81_FR_24498 81 FR 24419 - Supplemental Finding That It Is Appropriate and Necessary To Regulate Hazardous Air Pollutants From Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric Utility Steam Generating Units

81 FR 24419 - Supplemental Finding That It Is Appropriate and Necessary To Regulate Hazardous Air Pollutants From Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric Utility Steam Generating Units

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 79 (April 25, 2016)

Page Range24419-24452
FR Document2016-09429

This action responds to the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Michigan v. EPA, 135 S. Ct. 2699 (2015), and explains how the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has taken cost into account in evaluating whether it is appropriate and necessary to regulate coal- and oil-fired electric utility steam generating units (EGUs) under section 112 of the Clean Air Act (CAA). The EPA requested comment on all aspects of its approach to considering cost through a proposed supplemental finding and on a companion Legal Memorandum available in the rulemaking docket. After consideration of public comments, the EPA, in this final supplemental finding, concludes that a consideration of cost does not cause us to change our determination that regulation of hazardous air pollutant (HAP) emissions from coal- and oil-fired EGUs is appropriate and necessary and that EGUs are, therefore, properly included on the CAA section 112(c) list of sources that must be regulated under CAA section 112(d).

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 79 (Monday, April 25, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 79 (Monday, April 25, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 24419-24452]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-09429]



[[Page 24419]]

Vol. 81

Monday,

No. 79

April 25, 2016

Part VII





 Environmental Protection Agency





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40 CFR Part 63





Supplemental Finding That It Is Appropriate and Necessary To Regulate 
Hazardous Air Pollutants From Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric Utility 
Steam Generating Units; Final Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 81 , No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules 
and Regulations

[[Page 24420]]


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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

40 CFR Part 63

[EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234; FRL-9945-33-OAR]
RIN 2060-AS76


Supplemental Finding That It Is Appropriate and Necessary To 
Regulate Hazardous Air Pollutants From Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric 
Utility Steam Generating Units

AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ACTION: Final supplemental finding.

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SUMMARY: This action responds to the U.S. Supreme Court decision in 
Michigan v. EPA, 135 S. Ct. 2699 (2015), and explains how the 
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has taken cost into account in 
evaluating whether it is appropriate and necessary to regulate coal- 
and oil-fired electric utility steam generating units (EGUs) under 
section 112 of the Clean Air Act (CAA). The EPA requested comment on 
all aspects of its approach to considering cost through a proposed 
supplemental finding and on a companion Legal Memorandum available in 
the rulemaking docket. After consideration of public comments, the EPA, 
in this final supplemental finding, concludes that a consideration of 
cost does not cause us to change our determination that regulation of 
hazardous air pollutant (HAP) emissions from coal- and oil-fired EGUs 
is appropriate and necessary and that EGUs are, therefore, properly 
included on the CAA section 112(c) list of sources that must be 
regulated under CAA section 112(d).

DATES: This final supplemental finding is effective on April 25, 2016.

ADDRESSES: The EPA has an established docket for this action under 
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234 (National Emission Standards for 
Hazardous Air Pollutants for Coal- and Oil-fired Electric Utility Steam 
Generating Units). All documents in the docket are listed on the 
www.regulations.gov Web site. Although listed in the index, some 
information is not publicly available, e.g., Confidential Business 
Information or other information whose disclosure is restricted by 
statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted material, will be 
publicly available only in hard copy. Publicly available docket 
materials are available either electronically in www.regulations.gov or 
in hard copy at the EPA Docket Center (EPA/DC), Room 3334, EPA WJC West 
Building, 1301 Constitution Ave. NW., Washington, DC. The Public 
Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through 
Friday, excluding legal holidays. The telephone number for the Public 
Reading Room is (202) 566-1744, and the telephone number for the Air 
Docket is (202) 566-1742.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. Nick Hutson, Energy Strategies 
Group, Sector Policies and Programs Division (D243-01), U.S. EPA, 
Research Triangle Park, NC 27711; telephone number (919) 541-2968, 
facsimile number (919) 541-5450; email address: [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 
    Organization of This Document. The information presented in this 
notice is organized as follows:

I. General Information
    A. Executive Summary
    B. Does this action apply to me?
    C. Where can I get a copy of this document?
    D. Judicial Review
II. Overview and Background on the Proposed Supplemental Finding
    A. Overview
    B. 2000 Finding and 2012 Affirmation
    C. Proposed Supplemental Finding
III. Final Supplemental Finding and Affirmation
    A. Supplemental Analyses Conducted in Response to Comments
    B. Basis for the Final Supplemental Finding
    C. Affirmation of the Appropriate and Necessary Finding
IV. Public Comments on the Proposed Supplemental Finding
    A. Comments on Considerations of Cost
    B. Comments on Consideration of Benefit-Cost Analysis in the 
MATS RIA
    C. Comments on the Legal Interpretation of CAA Section 112(n)(1)
    D. Comments on Topics that are Beyond the Limited Scope of the 
Supplemental Finding
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
    A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and 
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
    B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
    C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
    D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
    E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
    F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination with 
Indian Tribal Governments
    G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children from 
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
    H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations that 
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
    I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
    J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions to Address 
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income 
Populations
    K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
    L. Determination under CAA Section 307(d)
VI. Statutory Authority

I. General Information

A. Executive Summary

    The EPA is taking this final action in response to (1) the U.S. 
Supreme Court (Supreme Court) decision in Michigan v. EPA, 135 S. Ct. 
2699 (2015), which held that the EPA must consider cost in evaluating 
whether it is appropriate and necessary to regulate coal- and oil-fired 
EGUs under CAA section 112, and (2) the comments received on the 
agency's proposal.
    After evaluating cost reasonableness using several different 
metrics, the Administrator has, in accordance with her statutory duty 
under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A), weighed cost against the previously 
identified advantages of regulating HAP emissions from EGUs--including 
the agency's prior conclusions about the significant hazards to public 
health and the environment associated with such emissions and the 
volume of HAP that would be reduced by regulation of EGUs under CAA 
section 112.
    In evaluating the costs of the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards 
(MATS), the EPA uses several cost metrics specific to the power sector 
to determine whether the costs of MATS are reasonable. The evaluations 
across each of the different metrics reveal that the cost of complying 
with MATS--compared to historical annual revenues, annual capital 
expenditures, and impacts on retail electricity prices--is well within 
the range of historical variability. The EPA further finds that the 
power sector is able to comply with the rule's requirements while 
maintaining its ability to perform its primary and unique function--the 
generation, transmission, and distribution of reliable electricity at 
reasonable cost to consumers. The EPA thus concludes that under every 
metric examined, the cost of MATS is reasonable and that no new 
information provided during the public comment period demonstrates 
otherwise.
    In exercising the discretion granted to her under CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A), the Administrator has taken numerous factors into 
account, in addition to the consideration of the cost of regulation, 
including Congress's concern about the hazardous nature of these 
pollutants, the wealth of public health and environmental effects 
research examined under the agency's prior findings showing substantial 
risks from

[[Page 24421]]

the emission of HAP from EGUs, and the fact that the power sector is 
the largest remaining anthropogenic source of many HAP in the U.S. The 
Administrator finds in this final action that, in her judgment, after 
determining under each metric examined that the cost of MATS is 
reasonable, and weighing this consideration against the many identified 
advantages to regulation, it clearly remains appropriate and necessary 
to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs.
    The Administrator's approach to making her determination is fully 
consistent with the dictates of the statute and with the Michigan 
decision because it reflects her consideration of the full range of 
factors relevant to making a decision under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) 
regarding whether it is appropriate to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs 
under CAA section 112. She prefers--and the CAA supports--this approach 
because, in addition to cost, it places value on the statutory goals of 
achieving prompt, permanent, and ongoing reductions in significant 
volumes of HAP emissions and on the important, and, in many cases, 
unquantifiable advantages of reducing the significant hazards to public 
health posed by such emissions, including addressing the risk to the 
most exposed and most sensitive members of society.
    The EPA also presents in this action a second independent approach 
that supports the appropriate and necessary determination as informed 
by consideration of the cost of MATS: consideration of a formal 
benefit-cost analysis. Although the EPA does not view formal benefit-
cost analysis as required to support the appropriate finding, the 
agency had performed such an analysis for the regulatory impacts 
analysis (RIA ) \1\ for the final MATS rule. In this final action--as 
in the proposal--the EPA finds that the analysis demonstrates that the 
benefits (monetized and non-monetized) of the rule are substantial and 
far outweigh the costs. The benefit-cost analysis, thus, fully and 
independently supports the finding that it is appropriate to regulate 
HAP emissions from EGUs.
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    \1\ U.S. EPA. 2011. Regulatory Impact Analysis for the Final 
Mercury and Air Toxics Standards. EPA-452/R-11-011. Docket ID No. 
EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-20131.
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    The EPA provided an opportunity for public comment on both 
approaches through a proposed supplemental finding \2\ published on 
December 1, 2015 and on a supporting Legal Memorandum.\3\ The EPA 
received numerous comments both supporting and opposing the proposed 
approaches and the agency has considered all of these comments.
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    \2\ 80 FR 75025.
    \3\ ``Legal Memorandum Accompanying the Proposed Supplemental 
Finding that it is Appropriate and Necessary to Regulate Hazardous 
Air Pollutants from Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric Utility Steam 
Generating Units (EGUs)'' (Legal Memorandum). Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2009-0234-20519.
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    Based on all of these considerations, the Administrator finds that 
both approaches--the preferred approach and the alternative benefit-
cost analysis in the MATS RIA--support her determination that 
consideration of cost does not cause her to alter the previous 
conclusion that regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs is appropriate 
and necessary. Therefore, in this final notice, the Administrator 
affirms that it is appropriate and necessary to regulate coal- and oil-
fired EGUs under CAA section 112 and that these sources are properly 
listed as an affected source category under CAA section 112(c).

B. Does this Action Apply to Me?

    The regulated categories and entities potentially affected by this 
final supplemental finding are shown below in Table 1.

     Table 1--Potentially Affected Regulated Categories and Entities
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                                                        Examples of
           Category               NAICS Code \1\    potentially affected
                                                          entities
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Industry......................             221112  Fossil fuel-fired
                                                    electric utility
                                                    steam generating
                                                    units.
Federal government............         \2\ 221122  Fossil fuel-fired
                                                    electric utility
                                                    steam generating
                                                    units owned by the
                                                    federal government.
State/local/tribal government.         \2\ 221122  Fossil fuel-fired
                                           921150   electric utility
                                                    steam generating
                                                    units owned by
                                                    municipalities.
                                                   Fossil fuel-fired
                                                    electric utility
                                                    steam generating
                                                    units in Indian
                                                    country.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).
\2\ Federal, state, or local government-owned and operated
  establishments are classified according to the activity in which they
  are engaged.

    This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a 
guide for readers regarding entities that may be affected by this 
action. If you have any questions regarding the applicability of this 
action to a particular entity, consult either the air permitting 
authority for the entity or your EPA Regional representative as listed 
in 40 CFR 60.4 or 40 CFR 63.13 (General Provisions).

C. Where can I get a copy of this document?

    In addition to being available in the docket, an electronic copy of 
this final action will also be available on the World Wide Web (WWW). 
Following signature, a copy of this final action will be posted at the 
following address: http://www3.epa.gov/mats/.

D. Judicial Review

    Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA, judicial review of this final 
supplemental finding is available only by filing a petition for review 
in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (D.C. 
Circuit Court) by June 24, 2016. Moreover, under section 307(b)(2) of 
the CAA, the requirements established by this final supplemental 
finding may not be challenged separately in any civil or criminal 
proceedings brought by the EPA to enforce these requirements.
    In the proposal, the EPA provided notice that CAA section 307(d) 
was applicable to this action and has followed the requirements of that 
subsection. 80 FR 75042. CAA section 307(d) establishes procedural 
requirements specific to certain enumerated rulemakings under the CAA, 
and CAA section 307(d)(1)(V) provides for the extension of these 
procedural requirements to ``such other actions as the Administrator 
may determine.'' Section 307(d)(7)(B) of the CAA further provides that 
``[o]nly an objection to a rule or procedure which was raised with 
reasonable specificity during the period for public comment (including 
any public hearing) may be raised during judicial review.'' This 
section also provides a mechanism mandating the EPA to convene a 
proceeding for reconsideration ``[i]f the person raising an objection 
can demonstrate to the EPA that it was impracticable to raise such 
objection within [the period for public comment] or if the grounds for 
such objection arose after the period for public

[[Page 24422]]

comment (but within the time specified for judicial review) and if such 
objection is of central relevance to the outcome of the rule.'' Any 
person seeking to make such a demonstration should submit a Petition 
for Reconsideration to the Office of the Administrator, U.S. EPA, Room 
3000, EPA WJC North Building, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, 
DC 20460, with a copy to both the person(s) listed in the preceding FOR 
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section, and the Associate General Counsel 
for the Air and Radiation Law Office, Office of General Counsel (Mail 
Code 2344A), U.S. EPA, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC 
20460.

II. Overview and Background on the Proposed Supplemental Finding

A. Overview

    On June 29, 2015, the Supreme Court ruled in Michigan v. EPA that 
the agency had erred when it failed to take cost into account in 
evaluating whether it is appropriate to regulate HAP emissions from 
coal- and oil-fired EGUs. On December 1, 2015, in response to the 
Michigan ruling, the EPA published the proposed supplemental finding 
and companion Legal Memorandum. In the proposed supplemental finding, 
the EPA proposed to determine that including a consideration of cost 
does not cause the agency to alter its previous conclusion that 
regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs is appropriate and necessary.
    In Section II.B of this final supplemental finding, the EPA 
provides background information regarding the 2000 appropriate and 
necessary finding and the 2012 affirmation. Section II.C provides a 
summary of the proposed consideration of cost, explaining that, in the 
preferred approach, the EPA evaluated the cost of MATS and compared 
those costs to other metrics relevant to the power sector. In 
evaluating those cost metrics, the EPA proposed to determine that the 
MATS compliance costs are reasonable and that the power sector is able 
to comply with the rule's requirements while retaining its ability to 
perform its primary and unique function--the generation, transmission, 
and distribution of reliable electricity at a reasonable cost to 
consumers. The Administrator then weighed this evaluation of cost 
against previously identified advantages of regulation--such as 
addressing the significant hazards to public health and the environment 
posed by HAP emissions from EGUs. The EPA also considered the formal 
benefit-cost analysis from the final MATS RIA that showed the benefits 
(monetized and non-monetized) of the rule are substantial and far 
outweigh the costs. The EPA then proposed to find that consideration of 
such costs does not cause the agency to alter its previous finding that 
regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs is appropriate and necessary.
    The EPA received numerous public comments on the proposed 
supplemental finding. In Section III.A below, the EPA explains how 
consideration of the public comments resulted in the addition of a 
limited analysis that reinforces the final supplemental finding. In 
Section III.B, we explain the basis for the final action, and, in 
Section III.C we affirm the proposed finding that a consideration of 
cost does not cause the EPA to change its conclusion that regulation of 
HAP emissions from coal- and oil-fired EGUs is appropriate and 
necessary and that EGUs are, therefore, properly included on the CAA 
section 112(c) list of sources that must be regulated under CAA section 
112(d).
    In Section IV below, the EPA provides a summary of selected 
significant comments and the agency's response to those comments. The 
Response to Comments (RTC) document \4\ for this action summarizes all 
comments the EPA received. The RTC document also presents responses to 
significant comments or citations to Section IV below in the instances 
where relevant comment responses are presented in the preamble.
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    \4\ Response to Comments (RTC) for Supplemental Finding that it 
is Appropriate and Necessary to Regulate Hazardous Air Pollutants 
from Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric Utility Steam Generating Units. 
Available in the rulemaking docket. Docket ID EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234.
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B. 2000 Finding and 2012 Affirmation

    On December 20, 2000, the EPA determined, pursuant to CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A), that it was appropriate and necessary to regulate coal- 
and oil-fired EGUs under CAA section 112 and added such units to the 
CAA section 112(c) list of sources that must be regulated under CAA 
section 112(d). December 2000 Finding; 65 FR 79825. The appropriate and 
necessary finding was based primarily on consideration of the Utility 
Study Report to Congress (Utility Study),\5\ the Mercury Study Report 
to Congress (Mercury Study),\6\ the National Academy of Sciences' 
Toxicological Effects of Methylmercury (NAS Study),\7\ and mercury data 
collected from coal-fired EGUs after completion of the studies. 65 FR 
79826. The EPA found that mercury is a significant hazard to public 
health, and EGUs are the largest domestic source of mercury emissions. 
The EPA also identified control strategies that would effectively 
reduce HAP emissions from U.S. EGUs. The EPA found that implementation 
of other requirements under the CAA would not adequately address the 
significant public health and environmental hazards arising from HAP 
emissions from U.S. EGUs. After consideration of this information, the 
EPA found that it was appropriate to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs 
because such emissions pose significant hazards to public health and 
the environment and also because there were available controls to 
effectively reduce mercury and other HAP emissions from EGUs. 64 FR 
79825, 79830. The EPA found that it was necessary to regulate HAP 
emissions from EGUs because implementation of the other requirements of 
the CAA would not adequately address the serious hazards to public 
health and the environment posed by HAP emissions from EGUs and because 
CAA section 112 is the authority intended to regulate HAP emissions 
from stationary sources. Id. See also 76 FR 24984-20985 (for further 
discussion of conclusions supporting the 2000 finding).
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    \5\ U.S. EPA. 1998. Study of Hazardous Air Pollutant Emissions 
from Electric Utility Steam Generating Units--Final Report to 
Congress. EPA-453/R-98-004a. February. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-
2009-0234-3052.
    \6\ U.S. EPA. 1997. Mercury Study Report to Congress. EPA-452/R-
97-003. December. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-3054.
    \7\ National Research Council. 2000. Toxicological Effects of 
Methylmercury. Committee on the Toxicological Effects of 
Methylmercury, National Academy Press, Washington, DC. Docket ID No. 
EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-3055.
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    In 2005, the EPA issued the Section 112(n) Revision Rule (70 FR 
15994) that revised the agency's December 2000 appropriate and 
necessary finding and removed coal- and oil-fired EGUs from the CAA 
section 112(c) source category list. The agency also promulgated the 
Clean Air Mercury Rule (CAMR) which established CAA section 111 
standards of performance for mercury emissions from EGUs. Several 
groups challenged these actions and on February 8, 2008, the D.C. 
Circuit Court vacated both the Section 112(n) Revision Rule and CAMR 
holding that the EPA had failed to comply with the requirements of CAA 
section 112(c)(9) for delisting source categories. New Jersey v. EPA, 
517 F.3d 574 (D.C. Cir. 2008).
    In May 2011, in conjunction with the proposed MATS, the EPA 
conducted additional technical analyses to reaffirm the appropriate and 
necessary finding, including peer-reviewed risk assessments on human 
health effects

[[Page 24423]]

associated with mercury and non-mercury HAP emissions from EGUs, 
focusing on risks to the most exposed and sensitive individuals in the 
population. These analyses found that mercury and non-mercury HAP 
emissions from EGUs remain a significant public health hazard and that 
EGUs are by far the largest U.S. anthropogenic source of mercury, 
selenium, hydrogen chloride, and hydrogen fluoride emissions, and a 
significant source of other metallic HAP emissions including arsenic, 
chromium, and nickel.\8\
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    \8\ Specifically, the EPA estimated that in 2005 (the most 
recent inventory year available during the MATS rulemaking), U.S. 
EGUs emitted approximately 50 percent of total domestic 
anthropogenic mercury emissions, 62 percent of total arsenic 
emissions, 39 percent of total cadmium emissions, 22 percent of 
total chromium emissions, 82 percent of total hydrogen chloride 
emissions, 62 percent of total hydrogen fluoride emissions, 28 
percent of total nickel emissions, and 83 percent of total selenium 
emissions. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-19914.
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    Between the proposed and final MATS rule, the EPA conducted peer 
reviews of the Mercury Risk Assessment \9\ and the approach for 
estimating inhalation cancer risk from two non-mercury metal HAP, and 
the agency also changed the input data for the non-mercury HAP risk 
assessment based on new data and information obtained during the public 
comment period. The revised Mercury Risk Assessment \10\ estimated that 
up to 29 percent of modeled watersheds potentially have sensitive 
populations at risk from exposure to mercury from U.S. EGUs, including 
up to 10 percent of modeled watersheds where deposition from U.S. EGUs 
alone leads to potential exposures that exceed the level above which 
there is increased risk of adverse health effects (i.e., the reference 
dose). See, e.g., 77 FR 9310-6. In addition, the revised inhalation 
risk assessment for non-mercury HAP \11\ of 16 facilities estimated a 
lifetime cancer risk \12\ for an oil-fired EGU facility of 20-in-1 
million, five coal-fired EGU facilities with cancer risks greater than 
1-in-1 million, and one coal-fired facility with cancer risks of 5-in-1 
million. See, e.g., 77 FR 9317-9. Further, qualitative analyses on 
ecosystem effects found that mercury emissions from U.S. EGUs 
contribute to adverse impacts on fish-eating birds and mammals and that 
acid gases contribute to environmental acidification and chronic non-
cancer (respiratory) toxicity. See, e.g., 77 FR 9362-3.
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    \9\ U.S. EPA. 2011. National-Scale Assessment of Mercury Risk to 
Populations with High Consumption of Self-caught Freshwater Fish In 
Support of the Appropriate and Necessary Finding for Coal- and Oil-
Fired Electric Generating Units. Office of Air Quality Planning and 
Standards. November. EPA-452/R-11-009. Docket ID. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-
0234-3057.
    \10\ U.S. EPA. 2011. Revised Technical Support Document: 
National-Scale Assessment of Mercury Risk to Populations with High 
Consumption of Self-caught Freshwater Fish In Support of the 
Appropriate and Necessary Finding for Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric 
Generating Units. Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards. 
November. EPA-452/R-11-009. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-
19913.
    \11\ U.S. EPA. 2011. Supplement to Non-mercury Case Study 
Chronic Inhalation Risk Assessment for the Utility MACT Appropriate 
and Necessary Analysis. Office of Air Quality Planning and 
Standards. November. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-19912.
    \12\ As described in the preamble to the proposed MATS (76 FR 
25011), the non-mercury risk assessments calculated the maximum 
individual risk (MIR) for each facility as the cancer risk 
associated with a continuous lifetime (24 hours per day, 7 days per 
week, and 52 weeks per year for a 70-year period) exposure to the 
maximum concentration at the centroid of an inhabited census block.
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    Moreover, the EPA concluded that in 2016, after implementation of 
other provisions of the CAA, HAP emissions from U.S. EGUs would still 
reasonably be anticipated to pose hazards to public health. See, e.g., 
77 FR 9362-3. Finally, the EPA stated that the only way to ensure 
permanent reductions in HAP emissions from U.S. EGUs and the associated 
risks to public health and the environment is through standards set 
under CAA section 112. 77 FR 9363.
    Based on the agency's updated analyses, a consideration of the peer 
reviews of the analyses, and public comments, the EPA affirmed the 
findings in the February 2012 final rule (77 FR 9304) that mercury and 
non-mercury HAP emissions from U.S. EGUs pose hazards to public health 
and found that it remains appropriate to regulate U.S. EGUs under CAA 
section 112. The EPA also concluded, at that time, that it remains 
appropriate to regulate U.S. EGUs under CAA section 112 because of the 
magnitude of mercury and non-mercury HAP emissions, environmental 
effects of mercury and certain non-mercury HAP emissions, and the 
availability of controls to reduce HAP emissions from EGUs. In 
addition, the EPA concluded that the hazards to public health from 
mercury and non-mercury HAP emissions from U.S. EGUs are reasonably 
anticipated to remain after imposition of the requirements of the CAA. 
The same is true for hazards to the environment. Thus, the agency 
confirmed that it is necessary to regulate U.S. EGUs under CAA section 
112. 77 FR 9311.
    After MATS was promulgated, industry, states, environmental 
organizations, and public health organizations challenged many aspects 
of the EPA's appropriate and necessary finding and the final MATS rule 
in the D.C. Circuit Court, and the Court denied all challenges. White 
Stallion Energy Center v. EPA, 748 F.3d 1222 (D.C. Cir. 2014). Some 
industry and state petitioners sought further review of the final MATS 
rule, and the Supreme Court granted certiorari to determine whether the 
EPA erred when it concluded that the appropriate and necessary finding 
under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) could be made without consideration of 
cost. On June 29, 2015, the Supreme Court ruled that the EPA acted 
unreasonably when it determined cost was irrelevant to the appropriate 
and necessary finding. Michigan v. EPA, 135 S. Ct. 2699 (2015). 
Specifically, the Supreme Court held that the agency must consider cost 
before deciding whether regulation under CAA section 112 is appropriate 
and necessary, noting also that it will be up to the agency ``to 
decide, within the limits of reasonable interpretation, how to account 
for cost.'' Michigan, 135 S. Ct. at 2711.

C. Proposed Supplemental Finding

    In response to the Supreme Court's direction, the EPA proposed two 
different approaches to incorporate cost into the appropriate and 
necessary finding. 80 FR 75025. The first--which the EPA identified as 
its preferred approach--evaluated the cost estimates in the RIA for the 
final MATS rule using several different metrics and weighed these costs 
against the previously identified advantages of regulating HAP 
emissions from EGUs--including the agency's prior conclusions about the 
significant hazards to public health and the environment associated 
with such emissions and the volume of HAP that would be reduced by 
regulation of EGUs under CAA section 112. In a second independent 
approach, the EPA proposed consideration of the formal benefit-cost 
analysis \13\ in the RIA for the

[[Page 24424]]

final MATS rule, which demonstrates that the benefits (monetized and 
non-monetized) of the rule are substantial and far outweigh the costs. 
Each of these approaches is discussed further below.
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    \13\ In this supplemental finding, we use the term ``formal 
benefit-cost analysis'' to refer to an economic analysis that 
attempts to quantify all significant consequences of an action in 
monetary terms in order to determine whether an action increases 
economic efficiency. In other words, it is a determination of 
whether the willingness to pay for an action by those advantaged by 
it exceeds the willingness to pay to avoid the action by those 
disadvantaged by it. Measuring willingness to pay in a common metric 
of economic value, like dollars, is called monetization, and it 
allows for such comparisons across individuals. Assuming that all 
consequences can be monetized, actions with positive net benefits 
(i.e., benefits exceed costs) improve economic efficiency. When 
there are technical limitations that prevent certain benefits or 
costs that may be of significant magnitude from being quantified or 
monetized, then information is provided describing those potentially 
important non-monetized benefits or costs. This usage is consistent 
with the definition of a benefit-cost analysis used in the economics 
literature and the EPA's Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analyses 
(``Guidelines'').''
    U.S. EPA. 2010. Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analyses. EPA-
240-R-10-001. National Center for Environmental Economics, Office of 
Policy. Washington, DC. December. Available at http://
yosemite.epa.gov/ee/epa/eerm.nsf/vwAN/EE-0568-50.pdf/$file/EE-0568-
50.pdf. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-20503.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In the preferred approach, the EPA considered whether the cost of 
compliance with MATS is reasonable, and whether a consideration of such 
costs, when weighed against, among other things, the substantial 
hazards to public health and the environment posed by HAP emissions 
from power plants, causes the agency to alter its conclusion that 
regulation is appropriate and necessary. The EPA explained that it 
preferred this approach to a formal benefit-cost analysis given the 
statutory objectives of CAA section 112, in particular Congress' 
determination that HAP emissions are inherently harmful, and the 
instruction from Congress to protect the most sensitive populations 
from those harms. See Legal Memorandum at 6-20. The EPA found that CAA 
section 112(n)(1)(A)'s emphasis on the required studies supported its 
interpretation that while cost is an important factor that it must 
consider in making the appropriate and necessary finding, it is one of 
several factors that must be considered and the statutory text does not 
support a conclusion that cost should be the predominant or overriding 
factor. See id. at 11-15. The EPA's preferred approach to considering 
cost allows the Administrator to weigh the full range of factors 
relevant to making a determination under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) of 
whether it is appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP emissions from 
EGUs. Moreover, because the Supreme Court's holding did not disturb the 
scientific assessments and conclusions made in the original appropriate 
and necessary finding, many of which were challenged and upheld by the 
D.C. Circuit in White Stallion, the Administrator concluded that the 
task on remand was to determine whether a consideration of cost caused 
her to alter her prior conclusion that it was appropriate to regulate 
HAP emissions from EGUs under CAA section 112. See 80 FR 75038; Legal 
Memorandum at 20.
    The agency further explained that, as a check on the conclusion 
that the cost of MATS is reasonable, the EPA considered the power 
industry's ability to comply with MATS and still perform its primary 
and unique function--to provide a reliable source of electricity at a 
reasonable cost to consumers.
    Specifically, the EPA considered several metrics to evaluate 
whether the estimated cost of compliance with MATS is reasonable for 
the power sector.\14\ First, the EPA evaluated the annual compliance 
costs as a percent of the revenue from the power sector's annual retail 
electricity sales.\15\ The EPA found that the $9.6 billion annual cost 
of MATS is a small fraction of the revenue from the sector's annual 
retail sales, which ranged from $277.2 billion in 2000 to a peak of 
$356.6 billion in 2008.\16\ See 80 FR 75033, Table 2. Thus, the 
projected annual cost for MATS represents between 2.7 and 3.5 percent 
of annual revenues from electricity sales from 2000 to 2011--a small 
fraction of the value of overall sales.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ As explained in the proposed Supplemental Finding and 
described in the final MATS RIA and supporting materials for the 
RIA, the $9.6 billion compliance cost is an estimate of the change 
in electricity power generation costs between a base case without 
MATS and a policy case with MATS. These compliance costs represent a 
projection of the increase in expenditures by EGUs required to serve 
a particular level of electricity demand as a result of MATS. The 
compliance cost includes capital, fuel, and other variable and 
operating costs and was projected in the final MATS RIA to be $9.6 
billion (2007 dollars) in 2015. The costs may be borne by 
electricity producers, or passed along to electricity consumers in 
the form of higher electricity prices.
    \15\ In the proposed supplemental finding, the analysis of 
annual compliance costs as a percent of the revenue from the power 
sector's annual retail electricity sales was referred to as a 
``sales test.''
    \16\ Unless otherwise noted, all dollar amounts reported in this 
section and elsewhere in this notice are expressed in 2007-dollar 
equivalents to be directly comparable to the estimates in the 2011 
final MATS RIA, which were expressed in 2007 dollars.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    A second way the EPA evaluated cost was to compare the annual 
capital expenditures due to MATS compliance to the range of variation 
in the power sector's annual capital expenditures between 2000 and 
2011. As noted in the proposed supplemental finding, this comparison is 
a relevant metric because capital costs represent largely irreversible 
investments that must be paid off regardless of future economic 
conditions. Moreover, additional capital expenditures needed to comply 
with MATS represented about 26 percent of the total annual compliance 
cost projected for 2015, further emphasizing the importance of 
considering capital expenditures. Based on two different sources of 
data, capital expenditures for the electric power sector generally 
increased from 2000 to 2011. See 80 FR 75034, Table 3. Despite the 
generally increasing trend, the data show substantial year-to-year 
variability in industry capital expenditures. The EPA found that the 
incremental capital expenditures of $2.4 billion estimated to be 
required for MATS compliance in 2015 represent a small fraction--about 
3.0 percent--of the power sector's overall capital expenditures in 
recent years and are well within the range of annual variability 
between 2000 and 2011. Even if power sector-level capital expenditures 
were to decline to 2004 levels, the lowest level observed during the 
2000 to 2011 period, the incremental capital expenditures estimated for 
MATS would represent about 5.9 percent, a level we also find to be 
reasonable for this sector.
    The third metric the EPA evaluated was the impact of MATS 
compliance cost on the retail price of electricity. Potential changes 
in retail electricity prices can be indicative of the ``cost'' of MATS, 
in this instance to consumers specifically, as opposed to the 
compliance cost to the power sector, which is borne collectively by EGU 
owners and electricity consumers. The MATS RIA estimated that 
relatively small changes in the average price of electricity would 
result from MATS compliance. The projected impact of MATS on 
electricity rates was 0.3 cents/kWh or 3.1 percent. Meanwhile, between 
2000 and 2011, changes in national average retail prices ranged from -
0.13 cents/kWh to as high as 0.52 cents/kWh. See 80 FR 75035, Table 4. 
Based on this analysis, the EPA found that the estimated MATS retail 
price impact is well within the range of price fluctuations in recent 
years.
    The agency then proposed that each of these three metrics 
independently demonstrates that the MATS compliance costs are 
reasonable, and that each metric supports the EPA's proposed 
determination that weighing this consideration of cost against the 
prior conclusions reached by the agency does not alter the previous 
finding that it is appropriate to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs.
    In addition to the analysis summarized above, the EPA recognized it 
was important to consider the ability of the power sector to comply 
with MATS and maintain a reliable supply of electricity. The agency's 
compliance modeling indicated that additional coal-fired capacity 
projected to retire as a result of MATS represented EGUs that are, on 
average, older and smaller units that are less frequently used. See 80 
FR 75036, Table 6. The analysis indicated that the vast majority of the 
generation capacity directly affected by MATS requirements would be 
able to absorb

[[Page 24425]]

the anticipated compliance costs and remain operational. In addition, 
an analysis of the impacts of expected retirements on electric 
reliability found that reserve margins could be maintained over a 3-
year MATS compliance period, indicating that the power sector would be 
able to comply with MATS while maintaining the capacity necessary to 
meet projected electricity demands. This determination that reliability 
and resource adequacy would not be adversely affected provided further 
support for the EPA's proposed determination that the cost of MATS is 
reasonable.
    The EPA then weighed the reasonable cost of the rule against a 
number of other factors, including the agency's prior conclusions about 
the significant hazards to public health and the environment, as 
discussed above in Section II.B, and the volume of HAP that would be 
reduced by regulation of EGUs under CAA section 112. Keeping in mind 
Congress' statutory goals in enacting CAA section 112, the EPA proposed 
to find that a consideration of the cost of compliance with MATS did 
not outweigh the rule's many advantages and, therefore, does not cause 
the EPA to alter the prior determination that it is appropriate and 
necessary to regulate EGUs under CAA section 112.
    In the proposed supplemental finding, the EPA also presented a 
second independent basis for concluding that consideration of cost 
supports affirmation of the finding that it is appropriate and 
necessary to regulate HAP emissions from coal- and oil-fired EGUs. The 
EPA explained that the formal benefit-cost analysis in the RIA for the 
final MATS rule, although not required to support the appropriate 
finding, also demonstrates that the benefits (monetized and non-
monetized) of MATS are substantial and far outweigh the costs. 
Specifically, the EPA estimated that the final MATS would yield total 
annual monetized benefits (in 2007 dollars) of between $37 billion to 
$90 billion using a 3-percent discount rate and $33 billion to $81 
billion using a 7-percent discount rate in addition to many categories 
of unquantified benefits in comparison to the projected $9.6 billion in 
annual costs. The benefit-cost analysis thus supports the finding that 
it is appropriate to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs.
    Using both of these independent approaches, the EPA proposed to 
find that it remains appropriate to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs 
after considering costs. As such, the EPA proposed to find that 
including a consideration of cost does not alter the agency's previous 
determination that it is appropriate to regulate HAP emissions from 
EGUs under CAA section 112 and that coal- and oil-fired EGUs are 
properly listed pursuant to CAA section 112(c).

III. Final Supplemental Finding and Affirmation

A. Supplemental Analyses Conducted in Response to Comments

    A number of groups representing states, tribes, industries, 
environmental organizations, health organizations, and others submitted 
comments on the proposed supplemental finding. The EPA has considered 
the comments and provided detailed responses to the significant 
comments either below in Section IV of this final notice or in the RTC 
document for this action.
    The EPA has taken all the submitted comments into consideration in 
the preparation of this final supplemental finding. The EPA received 
comments that were both supportive and critical of both proposed 
approaches to considering cost. The EPA has carefully evaluated these 
comments and responded to them, as outlined in detail in Section IV 
below.
    The EPA did not receive any public comments that caused the agency 
to conclude that the interpretation of the statute or the approaches 
for consideration of cost that were detailed in the proposed action 
were in error. Therefore, in this final action, the EPA continues to 
rely on the analyses contained in the proposed supplemental finding and 
in the companion Legal Memorandum. Specifically, in this final 
consideration of cost, the EPA continues to rely on the ``Consideration 
of Cost to the Power Sector'' metrics discussed in Section IV.A of the 
proposed supplemental finding. 80 FR 75032. These metrics are 
summarized above in Section II.C. The metrics include an evaluation of 
the cost of MATS compliance in comparison to the power sector's 
revenues from retail sales of electricity. In addition, the EPA 
continues to rely on the metric comparing the impact of MATS on the 
retail price of electricity to historical fluctuations of the average 
retail price of electricity. The EPA also stands by the evaluation of 
resource adequacy that was presented in the final MATS rulemaking and 
in the proposed supplemental finding. We explain here in this final 
notice--and in the RTC document--the decision not to alter these 
analyses for this final action.
    While the agency has not changed its approaches to consideration of 
cost, the EPA has, in response to comments, supplemented the proposed 
metrics by incorporating additional information considering annual 
operating expenses to this industry. Specifically, the EPA added 
information on historical total production expenditures to the 
historical total capital expenditures in order to estimate total 
capital and production expenditures for the power sector from 2000 to 
2011. The agency conducted this analysis to provide additional 
perspective to the projected cost information by looking at a broader 
range of power industry costs beyond the capital cost comparison 
conducted at proposal. The additional analysis reinforces the EPA's 
conclusion that the cost of compliance with MATS is reasonable.
    Consistent with the proposal's focus on sector-level analysis, the 
EPA obtained historical information on power sector production costs. 
These production costs, which include operation and maintenance costs, 
fuel costs, and fixed costs were obtained from ABB Velocity Suite, a 
private sector firm that provides data and analytical services for the 
energy sector. The production costs were added to the two separate 
estimates of annual capital expenditures that were provided in the 
proposed supplemental finding (See Table 3, 80 FR 75034) in order to 
provide an estimate of historical trends in total capital and 
production costs faced by the power sector.\17\ The EPA then, as it had 
done in the proposal, compared year-to-year changes in the total cost 
estimates to the projected total compliance cost estimate for the final 
MATS rule in 2015. The total production costs along with the electric 
power sector's capital expenditures are provided below in Table 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ For power sector-level capital expenditures, the EPA relies 
on two sets of information: The U.S. Census Bureau's Annual Capital 
Expenditures Survey and SNL, a private sector firm that provides 
data and analytical services. As noted in the proposed supplemental 
finding, while each dataset has limitations, the estimates from each 
correspond to one another reasonably well. However, we present both 
sets of information to better depict capital expenditures in the 
power sector.

[[Page 24426]]



                                                 Table 2--Total Capital and Production Expenditures for the Electric Power Sector, 2000 to 2011
                                                                                     [Billions 2007 dollars]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              Total                                           Total
                                                             Capital         Capital       production         Total                       expenditures
                                                          expenditures    expenditures    expenditures    expenditures     Change from     (with U.S.      Change from
                          Year                             (SNL-based)    (U.S. census-     (velocity      (with SNL-     previous year   census-based    previous year
                                                               \1\         based) \2\     suite-based)    based capital                      capital
                                                                                               \3\        expenditures)                   expenditures)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2000...................................................            51.8            62.5           102.3           154.2                           164.9
2001...................................................            70.1            85.9           106.9           177.0            22.8           192.9            28.0
2002...................................................            56.4            66.4            93.7           150.1           -26.9           160.0           -32.9
2003...................................................            43.8            52.7           105.2           149.0            -1.1           157.9            -2.2
2004...................................................            40.4            45.0           111.6           152.0             3.0           156.6            -1.3
2005...................................................            46.7            50.0           133.6           180.2            28.2           183.5            27.0
2006...................................................            57.6            61.6           127.5           185.0             4.8           189.1             5.6
2007...................................................            66.9            73.9           133.5           200.4            15.3           207.4            18.3
2008...................................................            78.1            83.5           147.6           225.7            25.4           231.1            23.7
2009...................................................            76.6            87.9           117.3           193.9           -31.8           205.2           -25.9
2010...................................................            75.1            79.8           126.1           201.2             7.3           205.9             0.7
2011...................................................            79.6            79.2           121.3           200.9            -0.3           200.5            -5.4
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Source: SNL, accessed 10/14/15.
\2\ Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Annual Capital Expenditures Survey, http://www.census.gov/econ/aces/index.html, accessed 10/14/15.
\3\ Source: Velocity Suite ``Total Production Costs'' dataset. This dataset compiles operations and maintenance costs, fuel costs, and fixed costs reported in the FERC Form 1, RUS 12, and EIA
  412. For plants that do not report cost information, production costs are estimated by Velocity Suite.
Note: Dollar figures adjusted to 2007 dollars using the Gross Domestic Product--Implicit Price Deflator, https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/GDPDEF series/GDPDEF, accessed 10/14/15. Changes may
  not sum due to independent rounding.

    The estimated $9.6 billion total annual cost of the rule represents 
the total incremental annual capital and production costs to the sector 
for 2015. This incremental cost due to MATS requirements represents a 
small fraction of the power sector's annual capital and production 
expenditures in recent years, as illustrated in Table 2. For example, 
when compared to historical total expenditures that rely upon SNL-based 
estimates of capital expenditures, the total 2015 MATS cost represents 
about 4.3 percent of total expenditures in 2008 to 6.4 percent of total 
expenditures in both 2002 and 2003. With respect to historical total 
expenditures that rely upon Census Bureau-based estimates of capital 
expenditures, the total 2015 MATS cost represents about 4.2 percent of 
total expenditures in 2008 to 6.1 percent of total expenditures in 
2004.
    Additionally, the EPA notes that, similar to the capital 
expenditures analysis set forth in the proposed supplemental finding, 
the projected $9.6 billion in incremental capital plus production costs 
is well within the range of annual variability in costs in general over 
the 2000 to 2011 period. For example, during this period, the largest 
year-to-year decrease in power sector-level capital and production 
expenditures ranged from $31.8 billion (from 2008 to 2009, according to 
the sum of SNL-based capital expenditure and Velocity Suite-based 
production expenditure estimates) to $32.9 billion (from 2001 to 2002, 
according to the sum of U.S. Census-based capital expenditure and 
Velocity Suite-based production expenditure estimates). The largest 
year-to-year increase in power sector-level capital and production 
expenditures in this period ranged from $28.0 billion (from 2000 to 
2001, according to the sum of U.S. Census-based capital expenditure and 
Velocity Suite-based production expenditure estimates) to $28.2 billion 
(from 2004 to 2005, according to the sum of SNL-based capital 
expenditure and Velocity Suite-based production expenditure estimates).
    This wide range indicates substantial year-to-year variability in 
industry expenditures, and the projected $9.6 billion increase in total 
expenditures in 2015 attributable to MATS falls well within this 
variability. Therefore, the supplemental analysis that is responsive to 
commenters' suggestion provides additional support for the conclusion 
that the cost of MATS is reasonable when weighed against historical 
metrics.

