBSS
    
        Copies of this final rule are available electronically from the EPA 
    Internet Web site and via dial-up modem on the Technology Transfer 
    Network (TTN), which is an electronic bulletin board system (BBS) 
    operated by EPA's Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards. Both 
    services are free of charge, except for your existing cost of Internet 
    connectivity or the cost of the phone call to TTN. Users are able to 
    access and download files on their first call using a personal computer 
    per the following information. The official Federal Register version is 
    made available on the day of publication on the primary Internet sites 
    listed below. The EPA Office of Mobile Sources also publishes these 
    notices on the secondary Web site listed below and on the TTN BBS.
    
    Internet (Web)
    http://www.epa.gov/docs/fedrgstr/EPA-AIR/
    (either select desired date or use Search feature)
    http://www.epa.gov/OMSWWW/
    (look in What's New or under the specific rulemaking topic)
    
        TTNBBS: The TTNBBS can be accessed with a dial-in phone line and a 
    high-speed modem (PH 919-541-5742). The parity of your modem 
    should be set to none, the data bits to 8, and the stop bits to 1. 
    Either a 1200, 2400, 9600, or 14400 baud modem should be used. When 
    first signing on, the user will be required to answer some basic 
    informational questions for registration purposes. After completing the 
    registration process, proceed through the following series of menus:
    
    (T) Gateway to TTN Technical Areas (Bulletin Boards)
    (M) OMS--Mobile Sources Information
    (Alerts display a chronological list of recent documents)
    (K) Rulemaking and Reporting
    
        At this point, choose the topic (e.g, Fuels) and subtopic (e.g., 
    Reformulated Gasoline) of the rulemaking, and the system will list all 
    available files in the chosen category in date order with brief 
    descriptions. To download a file, type the letter ``D'' and hit your 
    Enter key. Then select a transfer protocol that is supported by the 
    terminal software on your own computer, and pick the appropriate 
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    protocol. After getting the files you want onto your computer, you can 
    quit the TTN BBS with the ``G''oodbye command.
        Please note that due to differences between the software used to 
    develop the document and the software into which the document may be 
    downloaded, changes in format, page length, etc. may occur.
    
    Regulated Entities
    
        Entities regulated by this action are those foreign refiners and 
    importers which produce, import or distribute gasoline for sale in the 
    United States. Regulated categories and entities include:
    
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                                                    Examples of regulated   
                     Category                             entities          
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    Industry..................................  Foreign Refiners, Importers.
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        This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a 
    guide for readers regarding entities potentially regulated by this 
    action. This table lists the types of entities that EPA is now aware 
    could potentially be regulated by this action. Other types of entities 
    not listed in the table could also be
    
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    regulated. To determine whether your company or facility may 
    potentially be regulated by this action, you should carefully examine 
    the applicability criteria of part 80, subpart D, of title 40 of the 
    Code of Federal Regulations. If you have questions regarding the 
    applicability of this action to a particular entity, consult the person 
    listed in the preceding FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
        The remainder of this final rulemaking is organized in the 
    following sections:
    
    I. Background
        A. Current Requirements for Imported Gasoline
        B. May 1994 Proposal
        C. The WTO Dispute Settlement Proceeding
        D. Invitation for Public Comment
        E. Requiring Individual Baselines for Foreign Refiners
        F. Summary of Comments from NPRM
    II. Description of Final Rule
        A. Introduction
        B. Requirements for Foreign Refiners with Individual Refinery 
    Baselines
        1. Establish Refinery Baselines
        2. Compliance with CG NOX and Exhaust Toxics 
    Requirements
        3. Requirements for Tracking Refinery of Origin
        4. Measures Related to Monitoring Compliance and Enforcement
        C. Baseline Adjustment for Imported Gasoline that is Not FRGAS
        1. Introduction
        2. Monitoring
        3. An Appropriate Benchmark
        4. Remedial Action Upon an Exceedance
        5. Imported Gasoline Subject to the Remedial Action
        D. Requirements for U.S. Importers
        1. Imported CG FRGAS
        2. Imported CG that is not FRGAS
        3. Imported RFG
        E. Early Use of Individual Foreign Refinery Baselines
        F. Requirements for RFG Before 1998
    III. Summary of Changes from Proposal
    IV. Response to Comments
        A. Optional vs. Mandatory Baselines
        B. Establishment of Individual Baselines
        C. Liability: Party responsible for meeting the gasoline quality 
    requirements for FRGAS
        D. Compliance Related Requirements
        1. Sovereign Immunity
        2. Agent for Service of Process
        3. Bond Requirement
        4. Foreign Refiner Commitments
        5. Gasoline Tracking Requirements
        6. Option to Classify Gasoline as Non-FRGAS
        7. Third Party Testing Requirements
        8. Diversion of FRGAS to Non-U.S. Markets
        9. Attest Requirements
        10. Imports from Canada by Truck
        E. Remedial Measures
        F. Compliance with WTO Obligations
    V. Administrative Designation and Regulatory Analysis
        A. Public Participation
        B. Executive Order 12866
        C. Economic Impact and Impact on Small Entities
        D. Paperwork Reduction Act
        E. Unfunded Mandates
        F. Submission to Congress and the General Accounting Office
        G. Statutory Authority
    Regulation of Fuels and Fuel Additives
    
    I. Background
    
    A. Current Requirements for Imported Gasoline
    
        On December 15, 1993, EPA issued final regulations that establish 
    requirements for reformulated gasoline (RFG) and conventional gasoline 
    (CG) (together the Gasoline Rule), as prescribed by section 211(k) of 
    the Clean Air Act (the Act). See 59 FR 7716 (February 16, 1994). Under 
    the Gasoline Rule, compliance by refiners and importers with the CG 
    requirements and certain RFG requirements is measured against baselines 
    that are intended to reflect a refinery's or importer's 1990 gasoline 
    quality. Domestic refiners are required to establish individual 
    refinery baselines of the quality and quantity of the gasoline produced 
    at each refinery in 1990. Domestic refinery baselines are calculated 
    using, in hierarchical order based on the availability of data, 1990 
    gasoline test data (Method 1), 1990 blendstock test data (Method 2), or 
    post-1990 blendstock and/or gasoline test data (Method 3). Under the 
    Gasoline Rule domestic blenders of gasoline and importers of foreign-
    produced gasoline are treated differently than domestic refiners in 
    that they are required to establish baselines of the quality and 
    quantity of gasoline they produced or imported in 1990 using Method 1 
    data, if available. However, almost all blenders and importers lack the 
    actual 1990 test data necessary to establish a baseline using Method 1 
    data. As a result, blenders and importers are assigned the statutory 
    baseline, a baseline established by EPA in 1993 to approximate average 
    gasoline quality in the United States in 1990,1 with the 
    consequence that almost all gasoline produced at foreign refineries is 
    evaluated through the importer using the statutory 
    baseline.2 The baseline-setting scheme is specified in 40 
    CFR 80.91 through 80.93, and is discussed in the Preamble to the final 
    rule at 59 FR 7791 (February 16, 1994).
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        \1\  The statutory baseline is calculated pursuant to section 
    211(k)(10)(B) of the Act which specifies the properties of 
    summertime statutory baseline gasoline, and instructs EPA to 
    establish the average properties of 1990 wintertime gasoline. The 
    Gasoline Rule specifies the properties of 1990 wintertime gasoline 
    in Sec. 80.45(b)(2), and the combined summer and winter, or annual, 
    statutory baseline gasoline properties in Sec. 80.91(c)(5).
        Importers are required to meet various conventional gasoline 
    requirements by comparing the annual average quality of the gasoline 
    they import against the statutory baseline. An individual batch of 
    imported conventional gasoline is not subject to any requirements, 
    only the annual average of gasoline imported by the importer. 
    Foreign refiners are not subject to the requirements of the current 
    Gasoline Rule.
        \2\ Only one importer had the Method 1 data necessary to 
    establish an individual baseline.
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        In preparing the Gasoline Rule, EPA focused on three major issues 
    regarding the use of individual baselines for foreign refiners in the 
    RFG and CG programs. EPA's overriding consideration was the ultimate 
    environmental consequences of the baseline-setting scheme. The three 
    issues that EPA focused on were: (1) The technical difficulty of using 
    baseline-setting Methods 2 and 3 to accurately predict the quality of 
    the subset of a foreign refinery's gasoline that was exported to the 
    U.S. in 1990; (2) the ability of the Agency to adequately verify and 
    enforce the use of individual foreign refinery baselines, including 
    problems identifying the refinery of origin of imported gasoline and 
    enforcing gasoline content requirements against a foreign refiner; and 
    (3) the risk of adverse environmental effects from providing refiners 
    or importers with options in establishing baselines.
        In developing the Gasoline Rule, EPA considered but did not go 
    forward with allowing foreign refiners the option of petitioning EPA to 
    establish individual baselines using Methods 1, 2, and 3, or defaulting 
    to the statutory baseline. EPA's reasons for not adopting the option at 
    that time are discussed at 59 FR 7785-7788 (February 16, 1994). When 
    EPA issued the final rule on December 15, 1993, however, it was not 
    fully satisfied that the baseline-setting scheme applicable to 
    importers and foreign refiners was the optimum solution and continued 
    to consider the issue.
    
    B. May 1994 Proposal
    
        In May 1994, EPA proposed to amend the Gasoline Rule to define 
    criteria and procedures by which foreign refiners would be allowed to 
    establish individual refinery baselines that reflected the properties 
    and volume of the gasoline that was produced at a foreign refinery in 
    1990 and exported for use within the United States. Under this 
    proposal, if a foreign refiner made the requisite showing through a 
    petition process EPA would establish an individual foreign refinery 
    baseline. U.S. importers of RFG produced at the foreign refinery would 
    have used the individual foreign refinery baseline
    
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    values to demonstrate compliance with the limited number of RFG 
    requirements that are based on individual baselines. Importers would 
    not have been allowed to use individual foreign refinery baselines for 
    the CG requirements. Foreign refinery baselines would have been used 
    only during the period 1995 through 1997 3 and only up to a 
    volume of gasoline each year that equaled the foreign refinery's 1990 
    baseline volume. The proposal also included detailed enforcement and 
    verification procedures.
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        \3\ Individual refinery baselines are used to set certain 
    content requirements for RFG only through 1997. See 40 CFR 80.41.
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        Subsequent to the May 1994 proposal, Congress included restrictive 
    language in the legislation on EPA's appropriations related to the May 
    1994 proposal. EPA took no further action on this proposal.
    
    C. The WTO Dispute Settlement Proceeding
    
        In 1995, the governments of Venezuela and Brazil initiated dispute 
    settlement proceedings before the World Trade Organization (WTO), 
    challenging as discriminatory the different treatment applied by the 
    Gasoline Rule to imported gasoline and gasoline produced by U.S. 
    refiners. Among other defenses, the United States argued that the rule 
    was justified by the difficulties associated with implementing and 
    enforcing individual baseline requirements with respect to foreign 
    refiners and by the potential environmental impact resulting from 
    providing foreign refiners the choice of employing individual 
    baselines. The dispute settlement panel reviewing the matter found the 
    regulation discriminatory under the General Agreement on Tariffs and 
    Trade 1994 (GATT) and that the United States had not shown that the 
    GATT's health, enforcement or conservation exceptions applied. The U.S. 
    appealed, arguing that the measure is covered by the GATT conservation 
    exception. The WTO Appellate Body recognized that the United States had 
    legitimate concerns, and modified the findings of the dispute 
    settlement panel accordingly, but concluded the rule did not satisfy 
    all the requirements for this exception. The Appellate Body based this 
    conclusion on its views that (1) the United States had not adequately 
    explored options available to deal with its compliance assurance 
    concerns, in particular international cooperative arrangements, and (2) 
    the United States had been concerned about the costs of the various 
    regulatory options to domestic refiners but there was no evidence 
    demonstrating similar concern about the costs to foreign refiners. The 
    Appellate Body recommended that the United States bring EPA's 
    regulations into conformity with WTO obligations, leaving the United 
    States to determine how it would comply.
        On June 19, 1996 after the Administration had consulted with 
    Congress, the United States advised the WTO that the United States 
    intended to meet U.S. obligations with respect to the results of the 
    WTO dispute settlement proceedings, that the EPA had initiated an open 
    process to examine any and all options for compliance, and that a key 
    criterion in evaluating options would be fully protecting public health 
    and the environment. On June 28, 1996, EPA published an invitation for 
    public comment in the Federal Register (61 FR 33703), seeking input and 
    suggestions from all interested parties. The comment period closed on 
    September 26, 1996.
    
    D. Invitation for Public Comment
    
        The invitation for public comment was an attempt to identify any 
    and all options available to the Agency to meet U.S. international 
    obligations in response to the WTO decision. EPA's goal was to identify 
    all feasible options that are consistent with EPA's commitment to fully 
    protect public health and the environment, and at the same time are 
    consistent with the obligations of the United States under the WTO.
        Specifically, EPA invited comment on: (1) How to accurately 
    establish a reliable and verifiable individual baseline for a foreign 
    refinery; (2) how EPA could adequately monitor compliance with and 
    enforce any baseline requirements; (3) how EPA could effectively 
    determine the refinery of origin of imported gasoline, so as to 
    determine the appropriate baseline to apply to the imported gasoline; 
    (4) the potential environmental impacts from implementing any suggested 
    options; and (5) a method by which EPA could better quantify or 
    characterize potential environmental impacts of any options proposed. 
    EPA also requested that commenters provide information and analysis on 
    the public health, environmental and economic impact associated with 
    any option presented.
        EPA received sixteen comments from various interested parties 
    during the comment period. Additional comments were received subsequent 
    to the comment period. To review the comments submitted during the 
    invitation for public comment see Air Docket A-96-33 or 62 FR 24778 
    under Section D, Invitation for Public Comment.
    
    E. Requiring Individual Baselines for Foreign Refiners
    
        In preparing the earlier proposal and this final rule EPA attempted 
    to identify any and all options available to the Agency to meet U.S. 
    international obligations in response to the WTO decision. EPA's goal 
    was to identify all feasible options that are consistent with EPA's 
    commitment to fully protect public health and the environment, and at 
    the same time are consistent with the obligations of the United States 
    under the WTO. Comments submitted to EPA during and after the public 
    comment period, and EPA's consideration of this issue, identified two 
    broad approaches for consideration involving individual baselines for 
    foreign refineries.4
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        \4\ The discussion in the preamble will focus on imports of CG, 
    as compared to imports of RFG. After January 1, 1998, individual 
    baselines have no application in the RFG program. For CG, however, 
    individual baselines will continue to be used in setting the 
    compliance requirement for all CG. The application of the final rule 
    to RFG prior to January 1, 1998 is discussed separately in this 
    notice at section II.F.
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        One approach would require the use of individual baselines (IB) by 
    foreign refiners. Use of individual baselines by foreign refiners would 
    be mandatory, not optional. Under this approach, EPA would apply 
    basically the same requirements that apply to domestic refiners to 
    foreign refiners. For the reasons discussed in the proposal, and later 
    in this notice, EPA is not adopting this approach. EPA is instead 
    adopting the approach proposed, which allows foreign refiners to 
    establish and use an IB but does not mandate it. EPA will monitor the 
    emissions quality of imported gasoline and adjust the baselines for 
    gasoline imported from refiners without an individual baseline if a 
    specified benchmark is exceeded.
        The mandatory approach would require all foreign refiners who 
    market gasoline to the U.S. to submit petitions to establish an 
    individual refinery baseline, using the same methods and procedures 
    currently in the regulations. Once an IB was assigned for a refinery, 
    that IB would be used in developing a volume weighted compliance 
    baseline. Under one approach, the foreign refiner would meet the 
    NOX and exhaust toxics requirements for CG exported to the 
    U.S. by that foreign refinery, in the same manner as domestic refiners. 
    Under an alternative approach the domestic importer would establish a 
    volume weighted compliance baseline reflecting the quantity and IBs of 
    gasoline imported from various foreign
    
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    refineries, and the domestic importer would meet the applicable CG 
    requirements. In either case, the use of a foreign refinery IB would be 
    subject to a volume cap, as for domestic refiners. Foreign refiners 
    would be subject to audits and inspections to verify the IB and to 
    verify the quantity and quality of gasoline sent to the U.S. from that 
    foreign refinery.5
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        \5\ These and many other elements of a mandatory IB approach 
    would also apply where foreign refiners are provided an option to 
    establish and use an IB. As discussed later, it is the application 
    of these factors across all imported gasoline that leads to the 
    concerns raised by DOE relating to the supply and price of gasoline 
    in the U.S. market.
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        Significant additional requirements would also need to be imposed 
    on gasoline imported under a foreign refiner's IB. For domestic 
    refiners, almost all gasoline is produced for the U.S. market and the 
    very small volume that is exported can be readily tracked and 
    subtracted from the domestic refiner's compliance calculations. The 
    domestic refiner then bases its CG compliance calculations on the 
    quality and quantity of finished gasoline when it leaves the refinery. 
    At that point it has entered the U.S. gasoline market, and there is no 
    need to track the gasoline or to segregate it from gasoline produced by 
    another refinery.
        For a foreign refiner, only a portion of the refinery's total 
    production is likely to be sent to the U.S., ranging from a very small 
    percentage to a significant minority of production. The gasoline also 
    may travel through a long and complicated distribution system from the 
    point it leaves the refinery gate to the point it enters the U.S. 
    market. However the IB for a specific foreign refinery would properly 
    apply only to gasoline produced at that foreign refinery, and would not 
    apply to gasoline produced at a different foreign refinery.
        Several facts would therefore need to be clearly established to 
    properly apply a foreign refinery's IB to a batch of imported gasoline. 
    First, the refinery that produced the specific batch of imported 
    gasoline must be identified. Second, it must be demonstrated that this 
    batch of gasoline has not been mixed with gasoline produced by a 
    different foreign refinery with a different IB, from the point it left 
    the refinery-of-origin to the point it entered the U.S. market. Third, 
    the total amount of CG and RFG produced by the foreign refinery and 
    sent to the U.S. market must be determined, to establish when the 
    volume cap is exceeded. As with domestic refiners, it would also be 
    important to track blendstocks produced and sent to the U.S. from a 
    foreign refinery, so a foreign refiner could not avoid a stringent IB 
    by shipping blendstocks instead of finished gasoline. Tracking and 
    segregation requirements would need to be adopted to implement this.
        A certain amount of gasoline is imported from fungible gasoline 
    supplies, where the refinery of origin is not known. This occurred in 
    1990, and would be expected to continue to occur in the future. It 
    would be reasonable to allow the practice to continue, and gasoline 
    imported from such sources would continue to be subject to the 
    statutory baseline (SB). However a mechanism would need to be imposed 
    so that this supply of fungible gasoline could not be used as a way to 
    avoid a more stringent IB.
        Under this approach, EPA would need to establish IBs for all 
    foreign refineries, most of which sent only a small volume of gasoline 
    to the U.S. in 1990. The methods used to set IBs for domestic refiners 
    could still be used to establish the quality and quantity of gasoline 
    sent to the U.S. by a foreign refiner in 1990. Given the large number 
    of foreign refineries involved and the potential for widely varying 
    technical and other ability to establish IBs, it is not clear that all 
    foreign refiners would have the information necessary to establish an 
    accurate IB for gasoline sent to the U.S. in 1990.
        The Department of Energy (DOE) has advised EPA that this approach 
    could seriously affect the supply and price of gasoline in the U.S. 
    market. Currently gasoline is imported into the U.S. market from a free 
    moving and fungible distribution system for imported gasoline. The 
    volume of imported gasoline, while small compared to the total U.S. 
    gasoline supply, can have a significant impact on gasoline prices. 
    Imported gasoline tends to moderate price increases by increasing the 
    sources of gasoline to meet U.S. demand, whether in response to a trend 
    of increasing demand over time, or a short term supply problem based on 
    local or temporary changes in domestic supply or demand.
        The mandatory approach outlined above would significantly change 
    the way gasoline is imported to the U.S. market, greatly increasing the 
    complexity and making it more likely that gasoline could not be quickly 
    and readily diverted to the U.S. market to meet demand. This would make 
    it more likely that imported gasoline would not play the same role that 
    it currently does in moderating price increases. The long term supply 
    implications are harder to predict.
        The increase in complexity from this approach is based on the need 
    to ensure that the right IB is applied to a batch of imported gasoline, 
    that an IB is only used up to the applicable volume cap, and that 
    parties do not circumvent the appropriate IB by shifting gasoline or 
    blendstocks through other parties. Modifying the tracking and 
    monitoring restrictions described above to try and resolve the supply 
    concerns would increase the risk of adverse environmental effects from 
    this approach.
        EPA is also concerned that this approach might produce incentives 
    that would tend to reduce the average quality of imported CG. For 
    example, gasoline from refiners with cleaner IBs would be measured 
    against a more stringent baseline than under the current rules, while 
    gasoline from refiners with dirtier IBs would be measured against a 
    less stringent baseline than under the current rules. Additional costs 
    would be associated with segregation, tracking, and other requirements 
    described above. To the extent these changes put refiners with clean 
    IBs at an economic disadvantage compared to refiners with either the SB 
    or an IB dirtier than the SB, it could potentially push the supply of 
    gasoline away from refiners with clean IBs.
        After evaluating this approach, EPA did not propose it. While it 
    appears generally neutral in requiring individual baselines for both 
    domestic and foreign refiners, upon full consideration this approach 
    presents too great a risk of adverse effects on gasoline supply and 
    prices. EPA also has questions as to its potential environmental 
    impact. The Agency instead proposed the optional use of individual 
    baselines, with specific provisions for monitoring gasoline quality and 
    remedying any adverse environmental effects. EPA's rationale (including 
    the Department of Energy's analysis) for selecting this option is 
    further outlined below in Section IV. Response to Comments: Mandatory 
    vs. Optional Baselines.
    
    F. Summary of Comments from NPRM
    
        EPA received comments from nine associations representing various 
    groups including domestic gasoline producers, domestic importers, and 
    environmental organizations. Three domestic refiners individually 
    submitted statements supporting the comments submitted by their 
    representing associations. Three foreign refiners commented. One state 
    environmental organization submitted favorable comments to the NPRM. 
    EPA also received comments from the Commission of the European 
    Communities.
    
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        The issues addressed in the public comments include: the question 
    of mandatory versus optional baselines; EPA's use of cost 
    considerations in the final rule; the consideration of seasonal impacts 
    to prevent additional competitive advantages for foreign refiners; 
    whether or not the Agency has established appropriate and adequate 
    monitoring, compliance and enforcement requirements; the requirement 
    for a waiver of sovereign immunity; and the implementation of the 
    remedial action. This is not intended to be an exhaustive list of 
    comments. A complete set of comments is available from the Air Docket 
    (A-97-26). The major issues and comments are addressed in the Response 
    to Comment section of this final rule.
    
    II. Description of Final Rule
    
    A. Introduction
    
        Today's final action allows foreign refiners the option to 
    establish and use IBs under the conventional gasoline program. Specific 
    regulatory provisions will be implemented to ensure that the optional 
    use of an IB will not lead to adverse environmental impacts. This 
    involves monitoring the average quality of imported gasoline, and if a 
    specified benchmark is exceeded, remedial action will be taken. The 
    remedial action involves making the requirements for imported gasoline 
    not subject to an IB more stringent. This will ensure the environmental 
    neutrality of this approach.
        Under this final rule, the procedures and methods for setting an 
    IB, as well as the tracking, segregation and other compliance related 
    provisions described below will all apply. However, they will only 
    apply where a foreign refiner chooses to apply for an IB.
        The volume of gasoline that can be imported under the IB for a 
    foreign refinery is limited in the same manner as for domestic 
    refiners, relative to a refinery's 1990 baseline volume. Since the 
    foreign refiner seeks an IB in order to specifically produce gasoline 
    for the U.S. market, the tracking and segregation requirements noted 
    above should not have a significant impact on the ready availability of 
    gasoline for import. The current requirements for imported gasoline 
    will continue to apply for all of the other gasoline imported into the 
    U.S.
        There was some concern about the possible environmental impact of 
    providing this option to foreign refiners. A foreign refiner may only 
    have an economic incentive to seek an IB if it will be less stringent 
    than the SB. Gasoline produced by this foreign refiner would then be 
    measured against this less stringent IB. Other imported gasoline would 
    be measured against the SB through the importer. As compared to the 
    situation in 1990, there would be the potential for the quality of 
    imported gasoline to degrade from an emissions perspective.
        The size and amount of this impact, however, is difficult to 
    quantify. It would depend on the number of foreign refiners that 
    receive an IB, the specific emissions levels of the IBs assigned, and 
    the volume of gasoline included in the IB. It would also depend on the 
    source and amount of CG and RFG imported into the U.S. in a specific 
    year. It is also hard to quantify to what extent, if any, foreign 
    refiners who produced gasoline in 1990 that was cleaner than the SB 
    would ship gasoline that is dirtier than what they shipped in 1990. 
    These circumstances, as well as the existence of a volume cap on the 
    use of IB's, and the large variation in the total levels of CG and RFG 
    imports each year make it difficult to assess in advance the risk of an 
    adverse environmental impact.
        EPA is addressing these potential environmental concerns in the 
    final rule by: (1) Establishing a benchmark for the quality of imported 
    gasoline that will reasonably identify when the factors identified 
    above have led to an adverse environmental impact; (2) monitoring 
    imported gasoline to determine whether the benchmark has been exceeded; 
    and (3) if the benchmark is exceeded, imposing a remedy that 
    compensates for the adverse environmental impact.6
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \6\ EPA has adopted an analogous approach in the RFG program. 
    See 40 CFR 80.41 and 80.68.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The benchmark for imported gasoline quality is the volume-weighted 
    average of the IBs for domestic refiners. EPA is finalizing a benchmark 
    for NOX emissions performance set at the volume weighted 
    average for domestic baselines. No benchmark is being set at this time 
    for exhaust toxics emissions performance, as there does not appear to 
    be the same potential for environmental degradation that there could be 
    for NOX.
        EPA will monitor the quality of imported gasoline based on the 
    annual compliance reports filed by importers and foreign refiners 
    producing gasoline that is exported to the U.S. Each year EPA will 
    evaluate the volume weighted annual average quality of the three prior 
    years and compare it to the benchmark. If the average quality of 
    imported gasoline exceeds the benchmark, NOX requirements 
    for gasoline imported from refiners without an IB (currently set at the 
    SB) will increase in stringency the following year by an amount 
    equivalent to the exceedance. This will occur each time the annual 
    monitoring indicates that the benchmark is exceeded. If the amount of 
    an exceedance either increases or decreases, the amount of the remedy 
    will be correspondingly adjusted on an annual basis. If the annual 
    monitoring shows that imported gasoline does not exceed the benchmark, 
    the compliance requirements will be reduced to the SB for the following 
    year. The more stringent requirements will apply to all imported 
    gasoline except for gasoline produced by foreign refiners with an IB.
        This approach meets the goals of environmental protection and 
    compliance with international obligations, as announced in the June 
    1996 Invitation for Public Comment, and avoids the potential supply, 
    price and environmental consequences of the alternative approaches 
    considered by EPA.
        The remainder of this section describes the contents of this final 
    rule. The following sections describe the changes made from the 
    proposal as well as the response to comments received by the Agency. 
    The preamble to the proposal also provides additional information 
    related to provisions that EPA is finalizing without change from the 
    proposal.
    
