97-20220. Change in Minimum Oxygen Content Requirement for Reformulated Gasoline  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 147 (Thursday, July 31, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 41047-41049]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-20220]
    
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    [FRL-5867-1]
    
    
    Change in Minimum Oxygen Content Requirement for Reformulated 
    Gasoline
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency.
    
    ACTION: Notice.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: EPA's reformulated gasoline (RFG) program contains various 
    standards for RFG, including an oxygen content standard. The current 
    per-gallon minimum standard for oxygen content in RFG is 1.5% by 
    weight. Pursuant to the RFG regulations, EPA is increasing this 
    standard to 1.6% by weight for several of the RFG covered areas, 
    because those areas failed a series of compliance surveys for oxygen 
    content in 1996. This notice announces the increased standard, and 
    describes the covered areas and parties that are subject to the 
    increased standard. The increased standard will help ensure that all 
    covered areas receive the full benefit of the oxygen content 
    requirement in the RFG program.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stuart Romanow, Fuels and Energy 
    Division, Office of Mobile Sources, Environmental Protection Agency, 
    Washington DC (6406J) 202-233-9296.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Regulatory Entities
    
        Regulatory categories and entities potentially affected by this 
    action include:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    Examples of affected    
                     Category                             entities          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Industry..................................  Refiners, importers,        
                                                 oxygenate blenders of      
                                                 reformulated gasoline.     
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a 
    guide for readers regarding entities likely to be affected by this 
    action. This table lists the types of entities that EPA is now aware 
    could be potentially affected by this action. Other types of entities 
    not listed in the table could also be affected. To determine whether 
    your entity is affected by this action, you should carefully examine 
    the existing provisions at 40 CFR 80.41. 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.
    
    II. Background
    
        Section 211(k) of the Clean Air Act requires that EPA establish 
    standards for reformulated gasoline ( RFG) to be used in specified 
    ozone nonattainment areas (covered areas). The RFG requirements contain 
    performance standards for reductions of emissions from motor vehicles 
    of ozone forming volatile organic compounds and toxic pollutants.
        Standards for RFG are contained in 40 CFR 80.41. Refiners and other 
    parties subject to the standards can choose to comply on either a per-
    gallon basis or to comply on average. The standards for compliance on 
    average (``averaged standards'') are numerically more stringent than 
    the per-gallon standards. The averaged standards for RFG that apply in 
    1996 are contained in Sec. 80.41(b). These averaged standards include a 
    per-gallon minimum requirement of 1.5 weight percent oxygen. This per-
    gallon minimum requirement is in addition to the requirement for 2.1 
    weight percent oxygen, on average. The average standard for oxygen must 
    be met by a refiner or oxygenate blender for all of the RFG it produced 
    at a refinery or blending facility, or for RFG imported by an importer, 
    but these parties are not required to meet this standard for the RFG 
    supplied to each covered area separately.
        Any refiner, importer or oxygenate blender has the option of 
    meeting the RFG standards on average or per gallon. If a party is 
    subject to the averaged standards, then the requirement to conduct 
    surveys, as specified in Sec. 80.68, must be satisfied. In these 
    surveys, RFG samples are collected at retail gasoline stations within 
    covered areas and analyzed to determine if the RFG supplied to each 
    covered area meets certain survey pass/fail criteria specified in 
    Sec. 80.68. An oxygen survey series failure occurs in a covered area if 
    the annual average oxygen content for all of the samples is less than 
    2.00 weight percent. The purpose of the surveys and the tightened 
    standards which result if a survey is failed is to ensure that 
    averaging over a refiner's entire production as compared to separate 
    averaging for each covered area does not lead to the reduced quality of 
    RFG in any covered area.
        Since the implementation of the RFG program in 1995, these surveys 
    have been conducted by the RFG Survey Association, a not-for-profit 
    association of refiners, importers and blenders, using an EPA-approved 
    survey design plan as required in the regulations. By letter dated 
    January 16, 1997, the RFG Survey Association reported to EPA the 
    results of its surveys for 1996, indicating that several survey areas 
    failed to meet the annual average requirements of 2.00% oxygen by 
    weight.\1\ After reviewing the data EPA determined that 8 areas did 
    fail the survey series for oxygen content.\2\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1\ Letter dated January 16, 1997 from Frank C. Lenski, 
    President, RFG Survey Association, to Charles Freed, Director, Fuels 
    and Energy Division, EPA.
        \2\ Letter dated January 31, 1997 from Charles Freed, EPA, to 
    Frank Lenski, RFG Survey Association. Also see Memorandum dated 
    April 29, 1997 from Stuart Romanow, Mechanical Engineer, Fuels and 
    Energy Division to Charles Freed.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The following covered areas failed the oxygen survey series:
    