B. Basis for the Final Supplemental Finding

    As directed by the Supreme Court, the EPA has now considered cost 
in its evaluation of whether or not it is appropriate to regulate coal- 
and oil-fired EGUs under CAA section 112. The EPA's approach to 
considering cost under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) is based on the 
interpretation of the relevant CAA provisions as described in the Legal 
Memorandum accompanying the proposed supplemental finding. As explained 
below in Section IV.C, the EPA stands by the interpretations presented 
in that document in this final action.
    As previously mentioned in Section III.A, the EPA, in this final 
action, is continuing to rely on the same cost metrics that were 
presented in the proposed supplemental finding--supplemented by an 
additional evaluation of MATS compliance cost estimates in the context 
of total capital and production costs from the 2000 to 2011 period that 
simply confirms the proposed findings. No commenter provided any 
evidence or information that convinced the EPA that the preferred 
approach to consideration of cost is inadequate or unreasonable. Thus, 
the EPA concludes in this final action that the preferred approach to 
considering cost in the appropriate and necessary finding is to weigh 
the cost of compliance with section 112(d) standards against, among 
other things, the volume of HAP emitted by EGUs and the associated 
hazards to public health and the environment. See e.g., 77 FR 9310-9364 
(Section III. Appropriate and Necessary Finding). Specifically, the EPA 
has evaluated several metrics that are relevant to the power sector to 
determine whether the estimated cost of compliance with MATS is 
reasonable. The EPA has also considered the impact of the cost of MATS 
compliance on the power sector's ability to continue to reliably 
generate, transmit and distribute electricity, at a reasonable cost to 
consumers. These analyses and the conclusions the EPA draws from the 
analyses were summarized above in Sections II.C and III.A and were

[[Page 24427]]

described in detail in the proposed supplemental finding. See 80 FR 
75031-39 (Section IV. Consideration of Cost). The EPA concludes, after 
considering all significant comments, that these technical analyses are 
reasonable evaluations of cost and that each supports a conclusion that 
the cost of MATS is reasonable. Id. The agency also finds that the 
power industry is able to comply with MATS while continuing to perform 
its primary and unique function--to provide consumers with a reliable 
source of electricity at a reasonable price--which further confirms 
that the cost of MATS is reasonable. Id. The supplemental analysis 
conducted in response to comments further confirms that the cost of 
MATS is reasonable based on historical fluctuations. See Section III.A 
above.
    The EPA also continues to rely on the results of the formal 
benefit-cost analysis contained in the RIA for MATS as we received no 
public comments that convinced us that this analysis is an insufficient 
approach to considering costs. Although the EPA does not view formal 
benefit-cost analysis as required to support the appropriate finding, 
the final RIA demonstrates that the benefits (monetized and non-
monetized) of MATS are substantial and far outweigh the costs. In fact, 
the monetized benefits exceed the cost by 3 to 9 times. Thus, for this 
final action, the EPA finds that the formal benefit-cost analysis in 
the final MATS RIA provides an independent basis to support the finding 
that a consideration of cost does not cause the agency to alter its 
determination that it is appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP 
emissions from EGUs. This conclusion is explained in greater detail in 
the proposed supplemental finding. See 80 FR 75039-41 (Section V. 
Consideration of Benefit-Cost Analysis in the MATS RIA).
    The EPA further notes that the Supreme Court's decision in Michigan 
neither called into question nor reversed the portions of the D.C. 
Circuit Court's opinion in White Stallion that unanimously rejected all 
other challenges to the appropriate and necessary interpretation and 
finding (the lone dissenting opinion addressed only the issue of cost 
on which the Supreme Court granted certiorari). Per the Supreme Court's 
instruction, the EPA has reversed its prior determination that cost 
need not be considered in deciding whether regulation is appropriate 
and has taken steps to add cost considerations to its analysis under 
CAA section 112(n)(1)(A). Aside from the considerations of cost 
described above, the EPA is not revisiting, in this final action, any 
other aspects of the final MATS rule or legal interpretations 
established therein. Many other challenges to the final MATS rule were 
unanimously rejected in White Stallion and left undisturbed by the 
Supreme Court's decision in Michigan. This action does not provide an 
opportunity for stakeholders to re-litigate issues previously decided 
in White Stallion or to raise new objections to the MATS rule that 
could have been, but were not, raised in that case.

C. Affirmation of the Appropriate and Necessary Finding

    The Administrator has weighed the cost of MATS against other 
relevant considerations in determining that it remains appropriate and 
necessary to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs. These other 
considerations include prior conclusions reached regarding the 
significant hazards to public health and the environment from HAP 
emissions from EGUs, and the agency's prior determination that these 
hazards will not be addressed through imposition of the requirements of 
the CAA. The Administrator's conclusion that, on balance, these factors 
support the appropriate finding is presented in the proposed 
supplemental finding, see 80 FR 75038-39 (Section IV.D. Incorporating 
Cost Into the Appropriate Finding). The supplemental analysis presented 
in this final notice and conducted in response to comments further 
supports the conclusion that the cost of compliance with MATS is 
reasonable and, thus, the Administrator determines that the 
supplemental analysis supports and does not alter the results of the 
proposed finding. Based on these conclusions, the EPA confirms that the 
preferred cost approach provides an independent basis to support the 
determination that a consideration of cost does not cause the agency to 
alter its previous conclusion that regulation of HAP emissions from 
EGUs is appropriate and necessary.
    The EPA also concludes that the formal benefit-cost analysis 
contained in the RIA for MATS provides an independent basis to support 
the finding that a consideration of cost does not cause us to alter our 
determination that it is appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP 
emissions from EGUs. This conclusion is explained in detail in the 
proposed supplemental finding. See 80 FR 75039-41 (Section V. 
Consideration of Benefit-Cost Analysis in the MATS RIA). Although the 
EPA does not view formal benefit-cost analysis as required to support 
the appropriate finding, the final RIA demonstrates that the benefits 
(monetized and non-monetized) of MATS are substantial and far outweigh 
the costs. Id. In fact, the monetized benefits exceed the cost by 3 to 
9 times.
    Based on all of these considerations, the Administrator finds that 
the preferred approach and the benefit-cost analysis in the RIA for 
MATS each provide alternative independent bases to support the 
conclusion that a consideration of cost does not cause the agency to 
alter its previous determination that it is appropriate to regulate HAP 
emissions from EGUs. For all these reasons, the Administrator affirms 
that it is appropriate and necessary to regulate coal- and oil-fired 
EGUs under CAA section 112 and that these sources are properly listed 
as an affected source category under CAA section 112(c).

IV. Public Comments on the Proposed Supplemental Finding

    This final action is in response to the Supreme Court's ruling that 
the agency erred by not considering cost in the initial determination 
that regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs is appropriate under CAA 
section 112. In the proposed supplemental finding, the EPA provided 
detailed information on how the agency has added such a consideration 
of cost and further explained why including such consideration does not 
alter the agency's previous determination. The EPA specifically 
requested comment on the proposed supplemental finding and on the 
companion Legal Memorandum.
    The EPA received a number of comment submissions from groups 
representing states, tribes, industries, environmental organizations, 
health organizations, and others. The EPA has taken all the submitted 
comments into consideration in preparing this final supplemental 
finding. All of the comments have been summarized and the EPA has 
provided detailed responses to the significant comments either here in 
this final notice or in the RTC document for the supplemental finding 
available in the rulemaking docket.

A. Comments on Considerations of Cost

    This Section of the notice addresses comments and responses to the 
EPA's preferred approach to consideration and incorporation of costs, 
analytical issues such as the use of compliance costs for the entire 
power sector, the use of the compliance cost and impact estimates from 
the final MATS RIA, and responses to comments on the cost metrics used 
to

[[Page 24428]]

evaluate the reasonableness of the MATS compliance costs.
1. The EPA's Preferred Approach to Considering and Incorporating Costs 
in Its Appropriate and Necessary Finding
    Comment: Numerous commenters supported the EPA's preferred approach 
to considering cost and asserted that the approach is ``well-suited'' 
to fulfilling the agency's obligation under the statute and the 
Michigan decision. These commenters also approved of the four cost 
metrics selected by the agency to evaluate the cost reasonableness of 
the compliance costs--revenues, capital expenditures, retail 
electricity rates, and impact on reliability. Many commenters stated 
that these are relevant measures for evaluating costs to the utility 
sector, and another pointed out that these are the types of metrics 
that are taken into consideration by electric companies.
    Moreover, many commenters strongly supported the EPA's preferred 
approach of weighing a consideration of cost against the many 
advantages of regulating HAP emissions from EGUs already identified by 
the agency. Several federally-recognized Indian tribes and inter-tribal 
organizations commented in support of the agency's methodology of 
weighing the hazards of HAP emissions from EGUs to public health and 
the environment against the costs of compliance. These commenters 
emphasized that this method of analysis would allow for consideration 
of important tribal interests and threats to longstanding Indian 
cultural traditions and critical social practices of fishing and fish 
consumption. Moreover, the tribal commenters also added that a benefit-
cost analysis would not fully account for the MATS rule's impact on the 
tribes and pointed to the United States' treaty obligations to protect 
tribal rights and the resources of American Indians and tribes as an 
important consideration supporting the finding. Commenters supporting 
the EPA's preferred cost approach pointed out that the statute and the 
Michigan decision do not require the Administrator to perform a 
benefit-cost analysis in order to adequately consider cost and make a 
determination that it is appropriate and necessary to regulate EGUs for 
HAP emissions. These commenters cited the lack of statutory text 
requiring such an analysis or monetization of benefits before those 
benefits may be considered by the Administrator, as well as the fact 
that limiting the agency's appropriate determination to this framework 
would thwart goals clearly identified by Congress--such as limiting 
grave harms associated with pollutants that Congress had already deemed 
hazardous.
    Other commenters, however, claimed that the EPA's preferred 
approach to considering cost for purposes of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) 
does not rationally balance the costs of the rule against the public 
health and environmental harms previously identified. Those commenters 
acknowledged that the Supreme Court's decision in Michigan did not 
require the EPA to perform a ``formal cost-benefit analysis,'' in order 
to satisfy the agency's obligation to consider cost as part of its CAA 
section 112(n)(1)(A) appropriate and necessary finding, but they argue 
that any rational balancing necessarily requires the EPA to compare the 
costs of compliance with the rule to the quantified and monetized 
benefits of the rule. One commenter claimed that because it was the 
EPA's position in the proposed supplemental finding that ``the 
significant hazards to public health and the environment from HAP 
emitted by EGUs (and the substantial reductions in HAP emissions 
achieved by MATS. . .) should be weighed against the costs of 
compliance,'' 80 FR 75028, that EPA had ``acknowledge[d]'' that its 
task was to assess whether the rule's benefits outweigh the costs. 
Another commenter argued that Michigan required such a comparison, 
based on the portion of the decision which stated that ``[o]ne would 
not say that it is even rational, never mind `appropriate,' to impose 
billions of dollars in economic costs in return for a few dollars in 
health or environmental benefits.'' 135 S. Ct. 2699, 2707 (U.S. 2015). 
The commenter alleged that the Supreme Court therefore required the EPA 
to weigh the rule's annual compliance costs of $9.6 billion against the 
monetized benefits from reducing HAP alone (not other pollutants) and 
determine whether the rule has positive net benefits (i.e., benefits 
exceed costs), in order to satisfy its obligation to consider cost 
under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A). Similarly, another commenter noted that 
the EPA's Guidelines (U.S. EPA, 2010) provide that the ``foundation'' 
for a benefit-cost analysis is ``that a policy's net benefits to 
society be positive.''
    Response: The EPA maintains that its preferred approach, where 
costs are considered in light of the significant hazards to public 
health and the environment posed by HAP emissions from EGUs, is 
consistent with the statute and the Michigan decision. CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A) states that ``the Administrator shall regulate [EGUs] . . 
. if the Administrator finds such regulation is appropriate and 
necessary.'' The Supreme Court's directive to the agency was to 
consider cost when making this initial decision, but the Court 
explicitly stated that ``[i]t will be up to the Agency to decide (as 
always, within the limits of reasonable interpretation) how to account 
for cost.'' 135 S. Ct. at 2711. Given the broad discretion afforded the 
Administrator by both the statute and the Supreme Court's decision in 
Michigan, the agency reasonably interpreted CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) to 
require the Administrator to apply her expert judgment in weighing 
several considerations in order to determine whether it is appropriate 
and necessary to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs.
    As discussed above in Section II.C and III.A, the agency evaluated 
the reasonableness of the regulation's cost of compliance by comparing 
that cost to metrics relevant to the utility sector: revenues, 
expenditures (including capital and production costs), and retail 
electricity rates, and also the impact that compliance with the CAA 
section 112(d) standards would have on the power sector's ability to 
provide a reliable source of electricity. After concluding the costs of 
MATS are reasonable based on these metrics, the agency confirmed that 
the industry could comply with MATS without unreasonably increasing 
electricity prices or undermining the reliability of the electric grid.
    The Administrator has taken this consideration of cost and weighed 
it against the other findings that were part of the EPA's prior 
evaluation of whether regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs is 
appropriate and necessary. See Section II.B above. The prior record 
supporting the original appropriate and necessary finding includes the 
agency's prior conclusions, based on the scientific evidence, that HAP 
emissions from EGUs pose significant hazards to public health and the 
environment and the conclusion that those emissions will not be 
addressed through imposition of other requirements of the CAA. The EPA 
also previously concluded that EGUs are by far the largest remaining 
source of mercury, selenium, hydrogen chloride, and hydrogen fluoride 
emissions, accounting for half or more of all U.S. anthropogenic 
emissions of such HAP, and that EGUs contribute a considerable 
percentage of all U.S. anthropogenic emissions of arsenic, chromium, 
nickel, and other metallic HAP emissions. The agency also confirmed the 
availability of controls to reduce these HAP emissions from EGUs. In 
addition, the agency found that MATS would achieve significant 
reductions of EGU emissions of HAP and a failure to regulate would 
result in continued emissions of significant

[[Page 24429]]

volumes of HAP emissions without any requirement to reduce or monitor 
those emissions. The finding also documented the persistent nature of 
HAP such as mercury, which, once emitted, can be re-emitted in the 
future, thereby resulting in continued contribution to mercury 
deposition and associated health and environmental hazards. In making 
the finding, the EPA noted the statutory goal of reducing the inherent 
hazards associated with HAP emissions and reducing the risks posed by 
such emissions, including risks to the most exposed and sensitive 
members of the population. 80 FR 75038. Based on all of these factors, 
the Administrator finds that, after considering cost, it remains 
appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs.
    Not only does the agency's preferred approach comport with the 
statute and the Michigan decision, it also has the advantage of 
allowing the Administrator to consider the full range of factors 
relevant to the appropriate and necessary determination. Nothing in the 
statute or in Michigan requires the EPA to ignore advantages of 
regulation that cannot be represented by monetary values. The agency's 
preferred approach permits the Administrator to weigh impacts to 
society that are not easy, or in some cases are impossible, to quantify 
or monetize, but are no less real than any other advantage of 
regulation.\18\ For example, the Administrator has taken into account 
distributional concerns (established as part of the agency's risk 
assessments performed for the prior affirmation of the appropriate and 
necessary finding) that found more severe risks from EGU HAP emissions 
to the most sensitive individuals, particularly subsistence fishers. 
Indeed, the EPA's Guidelines (U.S. EPA, 2010), cited by commenters who 
insist a benefit-cost analysis or some showing of economic ``net 
positive benefit'' of regulation is required under CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A), explicitly acknowledges the limitations of purely 
economic analyses. ``It is important to note that economic analysis is 
but one component in the decision-making process . . . Other factors 
that may influence decision makers include enforceability, technical 
feasibility, affordability, political concerns, and ethics, to name but 
a few.'' \19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ Though not explicitly addressed at proposal, the interests 
raised by the federally-recognized Indian tribes and inter-tribal 
organizations--such as the cultural impacts to tribes and the 
furtherance of the United States' treaty obligations to tribes--are 
an example of the type of societal value that cannot be monetized. 
The Administrator recognizes the importance of such interests and, 
though they are not necessary in affirming the finding here, only 
weigh in favor of the Administrator's conclusion that it remains 
appropriate and necessary to regulate EGUs for HAP emissions.
    \19\ See Guidelines at p. 1-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Moreover, the EPA notes that most commenters opposed to the EPA's 
preferred approach appear to dismiss outright the advantages of 
regulating HAP emissions, including the EPA's assessment, as 
articulated in the Legal Memorandum, that such regulation furthers the 
goal of CAA section 112 to obtain prompt, permanent, and ongoing 
reductions in significant volumes of HAP emissions that pose hazards to 
public health and/or the environment. No commenter has demonstrated 
that any of the HAP that are emitted from EGUs are chemically different 
than HAP emitted from other stationary sources or provided any other 
support for a conclusion that the inherent risks associated with HAP 
emissions that were acknowledged by Congress are somehow inapplicable 
to HAP emissions from EGUs.
    Instead, these commenters dismiss the agency's preferred approach 
without much analysis and conclude that the only rational consideration 
of cost is a bare comparison of the rule's costs of compliance with its 
monetized HAP-specific benefits, and the only way the EPA may find 
regulation to be appropriate and necessary under CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A) is if that comparison results in a ``positive net 
benefit.'' The EPA disagrees that a benefit-cost analysis, particularly 
one that only accounts for monetized HAP specific benefits, or a 
finding of an economic positive net benefit, is required by CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A) to determine whether regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs 
is appropriate and necessary, nor does the agency agree that such an 
analysis is the better approach.
    The Supreme Court explicitly declined to mandate that the 
Administrator perform a benefit-cost analysis to satisfy her obligation 
to consider cost under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A). Specifically, the 
Court stated, ``We . . . do not hold that the law unambiguously 
required the Agency, when making this preliminary estimate, to conduct 
a formal cost-benefit analysis in which each advantage and disadvantage 
is assigned a monetary value.'' 135 S. Ct. at 2711 (emphasis added). 
Some commenters nonetheless insist that the Supreme Court intended the 
EPA's consideration of cost to be circumscribed to a comparison with 
monetized benefits, and specifically HAP-specific monetized benefits, 
because the Court proffered one scenario of when regulation would not 
be appropriate, where a rule would impose ``billions of dollars in 
economic cost in return for a few dollars in health or environmental 
benefits.'' 135 S. Ct. at 2707. The Court's identification in dicta of 
one hypothetical, portrayed in the extreme for emphasis, does not 
establish a statutorily required formula by which the EPA must consider 
cost, particularly when the Court explicitly held, ``[i]t will be up to 
the Agency to decide (as always, within the limits of reasonable 
interpretation) how to account for cost.'' 135 S. Ct. at 2711. There 
is, thus, no basis for commenters' assertion that a formal benefit-cost 
test is the only permissible way for the agency to consider cost.
    We note that, in insisting that the Administrator is required to 
perform a benefit-cost analysis to satisfy her obligation to consider 
cost, the commenters also assert that the EPA may not rely on co-
benefits associated with reductions in non-HAP emissions in weighing 
the advantages and disadvantages of regulation under CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A).\20\ Under the agency's preferred approach, however, the 
EPA did not consider co-benefit impacts at all. As summarized above in 
Section II.B, the public health and environmental risks from mercury 
and non-mercury HAP emissions from EGUs are significant, and it is 
these risks, not co-benefits associated with reductions in ancillary 
emissions, that inform the Administrator's finding that it is 
appropriate to regulate under the preferred approach.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \20\ We disagree with commenters' position regarding the proper 
way to conduct a formal benefit-cost analysis and address the 
comments on this issue below in Section IV.B.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, while the EPA disagrees that section 112(n)(1)(A) in any 
way requires the Administrator to determine that regulation will have 
monetized positive ``net benefits'' to society, the record amply 
demonstrates that the advantages of MATS for society do in fact 
outweigh the disadvantages. The Administrator found that regulation of 
HAP emissions from EGUs has many advantages, chief among them is 
furthering Congress' goal of protecting the public, including sensitive 
populations, from risks posed by HAP emissions by reducing the volume 
of, and thus, the exposure to, those harmful pollutants. In light of 
the risk findings and the determination that the regulations are cost 
reasonable and will not impair the power sector's primary function of 
providing reliable electricity at a reasonable cost to consumers, the 
Administrator concludes that ``the significant advantages of

[[Page 24430]]

regulating these emissions outweigh the costs of regulation.'' See 80 
FR 75039. We agree that the appropriate and necessary finding requires 
the Administrator to determine that regulating HAP emissions from EGUs 
will, on the whole, be beneficial as opposed to detrimental to society. 
But the agency does not agree that whether a regulation is beneficial 
must be determined by weighing only those considerations that can be 
monetized. There are many societal values--such as protecting the most 
vulnerable among us--that could never be reduced to a monetary value. 
In sum, there is no basis to conclude that the finding requires the EPA 
to show that regulation of EGUs under CAA section 112 provides greater 
monetized benefits, much less HAP-specific monetized benefits, than 
costs.
    Comment: Several commenters stated that the EPA's finding that 
regulation of EGUs is ``appropriate and necessary'' after consideration 
of a number of factors is arbitrary and capricious because the EPA's 
alleged balancing of several factors is ``indecipherable,'' and because 
commenters assert that the agency lists the factors it considered 
without explaining the relative weight of each factor, and how that 
weighing supports the agency's finding.
    The commenters alleged that, in the proposed supplemental finding, 
the EPA sets out the factors that it has considered and then declares 
``by fiat'' that the regulation is appropriate, without comparing the 
significance of the factors on either side or explaining how the 
different factors relate to one another. One commenter stated that, 
even if the EPA had discretion to use an approach like the multi-factor 
balancing one, the agency ``must cogently explain why it has exercised 
its discretion in a given manner,'' citing Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. 
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 48-49 (U.S. 1983). 
Similarly, another commenter alleged that, by failing to articulate and 
explain its decision, the agency makes meaningful comment on its 
conclusion impossible, citing Appalachian Power Co. v. EPA, 249 F.3d 
1032, 1055 (D.C. Cir. 2001).
    Response: It is well within the bounds of the EPA's authority to 
interpret CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) as directing the Administrator to 
exercise her discretion in making a determination based on the 
consideration of a number of factors, including cost, as to whether it 
is appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs. 
Commenters took issue with the use of the EPA's method of analysis, but 
the approach the agency has taken here, which sets out the many 
relevant factors, including cost, the Administrator weighed and 
considered, is a reasonable and fitting response to Congress' open-
ended instruction to the Administrator to determine whether a 
regulation of EGUs is ``appropriate and necessary.''
    As noted by the D.C. Circuit Court, ``[a]gencies routinely employ 
multi-factor standards when discharging their statutory duties, and we 
have never hesitated to uphold their decisions when adequately 
explained.'' PDK Labs. v. DEA, 438 F.3d 1184, 1194 (D.C. Cir. 2006). 
Moreover, a totality-of-the-circumstances approach can be particularly 
appropriate when a statute confers broad discretionary authority. See, 
e.g., Catawba Cty. v. EPA, 571 F.3d 20, 39 (D.C. Cir. 2009); Chippewa & 
Flambeau Improvement Co. v. FERC, 325 F.3d 353, 358 (D.C. Cir. 2003) 
(noting, ``[b]y enacting the ``necessary or appropriate'' standard [in 
section 309 of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 825h], the Congress 
invested the Commission with significant discretion,'' and affirming 
FERC's use of a balancing of relevant factors as reasoned decision 
making). Here, CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) provides the broad directive 
that the Administrator shall regulate HAP emissions from EGUs under 
section 112 if she finds that such regulation is appropriate and 
necessary after considering the results of the CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) 
study. Michigan establishes that the Administrator must also consider 
the costs of regulation as part of her determination, but the Court's 
directive to ``pay[] attention to the advantages and disadvantages'' of 
regulation supports the EPA's choice to employ an approach that weighs 
a number of factors before reaching a conclusion.
    We also disagree with the commenters who suggest the proposed 
notice failed to explain and articulate the basis for the finding. The 
Supreme Court has said that a rule will be found to be arbitrary and 
capricious ``if the agency has relied on factors which Congress has not 
intended it to consider, entirely failed to consider an important 
aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for its decision that 
runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or is so implausible 
that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of 
agency expertise.'' State Farm, 463 U.S. at 43 (U.S. 1983). Further, an 
agency is required to give ``some definitional content'' to vague 
statutory terms by ``defining the criteria it is applying,'' because a 
refusal to do so is equivalent to ``simply saying no without 
explanation.'' Pearson v. Shalala, 164 F.3d 650, 660 (D.C. Cir. 1999). 
And finally, as cited by commenters, the courts have also held that the 
judicial branch cannot ``be compelled to guess at the theory underlying 
the agency's action.'' Appalachian Power Co. v. EPA, 249 F.3d 1032, 
1055 (D.C. Cir. 2001).
    But here, the EPA has not relied on factors that Congress has 
prohibited it to consider, nor have commenters demonstrated that there 
is an aspect to the problem that the EPA has ignored. There is no 
question as to the theory underlying the agency's action; the agency 
has given meaning to its understanding of the appropriate and necessary 
determination by laying out all of the many factors and criteria that 
it considered based on a thorough examination of the statute in light 
of the Michigan decision. See 80 FR 75038-39 and Legal Memorandum. In 
choosing how to consider cost, the EPA took note of section 
112(n)(1)(A)'s silence on the question, and the Supreme Court's 
direction that on remand the agency was to reasonably interpret the 
statute to decide how to account for cost. 135 S.Ct. at 2711. 
Furthermore, the agency heeded the D.C. Circuit's previous decisions 
holding that in other statutory provisions where the EPA is required to 
consider cost, the agency is prohibited from adopting a standard where 
the cost of doing so would be ``exorbitant,'' ``excessive,'' or 
``unreasonable.'' See Legal Memorandum at 19 (citations omitted). The 
EPA also considered Congress' statement issued with the 1990 CAA 
Amendments that its goal ``has been to promote the public health and 
welfare and the productive capacity of our nation.'' 80 FR 75031 
(citing ``A Legislative History of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 
1990,'' Vol. II., p. 3187). Based on these considerations and 
consistent with the Supreme Court's direction in Michigan, the EPA 
developed an approach to considering cost that acknowledges the unique 
function of EGUs and their importance to the power grid. Specifically, 
the EPA looked to whether the cost of potential section 112(d) 
standards is reasonable and whether the standards can be implemented 
without impairing the industry's ability to provide reliable 
electricity at a reasonable cost to consumers.
    The EPA used four metrics to evaluate the cost reasonableness of 
MATS and concluded that the costs associated with MATS are consistent 
with historical costs incurred in the power sector. 80 FR 75033-36. The 
EPA also confirmed that the power sector can reasonably absorb the 
compliance costs associated with MATS without impairing its ability to 
perform its primary and unique function --the generation, transmission,

[[Page 24431]]

and distribution of reliable electricity at a reasonable cost, i.e., 
its ``productive capacity.'' 80 FR 75038. In addition, given Congress' 
directive in section 112(n)(1)(B) to examine the cost of mercury 
controls as part of the Mercury Study, and the Michigan court's 
implication of the relevance of section 112(n)(1)(B)'s reference to 
cost, the EPA also considered the declining cost of technologies 
available to control mercury, as well as the cost of controls for other 
HAP emissions from EGUs. 80 FR 75036-38. All of these cost metrics 
support a conclusion that the costs of MATS are reasonable.
    The commenters are also incorrect that the Administrator failed to 
provide any sense of the relative weight or importance of the different 
factors considered under the agency's preferred approach. Commenters 
complain that the Administrator's balancing of the factors against each 
other is ``indecipherable,'' but it seems instead that they simply 
disagree that the costs are reasonable, that HAP emissions from EGUs 
pose hazards to public health and the environment, that the finding can 
consider harms to the environment, and that there is any benefit to 
regulating HAP emissions. As explained above, we disagree with the 
commenters' interpretations and further note that the bright line tests 
and thresholds they appear to prefer are not required under the statute 
or the case law. The D.C. Circuit Court has found that ``[a]n agency is 
free to adopt a totality-of-the-circumstances test to implement a 
statute that confers broad authority, even if that test lacks a 
definite ``threshold'' or ``clear line of demarcation to define an 
open-ended term.'' '' Catawba Cty. v. EPA, 571 F.3d at 37 (citation 
omitted) (noting that ``EPA's use of a multi-factor analysis is not in 
and of itself unreasonable just because it lacks quantitative 
standards''). Rather than requiring a quantification of the weight of 
each factor, courts have affirmed balancing tests where the agency 
provides an explanation of the relative significance of its 
considerations. See PDK Labs. v. U.S. DEA, 438 F.3d at 1194 (finding 
that the Deputy Administrator's explanation that one piece of evidence 
was by itself sufficient to induce action was enough of an explanation 
of the relative importance of that evidence to her decision); Chippewa 
v. FERC, 325 F.3d at 357-359 (deferring to FERC's ``expert judgment'' 
in determining on a case-by-case basis whether a reservoir is 
``necessary or appropriate,'' where the Commission has made clear the 
emphasis it places on the positive impact on downstream generation).
    In its proposed supplemental finding and the Legal Memorandum, the 
EPA pointed out section 112(n)(1)(A)'s silence regarding the weight to 
be given to the relevant factors in determining whether it is 
``appropriate'' to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs. 80 FR 75030; Legal 
Memorandum at 19. Given this statutory silence, the EPA concluded that 
it was reasonable to consider the objectives of section 112 in deciding 
how to assign relative weight to the factors under consideration. See 
Legal Memorandum at 20. Taking note of Congress' determination in 
section 112 that HAP emissions are inherently harmful and the statutory 
goal of protecting the most sensitive populations from that harm, the 
agency interpreted ``section 112(n)(1) . . . not [to] support a 
conclusion that cost should be the predominant or overriding factor.'' 
80 FR 75030. Cost, as the agency explained, is one of the factors to be 
considered. The EPA further emphasized the relative importance of its 
consideration of the public health and environmental risks in its 
analysis by noting that ``[i]f EPA were to conclude, prior to 
considering costs, that [HAP emissions from EGUs] posed no risk or that 
such risks had already been addressed by other provisions of the CAA 
(most notably the Acid Rain Program), a decision that regulation is not 
appropriate could be made without considering cost. Yet, the statutory 
focus on protecting public health and the environment suggests that the 
EPA could not make a finding under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) solely on 
the basis of cost.'' Legal Memorandum at 25-26. The relative weight 
given to the EPA's consideration of cost is also tied, in this case, to 
its finding that maximum achievable control technology (MACT) standards 
in MATS can be implemented at a cost that will not impair the utility 
sector's ability to provide reliable electricity at a reasonable cost. 
As a 7th Circuit Court case cited by commenters acknowledges, ``one 
factor of great weight may offset several which lean slightly in the 
other direction.'' Volkman v. Ryker, 736 F.3d 1084, 1092 (7th Cir. 
2013). Not all considerations are required to be given equal weight, 
and here, given the statutory goals of CAA section 112 and the EPA's 
finding that the cost of MATS is reasonable, it was correct for the EPA 
to place importance on reducing the significant hazards to public 
health and environment posed by HAP emissions from EGUs.
    Finally, the Administrator must exercise her judgment in deciding 
whether the costs of regulation justify its advantages and the agency 
need not demonstrate that her decision is the same decision that would 
be made by another Administrator or a reviewing court. An agency action 
need not be the only approach or even the approach that a reviewing 
court might find most reasonable. Instead, the test is ``whether the 
decision was based on a consideration of the relevant factors and 
whether there has been a clear error of judgment.'' Citizens to 
Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 416 (U.S. 1971); 
see also ExxonMobil Gas Mktg. Co. v. FERC, 297 F.3d 1071, 1083-1084 
(D.C. Cir. 2002) (``Accordingly, we will uphold the Commission's 
application of the test as long as it gives ``reasoned consideration to 
each of the pertinent factors'' and articulates factual conclusions 
that are supported by substantial evidence in the record.'' (citation 
omitted)). Reasonable people, and different decision-makers, can arrive 
at different conclusions under the same statutory provision, but those 
conclusions must be reasonable under the statutory structure. The 
agency does not agree with the commenters' positions that HAP emissions 
from EGUs do not pose significant hazards to public health and the 
environment and that the cost of compliance with MATS is unreasonable. 
This factual disagreement with the commenters does not render the 
agency's statutory interpretation of how to consider cost and the 
Administrator's weighing of the relevant factors arbitrary. Absent 
clear direction from the statute and a demonstration that the 
Administrator has made a ``clear error of judgment,'' the EPA's 
interpretation and analysis should govern.
    Comment: Several commenters stated that the EPA's cost analysis is 
unlawful and does not meet the Supreme Court's directive because it 
focuses mainly on whether the power sector can absorb the cost of 
compliance. The commenters argued that the EPA's focus on the 
``affordability'' of controls compared to revenues, capital 
expenditures, and impacts on electricity rates does not satisfy the 
statutory prerequisite to engage in some meaningful balancing analysis 
of costs and benefits. Rather, the commenters alleged that the EPA's 
consideration of cost in this manner is a ``cost-only'' approach, and 
does not meet the Supreme Court's instruction to consider both 
advantages and disadvantages of regulation. One commenter posited that 
by arbitrarily placing emphasis on the economic well-

[[Page 24432]]

being of the power industry rather than on whether the costs of 
compliance are appropriate when comparing them to the benefits achieved 
from reducing HAP, ``an industry that was financially strained would 
not be subject to regulation, regardless of the human health and 
environmental risks posed from HAP emissions from those sources, merely 
because the costs of compliance would constitute too high a percentage 
of the industry's revenue.'' Such an outcome, the commenter argued, 
would be inconsistent with CAA section 112's objective to protect the 
public from the risks posed by HAP.
    Response: The EPA disagrees that its consideration of cost in the 
proposed supplemental finding was confined to an analysis of whether 
the power sector could absorb the cost of compliance. The agency did 
not only consider whether the cost of regulation under CAA section 112 
was reasonable, but also weighed the costs of compliance with MATS 
against previously established conclusions about the significant risk 
and harm to public health and the environment attributable to HAP 
emissions from EGUs. See 80 FR 75038-39; Legal Memorandum at 20, 25-26. 
It was this latter step that met the Supreme Court's directive to 
consider both the advantages and disadvantages of regulation.
    Commenters' preference for a different approach that would have 
compared cost of compliance to monetized benefits of reducing HAP does 
not undermine the validity of the EPA's interpretation of CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A) and Michigan's requirement to consider cost. As the EPA 
explained in the Legal Memorandum, and as explained below in response 
to comments, the agency concluded that commenters' preferred cost 
approach of comparing costs to monetized HAP-specific benefits is not 
required by CAA section 112 or CAA section 112(n)(1), nor does the 
statute provide the tools to quantify and monetize benefits 
attributable to reductions in HAP emissions from EGUs or any other 
source category. Legal Memorandum at 24. In addition, given the known 
scientific limitations on the ability to quantify and/or monetize HAP-
specific benefits, there is no statutory basis for the assertion that 
the agency must decline to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs based on a 
comparison of costs to any HAP-specific benefits that could be 
monetized, and indeed it might not even be reasonable to do so. Id.
    The hypothetical scenario posed by commenters regarding how the 
EPA's approach would apply to a financially strained industry is 
neither realistic nor relevant. The hypothetical they pose could never 
occur as cost considerations are not relevant to listing decisions for 
any source category besides EGUs. Moreover, nothing in the EPA's 
preferred approach would require the EPA to ignore the potential 
benefits (e.g., reduced risk of cancer) of regulating a financially 
strapped industry based solely on a determination regarding the 
reasonableness of compliance costs for that industry.
2. Use of 2011 final MATS RIA costs and impacts
    Comment: Some commenters supported the EPA's reliance upon the 
final MATS RIA for compliance cost estimates used in the proposed 
notice. One commenter noted that RIA cost estimates incorporated the 
actual MATS regulations as the compliance target, so they are much more 
reliable than the type of pre-regulatory estimate anticipated by the 
statute. In particular, one commenter expressed confidence in the 
estimates because the EPA derived those estimates using the Integrated 
Planning Model (IPM), which the agency has relied on for over 20 years 
to forecast the cost and emissions impacts of environmental policy. 
Some commenters noted that the EPA's use of the first compliance year, 
2015, to estimate costs ensures that its cost consideration in this 
action is based on the highest cost year, and therefore is a 
``representation of the maximum impact.''
    Several commenters stated that some estimates of industry 
compliance costs have been much lower than those projected by the EPA 
in the final MATS RIA. One study cited by commenters found that the 
costs of control technologies have been less expensive and more 
effective than assumed in the RIA, and therefore the actual cost of 
complying with MATS has been significantly less than estimated by the 
EPA. This analysis was based on existing contracts for the installation 
of air pollution control systems, experience with the performance of 
emissions control technologies, and assessments of the amount of 
pollution control capacity installed by the power sector to comply with 
MATS. This analysis estimated that industry's actual annual compliance 
costs are currently approximately $2 billion, which is less than one-
quarter of the $9.6 billion annual cost that the EPA estimated for 
MATS.\21\ The commenters stated that the apparent dramatic cost 
reductions are the result of three key factors: (1) Improvements in the 
materials (sorbents) used to control acid gases and mercury have 
resulted in reduced operating costs and increased efficiency; (2) far 
fewer power plants than the EPA estimated have required installation of 
high-cost pollution controls, such as fabric filters and flue gas 
desulfurization systems (``FGD'' or ``scrubbers'') or system upgrades; 
and (3) natural gas prices have been significantly lower than the EPA 
projected, reducing the cost of gas conversion and related compliance 
strategies.
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    \21\ White Stallion Energy Center, LLC v. EPA, D.C. Circuit Case 
No. 12-1100, Motion of Industry Respondent Intervenors to Govern 
Future Proceedings, filed September 24, 2015 (see Declaration of 
James E. Staudt and accompanying exhibits).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Other commenters contended that the EPA's use of the MATS RIA cost 
estimates does not accurately reflect costs of compliance. One 
commenter said the EPA significantly overestimated the capability of 
dry sorbent injection (DSI) by assuming that it could be used to meet 
the acid gas emission standards regardless of the size of the unit. The 
commenter also alleged that the EPA incorrectly projected that wet 
scrubbers would not be widely required to meet the proposed emission 
limits, and that the MATS RIA estimates therefore underestimated 
compliance costs and the number of retirements. Other commenters 
asserted that the EPA's alleged underestimate of retirements generally 
demonstrates that the costs of the rule are not reasonable and that the 
agency's assessment was based on flawed assumptions. Commenters 
disagreed with the EPA's focus on projected compliance costs and 
generation capacity estimated at the time of MATS promulgation and 
suggested that the EPA should consider actual costs and retirements 
that have occurred since the promulgation of MATS to update the 
assumptions made in the RIA instead of using assumptions that the 
commenters argue are unrepresentative. The commenters alleged that the 
EPA's continued use of those assumptions when actual, new data are 
available is arbitrary and capricious.
    Response: The EPA maintains that its use of compliance cost and 
impact estimates from the MATS RIA for the year of 2015 is a reasonable 
way to assess expected costs of MATS for purposes of analyzing the cost 
reasonableness of the rule as part of its consideration of cost for the 
appropriate and necessary finding. As noted in the proposed 
supplemental finding and the Legal Memorandum, under the statutory

[[Page 24433]]

structure of CAA section 112, the CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) finding is a 
preliminary determination that is made significantly before the CAA 
section 112(d) standards would be promulgated. The suggestion by some 
commenters that the EPA is required to conduct a new analysis that 
attempts to estimate the actual costs incurred through compliance with 
the final CAA section 112(d) standards is thus not consistent with the 
statute. Moreover, the independent analysis cited by several commenters 
suggests that the actual costs of compliance have been much lower than 
the cost estimates contained in the MATS RIA.
    Both the statute and the Michigan decision support the EPA's 
reliance on the cost estimates from the RIA. First, any cost analysis 
included in an ``initial decision to regulate,'' Michigan, 135 S. Ct. 
at 2709, must precede any regulations flowing out of that decision. 
Therefore, in considering the costs of compliance as part of its 
appropriate and necessary finding, it is reasonable for the EPA to look 
at what types of cost information, such as the MATS RIA cost estimates, 
would be available at this threshold stage. 80 FR 75030; Legal 
Memorandum at 19-21. In addition, nothing in the Michigan decision 
precludes the EPA's use of the existing cost information in the record 
in addressing the agency's obligation on remand to consider cost as 
part of the appropriate and necessary finding. In Michigan, the Court 
rejected arguments that it could conclude that the agency had properly 
considered cost based on the agency's consideration of costs in other 
stages of the rulemaking (e.g., in setting the emission standards or in 
the RIA). The Court emphasized that the agency itself had not relied 
upon these rationales at the finding stage. 135 S. Ct. 2710-11 (citing 
SEC v. Chenery Corp., 318 U.S. 80, 87 (1943)). However, the Court left 
open the possibility that the economic analyses the agency had already 
conducted could suffice to satisfy its obligation to consider costs as 
part of the appropriate finding. Id. at 2711.
    We also disagree with the suggestion by commenters that the entire 
economic analysis that the EPA performed in the MATS RIA is invalid 
simply because of a discrepancy between modeling projections and actual 
outcomes. See, e.g., EME Homer City Generation, L.P. v. EPA, 795 F.3d 
118, 135-36 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (``We will not invalidate EPA's 
predictions solely because there might be discrepancies between those 
predictions and the real world. That possibility is inherent in the 
enterprise of prediction. The best model might predict that the 
Nationals will win the World Series in 2015. If that does not happen, 
you can't necessarily fault the model.''). The EPA used the best 
available data and modeling information, in accordance with Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) \22\ and EPA guidance (U.S. EPA, 2010), and 
provided the public with the opportunity to comment on all aspects of 
its analysis in developing the final MATS RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \22\ Office of Management and Budget. 2003. Circular A-4: 
Regulatory Analysis. Washington, DC. Available at: http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/a004/a-4.html. Docket ID No. EPA-
HQ-OAR-2009-0234-20507.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EPA disagrees with commenters who assert that the EPA 
underestimated the costs of particular control technologies. In 
response to comments received on the proposed MATS rule, the EPA 
reviewed control technology cost and performance assumptions and 
updated some of these assumptions in the final RIA. Additionally, in 
the response to comment section of the final MATS preamble, the EPA 
responds to a series of comments on the cost and performance 
assumptions of the control technologies in the RIA. For example, in 
Section VII.G.1 of the final MATS preamble, the EPA responds to 
comments regarding the technical applicability, cost, and performance 
of DSI, explaining that the ``representation of DSI in MATS compliance 
modeling is reasonable, is properly limited to applications that are 
technically feasible, and reflects a conservative approach to modeling 
future use of this technology.'' \23\ Furthermore, the EPA does not 
agree and the record does not support the assertion that the total 
costs projected in the RIA are underestimated as a result of the EPA's 
assumptions regarding the cost and performance of DSI and wet scrubber 
retrofits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \23\ 77 FR 9330, 9411.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EPA also disagrees with commenters that the number of 
retirements of coal- and oil-fired power plants that have occurred 
since the rule's promulgation indicates that the EPA's assumptions in 
the MATS RIA were flawed. Commenters argue that because there have been 
more retirements in recent years than the EPA predicted in the RIA 
would be attributable to MATS, that the EPA's assumptions are 
necessarily flawed. However, commenters fail to show that the 
additional retirements they cite are attributable to MATS. Coal-fired 
power plants shut down for reasons other than MATS. Numerous 
publications have pointed out that recent trends in the electric power 
industry, such as low natural gas prices and slow demand growth, have 
placed significant economic pressure on coal-fired power plants, even 
those that are compliant with MATS.\24\ Lower natural gas prices have 
made natural gas generation increasingly more competitive as compared 
to coal. Moreover, lower natural gas prices result in a reduction in 
wholesale electricity prices, leading to a reduction in the revenues 
received by some coal-fired generators. These and other factors lead to 
EGUs retiring, and they are unrelated to MATS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \24\ See, e.g., ``FirstEnergy's Largest Coal Plant Idled Due to 
Low Power Prices.'' March 11, 2016. Power Engineering News. 
Available at: http://www.power-eng.com/articles/2016/03/firstenergy-s-largest-coal-plant-idled-due-to-low-power-prices.8.leftinheritedbottom_standard_8.html.
    Mooney, Chris. 2015. ``How super low natural gas prices are 
reshaping how we get our power.'' The Washington Post. October 28. 
Available at: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2015/10/28/how-super-low-natural-gas-prices-are-reshaping-how-we-get-our-power/.
    Larson, Aaron. 2016. ``Power Generation Industry Faces 
Fundamental Changes.'' POWER Magazine. January 19. Available at: 
http://www.powermag.com/power-generation-industry-faces-fundamental-changes/?printmode=1.
    Cassell, Barry. 2015. ``Luminant switches a second unit at the 
Martin Lake coal plant into seasonal operations.'' Generation Hub. 
July 24. Available at: http://generationhub.com/2015/07/24/luminant-switches-a-second-unit-at-the-martin-lake.
    Smith, Rebecca. 2014. ``How Shale-Gas Boom Led to Demise of 
Energy Future Holdings.'' The Wall Street Journal. April 29. 
Available at: http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702304163604579531644232506988.
    U.S. EIA. 2016. ``Natural gas expected to surpass coal in mix of 
fuel used for U.S. power generation in 2016.'' Today in Energy. 
March 16. Available at: http://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.cfm?id=25392#.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EPA's cost analysis, summarized in the MATS RIA, was based on 
reasonable assumptions at the time of promulgation for important 
factors such as fuel supply, fuel prices, and electricity demand. More 
importantly, retirements that are not attributable to MATS cannot 
reasonably be considered a cost of compliance for MATS. Commenters have 
not demonstrated that any recent retirements not accounted for in the 
MATS RIA are solely or disproportionately a result of MATS and would 
not have occurred in the absence of MATS. For these reasons, in making 
the initial appropriate finding, it is reasonable for the EPA to use 
the final MATS RIA cost estimates, which were developed at the time the 
rule was finalized and are based on high quality economic, technical, 
and regulatory assumptions.
    Moreover, in its consideration of cost here, the agency elected to 
focus on the 2015 impacts presented in the RIA because, as some 
commenters note, the modeling the agency conducted