    B. Requirements for Foreign Refiners With Individual Refinery Baselines
    
    1. Establish Refinery Baselines
        Under this final action, a foreign refiner has the option of 
    submitting an individual refinery baseline petition to EPA. The 
    refinery baseline would reflect the quality and quantity of gasoline 
    produced at the foreign refinery in 1990 that was exported to the U.S.
        The procedures for establishing individual refinery baselines are 
    located in sections 80.90 through 80.93. These same procedures were 
    used by domestic refiners to develop their IBs based on their overall 
    gasoline quantity and quality for 1990.
        EPA is requiring that foreign refiners that elect to develop 
    individual refinery baselines would also follow these procedures to 
    determine the quality and quantity of gasoline they produced in 1990 
    that was exported to the U.S. As is the case for domestic refiners, 
    under section 80.92 baseline petitions would have to be supported by 
    the report of an EPA-approved baseline auditor.
        i. Required Information: The requirements for establishing 
    individual baselines for foreign refineries are essentially the same as 
    the baseline establishment requirements for domestic refineries. EPA is 
    adopting additional requirements for foreign
    
    [[Page 45538]]
    
    refineries that address the unique circumstances associated with 
    establishing and enforcing the establishment and use of an individual 
    baseline by a foreign refiner.
        The procedures for developing individual refinery baselines, set 
    forth in sections 80.90 through 80.93, are highlighted below and 
    discussed with respect to foreign refineries.
         A foreign refinery's individual baseline (i.e., quality 
    and quantity information) must be calculated using, in hierarchical 
    order based on the availability of data, 1990 gasoline test data 
    (Method 1), 1990 blendstock test data (Method 2), or post-1990 
    blendstock and/or gasoline test data (Method 3) to determine the 
    quality and quantity of the subset of gasoline exported to the United 
    States in 1990.
         All data collected beginning in 1990 and through the last 
    date of any data collection under section 80.91(d)(1)(i)(B) must be 
    used in the development of the foreign refineries baseline.
         Baseline petitions must be submitted in the same manner as 
    is required of domestic refiners under section 80.93. Baseline 
    petitions must be submitted before January 1, 2002. EPA is requiring 
    the same type and quality of information and level of accuracy in 
    establishing a baseline no matter when a foreign refiner applies for a 
    baseline.
         EPA is requiring that in order for a refinery to receive 
    an approved baseline, the refinery must commit to give EPA's auditors 
    full access to the foreign refinery to conduct announced and 
    unannounced inspections and audits related to the baseline development 
    and submission. EPA baseline audits could occur at any time after a 
    baseline petition has been submitted, either before or after EPA 
    approves a refinery baseline.
         Under section 80.93(b)(1)(i) foreign refiners are required 
    to provide any additional information requested by EPA to support a 
    baseline submittal or petition, as is required for domestic refiners.
         Under section 80.93(c) a separate baseline will be 
    established for each foreign refinery. However, as is the case of U.S. 
    refiners a foreign refiner could petition EPA for a single refinery 
    baseline for two closely integrated facilities under section 
    80.91(e)(1). In addition, as is the case for U.S. refiners, a foreign 
    refiner who operates more than one refinery with individual baselines 
    would be able to aggregate the baselines of some or all of its 
    refineries under section 80.101(h).
         All documentation included in a baseline submission or 
    petition must be in the English language or include an English language 
    translation.
        ii. EPA Action on Baseline Submissions: As for the domestic refiner 
    baseline approval process, EPA will subject foreign refinery baseline 
    submissions to an in-depth analysis and review. EPA also reserves the 
    right to inspect, audit and review all records or facilities used to 
    generate data submitted to the Agency prior to acting on a baseline 
    submission or petition.
        After conducting its review of the data and analysis in a baseline 
    submission, EPA will assign an individual baseline that represents the 
    quality and quantity of gasoline exported to the U.S. in 1990. EPA 
    believes that individual refinery baselines can be established for 
    foreign refineries for which individual baselines are sought to the 
    same degree of confidence as the baselines established for domestic 
    refineries. Further guidance on EPA's expectations for the petition 
    submission and approval process is provided in the proposed rule at 62 
    FR 24781 (May 6, 1997).
    2. Compliance With CG NOX and Exhaust Toxics Requirements
        The gasoline produced at a foreign refinery with an individual 
    refinery baseline that is imported into the United States is called 
    ``Foreign Refinery Gasoline,'' or ``FRGAS.'' Foreign refiners with 
    individual baselines are required to designate all FRGAS into one of 
    two categories: conventional gasoline FRGAS that is included in the 
    foreign refiner's NOX and exhaust toxics compliance 
    calculations, which is called ``certified FRGAS,'' and all other FRGAS, 
    which is called ``non-certified FRGAS.'' The non-certified FRGAS 
    category includes gasoline that meets the quality requirements for RFG, 
    as well as gasoline that is not RFG quality and has not been included 
    in the foreign refiner's NOX and exhaust toxics compliance 
    calculations.
        Foreign refiners who obtain individual foreign refinery baselines 
    will have to meet the NOX and exhaust toxics emissions 
    performance requirements for all gasoline classified as certified 
    FRGAS.7
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \7\ Non-certified FRGAS will be regulated through the importer. 
    If the importer classifies it as RFG, it will have to meet the RFG 
    requirements. If the importer classifies it as CG, it will have to 
    meet the importers compliance baseline for CG, which in almost all 
    cases is the statutory baseline.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In addition, foreign refiners with an individual refinery baseline 
    will be required to meet all requirements used to demonstrate 
    compliance with the CG emissions requirements. Certain adjustments to 
    these provisions are specified in the regulations to apply them to 
    foreign refiners. These are the same requirements that apply to 
    domestic refiners, and include the following:
         To register with EPA, section 80.103.
         To designate each batch of FRGAS as certified or non-
    certified, section 80.65(d).
         To determine the volume and properties of each certified 
    FRGAS batch through sampling and testing, section 80.101(i).
         To determine the volume of each batch of non-certified 
    FRGAS in order to complete the compliance baseline calculation in 
    section 80.101(f).
         To prepare product transfer documents for FRGAS, sections 
    80.77 and 80.106.
         To keep certain records for five years, sections 80.74 and 
    80.104.
         To submit reports to EPA on each batch of FRGAS, on the 
    volume of non-certified FRGAS, and on the annual average quality of 
    certified FRGAS, sections 80.75 and 80.105.
         To comply with an annual cap on the volume of specified 
    blendstocks that are transferred to others and used to produce gasoline 
    for the U.S., section 80.102.
         To have an independent audit performed of refinery 
    operations each year to review certain activities related to the FRGAS 
    requirements, sections 80.125 through 80.130. However, the audit 
    procedures for non-certified FRGAS would be limited to the procedures 
    that evaluate the quantity of non-certified FRGAS, and audits would not 
    be required to include procedures intended to verify information about 
    non-certified FRGAS that is unrelated to the compliance baseline 
    calculation, such as the quality of non-certified FRGAS quality or VOC-
    control designations.
        Under section 80.101(f) a compliance baseline for NOX 
    and exhaust toxics compliance is calculated for each calendar year 
    averaging period based on a refinery's 1990 baseline volume and 
    baseline NOX and exhaust toxics values, and the total 
    gasoline volume (CG and RFG) produced at the refinery and imported into 
    the U.S. during the averaging period. As a result, a foreign refiner 
    with an individual refinery baseline will be required to establish the 
    volume of U.S. market gasoline that is non-certified FRGAS in order to 
    calculate the refinery's compliance baseline for the NOX and 
    exhaust toxics CG requirements (see footnotes at 62 FR 24782 for 
    further clarification).
    
    [[Page 45539]]
    
        Therefore, a foreign refiner with an individual refinery baseline 
    will be required to designate each batch of U.S. market gasoline as 
    certified FRGAS or non-certified FRGAS, to establish the volume and 
    properties of gasoline designated as certified FRGAS, and to establish 
    the volume of gasoline designated as non-certified FRGAS.
        All foreign refiners with individual refinery baselines will be 
    required to submit annual reports to EPA that demonstrate the average 
    NOX and exhaust toxics emissions for certified FRGAS meets 
    the refinery's compliance baseline for the averaging period.
        Under today's final action, certified FRGAS will be treated 
    basically under the same rules as gasoline produced for the U.S. market 
    at a domestic refinery. The certified FRGAS will be subject to the same 
    conventional gasoline requirements as the conventional gasoline 
    produced by domestic refiners. During 1997, under section 80.101(b)(1) 
    a refinery's annual average for sulfur, T-90, olefins and exhaust 
    benzene emissions may not exceed its individual baseline for these fuel 
    characteristics. Starting in 1998 a refinery's annual average 
    conventional gasoline NOX and exhaust toxics emissions may 
    not exceed its individual baseline for these fuel characteristics. In 
    order to evaluate compliance, however, certified FRGAS must be 
    designated as such at the point of production, and must be tracked to 
    determine that it in fact is exported to the U.S.
        In order to determine compliance with the NOX and 
    exhaust toxics requirements for certified FRGAS, the quality and 
    quantity of each batch of certified FRGAS must be determined. The 
    volume of non-certified FRGAS also will have to be determined, because 
    the compliance baseline applicable to a refinery depends on the total 
    volume of gasoline produced at a refinery and imported into the U.S. 
    market, including both certified and non-certified FRGAS. To determine 
    the quality and/or quantity of this gasoline, a foreign refiner will 
    have to designate FRGAS when it is produced. It also is important that 
    gasoline used in a foreign refinery's compliance calculation all be 
    designated as FRGAS and actually imported into the U.S.
        In the case of certified FRGAS the foreign refiner must include the 
    gasoline in the refinery's NOX and exhaust toxics compliance 
    calculations, and meet the refinery tracking requirements, described 
    below. Gasoline that is not classified as FRGAS and is not imported 
    into the U.S. must be excluded from the refinery's compliance 
    calculations, and the refiner is not required to meet the refinery 
    tracking requirements for this gasoline.
        However, the foreign refiner will continue to be required to 
    include all non-certified FRGAS in the refinery's compliance baseline 
    calculations and to meet the refinery tracking requirements for all 
    non-certified FRGAS. This is necessary in order to prevent adverse 
    environmental effects. As in the case of domestic refiners, all 
    gasoline imported into the United States must be included in a 
    refinery's compliance baseline calculation because a larger volume of 
    non-certified FRGAS results in a more stringent compliance baseline 
    applicable to the certified FRGAS.
    3. Requirements for Tracking Refinery of Origin
        EPA is finalizing a series of requirements to accurately identify 
    both certified and non-certified FRGAS gasoline upon its arrival into 
    the U.S. There is the potential for adverse environmental results if a 
    foreign refiner includes gasoline in its CG NOX and exhaust 
    toxics compliance calculations that is not imported into the U.S. In 
    addition, there is environmental risk if a foreign refiner fails to 
    include in its compliance baseline calculations the volume of any 
    gasoline that is imported into the U.S.
        i. Segregation of FRGAS: EPA is requiring that certified FRGAS must 
    remain physically segregated from non-certified FRGAS and from 
    certified FRGAS produced at another refinery, from the foreign refinery 
    to the U.S. port of entry. As a result of this requirement, when a 
    foreign refiner loads FRGAS onto a ship for transport to the U.S. the 
    foreign refiner must know the gasoline is exclusively FRGAS that is 
    being included in the refinery compliance calculations (for certified 
    FRGAS), or compliance baseline calculations (in the case of non-
    certified FRGAS).
        This segregation requirement would not prohibit a foreign refiner 
    from combining batches of certified FRGAS, or combining batches of non-
    certified FRGAS, that are produced at a single refinery into larger 
    volumes for shipment. In addition, where multiple refineries have been 
    aggregated under Sec. 80.101(h), certified FRGAS produced at the 
    aggregated refineries may be combined, and non-certified FRGAS produced 
    at the aggregated refineries may be combined.
        ii. Foreign Refiner Certification of FRGAS: EPA is requiring that 
    foreign refiners of FRGAS prepare a certification, signed by an 
    appropriate foreign refiner official, for FRGAS when it is loaded onto 
    a ship for transport to the U.S. This certification must identify the 
    gasoline as being FRGAS, whether the FRGAS is certified or non-
    certified, the foreign refinery where the FRGAS was produced, and the 
    volume of the FRGAS being transported. In the case of certified FRGAS 
    the certification must also include the properties of the gasoline 
    being transported and a declaration that the gasoline is being included 
    in the NOX and exhaust toxics compliance calculations for 
    the foreign refinery. A single declaration may apply to the entire 
    contents of a vessel where the gasoline is only certified FRGAS or is 
    only non-certified FRGAS.
        The foreign refiner certification must be supported by an 
    inspection by an independent, EPA-approved third party such as an 
    independent laboratory. The independent party must confirm the refinery 
    of origin, guarantee that no prohibited mixing occurred, and determine 
    the volume and properties of the certified FRGAS, and the volume of 
    non-certified FRGAS.
        The independent party is required to prepare a report on these 
    inspections that becomes a part of the foreign refiner's certification. 
    The independent party also must submit an inspection report to EPA.
        iii. U.S. Importer Receipt of FRGAS: Under this final rule, the 
    U.S. importer must classify certified-FRGAS as such if the gasoline is 
    accompanied by a foreign refiner certification that is properly 
    supported by an independent party's report, and if test results from 
    the load port are consistent with test results from the U.S. port of 
    entry.
        The regulations require the importer to test the FRGAS, and include 
    criteria for comparing the load port and port of entry testing. The 
    test results have to agree, for five specified parameters (sulfur, 
    benzene, gravity, E200 and E300), within the reproducibility limits for 
    the test procedures for these parameters. The two volume 
    determinations, corrected for temperature, have to agree within one 
    percent. EPA believes this level of volume correlation is appropriate 
    because it is well within the level of correlation normally expected in 
    commercial transactions. EPA understands that protests normally are 
    initiated if ship volume determinations in commercial dealings differ 
    by 0.5%.
        Importers are required to include in their NOX and 
    exhaust toxics compliance calculations any FRGAS for which the importer 
    does not obtain a certificate by the foreign refiner supported by a 
    report prepared by an independent third party, or FRGAS where the load 
    and entry port comparison is outside the range specified in the 
    regulations.
    
    [[Page 45540]]
    
        In the case of FRGAS for which the importer obtains a properly 
    supported foreign refiner certificate, but where the volume and/or 
    parameter results from the load port and port of entry do not meet the 
    range requirements, the gasoline must be imported as non-certified 
    FRGAS.8 In addition, the foreign refiner is required to 
    remove the volume and properties of the FRGAS from its NOX 
    and exhaust toxics compliance calculations, because the gasoline now is 
    classified as non-certified FRGAS. However, the foreign refiner must 
    retain the volume of the FRGAS in its compliance baseline calculation, 
    the same as any other non-certified FRGAS, unless the foreign refiner 
    can demonstrate that the importer did not classify the gasoline or as 
    RFG or use it to produce RFG.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \8\ The importer may also treat as GTAB any gasoline classified 
    as non-certified FRGAS.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In a case of load port and port of entry test results that are 
    outside the specified range for certified FRGAS, the regulations also 
    allow the gasoline to retain this classification if the NOX 
    and exhaust toxics emissions performance based upon port of entry test 
    results is ``cleaner'' for both pollutants than the emissions 
    performance based upon the load port test results.
        U.S. importers are required to report to EPA on each batch of FRGAS 
    imported, identifying the foreign refinery, whether the FRGAS is 
    certified or non-certified, the volume and properties of certified 
    FRGAS, and the volume of non-certified FRGAS.9
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \9\ Non-certified FRGAS also must be included in the U.S. 
    importer's compliance calculations for RFG or conventional gasoline. 
    The importer must meet all current requirements for such gasoline, 
    such as sampling, testing and reporting.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        iv. Attest Engagement Requirements: Under today's final rule, 
    foreign refiners of FRGAS must meet the independent attest engagement 
    requirements in sections 80.125 through 80.130, the same as domestic 
    refiners, although the attest requirements for non-certified FRGAS are 
    limited to those related to the volume of non-certified FRGAS produced 
    at a foreign refinery.10 EPA is adopting additional attest 
    requirements that relate to the FRGAS requirements. These attest 
    requirements supplement the requirements regarding an independent party 
    determination of the refinery that produced FRGAS loaded onto a ship. 
    The focus of the attest requirements will be on the foreign refinery 
    operations, while the requirements for certification by an independent 
    party focus on the transportation and storage of gasoline from the 
    refinery to the point of ship loading.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \10\ ``Attest engagement'' is a term of art used by auditors to 
    describe the conduct of specified audit procedures--the auditor 
    attests to the conduct and results of the specified audit, or 
    attest, procedures completed during the attest engagement. The 
    requirements in sections 80.125 through 80.130 consist of specified 
    attest procedures dealing with the Gasoline Rule and instructions 
    for the conduct of these procedures.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        For further details on the procedures an auditor will be required 
    to perform see 62 FR 24784 (May 6, 1997) ``Attest Engagement 
    Requirements.''
        v. Requirements for Third Parties: EPA is requiring that FRGAS 
    sampling, volume and fuel quality determinations and determinations of 
    refinery of origin at the loading port will have to be performed by an 
    independent party. The criteria for independence are the same criteria 
    that apply for the independent sampling and testing requirement for 
    domestic refiners and importers, and that are specified at section 
    80.65(f)(2)(ii). In addition, persons performing this work must be EPA 
    approved. EPA approval will be based on the ability to perform the 
    required work as demonstrated through a petition process.
        Independent parties will have to agree to allow EPA inspections and 
    audits relative to their work under the Gasoline Rule for the foreign 
    refiner that are similar to the commitments required by foreign 
    refiners, described below.
        Third party sampling and testing is a necessary part of the foreign 
    refiner FRGAS program. However, in response to comments EPA is 
    modifying these requirements in several ways for this final rule, as 
    discussed below.
    4. Measures Related to Monitoring Compliance and Enforcement
        i. Introduction: The requirements for foreign refiners with 
    individual refinery baselines must be subject to strong measures for 
    monitoring compliance and enforcing violations, as are domestic 
    refiners. However, there are a number of unique circumstances 
    associated with monitoring compliance and enforcing requirements for 
    foreign refiners. EPA is adopting a range of provisions designed to 
    address these concerns in a comprehensive manner. These provisions will 
    promote EPA's ability to monitor compliance with the requirements 
    related to foreign refinery baselines, to conduct enforcement actions 
    when violations of these requirements are found, and to impose 
    sanctions that will constitute a deterrent to future violations.
        The purpose of the provisions is to ensure that EPA's compliance 
    and enforcement activities with regard to foreign refiners will be on a 
    par with those for domestic refiners, in order to assure achievement of 
    the environmental objectives of the gasoline programs.
        ii. Inspections and audits: EPA intends to inspect and audit 
    foreign refineries with individual baselines and other facilities 
    located overseas to determine compliance with requirements related to 
    establishing a baseline, identifying refineries or origin, and other 
    requirements proposed today. Foreign refiner inspections and audits 
    will be like domestic refiner inspections and audits with regard to 
    types of facilities visited, types of information reviewed, and types 
    of persons who conduct the inspections and audits. As with domestic 
    inspections and audits, some of the inspections and audits may be 
    announced while some will be unannounced.
        With the exception of the limited waiver of sovereign immunity, all 
    aspects of section (ii) inspections and audits (62 FR 24784-24785, May 
    6, 1997) outlined in the proposal are adopted by today's action. For a 
    detailed list of the inspection and audit requirements refer to that 
    section of the proposed rule. EPA's response to comment and final 
    action on the limited waiver of sovereign immunity is addressed below 
    in section D.
        Where a foreign refiner fails to abide by the terms of the foreign 
    refiner commitments, or a foreign government fails to allow entry for 
    the purpose of EPA inspections and audits, EPA may withdraw or suspend 
    the refiner's individual refinery baseline.
        iii. Administrative, civil, and criminal enforcement actions: A 
    foreign refiner with an individual refinery baseline who submits false 
    documents to EPA or who fails to meet other requirements will be 
    subject to civil, and in certain cases criminal, enforcement, and EPA 
    is adopting requirements that will facilitate prosecution of such 
    violations. These requirements consist of provisions relating to a 
    waiver of sovereign immunity, and commitments the foreign refiner must 
    include in a baseline petition submitted to EPA.
        Each foreign refiner seeking an individual refinery baseline must 
    identify an agent for service in the U.S. and agree that service on 
    this agent constitutes service on the foreign refiner and its 
    employees. This agent for service need not be a general agent for 
    service; the agent need only be authorized to accept service by EPA, or 
    otherwise by the U.S., for enforcement actions related to these 
    regulatory provisions. The agent for service must be located in the 
    District of Columbia.
        Foreign refiners have to acknowledge that the forum for civil 
    enforcement actions will be governed by Clean Air
    
    [[Page 45541]]
    
    Act (CAA) section 205. CAA section 205(b) specifies that the venue for 
    district court actions is either the district where the violation 
    occurred or where the defendant resides or in the Administrator's 
    principal place of business. However, EPA believes that the U.S. 
    district court for the District of Columbia would be the appropriate 
    court for violations related to the requirements proposed today that 
    are committed by defendants who reside outside the U.S. Administrative 
    assessment of civil penalties is allowed under CAA section 205(c) where 
    the penalty amount does not exceed $200,000, or where the EPA 
    Administrator and the Attorney General jointly determine that a case 
    involving a larger penalty is appropriate for administrative penalty 
    assessment.
        Foreign refiners of FRGAS must acknowledge that civil and criminal 
    enforcement actions will use the same U.S. civil and criminal 
    substantive and procedural laws that apply in enforcement actions 
    against domestic refiners. All of these requirements are finalized in 
    today's rulemaking.
        iv. Sanctions for civil and criminal violations: The sanctions for 
    civil and criminal violations committed by foreign refiners with 
    individual refinery baselines or employees of such foreign refiners 
    include the sanctions specified in the Clean Air Act. Under CAA section 
    211(d) the penalty for civil violations of the RFG and conventional 
    gasoline requirements is up to $25,000 per day of violation plus the 
    amount of economic benefit or savings resulting from the violation. 
    Injunctive authority is included under section 211(d)(2) as well. CAA 
    section 113(c) specifies that the criminal penalty for first violations 
    of knowingly making false statements or reports is a fine pursuant to 
    title 18 of the U.S. Code, or imprisonment for up to 5 years, or both. 
    The period of maximum imprisonment and the maximum fine are doubled for 
    repeat convictions.
        Foreign refiners seeking and then operating under an individual 
    refinery baseline must post a bond with the U.S. Treasury that will be 
    available to satisfy any civil penalty or criminal fine that is imposed 
    against the refiner or its employees, but only with regards to 
    enforcement of the regulatory provisions adopted today. The amount of 
    this bond is $0.01 per gallon of certified FRGAS imported from the 
    refiner into the U.S. per year, based on the maximum annual volume of 
    certified FRGAS imports during the most recent five year period during 
    which the foreign refiner exported certified FRGAS to the U.S. using an 
    individual refinery baseline. However, the initial bond amount will be 
    based on the volume of conventional gasoline or certified FRGAS 
    produced at a foreign refinery that was imported into the U.S. during 
    the year immediately preceding the year the baseline petition is 
    submitted.11 The foreign refiner must submit with its 
    baseline petition a bond to reflect this volume, and include with its 
    baseline petition information necessary to accurately establish the 
    conventional gasoline volume for the preceding year. The foreign 
    refiner then each year would take into account in its bond amount 
    calculation the certified FRGAS volume for an additional year until 
    there is a five year history, at which time the certified FRGAS volume 
    review would include only the most recent five years.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \11\ A foreign refinery's 1990 baseline volume would not be 
    appropriate for setting the bond amount, because in 1990 the 
    Gasoline Rule was not in effect, so there was no gasoline identified 
    as conventional or RFG.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        As an alternative to posting the bond with the U.S. Treasury, a 
    foreign refiner may meet the bond requirement by obtaining a bond in 
    the proper amount from a third party surety agent that would be payable 
    to satisfy U.S. judicial judgments for civil or administrative 
    penalties against the foreign refiner provided that EPA agrees in 
    advance to the third party and the nature of the surety agreement. In 
    addition, the bond requirement may be met by an alternative commitment 
    that results in assets of an appropriate liquidity and value being 
    readily available to the United States, provided that EPA agrees in 
    advance to the alternative.
        As with domestic refiners, any violation of a regulatory 
    requirement by a foreign refiner could result in the imposition of 
    penalties. For foreign refiners with individual refinery baselines the 
    assessment of a penalty could then result in the forfeiture of a bond 
    to satisfy the penalty. This would, for example, include a failure to 
    allow EPA inspections and audits; failure to submit required audit 
    reports prepared by an independent auditor; or failure to properly 
    identify the source refinery for FRGAS.
        If a foreign refiner with an individual refinery baseline fails to 
    meet any requirements, including those that apply to all refiners under 
    the current regulations, and/or the additional requirements that would 
    apply only to foreign refiners, then EPA may administratively withdraw 
    or suspend its individual refinery baseline.
        Withdrawal or suspension of an individual refinery baseline may be 
    imposed for all of the refineries operated by a foreign refiner, or for 
    a subset of a foreign refiner's refineries where appropriate. EPA will 
    impose this sanction in a particular case only after evaluating the 
    circumstances and exercising its discretion based on factors such as 
    egregiousness, willfulness and prior violations. The withdrawal or 
    suspension may be imposed for a limited time.
    
    C. Baseline Adjustment for Imported Gasoline That Is Non-FRGAS or Non-
    Certified FRGAS
    
    1. Introduction
        Allowing foreign refiners to choose whether to establish an IB 
    creates a potential for adverse environmental impact. This potential is 
    addressed by monitoring the quality of imported gasoline, comparing it 
    to a benchmark, and taking remedial action if the benchmark is 
    exceeded. The details of this approach are described below.
    2. Monitoring
        Under the current regulations, importers submit an annual report 
    concerning the quality of the CG they import. See 40 CFR 80.105. 
    Importers submit an annual report after the end of the calendar year, 
    comparing the quality of the gasoline they imported against the 
    applicable annual average requirements. Starting in 1998, these 
    requirements are for NOX and exhaust toxics emission 
    performance, determined under the Complex Model.
        Under the current rules, the annual report is due by the last day 
    of February following the end of the annual averaging period. An attest 
    engagement report is due by May 30. The importer's report must include 
    the total gallons of CG imported, the annual average compliance 
    baseline, and the annual average for the gasoline imported that 
    calendar year. The importer must also include the volume, grade and 
    qualities for each batch of imported gasoline.
        Under today's final rule, importers will continue to submit the 
    reports described above for CG produced by foreign refiners without an 
    IB. For gasoline produced by a foreign refiner with an IB, both the 
    importer and the foreign refiner will submit reports to EPA. In 
    combination these reports will contain all of the information submitted 
    for gasoline produced by refiners without an IB.
        These annual reports submitted by importers and foreign refiners 
    provide EPA with batch by batch information for all CG imported during 
    that year. From these, EPA will determine the volume weighted average 
    quality for all imported CG. This will be a simple and straightforward 
    way to monitor
    
    [[Page 45542]]
    
    imported gasoline quality. Additional sampling and testing by EPA would 
    be duplicative, as the importer must sample and test each batch of 
    imported gasoline. 40 CFR 80.101(i).
    3. An Appropriate Benchmark
        The purpose of the benchmark is to reasonably determine when 
    allowing foreign refiners the option to use an IB or to not use an IB 
    has caused degradation of the quality of imported gasoline from 1990 
    quality of imported gasoline.
        Ideally, EPA would use the volume weighted average of the quality 
    of gasoline sent to the U.S. by foreign refineries in 1990. EPA does 
    not have this information, but does have information on the volume 
    weighted average baselines for domestic refineries. This average 
    accounts for approximately 95% of the U.S. gasoline market in 1990, and 
    reflects a wide diversity in types and kinds of refineries. There is no 
    available data indicating that gasoline imported from foreign 
    refineries was not consistent with this average, and absent evidence to 
    the contrary it is not unreasonable to assume that average foreign 
    gasoline quality in 1990 was generally equivalent to domestic gasoline 
    quality. Also it would not be reasonable to measure overall quality for 
    gasoline produced by foreign refiners using stricter criteria than that 
    applied to domestic refiners, in the absence of evidence to support 
    such an action.
        The benchmark should be set at a point such that an exceedance of 
    the benchmark reasonably indicates that the average quality of imported 
    gasoline has degraded from 1990 levels because of the option provided 
    to foreign refiners in using or not using an IB. Many additional 
    factors also affect the average quality of imported gasoline. For 
    example, there is a wide variety in the level of imports from year to 
    year. The source and volume of imports from specific countries and 
    refineries also varies significantly from year to year. Despite general 
    trends in amount and source of imported gasoline, there remains a lot 
    of year to year variability. A change in average gasoline quality 
    during any particular year therefore might indicate the effects of 
    allowing the option for IBs, or it might reflect the unique 
    circumstances of that year, which may well change the next year.
        Since the existence of an exceedance of the benchmark is designed 
    to detect a multi-year trend, EPA will use a three year average for 
    comparison against the benchmark. This will be a rolling average; e.g. 
    the average for years 1 through 3 will be compared to the benchmark one 
    year, the next year the average for years 2 through 4 will be compared, 
    and so on.
        EPA is setting this benchmark for NOX at the volume 
    weighted baseline average for domestic refiners: 1465 mg/mile for 
    NOX.12
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \12\ This value is based on the Phase 2 Complex Model, and will 
    be used prior to and after 2000.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        For toxics, the evidence to date tends to show there would not 
    likely be an adverse impact from allowing the option to use IBs. In 
    1995, the volume weighted annual average of imported gasoline for 
    exhaust toxics was 86.64 mg/mile. This was cleaner than both the 
    statutory baseline (104.5 mg/mile) and the volume weighted average for 
    domestic baselines (97.34 mg/mile).\13\ In addition, one foreign 
    refiner that is a major supplier to the U.S. market has submitted 
    detailed information to EPA on their expected IB, and the information 
    submitted by the foreign refiner to date indicates that their IB for 
    exhaust toxics would be cleaner than the SB.\14\ Further information is 
    discussed in the response to comments section. EPA believes the present 
    circumstances do not indicate that there is a risk of adverse 
    environmental impact, and a benchmark and provisions for remedial 
    action are not needed for exhaust toxics at this time. Instead, EPA 
    will monitor the average quality of imported gasoline for exhaust 
    toxics as for NOX, and if an adverse trend occurs EPA will 
    develop a benchmark and remedial provisions analogous to that adopted 
    for NOX.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \13\ In 1995 the volume weighted average for NOX for 
    imported gasoline was 1415.9 mg/mile, while the SB was 1461 mg/mile, 
    and the volume weighted average for domestic baselines was 1465 mg/
    mile.
        \14\ See 59 FR 22809 (May 3, 1994).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        At the start of the program, the volume weighted average for 1998 
    and 1999 will be compared to the benchmark, and then the average for 
    1998, 1999 and 2000, to start the three year rolling average. A one 
    year average for 1998 alone would not by itself appear adequate to 
    detect a multi-year trend, while a two year average would be more 
    effective in this regard. The effects of imports in 1998 would still be 
    fully accounted for, in the two year average including 1999. Since an 
    IB might start to be used in 1997, EPA will include with the 1998 
    imports all gasoline imported in 1997 after the date any gasoline 
    subject to an IB is imported in 1997.
    4. Remedial Action Upon an Exceedance
        If a volume weighted three year annual average for imported CG 
    exceeds the benchmark for NOX then EPA will take remedial 
    action. The remedial action will be an adjustment applied to the 
    compliance baseline for CG not included in the CG compliance 
    calculations of a foreign refiner with an IB. The adjustment to the 
    baseline will equal the amount of the exceedance of the benchmark.
        This will be reevaluated each year by comparing the average for the 
    three prior years to the benchmark. If there is no exceedance, then a 
    prior adjustment will be terminated. If there is an exceedance, then a 
    new adjustment will be imposed that equals the amount of the current 
    exceedance. For example, if the three year annual average exceeds the 
    NOX benchmark by 5 mg/mile, then the compliance baseline for 
    NOX will be adjusted by 5 mg/mile. If there is no exceedance 
    in the next years comparison, then the adjustment will be dropped.\15\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \15\ For the initial years of the program, an exceedance for 
    1998 and 1999 will lead to a remedial adjustment that equals the 
    exceedance, but no more than 1% of the SB for NOX. The 1% 
    cap is designed to avoid imposing an unnecessarily stringent 
    adjustment that could result from the absence of data from a 
    complete three year cycle.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    5. Imported Gasoline Subject to the Remedial Action
        A foreign refiner using an IB will follow the same procedures as a 
    domestic refiner--the quality of its CG will be measured against the IB 
    of the refiner that produced it. Foreign refiners without an IB would 
    have chosen to have their gasoline measured against the SB instead of 
    an IB, and reasonably could be expected to include refiners whose IB 
    would have been more stringent than the SB. It is the use of IBs by 
    some refiners, and the degradation below 1990 quality in CG produced by 
    foreign refiners without an IB, that has the potential to cause the 
    average CG quality to be adversely affected when other refiners are 
    subject to an IB. Since the foreign refiner with an IB would be acting 
    no differently than domestic refiners with an IB, the remedial action 
    will be applied to CG imported from refiners without an IB.
    