    1. Philadelphia-Wilmington-Trenton area [Sec. 80.70(e)]
    2. Baltimore, MD area [Sec. 80.70(g)]
    
    [[Page 41048]]
    
    3. Houston-Galveston-Brazoria, TX area [Sec. 80.70(h)]
    4. The Atlantic City, NJ area comprised of [Sec. 80.70(j)(9):]
        Atlantic County
        Cape May County
    5. The Dallas-Fort Worth, TX area comprised of [Sec. 80.70(j)(13):]
        Collin County
        Dallas County
        Denton County
        Tarrant County
    6. Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Newport News (Hampton Roads), VA area 
    comprised of [Sec. 80.70(j)(14):]
        Chesapeake
        Hampton
        James City County
        Newport News
        Norfolk
        Poquoson
        Portsmouth
        Suffolk
        Virginia Beach
        Williamsburg
        York County
    7. Richmond, VA area comprised of [Sec. 80.70(j)(14):]
        Charles City County
        Chesterfield County
        Colonial Heights
        Hanover County
        Henrico County
        Hopewell
        Richmond
    8. Washington D.C. area comprised of [Sec. 80.70(j)(2),(j)(6),(j)(14):]
        The District of Columbia
        Calvert County, MD
        Charles County, MD
        Frederick County, MD
        Montgomery County, MD
        Prince Georges County, MD
        Alexandria, VA
        Arlington County, VA
        Fairfax, VA
        Fairfax County, VA
        Falls Church, VA
        Loudon County, VA
        Manassas, VA
        Manassas Park, VA
        Prince William County, VA
        Stafford County, VA
    