[[Page 24434]]

indicated that compliance costs would be highest in that first 
compliance year under the rule. By using the estimate from the year 
when compliance costs are highest to compare against the various cost 
metrics, the EPA ensured that its assessment of cost reasonableness 
was, if anything, conservative, and that these comparisons would, 
therefore, be applicable for other future years.
    The independent analysis cited by several commenters, which was the 
only retrospective analysis of MATS costs submitted to the EPA in 
comments, finds that a variety of control technology costs have shown 
to be lower than the EPA's projection from the final MATS RIA. These 
results further contradict the assertions of some commenters that the 
assumptions in the RIA led to an underestimate of costs. The EPA 
recognizes it is possible, and has historically been the case for other 
regulations, that the regulated industry develops ways to comply with 
regulations at lower cost than what the agency projects at the time of 
rule promulgation. However, the suggestion by the retrospective 
analysis that important components of the actual compliance cost of 
MATS are lower than the agency's projections does not alter the 
agency's determination that the analysis in the final MATS RIA 
represents the best and most comprehensive estimate of the cost of 
compliance with MATS available to the EPA for use in this finding, 
because it was developed at the time the agency reaffirmed the 
appropriate and necessary finding and established CAA section 112(d) 
standards for EGUs.
3. Consideration of Costs at the Sector Level
    Comment: Some commenters questioned whether the EPA's consideration 
of cost at the sector level was reasonable. These commenters argued 
that because MATS regulated only coal- and oil-fired power plants, that 
it was incorrect for the EPA to use sector-level data when comparing 
the costs of the rule to the array of metrics that the EPA used to 
assess the reasonableness of the rule.
    Another commenter stated that the EPA's framing of the cost 
inquiry--whether the power sector can reasonably absorb the cost of the 
MATS Rule, 80 FR 75030--is reasonable, and well within its discretion, 
citing Michigan 135 S. Ct. at 2711 (``It will be up to the Agency to 
decide (as always, within the limits of reasonable interpretation) how 
to account for cost.''
    Response: As explained here and below, the EPA's estimate of the 
MATS compliance costs reflects the cost to the entire power sector. 
MATS is an economically consequential rulemaking that is expected to 
induce changes in both electricity and fuel markets. To focus on the 
projected impact of MATS on only affected coal- and oil-fired EGUs 
would produce an incomplete estimate of the entire cost of complying 
with the rule and, thus, lead to an inappropriate consideration of the 
costs of the final MATS rule. The costs associated with installation 
and operation of pollution controls (or fuel switching) at some 
affected EGUs can influence the generation decisions of both EGUs that 
are regulated by MATS and those that are not regulated by MATS. As the 
EPA noted in the proposal, the U.S. electric power system is complex 
and interconnected and the generation decisions of a single affected 
EGU can influence the dispatch of other EGUs, wholesale power prices, 
and fuel prices. Therefore, for a rule with the scope and projected 
impacts of MATS it is necessary for the EPA to consider the full cost 
of the rule by capturing costs expended at all electric generators, not 
just those subject to emissions requirements under MATS. For example, 
the EPA's analysis estimated a small increase in generation from 
natural gas-fired sources as a result of the rule. This increase in 
generation results in increased demand for natural gas and, thus, a 
small increase in the price of natural gas. This results in additional 
costs for EGUs that utilize natural gas, which the EPA appropriately 
captured in the analysis for the RIA. Furthermore, an evaluation of the 
costs borne solely by EGUs subject to MATS would need to account for 
the potential ability of owners of these EGUs to recoup their increased 
expenditures through higher electricity prices, or else an estimate of 
the costs of MATS borne by the owners of those EGUs (i.e., their 
economic incidence) would be an overestimate. However, in doing so, the 
costs borne by the consumers of electricity from these higher prices 
would be ignored, which the EPA finds inappropriate. This is especially 
true given that the demand for electricity is not particularly price-
responsive and many firms in the industry are assured cost-recovery, 
and, therefore, there is considerable potential for producers to pass 
through their expenditures to consumers. Therefore, the EPA determined 
it was appropriate to account for all of the costs that may be expended 
as a result of the rule that could be reasonably estimated, recognizing 
that these expenditures would ultimately be borne either by electricity 
consumers or electricity producers, and not limiting our consideration 
of costs to just those borne by a subset of producers or consumers. 
Again, even non-regulated EGUs can be affected by the rule through 
changes in prices as a result of MATS, such as the example of a gas 
generator just provided. Another example is that of a generator that 
benefits from higher electricity prices induced by MATS without 
incurring costs, such as a renewable generator owned by a highly 
diversified firm. Ultimately, consumers and producers bear the costs of 
a regulation, not specific pieces of machinery. Therefore, a 
consideration of cost incurred by only directly regulated EGUs would 
not fully capture the impacts on the owners of those directly regulated 
EGUs.
    Finally, many commenters in MATS and in this supplemental finding 
agree that cost reasonableness can be determined in part by increases 
in electricity prices, which reflect increased expenditures by EGUs 
resulting from MATS. By advocating for the consideration of electricity 
price impacts, these commenters further support EPA's determination 
that it is appropriate to consider other cost metrics at the sector 
level as well. The EPA's estimate of the cost of MATS is an 
appropriately complete accounting of the costs incurred by the sector, 
and the agency's comparison of these costs to the sector-wide metrics 
is reasonable.
4. Power Sector Sales
    Comment: Commenters supporting the consideration of compliance 
costs as a percentage of power sector sales noted that the EPA has 
routinely used this type of analysis as a means of evaluating whether 
compliance costs for HAP regulations are reasonable. These commenters 
believe the comparison of compliance costs to power sector sales 
produces a useful metric to help the EPA determine whether the power 
sector can reasonably absorb the cost of compliance with MATS. These 
commenters also agree that this analysis supports the agency's 
conclusion and demonstrates that the costs of the standards are low, as 
compared to annual revenues of the electric utility sector.
    Commenters disagreeing with the agency's analysis of compliance 
costs as a percentage of power sector sales argue it is misleading 
because it ignores the relationship between revenues and expenses and, 
therefore, in their view, provides no indication of cost 
reasonableness. The commenters suggested that given the high operating 
costs for EGUs, a comparison of

[[Page 24435]]

compliance costs to affected facilities' net operating income (i.e., 
revenues from retail sales minus operating expenses) would more 
appropriately highlight the cost impacts on the marginal operations of 
affected sources.
    One commenter stated that the EPA does not explain why the analysis 
of compliance costs as a percentage of power sector sales is 
appropriate for the utility sector. The commenter noted that this type 
of analysis is generally used for measuring economic impacts to small 
entities under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) and, in that 
context, sales are generally measured per company or on another more 
granular level.
    Response: The EPA maintains that it is reasonable to employ an 
analysis of compliance costs as a percentage of power sector sales, a 
frequently used indicator of economic impact, to evaluate the cost of 
MATS. A comparison of revenues to costs is informative and relevant to 
an evaluation of whether the costs associated with a rule are 
reasonable.
    While the EPA recognizes that alternative metrics could also be 
useful, the application of such alternative metrics would not 
invalidate the use of compliance costs as a percentage of power sector 
sales as demonstrating cost-reasonableness. The level of sales in the 
industry is, over time, representative of the costs incurred by the 
industry to generate, transmit, and distribute electricity, as the 
firms that operate in the electricity sector usually do so with the 
expectation that they will recover their costs (i.e., expenditures) in 
addition to a profit. Therefore, total sales provides a sense of scope 
of economic activity in the industry, and annual changes in those sales 
provide a sense of the scope of fluctuations in that industry.
    The EPA disagrees that a comparison of the costs of complying with 
MATS and the power sector's sales is an unreasonable way to evaluate 
costs simply because this type of comparison is often made in the 
context of evaluating economic impacts on small businesses. While 
commenters point out that the analysis is often used for smaller 
entities, they do not demonstrate why the metric holds no value for 
examining economic impacts on the power sector.
    Further, with regard to the specific metric suggested by commenters 
opposed to using compliance costs as a percentage of power sector sales 
to consider costs, we note that while net operating income is an 
important indicator for utilities and other operating entities, as 
discussed in this section above, a significant share of operating 
expenditures may ultimately be borne by consumers. Therefore, comparing 
the costs borne by electricity producers to their net operating income 
(i.e., a measure of profits that does not account for payments on costs 
that have been committed to previously, like financing of existing 
capital) would be an incomplete assessment of the cost of MATS. Thus, 
it would be unreasonable to compare the total expenditures incurred as 
a result of MATS to historical net operating income in the sector 
without accounting for the ability of firms to pass through these costs 
through higher electricity prices.
    Additionally, there are difficulties associated with estimating 
changes in firm-level net-operating income or other measures of firm 
profits with the data and tools available to the agency. For example, 
many firms in the industry are not publicly traded, so historical 
profit data for many of these firms are not readily available; 
therefore, a comparison of an estimate of the change in profits to 
historical data on profits in the industry would be limited by data 
availability. Furthermore, there are accounting and tax practices that 
affect the timing of when profits are reported, and therefore measures 
of profits may fluctuate on an annual basis for reasons not directly 
related to coincident annual changes in revenues and expenditures. In 
addition, the fact that a large proportion of affected EGUs in the 
power sector operate within regulated markets and are able to pass 
regulatory costs to electricity consumers, yet often face different 
specific requirements for how and when they may recover those costs, 
presents challenges to the use of a change in net operating income as a 
metric for evaluating costs.
    Commenters advocating changes in net operating income as a more 
appropriate metric than a metric based on compliance costs as a 
percentage of power sector sales for measuring cost reasonableness do 
not supply any analysis in their comment, nor do they provide a source 
of historical data to use for this analysis, nor a way to address these 
technical challenges with estimating historical profits, nor do they 
assert that a different metric would result in a conclusion that 
contradicts the EPA's findings. However, in response to comments 
highlighting the importance of considering annual operating expenses to 
this industry, the EPA considered additional information on operating 
expenses in order to ensure that our analysis of retrospective and 
projected cost information is robust and complete. This supplemental 
analysis was discussed earlier in Section III.A. In sum, the EPA 
continues to find that it is reasonable, when evaluating the 
reasonableness of the costs of MATS, to compare those costs to utility 
sector sales.
5. Capital Expenditures
    Comment: Several commenters supported the EPA's use of the metric 
comparing MATS compliance costs to capital expenditures as one way to 
evaluate whether MATS compliance costs are reasonable. One commenter 
stated that projected compliance expenditures are small in relation to 
both the typical capital expenditures undertaken each year by the 
utility industry, as well as typical year-to-year changes in such 
expenditures. One commenter particularly approved of the focus of this 
metric on comparing the precise impact of a particular category of the 
rule's compliance costs to industry spending on that category of costs. 
The commenter stated that this metric provides a clear understanding of 
whether the rule's capital expenditure costs could readily be absorbed 
by industry.
    Other commenters took issue with the EPA's comparison of annual 
capital expenditures required by MATS to overall power-sector capital 
expenditures as a way to assess whether the rule's compliance costs are 
reasonable. These commenters stated that the power sector's historical 
annual capital expenditures are broad, all-encompassing statistics that 
do not provide an adequate basis to judge whether compliance 
expenditures are reasonable. Specifically, this commenter suggested 
that the EPA's analysis should instead focus on the historical annual 
capital expenditures of only the entities that own affected sources. 
One commenter argued that the EPA did not explain the benefits of this 
approach over any other approach, or why it is a good measure of the 
reasonableness of the costs of a regulation.
    Response: As an initial matter, the EPA notes that while a number 
of commenters disagreed with the agency's use of historical annual 
capital expenditure data for the power sector in its analysis, no 
commenter objected more generally to the agency's examination of the 
rule's capital expenditures as one way to consider whether the rule's 
costs are reasonable. In demonstrating that an analysis is reasonable, 
particularly in the absence of any statutory guidance, the EPA is not 
required to show that its chosen approach is better than ``any other 
approach.'' Instead, the agency is required to show that there is a 
``rational connection between the facts found and

[[Page 24436]]

the choice made.'' State Farm, 463 U.S. at 52. As discussed in the 
proposed supplemental finding, capital costs are one aspect of total 
compliance costs that can be evaluated against historical levels. As 
the EPA explained in the proposed supplemental finding, capital costs 
represent largely irreversible investments for firms that must be paid 
off regardless of future economic conditions, as opposed to other 
important variable costs, such as fuel costs, that may vary according 
to economic conditions and generation needs. For an action that was 
projected to result in a large number of pollution control retrofits 
nationwide for multiple HAP, the EPA determined it was reasonable to 
consider projected capital costs as one component of a comprehensive 
evaluation of overall compliance costs. This is further supported by 
the EPA's projection that the annual projected capital costs 
represented about 26 percent of the total annual compliance cost 
projected for 2015. For this rulemaking, the EPA was able to access 
reliable historical data from multiple sources over a sufficient time 
horizon, which enabled comparisons of the EPA's projections of 
incremental capital expenditures under MATS to sector-level historical 
trends in capital expenditures.
    We disagree with the comment alleging that the EPA's analysis of 
this metric is ``too broad''. Specifically, we do not agree with the 
commenter's suggestion that we should restrict our analysis of capital 
expenditures to focus on only the entities directly regulated by MATS 
(i.e., ``the entities that own the affected sources''). As discussed in 
Section IV.A.3, the EPA views a sector-level assessment of costs, 
including capital expenditure requirements, to be the correct scale of 
analysis for this notice, in part because analyzing cost at the sector-
level better captures impacts on entities, many of which own complex 
holdings that include units that are not regulated by MATS. Further, 
adopting the commenter's methodology for analyzing capital expenditures 
more narrowly would force the agency to ignore costs associated with 
installing additional new generating technologies that would be 
attributable to MATS (because those new units that are installed are 
not directly regulated by MATS and are not necessarily owned by 
entities that own units regulated by MATS), and those costs are not 
insignificant and increase over time. We also note that although the 
commenter urges the EPA to analyze historical annual capital 
expenditures by a subset of units, the commenter provides no 
information regarding that metric, nor is the agency aware of data to 
reliably analyze that metric. Therefore, for all of the reasons above, 
we decline to confine our analysis of capital expenditures to only 
those units that are directly regulated by MATS.
    Moreover, we disagree with the commenter's implied premise that an 
estimate of the capital expenditure costs associated with installing 
controls to comply with MATS actually reflects capital expenditure 
impacts on entities owning ``affected sources''. As noted in Section 
IV.A.3, many of these sources are able to pass-through compliance costs 
to ratepayers, and, thus the cost of compliance, including capital 
expenditure costs, are in many cases ultimately borne by consumers. The 
EPA's sector-level approach to analyzing cost for this metric, as for 
others, takes into account all costs whether they are borne by 
producers or consumers, and is therefore the most comprehensive and 
well-suited to evaluating whether such costs are reasonable.
    Additionally, in response to comments, the EPA supplemented its 
analysis of annual capital costs with annual production costs, the sum 
of which provides a more comprehensive metric to use to compare against 
total projected compliance costs (see Section IV.A.4 above). This 
addition confirmed the EPA's earlier finding that the compliance costs 
of this rule are projected to be well within historical variability, 
and continues to demonstrate that the agency's projected costs are 
reasonable when weighed against historical metrics.
6. Retail Electricity Prices
    Comment: A commenter supporting the EPA's retail price of 
electricity metric stated that in evaluating the economic impacts of 
CAA regulation, the EPA has often considered the projected costs of 
regulation to electricity consumers. Additionally one commenter noted 
that recent data show that the EPA's estimate for 2015 was conservative 
and that actual electricity prices have been lower than the EPA 
projected. Commenters supporting the metric concluded that the agency's 
analysis demonstrates that on a regional and national basis, the 
increases in the retail price are reasonable in light of the benefits 
afforded, and well within the range of variability.
    A commenter stated that the EPA's retail price of electricity 
metric masks the true effects of the rule because the commenter 
believes that the EPA failed to acknowledge that, of the 11 years 
examined, only 3 years saw greater average price increases than would 
be caused by the rule. The commenter added that the EPA did not 
acknowledge that the MATS rule causes average retail price of 
electricity increases that are almost double that of an average of the 
11 examined years and that the EPA did not recognize that the price 
increases caused by the rule are additive.
    Response: The EPA reviewed changes in average retail price of 
electricity over the 2000-2011 period and compared the projected impact 
of MATS on the average retail price of electricity to annual 
variability over this period. The EPA believes that the estimated 
increase in electricity price is reasonable because it falls well 
within the range of historical variation. The EPA does not believe that 
comparing the projected impact to an average or percentile of 
historical fluctuation is the appropriate approach for examining this 
particular impact. This is because the context of whether MATS incurs a 
disproportionate change is relevant in the context of positive changes 
in price, not simply the average trend in price changes, which includes 
both net-positive and net-negative changes. MATS will impact 
electricity prices; what is relevant is whether that change is 
disproportionate to the differences in electricity prices that happen 
for various different reasons, and that reveal themselves in year-to-
year fluctuations. To compare the effect of MATS to an average of those 
variations over time, essentially dampening those variations to an 
average growth rate in electricity prices, would prove misleading when 
trying to compare the effect of MATS on retail electricity price with 
other influences.
    Additionally, the EPA notes that the commenters' point regarding 
additive impacts is incorrect. The 0.3 cents per kilowatt-hour is 
incremental to the EPA's estimated average retail electricity price in 
the absence of the rule, not historical levels (which are actually 
higher in 2006-2011, on average, than the EPA's base case estimates for 
2015). As the EPA explains in the preamble to the final MATS rule, 
``Even with this rule in effect, electricity prices are projected to be 
lower in 2015 and 2020 than they were in 2010.'' In the EPA's 
consideration of the potential impacts of MATS on retail electricity 
prices, the agency appropriately considered the estimated increase in 
prices projected to occur as a result of MATS in the context of 
historical variability.

[[Page 24437]]

7. Reliability of Electricity Supply
    Comment: Several commenters took issue with the EPA's analysis of 
the impacts of MATS on power sector generation capacity and stated that 
impacts on reliability alone are not a measure of the reasonableness of 
costs. Commenters stated that the EPA vastly underestimated the number 
of retirements that have occurred as a result of MATS and presented 
several estimates of retirements and facility closures. Several 
commenters alleged that the EPA arbitrarily compares its projection of 
MATS-related coal-fired capacity retirements to the nation's total 
generation capacity and the nation's coal-fired generation capacity.
    Other commenters stated that the analysis of the impact on the 
sector's generating capacity supports the agency's finding. Commenters 
noted that retirement decisions are based on consideration of numerous 
factors (e.g., age of the unit, capacity factors, fuel prices, etc.) 
making it difficult to determine whether a given coal- or oil-fired 
unit retired due to MATS compliance obligations or due to other 
unrelated factors that make operation uneconomic.
    One commenter noted that the EPA's modeling and analysis in the 
MATS RIA provides the best estimate of the impact of MATS on 
retirements and stated that the fact that retirements have been higher 
than projected does not suggest that they were a result of MATS, much 
less that the EPA erred in concluding that the retirement of 4.7 
gigawatts (GW) of generation capacity would be a reasonable burden for 
the electric power industry to bear. Commenters stated that the EPA's 
resource adequacy analyses showed that reserve margins can be 
maintained while the power sector complies with MATS and supports the 
agency's determination that MATS compliance costs are reasonable.
    Response: In Section III.A.2 above, the EPA explains why 
commenters' assertions that the EPA underestimated the retirements due 
to MATS are unsupported and do not demonstrate that the EPA's 
assumptions and modeling for the MATS RIA are flawed. In fact, numerous 
factors unrelated to MATS have affected the rate of retirements in this 
sector (see Section III.A.2). Moreover, the EPA notes that, even while 
commenters argued that the EPA underestimated the total number of 
retirements that would occur, they do not provide any examples, nor 
could they, that the retirements that have occurred since promulgation 
of MATS have actually caused reliability problems.\25\
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    \25\ We note that, when promulgating MATS, the EPA recognized 
the statutory concern for meeting environmental goals without 
jeopardizing electric reliability, and consequently took steps to 
ensure that sources would be able to comply with the rule while 
maintaining a reliable supply of electricity. The rule set a 3-year 
compliance deadline for existing sources, which is the longest time 
period allowed by the statute. See 77 FR 9407. The rule also 
provided EGU specific guidance addressing how sources could obtain 
an extension for a fourth year from the relevant permitting 
authorities under CAA section 112(i)(3)(B) if such time is needed 
for the installation of controls. See id. at 9409-10. Finally, the 
EPA separately issued an enforcement response policy concurrently 
with MATS to provide additional flexibility for certain reliability-
critical power plants. Memorandum from Cynthia Giles, Assistant 
Administrator of the Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance, 
The Environmental Protection Agency's Enforcement Response Policy 
for Use of Clean Air Act Section 113(a) Administrative Orders in 
Relation to Electric Reliability and The Mercury and Air Toxics 
Standard (Dec. 16, 2011); see also 77 FR 9411. To date, only a few 
sources have approached the agency regarding the policy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As some commenters highlighted, the EPA's proposed supplemental 
finding indicates that the vast majority of the generation capacity in 
the power sector directly affected by the requirements of MATS would be 
able to absorb the anticipated compliance costs and remain operational. 
The EPA's analysis conducted in conjunction with promulgation of the 
final rule demonstrated the feasibility of installing the retrofit 
controls projected by the EPA.\26\ Given the fact that HAP control 
technologies are technically feasible and available, it is important to 
understand that the economics that drive retirements are based on 
multiple factors including: Expected demand for electricity, the cost 
of alternative generation, and the cost of continuing to generate using 
an existing unit. The EPA's analysis shows that factors other than 
MATS, such as the supply of natural gas, would have a greater impact on 
the number of projected retirements than the MATS rule itself.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \26\ See An Assessment of the Feasibility of Retrofits for the 
Mercury and Air Toxics Standards Rule. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-
2009-0234-20001.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Additionally, in order to ensure that any retirements resulting 
from MATS would not adversely impact the ability of the power sector to 
meet the demand for electricity, the EPA conducted a regional analysis 
of the impacts of projected retirements on electric reliability. This 
resource adequacy analysis looked at capacity projections in each of 
the 32 modeled subregions in the contiguous U.S. and demonstrated that, 
with the addition of very little new capacity, average reserve margins 
are significantly higher than required.\27\ Additionally, several 
external analyses have reached conclusions that are consistent with the 
EPA's analysis.\28\
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    \27\ U.S. EPA. 2011. Resource Adequacy and Reliability in the 
Integrated Planning Model Projections for the MATS Rule, http://www3.epa.gov/ttn/atw/utility/revised_resource_adequacy_tsd.pdf. 
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-19997.
    \28\ 77 FR 9408.
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    With regard to commenters' assertion that the impacts on 
reliability alone are not a measure of whether a rule's compliance 
costs are reasonable, given Congress' overall goal of maintaining the 
nation's productive capacity, it is reasonable for the EPA to consider 
such impacts as part of its consideration of costs under CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A). The potential impact of MATS on reliability was one of a 
series of independent analyses, each supporting conclusions that the 
costs of MATS are reasonable.

B. Comments on Consideration of Benefit-Cost Analysis in the MATS RIA

1. Co-Benefits
    Comment: Several commenters supported the EPA's conclusions 
regarding the benefit-cost analysis for MATS and also supported the 
inclusion of monetized co-benefits in that analysis. These commenters 
asserted that it would not be reasonable or legally defensible for the 
EPA to ignore the real and significant advantages of reductions in 
PM2.5 and SO2 emissions that result from reducing 
emissions of HAP from power plants. These commenters agreed that CAA 
section 112(n)(1)(A) reflects congressional intent that co-benefits are 
important considerations, and they highlighted legislative history, 
court instructions to agencies to consider indirect effects, and the 
EPA's consideration of co-benefits in justifying other CAA regulations. 
Commenters supporting the inclusion of co-benefits also noted that the 
EPA's consideration of co-benefits is consistent with well-settled 
principles of regulatory analysis supported by multiple presidential 
administrations of both parties as well as practices by states 
evaluating the benefits and costs of implementing state regulations on 
mercury.
    Other commenters, however, argued that the EPA must conduct a 
monetized benefit-cost analysis to support the appropriate and 
necessary finding and that the agency may not include monetized co-
benefits in such an analysis. These commenters argued that the plain 
language of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) establishes that a finding of

[[Page 24438]]

whether regulation of HAP emitted by EGUs is ``appropriate'' must be 
based on the costs and benefits of regulating HAP, not other pollutants 
like PM2.5. These commenters further asserted that it makes 
no difference whether such reductions in fine particulate matter 
(PM2.5) are a ``direct consequence'' of the use of 
filterable PM as a surrogate for non-mercury metal HAP. These 
commenters argued that reductions in PM emissions are not relevant for, 
and cannot form the basis of, an ``appropriate'' finding.
    One commenter also maintains that the EPA claims that Congress 
intended for the agency to take into account criteria pollutant co-
benefits in shaping HAP regulation of EGUs under CAA section 112 and 
argues such a position is a logical fallacy.
    Several commenters asserted that considering co-benefits 
circumvents the established regulatory framework of the CAA. These 
comments state that criteria pollutant emissions, like PM, are to be 
addressed through the national ambient air quality standards 
(``NAAQS'') program under CAA section 109. These commenters argued that 
PM co-benefits are irrelevant to the ``appropriate'' determination and 
that reliance on criteria pollutant emission reductions in this 
determination is an impermissible ``end run'' around the NAAQS program. 
Several commenters asserted that the EPA double-counts the co-benefits 
of MATS because the criteria pollutant emissions reductions should be 
attributable to other regulations, such as the PM NAAQS or the Cross-
State Air Pollution Rule.
    One commenter noted that although consideration of co-benefits in a 
benefit-cost analysis is fully consistent with economic principles and 
guidance documents, it is irrelevant to the decision about whether or 
not to regulate EGUs that co-benefit reductions are a direct 
consequence (or even an indirect consequence or mere chance relation) 
to HAP reductions. The commenter also asserted that the EPA's reliance 
on OMB guidance (OMB, 2003) is misplaced because the RIA benefit-cost 
analysis seeks to achieve a different purpose than is required for 
determining whether regulating HAP from EGUs is appropriate.
    The commenters disagreeing with the inclusion of co-benefits assert 
that when co-benefits associated with PM2.5 are excluded 
from the benefit-cost analysis for MATS, the quantified and monetized 
net benefits are overwhelmingly negative, which does not support a 
conclusion that it is appropriate to regulate HAP emissions from power 
plants.
    Response: The EPA disagrees with the commenters stating that the 
EPA may not consider monetized co-benefits in determining that it is 
appropriate to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs if the EPA uses a 
formal benefit-cost analysis to support the finding. As explained in 
the proposed supplemental finding and the Legal Memorandum accompanying 
the proposal, CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) does not mandate any particular 
type of cost analysis. The EPA further explained in the proposed 
supplemental finding (80 FR 75039-41), the Legal Memorandum, and in 
Section IV.A above, why a formal benefit-cost analysis is not the 
preferred way of analyzing cost under CAA section 112(n)(1). 
Nevertheless, the EPA had conducted a formal benefit-cost analysis for 
MATS in the RIA, as required under Executive Orders 12866 and 13563. 
Thus, in responding to the Supreme Court's directive to consider cost, 
while the agency maintains that a formal benefit-cost analysis is not 
statutorily required or, in the Administrator's judgment, the best way 
to consider cost under CAA section 112(n)(1), we find that the formal 
benefit-cost analysis performed for the MATS rulemaking demonstrates 
that the benefits of the rule do substantially outweigh the costs. That 
analysis therefore fully and independently supports the EPA's finding 
that the consideration of cost does not cause us to alter our 
conclusion that it is appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP 
emissions from coal- and oil-fired EGUs.
    As discussed in this response, the EPA included the air quality co-
benefits associated with reductions in PM2.5 and 
SO2 (a PM2.5 precursor) emissions when the agency 
evaluated the direct and indirect consequences of MATS in the RIA.\29\ 
Regulation of a particular pollutant often necessarily and unavoidably 
results in reductions of other non-target pollutants. Reductions of the 
non-target pollutants are often referred to as ancillary reductions and 
the associated benefits referred to as co-benefits. All of the 
estimated PM co-benefits in the MATS RIA are attributable to the 
emissions reductions that would occur as a direct result of achieving 
the HAP emission limits under MATS, and these co-benefits are 
important, real, quantifiable, and monetizeable. Specifically, as 
outlined in the proposed supplemental finding (80 FR 75041), installing 
control technologies and implementing the compliance strategies 
necessary to reduce the HAP emissions directly regulated by the MATS 
rule also results in concomitant (co-benefit) reductions in the 
emissions of other pollutants such as directly emitted PM2.5 
and SO2. While reductions of PM2.5 and 
SO2 are not the objective of the MATS rule, these emission 
reductions are a direct consequence of regulating the HAP emissions 
from EGUs.\30\
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    \29\ As noted in the proposed supplemental finding (80 FR 
75041), ``PM2.5 emissions are comprised in part by the 
mercury and non-mercury HAP metals that the MATS rule is designed to 
reduce. The only way to effectively control the particulate-bound 
mercury and non-mercury metal HAP is with PM control devices that 
indiscriminately collect all PM along with the metal HAP, which are 
predominately present as particles. Similarly, emissions of the acid 
gas HAP (hydrogen chloride, hydrogen fluoride, hydrogen cyanide, and 
selenium oxide) are reduced by acid gas controls that are also 
effective at reducing emissions of SO2 (also an acid gas, 
but not a HAP).'' SO2 emissions form sulfate particles in 
the atmosphere and contribute to ambient concentrations of 
PM2.5. In the MATS RIA, the PM2.5 co-benefits 
estimates included reducing exposure to both directly emitted 
particles as well as secondarily-formed sulfate particles. The MATS 
RIA did not quantify the benefits from reducing direct exposure to 
SO2.
    \30\ Consider a hypothetical individual that quits smoking to 
decrease the likelihood he will develop lung cancer later in life. 
Although the objective of his quitting is to decrease the incidence 
of lung cancer, that individual will also unavoidably benefit from a 
decreased risk of cardiovascular disease, gum disease, and other 
health risks. The EPA believes that it would be unreasonable not to 
consider these co-benefits of quitting smoking, even though they are 
not the goal motivating the individual's health decision.
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    As an initial matter, the Supreme Court left it to the agency to 
determine a reasonable approach to considering costs in the finding, 
and the Court explicitly declined to address whether it would be 
reasonable to consider monetized co-benefits in evaluating the cost of 
the rule. Michigan v. EPA, 135 S. Ct. at 2711 (``[e]ven if the Agency 
could have considered ancillary benefits when deciding whether it is 
appropriate and necessary--a point we need not address--it plainly did 
not do so here'') (emphasis in original). The EPA thus first looks to 
whether the statutory text of the CAA addresses this issue. The 
statutory text of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) supports the EPA's 
conclusion that it is reasonable to consider monetized co-benefit 
pollutant reductions as part of such an analysis. That provision 
directs the EPA to perform a study of the hazards to public health from 
EGU HAP emissions that are likely to remain after imposition of other 
provisions of the CAA, including the Acid Rain Program. This 
requirement to consider ancillary (i.e., co-benefit) reductions in HAP 
emissions that are the result of other CAA programs highlights 
Congress' understanding that programs targeted at reducing pollutants 
other than HAP can and do result in the reduction of HAP emissions. The 
statutory text thus

[[Page 24439]]

recognizes the relevance of benefits associated with concomitant 
reductions in pollutants other than the targeted pollutants. See CAA 
section 112(n)(1)(A) (requiring consideration of remaining HAP from 
EGUs ``after imposition of the other requirements of this chapter 
[i.e., the CAA]''). The benefits associated with these concomitant 
reductions are just as real as benefits from reductions in the targeted 
pollutants.
    In light of the requirement to consider the co-benefits of other 
CAA programs, the EPA believes that it is reasonable to conclude that 
the CAA would also allow the EPA to consider other pollutant reductions 
directly resulting from regulation of HAP emissions if a monetized 
benefit-cost analysis were required (or used as a means of considering 
cost at the agency's discretion) to support the appropriate and 
necessary finding. In addition, in the legislative history to CAA 
section 112(d)(2), the Senate Report recognized that MACT standards 
would have a collateral benefit of controlling criteria pollutants as 
well and viewed this as an important benefit of the air toxics program. 
See S. Rep. No. 101-228, 101st Cong. 1st sess. at 172; Legal 
Memorandum, page 25.
    Even if one were to disagree that CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) and the 
legislative history expressly support our consideration of monetized 
co-benefits, nothing in the CAA, or the supporting legislative history, 
suggests that benefits associated with pollutants other than the 
targeted pollutants are irrelevant to a benefit-cost analysis or must 
be ignored by the EPA in this context. There is no statutory provision 
prohibiting consideration of direct co-benefits. The EPA believes that, 
consistent with economic principles and best practices regarding 
benefit-cost analysis and the fundamental linkages between reducing HAP 
emissions and reducing SO2 and PM2.5 emissions as 
a direct consequence of actions taken to meet the standards, it is 
reasonable to consider co-benefits in making the appropriate and 
necessary finding. Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Nat'l Res. Defense Council, 
467 U.S. 837 (1984) (holding that a court will defer to an agency's 
position on how to interpret an ambiguous statutory provision if ``the 
agency's answer is based on a permissible construction of the 
statute''); Catawba Cty. V. EPA, 571 F.3d 20 (D.C. Cir. 2009) 
(acknowledging that the EPA is warranted deference especially when 
administering complicated provisions of the CAA). Further, as explained 
in previous Sections of this notice, the Legal Memorandum (pages 22-24) 
and the proposed supplemental finding (80 FR 75040), neither the 
statute nor the Michigan decision support, much less mandate, that the 
EPA's consideration of benefits must be limited to monetized HAP-
specific benefits.
    The EPA further notes that consideration of co-benefits is also 
consistent with economic principles and best practices, executive 
guidance on regulatory review, and longstanding agency practice under 
administrations of both parties. Commenters argued, on the one hand, 
that the EPA is required to undertake a formal benefit-cost analysis to 
support the finding. At the same time, commenters contend that the 
agency cannot follow standard economic principles when undertaking such 
an analysis in this context. The EPA agrees that a formal benefit-cost 
analysis is not the preferred way of analyzing cost under CAA section 
112(n)(1). However, if a benefit-cost analysis is to be undertaken, and 
relied on, to support the finding, it should be conducted following 
standard economic principles. Commenters' argument that these 
principles should not be followed in this context undermines their 
argument that such a formal benefit-cost analysis is required. The EPA 
followed well-established principles for conducting such an analysis in 
the MATS RIA. Consistent with standard practice, the benefit-cost 
analysis for MATS accounted for all of the significant consequences of 
a policy decision (i.e., direct and indirect, intended and unintended, 
beneficial and harmful). In commenters' view, however, formal benefit-
cost analysis is not the best tool for evaluating costs and benefits 
under CAA section 112(n)(1). Their conclusion may weigh in favor of 
using an alternate approach such as EPA's preferred approach, but it 
does not provide a sufficient basis to conduct a distorted form of a 
benefit-cost analysis that ignores standard economic principles and 
well-established practices for conducting such analyses.
    As noted in the proposed supplemental finding (80 FR 75039), the 
agency is directed to include ancillary benefits in benefit-cost 
analysis by economic guidance documents from OMB (2003) \31\ and the 
EPA (2010).\32\ The EPA's Guidelines (U.S. EPA, 2010) are based on a 
well-developed body of economics literature identifying rigorous 
methods for conducting benefit-cost analysis, were extensively peer-
reviewed by the independent Environmental Economics Advisory 
Committee,\33\ and represent the current consensus of the economics 
discipline as to the purpose and appropriate practice of benefit-cost 
analysis. As discussed in the proposed supplemental finding (80 FR 
75039), the core purpose of a benefit-cost analysis is to determine 
whether a policy's overall net benefits to society are positive. 
Actions with positive net benefits (i.e., benefits exceed costs) 
increase economic efficiency. A key requirement for conducting a proper 
benefit-cost analysis is that all known consequences of an action 
should be considered.\34\
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    \31\ See p. 26 of OMB's Circular A-4: ``Your analysis should 
look beyond the direct benefits and direct costs of your rulemaking 
and consider any important ancillary benefits and countervailing 
risks. An ancillary benefit is a favorable impact of the rule that 
is typically unrelated or secondary to the statutory purpose of the 
rulemaking.''
    \32\ See p. 11-2 of EPA's Guidelines: ``An economic analysis of 
regulatory or policy options should present all identifiable costs 
and benefits that are incremental to the regulation or policy under 
consideration. These should include directly intended effects and 
associated costs, as well as ancillary (or co-) benefits and 
costs.''
    \33\ U.S. EPA--Science Advisory Board (U.S. EPA-SAB). 2009. 
Science Advisory Board (SAB) Advisory on EPA's draft Guidelines for 
Preparing Economic Analyses (2008). EPA-SAB-09-018. September. 
Available at https://yosemite.epa.gov/sab/sabproduct.nsf/
559B838F18C36F078525763C0058B32F/$File/EPA-SAB-09-018-unsigned.pdf.
    \34\ Under a strict economic efficiency test, an action should 
only be undertaken if the benefits exceed the costs, assuming all 
significant consequences can be quantified and monetized. However, 
as both the EPA's and OMB's guidance acknowledge, there are often 
other important considerations, such as distributional concerns, 
that limit the reasonableness of employing strict economic 
efficiency tests in decision-making. As noted in the proposed 
supplemental finding (80 FR 75040), distributional concerns, such as 
impacts to the most exposed and sensitive individuals in a 
population, are important for MATS.
    See p. 1-2 of the EPA's Guidelines: ``It is important to note 
that economic analysis is but one component in the decision-making 
process and under some statutes it cannot be used in setting 
standards. Other factors that may influence decision makers include 
enforceability, technical feasibility, affordability, political 
concerns, and ethics, to name but a few.''
    See p. 2 of OMB's Circular A-4: ``Where all benefits and costs 
can be quantified and expressed in monetary units, benefit-cost 
analysis provides decision makers with a clear indication of the 
most efficient alternative, that is, the alternative that generates 
the largest net benefits to society (ignoring distributional 
effects). This is useful information for decision makers and the 
public to receive, even when economic efficiency is not the only or 
the overriding public policy objective.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In conducting benefit-cost analyses, the EPA routinely considers 
consequences (both positive and negative) that are ancillary to the 
intended purpose of a regulation. For example, the $9.6 billion cost 
estimated in the MATS RIA included costs that would be passed on to 
electricity customers and higher fuel costs, which are beyond the costs 
borne by owners of coal- and oil-fired units regulated by

[[Page 24440]]