    D. Requirements for U.S. Importers
    
        Under today's action U.S. importers must meet NOX and 
    exhaust toxics requirements for all imported CG that is not designated 
    as certified FRGAS, and must exclude from importer CG compliance 
    calculations all CG that is designated as certified FRGAS. A mechanism 
    is provided by which U.S. importers would demonstrate that imported CG 
    is certified FRGAS. The baseline that will apply to U.S. importers of 
    non-FRGAS and non-
    
    [[Page 45543]]
    
    certified FRGAS will be the statutory baseline or any adjusted baseline 
    as discussed in section II.C above. EPA is not changing the current 
    requirement that U.S. importers meet all requirements for imported RFG.
    1. Imported Certified FRGAS
        Certified FRGAS must be excluded from the U.S. importer's CG 
    compliance calculations. This prevents the double counting that would 
    result if certified FRGAS were included in the CG compliance 
    calculations of both the foreign refiner and the U.S. importer. 
    However, the U.S. importer must determine the quality and quantity of 
    certified FRGAS at the U.S. port of entry, which the importer then 
    reports to the foreign refiner and to EPA in order to be compared with 
    the foreign load port testing.
        A U.S. importer must classify an imported gasoline batch as 
    certified FRGAS if the gasoline is accompanied by a certification 
    prepared by the foreign refiner that identifies the gasoline as 
    certified FRGAS to be included in the foreign refinery CG compliance 
    calculations, and a report on the certified FRGAS batch prepared by an 
    independent third party, and the load and entry port comparison is 
    within the specified range. In this way the U.S. importer acts like a 
    domestic distributor and would not be responsible for meeting the 
    NOX and exhaust toxics requirements for this gasoline. The 
    U.S. importer is not responsible for whether the foreign refiner meets 
    the annual NOX and exhaust toxics requirements for certified 
    FRGAS, including whether the foreign refiner properly calculates the 
    refinery's compliance baseline each year.
        However, the U.S. importer is responsible for ensuring the foreign 
    refiner certification was in fact prepared by the foreign refiner named 
    on the certificate, and that the foreign refinery has been assigned an 
    individual refinery baseline by EPA. If a certified FRGAS certification 
    was not prepared by the named foreign refiner, for example if it is a 
    forgery, the U.S. importer will be required to classify the gasoline as 
    non-FRGAS and include the gasoline in the importer's CG compliance 
    calculations. Similarly, if the certificate accompanying a batch of 
    certified FRGAS names a foreign refinery that has not been assigned an 
    individual baseline, the U.S. importer will be required to classify the 
    gasoline as non-FRGAS and include the gasoline in the importer's CG 
    compliance calculations. It is necessary to make U.S. importers 
    responsible for accounting for imported CG in these situations in order 
    to enable EPA to enforce the CG requirements effectively. EPA would 
    have great difficulty enforcing requirements against a foreign party 
    who may have created fraudulent FRGAS certification documents, other 
    than a foreign refiner who has established an individual refinery 
    baseline.
        EPA believes U.S. importers can easily protect themselves against 
    this type of liability. EPA will publish on its computer bulletin board 
    the identity of foreign refineries that have been assigned individual 
    baselines, that may be used by importers to identify legitimate foreign 
    refiners of FRGAS. Importers can avoid relying on false certificates by 
    selecting reliable business partners, or by contacting the foreign 
    refiner to ensure the authenticity of the certificate for any 
    particular certified FRGAS batch.
        The U.S. importer must use an independent third party to determine 
    information about each certified FRGAS batch. The batch quality and 
    quantity must be determined through sampling and testing prior to off 
    loading the ship, and that will be compared with the quality and 
    quantity determined at the load port after the ship was loaded. The 
    independent party also must use the product transfer documents to 
    determine the identity of the foreign refinery where the certified 
    FRGAS was produced. The importer submits a report to the foreign 
    refiner and to EPA containing the batch information.
        U.S. importers may not classify certified FRGAS as ``gasoline 
    treated as blendstock,'' (GTAB), because to do so would result in the 
    same CG being included in two compliance calculations.16 In 
    addition, U.S. importers may not use GTAB procedures to convert 
    certified FRGAS into RFG, for the same reason that domestic regulated 
    parties are not allowed to convert CG into RFG. Conversion of CG into 
    RFG is prohibited because of concern such conversions could result in 
    degradation of the CG gasoline pool. For example, in the absence of 
    this constraint a refiner could produce very clean CG that in fact 
    meets the RFG requirements, include this gasoline in the refiner's CG 
    compliance calculations to offset other dirty CG, and then convert this 
    gasoline into RFG. The result of this would be degradation in the 
    average quality of the refiner's CG. This same effect would be possible 
    if importers could convert certified FRGAS into RFG.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \16\ EPA has issued guidance under the current regulations that 
    allows importers to classify imported gasoline as blendstock, called 
    GTAB, that the importer must use to produce gasoline at a refinery 
    operated by the importer-company. The purpose of the GTAB procedures 
    is to enable importers to conduct remedial blending of imported 
    gasoline, or to reclassify gasoline with regard to RFG or CG, before 
    imported gasoline is introduced into U.S. commerce. This puts 
    importers on a more equal footing with refiners, who are able to 
    reblend or reclassify gasoline prior to shipping gasoline from the 
    refinery.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Imported Non-FRGAS or Non-Certified FRGAS
        U.S. importers must meet all current requirements for imported 
    gasoline that is produced at a foreign refinery without an individual 
    baseline (i.e., non-FRGAS), and for gasoline produced at a foreign 
    refinery with an individual baseline where the gasoline is not included 
    in the foreign refinery's NOX and exhaust toxics compliance 
    calculations (i.e., non-certified FRGAS). If the importer classifies 
    the gasoline as conventional, the importer must include the gasoline in 
    its NOX and exhaust toxics compliance calculations. However, 
    the baseline used by importers would be the baseline described in 
    section II.C of this preamble. If the imported gasoline is classified 
    as RFG, the importer must meet all RFG quality and other requirements 
    for the gasoline.
        Importers are allowed to use the current GTAB procedures to reblend 
    or reclassify imported non-FRGAS and non-certified FRGAS.
        In the case of non-FRGAS, importers have no requirements related to 
    tracking the refinery of origin. In the case of non-certified FRGAS the 
    importer must meet additional requirements related to tracking the 
    refinery of origin. The importer must have an independent laboratory 
    determine the volume of each non-certified FRGAS batch, and report this 
    volume to the foreign refiner and to EPA to be compared with the load 
    port volume. The volume of non-certified FRGAS produced at a foreign 
    refinery with an individual baseline is used to calculate the 
    refinery's CG compliance baseline, which constitutes a volume cap on 
    use of an individual refinery baseline.
    
    E. Early Use of Individual Foreign Refinery Baselines
    
        A foreign refiner who submits a petition for an individual refinery 
    baseline may begin using the individual baseline prior to EPA approval 
    of the baseline petition, provided EPA makes a preliminary finding the 
    baseline petition is complete, and the foreign refiner also has 
    completed certain requirements proposed today. However, any gasoline 
    imported under a requested IB will be subject to the actual IB assigned 
    by EPA.
    
    [[Page 45544]]
    
        EPA will conduct a completeness evaluation as the first step in 
    baseline review process, and will notify a foreign refiner of the 
    results of the completeness review on request. However, the initial 
    completeness review does not bar EPA from requiring a foreign refiner 
    to submit additional information later in the baseline review process.
        The additional requirements a foreign refiner will have to complete 
    in order to use an individual baseline early are related to ensuring 
    EPA's ability to monitor and enforce compliance by the foreign refiner 
    with all applicable requirements during the early use period. The 
    particular requirements that will have to be met are: (1) The 
    commitments regarding EPA inspections and the forum for enforcement 
    actions, and (2) the requirements related to posting of a bond.
        If these conditions are met, the foreign refiner may begin 
    classifying gasoline as certified and non-certified FRGAS, and may use 
    the individual refinery baseline to demonstrate compliance with the 
    NOX and exhaust toxics requirements.17 However, a 
    foreign refiner will be required to meet the NOX and exhaust 
    toxics requirements for certified FRGAS using the refinery baseline 
    values that ultimately are approved by EPA. Thus, if a foreign refiner 
    elects to use an individual refinery baseline early, and uses baseline 
    values that are less stringent than the baseline values ultimately 
    approved by EPA, the refiner's compliance with the NOX and 
    exhaust toxics requirements will nevertheless be measured relative to 
    the approved baseline values. If this evaluation results in a violation 
    of the NOX and exhaust toxics requirements, the foreign 
    refiner will be held liable.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \17\ During 1997, under section 80.101(b)(1) the CG requirements 
    are for sulfur, T-90, olefins and exhaust benzene emissions. 
    Beginning in 1998 the CG requirements are for NOX and 
    exhaust toxics emissions performance.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    F. Requirements for RFG Before 1998
    
        The scope of this final rule is limited to requirements for 
    conventional gasoline. The CG requirements rely on refinery baselines 
    both now and in the future. The RFG requirements for sulfur, T-90 and 
    olefin content also rely on individual refinery baselines, but only 
    until the Complex Model applies beginning in January, 1998. In the 
    proposed rule EPA requested comments on whether the regulations should 
    allow individual refinery baselines to be used for these RFG 
    requirements if a foreign refiner obtains an individual baseline before 
    January, 1998. The only comments on this issue stated that there would 
    be insufficient time before January, 1998 to justify use of individual 
    baselines for RFG and no commenters requested that this rule apply to 
    RFG. This final rule is therefore limited to conventional gasoline.
    
    III. Summary of Changes From Proposal
    
        The following list identifies aspects of the proposed rule (62 FR 
    24776) that were modified in the final rule.
         The proposal would have required foreign refiners to 
    submit baseline information on the foreign refinery's overall gasoline 
    production for 1990. This requirement is deleted in the final rule. 
    Baseline information must be submitted for the gasoline sent to the 
    U.S. in 1990, however, EPA reserves the right to seek further 
    information where appropriate.
         The proposal would have required that where a foreign 
    refiner is owned or operated by a foreign government, the government 
    would have to sign a waiver of sovereign immunity. The final rule 
    instead includes a regulatory requirement that if a foreign refiner 
    establishes and uses an individual baseline it will constitute a waiver 
    of sovereign immunity for purposes of EPA or other U.S. enforcement 
    actions based on violations of the requirements adopted today.
         The proposal would have required that the foreign refiner 
    post a bond in order to receive an individual refinery baseline. In the 
    final rule the bond requirement and bond amount are retained, however 
    the foreign refiner many meet the bond requirement with other assets, 
    subject to EPA approval.
         The proposal would have established various requirements 
    relating to verifying the source of gasoline imported under an 
    individual baseline--sampling and testing by independent third parties 
    at the load port and discharge port, comparisons of the test results, 
    and certifications as to identity and source of the gasoline. If the 
    gasoline failed the load and entry port comparison it would still be 
    included in the foreign refiner's compliance calculation. In addition, 
    no gasoline classified by the foreign refiner as intended for the U.S. 
    could be diverted to a non-U.S. market. Many of the details of those 
    related provisions have been modified to increase the flexibility for 
    importers and foreign refiners, to be consistent with the tracking 
    purpose of the provisions, and to take into account any potential for 
    adverse environmental impact.
    
    IV. Response to Comments
    
    A. Optional vs. Mandatory Baselines
    
    1. EPA's Proposal
        EPA proposed that foreign refiners would be allowed to establish 
    and use individual baselines, but it would not be mandatory. If a 
    refiner did not establish and use an IB, the gasoline they export to 
    the U.S. would be regulated through the importer, and subject to the 
    importer's baseline. Specific regulatory provisions would be 
    implemented to ensure that the option to use an individual baseline 
    would not lead to adverse environmental impacts. This would involve 
    monitoring the average quality of imported gasoline, and if a specified 
    benchmark is exceeded, remedial action would be taken by adjusting the 
    requirements applicable to imported gasoline.
        Under this approach, the volume of gasoline that could be imported 
    under the individual baseline for a foreign refinery would be limited 
    in the same manner as for domestic refiners, relative to a refinery's 
    1990 baseline volume.
    2. Comments: Optional Versus Mandatory Individual Baseline Approach
        Several parties from the domestic refining and distribution 
    industry commented that EPA should not offer foreign refineries the 
    opportunity to choose between either an individual baseline or the 
    statutory baseline. The commenters suggested that offering the choice 
    discriminates against domestic refiners who do not have the opportunity 
    to choose, and offers the foreign refiners a competitive advantage.
        These commenters argued that foreign refiners already have a 
    competitive advantage because they are subject to fewer environmental 
    costs at their refineries relative to U.S. refiners, and they are not 
    subject to U.S. RFG or anti-dumping regulations on the majority of 
    their production which is not for the U.S. market. These commenters 
    urge EPA to avoid any final regulation which would further upset the 
    competitive balance and concluded that foreign refiners should be 
    treated in the same manner as domestic refiners.
        These commenters argued that foreign refiners who would otherwise 
    have individual baselines more stringent than the statutory baseline 
    would not apply for an IB (their product would be regulated through the 
    importer, who is subject to the statutory baseline), while those with 
    baselines less stringent than the statutory baseline would choose to 
    establish and use an individual baseline. The domestic industry also
    
    [[Page 45545]]
    
    noted that many U.S. refiners with baselines more stringent than 
    average could significantly benefit if they were given the choice of 
    choosing the statutory baseline.
        To avoid this perceived inequity, domestic refiners maintain that 
    if all foreign refiners are not held to the statutory baseline, then 
    they must be required all to establish an individual baseline for 
    product shipped to the U.S. in 1990, or domestic refiners should be 
    offered the same option to operate at the statutory baseline if they 
    choose to do so.
        One commenter stated that EPA is obligated under the Clean Air Act 
    to favor protecting the environment over energy and economic 
    considerations. The commenter stated that in American Petroleum 
    Institute v. EPA (52 F. 3d 113, 1120 (D.C. Cir. 1995), the court 
    explicitly noted that these non-environmental factors are not to be 
    used as an independent grant of authority for EPA rulemaking.
        The same commenter suggested that EPA and DOE concerns regarding 
    price and supply impacts were an inappropriate foundation for this 
    rulemaking. The commenter stated that the structure of the Clean Air 
    Act, with its emphasis on protecting public health, meant that supply 
    or price concerns cannot provide the foundation for this rule. The 
    commenter concluded that EPA has an overriding obligation to consider 
    air quality before any other factors, and that obligation should lead 
    EPA to a decision to require mandatory baselines for all foreign 
    refiners.
        Another commenter suggested that EPA's reliance on DOE's analysis 
    was inadequate for selecting optional baselines over mandatory 
    baselines. The commenter, an association representing certain domestic 
    refiners, stated that they do not believe DOE or any other organization 
    can credibly quantify the impact of foreign refiner baseline 
    restrictions on the U.S. market just as DOE could not quantify the 
    impact of baseline requirements on domestic refiners.
        Another association representing the domestic refining and 
    distribution industry commented that despite DOE's concerns, a more 
    serious threat to U.S. gasoline supply is adopting a rule which 
    discriminates against domestic refiners. The commenter suggested that 
    domestic refiners' business is extremely sensitive to unequal treatment 
    in the international marketplace. The commenter suggested that during a 
    short term supply emergency, EPA could establish a temporary waiver 
    procedure to provide limited relief from baseline requirements. This 
    commenter also suggested that any waiver should apply to all suppliers 
    in an affected region and not be limited to foreign suppliers.
        Foreign refiners, domestic gasoline marketers and domestic 
    importers and blenders and others commented that the optional 
    individual baseline is appropriate.
    3. EPA Response
    Optional Baselines for Domestic Refiners
        EPA analyzed two approaches to establishing individual baselines 
    for foreign refiners. One involved mandating that all foreign refiners 
    obtain and use an IB in order to market conventional gasoline in the 
    United States, the other approach provided this as an option but did 
    not mandate it. For the reasons described in the proposal, and in this 
    notice, EPA believes there are serious problems with the mandatory 
    approach based on the risk that it could significantly disrupt the 
    marketing of foreign conventional gasoline to the United States and 
    therefore have significant impacts on the cost of gasoline. The 
    proposal also discussed the potential for degradation in emissions 
    quality of gasoline from the mandatory baseline approach. Because of 
    this, EPA proposed and is adopting an optional approach.
        EPA does not agree that this discriminates against the domestic 
    refining and distribution industry, or that domestic refiners should be 
    provided the same option. While foreign refiners are provided a choice 
    that domestic refiners are not provided, this is because the supply and 
    price impacts from mandating the use of IBs for imported gasoline 
    differ significantly from those for domestic gasoline. In addition, 
    this choice can be provided to foreign refiners without adverse 
    environmental impacts, through the use of the baseline adjustment 
    mechanism to monitor and offset any potential degradation in the pool 
    of imported gasoline. Providing the same choice to domestic refiners 
    would very likely lead to a significant degradation of the much larger 
    pool of domestically produced gasoline, that could only be remedied 
    through an expensive and cost-ineffective adjustment mechanism.
        In establishing the rules for conventional and reformulated 
    gasoline, EPA determined that domestic refiners are all able to 
    establish individual baselines. Under section 211(k)(8) of the Act, EPA 
    therefore requires that domestic refiners establish and use IBs. This 
    is a cost-effective way to ensure that domestically produced 
    conventional gasoline does not degrade in emissions related quality 
    below 1990 levels. It has been successfully implemented without 
    significant disruptions to the supply or price of conventional 
    gasoline. Continuing this approach for domestic refiners does not 
    present a risk of significantly disrupting the gasoline supply and 
    price market. This would be a much less cost effective way to keep 
    conventional gasoline quality at 1990 levels than mandating the use of 
    IBs for domestic refiners.
        Providing domestic refiners the choice between use of an IB and use 
    of the statutory baseline would likely lead, according to commenters, 
    to many domestic refiners making this choice.\18\ EPA would have to 
    establish a benchmark and adjustment mechanism, similar to that 
    proposed for imported gasoline, to monitor for and offset any 
    degradation of the gasoline pool resulting from providing such an 
    option. Given the large volume of gasoline involved, which is much 
    larger than the volume of imported gasoline at issue here, and the 
    expectation that exercising such a choice to use the SB would be based 
    on the economic value of producing gasoline designed to meet a less 
    stringent baseline with the resulting bias for a dirtier gasoline pool, 
    EPA would almost assuredly be called on to impose an across the board 
    adjustment to baselines for domestic refiners to offset degradation of 
    the gasoline pool from 1990 levels. This would result in the kind of 
    ``reformulation'' of conventional gasoline to stay at 1990 levels that 
    the mandatory use of IBs was meant to avoid.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \18\  Since domestic refiners have adequate data to establish an 
    IB, this would not be consistent with the requirements of section 
    211(k)(8).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        As compared to gasoline produced by domestic refiners, EPA has two 
    potential parties whom it can regulate with respect to gasoline 
    produced by foreign refiners. For imported gasoline EPA could regulate 
    either the importer, or the foreign refiner. EPA therefore has 
    discretion under section 211(k)(8) as to which party, and under what 
    conditions, it imposes the requirements for conventional gasoline that 
    is imported. For example, under the current regulations all foreign 
    produced gasoline is regulated through the importer, and importers are 
    not provided an option concerning establishment and use of an IB, while 
    foreign refiners are not directly regulated.
        For the reasons and circumstances described in section I.E. and in 
    the proposal, EPA has rejected the approach of mandating that all 
    foreign refiners establish and use an IB in order to
    
    [[Page 45546]]
    
    market conventional gasoline in the U.S. EPA has instead determined 
    that it is appropriate to continue regulating imported conventional 
    gasoline through the importer in all cases except those where a foreign 
    refiner has adequate data and chooses to establish and use an IB. The 
    concerns on price and supply which lead to rejecting the mandatory 
    approach for foreign refiners do not apply to domestic refiners, and 
    therefore do not provide a basis for changing the mandatory approach 
    currently applied for domestic refiners. In addition, providing this 
    option to foreign refiners is less likely to lead to a degradation of 
    the average qualities of imported gasoline than the much more likely 
    degradation that would occur to the much larger pool of domestically 
    produced gasoline if the same option were provided to domestic 
    refiners.
        In sum, the mandatory use of IBs for domestic refiners has worked 
    successfully, without significantly disrupting the supply and cost of 
    conventional gasoline. Requiring the same approach for imported 
    conventional gasoline, presents the risk of this kind of significant 
    disruption. Providing domestic refiners with an option to establish and 
    use IBs would very likely lead to a degradation in the emissions 
    quality of conventional gasoline, over a very large percentage of the 
    total volume of conventional gasoline. This degradation could be 
    remedied by a baseline adjustment mechanism, however this would be a 
    less-cost effective way to avoid such degradation than not providing 
    such an option. Providing foreign refiners with the option to establish 
    and use an IB presents a risk of environmental degradation, but this 
    covers a much smaller pool of gasoline and it is unclear whether and to 
    what extent there will in fact be a degradation in the pool of imported 
    gasoline. If there is, it can be readily remedied consistent with the 
    flexibility currently available to importers and foreign refiners to 
    determine what gasoline is imported into the U.S., without the 
    potential supply and price impacts from mandating the use of IBs for 
    imported gasoline.
    Consideration of Environmental Impact of Providing an Option for an 
    Individual Baseline
        Several commenters suggested that the Agency's proposal put trade 
    and economic considerations over its concern for protecting the 
    environment. On the contrary, the Agency believes that this final rule 
    is fully consistent with the Agency's commitment to fully protect 
    public health and the environment.
        EPA considered two different approaches to the use of IBs by 
    foreign refiners.19 It is reasonable for EPA to consider the 
    cost impacts of the two approaches and adopt the one that avoids the 
    risks attendant with seriously disrupting the importation of 
    conventional gasoline into the U.S. In this case, the provisions 
    adopted concerning the option to establish and use an individual 
    baseline will fully protect the public health and environment, and 
    achieve the Clean Air Act goals for the conventional gasoline program. 
    This will be achieved without risking significant disruption to the 
    supply or price of conventional gasoline.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \19\ The potential for an adverse environmental impact from 
    providing an option to foreign refiners, and EPA's mechanism to 
    monitor for and fully offset any such adverse impact, is explained 
    in detail in the proposal and elsewhere in this notice. The 
    potential for an adverse environmental impact from the mandatory IB 
    approach is described in the proposal at 62 FR 24779.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Impact of Mandatory Approach on Gasoline Supply/Price
        Commenters objected that EPA did not have an adequate basis to 
    reject the mandatory baseline approach based on supply and cost 
    considerations.
        Based on the information presented by DOE, EPA believes that 
    requiring individual baselines for all foreign refiners presents too 
    great a risk of adverse effects on gasoline supply and prices. To fully 
    understand how mandatory baselines for imported conventional gasoline 
    could impact the gasoline market it is first important to understand 
    the role imports play in the domestic market. Foreign imports account 
    for 6%-8% of total U.S. gasoline consumption. Almost all (over 95%) of 
    imports come into Petroleum Administration for Defense Districts (PADD) 
    I, the U.S. east coast, where they represent about 20% of total 
    gasoline supply.
        Imported gasoline plays a significant role in the domestic gasoline 
    market. Imported gasoline augments the supply of gasoline on the east 
    coast of the United States, an area with an already large demand. 
    During the summer of 1996, U.S. east coast and gulf coast refinery 
    operating utilization rates were in excess of 96%. Only about 150 
    thousand barrels a day of additional domestic gasoline production 
    capacity was available. However, the market was demanding about 500 
    thousand barrels a day of additional gasoline. Imported gasoline made 
    up the gap with over two-thirds of the imports meeting a need that 
    could not be served by U.S. refineries.20
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \20\ Analysis provided in comments submitted by the Department 
    of Energy, July 23, 1997 in response to the May 6, 1997, NPRM.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One commenter suggested that EPA's optional individual baseline 
    approach discriminates against domestic refiners to such a degree that 
    domestic refining capacity in the United States could contract as a 
    result of this unequal treatment, which would have a more severe impact 
    on the gasoline market in the United States. However, the current 
    production rates of east coast and gulf coast refineries would indicate 
    that this consequence is highly unlikely. It is clear that U.S. demand 
    for gasoline will continue to increase at a rate surpassing U.S. 
    production. The suggestion that domestic refineries will reduce their 
    production in light of such a demand seems implausible.
        One commenter suggested that EPA establish a temporary waiver 
    procedure to provide limited relief from baseline requirements during 
    short-term supply emergencies. Although EPA arguably may have the 
    authority to establish such a waiver provision, it would be an 
    impracticable solution in this instance. It is clear from the DOE's 
    analysis outlined below that the disruption mandatory baselines would 
    cause to the sale and importation of opportunistic gasoline could leave 
    the U.S. market with a constant risk of short term supply and price 
    disruptions, and the temporary waiver provision could not be 
    implemented in a time frame that would eliminate this risk. Moreover it 
    would require the U.S. government to arbitrarily determine the 
    appropriate market price of gasoline.
        Much of the gasoline imported into PADD I is shipped into the 
    United States on an ad hoc basis. Currently gasoline is imported into 
    the U.S. market from a free moving and fungible distribution system. 
    This opportunistic sale of gasoline is an important element in the 
    U.S., and particularly the east coast, gasoline supply system. The 
    broad based use of tracking and monitoring restrictions which would be 
    required by mandatory individual baselines would eliminate the 
    flexibility necessary to quickly divert opportunistic gasoline to the 
    U.S. should the market demand it. This would make it more likely that 
    imported gasoline would not play the same role that it currently does 
    in moderating price increases.
        The amount of opportunistic gasoline imported into the United 
    States is not inconsequential. DOE's analysis indicates that in 1996, a 
    total of 25
    