        The boundaries of the covered areas are described in detail in 
    Sec. 80.70.
        Under Sec. 80.41(o), when a covered area fails an oxygen content 
    survey series, the minimum oxygen content requirement for that covered 
    area is made more stringent by increasing the per gallon minimum oxygen 
    content standard for affected RFG subject to the averaging standard by 
    0.1% . This more stringent requirement applies beginning the year 
    following the year of the failure. Therefore, in this case, the minimum 
    per gallon oxygen content requirement for the above covered areas is 
    increased from 1.5% to 1.6% by weight.
        The criteria identifying the refineries, importers and oxygenate 
    blenders subject to adjusted standards are stated in Sec. 80.41(q). In 
    general, adjusted standards apply to RFG that is subject to an 
    averaging standard (``averaged RFG'') that is produced at a refinery or 
    oxygenate blending facility if any averaged RFG from that refinery or 
    facility supplied a failed covered area during 1996, or supplies the 
    covered area during any year that the more stringent standards are in 
    effect. The regulation provides for an exception based on certain 
    volume limits [see 40 CFR Sec. 80.41(q)(1)(iii).]
        Thus, if a refiner has elected for a refinery to be subject to the 
    average oxygen standard, and if even a small portion of the RFG 
    produced at the refinery is used in an area subject to an oxygen 
    ratchet, the entire volume of RFG produced at the refinery is subject 
    to the more stringent oxygen standard regardless of which area receives 
    the RFG. This result is true regardless of whether the refinery's 
    gasoline was supplied to the city in question during 1996 or during a 
    year when the more stringent oxygen standard applies.
        Under Sec. 80.41(q)(2), the applicability of adjusted standards to 
    imported averaged RFG is specified by the Petroleum Administration for 
    Defense District (PADD) in which the covered area is located and the 
    PADD where the gasoline is imported. The covered areas that had oxygen 
    survey series failures are located in PADDs I and III. Therefore, all 
    RFG imported at facilities located in PADDs I, II, III or IV is subject 
    to the adjusted oxygen standard. The states included in each PADD are 
    identified in Sec. 80.41(r). In addition, if any RFG imported into any 
    other PADD supplies any of the covered areas with oxygen survey 
    failures, the adjusted standard applies to that RFG, as well.
        Under Sec. 80.41(q)(3), any gasoline that is transported in a 
    fungible manner by a pipeline, barge or vessel is considered to have 
    supplied each covered area that is supplied with any gasoline by that 
    pipeline, barge or vessel shipment unless the refiner or importer is 
    able to establish that the gasoline it produced or imported was 
    supplied only to a smaller number of covered areas.
        Consider, for example, gasoline transported on the Colonial 
    Pipeline, which supplies RFG to several cities that failed the oxygen 
    survey in 1996. If a refinery's RFG was transported by the Colonial 
    Pipeline any time during 1996, or any time during any year when the 
    more stringent oxygen standard applies, the more stringent oxygen 
    standard applies to all RFG produced at the refinery regardless of the 
    market. In addition, there is a presumption that, due to fungible 
    mixing, each refinery's RFG that is transported by the Colonial 
    Pipeline is in part supplied to each city supplied by the Colonial 
    Pipeline. This presumption is rebuttable, but the rebuttal normally 
    would require a refiner to have transported its RFG in a non-fungible 
    manner. Thus, the more stringent standard applies to a refinery whose 
    gasoline is transported on the Colonial Pipeline regardless of whether 
    the refiner takes delivery of RFG in the specific cities that failed 
    the oxygen survey.
        The adjusted oxygen standard applies to all averaged RFG produced 
    by a refinery or imported by an importer identified in Sec. 80.41(q). 
    In accordance with Sec. 80.41(p), the effective date of this change is 
    October 29, 1997.
        Thus, under Sec. 80.41(p) the more stringent oxygen standard 
    applies at all points of the distribution system beginning on October 
    29, 1997, including terminals supplying the affected covered areas and 
    retail outlets in the covered areas. If a downstream facility fails to 
    meet the new standard by October 29, 1997, the party who operates the 
    facility would be in violation, as well as each upstream party who 
    supplied that facility. An upstream party who failed to supply RFG 
    meeting the new oxygen standard sufficiently in advance of October 29, 
    1997 will have caused the violation.
        As a result, EPA believes that refiners, importers and oxygenate 
    blenders must begin producing or importing RFG meeting the new oxygen 
    standard sufficiently in advance of October 29, 1997 to ensure all 
    downstream parties have time to transition storage tanks to meet the 
    new standard.
        However, EPA believes it may be difficult for all regulated parties 
    to transition to the new oxygen standard by October 29, 1997. As a 
    result, EPA intends to enforce the new oxygen standard in a manner that 
    gives parties additional time. Refiners, importers, and oxygenate 
    blenders will be required to meet the new oxygen standard beginning 
    September 29, 1997. EPA believes this revised date for refinery-level 
    compliance reflects a later date than would be necessary if all parties 
    had to comply by October 29, 1997. In the case of parties other than 
    refiners, importers, oxygenate blenders, retailers and wholesale 
    purchaser-consumers, (e.g., pipelines and terminals supplying gasoline 
    to affected covered areas) EPA will enforce the new oxygen standard
    
    [[Page 41049]]
    
    beginning November 28, 19973. In the case of retail outlets 
    and wholesale purchaser-consumer facilities located in the affected 
    covered areas EPA will enforce the new oxygen standard beginning 
    December 29, 1997. EPA intends to initiate a rulemaking to revise 
    Sec. 80.41(p) to reflect the need for additional downstream transition 
    time when a standard is changed.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \3\ This supersedes the downstream enforcement timing discussed 
    in ``RFG/Anti-Dumping Questions and Answers, November 12, 1996''.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Mary D. Nichols,
    Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation.
    Sylvia K. Lowrance,
    Assistant Administrator for Enforcement and Compliance Assurance.
    [FR Doc. 97-20220 Filed 7-30-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
07/31/1997
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice.
Document Number:
97-20220
Pages:
41047-41049 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
FRL-5867-1
PDF File:
97-20220.pdf