MATS. If it were unreasonable to consider co-benefits, then it would be 
unreasonable to consider these ancillary costs. The EPA notes that it 
similarly accounts for negative consequences such as increases in 
pollution emissions or concentrations (also called ``disbenefits'') in 
benefit-cost analyses when they occur.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \35\ See e.g., p. 5-14 of the MATS RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Because controlling HAP emissions necessarily results in fewer 
emissions of other non-HAP pollutants, the economic value of these 
consequences (i.e., co-benefits) are clearly within the scope of a 
proper benefit-cost analysis. Based on previous peer-reviewed studies 
(e.g., U.S. EPA, 2011),\36\ the large economic value of reducing air 
pollution, particularly ambient PM2.5, is well-known. 
Excluding such a large positive consequence has no basis in economic 
principles. Further, such deliberate disregard for the important 
consequences of an action would result in a benefit-cost analysis that 
would not be recognizable to most economists \37\ and would provide an 
incorrect conclusion regarding the net impact of MATS on economic 
efficiency. In addition, because the monetized value of the 
PM2.5 co-benefits were estimated to be $33 to $90 billion 
per year, it would likely be unreasonable to fail to consider such 
important economic consequences of MATS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \36\ U.S. EPA. 2011. The Benefits and Costs of the Clean Air Act 
1990 to 2020: EPA Report to Congress. Office of Air and Radiation, 
Office of Policy, Washington, DC. March. Available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-07/documents/fullreport_rev_a.pdf.
    \37\ See e.g., Chapter 1 (``Introduction'') of Just, Richard E., 
Darrell L. Hueth, and Andrew Schmitz. 2005. The Welfare Economics of 
Public Policy: A Practical Approach to Project and Policy 
Evaluation. Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK.
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    The EPA also disagrees with commenters' contentions that it is 
inappropriate for the EPA to consider co-benefits from reducing 
criteria pollutants below the level established in the NAAQS program. 
The EPA believes that the commenters mischaracterized the NAAQS 
program. As the EPA has consistently stated, the NAAQS are not zero-
risk standards.\38\ Unlike the CAA section 112 program, the agency is 
not required to take into account the health effects experienced by the 
most susceptible individual within at-risk populations when setting the 
NAAQS.\39\ Further, there is no scientific basis for ignoring health 
benefits (including avoiding premature death) that occur as a result of 
reducing PM2.5. In fact, there is a substantial body of 
scientific evidence supporting the existence of health impacts from 
exposure to PM2.5, even at low concentrations below the 
NAAQS (U.S. EPA, 2009).\40\ As a result, consistent with the robust 
scientific evidence and recommendations from multiple panels of the 
independent Science Advisory Board, the EPA routinely includes benefits 
of reductions in air pollution at levels below the NAAQS in benefits 
assessments. The most recent Integrated Science Assessment for 
Particulate Matter (PM ISA) concludes that the current science supports 
use of log-linear, no-threshold concentration-response functions, 
recognizing uncertainty in those relationship at concentrations where 
little data exists (U.S. EPA, 2009). In other words, there is no 
evidence of a PM2.5 concentration below which health effects 
would not occur.\41\ Based on these peer-reviewed scientific 
conclusions in the PM ISA, the EPA maintains that the most 
scientifically-defensible approach for estimating the benefits from 
reducing exposure to PM2.5 includes benefits both above and 
below the levels of the NAAQS. The EPA responds to additional technical 
comments regarding the calculation of PM2.5 co-benefits in 
the RTC document for this action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \38\ In the preamble to the final revisions of the PM NAAQS in 
2012 (78 FR 3090), the EPA noted that ``[t]he CAA does not require 
the Administrator to establish a primary NAAQS at a zero-risk level 
or at background concentration levels, see Lead Industries v. EPA, 
647 F.2d at 1156 n.51, but rather at a level that reduces risk 
sufficiently so as to protect public health with an adequate margin 
of safety.''
    \39\ In the preamble to the final revisions of the PM NAAQS in 
2012 (78 FR 3090), the EPA noted that ``[t]he legislative history of 
section 109 indicates that a primary standard is to be set at ``the 
maximum permissible ambient air level . . . which will protect the 
health of any [sensitive] group of the population,'' and that for 
this purpose ``reference should be made to a representative sample 
of persons comprising the sensitive group rather than to a single 
person in such a group.'' S. Rep. No. 91-1196, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 
10 (1970).''
    \40\ U.S. EPA. 2009. Integrated Science Assessment for 
Particulate Matter (Final Report). EPA-600-R-08-139F. National 
Center for Environmental Assessment--RTP Division. December. 
Available at http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/cfm/recordisplay.cfm?deid=216546. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-
20501.
    \41\ The recognition that there is ``no population threshold, 
below which it can be concluded with confidence that 
PM2.5-related effects do not occur'' (78 FR 3098) and 
``there is no evidence of a threshold'' (78 FR 3119, 3138) is 
consistent throughout the 2012 PM NAAQS rulemaking process, 
including in the assumptions for quantifying the mortality and 
morbidity health risks in the peer-reviewed risk assessment 
supporting the rulemaking.
    U.S. EPA. 2010. Quantitative Health Risk Assessment for 
Particulate Matter--Final Report. EPA-452/R-10-005. Office of Air 
Quality Planning and Standards, Research Triangle Park, NC. 
September. Available at http://www.epa.gov/ttnnaaqs/standards/pm/data/PM_RA_FINAL_June_2010.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EPA further disagrees that the monetized PM2.5 
health benefits from MATS are double-counted with the health benefits 
achieved by other regulations, such as the Cross-State Air Pollution 
Rule or the NAAQS. The EPA's standard practice for its rules is to 
estimate, to the extent data and time allow, all benefits of the 
emissions reductions achieved by a rule beyond control requirements for 
other rules. If this rule was duplicative with other rules, then there 
would be no additional costs or benefits attributable to this rule. As 
stated in the EPA's previous response on this issue in the 2011 MATS 
rulemaking (MATS RTC, Vol 2, pp. 482-484),\42\ the agency includes 
other rules such as the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule in the 
``baseline'' in estimating the benefits and costs for rules like MATS. 
Any emission changes expected as a result of MATS are additional 
emission reductions beyond previous regulations. Therefore, the 
benefits from reducing PM2.5 are not double counted--they 
are real additional health benefits from emissions reductions achieved 
by MATS alone. Further, the PM2.5 health benefits expected 
from MATS are not double-counted with benefits estimated in the NAAQS 
RIAs. The NAAQS RIAs hypothesize, but do not predict, the control 
strategies that states may choose to enact. In implementing MATS, 
emission controls may lead to reductions in ambient PM2.5 
concentrations below the NAAQS in some areas and assist other areas 
with attaining these NAAQS. As noted above, because the NAAQS are not 
set at a level of zero risk and the science fully supports quantifying 
benefits below the NAAQS, the EPA considers them to be legitimate 
components of the total benefits estimate. Subsequent to the final MATS 
rule, the EPA proposed and finalized a revision to the PM NAAQS (78 FR 
3086 (Jan. 15, 2013)). The RIA accompanying that rule (U.S. EPA, 2012) 
\43\ explicitly included MATS in the baseline (p. 3-6) to avoid double-

[[Page 24441]]

counting the benefits and costs of MATS in that rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \42\ U.S. EPA. 2011. EPA's Responses to Public Comments on EPA's 
National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants from Coal- 
and Oil-Fired Electric Utility Steam Generating Units. December. 
Volume 2 of 2. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-20126.
    \43\ U.S. EPA. 2012. Regulatory Impact Analysis for the Final 
Revisions to the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for 
Particulate Matter. EPA-452/R-12-003. Office of Air Quality Planning 
and Standards, Health and Environmental Impacts Division, Research 
Triangle Park, NC. December. Available at http://www.epa.gov/ttnecas1/regdata/RIAs/finalria.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In conclusion, for all of the reasons stated above, it is 
appropriate for the benefit-cost analysis to consider co-benefits, 
which are a direct consequence of actions to reduce HAP emissions. It 
is consistent with economic guidance documents and best practices to 
include such benefits in a formal benefit-cost analysis. The inclusion 
of such benefits is consistent with the underlying science. In 
addition, including such benefits is consistent with statutory 
requirements in CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) and the legislative history 
for the CAA section 112(d) maximum achievable control technology or 
MACT program. The final MATS RIA demonstrates that the quantified and 
monetized benefits and the unquantified benefits of the rule 
significantly outweighed the costs of the rule; thus, that analysis 
fully and independently supports the EPA's determination that it is 
appropriate to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs.
2. Monetized HAP Benefits
    Comment: Several commenters stated that the quantified and 
monetized mercury benefits in the MATS RIA vastly understated the full 
benefits from reducing mercury emissions and that there are many 
categories of unquantified HAP benefits. These commenters supported 
this conclusion by submitting recent research to the docket for this 
rulemaking, including studies that quantify additional categories of 
benefits not included the MATS RIA. Each of these cited studies \44\ 
indicate that the monetized mercury benefits from MATS could be in the 
hundreds of millions to billions of dollars per year. For example, the 
cited Giang and Selin (2016) study found that the monetized mercury 
benefits from implementation of MATS would exceed $3.7 billion (in 2005 
dollars) per year in lifetime benefits for affected individuals and 
$1.1 billion per year in economy-wide benefits. Additional commenters 
stated that new studies (e.g., Zhang et al. (2016), Castro and 
Sherwell, 2015; Drevnick et al., 2012; Evers et al., 2007; Hutcheson et 
al., 2014; Cross et al., 2015) \45\ demonstrate that reductions in 
mercury deposition to U.S. ecosystems and resulting human and 
ecological exposures were underestimated in the MATS RIA.
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    \44\ Giang, Amanda, and Noelle E. Selin. 2016. ``Benefits of 
Mercury Controls for the United States.'' Proceedings of the 
National Academy of Sciences 113 (2): 286-291. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2009-0234-20544.
    Rice, Glenn E, James K Hammitt, and John S Evans. 2010. ``A 
Probabilistic Characterization of the Health Benefits of Reducing 
Methyl Mercury Intake in the United States.'' Environmental Science 
& Technology 44 (13) (July 1): 5216-24. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-
2009-0234-19897.
    NESCAUM. 2005. Economic Valuation of Human Health Benefits of 
Controlling Mercury Emissions from U.S. Coal-Fired Power Plants. 
Available at: http://www.nescaum.org/documents/rpt050315mercuryhealth.pdf.
    \45\ Zhang et al. 2016. ``Observed decrease in atmospheric 
mercury explained by global decline in anthropogenic emissions.'' 
PNAS 113 (3): 526-531. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-20558, 
Exhibit 4.
    Castro, M.S. and J. Sherwell. 2015. ``Effectiveness of emission 
controls to reduce the atmospheric concentrations of mercury.'' 
Envtl. Sci. Tech. 49(24): 14000-14007.
    Drevnick, P.E., et al. 2007. ``Spatial and temporal patterns of 
mercury accumulation in lacustrine sediments across the Great Lakes 
region.'' Environmental Pollution 161: 252-260. Evers, D.C., et al. 
2007. ``Biological mercury hotspots in the northeastern United 
States and southeastern Canada.'' Bioscience 57(1): 29-43. Docket ID 
No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-20559, Exhibit I-22.
    Hutcheson, M.S., et al. 2014. ``Temporal and spatial trends in 
freshwater fish tissue mercury concentrations associated with 
mercury emissions reductions.'' Envtl. Sci. Tech. 48: 2193-2202.
    Cross, F.A., et al. 2015. ``Decadal declines of mercury in adult 
bluefish (1972-2011) from the mid-Atlantic coast of the U.S.A.'' 
Envtl. Sci. Tech. 49: 9064-9072.
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    Several commenters agreed that consideration of unquantified 
benefits is appropriate and consistent with economic principles and 
best practices, executive guidance on regulatory review, and 
longstanding EPA practice under administrations of both parties. These 
commenters noted that it is important to account for the full range of 
benefits associated with the action, including benefits that cannot be 
monetized due to lack of data. For example, several commenters noted 
that the monetized mercury benefits in the MATS RIA did not capture the 
breadth and severity of the hazards that mercury poses to wildlife and 
the ecosystem services that wildlife provides, including benefits to 
fish, sensitive bird species, marine mammals, and amphibian 
populations. Several commenters asserted that because the monetized 
benefits in the MATS RIA do not cover all of the benefits from reducing 
HAP emitted from power plants, a formal benefit-cost comparison is 
incomplete and potentially misleading. However, these commenters 
concluded that recent scientific findings on the quantified and 
unquantified benefits of reducing HAP exposure supports the EPA's 
determination that it is appropriate to regulate HAP from power plants 
after considering the costs.
    However, numerous other commenters asserted that the $4 to $6 
million in monetized mercury benefits in the RIA were the only real 
benefits attributable to MATS, and thus the rule is not justified 
because these small benefits do not exceed the projected $9.6 billion 
in costs.
    Response: For all of the reasons discussed above in Sections IV.A.1 
and IV.B.1, the EPA disagrees with commenters that the only benefits 
that should be included in a benefit-cost analysis are the HAP-specific 
monetized benefits. When all of the benefits are properly considered, 
the monetized benefits of MATS far outweigh the costs.
    Further, the EPA agrees with the commenters stating that the 
monetized mercury health benefits in the MATS RIA significantly 
underestimate the HAP health benefits associated with MATS. In the MATS 
RIA, the EPA could only quantify and monetize a small subset of the 
health and environmental benefits attributable to reducing mercury and 
none of the health and environmental benefits attributable to 
reductions in other HAP. As noted in the proposed supplemental finding 
(80 FR 75040), the monetized mercury benefits did not account for ``(1) 
benefits from reducing adverse health effects on brain and nervous 
system development beyond IQ loss; (2) benefits for consumers of 
commercial (store-bought) fish (i.e., the largest pathway to mercury 
exposure in the U.S.); (3) benefits for consumers of self-caught fish 
from oceans, estuaries or large lakes such as the Great Lakes; (4) 
benefits for the populations most affected by mercury emissions (e.g., 
children of women who consume subsistence-level amounts of fish during 
pregnancy); (5) benefits to children exposed to mercury after birth; 
and (6) environmental benefits from reducing adverse effects on birds 
and mammals that consume fish.'' This is because data and methods for 
monetizing these benefits are largely unavailable in scientific 
literature, including gaps in toxicological data, uncertainties in 
extrapolating results from high-dose animal experiments to estimate 
human effects at lower doses, limited monitoring data, difficulties in 
tracking diseases such as cancer that have long latency periods, and 
insufficient economic research to support the valuation of the health 
impacts often associated with exposure to individual HAP. However, the 
EPA acknowledges the submission of new research from several commenters 
that further corroborates the EPA's conclusion that the HAP benefits 
are underestimated in the MATS RIA and demonstrates the potential 
extent of that underestimation. See Section 3-3 of the RTC for the 
supplemental finding for additional details regarding new studies cited 
by commenters.

[[Page 24442]]

    The EPA also agrees that consideration of unquantified benefits is 
appropriate and consistent with economic principles and best practices, 
executive guidance on regulatory review, and longstanding EPA practice. 
The EPA agrees that it is important to recognize the full range of 
impacts associated with an action in a benefit-cost analysis, including 
those impacts that cannot be quantified or monetized due to a lack of 
data, for which the MATS RIA accounted qualitatively.
    Although the MATS RIA did not quantify and monetize all of the 
benefits that would result from reducing HAP emissions, the EPA 
maintains that the benefits of this rule (both quantified and 
unquantified) are substantial and far outweigh the costs, which 
independently supports the determination that regulating HAP emissions 
from EGUs is appropriate.
3. Impacts to Tribes
    Comment: One commenter representing several federally-recognized 
Indian tribes and inter-tribal organizations strongly agreed that a 
formal benefit-cost analysis is not a preferred approach to considering 
whether the costs of compliance are reasonable. The commenter stated 
that the EPA's inclusion of non-quantifiable benefits in the proposed 
supplemental finding is essential to the commenter's support of the 
agency's methodology because the benefits of MATS are difficult to 
monetize--and in the case of the impacts to American Indian culture--
are impossible to monetize. The commenter stated that benefits of MATS 
to American Indians are fundamentally different in kind than the 
economic costs the rule imposes on coal- and oil-fired EGU operators 
and ratepayers and provided examples of substantial non-quantitative 
benefits of MATS that are unique to tribal communities. The commenter 
stated that American Indians are disproportionately impacted by mercury 
emissions because many are subsistence fishers that rely on locally-
caught fish for daily sustenance and consume fish at far higher rates 
than the general population. The commenter stated that American Indians 
are therefore at unusually high risk for neurodevelopmental disorders, 
cardiovascular disease, autoimmune disorders, infertility, and other 
adverse health effects from methylmercury exposure, the impacts of 
which the EPA could not monetize. In addition to health concerns, the 
commenter describes how methylmercury contamination threatens 
longstanding Indian cultural traditions and critical social practices 
of fishing and fish consumption that are central to many tribes' 
cultural identity. The commenter explained that tribes are often 
connected to particular waters for cultural, spiritual, or other 
reasons (and others' fishing rights are limited to certain grounds by 
treaty), so they cannot simply move their fishing to another location 
to avoid mercury contamination. In addition, mercury fish advisories 
harm Indian subsistence and fishing economies, including commercial 
harvests and tourist revenues. The commenter states that MATS provides 
critical protections for Indian health, fishing rights, and traditional 
cultures that help the United States fulfill its legal duties to 
protect tribal rights and resources of American Indians and tribes.
    Response: The EPA acknowledges the supportive comments of the 
Indian tribes and inter-tribal organizations. The EPA shares the 
tribes' concerns about the potential impact of mercury emissions on 
tribes and agrees that tribes are likely to be affected differently by 
mercury contamination compared to the general population. The EPA 
acknowledges the importance of subsistence fishing and fishing cultures 
to numerous tribes and agrees that those who traditionally consume fish 
at higher rates than the general population are disproportionately 
exposed to higher levels of mercury. The EPA is committed to honoring 
and respecting tribal treaty rights by ensuring that its actions do not 
conflict with those rights, and by implementing its programs to enhance 
protection of treaty rights where there is discretion to do so. The EPA 
believes that MATS will substantially reduce emissions of mercury in 
the U.S. and that this reduction will benefit communities with 
subsistence fishing lifeways, including American Indians and Alaska 
Natives. The EPA also acknowledges that it was unable to monetize many 
of the benefits of MATS and recognizes the difficulty in attempting to 
quantify or monetize impacts to American Indian culture.

C. Comments on the Legal Interpretation of CAA Section 112(n)(1)

    Comment: Some states, tribes, industries, environmental 
organizations, and health organizations, and others generally supported 
the EPA's interpretation of the statute as set forth in the proposed 
supplemental finding and Legal Memorandum. Some commenters expressly 
agree that the purpose of CAA section 112 is to achieve prompt, 
permanent and ongoing reductions in HAP emissions from stationary 
sources to reduce the inherent risks associated with exposure to such 
emissions. Some commenters further agreed that these goals apply to HAP 
emissions from EGUs and that the EPA determined a reasonable approach 
to incorporating cost into the appropriate and necessary finding in 
light of the statute and the Michigan decision. Several of these 
commenters specifically agreed that cost should not be the predominant 
or overriding factor in the appropriate and necessary finding.
    Response: The EPA agrees that the interpretation of the statute and 
the Michigan decision set forth in the companion Legal Memorandum is 
reasonable. As stated above and in detail below, the EPA stands by the 
interpretation in the Legal Memorandum in this final action.
    Comment: Some state and industry commenters disagreed with several 
aspects of the EPA's interpretation of CAA section 112 and its reading 
of the Supreme Court's decision in Michigan. Several commenters argued 
that the Supreme Court's decision in Michigan, in essence, requires the 
EPA to discard all aspects of the EPA's prior appropriate and necessary 
finding. These commenters implicitly suggest that the Michigan decision 
by itself invalidates aspects of the finding unrelated to EPA's 
erroneous conclusion that it was not required to consider cost under 
section 112(n)(1)(A). These commenters argued that the agency must 
disregard or reevaluate all of its prior findings concerning the 
hazards to public health and the environment posed by HAP emissions 
from EGUs. They also argued that the EPA must reconsider all of its 
prior interpretations of CAA section 112(n)(1), including its 
conclusion that CAA section 112(n)(1) is a listing provision and not a 
regulatory provision.
    For example, these commenters asserted the Supreme Court's decision 
in Michigan requires the EPA to consider the potential cost of 
regulating HAP emissions from EGUs under statutory provisions other 
than CAA section 112(d). Among the approaches that the commenters 
asserted the EPA must consider are regulation of HAP emissions under 
CAA sections 112(n), 112(f), and 111(d). At least one commenter also 
asserted that the EPA must determine whether the cost of regulation of 
HAP emissions by the individual states would be more cost effective 
than regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs under the CAA at all. No 
commenter suggested a specific mechanism for regulating under those 
other authorities or for determining the

[[Page 24443]]

cost of such regulation. They appear to suggest, however, that the EPA 
must compare the cost of these undefined approaches to regulating HAP 
against the potential cost of standards under CAA section 112(d), and 
that the EPA must regulate under the least cost option or only to the 
level necessary to address the identified risks.
    As support for their positions, commenters point to the Supreme 
Court's Michigan decision; to the CAA section 112(n) Revision Rule and 
the Clean Air Mercury Rule (CAMR); to the requirement in CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A) to consider ``alternative control strategies'' for 
emissions of HAP that warrant regulation and to regulate EGUs ``under 
this section [112]''; and to statements in the legislative history. 
Specifically as concerning the citation to the requirement to consider 
``alternative control strategies'', commenters asserted that the EPA 
improperly interpreted the requirement when conducting the CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A) Utility Study that was issued in 1998, and that if the EPA 
had properly conducted the Utility Study, it would have had the 
information necessary to conduct these additional analyses.
    Some commenters also challenged the EPA's prior findings that HAP 
emissions from EGUs pose hazards to public health and the environment, 
specifically the findings for mercury, non-mercury metal HAP, and acid 
gas HAP. Some of these commenters also acknowledged that the Supreme 
Court only addressed the requirement to consider the cost of regulation 
in the threshold finding and did not disturb any other findings or 
legal conclusions in the MATS rule or the White Stallion decision. The 
commenters also resubmitted many comments previously submitted on the 
proposed MATS rule and addressed in the D.C. Circuit Court challenge to 
the MATS standards in White Stallion. In addition, the comments raised 
issues that were submitted in petitions for reconsideration on the MATS 
final rule and that were denied by the agency.\46\ The comments 
included arguments that the risk threshold of 1-in-1 million is not 
reasonable, that the EPA cannot base the appropriate and necessary 
finding on environmental risks, and that the volume of HAP emissions is 
not a legitimate basis for listing, even when the sources are emitting 
at major source levels.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \46\ 80 FR 24218; ``Denial of Petitions for Reconsideration of 
Certain Issues: MATS and Utility NSPS'' (March 2015). Docket ID No. 
EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-20493.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The same commenters also argued that the EPA must evaluate the cost 
of regulating each HAP individually and may only regulate those HAP for 
which a specific finding is made and then only to the level of 
regulation that is required to address the identified risk. The 
commenters maintained that the EPA must separately consider the cost of 
regulation of each HAP emitted by EGUs under various approaches (as 
identified above) before regulating any of the HAP at all, and 
certainly before regulating all the EGU HAP under CAA section 112(d).
    Commenters also argued that CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) is not a 
listing provision as the EPA states in the proposal. Legal Memorandum 
Accompanying at 2, 11-12. The commenters argued that CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A) does not mention listing because listing is only a 
precondition to regulation under CAA section 112(d), and that the EPA 
was not required or even authorized to regulate EGUs under that 
subsection. The commenters asserted that whether to list EGUs is not 
the question raised by CAA section 112(n)(1)(A). Instead, the 
commenters asserted, the question is whether additional regulation of 
EGU HAP emissions under CAA section 112 is ``appropriate and 
necessary.'' The commenters argued that the statutory question calls 
for a decision to authorize or to preclude specific regulation of EGU 
HAP emissions under CAA section 112. One commenter further asserted 
that the Supreme Court's opinion in Michigan confirms that New Jersey 
v. EPA, 517 F.3d 574 (D.C. Cir. 2008), was wrongly decided on this 
point. The commenter asserted that the New Jersey holding cannot stand 
because the D.C. Circuit Court found that even if the ``appropriate and 
necessary'' CAA section 112(n) finding and CAA section 112(c) listing 
of EGUs were erroneous, the EPA could only remove EGUs from the list of 
source categories regulated under CAA section 112(d) if it followed the 
delisting requirements of CAA section 112(c)(9). Id. at 583. The 
commenter maintained that holding cannot stand because, according to 
the commenter, the Supreme Court's opinion makes clear that the 
``appropriate and necessary'' finding is the gateway to deciding to 
regulate EGU HAP emissions under CAA section 112, and if that finding 
is not made, then regulation cannot be imposed. See Michigan, 135 S. 
Ct. at 2707.
    Commenters further maintained that CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) 
requires the EPA to decide whether regulation of HAP emissions from 
EGUs ``under this section'' is ``appropriate and necessary'' after 
considering a study that addresses ``hazards to public health'' that 
remain ``after imposition of the requirements of this chapter,'' and 
``alternative control strategies for emissions which may warrant 
regulation.'' Commenters characterized the EPA's first task as a 
requirement to find whether a residual public health hazard is posed by 
specific EGU HAP emissions remaining after those emissions have been 
reduced under other provisions of the Act. Commenters also asserted 
that, if the EPA finds that any remaining EGU HAP emissions pose a 
hazard, then the EPA must determine how and ultimately whether to 
regulate those emissions ``under this section [112].'' Commenters 
argued that the EPA must therefore calculate a ``preliminary estimate'' 
of the costs of the specific form of CAA section 112 regulation that it 
is considering. Commenters also maintained that the EPA's 
interpretation of the statute--which the commenters characterized as 
mandating regulation under CAA section 112(d) if the EPA finds that one 
HAP emitted by one EGU is found to pose either a residual health or 
environmental risk--is no longer valid because of the Michigan 
decision.
    Commenters also asserted that CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) is, on its 
face, a residual risk regulatory provision and, as such, it requires 
the EPA to make a risk management decision regarding whether health 
risks exist, and if so, the degree to which they need to be reduced 
further. The commenters maintained that regulation must necessarily 
depend on what remaining risks, if any, are identified, that certain 
HAP should only be regulated to the extent necessary to address the 
risks and only if the monetized HAP-specific benefits exceed the costs 
of standards, and that the EPA must undertake this analysis before 
regulating each HAP individually. Commenters asserted that the statute 
allows the EPA to regulate only those HAP from EGUs that do pose some 
risk, and then only to the extent ``appropriate'' (from a cost point of 
view) and ``necessary'' (from a risk reduction point of view). The 
commenters argued that the EPA's approach impermissibly uses the risk 
allegedly associated with one HAP to regulate another HAP. The 
commenters maintain that the EPA must instead evaluate different 
regulatory approaches available to it in order to determine costs and 
benefits on an individual HAP basis. The commenters concluded that the 
EPA cannot interpret the statute to permit regulation of all HAP under 
CAA section 112(d)(2)-(3) because that approach results in high HAP 
control

[[Page 24444]]

costs for no HAP benefit, at least for some pollutants (e.g., acid 
gases), according to the comments.
    For acid gas HAP, the commenters appear to maintain that the EPA 
could potentially use CAA section 112(d) to regulate, but that the 
nature of such regulation must change to satisfy the Michigan decision. 
For example, some commenters asserted that the agency could impose less 
costly health-based emissions limits for acid gas HAP. The commenters 
point to other CAA section 112 standards that include CAA section 
112(d)(4) health-based emissions limits for the acid gases, including 
the recently promulgated CAA section 112(d)(4) standards for hydrogen 
chloride, hydrogen fluoride, and chlorine for the Brick and Structural 
Clay Products Manufacturing and Clay Ceramics Manufacturing source 
categories as support for their position. 80 FR 65470-71 (Oct. 26, 
2015).
    Response: The EPA does not agree with these comments. For the 
reasons set forth below, the EPA stands by the interpretation of the 
statute and the Michigan decision set forth in the companion Legal 
Memorandum.
    These comments focus on several primary arguments: (1) The Michigan 
decision rendered invalid all aspects of the EPA's interpretation of 
CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) as set forth in the MATS record and the 
portions of the White Stallion decision upholding the EPA's 
interpretation; (2) the EPA cannot satisfy its obligation to consider 
cost without evaluating alternatives to regulating HAP emissions from 
EGUs under CAA section 112(d); and 3) that the requirement to consider 
cost renders invalid and/or insufficient the EPA's prior analyses of 
the significant hazards posed by HAP emissions from EGUs as well as the 
EPA's specific findings regarding the risks to public health and the 
environment. The EPA explains below why we disagree with these 
arguments.
    1. The Michigan decision does not disturb aspects of the EPA's 
interpretation of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) that are unrelated to its 
prior conclusion that cost need not be considered.
    Many of the comments in opposition to the EPA's interpretation of 
the statute are largely, if not wholly, premised on the position that 
the Supreme Court's decision in Michigan that the EPA must consider 
cost in the appropriate and necessary finding rendered invalid, in all 
respects, the EPA's prior interpretation of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) 
and also the specific findings that supported the appropriate and 
necessary finding in the original 2000 listing and in the reaffirmation 
of that finding in the MATS rulemaking.\47\ In essence, many of the 
comments opposed to the proposed supplemental finding are premised on a 
belief that the Supreme Court decision in Michigan invalidated 
interpretations and analyses presented in the MATS rule that were 
unrelated to the EPA's erroneous decision not to consider cost when 
evaluating whether regulation is appropriate and necessary. That 
premise and the assertions on which it is based lack merit.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \47\ The record in support of the appropriate and necessary 
finding is extensive and includes: (1) The three studies requires by 
CAA section 112(n)(1) and the additional NAS study of methylmercury 
directed in the appropriations report for the EPA's fiscal year 1999 
appropriations; (2) the 2000 Finding, 65 FR 79825 (December 20, 
2000) (Finding it appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP 
emissions from coal- and oil-fired EGUs and adding such units to the 
CAA section 112(c) list of sources that must be regulated under CAA 
section 112(d)); (3) the Proposed MATS rule, 76 FR 24976, 24980-
25020 (May 3, 2011) (The EPA affirmed the 2000 Finding was valid at 
the time it was made based on the available information, and 
reaffirmed that it remains appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP 
emissions from EGUs based on new information and analyses in the 
proposed MATS rule); and (4) the Final MATS rule, 77 FR 9304, 9310-
9366 (February 16, 2012) (reaffirming the appropriate and necessary 
finding and denying a petition to delist coal- and oil-fired EGUs 
from the CAA section 112(c) list).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We note that many of the commenters opposed to the proposed 
supplemental finding were parties to the Michigan case. The Court 
granted certiorari to consider one issue: Whether it was reasonable for 
the EPA to refuse to consider cost when making the section 112(n)(1)(A) 
``appropriate and necessary'' finding. Michigan, 135 S. Ct. at 2704. 
The Court held that the EPA was obligated to consider cost, but 
emphasized that ``it will be up to the Agency to decide (as always, 
within the limits of reasonable interpretation) how to account for 
cost.'' 135 S. Ct. at 2711.\48\ It thus remanded the rule to the D.C. 
Circuit Court ``for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.'' 
Id. at 2712.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \48\ In addition, the Supreme Court specifically stated in the 
Michigan decision that ``EPA has interpreted the Act to mean that 
power plants become subject to regulation on the same terms as 
ordinary major and area sources, see 77 Fed. Reg. 9330 (2012), and 
we assume without deciding that it was correct to do so.'' Id. at 
2705. This statement indicates that the Court did not intend for the 
Michigan decision to call into question legal interpretations, such 
as those relating to the terms on which power plants are to be 
regulated if an appropriate and necessary finding is made, that are 
beyond the scope of the grant of certiorari. All aspects of the 
agency's interpretation of section 112(n)(1)(A) were commented on 
during the MATS rulemaking and many were challenged and unanimously 
affirmed in the D.C. Circuit's White Stallion decision. The parties 
could have petitioned, and in one case did petition, the Supreme 
Court to review those other decisions. The Supreme Court explicitly 
limited its grant of certiorari and addressed only one question, 
leaving all other aspects of the White Stallion decision in place. 
It would not be reasonable to interpret the Supreme Court's decision 
in Michigan as reaching beyond the scope of the grant of certiorari 
to address issues that were decided by the EPA in the MATS 
rulemaking, and either not litigated in the lower court or 
unanimously upheld by that court in the White Stallion decision.
    \49\ On remand, the D.C. Circuit considered competing motions to 
govern the proceedings. Some states and industry asked for vacatur 
while the EPA, other states, industry groups and environmental NGOs 
asked the court to remand without vacatur. On December 15, 2015, the 
same D.C. Circuit panel that had originally heard the challenges to 
the MATS rule in the White Stallion case unanimously decided to 
remanded the proceeding to the EPA without vacatur of the rule. 
White Stallion Energy Center, LLC v. EPA, No. 12-1100 (Dec. 15, 
2015) (order granting remand without vacatur). Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2009-0234-20567.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In sum, the Michigan decision obligates the EPA to take cost into 
account when deciding whether regulation is appropriate and necessary 
but does not disturb other legal interpretations and technical findings 
made by the agency in support of the appropriate and necessary finding. 
The interpretation set forth in the Legal Memorandum reasonably 
incorporates a consideration of cost into the appropriate and necessary 
finding. The EPA's legal interpretation of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) 
was, with the exception of the cost issue, unanimously upheld by the 
D.C. Circuit Court, and undisturbed by the Supreme Court decision. The 
agency thus used that legal structure as the starting point for the 
incorporation of cost into the appropriate and necessary finding. See 
White Stallion Energy Center, LLC v. EPA, 748 F.3d 1222 (D.C. Cir. 
2014) (Judge Kavanaugh dissented only on the issue of cost). The 
commenters opposed to the EPA's interpretation make conclusory 
statements that the prior interpretations are rendered invalid because 
the EPA must consider cost in the appropriate and necessary finding. 
However, none of the commenters opposed to the agency's interpretation 
demonstrate in any substantive way that the agency's interpretation in 
the Legal Memorandum is unreasonable, and in developing the 
interpretation the agency considered not only the Michigan decision, 
but also the purpose of the 1990 amendments to CAA section 112 to 
obtain prompt, permanent and ongoing reductions in HAP emissions; the 
structure and context of the statute; and the long rulemaking and 
litigation history at issue in this case. The commenters did not 
clearly articulate an alternative to the EPA's reasoned interpretation 
of the role of cost in the appropriate and necessary finding; thus,

[[Page 24445]]

the EPA finds no reason to revise the interpretations set forth in the 
proposed supplemental finding and the companion Legal Memorandum.
    Furthermore, while not expressly stated, the commenters appear to 
assume that the EPA could never justify the cost of the MATS rule and 
that no analysis of whether the costs of the rule are reasonable would 
even be relevant. The Administrator disagrees and believes the EPA 
should evaluate and consider the cost of the MATS rule. Furthermore, 
having concluded that the cost of MATS is reasonable under several 
metrics and that the rule will not impair the ability of the industry 
to provide reliable electricity, the Administrator believes she must 
consider those conclusions. In light of those conclusions and the 
findings that HAP emissions pose significant hazards to public health 
and the environment that will not be addressed through imposition of 
the other requirements of the CAA, the Administrator concludes in this 
final notice that regulation is appropriate and necessary.\50\ The EPA 
went through an extensive process that spanned approximately 20 years 
before finally establishing standards for HAP emissions from EGUs in 
2012. The agency took comment on its legal interpretations and on its 
findings that HAP emissions from EGUs pose hazards to public health and 
the environment. Many of those interpretations and findings were 
challenged in the D.C. Circuit Court in petitions to review MATS, and 
some were not. With the exception of the cost issue, the challenges 
were unanimously rejected by that Court in the White Stallion 
decision.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \50\ In light of New Jersey v. EPA, 517 F.3d 574 (D.C. Cir. 
2008), the EPA may only remove coal and oil-fired EGUs from the CAA 
section 112(c) list if it demonstrates that the delisting criteria 
in CAA section 112(c)(9) have been met. A finding by the EPA that 
regulation of these sources is not appropriate or necessary would 
not be a sufficient basis for the EPA to remove EGUs from the CAA 
section 112(c) list, but the D.C. Circuit Court could vacate the 
rule upon review if the court concluded the agency's revised finding 
was unreasonable.
    \51\ Judge Kavanaugh dissented on the cost issue but otherwise 
joined the majority on all other challenges to the appropriate and 
necessary finding and HAP standards, including the EPA's decision to 
decline to establish a health based emission limit for acid gas HAP 
under section 112(d)(4) and to establish a more stringent beyond-
the-floor standard for Hg from certain coal-fired EGUs. The fact 
that Judge Kavanaugh dissented on the cost issue alone suggests that 
it is separate and distinct and that a decision that cost must be 
taken into consideration does not upend the other holdings in White 
Stallion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EPA's approach to evaluating cost is also supported by the 
Michigan decision wherein the Court directed the agency to ``consider 
cost--including, most importantly, cost of compliance--before deciding 
whether regulation is appropriate and necessary.'' 135 S. Ct. 2711. The 
``cost of compliance'' at issue in that case was the cost of MATS, and, 
as the EPA finds that the costs associated with the rule are reasonable 
under several different metrics, the agency cannot and should not 
ignore those conclusions. The Michigan decision itself does not, as 
some commenters appear to suggest, draw any conclusions regarding 
whether the cost of MATS is reasonable, or otherwise undermine the 
EPA's conclusion that the costs are reasonable. In addition, the EPA 
does not rely on this conclusion alone to support a determination that 
regulation is appropriate and necessary. Instead, as explained in 
greater detail in the proposed notice and this final action, the EPA's 
conclusion that the cost of MATS is reasonable is but one of the 
factors the agency considers when determining whether regulation is 
appropriate and necessary.
    2. Cost considerations can reasonably be incorporated as an 
additional factor to be considered under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) 
without disturbing the EPA's prior interpretation of the statutory 
structure.
    The agency has reversed its prior conclusion that cost need not be 
considered when making an appropriate and necessary finding and adopted 
a new interpretation of the role of cost in that finding. That new 
interpretation is consistent with the Michigan decision and the EPA's 
non-cost-related interpretations of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) that went 
through notice and comment during the MATS rulemaking and were upheld 
in White Stallion. The commenters appear to assume, without much 
explanation, that the requirement to consider cost renders the EPA's 
prior interpretation unreasonable because, according to the commenters, 
the approach set forth in the proposed supplemental finding did not, in 
their view, give sufficient weight to cost. The commenters seek to 
overturn several of the EPA's prior conclusions regarding CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A) such as: (1) The appropriate and necessary finding can be 
based on a finding that significant hazards to public health and/or the 
environment remain after imposition of the requirements of the Act; (2) 
the finding can be based on an identified hazard for any one HAP; and 
(3) the most reasonable approach to regulating HAP emissions from EGUs 
is listing under CAA section 112(c) and regulation under CAA section 
112(d) after a finding that regulation is appropriate and necessary. 
The Michigan decision does not undermine the legitimacy of any prior 
interpretation except the conclusion that cost need not be considered. 
It was thus reasonable for the EPA to take these prior conclusions into 
consideration when determining the manner in which to incorporate a 
consideration of cost into the appropriate and necessary finding.
    The EPA discussed the Michigan decision in the proposed 
supplemental finding and explained how cost can be reasonably 
incorporated into the statutory structure that was otherwise 
unanimously affirmed by the D.C. Circuit. Thus, the agency expressly 
stated in the proposed supplemental finding that it was not reopening 
or requesting comment on issues beyond its proposed approach to 
incorporating a consideration of cost as an additional factor into the 
appropriate and necessary finding. 80 FR 75028. Comments on other 
interpretations are therefore outside the scope of this rulemaking. 
Nonetheless, the EPA explains below why it disagrees with the comments 
and also addresses the specific arguments raised by the commenters in 
support of their positions.
    As background, the EPA issued MATS in response to the New Jersey 
decision vacating the EPA's CAA Section 112(n) Revision Rule removing 
coal- and oil-fired EGUs from the CAA section 112(c) list and CAMR 
regulating such units under CAA section 111(d) instead of CAA section 
112(d). New Jersey v. EPA, 517 F.3d 574 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (vacating the 
delisting action as inconsistent with the statute because the EPA did 
not comply with the requirements for delisting in CAA section 
112(c)(9), and also vacating CAMR because the EPA stated that the rule 
could not be legally supported if EGUs remained on the CAA section 
112(c) list). The New Jersey court did not address the legal 
interpretations of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) nor the conclusions that 
HAP emissions from EGUs did not pose a hazard to public health that 
supported the appropriate and necessary finding.\52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \52\ Several commenters wrongly asserted that the Section 112(n) 
Revision Rule was based on a determination that it was neither 
appropriate nor necessary to regulate HAP emissions because of cost. 
In fact, the EPA concluded that cost need not be considered in that 
revised finding because the agency concluded that HAP emissions from 
EGUs did not pose a hazard to public health warranting regulation 
based on the agency's interpretations of the statute in the 112(n) 
Revision Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EPA recognized in MATS that it must reevaluate the prior 
interpretations of the statute and the technical findings concerning 
the hazards to public health from HAP emissions from EGUs as part

[[Page 24446]]

of the appropriate and necessary finding. In the process of reviewing 
the conclusions in the Section 112(n) Revision Rule, the EPA determined 
that the interpretations contained in that rule should be revised to 
better reflect the structure and intent of the statute and concluded 
that the prior technical findings were either insufficient (e.g., for 
mercury) or essentially absent (e.g., non-mercury metal HAP and acid 
gas HAP). Thus, the agency addressed in detail how it intended to 
interpret the statute going forward, how the interpretation of the 
statute in MATS was consistent with the 2000 Finding, and how the new 
interpretation differed from the interpretation in the Section 112(n) 
Revision Rule. See 76 FR 24986-24998. The agency received numerous 
comments on the interpretations and the EPA responded to those comments 
in the final MATS rule and the RTC document. See 77 FR 9319-9336; see 
also MATS RTC, Vol. I.\53\ In affirming all of the changes in 
interpretation, the White Stallion court found that the agency has 
authority to change its interpretation of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) as 
long as ``the policy is permissible under the statute, that there are 
good reasons for it, and that the agency believes it to be better.'' 
White Stallion, 748 F.3d at 1235. Stated another way, a change is 
prohibited unless the agency determines that the alternative is legally 
permissible, that there is a good reason for the change, and that the 
alternative interpretation is better. Id. As explained further below, 
the commenters' suggested alternatives may not be reasonably supported 
under the terms of the statute. In addition, the EPA neither believes 
there are good reasons to adopt the alternatives offered nor finds that 
they would better address the identified risks and further the goals of 
the statute. The commenters appear to (and in at least one case 
expressly) place cost above all other considerations and the agency 
does not see ``good reasons'' for adopting that interpretation above 
our own in the comments, in the statute, or in the legislative history. 
See Legal Memorandum. There is no basis for concluding that any of 
these alternative approaches are mandatory, and the agency does not 
believe they are ``better'' than the approach we set forth in the MATS 
rule and the proposal notice. Among other things, as discussed below, 
the alternatives offered by commenters lack structure, are not easily 
supported by the statutory language, and do not further the statutory 
goals better than the EPA's approach.
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    \53\ The commenters do not in any meaningful way attempt to 
demonstrate why the prior reasoned interpretations are suddenly 
unreasonable because of cost. The agency maintains the lack of 
specificity and failure to explain more fully why those prior 
interpretations must be rejected because of cost is a significant 
flaw in the comments. See CAA section 307(d)(7)(B) (``Only an 
objection to a rule or procedure which was raised with reasonable 
specificity during the period for public comment . . . may be raised 
during judicial review.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Under the commenters' approaches, the EPA would be required to make 
specific separate cost findings for each HAP, but only if the EPA has 
determined that the HAP at issue poses a hazard to public health (not 
the environment). The commenters argued that the Michigan decision 
mandates this approach, but it does not. The Supreme Court did not 
disturb the EPA's prior conclusions (which were upheld in White 
Stallion) that the appropriate and necessary finding can be based on a 
finding that any one HAP emitted by EGUs poses a hazard to public 
health or the environment, that the statute contemplates that 
regulation under CAA section 112 will occur by listing pursuant to CAA 
section 112(c) based on the appropriate and necessary finding, and that 
EGUs are regulated like other sources once listed. In fact, the Supreme 
Court specifically limited its grant of certiorari and did not, as some 
petitioners had requested, grant certiorari on the question of whether 
the EPA ``may regulate EGU HAP emissions that pose no hazard to public 
health.'' See UARG Petition for Writ of Certiorari, July 14, 2014.\54\ 
The request for certiorari on this question focused on the lower 
court's conclusion that it was permissible for the EPA to regulate acid 
gas HAP from EGUs absent specific conclusions regarding public health 
hazards associated with such emissions from EGUs. The Supreme Court 
also explicitly acknowledged and did not disturb the conclusion that 
once the agency finds it appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP 
emissions from EGUs, power plants are regulated like other sources. See 
Michigan at 2705. The approach selected by the EPA is consistent with 
these undisturbed prior conclusions, and nothing in Michigan mandates 
that the EPA take a different approach now.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \54\ Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-20563.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The rationale for these conclusions is valid and in no way 
undermined by the conclusion that the EPA must incorporate cost 
considerations into the appropriate and necessary finding. The EPA 
stated in MATS that ``the use of the terms section, subsection, and 
subparagraph in section 112(n)(1)(A) demonstrates that Congress was 
consciously distinguishing the various provisions of section 112 in 
directing EPA's action under section 112(n)(1)(A). Congress directed 
the agency to regulate utilities ``under this section'' not ``under 
this subparagraph [112(n)],'' and accordingly EGUs should be regulated 
under section 112 in the same manner as other categories for which the 
statute requires regulation.'' See Final MATS, 77 FR 9326. The agency 
also cited the New Jersey case wherein the D.C. Circuit Court found 
that CAA section 112(n)(1) ``governs how the Administrator decides 
whether to list EGUs'' and that once listed, EGUs are subject to the 
requirements of section 112. Id. citing New Jersey, 517 F.3d at 583 The 
New Jersey court expressly noted that ``where Congress wished to exempt 
EGUs from specific requirements of section 112, it said so 
explicitly,'' noting that ``section 112(c)(6) expressly exempts EGUs 
from the strict deadlines imposed on other sources of certain 
pollutants.'' Id. The EPA concluded that ``Congress did not exempt EGUs 
from the other requirements of section 112, and, once listed, the EPA 
is reasonably regulating EGUs pursuant to the standard-setting 
provisions in section 112(d), as it does for all other listed source 
categories.'' Id.
    During the MATS rulemaking, the EPA explicitly considered and 
rejected comments suggesting that the agency could regulate under CAA 
section 112(n)(1), and neither the EPA's conclusion nor its rationale 
are affected by the Michigan decision. As the agency explained ``even 
assuming for the sake of argument, that we could issue standards under 
section 112(n)(1), we would decline to do so because there is nothing 
in section 112(n)(1)(A) that provides any guidance as to how such 
standards should be developed.'' Id. The EPA noted that ``[a]ny 
mechanism we devised, absent explicit statutory support, would likely 
receive less deference than a CAA section 112(d) standard issued in the 
same manner in which the Agency issues standards for other listed 
source categories.'' Id.\55\ A requirement to consider cost does not 
change these conclusions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \55\ Several commenters asserted that the EPA indicated that it 
must regulate HAP emissions from EGUs under CAA section 112(d), but 
this argument is contradicted by the quoted statement from the final 
rule explaining that any other mechanism would likely receive less 
deference. The EPA maintained in the MATS rule that the best reading 
of the statute was that an affirmative appropriate and necessary 
finding should be followed by listing under CAA section 112(c) and 
regulation under CAA section 112(d). See e.g., 77 FR 9326. The EPA 
did not, however, identify an alternative approach to regulation 
``under this section [112]'' that is as reasonable or defensible as 
the approach we followed, and the commenters have not provided any.