    [[Page 45547]]
    
    separate importers brought gasoline, of all types, to the U.S. east 
    coast from about 40 refineries in 28 countries. Of this amount, over 
    40% was imported as opportunistic gasoline. The ability to quickly draw 
    gasoline supplies from various parts of the world to the U.S. market is 
    important in moderating price swings and meeting consumer demand.
        While most imported gasoline enters the U.S. market on the east 
    coast it impacts gasoline prices nationwide. Imported gasoline tends to 
    moderate price increases by increasing the sources of gasoline to meet 
    U.S. demand. DOE examined New York harbor, Chicago and Gulf Coast spot 
    prices for conventional gasoline which showed highly correlated 
    movements throughout 1996. The pipelines linkages between PADD III and 
    PADDs I and II are the key mechanism for linking the prices.
        The DOE analysis concluded that a 1 cent per gallon change in New 
    York spot prices, driven by a shortage of imports, could affect the 
    over 4 million B/D of conventional gasoline being used in PADD's I, II 
    and III. A 1 cent/gallon price change, lasting as little as one week 
    (typical of the time required to get additional gasoline shipments to 
    the U.S. east coast from Europe or from the gulf coast by water), could 
    cost or save gasoline consumers over $10 million.21
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        \21\ Comments from DOE on EPA's May 6, 1997 NPRM, page 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        While a number of factors are at work in market fluctuations it is 
    clear that the volume of imported gasoline is price responsive. By 
    rapidly providing additional supply, consumer demand is met without the 
    large price increases that would be necessary to control gasoline 
    demand.
        EPA disagrees with the comment that an option to establish an 
    individual baseline should not be provided because it would give 
    foreign refiners a competitive advantage over domestic refiners. 
    Foreign refiners who establish an individual baseline will be subject 
    to the same requirements as domestic refiners, with additional 
    requirements dictated by their unique circumstances. Foreign refiners 
    will be required to fulfill the additional burden of tracking and 
    segregating their imported gasoline to ensure that the correct 
    individual baseline is being used for the purposes of the compliance 
    calculation.
        Gasoline from foreign refiners who do not establish an individual 
    baseline would be subject, through the importer, to an adjustment to 
    the importer baseline needed to offset any adverse environmental impact 
    from a foreign refiner's choice not to seek an individual baseline.
        As described above, this option is provided to foreign refiners 
    based on the significant difference in circumstances between applying 
    the mandatory use of individual baselines to domestic or foreign 
    refiners, and the significant difference in potential adverse impact on 
    the environment and gasoline supply and prices.
    Role of Consideration of Costs
        One commenter argued that EPA's obligation under the Clean Air Act 
    to protect the environment take priority over costs and economic 
    concerns in this rulemaking.
        EPA's authority to take costs and economic factors into 
    consideration when establishing rules protective of the environment 
    depends on the terms of the specific statutory provision at issue. As 
    in prior rulemakings establishing the conventional gasoline program, 
    EPA's authority is based on sections 211(k)(8) and 211(c)(1) of the 
    Act. Each of these provisions gives EPA discretion to take cost and 
    other relevant factors into consideration when establishing 
    requirements that meet the air quality goals of the conventional 
    gasoline program. In the prior rulemakings for the conventional 
    gasoline program, EPA has taken these factors into consideration when 
    establishing the requirements needed to meet the air quality 
    requirements of this program. For example, EPA's CG requirements 
    include the ability to obtain an adjustment to the IB under certain 
    circumstances related to economics; establish testing, recordkeeping 
    and reporting requirements which reasonably take into account the 
    burden of the measures, and reflect the decision in the 1993 rulemaking 
    to not establish specific emissions requirements for VOCs, CO, and non-
    exhaust toxics, based in part on economic considerations. In this case 
    it is also reasonable to consider adverse supply and cost impacts when 
    determining the appropriate approach. The statutory provisions noted 
    above provide EPA with the discretion to consider these factors.
    
    B. Establishment of an Individual Baseline (IB)
    
    1. Overview
        Comments were submitted on a number of issues with regard to 
    establishment of individual baselines by foreign refiners. These issues 
    included the proposed requirement to submit baseline information on the 
    foreign refinery's overall gasoline production as well as the subset of 
    gasoline which was sent to the U.S. in 1990; the proposed January 1, 
    2002 deadline for submittal of foreign refinery baseline petitions; and 
    foreign refinery aggregation for compliance purposes.
        In summary, EPA is not requiring foreign refiners to submit 
    baseline information on the foreign refinery's overall gasoline 
    production. EPA reserves the right to require such information in a 
    specific case if it is needed to reasonably evaluate a baseline 
    submission. EPA is retaining the proposed January 1, 2002 deadline for 
    baseline petition submittals. In general, with regard to other baseline 
    issues, such as aggregation, baseline volumes, and baseline review, 
    audit and approval, EPA is maintaining the same requirements for 
    foreign refiners as for domestic refiners, as proposed.
    2. Use of Total 1990 Product Data
        EPA proposed that a foreign refinery would have to submit 
    information regarding its total 1990 gasoline production as well as 
    information regarding the subset of the refinery's gasoline production 
    which was sent to the U.S. in 1990. EPA believed that information on 
    the total refinery gasoline production would be useful in the 
    calculation and verification of the quality of the subset of gasoline 
    sent to the U.S. in 1990.
        Commenters indicated that requiring an individual baseline 
    calculation for the total gasoline production was burdensome, costly, 
    and, in general, of little additional value. Commenters indicated that 
    the quality of the subset of gasoline sent to the U.S. in 1990 could be 
    accurately determined without the additional information on the 
    refinery's total gasoline production. One commenter also stated that 
    EPA previously concluded that the overall quality from a foreign 
    refinery might bear scant resemblance to the quality of the portion 
    going to the U.S. market. This commenter also stated that requiring 
    information on a foreign refiner's overall gasoline production is 
    wholly unnecessary.
        In general, EPA agrees with the commenters that requiring 
    information in all cases on the overall 1990 gasoline production of a 
    foreign refinery may be costly and may provide little additional value. 
    Thus, EPA will only require that a foreign refiner's baseline petition 
    contain information relevant to the calculation of the baseline for the 
    subset of gasoline sent to the U.S. in 1990. Nonetheless, the 
    calculation of a refinery baseline per these regulations is complex, 
    with wide variances in the types and amounts of data available on
    
    [[Page 45548]]
    
    the subset of 1990 gasoline which came to the U.S. As with domestic 
    refiners, EPA reserves the right to request additional information to 
    evaluate a petition for an IB, where such information is needed to 
    reasonably determine an accurate IB. In specific cases this might 
    include much or all of the information pertaining to the refinery's 
    1990 total gasoline production.
    3. January 2002 Deadline
        EPA proposed that baseline submissions would have to be submitted 
    to the Agency by January 1, 2002. EPA proposed this date in order to 
    allow for the collection of both summer and winter data and the 
    preparation of a baseline petition subsequent to June 1, 2000, the 
    scheduled date EPA would announce the average quality of imported 
    gasoline for the first monitoring period of 1998 and 1999. Domestic 
    refiners had approximately one year following issuance of the final 
    regulations in December 1993 to prepare (including completion of 
    sampling, testing and analysis) and submit their individual baselines 
    to EPA prior to the start of the program on January 1, 1995.
        EPA received comments indicating that the proposed deadline was 
    appropriate, and others indicating that such a deadline was 
    unnecessary, and perhaps arbitrary. Commenters opposing a deadline 
    thought that foreign refiners should be allowed to apply for an 
    individual baseline when they desire to, for example, when export 
    volumes to the U.S. increase and/or pricing conditions are favorable. 
    One commenter questioned whether baseline petitions would be accepted 
    prior to January 1, 2000, and suggested that EPA specify a reasonable 
    period of time in which it will act on a baseline submission, as the 
    commenter indicated EPA did with domestic refiners.
        EPA continues to believe that a deadline for the receipt of foreign 
    refiner baselines is appropriate in order to avoid the increased 
    uncertainty in determining an individual baseline too many years after 
    the 1990 time period that an IB is based upon. A reasonable deadline 
    such as January 1, 2002 provides foreign refiners several years to 
    exercise the option provided here, and will assure that EPA has a 
    reasonable factual basis to determine an accurate IB regarding 1990 
    gasoline volume and quality. It will also maintain requirements similar 
    to those imposed on domestic refiners. While a foreign refiner would 
    not have the right under the regulations to seek an IB after January 1, 
    2002, after this date a foreign refiner could still petition EPA to 
    revise this rule and establish an IB, for example, where the refiner 
    could demonstrate that it is able to establish an accurate and 
    verifiable IB.
        Foreign refiners may submit a baseline petition to EPA at any time 
    prior to January 1, 2002. However, if gasoline is imported using an IB 
    while a petition for an IB is pending, the foreign refiner will be 
    subject to the ultimate approved baseline, which may change 
    significantly (to their benefit or detriment) from the original 
    submission due to errors or omissions uncovered during EPA review. In 
    general, baselines are reviewed in the order received, but a well 
    prepared and ultimately correct baseline may be approved prior to a 
    baseline submitted earlier which was less well prepared or incorrect.
        EPA is not establishing a specific time frame to act upon 
    baselines, due to the many uncertainties, discussed above, regarding 
    the completeness of the original submittals and the number of questions 
    EPA may have for a refiner before determining that a submittal is 
    complete, accurate, and appropriate for approval. The Agency's review 
    of submissions by domestic refiners took between a few months and two 
    years, depending on the quality and completeness of the original 
    submission. EPA will review foreign refiner baseline submissions in an 
    expeditious and timely manner but cannot specify a time frame in which 
    a foreign refiner baseline will be acted upon. Foreign refiners can 
    export conventional gasoline to the U.S. using an IB under the program 
    requirements finalized today without an approved baseline. Foreign 
    refiners should note that once a baseline petition is submitted and a 
    refiner begins to use an IB, the refiner will be held to compliance 
    with the ultimately approved baseline.
    4. Aggregation
        As stated in the proposal, a foreign refiner who operates more than 
    one refinery with an individual baseline would be able to aggregate the 
    baselines of some or all of its refineries, as allowed for domestic 
    refiners.
        Commenters said that allowing a foreign refiner to aggregate 
    refineries with both unique individual baselines and statutory 
    baselines gave additional flexibility to foreign refiners who would 
    already have the option of having or not having an individual baseline. 
    One commenter also stated that foreign refiners should be subject to 
    the same one-time decision regarding aggregation as domestic refiners. 
    Commenters also said that foreign refiners should not be allowed to 
    game the system by electing either an individual baseline (for 
    refineries dirtier than the statutory baseline) or the statutory 
    baseline (for refineries cleaner than the statutory baseline) on a 
    refinery-by-refinery basis for facilities owned by a single entity. 
    These commenters claimed that allowing some individual baseline 
    refineries and some statutory baseline refineries under a single owner 
    would ``aggravate the competitive discrimination against domestic 
    refiners.'' According to these commenters, all refineries owned by a 
    single entity should all have either an individual baseline or all have 
    the statutory baseline, and if a baseline for one of the refineries 
    could not be established, then no individual baseline should be given 
    to any of the refineries of a single entity.
        EPA did not propose that all or none of the refineries of a foreign 
    refiner would have to have an individual baseline, because a central 
    element of the proposal was to provide foreign refiners an option: 
    either obtain an individual baseline and fulfill all of the 
    requirements accompanying the use of an individual baseline by a 
    foreign refinery, or continue with the current requirements with 
    respect to gasoline produced for the U.S., subject to any remedial 
    baseline adjustment.
        Many of the comments above focused on foreign refineries with 
    statutory baselines. In fact, under today's rule, no foreign refinery 
    which does not apply for an individual baseline will have the statutory 
    baseline. Foreign refineries which apply for and receive an individual 
    baseline will either have a unique individual baseline or will have the 
    statutory baseline (with a zero baseline volume) e.g., where the 
    refinery was not in operation in 1990 or produced no gasoline for the 
    U.S. in 1990. All other foreign refineries will have no baseline, and 
    their gasoline will be regulated through the importer's baseline, 
    typically the statutory baseline. Thus, under this rule, it is possible 
    that some refineries of a foreign refiner would have an approved 
    individual baseline and some would have no baseline. An aggregate 
    baseline (or baselines) of a foreign refiner could only be composed of 
    the baselines of its facilities with approved individual baselines. 
    Foreign refineries without an individual baseline cannot be included in 
    an aggregate baseline.
        A foreign refiner may choose to obtain an individual baseline for 
    one, some, all or none of its refineries. Limiting the option to cases 
    where all of a refiner's refineries receive IBs is counter to the 
    reasons for providing an option. For
    
    [[Page 45549]]
    
    example, it would lead to cases where a foreign refiner wanted to 
    establish an IB for a refinery and had adequate data to do so, but was 
    precluded from this because it could not establish an IB for a 
    different refinery, or to situations where EPA or the foreign refiner 
    would have to prove a negative in order to establish an IB, i.e., that 
    no IB could be developed for one refinery as a condition of allowing an 
    IB for a different refinery where the data was available. These results 
    would be inconsistent with the general approach of giving foreign 
    refiners an option to establish individual baselines where they want, 
    and have adequate data to do so.
        In summary, the requirements for aggregating baselines for foreign 
    refiners are the same as those for domestic refiners, namely, all 
    facilities in an aggregate baseline must have an assigned individual 
    baseline, either a unique individual baseline or the statutory 
    baseline. Aggregate baselines may be composed of some or all of a 
    refiner's refineries with assigned individual baselines, and a refiner 
    may have more than one aggregate baseline. Each refinery, though, can 
    only be part of one aggregation. As with domestic refiners, the 
    decision to form an aggregate baseline is a one-time decision.
    5. Baseline Volumes
        Several commenters indicated that foreign refiners should be 
    subject to the same baseline volume constraints as domestic refiners, 
    namely, that the individual baseline applies up to their baseline 
    volume limit, and the statutory baseline applies to all volume in 
    excess of the baseline volume per the calculation of compliance 
    baseline values in 80.101(f), namely, a volume-weighted average of the 
    individual baseline value and the corresponding statutory baseline 
    value. EPA agrees. EPA proposed and is finalizing a requirement that 
    foreign refiners would be subject to the same restrictions for 
    individual baseline volumes as are domestic refiners, per 80.101(f).
        One commenter suggested, that where it is difficult to quantify 
    volumes exported to the U.S. by a refiner, that Energy Information 
    Administration (EIA) reported country totals be used to verify and cap 
    quantities reported by foreign refiners. The commenter suggested that 
    the sum of all baseline volumes reported to EPA from a country cannot 
    exceed the total country volume reported by EIA in 1990. According to 
    the commenter, this should be done on a seasonal basis to assure that 
    complex model winter/summer differences are properly accounted for.
        EPA proposed and is finalizing that those foreign refiners which 
    petition the Agency for an individual baseline will have to adequately 
    account for the volumes of gasoline they sent to the U.S. in 1990. EPA 
    agrees that EIA data would be a useful tool for checking that the sum 
    of the baseline volumes of each facility did not exceed the 1990 
    country levels reported in EIA.
    16. Baseline Audits
        Several commenters indicated their concern that foreign refiners 
    submitting baseline petitions should be subject to the same 
    requirements with regard to review by an EPA-approved independent 
    baseline auditor, and EPA audits and approval of baselines. EPA 
    proposed and is finalizing requirements that all foreign refinery 
    individual baseline petitions be reviewed by an EPA-approved 
    independent baseline auditor. Once submitted to the Agency, they will 
    undergo the same comprehensive and detailed review process used to 
    evaluate baseline submissions by domestic refiners.
    7. Miscellaneous
        Several commenters indicated that foreign refiners would have a 
    competitive advantage vis-a-vis the proposed regulations in a number of 
    areas, including the fact that they are not subject to conventional 
    gasoline and other environmental requirements for all of the non-U.S. 
    bound gasoline they produce. Commenters claimed that clean gasoline for 
    the U.S. could be made less expensively because foreign refiners could 
    ``dump'' dirty components into the gasoline destined for their home 
    markets and other non-U.S. markets which have fewer restrictions on 
    gasoline quality than the U.S. One commenter suggested that a foreign 
    refiner seeking an individual baseline should be required to 
    demonstrate that it is not, in fact, dumping dirty components into 
    gasoline sold in its home market.
        EPA acknowledges that foreign refiners may have additional 
    flexibility, as indicated by commenters. However, as EPA has indicated 
    previously, section 211(k) of the Clean Air Act is not aimed at 
    regulating the quality of gasoline used in other countries, nor at 
    regulating foreign refiners except with regard to the gasoline they 
    send to the U.S.
    
    C. Type of Requirement for FRGAS
    
    1. Summer vs. Winter Averaging
        A few commenters suggested that foreign refiners with individual 
    baselines would have additional flexibility over domestic refiners 
    because of seasonal differences in the complex model. They stated that 
    the same gasoline evaluated under the winter model produces 
    significantly higher emissions than gasoline evaluated under the summer 
    model, and because of this, foreign refiners could meet their emission 
    requirements with poorer quality gasoline by increasing imports of 
    summer gasoline (or importing a lower portion of winter gasoline). 
    Commenters also stated that gasoline imports have traditionally been 
    higher in the summer. According to commenters, domestic refiners are 
    essentially limited to domestic markets and fixed seasonal demand, and 
    do not have the opportunity to systematically control their summer/
    winter production. Commenters suggested that EPA require foreign 
    refiner compliance on a seasonal basis, or offer the seasonal basis 
    option to domestic refiners. One commenter also suggested that the 
    benchmark be based on the last 3 year running average of imported 
    summer gasoline.
        Starting in 1998, compliance with IBs only applies to conventional 
    gasoline for which only certain exhaust emissions are of concern. The 
    winter complex model does produce higher exhaust emissions for a given 
    fuel than the summer version of the model. However, EPA disagrees that 
    foreign refiners could take advantage of this by systematically 
    producing more summer than winter gasoline. First, U.S. gasoline demand 
    increases nationwide during the summer. Domestic refiners produce more 
    gasoline in the summer, and it would seem logical that imports would 
    also increase during the summer. EPA agrees that domestic refiners are 
    essentially limited to domestic markets, however, EPA believes that 
    both foreign and domestic refiners are limited to the seasonal demand. 
    It would not be prudent for a foreign or domestic refiner to market 
    additional volumes of summer gasoline beyond what it could reasonably 
    expect to be used, because of storage issues and the fact that, for 
    foreign refiner's with an individual baseline, gasoline in excess of 
    their baseline volume is evaluated at the statutory baseline, just as 
    for domestic refiners.22
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        \22\ On a related matter, EPA recently proposed a requirement 
    that conventional gasoline will be classified as summer gasoline 
    only where the gasoline both meets A federal RVP requirements under 
    section 80.27, and is intended for use in an area subject to the RVP 
    requirements during the period these requirements are in effect. If 
    adopted this would limit inappropriate classification of winter 
    gasoline as summer gasoline. If the agency adopts this proposal, all 
    gasoline produced for use in the continental United States between 
    May 1 and September 15 each year would be classified as summer 
    gasoline. This proposal was created to reduce the amount of gasoline 
    that was being accounted for as summer gasoline which really only 
    had summer RVP but was intended for use outside the summer time 
    period. (See 62 FR 37338).
    
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    [[Page 45550]]
    
        Providing different averaging periods for foreign and domestic 
    refiners of CG would not be consistent with EPA's basic approach of 
    applying the same requirements to foreign and domestic refiners except 
    where clear and convincing reasons call for different requirements 
    (such as providing an option to establish and use an IB to foreign 
    refiners as compared to mandating an IB, imposing additional 
    requirements related to tracking of gasoline and compliance assurance, 
    and establishing a mechanism to offset any adverse environmental impact 
    from providing the option to establish and use and IB). In addition, 
    providing domestic but not foreign refiners with an option to average 
    seasonally would clearly lead to adverse environmental impacts, as 
    domestic refiners would choose the averaging period that required less 
    control of gasoline quality. For these reasons EPA is not adopting the 
    suggested approach.
    2. Other
        One commenter suggested that foreign refiners have yet another 
    advantage because they can blend components such as MTBE into their 
    gasoline prior to entry into the U.S. at the tariff rate for motor 
    fuels while domestic refiners must pay a significantly higher chemical 
    duty on MTBE imported for gasoline blending. While the tariff situation 
    described by the commenter could provide an advantage to foreign 
    refiners, this tariff differential already exists, and is not a result 
    of, nor will it necessarily be exacerbated by, today's rule.
    
    D. Liability
    
    1. Party Responsible for Meeting the Gasoline Quality Requirements for 
    FRGAS
        a. EPA's Proposal: EPA proposed that a foreign refiner who obtains 
    an individual refinery baseline would be responsible for meeting the 
    NOX and exhaust toxics requirements for the conventional 
    gasoline produced at the foreign refinery and imported into the United 
    States. This is like the requirements that apply to a domestic refiner, 
    who must meet the NOX and exhaust toxics and requirements 
    for conventional gasoline produced at the domestic refinery and used in 
    the United States. EPA also requested comments on an alternative 
    option, where the U.S. importer would be responsible for meeting the 
    NOX and exhaust toxics requirements for imported 
    conventional gasoline produced by a foreign refiner with an individual 
    refinery baseline, but using the baseline that applies to the foreign 
    refinery.
        b. Comments: EPA received comments from two foreign refiners who 
    supported the alternative option of making the U.S. importer 
    responsible for meeting the conventional gasoline NOX and 
    exhaust toxics requirements. EPA also received comments from a group of 
    U.S. importers who opposed placing this responsibility on U.S. 
    importers if the importer would have liability for violations that 
    result if a foreign refiner specifies incorrect baseline values for 
    specific FRGAS batches.
        One foreign refiner suggested an approach they believe would allow 
    U.S. importers to meet the NOX and exhaust toxics 
    requirements for imported FRGAS without risk of incorrect baseline 
    values, by removing any uncertainty regarding the baseline values that 
    apply to each individual batch of imported FRGAS. This foreign refiner 
    suggested that for a foreign refiner with an individual baseline, the 
    annual compliance baseline for an upcoming year would be established at 
    the beginning of that year, using an assumption for the total volume of 
    gasoline (conventional gasoline plus RFG) that will be produced and 
    shipped to the U.S. during the upcoming year.23
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        \23\ Under section 80.101(f) a compliance baseline for 
    NOX and exhaust toxics compliance is calculated for each 
    calendar year averaging period based on a refinery's 1990 baseline 
    volume and baseline NOX and exhaust toxics values, and 
    the total U.S. gasoline volume (conventional gasoline and RFG) 
    produced at the refinery during the year. The compliance baseline 
    equation caps use of a refinery's individual baseline values at the 
    refinery's baseline volume, and any additional gasoline volume 
    (conventional gasoline and RFG) for a year moves the refinery's 
    compliance baseline values in the direction of the statutory 
    baseline. Thus, a refinery's annual compliance baseline, and as a 
    result the refinery's NOX and exhaust toxics requirements 
    for the year, are not finally established until the end of the year 
    when the refinery's total gasoline volume for the year is known.
        Section 80.101(b) requires use of compliance baselines only for 
    the simple model requirements that apply before 1998. However, in 
    another rulemaking EPA has proposed to require use of compliance 
    baselines for the complex model requirements that apply beginning in 
    1998. See 62 FR 37363 (July 11, 1997). EPA believes this proposed 
    change will be final before the beginning of 1998. In any case, the 
    same provision will apply to both domestic and foreign refiners.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The foreign refiner suggested that this assumed volume would be the 
    refinery's prior year volume or the refinery's volume projections for 
    the upcoming year, and that EPA would approve each foreign refiner's 
    volume assumption in advance of each year. In this way the foreign 
    refiner and U.S. importers of that refiner's gasoline would have 
    certainty at the beginning of each year of the compliance baseline that 
    applies to gasoline produced at the foreign refinery during the year. 
    This foreign refiner also suggested that if the refinery's actual 
    gasoline volume during the year is different than the assumed volume a 
    correction would be applied to the refinery's compliance baseline in a 
    subsequent year.
        The foreign refiner stated that this approach, as compared to the 
    approach where the foreign refiner would meet the NOX and 
    exhaust toxics requirements, would be simpler, more feasible, and would 
    require fewer resources to implement, largely because U.S. importers 
    would be responsible for demonstrating compliance with the 
    NOX and exhaust toxics requirements.
        Another foreign refiner commented that in a case where the gasoline 
    produced by a foreign refiner with an individual refinery baseline is 
    imported into the U.S. by a single importer, the U.S. importer could 
    take all compliance responsibility for this gasoline.
        c. EPA's Response: EPA is finalizing this foreign refiner 
    requirement as proposed for the following reasons.
        Requiring U.S. importers to meet the NOX and exhaust 
    toxics requirements for FRGAS presents an inherent difficulty, in that 
    the compliance baseline that applies to conventional gasoline is not 
    known until the end of each year. Domestic refiners are able to operate 
    with this uncertainty, because the refiner can update a refinery's 
    projected compliance baseline throughout the year based on gasoline 
    volumes, and the refiner has the ability to adjust conventional 
    gasoline quality to meet these projections. In contrast, U.S. importers 
    of FRGAS would have to rely on the foreign refiner to estimate the 
    compliance baseline that applies to each FRGAS batch, and the U.S. 
    importer would be liable if imported conventional gasoline quality 
    failed to meet these projections. U.S. importers have commented that it 
    is this uncertainty that most hampers their operations--that an 
    importer could rely in good faith on the foreign refiner's compliance 
    baseline estimate, yet the importer would be liable if the estimate 
    ultimately is incorrect.
    
