United States Government Publishing Office
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United States
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Regulatory Information
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2017-01-09
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Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Ohio
Part II
UNKNOWN
D09002ee1be06eaa9
United States
Environmental Protection Agency
originator
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United States Government Agency or Subagency
The USEPA is approving, through direct final procedure, two exemption requests from the requirements contained in Section 18(f) of the Clean Air Act (Act) for the Toledo and Dayton ozone nonattainment areas in Ohio. These exemption requests, submitted by the State of Ohio, are based upon the most recent three years of ambient air monitoring data which demonstrate that the National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) for ozone has been attained in each of these areas without additional reductions of nitrogen oxides (NO<INF>X). Section 182(f) of the Act requires States with areas designated nonattainment of the NAAQS for ozone, and classified as moderate nonattainment and above, to adopt reasonably available control technology (RACT) rules for major stationary sources of NO<INF>X and to provide for nonattainment area new source review (NSR) for new sources and modifications that are major for NO<INF>X. Section 182(f) provides further that these requirements do not apply for areas outside an ozone transport region if USEPA determines that additional reductions of NO<INF>X would not contribute to attainment of the NAAQS for ozone in the area. In the Final Rules Section of this Federal Register, the USEPA is approving these exemption requests as a direct final rule without prior proposal because USEPA views this as noncontroversial and anticipates no adverse comments. A detailed rationale for the approval is set forth in the direct final rule. If no adverse comments are received in response to that direct final rule, no further activity is contemplated in relation to this proposed rule. If USEPA receives adverse comments, the direct final rule will be withdrawn and all public comments received will be addressed in a subsequent final rule based on this proposed rule. USEPA will not institute a second comment period on this action. Any parties interested in commenting on this action should do so at this time.
59 FR 0
https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/FR-1994-07-26/94-18234
94-18234
fr26jy94-16
6560-50-P
Federal Register: July 26, 1994
OH63-1-6403b, OH64-1-6404b
FRL-5020-6
https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/FR-1994-07-26/94-18234
https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-1994-07-26/html/94-18234.htm
1 p.
0
0
59 FR 0
Code of Federal Regulations
Title 40 Part 52
40 CFR Part 52
Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Ohio; Federal Register Vol. 59, Issue
UNKNOWN
94-18234
II
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
1994-08-10
Federal Register: July 26, 1994
OH63-1-6403b, OH64-1-6404b
FRL-5020-6
6560-50-P
94-18234
Proposed rule.
The USEPA is approving, through direct final procedure, two exemption requests from the requirements contained in Section 18(f) of the Clean Air Act (Act) for the Toledo and Dayton ozone nonattainment areas in Ohio. These exemption requests, submitted by the State of Ohio, are based upon the most recent three years of ambient air monitoring data which demonstrate that the National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) for ozone has been attained in each of these areas without additional reductions of nitrogen oxides (NO<INF>X). Section 182(f) of the Act requires States with areas designated nonattainment of the NAAQS for ozone, and classified as moderate nonattainment and above, to adopt reasonably available control technology (RACT) rules for major stationary sources of NO<INF>X and to provide for nonattainment area new source review (NSR) for new sources and modifications that are major for NO<INF>X. Section 182(f) provides further that these requirements do not apply for areas outside an ozone transport region if USEPA determines that additional reductions of NO<INF>X would not contribute to attainment of the NAAQS for ozone in the area. In the Final Rules Section of this Federal Register, the USEPA is approving these exemption requests as a direct final rule without prior proposal because USEPA views this as noncontroversial and anticipates no adverse comments. A detailed rationale for the approval is set forth in the direct final rule. If no adverse comments are received in response to that direct final rule, no further activity is contemplated in relation to this proposed rule. If USEPA receives adverse comments, the direct final rule will be withdrawn and all public comments received will be addressed in a subsequent final rule based on this proposed rule. USEPA will not institute a second comment period on this action. Any parties interested in commenting on this action should do so at this time.
Comments on this action must be received by August 10, 1994.
Richard Schleyer, Environmental Engineer, Regulation Development Section, Air Enforcement Branch (AE- 17J), USEPA, Region 5, 77 West Jackson Blvd., Chicago, Illinois 60604.
Federal Register
Vol. 59, no. 142
Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
1994-07-26
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