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[[Page 24447]]

    The White Stallion court upheld the EPA's determination to regulate 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
under CAA section 112(d) and held:

    EPA acted properly in regulating EGUs under Sec.  112(d). 
Section 112(n)(1)(A) directs the Administrator to ``regulate 
electric steam generating units under this section, if the 
Administrator finds such regulation is appropriate and necessary.'' 
CAA Sec.  112(n)(1)(A). EPA reasonably interprets the phrase ``under 
this section'' to refer to the entirety of section 112. See Desert 
Citizens Against Pollution v. EPA, 699 F.3d 524 (D.C. Cir. 2012). 
Under section 112, the statutory framework for regulating HAP 
sources appears in Sec.  112(c), which covers listing, and Sec.  
112(d), which covers standard-setting. See CAA Sec.  112(c), 112(d). 
This court has previously noted that ``where Congress wished to 
exempt EGUs from specific requirements of section 112, it said so 
explicitly.'' New Jersey, 517 F.3d at 583. EPA reasonably concluded 
that the framework set forth in Sec.  112(c) and Sec.  112(d)--
rather than another, hypothetical framework not elaborated in the 
statute--provided the appropriate mechanism for regulating EGUs 
under Sec.  112 after the ``appropriate and necessary'' 
determination was made. Therefore, EPA's interpretation is entitled 
to deference and must be upheld.

    White Stallion, 748 F.3d at 1243-44 (emphasis added).
    The White Stallion court also addressed, and rejected, arguments 
that the EPA erred by regulating all HAP emissions from EGUs:

    Although the petitioners attempt to distinguish National Lime on 
grounds that it concerned ``major sources'' rather than EGUs, they 
have not provided any compelling reason why EGUs should not be 
regulated the same way as other sources once EPA has determined that 
regulation under Sec.  112 is ``appropriate and necessary.'' It also 
bears emphasis that the plain text of Sec.  112(n)(1)(A) directs the 
Administrator to ``regulate electric utility steam generating 
units''--not to regulate their emissions as petitioners suggest. 
This source based approach to regulating EGUs HAPs was affirmed in 
New Jersey, 517 F.3d at 582, which held that EGUs could not be 
delisted without demonstrating that EGUs, as a category, satisfied 
the delisting criteria set forth in Sec.  112(c)(9). The notion that 
EPA must ``pick and choose'' among HAPs in order to regulate only 
those substances it deems most harmful is at odds with the court's 
precedent.

    White Stallion, 748 F.3d at 1244-45.\56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \56\ The findings in the White Stallion are premised in part on 
the holding in the New Jersey decision and those findings undermine 
many of the commenters' arguments against the EPA's interpretation 
of the proper role of cost in the appropriate and necessary finding. 
This fact explains why the commenters opposed to EPA's 
interpretation argue that the Michigan decision demonstrates that 
the New Jersey decision was wrongly decided. The commenters are 
incorrect in their assertions and certain commenters petitioned the 
Supreme Court for certiorari to review the New Jersey decision, and 
the request was denied. The commenters point to no legal precedent 
for their position and rely instead on a convoluted argument 
associated with the EPA's inability to delist a listed sources 
category without complying with CAA section 112(c)(9). However, the 
commenters failed to acknowledge that the EPA is not the only entity 
that can remove a source category from the section 112(c) list, and 
the other entity, in this case the D.C. Circuit Court, is not 
required to comply with the section 112(c)(9) requirements. CAA 
Section 112(e)(4) of the statute clearly authorizes judicial review 
of any listing decision pursuant to section 307(d) when the EPA 
issues section 112(d) standards. The courts thus have authority to 
determine that a listing was improper and to vacate any such 
listing. In this manner, an improper source category listing could 
be corrected.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    There is no basis for commenters' assertion that these 
interpretations are rendered unreasonable or otherwise invalid by the 
requirement that the EPA consider cost as part of the appropriate and 
necessary determination. Moreover, the agency's incorporation of a 
consideration of cost into the prior interpretation is reasonable, 
supported by the statutory text and context of the provision, and 
consistent with the purpose of the statute. See Legal Memorandum.
    3. The EPA is not required to consider the potential cost of 
alternative approaches to regulating HAP emissions from EGUs before 
finding that regulation is appropriate and necessary.
    As explained above, commenters maintain that listing under CAA 
section 112(c) and regulation under CAA section 112(d) is not 
reasonable for EGUs and that the EPA must instead look to other 
provisions of the statute to develop a regulatory approach that is only 
as costly as necessary to address specifically identified hazards to 
public health (hazards to the environment would not be sufficient to 
justify regulation of any HAP according to many commenters opposed to 
the agency's interpretation). The commenters point to various 
provisions including CAA sections 112(n)(1), 112(f), and 111(d), and to 
the potential for state action,\57\ and the commenters assert that the 
EPA must consider all these different approaches for each HAP, in 
addition to, or instead of, evaluating the cost reasonableness of MATS. 
The EPA does not agree that these alternative approaches are mandated 
by the Michigan decision or by the statute for the reasons above and as 
explained further below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ The comments suggesting that the EPA must consider 
potential state action prior to making the appropriate and necessary 
finding is in direct conflict with CAA section 112(n)(1)(A). That 
provision only requires the agency to consider the potential impact 
of CAA requirements on HAP emissions from EGUs when determining 
whether hazards to public health remain ``after imposition of the 
requirements of this chapter [the CAA].'' See CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A). In light of this limitation, we do not believe the 
agency could reasonably defer federal regulation of HAP emissions 
from EGUs because of potential state action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As an initial matter, the commenters do not suggest a clear 
framework for developing standards under those alternative approaches 
and the statute does not provide one. The D.C. Circuit stated that the 
EPA is not required to adopt a ``hypothetical framework not elaborated 
in the statute''; thus, even if HAP emissions could theoretically be 
regulated under the alternative provisions of the CAA identified by the 
comments, the agency could reasonably decline to adopt those 
alternative approaches in lieu of the reasonable approach affirmed in 
White Stallion. See 748 F.3d at 1244.
    The lack of a statutory framework for the alternative approaches 
suggested by commenters would frustrate if not wholly undermine the 
agency's ability to achieve prompt, permanent and ongoing reductions in 
HAP emissions from EGUs after completion of the studies, thus unduly 
frustrating the purpose of CAA section 112. As the EPA explained in the 
Legal Memorandum, CAA section 112(n)(1) required the agency to conduct 
the three studies that Congress thought most relevant to a 
determination of whether to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs within 4 
years of the 1990 amendments to ensure that the EPA would have the 
information required to make the appropriate and necessary finding. 
Legal Memorandum at 13-18. The EPA maintains that this direction 
ensured that the agency could list and regulate HAP emissions from EGUs 
if warranted. Conversely, the commenters' different and supposedly 
mandated approaches would make it virtually impossible to obtain prompt 
reductions in HAP emissions,\58\ and none of the approaches would 
require ongoing evaluation of HAP emissions from EGUs. In addition, 
because of the legal uncertainty

[[Page 24448]]

surrounding the alternative approaches, the potential for loss in court 
makes the risk that the standards will not be permanent arguably 
unacceptable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \58\ We note that collectively the comments would mandate a 
significant process after the agency completes the section 112(n) 
studies that would necessarily delay potential regulation 
indefinitely. Even if we assume that the commenters would argue that 
EPA need not take the time to evaluate the cost of standards under 
section 112(d) (i.e., the MATS HAP standards), a position with which 
we disagree as explained above, the different approaches to 
considering cost under the different provisions would be difficult 
for a number of reasons, including the fact that there are no 
defined mechanisms for setting the level of the standard and there 
is no indication in the comments when the EPA would be authorized to 
conclude that sufficient alternatives had been evaluated. Even if 
only one of the alternative approaches were chosen, because there 
are no defined standards, commenters could provide endless 
alternative approaches with different costs and benefits. The EPA 
declines to interpret the statute in ways that are not mandated by 
the statute and that we believe would frustrate the purpose of the 
statute.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We next address the commenters' assertion that the EPA could 
regulate under CAA section 112(f) and that such an approach is proper 
because CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) is a residual risk provision.\59\ As a 
legal matter, the commenters have failed to explain how the EPA could 
jump to regulation under CAA section 112(f)(2) when that provision, on 
its face, only applies after promulgation of CAA section 112(d) 
standards. See CAA section 112(f)(2)(A) (requiring review ``within 8 
years after promulgation of standards . . . pursuant to subsection (d) 
of this section''). In addition, CAA section 112(f)(2) embodies the 
failed approach to regulating HAP that existed prior to the 1990 
amendments wherein the agency listed as HAP only those air pollutants 
that the agency determined pose a risk and then regulate sources of 
those identified HAP based solely on the risk to human health. See 
Legal Memorandum at 9. As explained in the Legal Memorandum, the 
statute was completely revised in 1990 to ensure that there would be 
prompt, permanent and ongoing reductions in HAP emissions from 
stationary sources that meet the listing criteria. Id. at 6-7. CAA 
section 112(d) contains the statutory mechanism adopted to ensure 
prompt reductions and the risk approach incorporated into CAA section 
112(f) was explicitly relegated to secondary status. Id. at 6-11. Under 
this statutory scheme, the risk analysis is conducted when standards 
are reviewed and no provision authorizes setting standards, in the 
first instance, based on a CAA section 112(f) risk analysis. In 
addition, the fact that CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) uses the terms 
``section, ``subsection'' and ``subparagraph'' in a very careful and 
deliberate manner is an indication that Congress consciously directed 
the EPA to the relevant provisions of CAA section 112. If Congress 
intended the EPA to regulate under CAA section 112(f), it could have 
directed the EPA to that provision; in fact, however, the statute 
directs the agency to regulate under CAA section 112 as a whole.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \59\ The characterization of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) as a 
residual risk provision of a kind with the CAA section 112(f) 
residual risk program is not reasonable. As indicated in the Legal 
Memorandum, the only EGU specific regulatory program enacted in the 
1990 amendments to the CAA was the title IV acid rain program (ARP). 
The ARP was a trading program directed at the reduction in 
SO2 and NOX. Conversely, under CAA section 
112(f), the EPA evaluates whether a residual risk from HAP emissions 
remains within 8 years of implementation of section 112(d)(2) MACT 
standards. See CAA section 112(f)(2)(A). The requirement to comply 
with a trading program that does not require controls on any 
particular source or for any HAP does not in any meaningful way 
compare to the application of MACT standards that require reductions 
in all HAP emitted from a source category. As explained throughout 
the MATS rulemaking, CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) was included in the 
CAA in large part because EGUs were uniquely affected by the ARP and 
there was a belief that ARP trading program and other CAA programs 
applicable to all major stationary sources (e.g., NSR, PSD, haze) 
might address any risks associated with HAP emissions from EGUs. CAA 
section 112(n)(1)(A) required the EPA to estimate potential HAP risk 
after implementation of the ARP and other programs, and the EPA 
found unacceptable risks remain in 2000 and again in 2012, more than 
20 years after the CAA amendments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Commenters' challenges based on the legislative history are equally 
misplaced. The EPA has reviewed the legislative history cited by the 
commenters and the agency does not agree that it mandates or even 
supports the commenters' assertions concerning the proper consideration 
of cost. Commenters on the MATS rule used much of the same legislative 
history to argue against the non-cost related aspects of EPA's 
interpretation of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A), and the agency explained 
why the legislative history did not undermine the EPA's interpretation 
or compel a different approach. See e.g., 77 FR 9320-9323. The Michigan 
decision did not rely on the legislative history at all in its opinion, 
much less adopt the commenters' interpretation of that history. 
Instead, the Supreme Court relied on the context of the statute, 
specifically citing the requirement to consider cost in the Mercury 
Study required pursuant to CAA section 112(n)(1)(B). See Michigan, 135 
S. Ct. at 2708 and 2710. For these reasons, and after review of the 
additional legislative history cited, the EPA confirms that the 
legislative history does not mandate a particular approach to 
considering cost pursuant to section 112(n)(1)(A). See RTC, Chapter 1 
(providing additional discussion of the legislative history cited by 
commenters).
    Commenters also argue that the direction to conduct the Utility 
Study in CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) required the agency to consider 
regulation of HAP under other CAA authorities and that the agency 
incorrectly interpreted the scope of the study. Specifically, the 
commenters assert that the requirement to ``develop and describe . . . 
alternative control strategies'' for HAP emissions was a requirement to 
devise alternative regulatory approaches (other than CAA section 
112(d)) for reducing HAP emissions from EGUs and further required the 
agency to evaluate the comparative cost of the different approaches. 
The commenters argue that if the EPA had done what it was ``supposed'' 
to do in the study, it would have had the information commenters 
maintain is necessary to properly consider cost. The commenters' 
argument is flawed for several reasons. First, a natural reading of the 
statute does not support the type of analysis the commenters suggest is 
mandated and the legislative history does not support that conclusion 
either. In addition, the EPA completed the Utility Study in 1998 and to 
comply with the requirement to consider alternative control strategies 
the agency considered mechanisms to reduce HAP from EGUs before, 
during, and after combustion. See Utility Study, Chapter 13. The 
Utility Study was the last of the CAA section 112(n)(1) studies 
completed and Congress never indicated that the agency erred in the 
conduct of that study. Conversely, in the EPA's Fiscal Year 1999 
appropriations report, Congress did direct the agency to fund a NAS 
study to determine a reference dose for methylmercury, which is 
essentially the same study that was required in CAA section 
112(n)(1)(C), and the appropriations report stated that the EPA should 
not make the appropriate and necessary finding until after 
consideration of the NAS study. See Legal Memorandum, citing H.R. Conf. 
Rep. No 105-769, at 281-82 (1998). The fact that Congress specifically 
requested more information in relation to one of the CAA section 
112(n)(1) studies undermines the commenters' position that the EPA 
erred in the conduct of the Utility Study. Finally, the commenters fail 
to note that CAA section 112(n)(1)(A), unlike CAA section 112(n)(1)(B), 
did not require the agency to consider the cost of the alternative 
control strategies that the agency identified, thus further undermining 
their position that EPA erred in its conduct of the Utility Study. 
Congress could have explicitly required the EPA to consider the costs 
of alternative control strategies under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A). The 
fact that it did not do so is significant, particularly in light of the 
fact that it did include such a requirement in the very next 
subsection. For all these reasons, we reject the contention that the 
EPA erred in the conduct of the Utility Study.
    4. The Michigan decision does not affect the EPA's prior analyses 
and conclusions regarding the risks of HAP and its prior findings of 
hazards to public health and the environment from EGU HAP emissions.
    The commenters challenge either expressly or impliedly the legal 
and technical bases on which the agency determined that HAP emissions 
from EGUs pose hazards to public health and

[[Page 24449]]

the environment. Specifically, the commenters state that environmental 
harms cannot form the basis for a finding that it is appropriate to 
regulate HAP emissions from EGUs, that the 1-in-1 million standard is 
not reasonable, that HAP volume (particularly major source levels) is 
not a basis for determining risk, and that the agency has not 
demonstrated that a sufficient risk exists to warrant regulation of HAP 
emissions from EGUs. While we believe these comments are outside the 
scope of the proposed supplemental finding because they raise issues 
unrelated to cost, we respond briefly below.
    As to the consideration of environmental harms and the 1-in-1 
million standard, the White Stallion court unanimously affirmed the 
reasonableness of these standards for evaluating whether it is 
appropriate to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs. White Stallion, 748 
F.3d at 1236 (finding that ``EPA reasonably relied on the Sec.  
112(c)(9) delisting criteria [including the 1-in-1 million standard] to 
inform the interpretation of the undefined statutory term `hazard to 
public health.' ''), and 748 F.3d at 1242 (finding that ``[i]n the 
absence of any limiting text, and considering the context (including 
Sec.  112(n)(1)(B)) and purpose of the CAA, the EPA reasonably 
concluded that it could consider environmental harms in making its 
`appropriate and necessary' determination.''). The Michigan decision 
indirectly confirms that environmental harms are a valid basis for the 
finding because it is CAA section 112(n)(1)(B) that the Supreme Court 
cites as the context that demonstrates costs are relevant to the 
appropriate finding. The Michigan decision noted that the EPA used CAA 
section 112(n)(1)(B) to justify (in part) the consideration of 
environmental harms in support of the appropriate finding so it was 
unreasonable in the majority's view to ignore costs, which were also a 
required consideration under that provision. Michigan, 135 S. Ct. at 
2708. It is unreasonable to conclude based on the Michigan decision 
that the statute requires a consideration of cost and precludes in any 
way a consideration of environmental impacts. Id. (``Chevron allows 
agencies to choose among reasonable interpretations of a statute; it 
does not license interpretive gerrymandering under which an agency 
keeps parts of statutory context it likes while throwing away parts it 
does not.'').
    Commenters note that the White Stallion court specifically declined 
to determine ``whether environmental effects alone would allow the EPA 
to regulate EGUs under Sec.  112, because EPA did not base its decision 
solely on environmental effects'', and they argue that because the 
agency must consider cost, the appropriate finding for acid gas HAP 
cannot stand because it was based only on environmental effects.\60\ 
748 F.3d at 1242. Initially, we note that the commenters are not 
correct that the appropriate finding for acid gas HAP was based solely 
on environmental effects, as it was also based on the major source 
status of almost all EGUs and the concern about the potential for these 
emissions to add to the already high atmospheric levels of other 
chronic respiratory toxicants. See, e.g., 76 FR 25015-16; 77 FR 9363. 
More importantly, as with all of these comments, the arguments are 
based on an assumption that the EPA's prior interpretations of the act 
are invalid (e.g., that the EPA will list under CAA section 112(c) and 
regulate under CAA section 112(d) if we determine regulation is 
appropriate and necessary; that the EPA can base the finding on a 
hazard from one HAP), and we explain above why the consideration of 
cost does not mandate or otherwise support a change in the agency's 
interpretation in the MATS rule, as supplemented by the Legal 
Memorandum.\61\
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    \60\ The commenters' argument against regulating acid gas HAP 
does not apply to the non-mercury metal HAP risk assessment because 
that assessment found a hazard to public health, and commenters 
agreed that hazards to public health form a valid basis for the 
appropriate finding. For this reason, the commenters instead attempt 
to reargue issues raised and responded to in the MATS rule and the 
agency's response to petitions for reconsideration. See 80 FR 24218 
(April 30, 2015) (providing notice of the document titled ``Denials 
of Petitions for Reconsideration of Certain Issues: MATS and Utility 
NSPS'', March 2015. Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-20493). 
Specifically, the commenters cited data submitted after the final 
MATS rule was issued as supporting their conclusion that non-mercury 
metal HAP do not pose a significant risk. The EPA responded to the 
petitions in the reconsideration denials document, and certain 
commenters are currently challenging the agency's denial of that 
petition for reconsideration in the D.C. Circuit Court. For these 
reasons, the specific arguments challenging the sufficiency of the 
finding are outside the scope of this action and they require no 
additional response.
    \61\ Though some commenters acknowledged that the findings from 
the lower court were not disturbed, they appear to ignore the fact 
that the White Stallion court unanimously found that the hazards to 
public health from mercury emissions alone supported the appropriate 
finding. 748 F.3d at 1245. The commenters' attempt to use the 
limited nature of the White Stallion decision (i.e., find the 
determination sufficiently supported by the mercury health risks 
alone) as a justification for rearguing the merits of the other 
technical findings the EPA cited in support of the conclusion that 
regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs is appropriate and necessary 
(e.g., the non-mercury metal HAP related health findings, the 
mercury-related environmental findings, the acid gas HAP-related 
environmental findings, and the finding that the volume of HAP from 
EGUs support the decision to regulate). The commenters have not 
shown in any way how a consideration of cost necessarily implicates 
the actual development of the specific risks finding in the MATS 
record, and the agency explained in the Legal Memorandum that cost 
plays no role in those analyses. See Legal Memorandum at 10-11. 
Instead, cost is a factor only if the agency has first concluded 
that HAP emissions from EGUs pose a hazard to public health or the 
environment that will not be addressed through imposition of the 
other requirements of the act. Id. For these reasons, neither the 
requirement to consider cost nor issues related to the manner in 
which the EPA incorporated cost into the appropriate and necessary 
finding, has any impact on the health and environmental findings, 
and commenters' challenges are thus beyond the scope of this 
rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Concerning the consideration of the volume of HAP emissions in the 
appropriate finding, the EPA explained in the Legal Memorandum why 
volume of HAP is relevant to the appropriate finding because one of the 
goals of the CAA is to obtain permanent reductions in the volume of HAP 
emissions from major stationary sources. See, e.g., Legal Memorandum at 
17. The commenters do not directly address the EPA's argument and 
instead state that CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) clearly prohibits the 
consideration of the volume of HAP as a basis for regulating HAP 
emissions from EGUs.\62\ The commenters' next point to acid gas HAP 
specifically and argue that the EPA cannot consider major source levels 
of those HAP because CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) was enacted in part 
because of the Acid Rain Program and if Congress wanted to regulate 
major source levels of HAP from EGUs it would simply have directed the 
agency to list and regulate EGUs. That argument is unpersuasive as 
Congress could have just as easily prohibited the EPA from regulating 
acid gas HAP emissions from EGUs if that was the intent. In addition, 
the EPA does not believe the commenters' interpretation is better than 
the agency's in light of the overall context of the CAA and the purpose 
of the 1990 CAA amendments. The history of CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) 
suggests that it was included due to uncertainty about whether the Acid 
Rain Program in Title IV and other CAA programs would sufficiently 
reduce HAP emissions from EGUs and Congress' interest in better 
understanding the impact of such reductions on risk before authorizing

[[Page 24450]]

regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs under CAA section 112. The Acid 
Rain Program required significant reductions in EGU SO2 
emissions and, as explained in the MATS record, other acid gases (e.g., 
hydrogen chloride and hydrogen fluoride) are removed from flue gas more 
easily than SO2 such that control of that pollutant could 
potentially address the acid gas HAP emissions, and to a lesser extent 
mercury and non-mercury metal HAP emissions. In fact, as the record 
reflects, the Acid Rain Program led to the installation of far fewer 
controls than estimated at a cost that was considerably below estimates 
at the time of promulgation. As a result the co-benefit HAP reductions 
attributable to the Acid Rain Program and other CAA programs were 
limited. The EPA believes adopting the commenters' interpretation that 
the agency must ignore the volume of HAP from EGUs would potentially 
undermine one of the purposes of CAA section 112, and we therefore 
decline to adopt that interpretation in the absence of express 
statutory support. For all these reasons, we maintain our position from 
the MATS rule that the volume of HAP emissions from EGUs, including 
acid gas HAP emissions, may form the basis for finding that HAP 
emissions from EGUs pose a hazard to public health and the environment 
that is appropriate to regulate. See e.g. Legal Memorandum at 10-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \62\ The commenters appear to assume that the EPA was concerned 
only with the volume of acid gas HAP emissions from EGUs. In fact, 
the EPA determined that EGUs emitted almost half of all U.S. 
anthropogenic emissions of mercury, and more than half of all U.S. 
anthropogenic emissions of selenium, hydrogen chloride, hydrogen 
fluoride, and arsenic, along with significant volumes of other HAP 
such as nickel. The agency maintains it would be unreasonable not to 
at least consider the significant contribution of HAP emissions from 
EGUs in light of the statutory goals as discussed in the MATS record 
and the Legal Memorandum.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EPA also disagrees with commenters' assertion that the acid gas 
HAP that are emitted from EGUs do not warrant regulation under CAA 
section 112. CAA Section 112(b) identifies the HAP that Congress 
determined warrant regulation under CAA section 112. Congress also 
provided a mechanism to remove pollutants from the CAA section 112(b) 
list. See CAA section 112(b)(3). If such HAP are not harmful to human 
health or the environment as the commenters contend, they may petition 
the Administrator to remove those pollutants from the CAA section 
112(b) list. If the EPA grants such a petition, the agency would not be 
required to regulate such emissions from EGUs or any other sources. 
Absent such an action, the EPA must regulate all HAP on the CAA section 
112(b) list. See e.g., Sierra Club v. EPA, 479 F.3d 875, 883 (D.C. Cir. 
2007); Nat'l Lime Ass'n v. EPA, 233 F.3d 625, 634 (D.C. Cir. 2000).
    Finally, the agency also does not agree that it may establish a 
standard under CAA section 112(d)(4), which allows the agency to factor 
health thresholds into its decisions on standards in cases where health 
thresholds have been established for pollutants, simply based on cost 
and the Michigan decision. The EPA considered and rejected the 
establishment of a CAA section 112(d)(4) standard in the MATS 
rulemaking. In the proposed MATS rule, the EPA stated its basis for 
declining to establish a CAA section 112(d)(4) standard, which included 
concern over the combination of EGU acid gases with other acid gases 
emitted from other sources, and the agency requested data that would 
support the establishment of such standard. The commenters on the MATS 
rule objected to the determination but provided no data to support 
their position. The agency's decision was challenged in White Stallion, 
and the D.C. Circuit unanimously rejected those challenges. White 
Stallion, 748 F.3d at 1248. While the commenters again renew their 
arguments, they still have not provided the information that the agency 
indicated in the MATS proposal (in May 2011) was necessary to establish 
a CAA section 112(d)(4) standard for acid gas HAP from EGUs with their 
comments on the cost proposal.

D. Comments on Topics That Are Beyond the Limited Scope of the 
Supplemental Finding

    Because of the limited nature of the Supreme Court's remand, the 
EPA only solicited comments on its consideration of cost in its 
proposal reaffirming the appropriate determination. We explained that 
analyses presented in the proposed notice and in the accompanying Legal 
Memorandum did not affect or alter other aspects of the appropriate and 
necessary interpretation or finding or the CAA section 112(d) emission 
standards promulgated in MATS. The EPA also clearly explained that the 
analyses in the proposed supplemental finding did not, in any way, 
alter the RIA prepared for the final MATS.
    Therefore, we clearly stated that we would not accept comment on 
the scientific or technical aspects of the prior findings or the 
analyses supporting our conclusions regarding the hazards to public 
health and environmental benefits from HAP emissions from EGUs. These 
findings include that mercury and other HAP emissions pose significant 
hazards to public health and the environment, that EGUs are the largest 
emitter of many HAP, that effective control strategies for HAP 
emissions are available, and that HAP hazards remain after 
implementation of other CAA provisions.
    The EPA did not open for comment or propose to revise any other 
aspects of the appropriate and necessary interpretation or finding, or 
the MATS standards themselves, as part of the proposed action. The 
final MATS standards were supported by an extensive administrative 
record and based on available control technologies and other practices 
already used by the better-controlled and lower-emitting EGUs, and the 
EPA previously concluded that the standards are achievable and reduce 
hazards to public health and the environment from HAP emitted by EGUs. 
76 FR 24976 (MATS proposal); 77 FR 9304 (MATS final). Further, the 
public had ample opportunity to comment on all aspects of the CAA 
section 112(d) standards, the RIA, and the appropriate and necessary 
finding beyond the consideration of cost; and the EPA responded to all 
of the significant comments.\63\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \63\ 77 FR 3919-62; 77 FR 9386-9423; U.S. EPA. 2011. EPA's 
Responses to Public Comments on EPA's National Emission Standards 
for Hazardous Air Pollutants from Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric 
Utility Steam Generating Units. December 2011. Volumes 1 and 2. 
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2009-0234-20126.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Supreme Court's decision in Michigan neither called into 
question nor reversed the portions of the D.C. Circuit Court's opinion 
unanimously rejecting all other challenges to the appropriate and 
necessary interpretation and finding and the HAP emission standards 
that the EPA promulgated in the final MATS rule. Industry, states, 
environmental organizations, and public health organizations challenged 
many aspects of the EPA's appropriate and necessary finding and the 
MATS emissions standards, including: (1) The EPA's reliance on the CAA 
section 112(c)(9) delisting criteria for determining the level of risk 
worth regulating; (2) the EPA's decision not to consider cost in making 
the appropriate and necessary determination and listing of EGUs; (3) 
the EPA's use of identified environmental harms as a basis for finding 
it appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs; (4) 
the EPA's consideration of the cumulative impacts of HAP emissions from 
EGUs and other sources in determining whether EGUs pose a hazard to 
public health or the environment; (5) the EPA's regulation of EGUs 
pursuant to CAA section 112(d) after adding EGUs to the CAA section 
112(c) list pursuant to the appropriate and necessary finding; (6) the 
EPA's determination that all HAP from EGUs should be regulated; (7) the 
EPA's technical basis for concluding that EGUs pose a hazard to public 
health or the environment; (8) the EPA's determination to regulate all 
EGUs as defined in CAA section 112(a)(8) in the same manner whether or 
not the

[[Page 24451]]

individual units are located at major or area sources of HAP; (9) the 
EPA's emissions standards for mercury and acid gas HAP, including the 
EPA's decision not to set health-based emission standards for acid gas 
HAP; (10) the EPA's use of certified data submitted by regulated 
parties; (11) the EPA's denial of a delisting petition filed by an 
industry trade group; (12) the EPA's decision not to subcategorize a 
certain type of EGU; and (13) the EPA's decision to allow EGUs to 
average HAP emissions among certain EGUs. The D.C. Circuit Court denied 
all challenges to the CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) appropriate and 
necessary finding and to the CAA section 112(d) MATS rule, and, with 
the exception of the cost issue relevant to the CAA section 
112(n)(1)(A) finding, all the challenges were unanimously rejected. For 
that reason, the EPA clearly explained in the proposed supplemental 
finding that it was not soliciting comment nor revisiting, in any way, 
those final actions that were unanimously upheld in White Stallion 
Energy Center v. EPA, 748 F.3d 1222 (April 15, 2014). 80 FR 75028-29.
    The EPA further clarified that reference or citation to any final 
decision, interpretation, or conclusion in the MATS record does not 
constitute a re-opening of the issue or an invitation to comment on the 
underlying decision in which the EPA considered some cost of MATS 
(e.g., in CAA section 112(d) beyond-the-floor analyses either 
establishing or declining to establish a standard more stringent than 
the MACT floor).
    Despite the very clear direction that the EPA provided in the 
proposal and solicitation, numerous commenters submitted comments that 
were beyond the limited scope identified in the proposed supplemental 
finding. In many cases, the submissions contained comments on issues 
that the EPA had considered in Petitions for Reconsideration (80 FR 
24218) or that had been upheld in White Stallion and not disturbed by 
the Supreme Court's decision in Michigan. Those comments are noted in 
Section 5.0 of the Response to Comments document. However, the EPA has 
no obligation to respond to comments beyond the scope of the rulemaking 
and the EPA has not provided extensive responses to such comments.

V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews

    Additional information about these statues and Executive Orders can 
be found at https://www.epa.gov/laws-regulations/laws-and-executive-orders.

A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive 
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review

    This action is a significant regulatory action that was submitted 
to OMB for review because it ``raises novel legal or policy issues 
arising out of legal mandates.'' Any changes made in response to OMB 
recommendations have been documented in the docket. The EPA does not 
project any incremental costs or benefits associated with this 
supplemental finding because this action does not impose standards or 
other requirements on affected sources.

B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)

    This action does not impose an information collection burden under 
the PRA. There are no information collection requirements in this 
action.

C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)

    I certify that this action will not have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. This 
action will not impose any requirements on small entities. The EPA does 
not project any incremental costs or benefits associated with this 
supplemental finding because this action does not impose standards or 
other requirements on affected sources.

D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)

    This action does not contain any unfunded mandate as described in 
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect 
small governments. The action imposes no enforceable duty on any state, 
local, or tribal governments or the private sector.

E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism

    This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have 
substantial direct effects on the states, on the relationship between 
the national government and the states, or on the distribution of power 
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.

F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian 
Tribal Governments

    This action does not have tribal implications as specified in 
Executive Order 13175. It would neither impose substantial direct 
compliance costs on tribal governments, nor preempt Tribal law. Thus, 
Executive Order 13175 does not apply to this action.

G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental 
Health Risks and Safety Risks

    The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying only to those 
regulatory actions that concern environmental health or safety risks 
that the EPA has reason to believe may disproportionately affect 
children, per the definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in 
section 2-202 of the Executive Order. This action is not subject to 
Executive Order 13045 because it does not concern an environmental 
health risk or safety risk.

H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That 
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use

    This action is not a ``significant energy action'' because it is 
not likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply, 
distribution, or use of energy. This action is not anticipated to have 
notable impacts on emissions, costs, or energy supply decisions for the 
affected electric utility industry as this action does not impose 
standards or other requirements on affected sources.

I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)

    This action does not involve technical standards.

J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental 
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations

    The EPA believes the human health or environmental risk addressed 
by this action will not have potential disproportionately high and 
adverse human health or environmental effects on minority, low-income, 
or indigenous populations because it is limited in scope and only 
considers the cost of whether it is appropriate to regulate HAP 
emissions from EGUs.

K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)

    This action is subject to the CRA, and the EPA will submit a rule 
report to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of 
the United States. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 
U.S.C. 804(2).

L. Determination Under CAA Section 307(d)

    Pursuant to CAA section 307(d)(1)(V), the Administrator determines 
that this action is subject to provisions of section 307(d). Section 
307(d) establishes procedural requirements specific to rulemaking under 
the CAA. CAA section 307(d)(1)(V) provides that the provisions of CAA 
section 307(d) apply

[[Page 24452]]

to ``such other actions as the Administrator may determine.''

VI. Statutory Authority

    The statutory authority for this proposed action is provided by 
sections 112, 301, 302, and 307(d)(1) of the CAA as amended (42 U.S.C. 
7412, 7601, 7602, 7607(d)(1)). This action is also subject to section 
307(d) of the CAA (42 U.S.C. 7607(d)).

    Dated: April 14, 2016.
Gina McCarthy,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2016-09429 Filed 4-22-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6560-50-P



                                                                                                        Vol. 81                           Monday,
                                                                                                        No. 79                            April 25, 2016




                                                                                                        Part VII


                                                                                                        Environmental Protection Agency
                                                                                                        40 CFR Part 63
                                                                                                        Supplemental Finding That It Is Appropriate and Necessary To Regulate
                                                                                                        Hazardous Air Pollutants From Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric Utility Steam
                                                                                                        Generating Units; Final Rule
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                                                  24420               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION                                Building, 1301 Constitution Ave. NW.,                      Minority Populations and Low-Income
                                                  AGENCY                                                  Washington, DC. The Public Reading                         Populations
                                                                                                          Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30                     K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
                                                  40 CFR Part 63                                                                                                  L. Determination under CAA Section
                                                                                                          p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding                     307(d)
                                                  [EPA–HQ–OAR–2009–0234; FRL–9945–33–                     legal holidays. The telephone number                  VI. Statutory Authority
                                                  OAR]                                                    for the Public Reading Room is (202)
                                                                                                          566–1744, and the telephone number for                I. General Information
                                                  RIN 2060–AS76                                           the Air Docket is (202) 566–1742.                     A. Executive Summary
                                                  Supplemental Finding That It Is                         FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr.
                                                                                                                                                                   The EPA is taking this final action in
                                                  Appropriate and Necessary To                            Nick Hutson, Energy Strategies Group,
                                                                                                                                                                response to (1) the U.S. Supreme Court
                                                  Regulate Hazardous Air Pollutants                       Sector Policies and Programs Division                 (Supreme Court) decision in Michigan v.
                                                  From Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric Utility               (D243–01), U.S. EPA, Research Triangle                EPA, 135 S. Ct. 2699 (2015), which held
                                                  Steam Generating Units                                  Park, NC 27711; telephone number (919)                that the EPA must consider cost in
                                                                                                          541–2968, facsimile number (919) 541–                 evaluating whether it is appropriate and
                                                  AGENCY:  Environmental Protection                       5450; email address: hutson.nick@                     necessary to regulate coal- and oil-fired
                                                  Agency (EPA).                                           epa.gov.                                              EGUs under CAA section 112, and (2)
                                                  ACTION: Final supplemental finding.                     SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                            the comments received on the agency’s
                                                                                                            Organization of This Document. The                  proposal.
                                                  SUMMARY:    This action responds to the
                                                                                                          information presented in this notice is                  After evaluating cost reasonableness
                                                  U.S. Supreme Court decision in
                                                                                                          organized as follows:                                 using several different metrics, the
                                                  Michigan v. EPA, 135 S. Ct. 2699 (2015),
                                                                                                          I. General Information                                Administrator has, in accordance with
                                                  and explains how the Environmental
                                                                                                             A. Executive Summary                               her statutory duty under CAA section
                                                  Protection Agency (EPA) has taken cost
                                                                                                             B. Does this action apply to me?                   112(n)(1)(A), weighed cost against the
                                                  into account in evaluating whether it is                   C. Where can I get a copy of this                  previously identified advantages of
                                                  appropriate and necessary to regulate                         document?                                       regulating HAP emissions from EGUs—
                                                  coal- and oil-fired electric utility steam                 D. Judicial Review                                 including the agency’s prior conclusions
                                                  generating units (EGUs) under section                   II. Overview and Background on the                    about the significant hazards to public
                                                  112 of the Clean Air Act (CAA). The                           Proposed Supplemental Finding
                                                                                                             A. Overview
                                                                                                                                                                health and the environment associated
                                                  EPA requested comment on all aspects
                                                                                                             B. 2000 Finding and 2012 Affirmation               with such emissions and the volume of
                                                  of its approach to considering cost
                                                                                                             C. Proposed Supplemental Finding                   HAP that would be reduced by
                                                  through a proposed supplemental
                                                                                                          III. Final Supplemental Finding and                   regulation of EGUs under CAA section
                                                  finding and on a companion Legal                              Affirmation                                     112.
                                                  Memorandum available in the                                A. Supplemental Analyses Conducted in                 In evaluating the costs of the Mercury
                                                  rulemaking docket. After consideration                        Response to Comments                            and Air Toxics Standards (MATS), the
                                                  of public comments, the EPA, in this                       B. Basis for the Final Supplemental                EPA uses several cost metrics specific to
                                                  final supplemental finding, concludes                         Finding                                         the power sector to determine whether
                                                  that a consideration of cost does not                      C. Affirmation of the Appropriate and
                                                                                                                Necessary Finding                               the costs of MATS are reasonable. The
                                                  cause us to change our determination                                                                          evaluations across each of the different
                                                  that regulation of hazardous air                        IV. Public Comments on the Proposed
                                                                                                                Supplemental Finding                            metrics reveal that the cost of complying
                                                  pollutant (HAP) emissions from coal-                                                                          with MATS—compared to historical
                                                                                                             A. Comments on Considerations of Cost
                                                  and oil-fired EGUs is appropriate and                      B. Comments on Consideration of Benefit-           annual revenues, annual capital
                                                  necessary and that EGUs are, therefore,                       Cost Analysis in the MATS RIA                   expenditures, and impacts on retail
                                                  properly included on the CAA section                       C. Comments on the Legal Interpretation of         electricity prices—is well within the
                                                  112(c) list of sources that must be                           CAA Section 112(n)(1)                           range of historical variability. The EPA
                                                  regulated under CAA section 112(d).                        D. Comments on Topics that are Beyond
                                                                                                                the Limited Scope of the Supplemental
                                                                                                                                                                further finds that the power sector is
                                                  DATES: This final supplemental finding                                                                        able to comply with the rule’s
                                                                                                                Finding
                                                  is effective on April 25, 2016.                                                                               requirements while maintaining its
                                                                                                          V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
                                                  ADDRESSES: The EPA has an established                      A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory               ability to perform its primary and
                                                  docket for this action under Docket ID                        Planning and Review and Executive               unique function—the generation,
                                                  No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2009–0234                                      Order 13563: Improving Regulation and           transmission, and distribution of
                                                  (National Emission Standards for                              Regulatory Review                               reliable electricity at reasonable cost to
                                                  Hazardous Air Pollutants for Coal- and                     B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)                   consumers. The EPA thus concludes
                                                  Oil-fired Electric Utility Steam                           C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)                that under every metric examined, the
                                                                                                             D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                  Generating Units). All documents in the                                                                       cost of MATS is reasonable and that no
                                                                                                                (UMRA)
                                                  docket are listed on the                                   E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism               new information provided during the
                                                  www.regulations.gov Web site. Although                     F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation             public comment period demonstrates
                                                  listed in the index, some information is                      and Coordination with Indian Tribal             otherwise.
                                                  not publicly available, e.g., Confidential                    Governments                                        In exercising the discretion granted to
                                                  Business Information or other                              G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of            her under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A), the
                                                  information whose disclosure is                               Children from Environmental Health              Administrator has taken numerous
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                                                  restricted by statute. Certain other                          Risks and Safety Risks                          factors into account, in addition to the
                                                  material, such as copyrighted material,                    H. Executive Order 13211: Actions                  consideration of the cost of regulation,
                                                                                                                Concerning Regulations that
                                                  will be publicly available only in hard                                                                       including Congress’s concern about the
                                                                                                                Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
                                                  copy. Publicly available docket                               Distribution, or Use                            hazardous nature of these pollutants,
                                                  materials are available either                             I. National Technology Transfer and                the wealth of public health and
                                                  electronically in www.regulations.gov or                      Advancement Act (NTTAA)                         environmental effects research
                                                  in hard copy at the EPA Docket Center                      J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions          examined under the agency’s prior
                                                  (EPA/DC), Room 3334, EPA WJC West                             to Address Environmental Justice in             findings showing substantial risks from


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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                        24421

                                                  the emission of HAP from EGUs, and                                   important, and, in many cases,                        finding 2 published on December 1,
                                                  the fact that the power sector is the                                unquantifiable advantages of reducing                 2015 and on a supporting Legal
                                                  largest remaining anthropogenic source                               the significant hazards to public health              Memorandum.3 The EPA received
                                                  of many HAP in the U.S. The                                          posed by such emissions, including                    numerous comments both supporting
                                                  Administrator finds in this final action                             addressing the risk to the most exposed               and opposing the proposed approaches
                                                  that, in her judgment, after determining                             and most sensitive members of society.                and the agency has considered all of
                                                  under each metric examined that the                                     The EPA also presents in this action               these comments.
                                                  cost of MATS is reasonable, and                                      a second independent approach that
                                                                                                                                                                                Based on all of these considerations,
                                                  weighing this consideration against the                              supports the appropriate and necessary
                                                                                                                                                                             the Administrator finds that both
                                                  many identified advantages to                                        determination as informed by
                                                                                                                                                                             approaches—the preferred approach
                                                  regulation, it clearly remains                                       consideration of the cost of MATS:
                                                                                                                                                                             and the alternative benefit-cost analysis
                                                  appropriate and necessary to regulate                                consideration of a formal benefit-cost
                                                                                                                                                                             in the MATS RIA—support her
                                                  HAP emissions from EGUs.                                             analysis. Although the EPA does not
                                                                                                                                                                             determination that consideration of cost
                                                                                                                       view formal benefit-cost analysis as
                                                     The Administrator’s approach to                                                                                         does not cause her to alter the previous
                                                                                                                       required to support the appropriate
                                                  making her determination is fully                                    finding, the agency had performed such                conclusion that regulation of HAP
                                                  consistent with the dictates of the                                  an analysis for the regulatory impacts                emissions from EGUs is appropriate and
                                                  statute and with the Michigan decision                               analysis (RIA ) 1 for the final MATS rule.            necessary. Therefore, in this final
                                                  because it reflects her consideration of                             In this final action—as in the proposal—              notice, the Administrator affirms that it
                                                  the full range of factors relevant to                                the EPA finds that the analysis                       is appropriate and necessary to regulate
                                                  making a decision under CAA section                                  demonstrates that the benefits                        coal- and oil-fired EGUs under CAA
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) regarding whether it is                                 (monetized and non-monetized) of the                  section 112 and that these sources are
                                                  appropriate to regulate HAP emissions                                rule are substantial and far outweigh the             properly listed as an affected source
                                                  from EGUs under CAA section 112. She                                 costs. The benefit-cost analysis, thus,               category under CAA section 112(c).
                                                  prefers—and the CAA supports—this                                    fully and independently supports the                  B. Does this Action Apply to Me?
                                                  approach because, in addition to cost, it                            finding that it is appropriate to regulate
                                                  places value on the statutory goals of                               HAP emissions from EGUs.                                The regulated categories and entities
                                                  achieving prompt, permanent, and                                        The EPA provided an opportunity for                potentially affected by this final
                                                  ongoing reductions in significant                                    public comment on both approaches                     supplemental finding are shown below
                                                  volumes of HAP emissions and on the                                  through a proposed supplemental                       in Table 1.