    [[Page 45551]]
    
        While the alternative suggested by one foreign refiner (using EPA-
    approved volume projections each year to specify a foreign refinery's 
    compliance baseline at the beginning of the year) would remove this 
    uncertainty, it has the disadvantage of constantly requiring 
    corrections in a subsequent year. It is unlikely a foreign refiner's 
    annual volume projections will ever exactly match the refinery's actual 
    annual volume. As a result, if this approach were adopted EPA probably 
    would be required to calculate and implement corrections each year for 
    each foreign refinery with an individual baseline. In addition, these 
    corrections could not be applied immediately, because a foreign 
    refinery's annual volume will not be established until reports could be 
    filed, and the correction calculated, which would necessarily occur in 
    the subsequent year. As a result, it is likely there would be a one 
    year lag in applying corrections, e.g., if a foreign refiner's volume 
    projection for 1998 were incorrect the details of this error would not 
    be known until some time in 1999, and the correction could not occur 
    until 2000. It is preferable that NOX and exhaust toxics 
    requirements be met each year without the expectation of constant 
    subsequent correction, if other considerations are equal. This also 
    avoids any risk of adverse environmental consequences that could result 
    if the foreign refiner ceased supplying gasoline to the United States 
    before the correction could be completed.
        In addition, domestic refiners do not have the option of using an 
    incorrect compliance baseline each year and correcting for the error in 
    a subsequent year, and there are no compelling reasons to treat foreign 
    refiners differently in this regard.
        EPA agrees that, in general, it is easier to monitor and enforce 
    requirements that apply to parties present in the United States such as 
    U.S. importers, as compared to parties located outside the United 
    States such as foreign refiners. However, even if EPA were to adopt the 
    suggested approach of requiring U.S. importers to meet the 
    NOX and exhaust toxics requirements for FRGAS, foreign 
    refiners of FRGAS would continue to have significant responsibilities 
    under the regulations that EPA would monitor and enforce. The foreign 
    refiner would have to establish individual refinery baselines; submit 
    supported volume projections to EPA; and meet a range of requirements 
    associated with establishing the refinery's actual volume of FRGAS each 
    year, including designation of FRGAS, load port sampling and testing, 
    record keeping and reporting, and attest requirements. EPA would have 
    to monitor compliance with these requirements even if U.S. importers 
    met the NOX and exhaust toxics requirements.
        EPA disagrees with the comment by one foreign refiner that the U.S. 
    importer could be responsible for meeting all requirements associated 
    with FRGAS where a foreign refiner's FRGAS is imported by a single U.S. 
    importer. A foreign refinery's annual compliance baseline is based on 
    the refinery's volume of conventional gasoline and RFG FRGAS, and this 
    volume can most properly be established using information available 
    only at the foreign refinery. As a result, regardless of the 
    responsibilities assumed by the U.S. importer the foreign refiner still 
    must, inter alia, keep records, file reports, commission an attest 
    engagement, and agree to allow EPA inspections and audits.
        On balance, EPA believes the proposed approach of requiring foreign 
    refiners of FRGAS to meet the NOX and exhaust toxics 
    requirements is the best approach in that it does not impose 
    unwarranted uncertainties on importers, avoids the uncertainty of 
    subsequent corrections on a yearly basis, and is consistent with the 
    requirements on domestic refiners.
    2. Sovereign Immunity and Agent for Service of Process
        a. EPA's Proposal: EPA proposed that where a foreign refiner is 
    owned or operated by a foreign government, the government would have to 
    issue a waiver of sovereign immunity before the refiner could obtain an 
    individual refinery baseline. As proposed, this waiver would have to be 
    signed by an official of the foreign government at the cabinet 
    secretary level or higher who has responsibility for the foreign 
    refinery, and would have to specify the waiver would apply in any case 
    of prosecution by the United States for civil or criminal violations 
    related to FRGAS requirements including requirements in relevant Clean 
    Air Act sections and Title 18 United States Code.
        b. Comments: EPA received comments addressing the sovereign 
    immunity waiver proposal from several foreign government-owned refiners 
    and from a domestic association that represents independent gasoline 
    marketers. In addition, EPA received comments from associations 
    representing domestic refiners that generally addressed EPA's proposed 
    enforcement requirements without specifically discussing the proposed 
    sovereign immunity waiver requirement.
        The foreign government-owned refiners and the association of 
    domestic marketers commented that the proposed waiver of sovereign 
    immunity is unnecessary. One of these foreign refiners commented that 
    in the antitrust context the U.S. Department of Justice has taken the 
    position that foreign government-owned corporations operating in the 
    commercial marketplace are subject to U.S. antitrust laws to the same 
    extent as foreign private-owned firms. This commenter concluded that 
    waivers of sovereign immunity are unnecessary to enforce the antitrust 
    laws, and that this same conclusion also should apply to enforcement 
    under the Clean Air Act.
        Two other foreign refiners referred to 28 U.S.C. 1605(a)(2) of the 
    Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA), which provides that a foreign 
    sovereign is not entitled to immunity in an action based on certain 
    ``commercial activity.'' These commenters further stated or implied 
    that a foreign refiner, by engaging in the production and sale of 
    gasoline for export to the U.S., would be covered by the provisions of 
    this section and, hence, would not be entitled to sovereign immunity 
    under the FSIA with respect to matters covered by this regulation. 
    These commenters concluded, as a result, that the proposed sovereign 
    immunity waiver requirement is unnecessary. One foreign refiner 
    commenter said the proposed sovereign immunity waiver requirement is 
    particularly objectionable if the waiver must be signed by a cabinet 
    secretary.
        One foreign refiner said the proposed scope of the waiver is too 
    broad, because EPA had proposed that the waiver would need to apply to 
    all provisions of Title 18, United States Code. This foreign refiner 
    said, in addition, that sovereign immunity cannot be a condition for 
    according national treatment under Article III of GATT 1994.
        The association of domestic marketers commented that the proposed 
    requirement to waive sovereign immunity is inflammatory, and that other 
    proposed enforcement mechanisms are sufficient for appropriate EPA 
    enforcement, including the possibility of revoking an individual 
    refinery baseline, and the required foreign refiner commitments 
    regarding EPA inspections and audits, naming an agent for service, and 
    bond posting.
        The associations representing domestic refiners did not 
    specifically address the proposed sovereign immunity waiver 
    requirement, but did support EPA's proposed enforcement
    
    [[Page 45552]]
    
    requirements in general. In addition, one of these associations 
    commented that EPA also should require there be an extradition treaty 
    in place with a foreign government before allowing a refiner in that 
    country to obtain an individual refinery baseline. This commenter 
    stated that in the absence of an extradition treaty there could not be 
    adequate enforcement of criminal violations.
        c. EPA's Response: EPA continues to believe that to provide 
    adequate enforcement mechanisms related to the establishment and use of 
    individual baselines by foreign refiners, the issue of sovereign 
    immunity needs to be addressed for foreign government-owned refiners. 
    Therefore, EPA has retained a specific provision in the final rule 
    addressing sovereign immunity. However, the form of this sovereign 
    immunity provision is being revised based on EPA's evaluation of the 
    comments and prior U.S. administrative practice in this area.
        Under the FSIA a foreign refiner who obtains an individual refinery 
    baseline from EPA, exports FRGAS to the United States, and violates 
    requirements applicable to the foreign refiner under this rule has 
    engaged in the kind of activity that falls within an exception to 
    sovereign immunity under 28 U.S.C. 1605(a)(2), (commonly referred to as 
    the ``commercial activity'' exception) as asserted by the commenters. 
    However, EPA is aware of no judicial precedent directly addressing 
    these issues in the context of a regulatory enforcement action by an 
    agency of the United States. As a result, a degree of uncertainty 
    remains on the issue of whether United States courts would rule in all 
    cases that a foreign refiner who obtains and uses an individual 
    refinery baseline automatically is ineligible to claim sovereign 
    immunity in the context of an EPA enforcement action for violations of 
    the FRGAS requirements.
        Under 28 U.S.C. 1605(a)(1) the issue of sovereign immunity can be 
    resolved where the foreign government waives sovereign immunity. EPA 
    has evaluated and adopted an approach to a sovereign immunity waiver 
    that provides EPA with the ability to effectively enforce the 
    requirements applicable to a foreign refiner, in combination with other 
    provisions adopted today. This is similar to the approach used by the 
    U.S. Department of Transportation in the context of economic licenses 
    issued to foreign air carriers that are necessary for those carriers to 
    conduct commercial operations in foreign air transportation to and from 
    the United States. The DOT approach does not require an official of the 
    foreign government to sign a separate document waiving sovereign 
    immunity. Rather, DOT licenses for foreign air carriers, whether 
    government or privately owned, include a condition that states, in 
    essence, that operation under the license by a foreign air carrier 
    constitutes a waiver of sovereign immunity under the FSIA.24
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \24\ The Department of Transportation's Conditions of Authority 
    that applies to foreign air carriers includes the following 
    provision:
        In the conduct of the operations authorized, the holder shall:
        *    *    *    *    *
        (7) Agree that operations under this authority constitute a 
    waiver of sovereign immunity, for purposes of 28 U.S.C. 1605(a), but 
    only with respect to those actions or proceedings instituted against 
    it in any court or other tribunal in the United States that are: (a) 
    based on its operations in international air transportation that, 
    according to the contract of carriage, include a point in the United 
    States as a point of origin, point of destination, or agreed 
    stopping place
        *    *    *    *    *
        DOT Order 87-8-8 (issued July 31, 1987).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        DOT has included this type of waiver of sovereign immunity clause 
    in its foreign air carrier licenses for several decades, and sovereign 
    immunity has not been raised as an issue in DOT enforcement of its 
    requirements against foreign government-owned air carriers. Foreign 
    government-owned air carriers have willingly operated under this waiver 
    of sovereign immunity license term, indicating that this approach for 
    addressing the issue of sovereign immunity has been acceptable to all 
    foreign governments concerned.
        Based on the success of this administrative approach by another 
    U.S. agency, EPA is including a similar provision in the foreign 
    refiner final rule that is like the DOT approach, but uses regulatory 
    language that is somewhat different from the language used by DOT. The 
    regulatory language used by EPA acts to preclude a defense of sovereign 
    immunity for purposes of the FSIA as well as for any enforcement 
    actions that may be taken which may not be subject to the provisions of 
    the FSIA. The sole purpose and effect of the regulatory language is 
    limited to precluding the use of sovereign immunity as a defense to an 
    otherwise valid EPA or other U.S. enforcement action based on a 
    violation of the requirements that apply to a foreign refiner as a 
    result of obtaining and using an individual refinery baseline.
        Under this regulatory provision, when a foreign government-owned 
    refiner submits a petition to EPA for an individual refinery baseline, 
    the baseline submission constitutes a waiver of sovereign immunity for 
    purposes of 28 U.S.C. 1605(a)(1) of the FSIA, e.g., for an enforcement 
    action based on incorrect or fraudulent submissions. In addition, when 
    a foreign government-owned refiner operates under an individual 
    refinery baseline by supplying FRGAS to the U.S., this constitutes an 
    additional waiver of sovereign immunity under the FSIA, e.g., for 
    enforcement actions based on failure to comply with the exhaust toxics 
    or NOX emissions requirements, failure to submit reports, or 
    failure to provide access to inspectors. This waiver of sovereign 
    immunity would also apply for any enforcement action not otherwise 
    subject to the FSIA.
        If a foreign government-owned refiner states that it reserves the 
    right to or will assert a sovereign immunity defense in the context of 
    any EPA enforcement action for violations of the requirements under 
    these regulations, or in fact raises such a claim, then EPA may, in 
    addition to other remedies in law, take action to deny or withdraw all 
    individual refinery baselines that have been issued to the foreign 
    refiner.
    3. Agent for Service of Process
        a. EPA Proposal: EPA proposed that in order to obtain an individual 
    refinery baseline a foreign refiner would be required to name an agent 
    for service of process located in Washington, D.C.
        b. Comments: One foreign government-owned refiner objected to the 
    proposed requirement to name an agent for service of process located in 
    Washington, D.C. as being unnecessary for a foreign government-owned 
    refiner. This commenter stated that the FSIA specifies procedures for 
    achieving service of process that do not involve a named agent. In 
    addition, the commenter said the requirement for an agent for service 
    of process should be limited to service of process in EPA enforcement 
    actions and should not cover service of process in non-related actions, 
    such as private commercial claims raised by other parties.
        c. EPA's Response: EPA remains convinced that the final rule should 
    include a provision as proposed for all foreign refiners acting under 
    an individual baseline, including foreign refiners that are foreign 
    government-owned, to name an agent for service of process in 
    Washington, D.C. While it is true the FSIA includes procedures for 
    service of process on foreign government-owned firms, the FSIA 
    procedures are cumbersome at best.25 In
    
    [[Page 45553]]
    
    addition, 28 U.S.C. 1608(b)(1) of the FSIA states that service of 
    process on an agency or instrumentality of a foreign government may be 
    by delivery of a copy of the summons and complaint in accordance with 
    any ``special arrangement'' for service between the plaintiff and the 
    agency or instrumentality of the foreign government. EPA believes a 
    foreign government-owned refiner naming an agent for service of 
    process, as proposed, would constitute a ``special arrangement'' for 
    service under 28 U.S.C. 1608(b)(1), and service on such an agent by EPA 
    would resolve any question regarding whether service has been 
    accomplished.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \25\ For example, 28 U.S.C. 1608(b)(2) provides that service on 
    an agency or instrumentality of a foreign state must be accomplished 
    by delivery of copies of the summons and complaint to an officer, 
    general agent, or other agent authorized by appointment or law to 
    receive service of process in the United States, or in accordance 
    with applicable international conventions on service of judicial 
    documents; and section 1608(b)(3) provides that if service cannot be 
    made under section 1608(b)(2), by delivering copies of the summons 
    and complaint, with translations into the official language of the 
    foreign state, if reasonably calculated to give actual notice, as 
    directed by an authority of the foreign state or political 
    subdivision in response to a letter rogatory, by return receipt mail 
    from the clerk of the court to the agency or instrumentality to be 
    served, or as directed by the court consistent with the law of the 
    foreign state.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Commenters have not described any reason why it would be difficult 
    or expensive for a foreign government-owned refiner to name an agent 
    for service of process in Washington, D.C., but only that there is an 
    alternative under the FSIA. EPA believes that, on balance, it is more 
    appropriate to require all foreign refiners seeking an individual 
    refinery baseline, including foreign government-owned refiners, to name 
    an agent for service, instead of relying on the alternative under 28 
    U.S.C. 1608(b) (2) and (3) of the FSIA. It will reduce the 
    administrative burden on EPA and will not add any significant burden on 
    the foreign refiner.
        Finally, EPA agrees that the agent for service of process need not 
    be authorized to receive process from parties other than EPA or others 
    in the United States government, or for enforcement actions other than 
    those that result from a foreign refiner having petitioned for and used 
    an individual refinery baseline.
    4. Bond Requirement
        a. EPA Proposal: EPA proposed that a foreign refiner would be 
    required to post a bond in order to receive an individual refinery 
    baseline. The amount proposed for this bond would be calculated by 
    multiplying the annual volume of conventional gasoline exported to the 
    U.S. by the foreign refiner, in gallons, times $0.01. The bond amount 
    that applies each year would be calculated using the annual volume for 
    the single year that had the greatest volume among the immediately 
    preceding five years. EPA also proposed that the bond requirement could 
    be met if a bond is obtained from a third party surety agent, provided 
    that EPA approves the surety agreement.
        b. Comments: EPA received comments on the bond proposal from two 
    foreign refiners who opposed requiring bonds or believed them to be 
    unnecessary, and from an association of domestic refiners who supported 
    the bond proposal.
        One foreign refiner commented that although it could accept a bond 
    requirement, such a requirement is not necessary. This commenter also 
    stated that the amount proposed for the bond is too large, and that the 
    bond amount required for any particular foreign refiner should be 
    reduced over time based on the refiner's compliance record. This 
    commenter stated that bonds need not be for the full amount of any 
    possible liability, because a lesser, but significant, bond amount 
    would create an incentive for good conduct, which serves one purpose of 
    a bond. However, this commenter did not suggest any alternative bond 
    amount.
        The other foreign refiner, who also objected to the proposed bond 
    requirement, interpreted the proposal as requiring that bond amounts be 
    calculated based on the cumulative volume of FRGAS exported to the U.S. 
    by a refiner over the prior five years, and stated that the bond amount 
    that would result raises questions under Article II and Article III of 
    the GATT. This commenter also stated it is aware of no surety agent who 
    would issue a bond to cover judgments against a foreign refiner for 
    Clean Air Act violations. Further, this commenter stated that EPA 
    should rely on penalties other than bonds, such as imposing a sanction 
    of prohibiting the sale in the U.S. of gasoline produced by a foreign 
    refiner who has violated the Clean Air Act.
        The association representing certain domestic refiners commented in 
    support of the bond proposal, stating that posting of bonds by foreign 
    refiners is critical for effective enforcement.
        c. EPA's Response: A bond requirement was proposed because of 
    concern that collecting a judgment against a refiner located outside 
    the United States for an enforcement action related to the requirements 
    of this rule is more difficult than collecting a judgment against a 
    domestic refiner. None of the comments refuted this basic concern. The 
    bond requirement has the effect of enabling EPA to collect penalties 
    against foreign refiners in a straightforward manner, analogous to 
    penalty collections against domestic refiners.
        The bond amount EPA proposed, annual conventional gasoline gallons 
    times $0.01, was based on an estimate of the penalty that could result 
    if a foreign refiner violated the exhaust toxics or NOX 
    requirements. These requirements are met based on average conventional 
    gasoline quality over a calendar year averaging period, and penalty 
    amounts are calculated, in part, based on the volume of gasoline in 
    violation. As a result, it is appropriate to use a foreign refiners's 
    annual conventional gasoline volume as the yardstick for calculating 
    bond amounts. Penalty amounts also are based on the amount the exhaust 
    toxics and/or NOX requirements are exceeded, and for 
    egregious violations penalty amounts may well exceed $0.01 per gallon. 
    As a result, the proposed penalty amount does not cover the maximum 
    possible penalty. Nevertheless, EPA believes the proposed amount is 
    appropriate because it ensures that a penalty up to this amount may be 
    collected, which constitutes a significant incentive for a foreign 
    refiner to avoid violations.
        The comments of one foreign refiner, that bond amounts would be 
    calculated using the foreign refiner's five year cumulative gasoline 
    volume, were based on an apparent misunderstanding of the bond 
    proposal. EPA intends that bond amounts be calculated using the annual 
    conventional gasoline volume for a single year, that year which has the 
    highest volume for the preceding five years. EPA is slightly revising 
    the language in the bond provision to make this intent clear. The bond 
    amount applicable each year is calculated using the single year, among 
    the past five years, when the largest volume of conventional gasoline 
    was exported to the U.S.
        EPA's review indicates that these concerns appear to be unfounded. 
    Surety agents will be available to issue bonds to cover judgments for 
    violations of the FRGAS requirements. Representatives of two national 
    associations of surety agents, the Surety Association of America and 
    the American Surety Association, told EPA there is nothing inherent in 
    the FRGAS requirements that would prevent surety agents from writing 
    bonds for foreign refiners as contemplated. The representatives said 
    the proposed FRGAS bond requirement is analogous to the bonds required 
    by the U.S. Customs Service, which routinely are issued by third party 
    surety agents. These representatives concluded that foreign refiners 
    can locate third party surety agents who would issue bonds to
    
    [[Page 45554]]
    
    meet the FRGAS requirement, and that the annual fee probably would be 
    between one-half and two percent of the bond amount depending on 
    company-specific factors such as the general business strength and 
    reputation of the foreign refiner and the type and amount of collateral 
    offered.
        However, EPA now believes it is possible for a foreign refiner to 
    meet the purpose and intent of the bond requirement through means other 
    than posting the requisite bond amount with the Treasurer of the United 
    States or a bond issued by a third party surety. For example, if a 
    foreign refiner owns assets that are located in the United States it 
    may be possible for the foreign refiner to pledge these assets in a way 
    that would be equivalent to posting a cash bond. As a result, EPA has 
    modified the bond requirement to allow a foreign refiner to petition 
    EPA to be allowed to satisfy the bond requirement through an 
    alternative means. EPA will rule on any such petition based on whether 
    there is certainty as to the ready availability of liquid assets, or 
    easily liquidated assets, that are equal in value to the bond 
    requirement.
        For the foregoing reasons, EPA is finalizing the proposed bond 
    requirement modified to allow petitions for alternative bonding 
    mechanisms.
        EPA has included in the final rule a provision that specifies that 
    a foreign refiner's bond may only be used to satisfy judgments against 
    the foreign refiner that result from violations of the FRGAS 
    requirements.
        EPA also is adopting a requirement that the bond may be used to 
    satisfy judgments that result from violations by the foreign refiner 
    for causing another person to violate the regulations.26 For 
    example, the regulations include a prohibition against combining 
    certified FRGAS with non-certified FRGAS that applies to any person. If 
    a foreign refiner causes a third party to violate this prohibition, 
    this would be a violation by the foreign refiner, and the bond could be 
    used to satisfy a judgment resulting from this violation.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \26\ EPA also has included language in Section 80.94(n) that 
    prohibits foreign refiners from causing violations by other parties.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        EPA intends to reevaluate the amount required for bonds after the 
    FRGAS program has been in place for approximately two years. Based on 
    EPA's experience in implementing and enforcing the FRGAS program up to 
    that time EPA will evaluate whether it should revise the regulations to 
    allow a foreign refiner to submit a petition to EPA to reduce the 
    required bond amount, based on factors such as its history of 
    compliance and the strength of quality assurance programs in place at 
    the refinery to ensure violations will not occur. EPA invites all 
    parties to consider any modifications of the bond requirement they 
    believe would be appropriate based on their experience with the FRGAS 
    program, and to submit these suggestions to EPA at that time.
    5. Foreign Refiner Commitments
        a. EPA's Proposal: EPA proposed that a foreign refiner would have 
    to submit as part of their baseline petition a commitment to allow EPA 
    inspections and audits related to the FRGAS requirements, and its 
    acceptance of United States courts or administrative tribunals acting 
    under United States law as the forum for any enforcement action, in 
    order to receive an individual refinery baseline. EPA also proposed 
    that this commitment would have to be signed by the owner or president 
    of the foreign refiner business, or by the relevant government official 
    in the case of government-owned foreign refiners.
        EPA proposed that the scope of EPA inspections and audits may 
    include information related to baseline establishment, the quality and 
    quantity of FRGAS, transfers of FRGAS, sampling and testing of FRGAS, 
    and reports submitted to EPA.
        b. Comments: EPA received a comment from a foreign refiner on the 
    proposed commitments related to allowing EPA inspections and audits. 
    This commenter stated that while it is willing to allow EPA inspections 
    and audits, these should relate solely to establishment and use of an 
    individual refinery baseline. EPA also received a comment from a 
    domestic environmental non-governmental organization, expressing the 
    view that the proposed foreign refiner commitments will be less 
    effective than the authorities available in the United States for 
    ensuring EPA's ability to conduct an effective enforcement program.
        c. EPA's Response: EPA agrees the scope of any EPA inspection or 
    audit to which a foreign refiner would consent would be limited to 
    matters relevant to compliance with the FRGAS requirements. The 
    commitment requirement is limited in this manner.
        The scope of EPA audits of a foreign refiner clearly could include 
    a review of all information related to baseline establishment, and the 
    quality and quantity of all gasoline identified by the foreign refiner 
    as FRGAS. However, EPA auditors also must be able to verify that 
    gasoline and blendstock not identified as FRGAS by the foreign refiner 
    in fact went to non-U.S. markets. If a foreign refiner were able to 
    exclude from its compliance baseline calculations the volume of any 
    gasoline or blendstock delivered to the U.S., the compliance baseline 
    values would be inappropriately lenient. This concern is discussed more 
    fully, below. EPA auditors must be able to review documents and other 
    information related to gasoline not classified as FRGAS by the foreign 
    refiner in order to verify this gasoline was used in non-U.S. markets 
    and, hence, to guard against this possible form of cheating. As a 
    result, the effective scope of EPA audits must include all gasoline and 
    blendstock produced at a foreign refinery with an individual baseline, 
    and not just the gasoline classified by the foreign refiner as FRGAS.
        The final regulations are being revised to clarify that the foreign 
    refiner commitment must be to allow EPA inspections and audits with 
    this scope.
        EPA generally agrees that the required foreign refiner commitments 
    do not give EPA enforcement authorities that are exactly equivalent in 
    all respects to the authorities available in the United States, such as 
    the availability of search warrants, injunctions, and subpoenas. 
    However, EPA believes the proposed commitments, when honored by the 
    foreign refiner, will give EPA the ability to effectively enforce the 
    requirements, as is done domestically. In addition, EPA has the 
    recourse of withdrawing the individual refinery baseline of any foreign 
    refiner who fails to honor these commitments.
    6. Gasoline Tracking Requirements
        a. EPA's Proposal: EPA proposed a series of requirements intended 
    to allow EPA to ensure that gasoline, identified on arrival in the U.S. 
    as FRGAS that was produced at a specific foreign refinery, in fact was 
    produced at that foreign refinery. These proposed requirements include 
    the following.
         Foreign refiners with individual baselines would designate 
    all gasoline to be imported into the United States as FRGAS when 
    produced.
         A foreign refinery's certified FRGAS would remain 
    segregated from its non-certified FRGAS, and from gasoline produced at 
    a different foreign refinery until entry into the U.S., except that 
    FRGAS produced at refineries that have been aggregated could be 
    combined.
         An independent third party would sample each certified 
    FRGAS batch subsequent to loading onboard a vessel, and test for all 
    complex model parameters.
         An independent third party would review gasoline transfer 
    documents to verify the gasoline loaded onboard a
    
    [[Page 45555]]
    
    vessel was produced at the foreign refinery.
         The foreign refiner would prepare a certification to 
    accompany the vessel identifying the gasoline as FRGAS, which would 
    include a report prepared by the independent third party.
         U.S. importers would sample and test certified FRGAS on 
    arrival at the U.S. port of entry. The foreign refiner would compare 
    the volume and property results from the port of entry testing, with 
    the volume and property results from the load port testing. If the test 
    results differ by more than the ranges allowed in section 80.65(e)(1), 
    or if the volume measurements differ by more than one percent, the 
    foreign refiner would have to adjust its compliance calculations to 
    reflect the discrepancy.
         The U.S. importer would treat the gasoline as certified 
    FRGAS if it received the proper certification and third party report, 
    and the load port and port of entry test results are consistent.
        b. Comments and EPA's Responses:
    (1) Option to Classify Gasoline as Non-FRGAS
    (a) Comment
        One foreign refiner and a group of independent U.S. importers 
    commented that foreign refiners with individual refinery baselines 
    should have the option of designating gasoline for the U.S. market as 
    FRGAS or as non-FRGAS.27 The conventional gasoline 
    designated as FRGAS would be subject to the foreign refiner's 
    individual baseline, and the conventional gasoline designated as non-
    FRGAS would be treated as any other gasoline regulated through the U.S. 
    importer, subject to the assigned statutory baseline.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \27\ EPA proposed to define ``FRGAS'' as gasoline produced at a 
    foreign refinery that has been assigned an individual refinery 
    baseline, and that is included in the foreign refinery's 
    conventional gasoline compliance calculations, or compliance 
    baseline calculations.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The U.S. importers stated that this flexibility is desirable in 
    order to increase the volume of imported conventional gasoline that 
    could be classified as ``gasoline treated as blendstock,'' or 
    GTAB.28 Non-FRGAS then could be blended with other GTAB or 
    blendstocks where desired, and classified by the importer either as 
    conventional or reformulated gasoline. The importer then would account 
    for it in its compliance calculations.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \28\ See description of GTAB, above.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    (b) EPA's Response
        In the case of non-certified FRGAS produced by a foreign refiner 
    with an individual baseline, it is important that the volume of all 
    such gasoline be included in the compliance baseline calculation of the 
    foreign refiner for conventional gasoline. Even though a refinery's 
    annual compliance baseline applies only to the NOX and 
    exhaust toxics requirements for conventional gasoline, the equation 
    used to calculate the compliance baseline includes the volume of all 
    gasoline produced at a refinery that is used in the United States 
    including RFG.29 If a foreign refiner were allowed to 
    exclude the volume of non-certified FRGAS from compliance baseline 
    calculations, the compliance baseline would be less stringent than if 
    the volume of all certified and non-certified FRGAS were included.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \29\ The compliance baseline equation at section 80.101(f) 
    requires a refiner to include the volumes of all gasoline used in 
    the U.S., including conventional gasoline, RFG, RFG blendstock for 
    oxygenate blending (RBOB), and California gasoline under section 
    80.81. In addition, where a refiner is required to include 
    blendstocks in its compliance calculations under section 80.102 the 
    volume of blendstocks also would be included in compliance baseline 
    calculations. These requirements apply equally to domestic and to 
    foreign refiners.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The effect of the compliance baseline equation, in the case of a 
    refiner whose overall gasoline volume exceeds its individual baseline 
    volume, is to move the NOX and exhaust toxics compliance 
    baseline in the direction of the statutory baseline values. EPA assumes 
    that any foreign refiner who obtains an individual refinery baseline 
    will likely have an individual baseline value for at least one complex 
    model requirement (NOX or exhaust toxics emissions 
    performance) that is less stringent than the statutory baseline values. 
    Hence, the effect of the compliance baseline equation for such a 
    refiner is more stringent for the NOX or exhaust toxics, or 
    for both requirements, and the magnitude of this effect increases as 
    the volume of the refinery's U.S. export-gasoline increases.
        In the case of conventional gasoline produced by a foreign refiner 
    with an individual baseline, the reason given by commenters for 
    allowing the foreign refiner to classify this gasoline as non-FRGAS is 
    to give additional flexibility to the U.S. importer. This flexibility 
    results from the option of classifying imported conventional gasoline 
    as GTAB, which under the proposal would only be available if the 
    imported conventional gasoline is non-FRGAS.30 This 
    flexibility is lost if conventional gasoline was classified as 
    conventional FRGAS because it would have been previously certified by 
    the foreign refiner and included in the foreign refiner's compliance 
    calculations.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \30\ In the case of conventional gasoline classified by the 
    importer as GTAB, the importer is able to add blendstocks to the 
    gasoline if the gasoline is ``cleaner'' than required, or to 
    reclassify the gasoline as RFG.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        EPA is concerned that if foreign refiners had the option of 
    classifying conventional gasoline as FRGAS or as non-FRGAS, a foreign 
    refiner could classify very ``clean'' conventional gasoline as non-
    FRGAS, including gasoline that in fact meets the quality requirements 
    for reformulated gasoline. This ``clean'' conventional gasoline then 
    could be classified as GTAB by the U.S. importer and reclassified as 
    reformulated gasoline. In this way a foreign refiner could avoid 
    including all RFG in its compliance baseline calculations, which would 
    result in adverse environmental consequences.
        However, this result would not be possible if the foreign refiner 
    includes in its compliance baseline calculations all gasoline imported 
    into the United States (i.e., all FRGAS), whether or not the gasoline 
    is included in the foreign refiner's NOX and exhaust toxics 
    compliance calculations.
        Assuming the foreign refiners counts the volume in its compliance 
    baseline equation, there is no adverse environmental consequence if the 
    importer can treat the foreign refiner's gasoline, whether RFG or CG, 
    as GTAB. If the gasoline is treated as GTAB, it will be imported 
    subject to the requirements applicable to the importer for either RFG 
    or CG, depending on how the importer classifies the gasoline. In both 
    cases the importer would include the gasoline in it's compliance 
    calculations, and the importer's compliance requirement would in all 
    cases be more stringent than the CG compliance baseline for the foreign 
    refiner.
        As a result the final rules establish two categories of FRGAS--
    ``certified FRGAS'' and ``non-certified FRGAS.'' The foreign refiner 
    designates all gasoline that it produces and that is sent to the US as 
    FRGAS, and FRGAS is further classified as either certified or non-
    certified FRGAS. The foreign refiner can include gasoline of any 
    quality in the non-certified FRGAS category, including gasoline that 
    meets the quality requirements for RFG or CG.
        Gasoline classified as certified FRGAS will be subject to the 
    compliance baseline for NOX and exhaust toxics applicable 
    for the foreign refiner. The volume of all FRGAS, certified and non-
    certified, must be included in the foreign refiner's compliance 
    baseline calculation.
        The importer may not include certified FRGAS in the importer's 
    NOX and exhaust toxics compliance calculations. However, 
    importers must meet requirements for all non-certified FRGAS the same 
    as for non-FRGAS, i.e.,
    