                                                                                           TABLE 1—POTENTIALLY AFFECTED REGULATED CATEGORIES AND ENTITIES
                                                                         Category                                   NAICS Code 1                                Examples of potentially affected entities

                                                  Industry ....................................................                 221112   Fossil fuel-fired electric utility steam generating units.
                                                  Federal government ................................                        2 221122    Fossil fuel-fired electric utility steam generating units owned by the federal gov-
                                                                                                                                           ernment.
                                                  State/local/tribal government ...................                          2 221122    Fossil fuel-fired electric utility steam generating units owned by municipalities.
                                                                                                                                921150   Fossil fuel-fired electric utility steam generating units in Indian country.
                                                     1 North    American Industry Classification System (NAICS).
                                                     2 Federal,   state, or local government-owned and operated establishments are classified according to the activity in which they are engaged.


                                                     This table is not intended to be                                  D. Judicial Review                                    enumerated rulemakings under the
                                                  exhaustive, but rather provides a guide                                 Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA,                CAA, and CAA section 307(d)(1)(V)
                                                  for readers regarding entities that may                              judicial review of this final                         provides for the extension of these
                                                  be affected by this action. If you have                              supplemental finding is available only                procedural requirements to ‘‘such other
                                                  any questions regarding the                                          by filing a petition for review in the U.S.           actions as the Administrator may
                                                  applicability of this action to a                                    Court of Appeals for the District of                  determine.’’ Section 307(d)(7)(B) of the
                                                  particular entity, consult either the air                            Columbia Circuit (D.C. Circuit Court) by              CAA further provides that ‘‘[o]nly an
                                                  permitting authority for the entity or                               June 24, 2016. Moreover, under section                objection to a rule or procedure which
                                                  your EPA Regional representative as                                  307(b)(2) of the CAA, the requirements                was raised with reasonable specificity
                                                  listed in 40 CFR 60.4 or 40 CFR 63.13                                established by this final supplemental                during the period for public comment
                                                  (General Provisions).                                                finding may not be challenged                         (including any public hearing) may be
                                                  C. Where can I get a copy of this                                    separately in any civil or criminal                   raised during judicial review.’’ This
                                                  document?                                                            proceedings brought by the EPA to                     section also provides a mechanism
                                                                                                                       enforce these requirements.                           mandating the EPA to convene a
                                                    In addition to being available in the                                 In the proposal, the EPA provided                  proceeding for reconsideration ‘‘[i]f the
                                                  docket, an electronic copy of this final                             notice that CAA section 307(d) was                    person raising an objection can
                                                  action will also be available on the                                 applicable to this action and has                     demonstrate to the EPA that it was
                                                  World Wide Web (WWW). Following                                      followed the requirements of that                     impracticable to raise such objection
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                                                  signature, a copy of this final action will                          subsection. 80 FR 75042. CAA section                  within [the period for public comment]
                                                  be posted at the following address:                                  307(d) establishes procedural                         or if the grounds for such objection
                                                  http://www3.epa.gov/mats/.                                           requirements specific to certain                      arose after the period for public
                                                    1 U.S. EPA. 2011. Regulatory Impact Analysis for                     2 80FR 75025.                                       Air Pollutants from Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric
                                                  the Final Mercury and Air Toxics Standards. EPA–                       3 ‘‘Legal
                                                                                                                                 Memorandum Accompanying the                 Utility Steam Generating Units (EGUs)’’ (Legal
                                                  452/R–11–011. Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–                              Proposed Supplemental Finding that it is              Memorandum). Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–
                                                  2009–0234–20131.                                                     Appropriate and Necessary to Regulate Hazardous       2009–0234–20519.



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                                                  24422               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  comment (but within the time specified                  final MATS RIA that showed the                        Academy of Sciences’ Toxicological
                                                  for judicial review) and if such objection              benefits (monetized and non-monetized)                Effects of Methylmercury (NAS Study),7
                                                  is of central relevance to the outcome of               of the rule are substantial and far                   and mercury data collected from coal-
                                                  the rule.’’ Any person seeking to make                  outweigh the costs. The EPA then                      fired EGUs after completion of the
                                                  such a demonstration should submit a                    proposed to find that consideration of                studies. 65 FR 79826. The EPA found
                                                  Petition for Reconsideration to the                     such costs does not cause the agency to               that mercury is a significant hazard to
                                                  Office of the Administrator, U.S. EPA,                  alter its previous finding that regulation            public health, and EGUs are the largest
                                                  Room 3000, EPA WJC North Building,                      of HAP emissions from EGUs is                         domestic source of mercury emissions.
                                                  1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.,                             appropriate and necessary.                            The EPA also identified control
                                                  Washington, DC 20460, with a copy to                       The EPA received numerous public                   strategies that would effectively reduce
                                                  both the person(s) listed in the                        comments on the proposed                              HAP emissions from U.S. EGUs. The
                                                  preceding FOR FURTHER INFORMATION                       supplemental finding. In Section III.A                EPA found that implementation of other
                                                  CONTACT section, and the Associate                      below, the EPA explains how                           requirements under the CAA would not
                                                  General Counsel for the Air and                         consideration of the public comments                  adequately address the significant
                                                  Radiation Law Office, Office of General                 resulted in the addition of a limited                 public health and environmental
                                                  Counsel (Mail Code 2344A), U.S. EPA,                    analysis that reinforces the final                    hazards arising from HAP emissions
                                                  1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.,                             supplemental finding. In Section III.B,               from U.S. EGUs. After consideration of
                                                  Washington, DC 20460.                                   we explain the basis for the final action,            this information, the EPA found that it
                                                                                                          and, in Section III.C we affirm the                   was appropriate to regulate HAP
                                                  II. Overview and Background on the                      proposed finding that a consideration of              emissions from EGUs because such
                                                  Proposed Supplemental Finding                           cost does not cause the EPA to change                 emissions pose significant hazards to
                                                  A. Overview                                             its conclusion that regulation of HAP                 public health and the environment and
                                                                                                          emissions from coal- and oil-fired EGUs               also because there were available
                                                     On June 29, 2015, the Supreme Court
                                                                                                          is appropriate and necessary and that                 controls to effectively reduce mercury
                                                  ruled in Michigan v. EPA that the
                                                                                                          EGUs are, therefore, properly included                and other HAP emissions from EGUs. 64
                                                  agency had erred when it failed to take
                                                                                                          on the CAA section 112(c) list of sources             FR 79825, 79830. The EPA found that it
                                                  cost into account in evaluating whether
                                                                                                          that must be regulated under CAA                      was necessary to regulate HAP
                                                  it is appropriate to regulate HAP
                                                                                                          section 112(d).                                       emissions from EGUs because
                                                  emissions from coal- and oil-fired EGUs.                                                                      implementation of the other
                                                  On December 1, 2015, in response to the                    In Section IV below, the EPA provides
                                                                                                          a summary of selected significant                     requirements of the CAA would not
                                                  Michigan ruling, the EPA published the                                                                        adequately address the serious hazards
                                                  proposed supplemental finding and                       comments and the agency’s response to
                                                                                                          those comments. The Response to                       to public health and the environment
                                                  companion Legal Memorandum. In the                                                                            posed by HAP emissions from EGUs and
                                                  proposed supplemental finding, the                      Comments (RTC) document 4 for this
                                                                                                          action summarizes all comments the                    because CAA section 112 is the
                                                  EPA proposed to determine that                                                                                authority intended to regulate HAP
                                                  including a consideration of cost does                  EPA received. The RTC document also
                                                                                                          presents responses to significant                     emissions from stationary sources. Id.
                                                  not cause the agency to alter its previous                                                                    See also 76 FR 24984–20985 (for further
                                                  conclusion that regulation of HAP                       comments or citations to Section IV
                                                                                                          below in the instances where relevant                 discussion of conclusions supporting
                                                  emissions from EGUs is appropriate and                                                                        the 2000 finding).
                                                  necessary.                                              comment responses are presented in the
                                                                                                          preamble.                                                In 2005, the EPA issued the Section
                                                     In Section II.B of this final                                                                              112(n) Revision Rule (70 FR 15994) that
                                                  supplemental finding, the EPA provides                  B. 2000 Finding and 2012 Affirmation                  revised the agency’s December 2000
                                                  background information regarding the                                                                          appropriate and necessary finding and
                                                                                                            On December 20, 2000, the EPA
                                                  2000 appropriate and necessary finding                                                                        removed coal- and oil-fired EGUs from
                                                                                                          determined, pursuant to CAA section
                                                  and the 2012 affirmation. Section II.C                                                                        the CAA section 112(c) source category
                                                                                                          112(n)(1)(A), that it was appropriate and
                                                  provides a summary of the proposed                                                                            list. The agency also promulgated the
                                                                                                          necessary to regulate coal- and oil-fired
                                                  consideration of cost, explaining that, in                                                                    Clean Air Mercury Rule (CAMR) which
                                                                                                          EGUs under CAA section 112 and added
                                                  the preferred approach, the EPA                                                                               established CAA section 111 standards
                                                                                                          such units to the CAA section 112(c) list
                                                  evaluated the cost of MATS and                                                                                of performance for mercury emissions
                                                                                                          of sources that must be regulated under
                                                  compared those costs to other metrics                                                                         from EGUs. Several groups challenged
                                                                                                          CAA section 112(d). December 2000
                                                  relevant to the power sector. In                                                                              these actions and on February 8, 2008,
                                                                                                          Finding; 65 FR 79825. The appropriate
                                                  evaluating those cost metrics, the EPA                                                                        the D.C. Circuit Court vacated both the
                                                                                                          and necessary finding was based
                                                  proposed to determine that the MATS                                                                           Section 112(n) Revision Rule and CAMR
                                                                                                          primarily on consideration of the Utility
                                                  compliance costs are reasonable and                                                                           holding that the EPA had failed to
                                                                                                          Study Report to Congress (Utility
                                                  that the power sector is able to comply                                                                       comply with the requirements of CAA
                                                                                                          Study),5 the Mercury Study Report to
                                                  with the rule’s requirements while                                                                            section 112(c)(9) for delisting source
                                                                                                          Congress (Mercury Study),6 the National
                                                  retaining its ability to perform its                                                                          categories. New Jersey v. EPA, 517 F.3d
                                                  primary and unique function—the                           4 Response to Comments (RTC) for Supplemental       574 (D.C. Cir. 2008).
                                                  generation, transmission, and                           Finding that it is Appropriate and Necessary to          In May 2011, in conjunction with the
                                                  distribution of reliable electricity at a               Regulate Hazardous Air Pollutants from Coal- and      proposed MATS, the EPA conducted
                                                  reasonable cost to consumers. The                       Oil-Fired Electric Utility Steam Generating Units.    additional technical analyses to reaffirm
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                                                                                                          Available in the rulemaking docket. Docket ID
                                                  Administrator then weighed this                         EPA–HQ–OAR–2009–0234.                                 the appropriate and necessary finding,
                                                  evaluation of cost against previously                     5 U.S. EPA. 1998. Study of Hazardous Air            including peer-reviewed risk
                                                  identified advantages of regulation—                    Pollutant Emissions from Electric Utility Steam       assessments on human health effects
                                                  such as addressing the significant                      Generating Units—Final Report to Congress. EPA–
                                                  hazards to public health and the                        453/R–98–004a. February. Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–          7 National Research Council. 2000. Toxicological
                                                                                                          OAR–2009–0234–3052.                                   Effects of Methylmercury. Committee on the
                                                  environment posed by HAP emissions                        6 U.S. EPA. 1997. Mercury Study Report to           Toxicological Effects of Methylmercury, National
                                                  from EGUs. The EPA also considered                      Congress. EPA–452/R–97–003. December. Docket ID       Academy Press, Washington, DC. Docket ID No.
                                                  the formal benefit-cost analysis from the               No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2009–0234–3054.                        EPA–HQ–OAR–2009–0234–3055.



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                    24423

                                                  associated with mercury and non-                        estimated a lifetime cancer risk 12 for an             finding and the final MATS rule in the
                                                  mercury HAP emissions from EGUs,                        oil-fired EGU facility of 20-in-1 million,             D.C. Circuit Court, and the Court denied
                                                  focusing on risks to the most exposed                   five coal-fired EGU facilities with cancer             all challenges. White Stallion Energy
                                                  and sensitive individuals in the                        risks greater than 1-in-1 million, and                 Center v. EPA, 748 F.3d 1222 (D.C. Cir.
                                                  population. These analyses found that                   one coal-fired facility with cancer risks              2014). Some industry and state
                                                  mercury and non-mercury HAP                             of 5-in-1 million. See, e.g., 77 FR 9317–              petitioners sought further review of the
                                                  emissions from EGUs remain a                            9. Further, qualitative analyses on                    final MATS rule, and the Supreme
                                                  significant public health hazard and that               ecosystem effects found that mercury                   Court granted certiorari to determine
                                                  EGUs are by far the largest U.S.                        emissions from U.S. EGUs contribute to                 whether the EPA erred when it
                                                  anthropogenic source of mercury,                        adverse impacts on fish-eating birds and               concluded that the appropriate and
                                                  selenium, hydrogen chloride, and                        mammals and that acid gases contribute                 necessary finding under CAA section
                                                  hydrogen fluoride emissions, and a                      to environmental acidification and                     112(n)(1)(A) could be made without
                                                  significant source of other metallic HAP                chronic non-cancer (respiratory)                       consideration of cost. On June 29, 2015,
                                                  emissions including arsenic, chromium,                  toxicity. See, e.g., 77 FR 9362–3.                     the Supreme Court ruled that the EPA
                                                  and nickel.8                                               Moreover, the EPA concluded that in                 acted unreasonably when it determined
                                                     Between the proposed and final                       2016, after implementation of other                    cost was irrelevant to the appropriate
                                                  MATS rule, the EPA conducted peer                       provisions of the CAA, HAP emissions                   and necessary finding. Michigan v. EPA,
                                                  reviews of the Mercury Risk                             from U.S. EGUs would still reasonably                  135 S. Ct. 2699 (2015). Specifically, the
                                                  Assessment 9 and the approach for                       be anticipated to pose hazards to public               Supreme Court held that the agency
                                                  estimating inhalation cancer risk from                  health. See, e.g., 77 FR 9362–3. Finally,              must consider cost before deciding
                                                  two non-mercury metal HAP, and the                      the EPA stated that the only way to                    whether regulation under CAA section
                                                  agency also changed the input data for                  ensure permanent reductions in HAP                     112 is appropriate and necessary, noting
                                                  the non-mercury HAP risk assessment                     emissions from U.S. EGUs and the                       also that it will be up to the agency ‘‘to
                                                  based on new data and information                       associated risks to public health and the              decide, within the limits of reasonable
                                                  obtained during the public comment                      environment is through standards set                   interpretation, how to account for cost.’’
                                                  period. The revised Mercury Risk                        under CAA section 112. 77 FR 9363.                     Michigan, 135 S. Ct. at 2711.
                                                  Assessment 10 estimated that up to 29                      Based on the agency’s updated
                                                  percent of modeled watersheds                                                                                  C. Proposed Supplemental Finding
                                                                                                          analyses, a consideration of the peer
                                                  potentially have sensitive populations at               reviews of the analyses, and public                       In response to the Supreme Court’s
                                                  risk from exposure to mercury from U.S.                 comments, the EPA affirmed the                         direction, the EPA proposed two
                                                  EGUs, including up to 10 percent of                     findings in the February 2012 final rule               different approaches to incorporate cost
                                                  modeled watersheds where deposition                     (77 FR 9304) that mercury and non-                     into the appropriate and necessary
                                                  from U.S. EGUs alone leads to potential                 mercury HAP emissions from U.S. EGUs                   finding. 80 FR 75025. The first—which
                                                  exposures that exceed the level above                   pose hazards to public health and found                the EPA identified as its preferred
                                                  which there is increased risk of adverse                that it remains appropriate to regulate                approach—evaluated the cost estimates
                                                  health effects (i.e., the reference dose).              U.S. EGUs under CAA section 112. The                   in the RIA for the final MATS rule using
                                                  See, e.g., 77 FR 9310–6. In addition, the               EPA also concluded, at that time, that it              several different metrics and weighed
                                                  revised inhalation risk assessment for                  remains appropriate to regulate U.S.                   these costs against the previously
                                                  non-mercury HAP 11 of 16 facilities                     EGUs under CAA section 112 because of                  identified advantages of regulating HAP
                                                                                                          the magnitude of mercury and non-                      emissions from EGUs—including the
                                                    8 Specifically, the EPA estimated that in 2005 (the
                                                                                                          mercury HAP emissions, environmental                   agency’s prior conclusions about the
                                                  most recent inventory year available during the                                                                significant hazards to public health and
                                                  MATS rulemaking), U.S. EGUs emitted
                                                                                                          effects of mercury and certain non-
                                                  approximately 50 percent of total domestic              mercury HAP emissions, and the                         the environment associated with such
                                                  anthropogenic mercury emissions, 62 percent of          availability of controls to reduce HAP                 emissions and the volume of HAP that
                                                  total arsenic emissions, 39 percent of total cadmium    emissions from EGUs. In addition, the                  would be reduced by regulation of EGUs
                                                  emissions, 22 percent of total chromium emissions,                                                             under CAA section 112. In a second
                                                  82 percent of total hydrogen chloride emissions, 62
                                                                                                          EPA concluded that the hazards to
                                                  percent of total hydrogen fluoride emissions, 28        public health from mercury and non-                    independent approach, the EPA
                                                  percent of total nickel emissions, and 83 percent of    mercury HAP emissions from U.S. EGUs                   proposed consideration of the formal
                                                  total selenium emissions. Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–         are reasonably anticipated to remain                   benefit-cost analysis 13 in the RIA for the
                                                  OAR–2009–0234–19914.
                                                    9 U.S. EPA. 2011. National-Scale Assessment of
                                                                                                          after imposition of the requirements of
                                                                                                                                                                    13 In this supplemental finding, we use the term
                                                  Mercury Risk to Populations with High                   the CAA. The same is true for hazards
                                                                                                                                                                 ‘‘formal benefit-cost analysis’’ to refer to an
                                                  Consumption of Self-caught Freshwater Fish In           to the environment. Thus, the agency                   economic analysis that attempts to quantify all
                                                  Support of the Appropriate and Necessary Finding        confirmed that it is necessary to regulate             significant consequences of an action in monetary
                                                  for Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric Generating Units.      U.S. EGUs under CAA section 112. 77                    terms in order to determine whether an action
                                                  Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards.                                                                  increases economic efficiency. In other words, it is
                                                  November. EPA–452/R–11–009. Docket ID. EPA–             FR 9311.
                                                                                                                                                                 a determination of whether the willingness to pay
                                                  HQ–OAR–2009–0234–3057.                                     After MATS was promulgated,                         for an action by those advantaged by it exceeds the
                                                    10 U.S. EPA. 2011. Revised Technical Support          industry, states, environmental                        willingness to pay to avoid the action by those
                                                  Document: National-Scale Assessment of Mercury          organizations, and public health                       disadvantaged by it. Measuring willingness to pay
                                                  Risk to Populations with High Consumption of Self-                                                             in a common metric of economic value, like dollars,
                                                  caught Freshwater Fish In Support of the
                                                                                                          organizations challenged many aspects
                                                                                                                                                                 is called monetization, and it allows for such
                                                  Appropriate and Necessary Finding for Coal- and         of the EPA’s appropriate and necessary                 comparisons across individuals. Assuming that all
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                                                  Oil-Fired Electric Generating Units. Office of Air                                                             consequences can be monetized, actions with
                                                  Quality Planning and Standards. November. EPA–             12 As described in the preamble to the proposed     positive net benefits (i.e., benefits exceed costs)
                                                  452/R–11–009. Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–                 MATS (76 FR 25011), the non-mercury risk               improve economic efficiency. When there are
                                                  2009–0234–19913.                                        assessments calculated the maximum individual          technical limitations that prevent certain benefits or
                                                    11 U.S. EPA. 2011. Supplement to Non-mercury          risk (MIR) for each facility as the cancer risk        costs that may be of significant magnitude from
                                                  Case Study Chronic Inhalation Risk Assessment for       associated with a continuous lifetime (24 hours per    being quantified or monetized, then information is
                                                  the Utility MACT Appropriate and Necessary              day, 7 days per week, and 52 weeks per year for        provided describing those potentially important
                                                  Analysis. Office of Air Quality Planning and            a 70-year period) exposure to the maximum              non-monetized benefits or costs. This usage is
                                                  Standards. November. Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–              concentration at the centroid of an inhabited census   consistent with the definition of a benefit-cost
                                                  OAR–2009–0234–19912.                                    block.                                                                                             Continued




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                                                  24424               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  final MATS rule, which demonstrates                     of MATS is reasonable, the EPA                           increasing trend, the data show
                                                  that the benefits (monetized and non-                   considered the power industry’s ability                  substantial year-to-year variability in
                                                  monetized) of the rule are substantial                  to comply with MATS and still perform                    industry capital expenditures. The EPA
                                                  and far outweigh the costs. Each of these               its primary and unique function—to                       found that the incremental capital
                                                  approaches is discussed further below.                  provide a reliable source of electricity at              expenditures of $2.4 billion estimated to
                                                     In the preferred approach, the EPA                   a reasonable cost to consumers.                          be required for MATS compliance in
                                                  considered whether the cost of                             Specifically, the EPA considered                      2015 represent a small fraction—about
                                                  compliance with MATS is reasonable,                     several metrics to evaluate whether the                  3.0 percent—of the power sector’s
                                                  and whether a consideration of such                     estimated cost of compliance with                        overall capital expenditures in recent
                                                  costs, when weighed against, among                      MATS is reasonable for the power                         years and are well within the range of
                                                  other things, the substantial hazards to                sector.14 First, the EPA evaluated the                   annual variability between 2000 and
                                                  public health and the environment                       annual compliance costs as a percent of                  2011. Even if power sector-level capital
                                                  posed by HAP emissions from power                       the revenue from the power sector’s                      expenditures were to decline to 2004
                                                  plants, causes the agency to alter its                  annual retail electricity sales.15 The EPA               levels, the lowest level observed during
                                                  conclusion that regulation is                           found that the $9.6 billion annual cost                  the 2000 to 2011 period, the incremental
                                                  appropriate and necessary. The EPA                      of MATS is a small fraction of the                       capital expenditures estimated for
                                                  explained that it preferred this approach               revenue from the sector’s annual retail                  MATS would represent about 5.9
                                                  to a formal benefit-cost analysis given                 sales, which ranged from $277.2 billion                  percent, a level we also find to be
                                                  the statutory objectives of CAA section                 in 2000 to a peak of $356.6 billion in                   reasonable for this sector.
                                                  112, in particular Congress’                            2008.16 See 80 FR 75033, Table 2. Thus,                     The third metric the EPA evaluated
                                                  determination that HAP emissions are                    the projected annual cost for MATS                       was the impact of MATS compliance
                                                  inherently harmful, and the instruction                 represents between 2.7 and 3.5 percent                   cost on the retail price of electricity.
                                                  from Congress to protect the most                       of annual revenues from electricity sales                Potential changes in retail electricity
                                                  sensitive populations from those harms.                 from 2000 to 2011—a small fraction of                    prices can be indicative of the ‘‘cost’’ of
                                                  See Legal Memorandum at 6–20. The                       the value of overall sales.                              MATS, in this instance to consumers
                                                  EPA found that CAA section                                 A second way the EPA evaluated cost                   specifically, as opposed to the
                                                  112(n)(1)(A)’s emphasis on the required                 was to compare the annual capital                        compliance cost to the power sector,
                                                  studies supported its interpretation that               expenditures due to MATS compliance                      which is borne collectively by EGU
                                                  while cost is an important factor that it               to the range of variation in the power                   owners and electricity consumers. The
                                                  must consider in making the                             sector’s annual capital expenditures                     MATS RIA estimated that relatively
                                                  appropriate and necessary finding, it is                between 2000 and 2011. As noted in the                   small changes in the average price of
                                                  one of several factors that must be                     proposed supplemental finding, this                      electricity would result from MATS
                                                                                                          comparison is a relevant metric because                  compliance. The projected impact of
                                                  considered and the statutory text does
                                                                                                          capital costs represent largely                          MATS on electricity rates was 0.3 cents/
                                                  not support a conclusion that cost
                                                                                                          irreversible investments that must be                    kWh or 3.1 percent. Meanwhile,
                                                  should be the predominant or
                                                                                                          paid off regardless of future economic                   between 2000 and 2011, changes in
                                                  overriding factor. See id. at 11–15. The
                                                                                                          conditions. Moreover, additional capital                 national average retail prices ranged
                                                  EPA’s preferred approach to considering
                                                                                                          expenditures needed to comply with                       from ¥0.13 cents/kWh to as high as
                                                  cost allows the Administrator to weigh
                                                                                                          MATS represented about 26 percent of                     0.52 cents/kWh. See 80 FR 75035, Table
                                                  the full range of factors relevant to
                                                                                                          the total annual compliance cost                         4. Based on this analysis, the EPA found
                                                  making a determination under CAA
                                                                                                          projected for 2015, further emphasizing                  that the estimated MATS retail price
                                                  section 112(n)(1)(A) of whether it is
                                                                                                          the importance of considering capital                    impact is well within the range of price
                                                  appropriate and necessary to regulate                   expenditures. Based on two different                     fluctuations in recent years.
                                                  HAP emissions from EGUs. Moreover,                      sources of data, capital expenditures for                   The agency then proposed that each
                                                  because the Supreme Court’s holding                     the electric power sector generally                      of these three metrics independently
                                                  did not disturb the scientific                          increased from 2000 to 2011. See 80 FR                   demonstrates that the MATS
                                                  assessments and conclusions made in                     75034, Table 3. Despite the generally                    compliance costs are reasonable, and
                                                  the original appropriate and necessary                                                                           that each metric supports the EPA’s
                                                  finding, many of which were challenged                     14 As explained in the proposed Supplemental          proposed determination that weighing
                                                  and upheld by the D.C. Circuit in White                 Finding and described in the final MATS RIA and          this consideration of cost against the
                                                  Stallion, the Administrator concluded                   supporting materials for the RIA, the $9.6 billion
                                                                                                                                                                   prior conclusions reached by the agency
                                                  that the task on remand was to                          compliance cost is an estimate of the change in
                                                                                                          electricity power generation costs between a base        does not alter the previous finding that
                                                  determine whether a consideration of                    case without MATS and a policy case with MATS.           it is appropriate to regulate HAP
                                                  cost caused her to alter her prior                      These compliance costs represent a projection of         emissions from EGUs.
                                                  conclusion that it was appropriate to                   the increase in expenditures by EGUs required to
                                                                                                          serve a particular level of electricity demand as a         In addition to the analysis
                                                  regulate HAP emissions from EGUs                        result of MATS. The compliance cost includes             summarized above, the EPA recognized
                                                  under CAA section 112. See 80 FR                        capital, fuel, and other variable and operating costs    it was important to consider the ability
                                                  75038; Legal Memorandum at 20.                          and was projected in the final MATS RIA to be $9.6       of the power sector to comply with
                                                     The agency further explained that, as                billion (2007 dollars) in 2015. The costs may be
                                                                                                          borne by electricity producers, or passed along to       MATS and maintain a reliable supply of
                                                  a check on the conclusion that the cost                 electricity consumers in the form of higher              electricity. The agency’s compliance
                                                                                                          electricity prices.                                      modeling indicated that additional coal-
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                                                  analysis used in the economics literature and the          15 In the proposed supplemental finding, the
                                                                                                                                                                   fired capacity projected to retire as a
                                                  EPA’s Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analyses        analysis of annual compliance costs as a percent of
                                                  (‘‘Guidelines’’).’’                                     the revenue from the power sector’s annual retail
                                                                                                                                                                   result of MATS represented EGUs that
                                                     U.S. EPA. 2010. Guidelines for Preparing             electricity sales was referred to as a ‘‘sales test.’’   are, on average, older and smaller units
                                                  Economic Analyses. EPA–240–R–10–001. National              16 Unless otherwise noted, all dollar amounts         that are less frequently used. See 80 FR
                                                  Center for Environmental Economics, Office of           reported in this section and elsewhere in this notice    75036, Table 6. The analysis indicated
                                                  Policy. Washington, DC. December. Available at          are expressed in 2007-dollar equivalents to be
                                                  http://yosemite.epa.gov/ee/epa/eerm.nsf/vwAN/EE-        directly comparable to the estimates in the 2011
                                                                                                                                                                   that the vast majority of the generation
                                                  0568-50.pdf/$file/EE-0568-50.pdf. Docket ID No.         final MATS RIA, which were expressed in 2007             capacity directly affected by MATS
                                                  EPA–HQ–OAR–2009–0234–20503.                             dollars.                                                 requirements would be able to absorb


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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         24425

                                                  the anticipated compliance costs and                    that it remains appropriate to regulate     was presented in the final MATS
                                                  remain operational. In addition, an                     HAP emissions from EGUs after               rulemaking and in the proposed
                                                  analysis of the impacts of expected                     considering costs. As such, the EPA         supplemental finding. We explain here
                                                  retirements on electric reliability found               proposed to find that including a           in this final notice—and in the RTC
                                                  that reserve margins could be                           consideration of cost does not alter the    document—the decision not to alter
                                                  maintained over a 3-year MATS                           agency’s previous determination that it     these analyses for this final action.
                                                  compliance period, indicating that the                  is appropriate to regulate HAP                 While the agency has not changed its
                                                  power sector would be able to comply                    emissions from EGUs under CAA               approaches to consideration of cost, the
                                                  with MATS while maintaining the                         section 112 and that coal- and oil-fired    EPA has, in response to comments,
                                                  capacity necessary to meet projected                    EGUs are properly listed pursuant to        supplemented the proposed metrics by
                                                  electricity demands. This determination                 CAA section 112(c).                         incorporating additional information
                                                  that reliability and resource adequacy
                                                                                                          III. Final Supplemental Finding and         considering annual operating expenses
                                                  would not be adversely affected
                                                  provided further support for the EPA’s                  Affirmation                                 to this industry. Specifically, the EPA
                                                  proposed determination that the cost of                                                             added information on historical total
                                                                                                          A. Supplemental Analyses Conducted in production expenditures to the
                                                  MATS is reasonable.                                     Response to Comments
                                                     The EPA then weighed the reasonable                                                              historical total capital expenditures in
                                                  cost of the rule against a number of                       A number of groups representing          order to estimate total capital and
                                                  other factors, including the agency’s                   states, tribes, industries, environmental   production expenditures for the power
                                                  prior conclusions about the significant                 organizations, health organizations, and sector from 2000 to 2011. The agency
                                                  hazards to public health and the                        others submitted comments on the            conducted this analysis to provide
                                                  environment, as discussed above in                      proposed supplemental finding. The          additional perspective to the projected
                                                  Section II.B, and the volume of HAP                     EPA has considered the comments and         cost information by looking at a broader
                                                  that would be reduced by regulation of                  provided detailed responses to the          range of power industry costs beyond
                                                  EGUs under CAA section 112. Keeping                     significant comments either below in        the capital cost comparison conducted
                                                  in mind Congress’ statutory goals in                    Section IV of this final notice or in the   at proposal. The additional analysis
                                                  enacting CAA section 112, the EPA                       RTC document for this action.               reinforces the EPA’s conclusion that the
                                                  proposed to find that a consideration of                   The EPA has taken all the submitted      cost of compliance with MATS is
                                                  the cost of compliance with MATS did                    comments into consideration in the          reasonable.
                                                  not outweigh the rule’s many                            preparation of this final supplemental
                                                                                                          finding. The EPA received comments             Consistent with the proposal’s focus
                                                  advantages and, therefore, does not                                                                 on  sector-level analysis, the EPA
                                                  cause the EPA to alter the prior                        that were both supportive and critical of
                                                                                                          both proposed approaches to                 obtained historical information on
                                                  determination that it is appropriate and
                                                  necessary to regulate EGUs under CAA                    considering cost. The EPA has carefully power sector production costs. These
                                                                                                          evaluated these comments and                production costs, which include
                                                  section 112.
                                                     In the proposed supplemental finding,                responded to them, as outlined in detail operation and maintenance costs, fuel
                                                                                                          in Section IV below.                        costs, and fixed costs were obtained
                                                  the EPA also presented a second                                                                     from ABB Velocity Suite, a private
                                                  independent basis for concluding that                      The EPA did not receive any public
                                                                                                          comments that caused the agency to          sector firm that provides data and
                                                  consideration of cost supports                                                                      analytical services for the energy sector.
                                                  affirmation of the finding that it is                   conclude that the interpretation of the
                                                                                                          statute or the approaches for               The production costs were added to the
                                                  appropriate and necessary to regulate                                                               two separate estimates of annual capital
                                                  HAP emissions from coal- and oil-fired                  consideration of cost that were detailed
                                                                                                          in the proposed action were in error.       expenditures that were provided in the
                                                  EGUs. The EPA explained that the                                                                    proposed supplemental finding (See
                                                  formal benefit-cost analysis in the RIA                 Therefore, in this final action, the EPA
                                                                                                          continues to rely on the analyses           Table 3, 80 FR 75034) in order to
                                                  for the final MATS rule, although not
                                                  required to support the appropriate                     contained in the proposed supplemental provide an estimate of historical trends
                                                                                                          finding and in the companion Legal          in total capital and production costs
                                                  finding, also demonstrates that the
                                                                                                          Memorandum. Specifically, in this final faced by the power sector. The EPA
                                                                                                                                                                                         17
                                                  benefits (monetized and non-monetized)
                                                                                                          consideration of cost, the EPA continues    then,   as it had   done   in  the  proposal,
                                                  of MATS are substantial and far
                                                                                                          to rely on the ‘‘Consideration of Cost to   compared      year-to-year     changes    in the
                                                  outweigh the costs. Specifically, the
                                                                                                          the Power Sector’’ metrics discussed in     total cost estimates to the projected total
                                                  EPA estimated that the final MATS
                                                                                                          Section IV.A of the proposed                compliance cost estimate for the final
                                                  would yield total annual monetized
                                                                                                          supplemental finding. 80 FR 75032.          MATS rule in 2015. The total
                                                  benefits (in 2007 dollars) of between $37
                                                                                                          These metrics are summarized above in       production costs along with the electric
                                                  billion to $90 billion using a 3-percent
                                                                                                          Section II.C. The metrics include an        power sector’s capital expenditures are
                                                  discount rate and $33 billion to $81
                                                                                                          evaluation of the cost of MATS              provided below in Table 2.
                                                  billion using a 7-percent discount rate
                                                  in addition to many categories of                       compliance in comparison to the power         17 For power sector-level capital expenditures, the
                                                  unquantified benefits in comparison to                  sector’s revenues from retail sales of      EPA relies on two sets of information: The U.S.
                                                  the projected $9.6 billion in annual                    electricity. In addition, the EPA           Census Bureau’s Annual Capital Expenditures
                                                  costs. The benefit-cost analysis thus                   continues to rely on the metric             Survey and SNL, a private sector firm that provides
                                                  supports the finding that it is                         comparing the impact of MATS on the         data and analytical services. As noted in the
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                                                                                                          retail price of electricity to historical   proposed supplemental finding, while each dataset
                                                  appropriate to regulate HAP emissions                                                               has limitations, the estimates from each correspond
                                                  from EGUs.                                              fluctuations of the average retail price of to one another reasonably well. However, we
                                                     Using both of these independent                      electricity. The EPA also stands by the     present both sets of information to better depict
                                                  approaches, the EPA proposed to find                    evaluation of resource adequacy that        capital expenditures in the power sector.




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                                                  24426                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                         TABLE 2—TOTAL CAPITAL AND PRODUCTION EXPENDITURES FOR THE ELECTRIC POWER SECTOR, 2000 TO 2011
                                                                                                                              [Billions 2007 dollars]

                                                                                                                                                  Total expendi-                         Total expendi-
                                                                                                              Capital         Total produc-
                                                                                            Capital         expenditures       tion expendi-
                                                                                                                                                   tures (with      Change from            tures (with    Change from
                                                              Year                        expenditures     (U.S. census-      tures (velocity
                                                                                                                                                   SNL-based        previous year         U.S. census-    previous year
                                                                                         (SNL-based) 1        based) 2        suite-based) 3
                                                                                                                                                    capital ex-                          based capital
                                                                                                                                                   penditures)                           expenditures)

                                                  2000   .............................            51.8                62.5              102.3               154.2                                164.9
                                                  2001   .............................            70.1                85.9              106.9               177.0               22.8             192.9            28.0
                                                  2002   .............................            56.4                66.4               93.7               150.1              ¥26.9             160.0           ¥32.9
                                                  2003   .............................            43.8                52.7              105.2               149.0               ¥1.1             157.9            ¥2.2
                                                  2004   .............................            40.4                45.0              111.6               152.0                3.0             156.6            ¥1.3
                                                  2005   .............................            46.7                50.0              133.6               180.2               28.2             183.5            27.0
                                                  2006   .............................            57.6                61.6              127.5               185.0                4.8             189.1             5.6
                                                  2007   .............................            66.9                73.9              133.5               200.4               15.3             207.4            18.3
                                                  2008   .............................            78.1                83.5              147.6               225.7               25.4             231.1            23.7
                                                  2009   .............................            76.6                87.9              117.3               193.9              ¥31.8             205.2           ¥25.9
                                                  2010   .............................            75.1                79.8              126.1               201.2                7.3             205.9             0.7
                                                  2011   .............................            79.6                79.2              121.3               200.9               ¥0.3             200.5            ¥5.4
                                                     1 Source:SNL, accessed 10/14/15.
                                                     2 Source:U.S. Census Bureau, Annual Capital Expenditures Survey, http://www.census.gov/econ/aces/index.html, accessed 10/14/15.
                                                     3 Source:Velocity Suite ‘‘Total Production Costs’’ dataset. This dataset compiles operations and maintenance costs, fuel costs, and fixed costs
                                                  reported in the FERC Form 1, RUS 12, and EIA 412. For plants that do not report cost information, production costs are estimated by Velocity
                                                  Suite.
                                                    Note: Dollar figures adjusted to 2007 dollars using the Gross Domestic Product—Implicit Price Deflator, https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/
                                                  series/GDPDEF, accessed 10/14/15. Changes may not sum due to independent rounding.


                                                     The estimated $9.6 billion total                           production expenditure estimates). The                presented in that document in this final
                                                  annual cost of the rule represents the                        largest year-to-year increase in power                action.
                                                  total incremental annual capital and                          sector-level capital and production                      As previously mentioned in Section
                                                  production costs to the sector for 2015.                      expenditures in this period ranged from               III.A, the EPA, in this final action, is
                                                  This incremental cost due to MATS                             $28.0 billion (from 2000 to 2001,                     continuing to rely on the same cost
                                                  requirements represents a small fraction                      according to the sum of U.S. Census-                  metrics that were presented in the
                                                  of the power sector’s annual capital and                      based capital expenditure and Velocity                proposed supplemental finding—
                                                  production expenditures in recent years,                      Suite-based production expenditure                    supplemented by an additional
                                                  as illustrated in Table 2. For example,                       estimates) to $28.2 billion (from 2004 to             evaluation of MATS compliance cost
                                                  when compared to historical total                             2005, according to the sum of SNL-                    estimates in the context of total capital
                                                  expenditures that rely upon SNL-based                         based capital expenditure and Velocity                and production costs from the 2000 to
                                                  estimates of capital expenditures, the                        Suite-based production expenditure                    2011 period that simply confirms the
                                                  total 2015 MATS cost represents about                         estimates).                                           proposed findings. No commenter
                                                  4.3 percent of total expenditures in 2008                       This wide range indicates substantial               provided any evidence or information
                                                  to 6.4 percent of total expenditures in                       year-to-year variability in industry                  that convinced the EPA that the
                                                  both 2002 and 2003. With respect to                           expenditures, and the projected $9.6                  preferred approach to consideration of
                                                  historical total expenditures that rely                       billion increase in total expenditures in             cost is inadequate or unreasonable.
                                                  upon Census Bureau-based estimates of                         2015 attributable to MATS falls well                  Thus, the EPA concludes in this final
                                                  capital expenditures, the total 2015                          within this variability. Therefore, the               action that the preferred approach to
                                                  MATS cost represents about 4.2 percent                        supplemental analysis that is responsive              considering cost in the appropriate and
                                                  of total expenditures in 2008 to 6.1                          to commenters’ suggestion provides                    necessary finding is to weigh the cost of
                                                  percent of total expenditures in 2004.                        additional support for the conclusion                 compliance with section 112(d)
                                                     Additionally, the EPA notes that,                          that the cost of MATS is reasonable                   standards against, among other things,
                                                  similar to the capital expenditures                           when weighed against historical                       the volume of HAP emitted by EGUs
                                                  analysis set forth in the proposed                            metrics.                                              and the associated hazards to public
                                                  supplemental finding, the projected $9.6                                                                            health and the environment. See e.g., 77
                                                                                                                B. Basis for the Final Supplemental
                                                  billion in incremental capital plus                                                                                 FR 9310–9364 (Section III. Appropriate
                                                                                                                Finding
                                                  production costs is well within the                                                                                 and Necessary Finding). Specifically,
                                                  range of annual variability in costs in                          As directed by the Supreme Court, the              the EPA has evaluated several metrics
                                                  general over the 2000 to 2011 period.                         EPA has now considered cost in its                    that are relevant to the power sector to
                                                  For example, during this period, the                          evaluation of whether or not it is                    determine whether the estimated cost of
                                                  largest year-to-year decrease in power                        appropriate to regulate coal- and oil-                compliance with MATS is reasonable.
                                                  sector-level capital and production                           fired EGUs under CAA section 112. The                 The EPA has also considered the impact
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                                                  expenditures ranged from $31.8 billion                        EPA’s approach to considering cost                    of the cost of MATS compliance on the
                                                  (from 2008 to 2009, according to the                          under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) is based               power sector’s ability to continue to
                                                  sum of SNL-based capital expenditure                          on the interpretation of the relevant                 reliably generate, transmit and
                                                  and Velocity Suite-based production                           CAA provisions as described in the                    distribute electricity, at a reasonable
                                                  expenditure estimates) to $32.9 billion                       Legal Memorandum accompanying the                     cost to consumers. These analyses and
                                                  (from 2001 to 2002, according to the                          proposed supplemental finding. As                     the conclusions the EPA draws from the
                                                  sum of U.S. Census-based capital                              explained below in Section IV.C, the                  analyses were summarized above in
                                                  expenditure and Velocity Suite-based                          EPA stands by the interpretations                     Sections II.C and III.A and were


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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         24427

                                                  described in detail in the proposed                     considerations of cost described above,               appropriate finding, the final RIA
                                                  supplemental finding. See 80 FR 75031–                  the EPA is not revisiting, in this final              demonstrates that the benefits
                                                  39 (Section IV. Consideration of Cost).                 action, any other aspects of the final                (monetized and non-monetized) of
                                                  The EPA concludes, after considering                    MATS rule or legal interpretations                    MATS are substantial and far outweigh
                                                  all significant comments, that these                    established therein. Many other                       the costs. Id. In fact, the monetized
                                                  technical analyses are reasonable                       challenges to the final MATS rule were                benefits exceed the cost by 3 to 9 times.
                                                  evaluations of cost and that each                       unanimously rejected in White Stallion                   Based on all of these considerations,
                                                  supports a conclusion that the cost of                  and left undisturbed by the Supreme                   the Administrator finds that the
                                                  MATS is reasonable. Id. The agency also                 Court’s decision in Michigan. This                    preferred approach and the benefit-cost
                                                  finds that the power industry is able to                action does not provide an opportunity                analysis in the RIA for MATS each
                                                  comply with MATS while continuing to                    for stakeholders to re-litigate issues                provide alternative independent bases
                                                  perform its primary and unique                          previously decided in White Stallion or               to support the conclusion that a
                                                  function—to provide consumers with a                    to raise new objections to the MATS                   consideration of cost does not cause the
                                                  reliable source of electricity at a                     rule that could have been, but were not,              agency to alter its previous
                                                  reasonable price—which further                          raised in that case.                                  determination that it is appropriate to
                                                  confirms that the cost of MATS is                                                                             regulate HAP emissions from EGUs. For
                                                                                                          C. Affirmation of the Appropriate and
                                                  reasonable. Id. The supplemental                                                                              all these reasons, the Administrator
                                                                                                          Necessary Finding
                                                  analysis conducted in response to                                                                             affirms that it is appropriate and
                                                  comments further confirms that the cost                    The Administrator has weighed the                  necessary to regulate coal- and oil-fired
                                                  of MATS is reasonable based on                          cost of MATS against other relevant
                                                                                                                                                                EGUs under CAA section 112 and that
                                                  historical fluctuations. See Section III.A              considerations in determining that it
                                                                                                                                                                these sources are properly listed as an
                                                  above.                                                  remains appropriate and necessary to
                                                                                                                                                                affected source category under CAA
                                                     The EPA also continues to rely on the                regulate HAP emissions from EGUs.
                                                                                                                                                                section 112(c).
                                                  results of the formal benefit-cost                      These other considerations include
                                                  analysis contained in the RIA for MATS                  prior conclusions reached regarding the               IV. Public Comments on the Proposed
                                                  as we received no public comments that                  significant hazards to public health and              Supplemental Finding
                                                  convinced us that this analysis is an                   the environment from HAP emissions
                                                                                                                                                                   This final action is in response to the
                                                  insufficient approach to considering                    from EGUs, and the agency’s prior
                                                                                                                                                                Supreme Court’s ruling that the agency
                                                  costs. Although the EPA does not view                   determination that these hazards will
                                                                                                          not be addressed through imposition of                erred by not considering cost in the
                                                  formal benefit-cost analysis as required
                                                                                                          the requirements of the CAA. The                      initial determination that regulation of
                                                  to support the appropriate finding, the
                                                                                                          Administrator’s conclusion that, on                   HAP emissions from EGUs is
                                                  final RIA demonstrates that the benefits
                                                                                                          balance, these factors support the                    appropriate under CAA section 112. In
                                                  (monetized and non-monetized) of
                                                                                                          appropriate finding is presented in the               the proposed supplemental finding, the
                                                  MATS are substantial and far outweigh
                                                                                                          proposed supplemental finding, see 80                 EPA provided detailed information on
                                                  the costs. In fact, the monetized benefits
                                                                                                          FR 75038–39 (Section IV.D.                            how the agency has added such a
                                                  exceed the cost by 3 to 9 times. Thus,
                                                                                                          Incorporating Cost Into the Appropriate               consideration of cost and further
                                                  for this final action, the EPA finds that
                                                                                                          Finding). The supplemental analysis                   explained why including such
                                                  the formal benefit-cost analysis in the
                                                                                                          presented in this final notice and                    consideration does not alter the agency’s
                                                  final MATS RIA provides an
                                                  independent basis to support the                        conducted in response to comments                     previous determination. The EPA
                                                  finding that a consideration of cost does               further supports the conclusion that the              specifically requested comment on the
                                                  not cause the agency to alter its                       cost of compliance with MATS is                       proposed supplemental finding and on
                                                  determination that it is appropriate and                reasonable and, thus, the Administrator               the companion Legal Memorandum.
                                                  necessary to regulate HAP emissions                     determines that the supplemental                         The EPA received a number of
                                                  from EGUs. This conclusion is                           analysis supports and does not alter the              comment submissions from groups
                                                  explained in greater detail in the                      results of the proposed finding. Based                representing states, tribes, industries,
                                                  proposed supplemental finding. See 80                   on these conclusions, the EPA confirms                environmental organizations, health
                                                  FR 75039–41 (Section V. Consideration                   that the preferred cost approach                      organizations, and others. The EPA has
                                                  of Benefit-Cost Analysis in the MATS                    provides an independent basis to                      taken all the submitted comments into
                                                  RIA).                                                   support the determination that a                      consideration in preparing this final
                                                     The EPA further notes that the                       consideration of cost does not cause the              supplemental finding. All of the
                                                  Supreme Court’s decision in Michigan                    agency to alter its previous conclusion               comments have been summarized and
                                                  neither called into question nor reversed               that regulation of HAP emissions from                 the EPA has provided detailed
                                                  the portions of the D.C. Circuit Court’s                EGUs is appropriate and necessary.                    responses to the significant comments
                                                  opinion in White Stallion that                             The EPA also concludes that the                    either here in this final notice or in the
                                                  unanimously rejected all other                          formal benefit-cost analysis contained in             RTC document for the supplemental
                                                  challenges to the appropriate and                       the RIA for MATS provides an                          finding available in the rulemaking
                                                  necessary interpretation and finding                    independent basis to support the                      docket.
                                                  (the lone dissenting opinion addressed                  finding that a consideration of cost does
                                                                                                                                                                A. Comments on Considerations of Cost
                                                  only the issue of cost on which the                     not cause us to alter our determination
                                                  Supreme Court granted certiorari). Per                  that it is appropriate and necessary to                  This Section of the notice addresses
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                                                  the Supreme Court’s instruction, the                    regulate HAP emissions from EGUs.                     comments and responses to the EPA’s
                                                  EPA has reversed its prior                              This conclusion is explained in detail in             preferred approach to consideration and
                                                  determination that cost need not be                     the proposed supplemental finding. See                incorporation of costs, analytical issues
                                                  considered in deciding whether                          80 FR 75039–41 (Section V.                            such as the use of compliance costs for
                                                  regulation is appropriate and has taken                 Consideration of Benefit-Cost Analysis                the entire power sector, the use of the
                                                  steps to add cost considerations to its                 in the MATS RIA). Although the EPA                    compliance cost and impact estimates
                                                  analysis under CAA section                              does not view formal benefit-cost                     from the final MATS RIA, and responses
                                                  112(n)(1)(A). Aside from the                            analysis as required to support the                   to comments on the cost metrics used to


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                                                  24428               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  evaluate the reasonableness of the                         Other commenters, however, claimed                 cost when making this initial decision,
                                                  MATS compliance costs.                                  that the EPA’s preferred approach to                  but the Court explicitly stated that ‘‘[i]t
                                                                                                          considering cost for purposes of CAA                  will be up to the Agency to decide (as
                                                  1. The EPA’s Preferred Approach to
                                                                                                          section 112(n)(1)(A) does not rationally              always, within the limits of reasonable
                                                  Considering and Incorporating Costs in
                                                                                                          balance the costs of the rule against the             interpretation) how to account for cost.’’
                                                  Its Appropriate and Necessary Finding
                                                                                                          public health and environmental harms                 135 S. Ct. at 2711. Given the broad
                                                     Comment: Numerous commenters                         previously identified. Those                          discretion afforded the Administrator by
                                                  supported the EPA’s preferred approach                  commenters acknowledged that the                      both the statute and the Supreme
                                                  to considering cost and asserted that the               Supreme Court’s decision in Michigan                  Court’s decision in Michigan, the agency
                                                  approach is ‘‘well-suited’’ to fulfilling               did not require the EPA to perform a                  reasonably interpreted CAA section
                                                  the agency’s obligation under the statute               ‘‘formal cost-benefit analysis,’’ in order            112(n)(1)(A) to require the
                                                  and the Michigan decision. These                        to satisfy the agency’s obligation to                 Administrator to apply her expert
                                                  commenters also approved of the four                    consider cost as part of its CAA section              judgment in weighing several
                                                  cost metrics selected by the agency to                  112(n)(1)(A) appropriate and necessary                considerations in order to determine
                                                  evaluate the cost reasonableness of the                 finding, but they argue that any rational             whether it is appropriate and necessary
                                                  compliance costs—revenues, capital                      balancing necessarily requires the EPA                to regulate HAP emissions from EGUs.
                                                  expenditures, retail electricity rates, and             to compare the costs of compliance with                  As discussed above in Section II.C
                                                  impact on reliability. Many commenters                  the rule to the quantified and monetized              and III.A, the agency evaluated the
                                                  stated that these are relevant measures                 benefits of the rule. One commenter                   reasonableness of the regulation’s cost
                                                  for evaluating costs to the utility sector,             claimed that because it was the EPA’s                 of compliance by comparing that cost to
                                                  and another pointed out that these are                  position in the proposed supplemental                 metrics relevant to the utility sector:
                                                  the types of metrics that are taken into                finding that ‘‘the significant hazards to             revenues, expenditures (including
                                                  consideration by electric companies.                    public health and the environment from                capital and production costs), and retail
                                                     Moreover, many commenters strongly                                                                         electricity rates, and also the impact that
                                                                                                          HAP emitted by EGUs (and the
                                                  supported the EPA’s preferred approach                                                                        compliance with the CAA section
                                                                                                          substantial reductions in HAP emissions
                                                  of weighing a consideration of cost                                                                           112(d) standards would have on the
                                                                                                          achieved by MATS. . .) should be
                                                  against the many advantages of                                                                                power sector’s ability to provide a
                                                                                                          weighed against the costs of
                                                  regulating HAP emissions from EGUs                                                                            reliable source of electricity. After
                                                                                                          compliance,’’ 80 FR 75028, that EPA
                                                  already identified by the agency. Several                                                                     concluding the costs of MATS are
                                                                                                          had ‘‘acknowledge[d]’’ that its task was
                                                  federally-recognized Indian tribes and                                                                        reasonable based on these metrics, the
                                                                                                          to assess whether the rule’s benefits
                                                  inter-tribal organizations commented in                                                                       agency confirmed that the industry
                                                                                                          outweigh the costs. Another commenter
                                                  support of the agency’s methodology of                                                                        could comply with MATS without
                                                  weighing the hazards of HAP emissions                   argued that Michigan required such a
                                                                                                          comparison, based on the portion of the               unreasonably increasing electricity
                                                  from EGUs to public health and the                                                                            prices or undermining the reliability of
                                                  environment against the costs of                        decision which stated that ‘‘[o]ne would
                                                                                                          not say that it is even rational, never               the electric grid.
                                                  compliance. These commenters                                                                                     The Administrator has taken this
                                                  emphasized that this method of analysis                 mind ‘appropriate,’ to impose billions of
                                                                                                                                                                consideration of cost and weighed it
                                                  would allow for consideration of                        dollars in economic costs in return for
                                                                                                                                                                against the other findings that were part
                                                  important tribal interests and threats to               a few dollars in health or environmental
                                                                                                                                                                of the EPA’s prior evaluation of whether
                                                  longstanding Indian cultural traditions                 benefits.’’ 135 S. Ct. 2699, 2707 (U.S.
                                                                                                                                                                regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs
                                                  and critical social practices of fishing                2015). The commenter alleged that the
                                                                                                                                                                is appropriate and necessary. See
                                                  and fish consumption. Moreover, the                     Supreme Court therefore required the                  Section II.B above. The prior record
                                                  tribal commenters also added that a                     EPA to weigh the rule’s annual                        supporting the original appropriate and
                                                  benefit-cost analysis would not fully                   compliance costs of $9.6 billion against              necessary finding includes the agency’s
                                                  account for the MATS rule’s impact on                   the monetized benefits from reducing                  prior conclusions, based on the
                                                  the tribes and pointed to the United                    HAP alone (not other pollutants) and                  scientific evidence, that HAP emissions
                                                  States’ treaty obligations to protect tribal            determine whether the rule has positive               from EGUs pose significant hazards to
                                                  rights and the resources of American                    net benefits (i.e., benefits exceed costs),           public health and the environment and
                                                  Indians and tribes as an important                      in order to satisfy its obligation to                 the conclusion that those emissions will
                                                  consideration supporting the finding.                   consider cost under CAA section                       not be addressed through imposition of
                                                  Commenters supporting the EPA’s                         112(n)(1)(A). Similarly, another                      other requirements of the CAA. The
                                                  preferred cost approach pointed out that                commenter noted that the EPA’s                        EPA also previously concluded that
                                                  the statute and the Michigan decision do                Guidelines (U.S. EPA, 2010) provide                   EGUs are by far the largest remaining
                                                  not require the Administrator to perform                that the ‘‘foundation’’ for a benefit-cost            source of mercury, selenium, hydrogen
                                                  a benefit-cost analysis in order to                     analysis is ‘‘that a policy’s net benefits            chloride, and hydrogen fluoride
                                                  adequately consider cost and make a                     to society be positive.’’                             emissions, accounting for half or more
                                                  determination that it is appropriate and                   Response: The EPA maintains that its               of all U.S. anthropogenic emissions of
                                                  necessary to regulate EGUs for HAP                      preferred approach, where costs are                   such HAP, and that EGUs contribute a
                                                  emissions. These commenters cited the                   considered in light of the significant                considerable percentage of all U.S.
                                                  lack of statutory text requiring such an                hazards to public health and the                      anthropogenic emissions of arsenic,
                                                  analysis or monetization of benefits                    environment posed by HAP emissions                    chromium, nickel, and other metallic
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                                                  before those benefits may be considered                 from EGUs, is consistent with the                     HAP emissions. The agency also
                                                  by the Administrator, as well as the fact               statute and the Michigan decision. CAA                confirmed the availability of controls to
                                                  that limiting the agency’s appropriate                  section 112(n)(1)(A) states that ‘‘the                reduce these HAP emissions from EGUs.
                                                  determination to this framework would                   Administrator shall regulate [EGUs] . . .             In addition, the agency found that
                                                  thwart goals clearly identified by                      if the Administrator finds such                       MATS would achieve significant
                                                  Congress—such as limiting grave harms                   regulation is appropriate and                         reductions of EGU emissions of HAP
                                                  associated with pollutants that Congress                necessary.’’ The Supreme Court’s                      and a failure to regulate would result in
                                                  had already deemed hazardous.                           directive to the agency was to consider               continued emissions of significant


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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                 24429

                                                  volumes of HAP emissions without any                    affordability, political concerns, and                 regulation would not be appropriate,
                                                  requirement to reduce or monitor those                  ethics, to name but a few.’’ 19                        where a rule would impose ‘‘billions of
                                                  emissions. The finding also documented                    Moreover, the EPA notes that most                    dollars in economic cost in return for a
                                                  the persistent nature of HAP such as                    commenters opposed to the EPA’s                        few dollars in health or environmental
                                                  mercury, which, once emitted, can be                    preferred approach appear to dismiss                   benefits.’’ 135 S. Ct. at 2707. The Court’s
                                                  re-emitted in the future, thereby                       outright the advantages of regulating                  identification in dicta of one
                                                  resulting in continued contribution to                  HAP emissions, including the EPA’s                     hypothetical, portrayed in the extreme
                                                  mercury deposition and associated                       assessment, as articulated in the Legal                for emphasis, does not establish a
                                                  health and environmental hazards. In                    Memorandum, that such regulation                       statutorily required formula by which
                                                  making the finding, the EPA noted the                   furthers the goal of CAA section 112 to                the EPA must consider cost, particularly
                                                  statutory goal of reducing the inherent                 obtain prompt, permanent, and ongoing                  when the Court explicitly held, ‘‘[i]t will
                                                  hazards associated with HAP emissions                   reductions in significant volumes of                   be up to the Agency to decide (as
                                                  and reducing the risks posed by such                    HAP emissions that pose hazards to                     always, within the limits of reasonable
                                                  emissions, including risks to the most                  public health and/or the environment.                  interpretation) how to account for cost.’’
                                                  exposed and sensitive members of the                    No commenter has demonstrated that                     135 S. Ct. at 2711. There is, thus, no
                                                  population. 80 FR 75038. Based on all                   any of the HAP that are emitted from                   basis for commenters’ assertion that a
                                                  of these factors, the Administrator finds               EGUs are chemically different than HAP                 formal benefit-cost test is the only
                                                  that, after considering cost, it remains                emitted from other stationary sources or               permissible way for the agency to
                                                  appropriate and necessary to regulate                   provided any other support for a                       consider cost.
                                                  HAP emissions from EGUs.                                conclusion that the inherent risks                        We note that, in insisting that the
                                                     Not only does the agency’s preferred                 associated with HAP emissions that                     Administrator is required to perform a
                                                  approach comport with the statute and                   were acknowledged by Congress are                      benefit-cost analysis to satisfy her
                                                  the Michigan decision, it also has the                  somehow inapplicable to HAP                            obligation to consider cost, the
                                                  advantage of allowing the Administrator                 emissions from EGUs.                                   commenters also assert that the EPA
                                                  to consider the full range of factors                     Instead, these commenters dismiss the                may not rely on co-benefits associated
                                                  relevant to the appropriate and                         agency’s preferred approach without                    with reductions in non-HAP emissions
                                                  necessary determination. Nothing in the                 much analysis and conclude that the                    in weighing the advantages and
                                                  statute or in Michigan requires the EPA                 only rational consideration of cost is a               disadvantages of regulation under CAA
                                                  to ignore advantages of regulation that                 bare comparison of the rule’s costs of                 section 112(n)(1)(A).20 Under the
                                                  cannot be represented by monetary                       compliance with its monetized HAP-                     agency’s preferred approach, however,
                                                  values. The agency’s preferred approach                 specific benefits, and the only way the                the EPA did not consider co-benefit
                                                  permits the Administrator to weigh                      EPA may find regulation to be                          impacts at all. As summarized above in
                                                  impacts to society that are not easy, or                appropriate and necessary under CAA                    Section II.B, the public health and
                                                  in some cases are impossible, to                        section 112(n)(1)(A) is if that                        environmental risks from mercury and
                                                  quantify or monetize, but are no less                   comparison results in a ‘‘positive net                 non-mercury HAP emissions from EGUs
                                                  real than any other advantage of                        benefit.’’ The EPA disagrees that a                    are significant, and it is these risks, not
                                                  regulation.18 For example, the                          benefit-cost analysis, particularly one                co-benefits associated with reductions
                                                  Administrator has taken into account                    that only accounts for monetized HAP                   in ancillary emissions, that inform the
                                                  distributional concerns (established as                 specific benefits, or a finding of an                  Administrator’s finding that it is
                                                  part of the agency’s risk assessments                   economic positive net benefit, is                      appropriate to regulate under the
                                                  performed for the prior affirmation of                  required by CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) to
                                                                                                                                                                 preferred approach.
                                                  the appropriate and necessary finding)                  determine whether regulation of HAP                       Finally, while the EPA disagrees that
                                                  that found more severe risks from EGU                   emissions from EGUs is appropriate and                 section 112(n)(1)(A) in any way requires
                                                  HAP emissions to the most sensitive                     necessary, nor does the agency agree                   the Administrator to determine that
                                                  individuals, particularly subsistence                   that such an analysis is the better                    regulation will have monetized positive
                                                  fishers. Indeed, the EPA’s Guidelines                   approach.                                              ‘‘net benefits’’ to society, the record
                                                  (U.S. EPA, 2010), cited by commenters                     The Supreme Court explicitly
                                                                                                                                                                 amply demonstrates that the advantages
                                                  who insist a benefit-cost analysis or                   declined to mandate that the
                                                                                                                                                                 of MATS for society do in fact outweigh
                                                  some showing of economic ‘‘net positive                 Administrator perform a benefit-cost
                                                                                                                                                                 the disadvantages. The Administrator
                                                  benefit’’ of regulation is required under               analysis to satisfy her obligation to
                                                                                                          consider cost under CAA section                        found that regulation of HAP emissions
                                                  CAA section 112(n)(1)(A), explicitly                                                                           from EGUs has many advantages, chief
                                                  acknowledges the limitations of purely                  112(n)(1)(A). Specifically, the Court
                                                                                                          stated, ‘‘We . . . do not hold that the                among them is furthering Congress’ goal
                                                  economic analyses. ‘‘It is important to                                                                        of protecting the public, including
                                                  note that economic analysis is but one                  law unambiguously required the
                                                                                                          Agency, when making this preliminary                   sensitive populations, from risks posed
                                                  component in the decision-making                                                                               by HAP emissions by reducing the
                                                  process . . . Other factors that may                    estimate, to conduct a formal cost-
                                                                                                          benefit analysis in which each                         volume of, and thus, the exposure to,
                                                  influence decision makers include                                                                              those harmful pollutants. In light of the
                                                  enforceability, technical feasibility,                  advantage and disadvantage is assigned
                                                                                                          a monetary value.’’ 135 S. Ct. at 2711                 risk findings and the determination that
                                                    18 Though not explicitly addressed at proposal,       (emphasis added). Some commenters                      the regulations are cost reasonable and
                                                  the interests raised by the federally-recognized        nonetheless insist that the Supreme                    will not impair the power sector’s
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                                                  Indian tribes and inter-tribal organizations—such as    Court intended the EPA’s consideration                 primary function of providing reliable
                                                  the cultural impacts to tribes and the furtherance
                                                                                                          of cost to be circumscribed to a                       electricity at a reasonable cost to
                                                  of the United States’ treaty obligations to tribes—                                                            consumers, the Administrator concludes
                                                  are an example of the type of societal value that       comparison with monetized benefits,
                                                  cannot be monetized. The Administrator recognizes       and specifically HAP-specific                          that ‘‘the significant advantages of
                                                  the importance of such interests and, though they       monetized benefits, because the Court
                                                  are not necessary in affirming the finding here, only                                                            20 We disagree with commenters’ position

                                                  weigh in favor of the Administrator’s conclusion        proffered one scenario of when                         regarding the proper way to conduct a formal
                                                  that it remains appropriate and necessary to                                                                   benefit-cost analysis and address the comments on
                                                  regulate EGUs for HAP emissions.                          19 See   Guidelines at p. 1–2.                       this issue below in Section IV.B.



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                                                  24430               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  regulating these emissions outweigh the                 out the many relevant factors, including              finally, as cited by commenters, the
                                                  costs of regulation.’’ See 80 FR 75039.                 cost, the Administrator weighed and                   courts have also held that the judicial
                                                  We agree that the appropriate and                       considered, is a reasonable and fitting               branch cannot ‘‘be compelled to guess at
                                                  necessary finding requires the                          response to Congress’ open-ended                      the theory underlying the agency’s
                                                  Administrator to determine that                         instruction to the Administrator to                   action.’’ Appalachian Power Co. v. EPA,
                                                  regulating HAP emissions from EGUs                      determine whether a regulation of EGUs                249 F.3d 1032, 1055 (D.C. Cir. 2001).
                                                  will, on the whole, be beneficial as                    is ‘‘appropriate and necessary.’’                        But here, the EPA has not relied on
                                                  opposed to detrimental to society. But                     As noted by the D.C. Circuit Court,                factors that Congress has prohibited it to
                                                  the agency does not agree that whether                  ‘‘[a]gencies routinely employ multi-                  consider, nor have commenters
                                                  a regulation is beneficial must be                      factor standards when discharging their               demonstrated that there is an aspect to
                                                  determined by weighing only those                       statutory duties, and we have never                   the problem that the EPA has ignored.
                                                  considerations that can be monetized.                   hesitated to uphold their decisions                   There is no question as to the theory
                                                  There are many societal values—such as                  when adequately explained.’’ PDK Labs.                underlying the agency’s action; the
                                                  protecting the most vulnerable among                    v. DEA, 438 F.3d 1184, 1194 (D.C. Cir.                agency has given meaning to its
                                                  us—that could never be reduced to a                     2006). Moreover, a totality-of-the-                   understanding of the appropriate and
                                                  monetary value. In sum, there is no                     circumstances approach can be                         necessary determination by laying out
                                                  basis to conclude that the finding                      particularly appropriate when a statute               all of the many factors and criteria that
                                                  requires the EPA to show that regulation                confers broad discretionary authority.                it considered based on a thorough
                                                  of EGUs under CAA section 112                           See, e.g., Catawba Cty. v. EPA, 571 F.3d              examination of the statute in light of the
                                                  provides greater monetized benefits,                    20, 39 (D.C. Cir. 2009); Chippewa &                   Michigan decision. See 80 FR 75038–39
                                                  much less HAP-specific monetized                        Flambeau Improvement Co. v. FERC,                     and Legal Memorandum. In choosing
                                                  benefits, than costs.                                   325 F.3d 353, 358 (D.C. Cir. 2003)                    how to consider cost, the EPA took note
                                                     Comment: Several commenters stated                   (noting, ‘‘[b]y enacting the ‘‘necessary or           of section 112(n)(1)(A)’s silence on the
                                                  that the EPA’s finding that regulation of               appropriate’’ standard [in section 309 of             question, and the Supreme Court’s
                                                  EGUs is ‘‘appropriate and necessary’’                   the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 825h],               direction that on remand the agency was
                                                  after consideration of a number of                      the Congress invested the Commission                  to reasonably interpret the statute to
                                                  factors is arbitrary and capricious                     with significant discretion,’’ and                    decide how to account for cost. 135
                                                  because the EPA’s alleged balancing of                  affirming FERC’s use of a balancing of                S.Ct. at 2711. Furthermore, the agency
                                                  several factors is ‘‘indecipherable,’’ and              relevant factors as reasoned decision                 heeded the D.C. Circuit’s previous
                                                  because commenters assert that the                      making). Here, CAA section 112(n)(1)(A)               decisions holding that in other statutory
                                                  agency lists the factors it considered                  provides the broad directive that the                 provisions where the EPA is required to
                                                  without explaining the relative weight                  Administrator shall regulate HAP                      consider cost, the agency is prohibited
                                                  of each factor, and how that weighing                   emissions from EGUs under section 112                 from adopting a standard where the cost
                                                  supports the agency’s finding.                          if she finds that such regulation is                  of doing so would be ‘‘exorbitant,’’
                                                     The commenters alleged that, in the                  appropriate and necessary after                       ‘‘excessive,’’ or ‘‘unreasonable.’’ See
                                                  proposed supplemental finding, the                      considering the results of the CAA                    Legal Memorandum at 19 (citations
                                                  EPA sets out the factors that it has                    section 112(n)(1)(A) study. Michigan                  omitted). The EPA also considered
                                                  considered and then declares ‘‘by fiat’’                establishes that the Administrator must               Congress’ statement issued with the
                                                  that the regulation is appropriate,                     also consider the costs of regulation as              1990 CAA Amendments that its goal
                                                  without comparing the significance of                   part of her determination, but the                    ‘‘has been to promote the public health
                                                  the factors on either side or explaining                Court’s directive to ‘‘pay[] attention to             and welfare and the productive capacity
                                                  how the different factors relate to one                 the advantages and disadvantages’’ of                 of our nation.’’ 80 FR 75031 (citing ‘‘A
                                                  another. One commenter stated that,                     regulation supports the EPA’s choice to               Legislative History of the Clean Air Act
                                                  even if the EPA had discretion to use an                employ an approach that weighs a                      Amendments of 1990,’’ Vol. II., p. 3187).
                                                  approach like the multi-factor balancing                number of factors before reaching a                   Based on these considerations and
                                                  one, the agency ‘‘must cogently explain                 conclusion.                                           consistent with the Supreme Court’s
                                                  why it has exercised its discretion in a                   We also disagree with the commenters               direction in Michigan, the EPA
                                                  given manner,’’ citing Motor Vehicle                    who suggest the proposed notice failed                developed an approach to considering
                                                  Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm Mut. Auto.                    to explain and articulate the basis for               cost that acknowledges the unique
                                                  Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 48–49 (U.S. 1983).               the finding. The Supreme Court has said               function of EGUs and their importance
                                                  Similarly, another commenter alleged                    that a rule will be found to be arbitrary             to the power grid. Specifically, the EPA
                                                  that, by failing to articulate and explain              and capricious ‘‘if the agency has relied             looked to whether the cost of potential
                                                  its decision, the agency makes                          on factors which Congress has not                     section 112(d) standards is reasonable
                                                  meaningful comment on its conclusion                    intended it to consider, entirely failed to           and whether the standards can be
                                                  impossible, citing Appalachian Power                    consider an important aspect of the                   implemented without impairing the
                                                  Co. v. EPA, 249 F.3d 1032, 1055 (D.C.                   problem, offered an explanation for its               industry’s ability to provide reliable
                                                  Cir. 2001).                                             decision that runs counter to the                     electricity at a reasonable cost to
                                                     Response: It is well within the bounds               evidence before the agency, or is so                  consumers.
                                                  of the EPA’s authority to interpret CAA                 implausible that it could not be ascribed                The EPA used four metrics to evaluate
                                                  section 112(n)(1)(A) as directing the                   to a difference in view or the product of             the cost reasonableness of MATS and
                                                  Administrator to exercise her discretion                agency expertise.’’ State Farm, 463 U.S.              concluded that the costs associated with
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                                                  in making a determination based on the                  at 43 (U.S. 1983). Further, an agency is              MATS are consistent with historical
                                                  consideration of a number of factors,                   required to give ‘‘some definitional                  costs incurred in the power sector. 80
                                                  including cost, as to whether it is                     content’’ to vague statutory terms by                 FR 75033–36. The EPA also confirmed
                                                  appropriate and necessary to regulate                   ‘‘defining the criteria it is applying,’’             that the power sector can reasonably
                                                  HAP emissions from EGUs. Commenters                     because a refusal to do so is equivalent              absorb the compliance costs associated
                                                  took issue with the use of the EPA’s                    to ‘‘simply saying no without                         with MATS without impairing its ability
                                                  method of analysis, but the approach                    explanation.’’ Pearson v. Shalala, 164                to perform its primary and unique
                                                  the agency has taken here, which sets                   F.3d 650, 660 (D.C. Cir. 1999). And                   function —the generation, transmission,


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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          24431

                                                  and distribution of reliable electricity at             emphasis it places on the positive                       Finally, the Administrator must
                                                  a reasonable cost, i.e., its ‘‘productive               impact on downstream generation).                     exercise her judgment in deciding
                                                  capacity.’’ 80 FR 75038. In addition,                      In its proposed supplemental finding               whether the costs of regulation justify
                                                  given Congress’ directive in section                    and the Legal Memorandum, the EPA                     its advantages and the agency need not
                                                  112(n)(1)(B) to examine the cost of                     pointed out section 112(n)(1)(A)’s                    demonstrate that her decision is the
                                                  mercury controls as part of the Mercury                 silence regarding the weight to be given              same decision that would be made by
                                                  Study, and the Michigan court’s                         to the relevant factors in determining                another Administrator or a reviewing
                                                  implication of the relevance of section                 whether it is ‘‘appropriate’’ to regulate             court. An agency action need not be the
                                                  112(n)(1)(B)’s reference to cost, the EPA               HAP emissions from EGUs. 80 FR                        only approach or even the approach that
                                                  also considered the declining cost of                   75030; Legal Memorandum at 19. Given                  a reviewing court might find most
                                                  technologies available to control                       this statutory silence, the EPA                       reasonable. Instead, the test is ‘‘whether
                                                  mercury, as well as the cost of controls                concluded that it was reasonable to                   the decision was based on a
                                                  for other HAP emissions from EGUs. 80                   consider the objectives of section 112 in             consideration of the relevant factors and
                                                  FR 75036–38. All of these cost metrics                  deciding how to assign relative weight                whether there has been a clear error of
                                                  support a conclusion that the costs of                  to the factors under consideration. See               judgment.’’ Citizens to Preserve Overton
                                                  MATS are reasonable.                                    Legal Memorandum at 20. Taking note                   Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 416
                                                                                                          of Congress’ determination in section                 (U.S. 1971); see also ExxonMobil Gas
                                                     The commenters are also incorrect                                                                          Mktg. Co. v. FERC, 297 F.3d 1071, 1083–
                                                                                                          112 that HAP emissions are inherently
                                                  that the Administrator failed to provide                                                                      1084 (D.C. Cir. 2002) (‘‘Accordingly, we
                                                                                                          harmful and the statutory goal of
                                                  any sense of the relative weight or                                                                           will uphold the Commission’s
                                                                                                          protecting the most sensitive
                                                  importance of the different factors                                                                           application of the test as long as it gives
                                                                                                          populations from that harm, the agency
                                                  considered under the agency’s preferred                                                                       ‘‘reasoned consideration to each of the
                                                                                                          interpreted ‘‘section 112(n)(1) . . . not
                                                  approach. Commenters complain that                                                                            pertinent factors’’ and articulates factual
                                                                                                          [to] support a conclusion that cost
                                                  the Administrator’s balancing of the                    should be the predominant or                          conclusions that are supported by
                                                  factors against each other is                           overriding factor.’’ 80 FR 75030. Cost, as            substantial evidence in the record.’’
                                                  ‘‘indecipherable,’’ but it seems instead                the agency explained, is one of the                   (citation omitted)). Reasonable people,
                                                  that they simply disagree that the costs                factors to be considered. The EPA                     and different decision-makers, can
                                                  are reasonable, that HAP emissions from                 further emphasized the relative                       arrive at different conclusions under the
                                                  EGUs pose hazards to public health and                  importance of its consideration of the                same statutory provision, but those
                                                  the environment, that the finding can                   public health and environmental risks                 conclusions must be reasonable under
                                                  consider harms to the environment, and                  in its analysis by noting that ‘‘[i]f EPA             the statutory structure. The agency does
                                                  that there is any benefit to regulating                 were to conclude, prior to considering                not agree with the commenters’
                                                  HAP emissions. As explained above, we                   costs, that [HAP emissions from EGUs]                 positions that HAP emissions from
                                                  disagree with the commenters’                           posed no risk or that such risks had                  EGUs do not pose significant hazards to
                                                  interpretations and further note that the               already been addressed by other                       public health and the environment and
                                                  bright line tests and thresholds they                   provisions of the CAA (most notably the               that the cost of compliance with MATS
                                                  appear to prefer are not required under                 Acid Rain Program), a decision that                   is unreasonable. This factual
                                                  the statute or the case law. The D.C.                   regulation is not appropriate could be                disagreement with the commenters does
                                                  Circuit Court has found that ‘‘[a]n                     made without considering cost. Yet, the               not render the agency’s statutory
                                                  agency is free to adopt a totality-of-the-              statutory focus on protecting public                  interpretation of how to consider cost
                                                  circumstances test to implement a                       health and the environment suggests                   and the Administrator’s weighing of the
                                                  statute that confers broad authority,                   that the EPA could not make a finding                 relevant factors arbitrary. Absent clear
                                                  even if that test lacks a definite                      under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) solely                 direction from the statute and a
                                                  ‘‘threshold’’ or ‘‘clear line of                        on the basis of cost.’’ Legal                         demonstration that the Administrator
                                                  demarcation to define an open-ended                     Memorandum at 25–26. The relative                     has made a ‘‘clear error of judgment,’’
                                                  term.’’ ’’ Catawba Cty. v. EPA, 571 F.3d                weight given to the EPA’s consideration               the EPA’s interpretation and analysis
                                                  at 37 (citation omitted) (noting that                   of cost is also tied, in this case, to its            should govern.
                                                  ‘‘EPA’s use of a multi-factor analysis is               finding that maximum achievable                          Comment: Several commenters stated
                                                  not in and of itself unreasonable just                  control technology (MACT) standards in                that the EPA’s cost analysis is unlawful
                                                  because it lacks quantitative                           MATS can be implemented at a cost that                and does not meet the Supreme Court’s
                                                  standards’’). Rather than requiring a                   will not impair the utility sector’s                  directive because it focuses mainly on
                                                  quantification of the weight of each                    ability to provide reliable electricity at            whether the power sector can absorb the
                                                  factor, courts have affirmed balancing                  a reasonable cost. As a 7th Circuit Court             cost of compliance. The commenters
                                                  tests where the agency provides an                      case cited by commenters                              argued that the EPA’s focus on the
                                                  explanation of the relative significance                acknowledges, ‘‘one factor of great                   ‘‘affordability’’ of controls compared to
                                                  of its considerations. See PDK Labs. v.                 weight may offset several which lean                  revenues, capital expenditures, and
                                                  U.S. DEA, 438 F.3d at 1194 (finding that                slightly in the other direction.’’                    impacts on electricity rates does not
                                                  the Deputy Administrator’s explanation                  Volkman v. Ryker, 736 F.3d 1084, 1092                 satisfy the statutory prerequisite to
                                                  that one piece of evidence was by itself                (7th Cir. 2013). Not all considerations               engage in some meaningful balancing
                                                  sufficient to induce action was enough                  are required to be given equal weight,                analysis of costs and benefits. Rather,
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                                                  of an explanation of the relative                       and here, given the statutory goals of                the commenters alleged that the EPA’s
                                                  importance of that evidence to her                      CAA section 112 and the EPA’s finding                 consideration of cost in this manner is
                                                  decision); Chippewa v. FERC, 325 F.3d                   that the cost of MATS is reasonable, it               a ‘‘cost-only’’ approach, and does not
                                                  at 357–359 (deferring to FERC’s ‘‘expert                was correct for the EPA to place                      meet the Supreme Court’s instruction to
                                                  judgment’’ in determining on a case-by-                 importance on reducing the significant                consider both advantages and
                                                  case basis whether a reservoir is                       hazards to public health and                          disadvantages of regulation. One
                                                  ‘‘necessary or appropriate,’’ where the                 environment posed by HAP emissions                    commenter posited that by arbitrarily
                                                  Commission has made clear the                           from EGUs.                                            placing emphasis on the economic well-


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                                                  24432               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  being of the power industry rather than                 strained industry is neither realistic nor            the apparent dramatic cost reductions
                                                  on whether the costs of compliance are                  relevant. The hypothetical they pose                  are the result of three key factors: (1)
                                                  appropriate when comparing them to                      could never occur as cost considerations              Improvements in the materials
                                                  the benefits achieved from reducing                     are not relevant to listing decisions for             (sorbents) used to control acid gases and
                                                  HAP, ‘‘an industry that was financially                 any source category besides EGUs.                     mercury have resulted in reduced
                                                  strained would not be subject to                        Moreover, nothing in the EPA’s                        operating costs and increased efficiency;
                                                  regulation, regardless of the human                     preferred approach would require the                  (2) far fewer power plants than the EPA
                                                  health and environmental risks posed                    EPA to ignore the potential benefits                  estimated have required installation of
                                                  from HAP emissions from those sources,                  (e.g., reduced risk of cancer) of                     high-cost pollution controls, such as
                                                  merely because the costs of compliance                  regulating a financially strapped                     fabric filters and flue gas desulfurization
                                                  would constitute too high a percentage                  industry based solely on a                            systems (‘‘FGD’’ or ‘‘scrubbers’’) or
                                                  of the industry’s revenue.’’ Such an                    determination regarding the                           system upgrades; and (3) natural gas
                                                  outcome, the commenter argued, would                    reasonableness of compliance costs for                prices have been significantly lower
                                                  be inconsistent with CAA section 112’s                  that industry.                                        than the EPA projected, reducing the
                                                  objective to protect the public from the                                                                      cost of gas conversion and related
                                                                                                          2. Use of 2011 final MATS RIA costs
                                                  risks posed by HAP.                                                                                           compliance strategies.
                                                     Response: The EPA disagrees that its                 and impacts
                                                                                                                                                                   Other commenters contended that the
                                                  consideration of cost in the proposed                      Comment: Some commenters                           EPA’s use of the MATS RIA cost
                                                  supplemental finding was confined to                    supported the EPA’s reliance upon the                 estimates does not accurately reflect
                                                  an analysis of whether the power sector                 final MATS RIA for compliance cost                    costs of compliance. One commenter
                                                  could absorb the cost of compliance.                    estimates used in the proposed notice.                said the EPA significantly overestimated
                                                  The agency did not only consider                        One commenter noted that RIA cost                     the capability of dry sorbent injection
                                                  whether the cost of regulation under                    estimates incorporated the actual MATS                (DSI) by assuming that it could be used
                                                  CAA section 112 was reasonable, but                     regulations as the compliance target, so              to meet the acid gas emission standards
                                                  also weighed the costs of compliance                    they are much more reliable than the                  regardless of the size of the unit. The
                                                  with MATS against previously                            type of pre-regulatory estimate                       commenter also alleged that the EPA
                                                  established conclusions about the                       anticipated by the statute. In particular,            incorrectly projected that wet scrubbers
                                                  significant risk and harm to public                     one commenter expressed confidence in                 would not be widely required to meet
                                                  health and the environment attributable                 the estimates because the EPA derived                 the proposed emission limits, and that
                                                  to HAP emissions from EGUs. See 80 FR                   those estimates using the Integrated                  the MATS RIA estimates therefore
                                                  75038–39; Legal Memorandum at 20,                       Planning Model (IPM), which the                       underestimated compliance costs and
                                                  25–26. It was this latter step that met the             agency has relied on for over 20 years                the number of retirements. Other
                                                  Supreme Court’s directive to consider                   to forecast the cost and emissions                    commenters asserted that the EPA’s
                                                  both the advantages and disadvantages                   impacts of environmental policy. Some                 alleged underestimate of retirements
                                                  of regulation.                                          commenters noted that the EPA’s use of                generally demonstrates that the costs of
                                                     Commenters’ preference for a                         the first compliance year, 2015, to                   the rule are not reasonable and that the
                                                  different approach that would have                      estimate costs ensures that its cost                  agency’s assessment was based on
                                                  compared cost of compliance to                          consideration in this action is based on              flawed assumptions. Commenters
                                                  monetized benefits of reducing HAP                      the highest cost year, and therefore is a             disagreed with the EPA’s focus on
                                                  does not undermine the validity of the                  ‘‘representation of the maximum                       projected compliance costs and
                                                  EPA’s interpretation of CAA section                     impact.’’                                             generation capacity estimated at the
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) and Michigan’s                                Several commenters stated that some                time of MATS promulgation and
                                                  requirement to consider cost. As the                    estimates of industry compliance costs                suggested that the EPA should consider
                                                  EPA explained in the Legal                              have been much lower than those                       actual costs and retirements that have
                                                  Memorandum, and as explained below                      projected by the EPA in the final MATS                occurred since the promulgation of
                                                  in response to comments, the agency                     RIA. One study cited by commenters                    MATS to update the assumptions made
                                                  concluded that commenters’ preferred                    found that the costs of control                       in the RIA instead of using assumptions
                                                  cost approach of comparing costs to                     technologies have been less expensive                 that the commenters argue are
                                                  monetized HAP-specific benefits is not                  and more effective than assumed in the                unrepresentative. The commenters
                                                  required by CAA section 112 or CAA                      RIA, and therefore the actual cost of
                                                  section 112(n)(1), nor does the statute                                                                       alleged that the EPA’s continued use of
                                                                                                          complying with MATS has been                          those assumptions when actual, new
                                                  provide the tools to quantify and                       significantly less than estimated by the
                                                  monetize benefits attributable to                                                                             data are available is arbitrary and
                                                                                                          EPA. This analysis was based on                       capricious.
                                                  reductions in HAP emissions from EGUs                   existing contracts for the installation of               Response: The EPA maintains that its
                                                  or any other source category. Legal                     air pollution control systems,                        use of compliance cost and impact
                                                  Memorandum at 24. In addition, given                    experience with the performance of                    estimates from the MATS RIA for the
                                                  the known scientific limitations on the                 emissions control technologies, and
                                                  ability to quantify and/or monetize                                                                           year of 2015 is a reasonable way to
                                                                                                          assessments of the amount of pollution                assess expected costs of MATS for
                                                  HAP-specific benefits, there is no                      control capacity installed by the power
                                                  statutory basis for the assertion that the                                                                    purposes of analyzing the cost
                                                                                                          sector to comply with MATS. This                      reasonableness of the rule as part of its
                                                  agency must decline to regulate HAP                     analysis estimated that industry’s actual
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                                                  emissions from EGUs based on a                                                                                consideration of cost for the appropriate
                                                                                                          annual compliance costs are currently                 and necessary finding. As noted in the
                                                  comparison of costs to any HAP-specific                 approximately $2 billion, which is less
                                                  benefits that could be monetized, and                                                                         proposed supplemental finding and the
                                                                                                          than one-quarter of the $9.6 billion                  Legal Memorandum, under the statutory
                                                  indeed it might not even be reasonable                  annual cost that the EPA estimated for
                                                  to do so. Id.                                           MATS.21 The commenters stated that                    Respondent Intervenors to Govern Future
                                                     The hypothetical scenario posed by                                                                         Proceedings, filed September 24, 2015 (see
                                                  commenters regarding how the EPA’s                        21 White Stallion Energy Center, LLC v. EPA, D.C.   Declaration of James E. Staudt and accompanying
                                                  approach would apply to a financially                   Circuit Case No. 12–1100, Motion of Industry          exhibits).