    [[Page 45556]]
    
    non-certified FRGAS must be classified by the importer as CG or RFG and 
    meet the applicable quality requirements, or must be classified as GTAB 
    and subsequently meet the CG or RFG requirements. The importer may 
    treat any non-certified FRGAS as GTAB.31
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \31\ In another rulemaking EPA has proposed giving refiners and 
    importers additional flexibility for reclassifying previously 
    certified gasoline, called the PCG option. See 62 FR 37349 (July 11, 
    1997). The proposed PCG option would allow a refiner or importer to 
    reclassify previously certified conventional gasoline as RFG, 
    provided the refiner or importer replaces the reclassified 
    conventional gasoline during the same averaging period. EPA believes 
    the PCG option, if adopted, would give U.S. importers flexibility 
    regarding conventional gasoline classified by the foreign refiner as 
    certified FRGAS.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        As described above, there will be no adverse environmental impact 
    from this. It will also increase flexibility under the regulations for 
    both importers and foreign refiners.
        To implement this change, EPA is revising the regulations so that 
    the appropriate classification, tracking, record-keeping and reporting 
    occurs for non-certified FRGAS. To accomplish this, the provisions 
    proposed for ``RFG FRGAS'' would basically be applied for all non-
    certified FRGAS, whether RFG or CG.
        In addition, EPA is adopting an additional flexibility regarding 
    FRGAS classification that was not proposed. A foreign refiner who has 
    obtained an individual refinery baseline may elect each calendar year 
    to not participate in the FRGAS program at all, provided notice is 
    provided to EPA before the beginning of the calendar year. If such a 
    foreign refiner gives timely non-participation notice to EPA, the 
    foreign refiner could not classify any gasoline, conventional gasoline 
    or RFG, as FRGAS during the calendar year, and the individual refinery 
    baseline would have no effect for that year. In this situation the 
    foreign refiner would not have to meet the gasoline tracking 
    requirements during the year (designation, independent sampling and 
    testing, attest engagements, etc.), and the refiner would not have to 
    submit reports to EPA. However, such a non-participating foreign 
    refiner would remain subject to EPA audits and enforcement that focus 
    on prior years when the refiner did participate in the FRGAS program. 
    As a result, enforcement-related requirements, such as the refiner 
    commitments and bond, would remain in effect during any period of non-
    participation.
        A foreign refiner who has elected the non-participation status 
    could begin participating again at the beginning of any subsequent year 
    by giving notice to EPA before the beginning of the year when 
    participation is to begin.
        Also, where a foreign refiner operates multiple refineries with 
    individual baselines that have been aggregated under section 80.101(h), 
    the foreign refiner is required to make the same FRGAS election for all 
    refineries in the aggregation. This consistency requirement for 
    aggregated refineries is similar to the requirement that aggregation 
    decisions cannot be modified from year-to-year, that applies to 
    domestic and foreign refiners. If a foreign refiner of aggregated 
    refineries could elect non-participation FRGAS status for only one 
    refinery in the aggregation while electing for the remaining refineries 
    to participate in the FRGAS program, this would have the effect of 
    changing the aggregation for the participating refinery or refineries.
        EPA believes the additional flexibility of allowing an annual FRGAS 
    election is appropriate because there would be no adverse environmental 
    effect if a foreign refiner with a relatively ``dirty'' individual 
    baseline elected to not use that baseline. In that case, the 
    conventional gasoline would be regulated through the importer, who is 
    subject to the statutory baseline.
        As a result, EPA is finalizing the regulations to require a foreign 
    refiner with an individual refinery baseline to classify all gasoline 
    exported to the United States as FRGAS, or, at the foreign refiner's 
    election, to classify no gasoline as FRGAS. A foreign refiner with an 
    individual refinery baseline would not be allowed to classify part of 
    its gasoline as FRGAS and part as non-FRGAS during a calendar year.
        EPA also is including a provision in the final rule to specifically 
    prohibit a foreign refiner with an individual baseline from failing to 
    include in the refinery compliance baseline calculations all gasoline 
    produced at the foreign refinery that is used in the U.S., and 
    including any blendstock produced at the foreign refinery that is used 
    to produce RFG used in the U.S. If EPA discovers that a foreign refiner 
    with an individual baseline has produced gasoline that was used in the 
    U.S., but that was not included in the refinery's compliance baseline 
    calculations, this would be a violation of the prohibition. In 
    addition, this also would result in a recalculation of the refinery's 
    compliance baseline for the relevant year, ab initio, which could 
    result in the foreign refiner violating the revised NOX and 
    exhaust toxics requirements for that year. It would be no defense if 
    the gasoline or blendstock had been transferred to a third party who 
    was responsible for exporting the gasoline or blendstock to the U.S., 
    even if the foreign refiner had no actual knowledge of the subsequent 
    U.S. export or if the foreign refiner had a good faith belief the 
    gasoline or blendstocks would be used only in non-U.S. markets.
        This is similar to the requirement at section 80.67(h)(3) that 
    prohibits domestic refiners from using improperly created oxygen or 
    benzene credits regardless of any good faith belief the credits were 
    valid, and if invalid credits are used results in EPA recalculating the 
    refiner's compliance calculations, ab initio, with the invalid credits 
    being removed.
        As a result, EPA believes it would be prudent for foreign refiners 
    of FRGAS to take appropriate commercial steps to ensure they are 
    informed if gasoline or blendstock transferred to third parties 
    ultimately is exported to the U.S. If a foreign refiner fails to take 
    reasonable steps in this regard, and EPA determines that the refiner's 
    gasoline or blendstock is exported to the U.S. by a third party without 
    being included in the refiner's compliance baseline calculations, EPA 
    will consider this an aggravating factor in determining the amount of 
    any penalty imposed against the foreign refiner for the violation.
    (2) Third Party Testing Requirements
    (a) Comments
        EPA received several comments related to the proposed third party 
    testing requirements and the comparison of load port test results with 
    port of entry test results. One foreign refiner and an association of 
    domestic gasoline marketers commented that load port testing is not 
    necessary, and the foreign refiner stated their comment is based on the 
    view that EPA should require U.S. importers to meet NOX and 
    exhaust toxics requirements based on testing only at the U.S. port of 
    entry and EPA audits of refinery records.
        A number of comments were related to factors intended to reduce the 
    costs associated with third party testing. Two foreign refiners 
    commented that if third party testing is required, the load port 
    testing requirement should require analysis only of vessel composite 
    samples instead of separate analyses for each vessel compartment. One 
    foreign refiner commented that the parameters required to be analyzed 
    should be limited to gravity, T50, T90, benzene and sulfur, or in the 
    alternative, for NOX and exhaust toxics emissions 
    performance. Two foreign refiners commented that the third party tester 
    should not be required to use an independent laboratory, and instead 
    should be allowed to observe the testing
    
    [[Page 45557]]
    
    in the foreign refiner's laboratory or use the foreign refiner's 
    laboratory equipment, because at present there are no independent 
    laboratory facilities located near their foreign refineries.
        Two foreign refiners commented that comparisons of load port 
    testing with port of entry testing should be on the basis of ASTM 
    reproducibility,32 instead of the comparison criteria 
    proposed by EPA.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \32\ The American Society of Testing and Materials, ASTM, is a 
    non-governmental body that describes test methods, including test 
    methods for gasoline parameters, that are generally recognized as 
    industry-standard test methods. ASTM includes precision measures for 
    each test method in the form of repeatability and reproducibility 
    statistics. In general, repeatability reflects intra-laboratory 
    variability, while reproducibility reflects inter-laboratory 
    variability.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        One foreign refiner also commented that in the case of inconsistent 
    load port--port of entry test results, the U.S. importer should be 
    responsible for meeting the NOX and exhaust toxics 
    requirements for the gasoline.
        An association of domestic refiners commented that the proposed 
    requirements for third party testing are necessary for an effective 
    enforcement program.
    (b) EPA's Response
        EPA continues to believe third party sampling and testing is a 
    necessary part of the foreign refiner FRGAS program. However, in 
    response to comments EPA is modifying these requirements in several 
    ways in the final rule.
        The primary purpose served by the third party sampling and testing 
    requirements is to provide information useful in evaluating whether any 
    event has occurred since the gasoline was loaded into the vessel that 
    would cast doubt on the identification of the source refinery of FRGAS. 
    The NOX and exhaust toxics requirements are met on the basis 
    of sampling and testing conducted by the foreign refiner at the foreign 
    refinery (not necessarily at the load port), and is largely unrelated 
    to the third party load port sampling and testing. The tracking purpose 
    of the third party testing requirements provides the focus for 
    evaluating the comments received on this issue.
        In the case of gasoline classified as non-certified FRGAS, EPA now 
    believes that no third party load port sampling or testing to determine 
    gasoline properties is necessary. There is no adverse environmental 
    effect if a foreign refiner includes FRGAS in its compliance baseline 
    calculations even if this gasoline was produced by a different refiner. 
    As a result, there is little need for third party testing intended to 
    verify gasoline was produced at the specified foreign refinery, and, 
    hence, EPA is dropping the requirement for third parties to determine 
    properties of non-certified FRGAS. However, EPA has retained the 
    requirement for third party determination of volume for non-certified 
    FRGAS, because the volume of all FRGAS is important to the accuracy of 
    the compliance baseline calculation.
        In addition, the foreign refiner is required to prepare a 
    certification to accompany shipments of non-certified FRGAS that 
    identify the foreign refinery and the volume, supported by the report 
    of the independent third party. The requirement also remains that the 
    U.S. importer must report the volume of non-certified FRGAS to EPA and 
    to the foreign refiner. EPA intends to monitor the volumes of non-
    certified FRGAS used by foreign refiners in their compliance baseline 
    calculations. If EPA discovers that the volume of non-certified FRGAS 
    included in a foreign refiner's compliance baseline calculation is 
    incorrect (for example, discovers this violation during an audit of the 
    foreign refinery), EPA will recalculate the refinery's compliance 
    baseline and evaluate the refinery's compliance with the NOX 
    and exhaust toxics requirements on this basis.
        In the case of gasoline classified as certified FRGAS, EPA believes 
    third party testing is needed in order to verify the imported gasoline 
    was produced at the named foreign refinery and subsequent to loading 
    was not mixed with gasoline from a different foreign refinery. Only 
    conventional gasoline that is produced at the foreign refinery with an 
    individual baseline is entitled to use that baseline, and it would be 
    inappropriate for the foreign refiner or anyone else to substitute 
    conventional gasoline produced at another refinery.33 
    However, the purpose of third party sampling and testing of certified 
    FRGAS is limited to identifying the source refinery. As a result, and 
    in response to comments received, EPA has revised the parameters that 
    must be tested by the third party, the manner in which the third party 
    may determine the property values, and the criteria that are used to 
    compare load port and port of entry test results to more reasonably 
    reflect the purpose of this sampling and testing.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \33\ As discussed elsewhere in this preamble, foreign refiners 
    of FRGAS who have aggregated refineries may mix or substitute 
    gasoline produced at any refinery within the aggregation.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The purpose of comparing load port and port of entry test results 
    is to verify the gasoline on board a vessel on arrival at the U.S. port 
    of entry is the same gasoline that was loaded by the refiner at the 
    load port, i.e., to verify that the vessel has not stopped en route to 
    the U.S. to discharge or take on gasoline. EPA had proposed that this 
    comparison must be of all complex model parameters.34 A 
    foreign refiner commented that a comparison based on test results for a 
    subset of the complex model parameters would also meet the purpose of 
    this provision, i.e., test results for sulfur, benzene, T50, T90, and 
    gravity. EPA agrees the vessel tracking purpose is served by comparing 
    results for the suggested parameters, although the distillation terms 
    E200 and E300 that are used in the complex model are being substituted 
    for the distillation terms T50 and T90 recommended by the commenter. It 
    is highly likely the gasoline on board a vessel has not been altered if 
    the values for these five parameters plus the gasoline volume are 
    unchanged.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \34\ The parameters that are used in the complex model are 
    sulfur, aromatics, olefins, benzene, oxygenate, distillation (E200 
    and E300), and gravity. See 40 CFR 80.65(e)(2)(i).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        However, it nevertheless is necessary for the foreign refiner to 
    have the third party determine values for all complex model parameters 
    for certified FRGAS loaded onto the vessel, so the foreign refiner can 
    correct its NOX compliance and exhaust toxics calculations 
    in the event the results from load port and port of entry testing are 
    inconsistent, or the vessel is diverted to a non-U.S. market, as 
    discussed below. The additional parameters that must be established for 
    the vessel are aromatics, olefins, oxygenate and RVP. These additional 
    parameters may be established by the third party testing the ship 
    composite sample for them. In addition, if a vessel is loaded from 
    shore tanks containing gasoline that has been tested for the additional 
    parameters and the volume from each shore tank that was loaded is 
    known, the third party may calculate the additional parameter values 
    for the gasoline that was loaded onto the vessel.
        Thus, the load port testing must be for all complex model 
    parameters, but the comparison of load port and port of entry samples 
    must be only for the subset of parameters.
        EPA also now believes the appropriate basis for comparison of load 
    port and port of entry testing is ASTM reproducibility, as recommended 
    in the comments. EPA proposed requiring these comparisons be based on 
    the ranges specified at 40 CFR 80.65(e)(2)(i). However, these proposed 
    ranges currently are used under the regulations to compare a refiner's 
    internal test results for RFG with the test results obtained by the 
    refiner's independent
    
    [[Page 45558]]
    
    laboratory. The purpose is to verify the actual quality of the 
    gasoline, not the source refinery. A relatively high degree of 
    correlation in test results would be expected between a refiner and the 
    single independent laboratory selected and used by the refiner on an 
    ongoing basis. In contrast, a foreign refiner's load port test results 
    for FRGAS normally will be compared with port of entry testing 
    conducted by multiple importers, where unusually high correlation in 
    test results would not be expected. EPA believes ASTM reproducibility 
    is an appropriate correlation criteria in this situation in light of 
    the tracking purpose of load port and port of entry test comparisons. 
    ASTM reproducibility for most parameters is calculated using the test 
    result obtained in each test, and the reproducibility value that must 
    be used for each load port-port of entry comparison must be calculated 
    using the port of entry test result.35 The final regulations 
    are being revised accordingly.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \35\ For example, under the ASTM test for benzene, ASTM D 3606-
    92, reproducibility is calculated as 0.28 times the measured value. 
    If the benzene tests for a particular vessel are 2.50 vol% from the 
    load port composite sample, and 1.80 vol% from the port of entry 
    composite sample, the reproducibility calculated as 1.80 vol% 
     0.50 vol% based on the 1.80 vol% port of entry result, 
    i.e., the load port result would be consistent with the port of 
    entry result if it is between 1.30 vol% and 2.30 vol%. In this 
    example the benzene test results are inconsistent because the load 
    port result is larger than 2.30 vol%.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Also in light of the limited purpose of load port testing, EPA now 
    believes this testing need not be conducted in an independent 
    laboratory. This is in contrast to independent sampling and testing of 
    RFG, which must be conducted at an independent laboratory. EPA believes 
    the purpose of load port testing may be achieved if the independent 
    chemist observes the foreign refiner chemist conduct the required tests 
    or if the independent chemist uses the foreign refiner's laboratory 
    equipment. In addition, load port testing of certified FRGAS could be 
    conducted by the independent third party at an independent laboratory. 
    The final regulations are being revised accordingly.
        EPA proposed that load port testing would be conducted separately 
    for each quantity of gasoline that is not homogeneous with regard to 
    the properties being tested, i.e., that separate testing would be 
    conducted for each batch.36 Commenters stated that EPA 
    instead should allow parties to conduct load port-port of entry test 
    comparisons on the basis of vessel composite samples. Based on the 
    tracking purpose of load port-port of entry test comparisons, EPA 
    agrees with the commenters' suggestion. The point of comparing load 
    port with port of entry test results is to establish that a vessel has 
    not stopped en route to the United States to add new gasoline. The 
    gasoline quality and quantity changes that would result from such a 
    mid-journey stop would be revealed by comparing the analysis results of 
    vessel composite samples, and EPA now believes there is no need to 
    require separate comparisons for each gasoline batch being transported 
    on a vessel.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \36\ 40 CFR 80.2(gg) defines an RFG batch as a quantity that is 
    homogeneous with regard to the RFG parameters. In another 
    rulemaking, EPA has proposed that this definition also would apply 
    to conventional gasoline. See 62 FR 37339 (July 11, 1997).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        EPA proposed that if port of entry test results for certified FRGAS 
    differ from load port test results by more than the specified ranges, 
    the foreign refiner would be required to correct its compliance 
    calculations to reflect the port of entry results. Foreign refiners 
    objected, stating they sell their gasoline ``free on board'' (FOB) the 
    foreign load port, and, hence, have no control and are not responsible 
    for what happens to it afterwards.
        EPA now believes the proposed approach is not the most appropriate 
    consequence when port of entry test results are inconsistent with load 
    port test results. Instead, EPA believes the U.S. importer should 
    simply treat the gasoline as non-certified FRGAS. In the case of 
    inconsistent results from load port and port of entry testing, the 
    implication is the gasoline was not produced by the foreign refiner or 
    has been mixed with gasoline not produced by the foreign refiner, and 
    is not entitled to the foreign refinery's individual baseline. In 
    addition, the U.S. importer must inform the foreign refiner of the 
    inconsistent results, and the foreign refiner must adjust its 
    compliance calculations to remove the qualities and volume of the 
    conventional gasoline from the refinery NOX and exhaust 
    toxics compliance calculations.
        However, the foreign refiner may not remove the volume from its 
    compliance baseline calculations. This is necessary in order to prevent 
    the adverse impacts, described above, that could occur if foreign 
    refiners of FRGAS or their importers have the option of classifying 
    conventional gasoline as ``non-FRGAS.'' Requiring the named foreign 
    refiner to retain the volume of the non-certified FRGAS in its 
    compliance baseline calculations even where load port and port of entry 
    test results are inconsistent removes any incentive for the foreign 
    refiner or its U.S. importer to manipulate test results in order to 
    make them inconsistent, and in this way to ship to the United States 
    gasoline that could be treated as ``non-FRGAS.''
        EPA is providing an exception to this requirement. In the case of 
    test results outside the specified ranges the foreign refiner need not 
    retain the volume of the gasoline in its compliance baseline 
    calculations, where the foreign refiner can demonstrate that the U.S. 
    importer does not classify the imported gasoline as reformulated 
    gasoline, or use the imported gasoline to produce reformulated gasoline 
    through the GTAB protocol. This exception is appropriate because the 
    potential for adverse environmental effects only exists where the 
    gasoline is used as reformulated gasoline in the U.S.37 EPA 
    intends to review compliance with this exception when it conducts 
    audits of foreign refiners and U.S. importers. If EPA discovers that a 
    foreign refiner excluded the volume of certified FRGAS from its 
    compliance baseline calculations based on inconsistent load port--port 
    of entry testing, but the gasoline was classified as reformulated 
    gasoline by the U.S. importer, the foreign refiner's compliance 
    baseline calculation will be adjusted, ab initio, which could result in 
    a violation of the NOX and exhaust toxics requirements by 
    the foreign refiner. This would be true in a case where only a portion 
    of the gasoline at issue has been classified as reformulated gasoline 
    using the GTAB protocol. Moreover, the foreign refiner could not avoid 
    this result even if it had a good faith belief the U.S. importer would 
    not use the gasoline at issue to produce reformulated gasoline. The 
    burden is on the foreign refiner to demonstrate that the gasoline was 
    not classified as reformulated.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \37\ If the gasoline is included in the importer's CG compliance 
    calculations, it will be subject to the statutory baseline, which is 
    more stringent than the applicable compliance baseline where the 
    foreign refiner includes the volume in its compliance baseline 
    equation.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        EPA is adopting an additional basis for retaining the certified 
    FRGAS classification of conventional gasoline, even if the load port 
    and port of entry test results are outside the specified ranges. This 
    is based on a comparison of the NOX and exhaust toxics 
    emissions performance of the FRGAS calculated using load port test 
    results, with the emissions performance calculated using port of entry 
    test results. If the port of entry emissions performance for both 
    NOX and exhaust toxics, in milligrams per mile, is smaller 
    than the load port emissions performance (i.e., cleaner),
    
    [[Page 45559]]
    
    the gasoline remains classified as certified FRGAS regardless of the 
    parameter test results comparisons. This exception is appropriate 
    because there is no adverse environmental effect if the quality of the 
    conventional gasoline improves in terms of NOX and exhaust 
    toxics emissions performance. However, this exception would not apply 
    if EPA is able to establish that the vessel in fact stopped en route to 
    the United States and took on additional gasoline produced at a 
    different foreign refinery.
    7. Diversion of FRGAS to Non-U.S. Markets
        a. EPA Proposal: EPA proposed that all gasoline produced at a 
    foreign refinery with an individual baseline that is exported to the 
    U.S. must be classified as FRGAS. However, EPA left open and requested 
    comment on the issue of whether the regulations should allow FRGAS to 
    be diverted to a non-U.S. market after production, for example, whether 
    a vessel containing FRGAS could be diverted to a non-U.S. market.
        b. Comments: EPA received comments from two foreign refiners and an 
    association representing domestic marketers that recommended foreign 
    refiners be given the option of diverting FRGAS to non-U.S. markets. 
    The two foreign refiners stated that foreign refiners could implement 
    commercial procedures that would allow them to know when FRGAS has been 
    diverted to a non-U.S. market, and the foreign refiner could correct 
    their compliance calculations accordingly.
        c. EPA's Response: EPA now agrees that foreign refiners of FRGAS 
    should be allowed to divert certified and non-certified FRGAS to non-
    U.S. markets, provided the foreign refiner corrects its compliance 
    baseline calculations, and in the case of certified FRGAS its 
    NOX and exhaust toxics compliance calculations, to reflect 
    the diversion. In the case of diverted certified FRGAS, the foreign 
    refiner must use the load port test results, and the load port volume, 
    as the basis for correcting the NOX and exhaust toxics 
    compliance calculations. A foreign refiner may treat FRGAS as having 
    been diverted only if the foreign refiner is able to demonstrate the 
    gasoline in fact was used outside the U.S. This demonstration must be 
    in the form of documents obtained from the recipient of the gasoline 
    that certify where the gasoline will be used, and that the gasoline 
    will not be imported into the United States. Provisions have been 
    included in the final rule to reflect these requirements.
    8. Attest Requirements
        a. EPA Proposal: Under the Gasoline Rule foreign refiners of FRGAS, 
    like domestic refiners, are required to commission an attest engagement 
    each year.38 EPA proposed additional attest procedures 
    dealing with the FRGAS requirements, that would have to be completed by 
    foreign refiners of FRGAS.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \38\ ``Attest engagement'' is a term of art used by auditors to 
    describe the conduct of audit procedures that have been agreed upon 
    in advance by the auditor and the subject of the audit--the auditor 
    attests to the conduct and results of the specified audit, or 
    attest, procedures completed during the attest engagement. The 
    requirements in sections 80.125 through 80.130 consist of specified 
    attest procedures dealing with the Gasoline Rule and instructions 
    for the conduct of these procedures.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        b. Comments: EPA received comments on the proposed FRGAS attest 
    procedures from a domestic firm of Certified Public Accountants. These 
    comments included specific suggestions regarding the wording used in 
    certain proposed FRGAS attest provisions.
        c. EPA's Response: EPA has modified the attest procedures to 
    address the comments received. In particular, EPA has included 
    additional details in the attest procedure that requires the auditor to 
    determine whether FRGAS was produced at the foreign refinery in 
    question, and whether FRGAS was produced at any non-FRGAS or FRGAS 
    produced at a different refinery.
    9. Truck Imports
        a. EPA Proposal: EPA did not distinguish gasoline that is imported 
    into the U.S. by truck, from gasoline that is transported by vessel, in 
    the foreign refiner proposed rule. However, in implementing the current 
    regulations EPA has allowed an additional option for meeting the 
    conventional gasoline requirements where the gasoline is imported into 
    the U.S. by truck, because of the costs associated with every-batch 
    sampling that is required for imported gasoline. Under this option 
    truck importers are allowed to demonstrate compliance with the 
    conventional gasoline requirements based on the quality of gasoline at 
    the terminal located outside the U.S. where the trucks are loaded. This 
    quality must meet the statutory baseline on an every-gallon basis, and 
    not an annual average basis. The foreign terminal operator provides the 
    U.S. importer with documents for each truck loaded at the terminal, 
    that demonstrate the gasoline meets these quality requirements. These 
    documents must be based on complete sampling and testing by the foreign 
    terminal operator. In addition, the U.S. importer must conduct a 
    program of periodic quality assurance testing of the gasoline dispensed 
    at the foreign terminal to verify the accuracy of the foreign refiner's 
    documents. This option was allowed in guidance issued by EPA in 
    Reformulated Gasoline and Anti-Dumping Questions and Answers (October 
    29, 1994), and has been proposed for inclusion in the Gasoline Rule in 
    another rulemaking, 62 FR 37367 (July 11, 1997).
        b. Comments: EPA received comments from a coalition of companies 
    who import gasoline into the United States by truck. These commenters 
    stated that EPA should structure the foreign refiner requirements in a 
    manner that allows truck importers to continue using the testing option 
    described above.
        In particular, these commenters expressed the view that the foreign 
    refiner FRGAS requirements would affect truck importers only if an 
    individual refinery baseline is sought by the foreign refiner supplying 
    gasoline to the terminal used by truck importers. If an individual 
    refinery baseline is obtained by such a foreign refiner, the commenters 
    suggested the foreign refinery should be considered analogous to the 
    load port, and the truck loading terminal should be considered 
    analogous to the U.S. port of entry. In this way the gasoline dispensed 
    at the truck loading terminal would have no additional testing 
    requirements that would be met by the U.S. importer.
        c. EPA's Response: Where the foreign refiner has not obtained an 
    individual refinery baseline the testing option available to truck 
    importers, described above, is unaffected by the foreign refiner 
    requirements being promulgated. However, if conventional gasoline 
    imported by a truck importer is produced at a foreign refinery with an 
    individual baseline the current importer testing option is not 
    available. This is true because the truck testing option does not allow 
    any gasoline to meet NOX and exhaust toxics quality 
    requirements other than statutory baseline-based requirements.
        EPA believes it may be possible to modify the testing option 
    available to truck importers for application with gasoline produced at 
    a foreign refinery with an individual refinery baseline. However, this 
    is not the most appropriate rulemaking for such a modification. As 
    described above, EPA has proposed in a separate rulemaking to include 
    this truck importer testing option in the regulations, which EPA hopes 
    to complete by the end of December 1997. EPA believes it would be most 
    appropriate to address all issues related to testing by truck importers 
    in that separate rulemaking, including
    
    [[Page 45560]]
    
    where the foreign refiner has obtained an individual refinery baseline. 
    In the meantime, if EPA receives an individual refinery baseline 
    petition from a foreign refiner that supplies truck importers, EPA will 
    attempt to address the issue of the truck testing option through 
    modifying the Question and Answer guidance.
    
    E. Remedial Measures
    
    1. EPA's Proposal
        Allowing foreign refiners to choose whether to establish an 
    individual baseline creates a potential for adverse environmental 
    impact. This would be addressed by monitoring the quality of imported 
    gasoline, comparing it to a benchmark, and taking remedial action if 
    the benchmark is exceeded.
        EPA would monitor the entire pool of imported gasoline, and 
    determine the volume weighted average quality of the gasoline. This 
    average would be compared to a benchmark. The purpose of the benchmark 
    is to reasonably determine when allowing foreign refiners the option to 
    use or not use an IB has caused degradation of the quality of imported 
    gasoline from the 1990 quality of imported gasoline. The best measure 
    of this, given the absence of actual data on the average quality of 
    gasoline imported in 1990, would be the volume weighted average 
    baseline for domestic refiners.
        Since the use of a benchmark is designed to detect a multi-year 
    trend stemming from providing foreign refiners the option to use or not 
    use an IB, as compared to short term changes in gasoline quality 
    attributable to the many other factors that can affect the quality of 
    imported gasoline on a year to year basis, EPA proposed to use a three 
    year rolling average of the quality of imported gasoline. Thus each 
    year the average quality of the imported CG for the prior three years 
    would be compared to the benchmark.
        If the benchmark was exceeded, EPA would take remedial action by 
    adjusting the requirement applicable to imported CG that is not subject 
    to an IB. The adjustment would be equal to the amount of the 
    exceedance. The existence and level of the adjustment would be 
    evaluated each year by comparing the benchmark to the most recent 3 
    year average. The adjusted requirement would apply to CG imported from 
    refiners without an IB.
        Under the proposal, a benchmark would be set for NOX 
    emissions but not for exhaust toxics, as the evidence prior to the 
    proposal indicated that there would not likely be an adverse impact on 
    toxics from allowing the option to use an IB. Instead, EPA would 
    monitor the quality of imported CG for toxics, and if an adverse trend 
    were to occur EPA would develop at that time an appropriate benchmark 
    and adjustment mechanism, analogous to that proposed for 
    NOX.
    2. Comments
        Comments were received from various associations and members of the 
    refining and distribution industry, importers, gasoline marketers, 
    foreign refiners, a state environmental office and an environmental 
    group. Several of the commenters supported the proposed approach in 
    general, suggesting changes to specific parts of the proposal. One 
    commenter suggested extending the approach to include all imported and 
    domestic conventional gasoline, using this mechanism to improve the 
    average quality of fuel in areas with poor fuel quality. One commenter 
    from the gasoline refining and distribution industry opposed the 
    general approach of the proposal arguing that the after-the-fact 
    approach of the proposal was inappropriate as it would allow air 
    quality to degrade before remedial action was taken.
        Several commenters suggested changes to the benchmark. One 
    commenter suggested that a three year running average of the quality of 
    domestic CG would be a better way to ensure that imported gasoline was 
    no dirtier than domestic gasoline on average. Another commenter 
    suggested that a benchmark based on a one year average instead of a 
    three year average would be more protective of air quality and 
    therefore more appropriate. Another commenter suggested using the 
    statutory baseline as the benchmark instead of the volume weighted 
    average of domestic refiner IBs. One commenter suggested that remedial 
    action should be triggered when the benchmark was exceeded by an amount 
    reflecting the reproducibility of the test results for NOX 
    emissions. Finally, one commenter suggested using a national average as 
    the benchmark, done by individual metropolitan areas.
        While one commenter supported limiting the benchmark to 
    NOX, two commenters recommended adding a benchmark for 
    toxics. One commenter questioned EPA's lack of a benchmark for toxics, 
    given the difficulty in analyzing import data and enforcing 
    requirements against foreign refiners and the importance of the toxics 
    reductions from the RFG and CG programs. Another commenter suggested 
    monitoring exhaust toxics as well as NOX as domestic 
    refiners are subject to requirements for both, the prior history of the 
    toxics qualities of imported CG does not assure the quality of future 
    imports of CG, and the additional monitoring and reporting would not 
    impose significant effort for either EPA or the affected industry. This 
    commenter also expressed the view that gasoline produced outside the 
    U.S. would be likely to have higher toxics on average than that 
    produced in the U.S., based on the on-going phase out of lead, the 
    summer to winter ratio of imports, and the results of a 1993 National 
    Petroleum Council study on gasoline quality. In addition, EPA was 
    cautioned to exclude data from the U.S. Virgin Islands in determining 
    the toxics qualities of imported CG.
        One commenter objected that the adjustment mechanism did not comply 
    with the legal requirements spelled out by the WTO Appellate Body and 
    Panel, in that it could lead to subjecting imported gasoline to 
    stricter requirements than identical domestic gasoline. The commenter 
    argues that even though domestic refiners were required to use an IB, 
    there could still be changes in the average quality of domestic 
    gasoline yet no adjustment mechanism was employed in that case.
    3. EPA's Response
        For the reasons decribed below, EPA is finalizing these provisions 
    as proposed.
        The ``after-the-fact'' approach of these provisions is based on 
    EPA's inability to accurately quantify ahead of time the actual adverse 
    impact, if any, from allowing foreign refiners the option to use or not 
    use an IB. EPA does believe providing such an option clearly creates 
    the potential for such an adverse impact, but the size and amount of 
    the impact is difficult to quantify with any degree of certainty ahead 
    of time, as well as whether or not it will occur. It would depend on a 
    variety of factors, some of which would change from year to year--the 
    number of foreign refiners that receive an IB, the actual IBs assigned 
    to them, the volume of gasoline included in the IB, the source and 
    amount of CG and RFG imported each year, and the extent, if any, to 
    which foreign refiners whose 1990 exports to the U.S. were cleaner on 
    average than the SB would now ship gasoline that is dirtier than what 
    they exported to the U.S. in 1990.
        No commenter disputed the above, or suggested a way for EPA to 
    fairly quantify ahead of time the potential risk of an adverse 
    environmental impact. Given this uncertainty, EPA continues to believe 
    that the better course is to monitor imported CG, measure it against a 
    benchmark designed to reflect a multi-
    
    [[Page 45561]]
    
    year trend in gasoline quality, and if the benchmark is exceeded adjust 
    the gasoline quality requirement for imported CG by an amount that 
    offsets this adverse impact. EPA also does not believe it is 
    appropriate to extend this monitoring and adjustment approach to 
    include all CG, both domestic and imported. All domestic refiners and 
    blenders of CG have been assigned an IB, and do not have the option to 
    choose between the SB and an IB. As a result, for domestic refiners 
    there is not the same ability to choose a less stringent requirement, 
    based on economic reasons, with the resulting potential for an adverse 
    environmental impact, as there is for foreign refiners. Therefore, 
    there is not the same need to protect against such an adverse impact 
    for domestically produced gasoline.
        EPA proposed a three year rolling average in the comparison to the 
    benchmark as it is a better mechanism to detect a multi-year trend. A 
    one year average was rejected in the proposal as it might only reflect 
    the year to year volatility in the source and quantities of imported CG 
    which occur for a variety of reasons independent of the option to use 
    an IB. The commenter suggesting the use of a one year average did not 
    provide any evidence to rebut this view, but argued instead that a one 
    year average would be more protective of air quality. EPA is finalizing 
    the three year rolling average as it is a better mechanism to determine 
    when air quality has been adversely impacted from providing the option 
    to use an IB, and therefore needs to be protected by an adjustment.
        EPA proposed comparing the average quality of imported CG to the 
    volume weighted average of the IBs for domestic refiners. This reflects 
    the central purpose of the CG program as applied to imported gasoline--
    to avoid degradation in the quality of imported gasoline from the 
    quality of gasoline imported in 1990. As noted in the proposal, we do 
    not have actual data on the quality of gasoline imported in 1990 and it 
    is not unreasonable to assume that the average quality of imported 
    gasoline was generally equivalent to the volume weighted average of IBs 
    for domestic refiners, absent evidence to the contrary. The proposed 
    benchmark is based on this view, and no commenter contested these 
    assumptions or presented evidence to the contrary. One commenter 
    suggested comparing imported CG to the average quality of CG currently 
    produced by domestic refiners, another suggested using a national 
    average done by metropolitan area, and another suggested comparing it 
    to the SB. EPA is not adopting these methods because each of them is a 
    less direct way to meet the purpose identified above. These 
    alternatives would be a less certain way to meet the objectives as they 
    are less directly related to the quality of gasoline imported in 1990.
        EPA disagrees with the suggestion that the remedial action should 
    be triggered when the benchmark is exceeded by an amount reflecting the 
    reproducibility of the test results for NOX emissions. The 
    reproducibility of test results addresses comparisons of individual 
    test results conducted for example in different labs. It is not 
    relevant when comparing averages that are based on numerous data 
    points. A multi-year rolling average is an adequate benchmark to 
    determine the existence of an adverse trend, and an additional element 
    for reproducibility of individual test results is not needed.
        EPA's proposal to establish a benchmark for NOX at this 
    time but not for exhaust toxics was based on a review of the annual 
    reports submitted by importers for calendar year 1995. Those reports 
    showed that the average level of exhaust toxics for gasoline imported 
    in 1995 was significantly cleaner than either the statutory baseline or 
    the volume weighted average of individual baselines for domestic 
    refiners. In addition, information previously submitted by one foreign 
    refiner indicated that the IB they would seek would be cleaner than the 
    SB for exhaust toxics. Based on this, EPA did not believe there was 
    enough indication that there would be an adverse impact on toxics to 
    warrant establishing a benchmark and adjustment mechanism at this time. 
    Instead, EPA would monitor the toxics qualities of imported gasoline 
    and adopt a benchmark and adjustment mechanism in the future if 
    appropriate.
        None of the commenters provided information or reasons that warrant 
    a different conclusion. The claim that data on imported gasoline is 
    hard to analyze is unfounded, as it is relatively easy to determine the 
    volume weighted average quality of imported gasoline from the batch 
    reports submitted by importers. The same information will still be 
    available under the regulations finalized today; the fact that some of 
    the information may now be submitted by foreign refiners does not 
    change the availability and quality of the data submitted. Since the 
    regulatory changes adopted today will only affect conventional 
    gasoline, there will be no impact at all on the important toxics 
    reductions obtained in the RFG program. The fact that domestic refiners 
    are subject to requirements for both NOX and exhaust toxics 
    is not a reason to set a benchmark for toxics now, as both importers 
    and foreign refiners with an approved IB will also be subject to 
    requirements for NOX and exhaust toxics. While the prior 
    history of the toxics quality of imported gasoline does not assure that 
    the future quality will be the same, it does indicate that it is much 
    less likely that a toxics problem will develop from allowing foreign 
    refiners to use an IB. Since the proposal was published, EPA has been 
    able to evaluate the batch reports submitted by importers for calendar 
    year 1996. The results follow the same pattern as in 1995--the average 
    toxics quality of imported gasoline is significantly cleaner than 
    either the SB or the volume weighted average of the IBs for domestic 
    refiners. Data from the Virgin Islands was not included in either the 
    1995 or 1996 calculations, as this is not considered imported gasoline 
    for purposes of the CG or RFG regulations. Data on the actual toxics 
    quality of imported gasoline in 1995 and 1996 provides concrete 
    evidence for evaluating the risk of an adverse impact on toxics from 
    allowing foreign refiners an option to use IBs. This data is more 
    probative on this issue than the potential but unspecified impacts of 
    lead-phase down on foreign produced gasoline and the overall quality of 
    gasoline produced overseas in 1993, which would be dominated by 
    gasoline produced and used overseas as compared to gasoline exported to 
    the U.S. EPA is therefore not adopting a benchmark for exhaust toxics 
    at this time, and instead will continue to monitor the average toxics 
    quality of imported gasoline and will take appropriate action to adopt 
    a benchmark and adjustment mechanism for exhaust toxics if 
    circumstances develop which warrant such action.
    
    F. Compliance With WTO Obligations
    
        Some commenters claimed that certain provisions related to 
    enforcing compliance with the requirements for establishment and use of 
    an individual baseline, and the mechanism for remedial measures, were 
    not consistent with the obligations of the United States under the 
    World Trade Organization agreement.
        This rule meets the commitment of the United States to comply with 
    its obligations under the World Trade Organization agreement with 
    respect to this matter. This rule provides all foreign refiners with 
    the opportunity to apply for and use an individual baseline. To the 
    limited extent that foreign refiners with individual baselines are to 
    be subject to different
    
    [[Page 45562]]
    
    requirements than domestic refiners, great care has been taken to 
    ensure that these requirements are limited to those that are essential 
    to address issues that are unique to refiners exporting gasoline to the 
    United States.
    
    V. Administrative Designation and Regulatory Analysis
    
    A. Public Participation
    
        The agency held a public hearing on May 20, 1997, to hear comments 
    on the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (62 FR 24776) published on May 6, 
    1997. Comments were provided at the hearing by the National Petroleum 
    Refiner's Association and the Independent Refiners Coalition. EPA 
    reviewed and considered written comments on the proposal submitted by 
    the same groups as well as written comments from various other 
    commenters. These comments have been presented and addressed in the 
    preamble above. (See Response to Comments, Section IV) All comments 
    received by the Agency are located in the EPA Air Docket A-97-26.
    
    B. Executive Order 12866
    
        Under Executive Order 12866, (58 FR 51735 (October 4, 1993)) the 
    Agency must determine whether the regulatory action is ``significant'' 
    and therefore subject to Office of Management and Budget (OMB) review 
    and the requirements of the Executive Order. The Order defines 
    ``significant regulatory action'' as one that is likely to result in a 
    rule that may:
        (1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or 
    adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the 
    economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public 
    health or safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or communities
        (2) Create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an 
    action taken or planned by another Agency
        (3) Materially alter the budgetary impact of entitlement, grants, 
    user fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of recipients 
    thereof; or
        (4) Raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal 
    mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles set forth in 
    the Executive Order.
        Pursuant to the terms of Executive Order 12866, it has been 
    determined that this rule is a ``significant regulatory action,'' as 
    such, this action was submitted to OMB for review.
    
    C. Economic Impact and Impact on Small Entities
    
        EPA has determined that this final rule will not have a significant 
    impact on a substantial number of small entities because only a limited 
    number of domestic entities would be affected by this rule and would be 
    small entities. In addition, today's action will not significantly 
    change the requirements applicable to importers of gasoline produced by 
    foreign refineries. A regulatory flexibility analysis has therefore not 
    been prepared.
        Of the entire population of importers currently reporting to the 
    EPA, somewhat less than 100 importers that would be subject to today's 
    proposed rule are small entities. Under 40 CFR. 80.65 and 80.101 the 
    requirements for imported CG must currently be met by the importer. The 
    current requirements are based on the statutory baseline while today's 
    final rule would require either foreign refiners or importers to meet 
    the CG requirements using the baselines of the various foreign 
    refineries. Other importers would continue to meet the CG requirements 
    using the statutory baseline or an adjusted baseline. This will not, 
    however, have a significant impact on the importer, as the importer 
    will continue to only import gasoline that allows it to meet the annual 
    average requirements, and such gasoline would continue to be available 
    from the foreign refineries. The provision generally corresponds with 
    existing requirements. This final rule will continue the requirement 
    that importers be responsible for sampling and testing for foreign 
    gasoline imported into the U.S. Importers will be responsible for this 
    activity at the port of entry in the U.S. Importers will rely on the 
    foreign refiners and the independent party's to establish refinery of 
    origin. Importers can accomplish this by making private arrangements 
    with the importing foreign refiner and the independent party. The 
    Agency believes that, in general, exercising good business practices 
    with reputable foreign refiners will tend to eliminate any impact on 
    the importer. The impact of today's final rule will therefore either 
    not increase an importers cost, or would do so only marginally.
        The issue of baselines for imported gasoline is discussed generally 
    in section VII-C of the Regulatory Impact Analysis that was prepared to 
    support the Final Rule for gasoline. A copy of this document may be 
    found in the RFG docket, number A-92-12, at the location identified in 
    the ADDRESSES section of this document.
    
    D. The Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The information collection requirements in this final rule have 
    been submitted for approval to the Office of Management and Budget 
    (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. An 
    Information Collection Request (ICR) document has been prepared by EPA 
    (ICR No. 1591.08) and a copy may be obtained from Sandy Farmer, 
    Regulatory Information Division; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 
    (2136); 401 M St., S.W.; Washington, DC 20460 or by calling (202) 260-
    2740. The information requirements are not effective until OMB approves 
    them.
        This final rule will allow foreign refiners to establish individual 
    baselines to demonstrate compliance with the Agency's gasoline rule. 
    The information collected will enable EPA to evaluate imported gasoline 
    in a manner similar to gasoline produced at domestic refineries. 
    Section 211(k) specifically recognizes the need for recordkeeping, 
    reporting and sampling/testing requirements for enforcement of this 
    program. Because of the complex nature of the gasoline rule, EPA cannot 
    determine compliance merely by taking samples of gasoline at various 
    facilities.
        Estimated labor and cost burdens for this rule are:
        No. Of Respondents, 32.
        Total Annual Response, 90.
        Average labor burden per response, 2.1 hours.
        Average cost burden per response, $1,408.
        Total annual hours requested, 192 hours.
        Total annual capital costs, $126,700.00.
    
    Capital cost are those cost associated with testing of gasoline by 
    independent laboratories.
        Burden means the total time, effort, or financial resources 
    expended by persons to generate, maintain, retain, or disclose or 
    provide information to or for a Federal agency. This includes the time 
    needed to review instructions; develop, acquire, install, and utilize 
    technology and systems for the purposes of collecting, validating, and 
    verifying information, processing and maintaining information, and 
    disclosing and providing information; adjust the existing ways to 
    comply with any previously applicable instructions and requirements; 
    train personnel to be able to respond to a collection of information; 
    search data sources; complete and review the collection of information; 
    and transmit or otherwise disclose the information. An Agency may not 
    conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to a 
    collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
    control number. The OMB control numbers for
    
    [[Page 45563]]
    
    EPA's regulations are listed in 40 CFR Part 9 and 48 CFR Chapter 15.
        Send comments on the Agency's need for this information, the 
    accuracy of the provided burden estimates, and any suggested methods 
    for minimizing respondent burden, including through the use of 
    automated collection techniques to the Director, OPPE Regulatory 
    Information Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (2137), 401 
    M Street, SW., Washington, DC 20460, and to the Office of Information 
    and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th St., 
    N.W., Washington, DC 20503, marked ``Attention: Desk Officer for EPA.'' 
    Include the ICR number in any correspondence.
    
    E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
    
        Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Public 
    Law 104-4, establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the 
    effects of their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal 
    governments and the private sector. Under section 202 of the UMRA, EPA 
    generally must prepare a written statement, including a cost-benefit 
    analysis, for proposed and final rules with ``Federal mandates'' that 
    may result in expenditures to State, local, and tribal governments, in 
    the aggregate, or to the private sector, of $100 million or more in any 
    one year. Before promulgating an EPA rule for which a written statement 
    is needed, section 205 of the UMRA generally requires EPA to identify 
    and consider a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives and adopt 
    the least costly, most cost-effective or least burdensome alternative 
    that achieves the objectives of the rule. The provisions of section 205 
    do not apply when they are inconsistent with applicable law. Moreover, 
    section 205 allows EPA to adopt an alternative other than the least 
    costly, most cost-effective or least burdensome alternative if the 
    Administrator publishes with the final rule an explanation why that 
    alternative was not adopted. Before EPA establishes any regulatory 
    requirements that may significantly or uniquely affect small 
    governments, including tribal governments, it must have developed under 
    section 203 of the UMRA a small government agency plan. The plan must 
    provide for notifying potentially affected small governments, enabling 
    officials of affected small governments to have meaningful and timely 
    input in the development of EPA regulatory proposals with significant 
    Federal intergovernmental mandates, and informing, educating, and 
    advising small governments on compliance with the regulatory 
    requirements.
        Today's rule contains no Federal mandates (under the regulatory 
    provisions of Title II of the UMRA) for State, local or tribal 
    governments or the private sector. The rule imposes no enforceable duty 
    on any State, local or tribal governments or the private sector.
    
    F. Submission to Congress and the General Accounting Office
    
        Under 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A) as added 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 5 U.S.C. 
    804(2).
    
    G. Statutory Authority
    
        The statutory authority for the rules proposed today is granted to 
    EPA by sections 114, 211 (c) and (k), and 301 of the Clean Air Act, as 
    amended, 42 U.S.C. 7414, 7545 (c) and (k), and 7601.
    
    List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 80
    
        Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Fuel additives, 
    Gasoline, Motor vehicle pollution, Penalties, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements.
    
        Dated: August 19, 1997.
    Carol M. Browner,
    Administrator.
        40 CFR Part 80 is amended as follows:
    
    PART 80--REGULATIONS OF FUELS AND FUEL ADDITIVES
    
        1. The authority citation for part 80 continues to read as follows:
    
        Authority: Sections 114, 211 and 301(a) of the Clean Air Act as 
    amended, 42 U.S.C. 7414, 7545 and 7601(a).
    
        2. Section 80.94 is added to subpart E to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 80.94  Requirements for gasoline produced at foreign refineries.
    
        (a) Definitions. (1) A foreign refinery is a refinery that is 
    located outside the United States, including the Commonwealth of Puerto 
    Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of 
    the Northern Mariana Islands (collectively referred to in this section 
    as ``the United States'').
        (2) A foreign refiner is a person who meets the definition of 
    refiner under Sec. 80.2(i) for foreign refinery.
        (3) FRGAS means gasoline produced at a foreign refinery that has 
    been assigned an individual refinery baseline and that is imported into 
    the United States.
        (4) Non-FRGAS means gasoline that is produced at a foreign refinery 
    that has not been assigned an individual refinery baseline, gasoline 
    produced at a foreign refinery with an individual refinery baseline 
    that is not imported into the United States, and gasoline produced at a 
    foreign refinery with an individual baseline during a year when the 
    foreign refiner has opted to not participate in the FRGAS program under 
    paragraph (c)(3) of this section.
        (5) Certified FRGAS means FRGAS the foreign refiner intends to 
    include in the foreign refinery's NOX and exhaust toxics 
    compliance calculations under Sec. 80.101(g), and does include in these 
    compliance calculations when reported to EPA.
        (6) Non-certified FRGAS means FRGAS that is not certified FRGAS.
        (b) Baseline establishment. Any foreign refiner may submit to EPA a 
    petition for an individual refinery baseline, under Secs. 80.90 through 
    80.93.
        (1) The provisions for baselines as specified in Secs. 80.90 
    through 80.93 shall apply to a foreign refinery, except where provided 
    otherwise in this section.
        (2) The baseline for a foreign refinery shall reflect only the 
    volume and properties of gasoline produced in 1990 that was imported 
    into the United States.
        (3) A baseline petition shall establish the volume of conventional 
    gasoline produced at a foreign refinery and imported into the United 
    States during the calendar year immediately preceding the year the 
    baseline petition is submitted.
        (4) In making determinations for foreign refinery baselines EPA 
    will consider all information supplied by a foreign refiner, and in 
    addition may rely on any and all appropriate assumptions necessary to 
    make such a determination.
        (5) Where a foreign refiner submits a petition that is incomplete 
    or inadequate to establish an accurate baseline, and the refiner fails 
    to cure this defect after a request for more information, then EPA 
    shall not assign an individual refinery baseline.
        (6) Baseline petitions under this paragraph (b) of this section 
    must be submitted before January 1, 2002.
        (c) General requirements for foreign refiners with individual 
    refinery baselines. Any foreign refiner of a refinery that has been 
    assigned an individual baseline under paragraph (b) of this section 
    shall designate all gasoline produced at the foreign refinery that is 
    exported to the United States as either certified FRGAS or as non-
    
    [[Page 45564]]
    
    certified FRGAS, except as provided in paragraph (c)(3) of this 
    section.
        (1)(i) In the case of certified FRGAS, the foreign refiner shall 
    meet all requirements that apply to refiners under 40 CFR part 80, 
    subparts D, E and F.
        (ii) If the foreign refinery baseline is assigned, or a foreign 
    refiner begins early use of a refinery baseline under paragraph (r) of 
    this section, on a date other than January 1, the compliance baseline 
    for the initial year shall be calculated under Sec. 80.101(f) using an 
    adjusted baseline volume, as follows:
    
    AV1990 = (D/365) x V1990
    
    where:
    
    AV1990 = Adjusted 1990 baseline volume
    D = Number of days remaining in the year, beginning with the day the 
    foreign refinery baseline is approved or the day the foreign refiner 
    begins early use of a refinery baseline, whichever is later
    V1990 = Foreign refinery's 1990 baseline volume.
    
        (2) In the case of non-certified FRGAS, the foreign refiner shall 
    meet the following requirements, except the foreign refiner shall 
    substitute the name ``non-certified FRGAS'' for the names 
    ``reformulated gasoline'' or ``RBOB'' wherever they appear in the 
    following requirements:
        (i) The designation requirements in Sec. 80.65(d)(1);
        (ii) The recordkeeping requirements in Sec. 80.74 (a), and (b)(3);
        (iii) The reporting requirements in Sec. 80.75 (a), (m), and (n);
        (iv) The registration requirements in Sec. 80.76;
        (v) The product transfer document requirements in Sec. 80.77 (a) 
    through (f), and (j);
        (vi) The prohibition in Sec. 80.78(a)(10), (b) and (c); and
        (vii) The independent audit requirements in Secs. 80.125 through 
    80.127, 80.128 (a) through (c), and (g) through (i), and 80.130.
        (3)(i) Any foreign refiner that has been assigned an individual 
    baseline for a foreign refinery under paragraph (b) of this section may 
    elect to classify no gasoline imported into the United States as FRGAS, 
    provided the foreign refiner notifies EPA of the election no later than 
    November 1 of the prior calendar year.
        (ii) An election under paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section shall:
        (A) Be for an entire calendar year averaging period and apply to 
    all gasoline produced during the calendar year at the foreign refinery 
    that is imported into the United States; and
        (B) Remain in effect for each succeeding calendar year averaging 
    period, unless and until the foreign refiner notifies EPA of a 
    termination of the election. The change in election shall take effect 
    at the beginning of the next calendar year.
        (iii) A foreign refiner who has aggregated refineries under 
    Sec. 80.101(h) shall make the same election under paragraph (c)(3)(i) 
    of this section for all refineries in the aggregation.
        (d) Designation, product transfer documents, and foreign refiner 
    certification. (1) Any foreign refiner of a foreign refinery that has 
    been assigned an individual baseline shall designate each batch of 
    FRGAS as such at the time the gasoline is produced, unless the foreign 
    refiner has elected to classify no gasoline exported to the United 
    States as FRGAS under paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section.
        (2) On each occasion when any person transfers custody or title to 
    any FRGAS prior to its being imported into the United States, the 
    following information shall be included as part of the product transfer 
    document information in Secs. 80.77 and 80.106:
        (i) Identification of the gasoline as certified FRGAS or as non-
    certified FRGAS; and
        (ii) The name and EPA refinery registration number of the refinery 
    where the FRGAS was produced.
        (3) On each occasion when FRGAS is loaded onto a vessel or other 
    transportation mode for transport to the United States, the foreign 
    refiner shall prepare a certification for each batch of the FRGAS that 
    meets the following requirements:
        (i) The certification shall include the report of the independent 
    third party under paragraph (f) of this section, and the following 
    additional information:
        (A) The name and EPA registration number of the refinery that 
    produced the FRGAS;
        (B) The identification of the gasoline as certified FRGAS or non-
    certified FRGAS;
        (C) The volume of FRGAS being transported, in gallons;
        (D) A declaration that the FRGAS is being included in the 
    compliance baseline calculations under Sec. 80.101(f) for the refinery 
    that produced the FRGAS; and
        (E) In the case of certified FRGAS:
        (1) The values for each parameter required to calculate 
    NOX and exhaust toxics emissions performance as determined 
    under paragraph (f) of this section; and
        (2) A declaration that the FRGAS is being included in the 
    compliance calculations under Sec. 80.101(g) for the refinery that 
    produced the FRGAS.
        (ii) The certification shall be made part of the product transfer 
    documents for the FRGAS.
        (e) Transfers of FRGAS to non-United States markets. The foreign 
    refiner is responsible to ensure that all gasoline classified as FRGAS 
    is imported into the United States. A foreign refiner may remove the 
    FRGAS classification, and the gasoline need not be imported into the 
    United States, but only if:
        (1)(i) The foreign refiner excludes:
        (A) The volume of gasoline from the refinery's compliance baseline 
    calculations under Sec. 80.101(h); and
        (B) In the case of certified FRGAS, the volume and parameter values 
    of the gasoline from the compliance calculations under Sec. 80.101(g);
        (ii) The exclusions under paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section shall 
    be on the basis of the parameter and volumes determined under paragraph 
    (f) of this section; and
        (2) The foreign refiner obtains sufficient evidence in the form of 
    documentation that the gasoline was not imported into the United 
    States.
        (f) Load port independent sampling, testing and refinery 
    identification. (1) On each occasion FRGAS is loaded onto a vessel for 
    transport to the United States a foreign refiner shall have an 
    independent third party:
        (i) Inspect the vessel prior to loading and determine the volume of 
    any tank bottoms;
        (ii) Determine the volume of FRGAS loaded onto the vessel 
    (exclusive of any tank bottoms present before vessel loading);
        (iii) Obtain the EPA-assigned registration number of the foreign 
    refinery;
        (iv) Determine the name and country of registration of the vessel 
    used to transport the FRGAS to the United States; and
        (v) Determine the date and time the vessel departs the port serving 
    the foreign refinery.
        (2) On each occasion certified FRGAS is loaded onto a vessel for 
    transport to the United States a foreign refiner shall have an 
    independent third party:
        (i) Collect a representative sample of the certified FRGAS from 
    each vessel compartment subsequent to loading on the vessel and prior 
    to departure of the vessel from the port serving the foreign refinery;
        (ii) Prepare a volume-weighted vessel composite sample from the 
    compartment samples, and determine the values for sulfur, benzene, 
    gravity, E200 and E300 using the methodologies specified in Sec. 80.46, 
    by:
        (A) The third party analyzing the sample; or
    
    [[Page 45565]]
    
        (B) The third party observing the foreign refiner analyze the 
    sample;
        (iii) Determine the values for aromatics, olefins, RVP and each 
    oxygenate specified in Sec. 80.65(e)(2) for the gasoline loaded onto 
    the vessel, by:
        (A) Completing the analysis procedures under paragraph (f)(2)(ii) 
    of this section for the additional parameters; or
        (B) Obtaining from the foreign refiner the test results of samples 
    collected from each shore tank containing gasoline that was loaded onto 
    the vessel, and calculating the parameter values for the gasoline 
    loaded onto the vessel from the tank parameter values and the gasoline 
    volume from each such shore tank that was loaded;
        (iv) Review original documents that reflect movement and storage of 
    the certified FRGAS from the refinery to the load port, and from this 
    review determine:
        (A) The refinery at which the FRGAS was produced; and
        (B) That the FRGAS remained segregated from:
        (1) Non-FRGAS and non-certified FRGAS; and
        (2) Other certified FRGAS produced at a different refinery, except 
    that certified FRGAS may be combined with other certified FRGAS 
    produced at refineries that are aggregated under Sec. 80.101(h);
        (3) The independent third party shall submit a report:
        (i) To the foreign refiner containing the information required 
    under paragraphs (f) (1) and (2) of this section, to accompany the 
    product transfer documents for the vessel; and
        (ii) To the Administrator containing the information required under 
    paragraphs (f) (1) and (2) of this section, within thirty days 
    following the date of the independent third party's inspection. This 
    report shall include a description of the method used to determine the 
    identity of the refinery at which the gasoline was produced, that the 
    gasoline remained segregated as specified in paragraph (n)(1) of this 
    section, and a description of the gasoline's movement and storage 
    between production at the source refinery and vessel loading.
        (4) A person may be used to meet the third party requirements in 
    this paragraph (f) only if:
        (i) The person is approved in advance by EPA, based on a 
    demonstration of ability to perform the procedures required in this 
    paragraph (f);
        (ii) The person is independent under the criteria specified in 
    Sec. 80.65(f)(2)(iii); and
        (iii) The person signs a commitment that contains the provisions 
    specified in paragraph (i) of this section with regard to activities, 
    facilities and documents relevant to compliance with the requirements 
    of this paragraph (f).
        (g) Comparison of load port and port of entry testing. (1)(i) Any 
    foreign refiner and any United States importer of certified FRGAS shall 
    compare the results from the load port testing under paragraph (f) of 
    this section, with the port of entry testing as reported under 
    paragraph (o) of this section, for the volume of gasoline, for the 
    parameter values for sulfur, benzene, gravity, E200 and E300, and for 
    the NOX and exhaust toxics emissions performance; except 
    that
        (ii) Where a vessel transporting certified FRGAS off loads this 
    gasoline at more than one United States port of entry, and the 
    conditions of paragraph (g)(2)(i) of this section are not met at the 
    first United States port of entry, the requirements of paragraph (g)(1) 
    and (g)(2) of this section do not apply at subsequent ports of entry if 
    the United States importer obtains a certification from the vessel 
    owner or his immediate designee that the vessel has not loaded any 
    gasoline or blendstock between the first United States port of entry 
    and the subsequent port of entry.
        (2)(i) The requirements of paragraph (g)(2)(ii) apply if:
        (A)(1) The temperature-corrected volumes determined at the port of 
    entry and at the load port differ by more than one percent; or
        (2) For any parameter specified in paragraph (f)(2)(ii) of this 
    section, the values determined at the port of entry and at the load 
    port differ by more than the reproducibility amount specified for the 
    port of entry test result by the American Society of Testing and 
    Materials (ASTM); unless
        (B) The NOX and exhaust toxics emissions performance, in 
    grams per mile, calculated using the port of entry test results, are 
    each equal to or less than the NOX and exhaust toxics 
    emissions performance calculated using the load port test results;
        (ii) The United States importer and the foreign refiner shall treat 
    the gasoline as non-certified FRGAS, and the foreign refiner shall:
        (A) Exclude the gasoline volume and properties from its 
    conventional gasoline NOX and exhaust toxics compliance 
    calculations under Sec. 80.101(g); and
        (B) Include the gasoline volume in its compliance baseline 
    calculation under Sec. 80.101(f), unless the foreign refiner 
    establishes that the United States importer classified the gasoline 
    only as conventional gasoline and not as reformulated gasoline.
        (h) Attest requirements. The following additional procedures shall 
    be carried out by any foreign refiner of FRGAS as part of the attest 
    engagement for each foreign refinery under 40 CFR part 80, subpart F.
        (1) Include in the inventory reconciliation analysis under 
    Sec. 80.128(b) and the tender analysis under Sec. 80.128(c) non-FRGAS 
    in addition to the gasoline types listed in Sec. 80.128 (b) and (c).
        (2) Obtain separate listings of all tenders of certified FRGAS, and 
    of non-certified FRGAS. Agree the total volume of tenders from the 
    listings to the gasoline inventory reconciliation analysis in 
    Sec. 80.128(b), and to the volumes determined by the third party under 
    paragraph (f)(1) of this section.
        (3) For each tender under paragraph (h)(2) of this section where 
    the gasoline is loaded onto a marine vessel, report as a finding the 
    name and country of registration of each vessel, and the volumes of 
    FRGAS loaded onto each vessel.
        (4) Select a sample from the list of vessels identified in 
    paragraph (h)(3) of this section used to transport certified FRGAS, in 
    accordance with the guidelines in Sec. 80.127, and for each vessel 
    selected perform the following:
        (i) Obtain the report of the independent third party, under 
    paragraph (f) of this section, and of the United States importer under 
    paragraph (o) of this section.
        (A) Agree the information in these reports with regard to vessel 
    identification, gasoline volumes and test results.
        (B) Identify, and report as a finding, each occasion the load port 
    and port of entry parameter and volume results differ by more than the 
    amounts allowed in paragraph (g) of this section, and determine whether 
    the foreign refiner adjusted its refinery calculations as required in 
    paragraph (g) of this section.
        (ii) Obtain the documents used by the independent third party to 
    determine transportation and storage of the certified FRGAS from the 
    refinery to the load port, under paragraph (f) of this section. Obtain 
    tank activity records for any storage tank where the certified FRGAS is 
    stored, and pipeline activity records for any pipeline used to 
    transport the certified FRGAS, prior to being loaded onto the vessel. 
    Use these records to determine whether the certified FRGAS was produced 
    at the refinery that is the subject of the attest engagement, and 
    whether the certified FRGAS was mixed with any non-certified FRGAS, 
    non-FRGAS, or any certified FRGAS produced at a different
    
    [[Page 45566]]
    
    refinery that was not aggregated under Sec. 80.101(h).
        (5)(i) Select a sample from the list of vessels identified in 
    paragraph (h)(3) of this section used to transport certified and non-
    certified FRGAS, in accordance with the guidelines in Sec. 80.127, and 
    for each vessel selected perform the following:
        (ii) Obtain a commercial document of general circulation that lists 
    vessel arrivals and departures, and that includes the port and date of 
    departure of the vessel, and the port of entry and date of arrival of 
    the vessel. Agree the vessel's departure and arrival locations and 
    dates from the independent third party and United States importer 
    reports to the information contained in the commercial document.
        (6) Obtain separate listings of all tenders of non-FRGAS, and 
    perform the following:
        (i) Agree the total volume of tenders from the listings to the 
    gasoline inventory reconciliation analysis in Sec. 80.128(b).
        (ii) Obtain a separate listing of the tenders under paragraph 
    (h)(6) of this section where the gasoline is loaded onto a marine 
    vessel. Select a sample from this listing in accordance with the 
    guidelines in Sec. 80.127, and obtain a commercial document of general 
    circulation that lists vessel arrivals and departures, and that 
    includes the port and date of departure and the ports and dates where 
    the gasoline was off loaded for the selected vessels. Determine and 
    report as a finding the country where the gasoline was off loaded for 
    each vessel selected.
        (7) In order to complete the requirements of this paragraph (h) an 
    auditor shall:
        (i) Be independent of the foreign refiner;
        (ii) Be licensed as a Certified Public Accountant in the United 
    States and a citizen of the United States, or be approved in advance by 
    EPA based on a demonstration of ability to perform the procedures 
    required in Secs. 80.125 through 80.130 and this paragraph (h); and
        (iii) Sign a commitment that contains the provisions specified in 
    paragraph (i) of this section with regard to activities and documents 
    relevant to compliance with the requirements of Secs. 80.125 through 
    80.130 and this paragraph (h).
        (i) Foreign refiner commitments. Any foreign refiner shall commit 
    to and comply with the provisions contained in this paragraph (i) as a 
    condition to being assigned an individual refinery baseline.
        (1) Any United States Environmental Protection Agency inspector or 
    auditor will be given full, complete and immediate access to conduct 
    inspections and audits of the foreign refinery.
        (i) Inspections and audits may be either announced in advance by 
    EPA, or unannounced.
        (ii) Access will be provided to any location where:
        (A) Gasoline is produced;
        (B) Documents related to refinery operations are kept;
        (C) Gasoline or blendstock samples are tested or stored; and
        (D) FRGAS is stored or transported between the foreign refinery and 
    the United States, including storage tanks, vessels and pipelines.
        (iii) Inspections and audits may be by EPA employees or contractors 
    to EPA.
        (iv) Any documents requested that are related to matters covered by 
    inspections and audits will be provided to an EPA inspector or auditor 
    on request.
        (v) Inspections and audits by EPA may include review and copying of 
    any documents related to:
        (A) Refinery baseline establishment, including the volume and 
    parameters, and transfers of title or custody, of any gasoline or 
    blendstocks, whether FRGAS or non-FRGAS, produced at the foreign 
    refinery during the period January 1, 1990 through the date of the 
    refinery baseline petition or through the date of the inspection or 
    audit if a baseline petition has not been approved, and any work papers 
    related to refinery baseline establishment;
        (B) The parameters and volume of FRGAS;
        (C) The proper classification of gasoline as being FRGAS or as not 
    being FRGAS, or as certified FRGAS or as non-certified FRGAS;
        (D) Transfers of title or custody to FRGAS;
        (E) Sampling and testing of FRGAS;
        (F) Work performed and reports prepared by independent third 
    parties and by independent auditors under the requirements of this 
    section, including work papers; and
        (G) Reports prepared for submission to EPA, and any work papers 
    related to such reports.
        (vi) Inspections and audits by EPA may include taking samples of 
    gasoline or blendstock, and interviewing employees.
        (vii) Any employee of the foreign refiner will be made available 
    for interview by the EPA inspector or auditor, on request, within a 
    reasonable time period.
        (viii) English language translations of any documents will be 
    provided to an EPA inspector or auditor, on request, within 10 working 
    days.
        (ix) English language interpreters will be provided to accompany 
    EPA inspectors and auditors, on request.
        (2) An agent for service of process located in the District of 
    Columbia will be named, and service on this agent constitutes service 
    on the foreign refiner or any officer, or employee of the foreign 
    refiner for any action by EPA or otherwise by the United States related 
    to the requirements of 40 CFR part 80, subparts D, E and F.
        (3) The forum for any civil or criminal enforcement action related 
    to the provisions of this section for violations of the Clean Air Act 
    or regulations promulgated thereunder shall be governed by the Clean 
    Air Act, including the EPA administrative forum where allowed under the 
    Clean Air Act.
        (4) United States substantive and procedural laws shall apply to 
    any civil or criminal enforcement action against the foreign refiner or 
    any employee of the foreign refiner related to the provisions of this 
    section.
        (5) Submitting a petition for an individual refinery baseline, 
    producing and exporting gasoline under an individual refinery baseline, 
    and all other actions to comply with the requirements of 40 CFR part 
    80, subparts D, E and F relating to the establishment and use of an 
    individual refinery baseline constitute actions or activities covered 
    by and within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. 1605(a)(2), but solely with 
    respect to actions instituted against the foreign refiner, its agents, 
    officers, and employees in any court or other tribunal in the United 
    States for conduct that violates the requirements applicable to the 
    foreign refiner under 40 CFR part 80, subparts D, E and F, including 
    such conduct that violates Title 18 U.S.C. section 1001, Clean Air Act 
    section 113(c)(2), or other applicable provisions of the Clean Air Act.
        (6) The foreign refiner, or its agents, officers, or employees, 
    will not seek to detain or to impose civil or criminal remedies against 
    EPA inspectors or auditors, whether EPA employees or EPA contractors, 
    for actions performed within the scope of EPA employment related to the 
    provisions of this section.
        (7) The commitment required by this paragraph (i) shall be signed 
    by the owner or president of the foreign refiner business.
        (8) In any case where FRGAS produced at a foreign refinery is 
    stored or transported by another company between the refinery and the 
    vessel that transports the FRGAS to the United States, the foreign 
    refiner shall obtain from each such other company a commitment that 
    meets the
    
    [[Page 45567]]
    
    requirements specified in paragraphs (i) (1) through (7) of this 
    section, and these commitments shall be included in the foreign 
    refiner's baseline petition.
        (j) Sovereign immunity. By submitting a petition for an individual 
    foreign refinery baseline under this section, or by producing and 
    exporting gasoline to the United States under an individual refinery 
    baseline under this section, the foreign refiner, its agents, officers, 
    and employees, without exception, become subject to the full operation 
    of the administrative and judicial enforcement powers and provisions of 
    the United States without limitation based on sovereign immunity, with 
    respect to actions instituted against the foreign refiner, its agents, 
    officers, and employees in any court or other tribunal in the United 
    States for conduct that violates the requirements applicable to the 
    foreign refiner under 40 CFR part 80, subparts D, E and F, including 
    such conduct that violates Title 18 U.S.C. section 1001, Clean Air Act 
    section 113(c)(2), or other applicable provisions of the Clean Air Act.
        (k) Bond posting. Any foreign refiner shall meet the requirements 
    of this paragraph (k) as a condition to being assigned an individual 
    refinery baseline.
        (1) The foreign refiner shall post a bond of the amount calculated 
    using the following equation:
    
    Bond=G x $0.01
    
    where:
    
    Bond=amount of the bond in U.S. dollars
    G=the largest volume of conventional gasoline produced at the foreign 
    refinery and exported to the United States, in gallons, during a single 
    calendar year among the most recent of the following calendar years, up 
    to a maximum of five calendar years: the calendar year immediately 
    preceding the date the baseline petition is submitted, the calendar 
    year the baseline petition is submitted, and each succeeding calendar 
    year
    
        (2) Bonds shall be posted by:
        (i) Paying the amount of the bond to the Treasurer of the United 
    States;
        (ii) Obtaining a bond in the proper amount from a third party 
    surety agent that is payable to satisfy United States judicial 
    judgments against the foreign refiner, provided EPA agrees in advance 
    as to the third party and the nature of the surety agreement; or
        (iii) An alternative commitment that results in assets of an 
    appropriate liquidity and value being readily available to the United 
    States, provided EPA agrees in advance as to the alternative 
    commitment.
        (3) If the bond amount for a foreign refinery increases the foreign 
    refiner shall increase the bond to cover the shortfall within 90 days 
    of the date the bond amount changes. If the bond amount decreases, the 
    foreign refiner may reduce the amount of the bond beginning 90 days 
    after the date the bond amount changes.
        (4) Bonds posted under this paragraph (k) shall be used to satisfy 
    any judicial judgment that results from an administrative or judicial 
    enforcement action for conduct in violation of 40 CFR part 80, subparts 
    D, E and F, including such conduct that violates Title 18 U.S.C. 
    section 1001, Clean Air Act section 113(c)(2), or other applicable 
    provisions of the Clean Air Act.
        (5) On any occasion a foreign refiner bond is used to satisfy any 
    judgment, the foreign refiner shall increase the bond to cover the 
    amount used within 90 days of the date the bond is used.
        (l) Blendstock tracking. For purposes of blendstock tracking by any 
    foreign refiner under Sec. 80.102 by a foreign refiner with an 
    individual refinery baseline, the foreign refiner may exclude from the 
    calculations required in Sec. 80.102(d) the volume of applicable 
    blendstocks for which the foreign refiner has sufficient evidence in 
    the form of documentation that the blendstocks were used to produce 
    gasoline used outside the United States.
        (m) English language reports. Any report or other document 
    submitted to EPA by any foreign refiner shall be in the English 
    language, or shall include an English language translation.
        (n) Prohibitions. (1) No person may combine certified FRGAS with 
    any non-certified FRGAS or non-FRGAS, and no person may combine 
    certified FRGAS with any certified FRGAS produced at a different 
    refinery that is not aggregated under Sec. 80.101(h), except as 
    provided in paragraph (e) of this section.
        (2) No foreign refiner or other person may cause another person to 
    commit an action prohibited in paragraph (n)(1) of this section, or 
    that otherwise violates the requirements of this section.
        (o) United States importer requirements. Any United States importer 
    shall meet the following requirements.
        (1) Each batch of imported gasoline shall be classified by the 
    importer as being FRGAS or as non-FRGAS, and each batch classified as 
    FRGAS shall be further classified as certified FRGAS or as non-
    certified FRGAS.
        (2) Gasoline shall be classified as certified FRGAS or as non-
    certified FRGAS according to the designation by the foreign refiner if 
    this designation is supported by product transfer documents prepared by 
    the foreign refiner as required in paragraph (d) of this section, 
    unless the gasoline is classified as non-certified FRGAS under 
    paragraph (g) of this section.
        (3) For each gasoline batch classified as FRGAS, any United States 
    importer shall perform the following procedures.
        (i) In the case of both certified and non-certified FRGAS, have an 
    independent third party:
        (A) Determine the volume of gasoline in the vessel;
        (B) Use the foreign refiner's FRGAS certification to determine the 
    name and EPA-assigned registration number of the foreign refinery that 
    produced the FRGAS;
        (C) Determine the name and country of registration of the vessel 
    used to transport the FRGAS to the United States; and
        (D) Determine the date and time the vessel arrives at the United 
    States port of entry.
        (ii) In the case of certified FRGAS, have an independent third 
    party:
        (A) Collect a representative sample from each vessel compartment 
    subsequent to the vessel's arrival at the United States port of entry 
    and prior to off loading any gasoline from the vessel;
        (B) Prepare a volume-weighted vessel composite sample from the 
    compartment samples; and
        (C) Determine the values for sulfur, benzene, gravity, E200 and 
    E300 using the methodologies specified in Sec. 80.46, by:
        (1) The third party analyzing the sample; or
        (2) The third party observing the importer analyze the sample
        (4) Any importer shall submit reports within thirty days following 
    the date any vessel transporting FRGAS arrives at the United States 
    port of entry:
        (i) To the Administrator containing the information determined 
    under paragraph (o)(3) of this section; and
        (ii) To the foreign refiner containing the information determined 
    under paragraph (o)(3)(ii) of this section.
        (5)(i) Any United States importer shall meet the requirements 
    specified for conventional gasoline in Sec. 80.101 for any imported 
    conventional gasoline that is not classified as certified FRGAS under 
    paragraph (o)(2) of this section.
        (ii) The baseline applicable to a United States importer who has 
    not been assigned an individual importer baseline under 
    Sec. 80.91(b)(4) shall be the baseline specified in paragraph (p) of 
    this section.
        (p) Importer Baseline. (1) Each calendar year starting in 2000, the 
    Administrator shall calculate the
    
    [[Page 45568]]
    
    volume weighted average NOX emissions of imported 
    conventional gasoline for a multi-year period (MYANOx). This 
    calculation:
        (i) Shall use the Phase II Complex Model;
        (ii) Shall include all conventional gasoline in the following 
    categories:
        (A) Imported conventional gasoline that is classified as 
    conventional gasoline, and included in the conventional gasoline 
    compliance calculations of importers for each year; and
        (B) Imported conventional gasoline that is classified as certified 
    FRGAS, and included in the conventional gasoline compliance 
    calculations of foreign refiners for each year;
        (iii)(A) In 2000 only, shall be for the 1998 and 1999 averaging 
    periods and also shall include all conventional gasoline classified as 
    FRGAS and included in the conventional gasoline compliance calculations 
    of a foreign refiner for 1997, and all conventional gasoline batches 
    not classified as FRGAS that are imported during 1997 beginning on the 
    date the first batch of FRGAS arrives at a United States port of entry; 
    and
        (B) Starting in 2001, shall include imported conventional gasoline 
    during the prior three calendar year averaging periods.
        (2)(i) If the volume-weighted average NOX emissions 
    (MYANOx), calculated in paragraph (p)(1) of this section, is 
    greater than 1,465 mg/mile, the Administrator shall calculate an 
    adjusted baseline for NOX according to the following 
    equation:
    
    ABNOx = 1,465 mg/mile - (MYANOx - 1,465 mg/mile)
    
    where:
    
    ABNOx = Adjusted NOX baseline, in mg/mile
    MYANOx = Multi-year average NOX emissions, in mg/
    mile
    
        (ii) For the 1998 and 1999 multi-year averaging period only the 
    value of ABNOx shall not be larger than 1,480 mg/mile 
    regardless of the calculation under paragraph (p)(2)(i) of this 
    section.
        (3)(i) Notwithstanding the provisions of Sec. 80.91(b)(4)(iii), the 
    baseline NOX emissions values applicable to any United 
    States importer who has not been assigned an individual importer 
    baseline under Sec. 80.91(b)(4) shall be the more stringent of the 
    statutory baseline value for NOX under Sec. 80.91(c)(5), or 
    the adjusted NOX baseline calculated in paragraph (p)(2) of 
    this section.
        (ii) On or before June 1 of each calendar year, the Administrator 
    shall announce the NOX baseline that applies to importers 
    under this paragraph (p). If the baseline is an adjusted baseline, it 
    shall be effective for any conventional gasoline imported beginning 60 
    days following the Administrator's announcement. If the baseline is the 
    statutory baseline, it shall be effective upon announcement. A baseline 
    shall remain in effect until the effective date of a subsequent change 
    to the baseline pursuant to this paragraph (p).
        (q) Withdrawal or suspension of a foreign refinery's baseline. EPA 
    may withdraw or suspend a baseline that has been assigned to a foreign 
    refinery where:
        (1) A foreign refiner fails to meet any requirement of this 
    section;
        (2) A foreign government fails to allow EPA inspections as provided 
    in paragraph (i)(1) of this section;
        (3) A foreign refiner asserts a claim of, or a right to claim, 
    sovereign immunity in an action to enforce the requirements in 40 CFR 
    part 80, subparts D, E and F; or
        (4) A foreign refiner fails to pay a civil or criminal penalty that 
    is not satisfied using the foreign refiner bond specified in paragraph 
    (k) of this section.
        (r) Early use of a foreign refinery baseline. (1) A foreign refiner 
    may begin using an individual refinery baseline before EPA has approved 
    the baseline, provided that:
        (i) A baseline petition has been submitted as required in paragraph 
    (b) of this section;
        (ii) EPA has made a provisional finding that the baseline petition 
    is complete;
        (iii) The foreign refiner has made the commitments required in 
    paragraph (i) of this section;
        (iv) The persons who will meet the independent third party and 
    independent attest requirements for the foreign refinery have made the 
    commitments required in paragraphs (f)(3)(iii) and (h)(7)(iii) of this 
    section; and
        (v) The foreign refiner has met the bond requirements of paragraph 
    (k) of this section.
        (2) In any case where a foreign refiner uses an individual refinery 
    baseline before final approval under paragraph (r)(1) of this section, 
    and the foreign refinery baseline values that ultimately are approved 
    by EPA are more stringent than the early baseline values used by the 
    foreign refiner, the foreign refiner shall recalculate its compliance, 
    ab initio, using the baseline values approved by EPA, and the foreign 
    refiner shall be liable for any resulting violation of the conventional 
    gasoline requirements.
        (s) Additional requirements for petitions, reports and 
    certificates. Any petition for a refinery baseline under paragraph (b) 
    of this section, any report or other submission required by paragraphs 
    (c), (f)(2), or (i) of this section, and any certification under 
    paragraph (d)(3) or (g)(1)(ii) of this section shall be:
        (1) Submitted in accordance with procedures specified by the 
    Administrator, including use of any forms that may specified by the 
    Administrator.
        (2) Be signed by the president or owner of the foreign refiner 
    company, or in the case of (g)(1)(ii) the vessel owner, or by that 
    person's immediate designee, and shall contain the following 
    declaration:
    
        I hereby certify: (1) that I have actual authority to sign on 
    behalf of and to bind [insert name of foreign refiner or vessel 
    owner] with regard to all statements contained herein; (2) that I am 
    aware that the information contained herein is being certified, or 
    submitted to the United States Environmental Protection Agency, 
    under the requirements of 40 CFR part 80, subparts D, E and F and 
    that the information is material for determining compliance under 
    these regulations; and (3) that I have read and understand the 
    information being certified or submitted, and this information is 
    true, complete and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief 
    after I have taken reasonable and appropriate steps to verify the 
    accuracy thereof.
        I affirm that I have read and understand that the provisions of 
    40 CFR part 80, subparts D, E and F, including 40 CFR 80.94 (i), (j) 
    and (k), apply to [insert name of foreign refiner or vessel owner]. 
    Pursuant to Clean Air Act section 113(c) and Title 18, United States 
    Code, section 1001, the penalty for furnishing false, incomplete or 
    misleading information in this certification or submission is a fine 
    of up to $10,000, and/or imprisonment for up to five years.
    
    [FR Doc. 97-22803 Filed 8-27-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
8/27/1997
Published:
08/28/1997
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-22803
Dates:
This final rule is effective August 27, 1997.
Pages:
45533-45568 (36 pages)
Docket Numbers:
FRL-5883-3
RINs:
2060-AH48
PDF File:
97-22803.pdf
Supporting Documents:
» Legacy Index for Docket A-97-26
» Regulation of Fuels and Fuel Additives: Baseline Requirements for Gasoline Produced by Foreign Refiners
» Regulation of Fuels and Fuel Additives: Baseline Requirements for Gasoline Produced by Foreign Refiners
» Regulation of Fuels and Fuel Additives: Baseline Requirements for Gasoline Produced by Foreign Refiners [A-97-26-III-A-1]
CFR: (5)
40 CFR 80.128(b)
40 CFR 80.91(b)(4)
40 CFR 80.65(f)(2)(iii)
40 CFR 80.101(h)
40 CFR 80.94