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                 24433

                                                  structure of CAA section 112, the CAA                   predict that the Nationals will win the               growth, have placed significant
                                                  section 112(n)(1)(A) finding is a                       World Series in 2015. If that does not                economic pressure on coal-fired power
                                                  preliminary determination that is made                  happen, you can’t necessarily fault the               plants, even those that are compliant
                                                  significantly before the CAA section                    model.’’). The EPA used the best                      with MATS.24 Lower natural gas prices
                                                  112(d) standards would be promulgated.                  available data and modeling                           have made natural gas generation
                                                  The suggestion by some commenters                       information, in accordance with Office                increasingly more competitive as
                                                  that the EPA is required to conduct a                   of Management and Budget (OMB) 22                     compared to coal. Moreover, lower
                                                  new analysis that attempts to estimate                  and EPA guidance (U.S. EPA, 2010), and                natural gas prices result in a reduction
                                                  the actual costs incurred through                       provided the public with the                          in wholesale electricity prices, leading
                                                  compliance with the final CAA section                   opportunity to comment on all aspects                 to a reduction in the revenues received
                                                  112(d) standards is thus not consistent                 of its analysis in developing the final               by some coal-fired generators. These
                                                  with the statute. Moreover, the                         MATS RIA.                                             and other factors lead to EGUs retiring,
                                                  independent analysis cited by several                      The EPA disagrees with commenters                  and they are unrelated to MATS.
                                                  commenters suggests that the actual                     who assert that the EPA underestimated                   The EPA’s cost analysis, summarized
                                                  costs of compliance have been much                      the costs of particular control                       in the MATS RIA, was based on
                                                  lower than the cost estimates contained                 technologies. In response to comments                 reasonable assumptions at the time of
                                                  in the MATS RIA.                                        received on the proposed MATS rule,                   promulgation for important factors such
                                                     Both the statute and the Michigan                    the EPA reviewed control technology                   as fuel supply, fuel prices, and
                                                  decision support the EPA’s reliance on                  cost and performance assumptions and                  electricity demand. More importantly,
                                                  the cost estimates from the RIA. First,                 updated some of these assumptions in                  retirements that are not attributable to
                                                  any cost analysis included in an ‘‘initial              the final RIA. Additionally, in the                   MATS cannot reasonably be considered
                                                  decision to regulate,’’ Michigan, 135 S.                response to comment section of the final              a cost of compliance for MATS.
                                                  Ct. at 2709, must precede any                           MATS preamble, the EPA responds to a                  Commenters have not demonstrated that
                                                  regulations flowing out of that decision.               series of comments on the cost and                    any recent retirements not accounted for
                                                  Therefore, in considering the costs of                  performance assumptions of the control                in the MATS RIA are solely or
                                                  compliance as part of its appropriate                   technologies in the RIA. For example, in              disproportionately a result of MATS and
                                                  and necessary finding, it is reasonable                 Section VII.G.1 of the final MATS                     would not have occurred in the absence
                                                  for the EPA to look at what types of cost               preamble, the EPA responds to                         of MATS. For these reasons, in making
                                                  information, such as the MATS RIA cost                  comments regarding the technical                      the initial appropriate finding, it is
                                                  estimates, would be available at this                   applicability, cost, and performance of               reasonable for the EPA to use the final
                                                  threshold stage. 80 FR 75030; Legal                     DSI, explaining that the ‘‘representation             MATS RIA cost estimates, which were
                                                  Memorandum at 19–21. In addition,                       of DSI in MATS compliance modeling is                 developed at the time the rule was
                                                  nothing in the Michigan decision                        reasonable, is properly limited to                    finalized and are based on high quality
                                                  precludes the EPA’s use of the existing                 applications that are technically                     economic, technical, and regulatory
                                                  cost information in the record in                       feasible, and reflects a conservative                 assumptions.
                                                  addressing the agency’s obligation on                   approach to modeling future use of this                  Moreover, in its consideration of cost
                                                  remand to consider cost as part of the                  technology.’’ 23 Furthermore, the EPA                 here, the agency elected to focus on the
                                                  appropriate and necessary finding. In                   does not agree and the record does not                2015 impacts presented in the RIA
                                                  Michigan, the Court rejected arguments                  support the assertion that the total costs            because, as some commenters note, the
                                                  that it could conclude that the agency                  projected in the RIA are underestimated               modeling the agency conducted
                                                  had properly considered cost based on                   as a result of the EPA’s assumptions
                                                  the agency’s consideration of costs in                  regarding the cost and performance of                    24 See, e.g., ‘‘FirstEnergy’s Largest Coal Plant

                                                  other stages of the rulemaking (e.g., in                DSI and wet scrubber retrofits.                       Idled Due to Low Power Prices.’’ March 11, 2016.
                                                                                                                                                                Power Engineering News. Available at: http://
                                                  setting the emission standards or in the                   The EPA also disagrees with                        www.power-eng.com/articles/2016/03/firstenergy-s-
                                                  RIA). The Court emphasized that the                     commenters that the number of                         largest-coal-plant-idled-due-to-low-power-prices.8.
                                                  agency itself had not relied upon these                 retirements of coal- and oil-fired power              leftinheritedbottom_standard_8.html.
                                                  rationales at the finding stage. 135 S. Ct.             plants that have occurred since the                      Mooney, Chris. 2015. ‘‘How super low natural gas
                                                                                                          rule’s promulgation indicates that the                prices are reshaping how we get our power.’’ The
                                                  2710–11 (citing SEC v. Chenery Corp.,                                                                         Washington Post. October 28. Available at: https://
                                                  318 U.S. 80, 87 (1943)). However, the                   EPA’s assumptions in the MATS RIA                     www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-
                                                  Court left open the possibility that the                were flawed. Commenters argue that                    environment/wp/2015/10/28/how-super-low-
                                                  economic analyses the agency had                        because there have been more                          natural-gas-prices-are-reshaping-how-we-get-our-
                                                                                                                                                                power/.
                                                  already conducted could suffice to                      retirements in recent years than the EPA
                                                                                                                                                                   Larson, Aaron. 2016. ‘‘Power Generation Industry
                                                  satisfy its obligation to consider costs as             predicted in the RIA would be                         Faces Fundamental Changes.’’ POWER Magazine.
                                                  part of the appropriate finding. Id. at                 attributable to MATS, that the EPA’s                  January 19. Available at: http://www.powermag.com
                                                  2711.                                                   assumptions are necessarily flawed.                   /power-generation-industry-faces-fundamental-
                                                     We also disagree with the suggestion                 However, commenters fail to show that                 changes/?printmode=1.
                                                  by commenters that the entire economic                  the additional retirements they cite are                 Cassell, Barry. 2015. ‘‘Luminant switches a
                                                                                                                                                                second unit at the Martin Lake coal plant into
                                                  analysis that the EPA performed in the                  attributable to MATS. Coal-fired power                seasonal operations.’’ Generation Hub. July 24.
                                                  MATS RIA is invalid simply because of                   plants shut down for reasons other than               Available at: http://generationhub.com/2015/07/24/
                                                  a discrepancy between modeling                          MATS. Numerous publications have                      luminant-switches-a-second-unit-at-the-martin-
                                                  projections and actual outcomes. See,                   pointed out that recent trends in the                 lake.
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                                                                                                                                   Smith, Rebecca. 2014. ‘‘How Shale-Gas Boom Led
                                                  e.g., EME Homer City Generation, L.P. v.                electric power industry, such as low                  to Demise of Energy Future Holdings.’’ The Wall
                                                  EPA, 795 F.3d 118, 135–36 (D.C. Cir.                    natural gas prices and slow demand                    Street Journal. April 29. Available at: http://
                                                  2015) (‘‘We will not invalidate EPA’s                                                                         www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702
                                                  predictions solely because there might                    22 Office of Management and Budget. 2003.           304163604579531644232506988.
                                                  be discrepancies between those                          Circular A–4: Regulatory Analysis. Washington, DC.       U.S. EIA. 2016. ‘‘Natural gas expected to surpass
                                                                                                          Available at: http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/          coal in mix of fuel used for U.S. power generation
                                                  predictions and the real world. That                    circulars/a004/a-4.html. Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–        in 2016.’’ Today in Energy. March 16. Available at:
                                                  possibility is inherent in the enterprise               OAR–2009–0234–20507.                                  http://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.cfm?id=
                                                  of prediction. The best model might                       23 77 FR 9330, 9411.                                25392#.



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                                                  24434               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  indicated that compliance costs would                   compliance costs reflects the cost to the             electricity consumers or electricity
                                                  be highest in that first compliance year                entire power sector. MATS is an                       producers, and not limiting our
                                                  under the rule. By using the estimate                   economically consequential rulemaking                 consideration of costs to just those
                                                  from the year when compliance costs                     that is expected to induce changes in                 borne by a subset of producers or
                                                  are highest to compare against the                      both electricity and fuel markets. To                 consumers. Again, even non-regulated
                                                  various cost metrics, the EPA ensured                   focus on the projected impact of MATS                 EGUs can be affected by the rule
                                                  that its assessment of cost                             on only affected coal- and oil-fired                  through changes in prices as a result of
                                                  reasonableness was, if anything,                        EGUs would produce an incomplete                      MATS, such as the example of a gas
                                                  conservative, and that these                            estimate of the entire cost of complying              generator just provided. Another
                                                  comparisons would, therefore, be                        with the rule and, thus, lead to an                   example is that of a generator that
                                                  applicable for other future years.                      inappropriate consideration of the costs              benefits from higher electricity prices
                                                     The independent analysis cited by                    of the final MATS rule. The costs                     induced by MATS without incurring
                                                  several commenters, which was the only                  associated with installation and                      costs, such as a renewable generator
                                                  retrospective analysis of MATS costs                    operation of pollution controls (or fuel              owned by a highly diversified firm.
                                                  submitted to the EPA in comments,                       switching) at some affected EGUs can                  Ultimately, consumers and producers
                                                  finds that a variety of control technology              influence the generation decisions of                 bear the costs of a regulation, not
                                                  costs have shown to be lower than the                   both EGUs that are regulated by MATS                  specific pieces of machinery. Therefore,
                                                  EPA’s projection from the final MATS                    and those that are not regulated by                   a consideration of cost incurred by only
                                                  RIA. These results further contradict the               MATS. As the EPA noted in the                         directly regulated EGUs would not fully
                                                  assertions of some commenters that the                  proposal, the U.S. electric power system              capture the impacts on the owners of
                                                  assumptions in the RIA led to an                                                                              those directly regulated EGUs.
                                                                                                          is complex and interconnected and the
                                                  underestimate of costs. The EPA                                                                                 Finally, many commenters in MATS
                                                                                                          generation decisions of a single affected
                                                  recognizes it is possible, and has                                                                            and in this supplemental finding agree
                                                                                                          EGU can influence the dispatch of other
                                                  historically been the case for other                                                                          that cost reasonableness can be
                                                                                                          EGUs, wholesale power prices, and fuel
                                                  regulations, that the regulated industry                                                                      determined in part by increases in
                                                                                                          prices. Therefore, for a rule with the
                                                  develops ways to comply with                                                                                  electricity prices, which reflect
                                                                                                          scope and projected impacts of MATS it
                                                  regulations at lower cost than what the                                                                       increased expenditures by EGUs
                                                                                                          is necessary for the EPA to consider the
                                                  agency projects at the time of rule                                                                           resulting from MATS. By advocating for
                                                                                                          full cost of the rule by capturing costs              the consideration of electricity price
                                                  promulgation. However, the suggestion
                                                  by the retrospective analysis that                      expended at all electric generators, not              impacts, these commenters further
                                                  important components of the actual                      just those subject to emissions                       support EPA’s determination that it is
                                                  compliance cost of MATS are lower                       requirements under MATS. For                          appropriate to consider other cost
                                                  than the agency’s projections does not                  example, the EPA’s analysis estimated a               metrics at the sector level as well. The
                                                  alter the agency’s determination that the               small increase in generation from                     EPA’s estimate of the cost of MATS is
                                                  analysis in the final MATS RIA                          natural gas-fired sources as a result of              an appropriately complete accounting of
                                                  represents the best and most                            the rule. This increase in generation                 the costs incurred by the sector, and the
                                                  comprehensive estimate of the cost of                   results in increased demand for natural               agency’s comparison of these costs to
                                                  compliance with MATS available to the                   gas and, thus, a small increase in the                the sector-wide metrics is reasonable.
                                                  EPA for use in this finding, because it                 price of natural gas. This results in
                                                                                                          additional costs for EGUs that utilize                4. Power Sector Sales
                                                  was developed at the time the agency
                                                  reaffirmed the appropriate and                          natural gas, which the EPA                               Comment: Commenters supporting
                                                  necessary finding and established CAA                   appropriately captured in the analysis                the consideration of compliance costs as
                                                  section 112(d) standards for EGUs.                      for the RIA. Furthermore, an evaluation               a percentage of power sector sales noted
                                                                                                          of the costs borne solely by EGUs                     that the EPA has routinely used this
                                                  3. Consideration of Costs at the Sector                 subject to MATS would need to account                 type of analysis as a means of evaluating
                                                  Level                                                   for the potential ability of owners of                whether compliance costs for HAP
                                                     Comment: Some commenters                             these EGUs to recoup their increased                  regulations are reasonable. These
                                                  questioned whether the EPA’s                            expenditures through higher electricity               commenters believe the comparison of
                                                  consideration of cost at the sector level               prices, or else an estimate of the costs              compliance costs to power sector sales
                                                  was reasonable. These commenters                        of MATS borne by the owners of those                  produces a useful metric to help the
                                                  argued that because MATS regulated                      EGUs (i.e., their economic incidence)                 EPA determine whether the power
                                                  only coal- and oil-fired power plants,                  would be an overestimate. However, in                 sector can reasonably absorb the cost of
                                                  that it was incorrect for the EPA to use                doing so, the costs borne by the                      compliance with MATS. These
                                                  sector-level data when comparing the                    consumers of electricity from these                   commenters also agree that this analysis
                                                  costs of the rule to the array of metrics               higher prices would be ignored, which                 supports the agency’s conclusion and
                                                  that the EPA used to assess the                         the EPA finds inappropriate. This is                  demonstrates that the costs of the
                                                  reasonableness of the rule.                             especially true given that the demand                 standards are low, as compared to
                                                     Another commenter stated that the                    for electricity is not particularly price-            annual revenues of the electric utility
                                                  EPA’s framing of the cost inquiry—                      responsive and many firms in the                      sector.
                                                  whether the power sector can                            industry are assured cost-recovery, and,                 Commenters disagreeing with the
                                                  reasonably absorb the cost of the MATS                  therefore, there is considerable potential            agency’s analysis of compliance costs as
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                                                  Rule, 80 FR 75030—is reasonable, and                    for producers to pass through their                   a percentage of power sector sales argue
                                                  well within its discretion, citing                      expenditures to consumers. Therefore,                 it is misleading because it ignores the
                                                  Michigan 135 S. Ct. at 2711 (‘‘It will be               the EPA determined it was appropriate                 relationship between revenues and
                                                  up to the Agency to decide (as always,                  to account for all of the costs that may              expenses and, therefore, in their view,
                                                  within the limits of reasonable                         be expended as a result of the rule that              provides no indication of cost
                                                  interpretation) how to account for cost.’’              could be reasonably estimated,                        reasonableness. The commenters
                                                     Response: As explained here and                      recognizing that these expenditures                   suggested that given the high operating
                                                  below, the EPA’s estimate of the MATS                   would ultimately be borne either by                   costs for EGUs, a comparison of


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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          24435

                                                  compliance costs to affected facilities’                section above, a significant share of                 sum, the EPA continues to find that it
                                                  net operating income (i.e., revenues                    operating expenditures may ultimately                 is reasonable, when evaluating the
                                                  from retail sales minus operating                       be borne by consumers. Therefore,                     reasonableness of the costs of MATS, to
                                                  expenses) would more appropriately                      comparing the costs borne by electricity              compare those costs to utility sector
                                                  highlight the cost impacts on the                       producers to their net operating income               sales.
                                                  marginal operations of affected sources.                (i.e., a measure of profits that does not
                                                     One commenter stated that the EPA                                                                          5. Capital Expenditures
                                                                                                          account for payments on costs that have
                                                  does not explain why the analysis of                    been committed to previously, like                       Comment: Several commenters
                                                  compliance costs as a percentage of                     financing of existing capital) would be               supported the EPA’s use of the metric
                                                  power sector sales is appropriate for the               an incomplete assessment of the cost of               comparing MATS compliance costs to
                                                  utility sector. The commenter noted that                MATS. Thus, it would be unreasonable                  capital expenditures as one way to
                                                  this type of analysis is generally used                 to compare the total expenditures                     evaluate whether MATS compliance
                                                  for measuring economic impacts to                       incurred as a result of MATS to                       costs are reasonable. One commenter
                                                  small entities under the Regulatory                     historical net operating income in the                stated that projected compliance
                                                  Flexibility Act (RFA) and, in that                      sector without accounting for the ability             expenditures are small in relation to
                                                  context, sales are generally measured                   of firms to pass through these costs                  both the typical capital expenditures
                                                  per company or on another more                          through higher electricity prices.                    undertaken each year by the utility
                                                  granular level.                                            Additionally, there are difficulties               industry, as well as typical year-to-year
                                                     Response: The EPA maintains that it                  associated with estimating changes in                 changes in such expenditures. One
                                                  is reasonable to employ an analysis of                  firm-level net-operating income or other              commenter particularly approved of the
                                                  compliance costs as a percentage of                     measures of firm profits with the data                focus of this metric on comparing the
                                                  power sector sales, a frequently used                   and tools available to the agency. For                precise impact of a particular category
                                                  indicator of economic impact, to                        example, many firms in the industry are               of the rule’s compliance costs to
                                                  evaluate the cost of MATS. A                            not publicly traded, so historical profit             industry spending on that category of
                                                  comparison of revenues to costs is                      data for many of these firms are not                  costs. The commenter stated that this
                                                  informative and relevant to an                          readily available; therefore, a                       metric provides a clear understanding of
                                                  evaluation of whether the costs                         comparison of an estimate of the change               whether the rule’s capital expenditure
                                                  associated with a rule are reasonable.                  in profits to historical data on profits in           costs could readily be absorbed by
                                                     While the EPA recognizes that                        the industry would be limited by data                 industry.
                                                  alternative metrics could also be useful,               availability. Furthermore, there are                     Other commenters took issue with the
                                                  the application of such alternative                     accounting and tax practices that affect              EPA’s comparison of annual capital
                                                  metrics would not invalidate the use of                 the timing of when profits are reported,              expenditures required by MATS to
                                                  compliance costs as a percentage of                     and therefore measures of profits may                 overall power-sector capital
                                                  power sector sales as demonstrating                     fluctuate on an annual basis for reasons              expenditures as a way to assess whether
                                                  cost-reasonableness. The level of sales                 not directly related to coincident annual             the rule’s compliance costs are
                                                  in the industry is, over time,                          changes in revenues and expenditures.                 reasonable. These commenters stated
                                                  representative of the costs incurred by                 In addition, the fact that a large                    that the power sector’s historical annual
                                                  the industry to generate, transmit, and                 proportion of affected EGUs in the                    capital expenditures are broad, all-
                                                  distribute electricity, as the firms that               power sector operate within regulated                 encompassing statistics that do not
                                                  operate in the electricity sector usually               markets and are able to pass regulatory               provide an adequate basis to judge
                                                  do so with the expectation that they will               costs to electricity consumers, yet often             whether compliance expenditures are
                                                  recover their costs (i.e., expenditures) in             face different specific requirements for              reasonable. Specifically, this commenter
                                                  addition to a profit. Therefore, total                  how and when they may recover those                   suggested that the EPA’s analysis should
                                                  sales provides a sense of scope of                      costs, presents challenges to the use of              instead focus on the historical annual
                                                  economic activity in the industry, and                  a change in net operating income as a                 capital expenditures of only the entities
                                                  annual changes in those sales provide a                 metric for evaluating costs.                          that own affected sources. One
                                                  sense of the scope of fluctuations in that                 Commenters advocating changes in                   commenter argued that the EPA did not
                                                  industry.                                               net operating income as a more                        explain the benefits of this approach
                                                     The EPA disagrees that a comparison                  appropriate metric than a metric based                over any other approach, or why it is a
                                                  of the costs of complying with MATS                     on compliance costs as a percentage of                good measure of the reasonableness of
                                                  and the power sector’s sales is an                      power sector sales for measuring cost                 the costs of a regulation.
                                                  unreasonable way to evaluate costs                      reasonableness do not supply any                         Response: As an initial matter, the
                                                  simply because this type of comparison                  analysis in their comment, nor do they                EPA notes that while a number of
                                                  is often made in the context of                         provide a source of historical data to use            commenters disagreed with the agency’s
                                                  evaluating economic impacts on small                    for this analysis, nor a way to address               use of historical annual capital
                                                  businesses. While commenters point out                  these technical challenges with                       expenditure data for the power sector in
                                                  that the analysis is often used for                     estimating historical profits, nor do they            its analysis, no commenter objected
                                                  smaller entities, they do not                           assert that a different metric would                  more generally to the agency’s
                                                  demonstrate why the metric holds no                     result in a conclusion that contradicts               examination of the rule’s capital
                                                  value for examining economic impacts                    the EPA’s findings. However, in                       expenditures as one way to consider
                                                  on the power sector.                                    response to comments highlighting the                 whether the rule’s costs are reasonable.
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                                                     Further, with regard to the specific                 importance of considering annual                      In demonstrating that an analysis is
                                                  metric suggested by commenters                          operating expenses to this industry, the              reasonable, particularly in the absence
                                                  opposed to using compliance costs as a                  EPA considered additional information                 of any statutory guidance, the EPA is
                                                  percentage of power sector sales to                     on operating expenses in order to ensure              not required to show that its chosen
                                                  consider costs, we note that while net                  that our analysis of retrospective and                approach is better than ‘‘any other
                                                  operating income is an important                        projected cost information is robust and              approach.’’ Instead, the agency is
                                                  indicator for utilities and other                       complete. This supplemental analysis                  required to show that there is a ‘‘rational
                                                  operating entities, as discussed in this                was discussed earlier in Section III.A. In            connection between the facts found and


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                                                  24436               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  the choice made.’’ State Farm, 463 U.S.                 provides no information regarding that                average price increases than would be
                                                  at 52. As discussed in the proposed                     metric, nor is the agency aware of data               caused by the rule. The commenter
                                                  supplemental finding, capital costs are                 to reliably analyze that metric.                      added that the EPA did not
                                                  one aspect of total compliance costs that               Therefore, for all of the reasons above,              acknowledge that the MATS rule causes
                                                  can be evaluated against historical                     we decline to confine our analysis of                 average retail price of electricity
                                                  levels. As the EPA explained in the                     capital expenditures to only those units              increases that are almost double that of
                                                  proposed supplemental finding, capital                  that are directly regulated by MATS.                  an average of the 11 examined years and
                                                  costs represent largely irreversible                      Moreover, we disagree with the                      that the EPA did not recognize that the
                                                  investments for firms that must be paid                 commenter’s implied premise that an                   price increases caused by the rule are
                                                  off regardless of future economic                       estimate of the capital expenditure costs             additive.
                                                  conditions, as opposed to other                         associated with installing controls to
                                                  important variable costs, such as fuel                  comply with MATS actually reflects                       Response: The EPA reviewed changes
                                                  costs, that may vary according to                       capital expenditure impacts on entities               in average retail price of electricity over
                                                  economic conditions and generation                      owning ‘‘affected sources’’. As noted in              the 2000–2011 period and compared the
                                                  needs. For an action that was projected                 Section IV.A.3, many of these sources                 projected impact of MATS on the
                                                  to result in a large number of pollution                are able to pass-through compliance                   average retail price of electricity to
                                                  control retrofits nationwide for multiple               costs to ratepayers, and, thus the cost of            annual variability over this period. The
                                                  HAP, the EPA determined it was                          compliance, including capital                         EPA believes that the estimated increase
                                                  reasonable to consider projected capital                expenditure costs, are in many cases                  in electricity price is reasonable because
                                                  costs as one component of a                             ultimately borne by consumers. The                    it falls well within the range of
                                                  comprehensive evaluation of overall                     EPA’s sector-level approach to                        historical variation. The EPA does not
                                                  compliance costs. This is further                       analyzing cost for this metric, as for                believe that comparing the projected
                                                  supported by the EPA’s projection that                  others, takes into account all costs                  impact to an average or percentile of
                                                  the annual projected capital costs                      whether they are borne by producers or                historical fluctuation is the appropriate
                                                  represented about 26 percent of the total               consumers, and is therefore the most                  approach for examining this particular
                                                  annual compliance cost projected for                    comprehensive and well-suited to                      impact. This is because the context of
                                                  2015. For this rulemaking, the EPA was                  evaluating whether such costs are                     whether MATS incurs a
                                                  able to access reliable historical data                 reasonable.                                           disproportionate change is relevant in
                                                  from multiple sources over a sufficient                   Additionally, in response to
                                                                                                                                                                the context of positive changes in price,
                                                  time horizon, which enabled                             comments, the EPA supplemented its
                                                                                                          analysis of annual capital costs with                 not simply the average trend in price
                                                  comparisons of the EPA’s projections of                                                                       changes, which includes both net-
                                                                                                          annual production costs, the sum of
                                                  incremental capital expenditures under                                                                        positive and net-negative changes.
                                                                                                          which provides a more comprehensive
                                                  MATS to sector-level historical trends                                                                        MATS will impact electricity prices;
                                                                                                          metric to use to compare against total
                                                  in capital expenditures.                                                                                      what is relevant is whether that change
                                                                                                          projected compliance costs (see Section
                                                     We disagree with the comment                         IV.A.4 above). This addition confirmed                is disproportionate to the differences in
                                                  alleging that the EPA’s analysis of this                the EPA’s earlier finding that the                    electricity prices that happen for various
                                                  metric is ‘‘too broad’’. Specifically, we               compliance costs of this rule are                     different reasons, and that reveal
                                                  do not agree with the commenter’s                       projected to be well within historical                themselves in year-to-year fluctuations.
                                                  suggestion that we should restrict our                  variability, and continues to                         To compare the effect of MATS to an
                                                  analysis of capital expenditures to focus               demonstrate that the agency’s projected               average of those variations over time,
                                                  on only the entities directly regulated by              costs are reasonable when weighed                     essentially dampening those variations
                                                  MATS (i.e., ‘‘the entities that own the                 against historical metrics.                           to an average growth rate in electricity
                                                  affected sources’’). As discussed in                                                                          prices, would prove misleading when
                                                  Section IV.A.3, the EPA views a sector-                 6. Retail Electricity Prices
                                                                                                                                                                trying to compare the effect of MATS on
                                                  level assessment of costs, including                       Comment: A commenter supporting                    retail electricity price with other
                                                  capital expenditure requirements, to be                 the EPA’s retail price of electricity                 influences.
                                                  the correct scale of analysis for this                  metric stated that in evaluating the
                                                  notice, in part because analyzing cost at                                                                        Additionally, the EPA notes that the
                                                                                                          economic impacts of CAA regulation,
                                                  the sector-level better captures impacts                                                                      commenters’ point regarding additive
                                                                                                          the EPA has often considered the
                                                  on entities, many of which own                                                                                impacts is incorrect. The 0.3 cents per
                                                                                                          projected costs of regulation to
                                                  complex holdings that include units                     electricity consumers. Additionally one               kilowatt-hour is incremental to the
                                                  that are not regulated by MATS.                         commenter noted that recent data show                 EPA’s estimated average retail
                                                  Further, adopting the commenter’s                       that the EPA’s estimate for 2015 was                  electricity price in the absence of the
                                                  methodology for analyzing capital                       conservative and that actual electricity              rule, not historical levels (which are
                                                  expenditures more narrowly would                        prices have been lower than the EPA                   actually higher in 2006–2011, on
                                                  force the agency to ignore costs                        projected. Commenters supporting the                  average, than the EPA’s base case
                                                  associated with installing additional                   metric concluded that the agency’s                    estimates for 2015). As the EPA explains
                                                  new generating technologies that would                  analysis demonstrates that on a regional              in the preamble to the final MATS rule,
                                                  be attributable to MATS (because those                  and national basis, the increases in the              ‘‘Even with this rule in effect, electricity
                                                  new units that are installed are not                    retail price are reasonable in light of the           prices are projected to be lower in 2015
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                                                  directly regulated by MATS and are not                  benefits afforded, and well within the                and 2020 than they were in 2010.’’ In
                                                  necessarily owned by entities that own                  range of variability.                                 the EPA’s consideration of the potential
                                                  units regulated by MATS), and those                        A commenter stated that the EPA’s                  impacts of MATS on retail electricity
                                                  costs are not insignificant and increase                retail price of electricity metric masks              prices, the agency appropriately
                                                  over time. We also note that although                   the true effects of the rule because the              considered the estimated increase in
                                                  the commenter urges the EPA to analyze                  commenter believes that the EPA failed                prices projected to occur as a result of
                                                  historical annual capital expenditures                  to acknowledge that, of the 11 years                  MATS in the context of historical
                                                  by a subset of units, the commenter                     examined, only 3 years saw greater                    variability.


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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                  24437

                                                  7. Reliability of Electricity Supply                    have actually caused reliability                          significantly higher than required.27
                                                                                                          problems.25                                               Additionally, several external analyses
                                                     Comment: Several commenters took                                                                               have reached conclusions that are
                                                  issue with the EPA’s analysis of the                      As some commenters highlighted, the
                                                                                                          EPA’s proposed supplemental finding                       consistent with the EPA’s analysis.28
                                                  impacts of MATS on power sector                                                                                     With regard to commenters’ assertion
                                                  generation capacity and stated that                     indicates that the vast majority of the
                                                                                                          generation capacity in the power sector                   that the impacts on reliability alone are
                                                  impacts on reliability alone are not a                                                                            not a measure of whether a rule’s
                                                  measure of the reasonableness of costs.                 directly affected by the requirements of
                                                                                                          MATS would be able to absorb the                          compliance costs are reasonable, given
                                                  Commenters stated that the EPA vastly                                                                             Congress’ overall goal of maintaining
                                                  underestimated the number of                            anticipated compliance costs and
                                                                                                          remain operational. The EPA’s analysis                    the nation’s productive capacity, it is
                                                  retirements that have occurred as a                                                                               reasonable for the EPA to consider such
                                                  result of MATS and presented several                    conducted in conjunction with
                                                                                                          promulgation of the final rule                            impacts as part of its consideration of
                                                  estimates of retirements and facility                                                                             costs under CAA section 112(n)(1)(A).
                                                  closures. Several commenters alleged                    demonstrated the feasibility of installing
                                                                                                          the retrofit controls projected by the                    The potential impact of MATS on
                                                  that the EPA arbitrarily compares its                                                                             reliability was one of a series of
                                                  projection of MATS-related coal-fired                   EPA.26 Given the fact that HAP control
                                                                                                                                                                    independent analyses, each supporting
                                                  capacity retirements to the nation’s total              technologies are technically feasible and
                                                                                                                                                                    conclusions that the costs of MATS are
                                                  generation capacity and the nation’s                    available, it is important to understand
                                                                                                                                                                    reasonable.
                                                  coal-fired generation capacity.                         that the economics that drive
                                                                                                          retirements are based on multiple                         B. Comments on Consideration of
                                                     Other commenters stated that the                     factors including: Expected demand for                    Benefit-Cost Analysis in the MATS RIA
                                                  analysis of the impact on the sector’s                  electricity, the cost of alternative
                                                  generating capacity supports the                                                                                  1. Co-Benefits
                                                                                                          generation, and the cost of continuing to
                                                  agency’s finding. Commenters noted                      generate using an existing unit. The                        Comment: Several commenters
                                                  that retirement decisions are based on                  EPA’s analysis shows that factors other                   supported the EPA’s conclusions
                                                  consideration of numerous factors (e.g.,                than MATS, such as the supply of                          regarding the benefit-cost analysis for
                                                  age of the unit, capacity factors, fuel                 natural gas, would have a greater impact                  MATS and also supported the inclusion
                                                  prices, etc.) making it difficult to                    on the number of projected retirements                    of monetized co-benefits in that
                                                  determine whether a given coal- or oil-                 than the MATS rule itself.                                analysis. These commenters asserted
                                                  fired unit retired due to MATS                                                                                    that it would not be reasonable or
                                                  compliance obligations or due to other                    Additionally, in order to ensure that
                                                                                                                                                                    legally defensible for the EPA to ignore
                                                  unrelated factors that make operation                   any retirements resulting from MATS
                                                                                                                                                                    the real and significant advantages of
                                                  uneconomic.                                             would not adversely impact the ability
                                                                                                                                                                    reductions in PM2.5 and SO2 emissions
                                                                                                          of the power sector to meet the demand
                                                     One commenter noted that the EPA’s                                                                             that result from reducing emissions of
                                                                                                          for electricity, the EPA conducted a
                                                  modeling and analysis in the MATS RIA                                                                             HAP from power plants. These
                                                                                                          regional analysis of the impacts of
                                                  provides the best estimate of the impact                                                                          commenters agreed that CAA section
                                                                                                          projected retirements on electric                         112(n)(1)(A) reflects congressional
                                                  of MATS on retirements and stated that                  reliability. This resource adequacy
                                                  the fact that retirements have been                                                                               intent that co-benefits are important
                                                                                                          analysis looked at capacity projections                   considerations, and they highlighted
                                                  higher than projected does not suggest                  in each of the 32 modeled subregions in
                                                  that they were a result of MATS, much                                                                             legislative history, court instructions to
                                                                                                          the contiguous U.S. and demonstrated                      agencies to consider indirect effects, and
                                                  less that the EPA erred in concluding                   that, with the addition of very little new
                                                  that the retirement of 4.7 gigawatts (GW)                                                                         the EPA’s consideration of co-benefits in
                                                                                                          capacity, average reserve margins are                     justifying other CAA regulations.
                                                  of generation capacity would be a
                                                  reasonable burden for the electric power                                                                          Commenters supporting the inclusion of
                                                                                                             25 We note that, when promulgating MATS, the
                                                  industry to bear. Commenters stated that                                                                          co-benefits also noted that the EPA’s
                                                                                                          EPA recognized the statutory concern for meeting
                                                  the EPA’s resource adequacy analyses                    environmental goals without jeopardizing electric         consideration of co-benefits is
                                                  showed that reserve margins can be                      reliability, and consequently took steps to ensure        consistent with well-settled principles
                                                  maintained while the power sector                       that sources would be able to comply with the rule        of regulatory analysis supported by
                                                                                                          while maintaining a reliable supply of electricity.       multiple presidential administrations of
                                                  complies with MATS and supports the                     The rule set a 3-year compliance deadline for
                                                  agency’s determination that MATS                        existing sources, which is the longest time period        both parties as well as practices by
                                                  compliance costs are reasonable.                        allowed by the statute. See 77 FR 9407. The rule          states evaluating the benefits and costs
                                                                                                          also provided EGU specific guidance addressing            of implementing state regulations on
                                                     Response: In Section III.A.2 above, the              how sources could obtain an extension for a fourth        mercury.
                                                  EPA explains why commenters’                            year from the relevant permitting authorities under
                                                                                                                                                                      Other commenters, however, argued
                                                  assertions that the EPA underestimated                  CAA section 112(i)(3)(B) if such time is needed for
                                                                                                          the installation of controls. See id. at 9409–10.         that the EPA must conduct a monetized
                                                  the retirements due to MATS are                         Finally, the EPA separately issued an enforcement         benefit-cost analysis to support the
                                                  unsupported and do not demonstrate                      response policy concurrently with MATS to                 appropriate and necessary finding and
                                                  that the EPA’s assumptions and                          provide additional flexibility for certain reliability-
                                                                                                                                                                    that the agency may not include
                                                  modeling for the MATS RIA are flawed.                   critical power plants. Memorandum from Cynthia
                                                                                                          Giles, Assistant Administrator of the Office of           monetized co-benefits in such an
                                                  In fact, numerous factors unrelated to                  Enforcement and Compliance Assurance, The                 analysis. These commenters argued that
                                                  MATS have affected the rate of                          Environmental Protection Agency’s Enforcement             the plain language of CAA section
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                                                  retirements in this sector (see Section                 Response Policy for Use of Clean Air Act Section
                                                                                                                                                                    112(n)(1)(A) establishes that a finding of
                                                  III.A.2). Moreover, the EPA notes that,                 113(a) Administrative Orders in Relation to Electric
                                                                                                          Reliability and The Mercury and Air Toxics
                                                  even while commenters argued that the                   Standard (Dec. 16, 2011); see also 77 FR 9411. To           27 U.S. EPA. 2011. Resource Adequacy and
                                                  EPA underestimated the total number of                  date, only a few sources have approached the              Reliability in the Integrated Planning Model
                                                  retirements that would occur, they do                   agency regarding the policy.                              Projections for the MATS Rule, http://
                                                  not provide any examples, nor could                        26 See An Assessment of the Feasibility of             www3.epa.gov/ttn/atw/utility/revised_resource_
                                                                                                          Retrofits for the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards        adequacy_tsd.pdf. Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–
                                                  they, that the retirements that have                    Rule. Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2009–0234–                 2009–0234–19997.
                                                  occurred since promulgation of MATS                     20001.                                                      28 77 FR 9408.




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                                                  24438               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  whether regulation of HAP emitted by                       Response: The EPA disagrees with the                  referred to as ancillary reductions and
                                                  EGUs is ‘‘appropriate’’ must be based on                commenters stating that the EPA may                      the associated benefits referred to as co-
                                                  the costs and benefits of regulating HAP,               not consider monetized co-benefits in                    benefits. All of the estimated PM co-
                                                  not other pollutants like PM2.5. These                  determining that it is appropriate to                    benefits in the MATS RIA are
                                                  commenters further asserted that it                     regulate HAP emissions from EGUs if                      attributable to the emissions reductions
                                                  makes no difference whether such                        the EPA uses a formal benefit-cost                       that would occur as a direct result of
                                                  reductions in fine particulate matter                   analysis to support the finding. As                      achieving the HAP emission limits
                                                  (PM2.5) are a ‘‘direct consequence’’ of                 explained in the proposed supplemental                   under MATS, and these co-benefits are
                                                  the use of filterable PM as a surrogate                 finding and the Legal Memorandum                         important, real, quantifiable, and
                                                  for non-mercury metal HAP. These                        accompanying the proposal, CAA                           monetizeable. Specifically, as outlined
                                                  commenters argued that reductions in                    section 112(n)(1)(A) does not mandate                    in the proposed supplemental finding
                                                  PM emissions are not relevant for, and                  any particular type of cost analysis. The                (80 FR 75041), installing control
                                                  cannot form the basis of, an                            EPA further explained in the proposed                    technologies and implementing the
                                                  ‘‘appropriate’’ finding.                                supplemental finding (80 FR 75039–41),                   compliance strategies necessary to
                                                     One commenter also maintains that                    the Legal Memorandum, and in Section                     reduce the HAP emissions directly
                                                  the EPA claims that Congress intended                   IV.A above, why a formal benefit-cost                    regulated by the MATS rule also results
                                                  for the agency to take into account                     analysis is not the preferred way of                     in concomitant (co-benefit) reductions
                                                  criteria pollutant co-benefits in shaping               analyzing cost under CAA section                         in the emissions of other pollutants
                                                  HAP regulation of EGUs under CAA                        112(n)(1). Nevertheless, the EPA had                     such as directly emitted PM2.5 and SO2.
                                                  section 112 and argues such a position                  conducted a formal benefit-cost analysis                 While reductions of PM2.5 and SO2 are
                                                  is a logical fallacy.                                   for MATS in the RIA, as required under                   not the objective of the MATS rule,
                                                     Several commenters asserted that                     Executive Orders 12866 and 13563.                        these emission reductions are a direct
                                                  considering co-benefits circumvents the                 Thus, in responding to the Supreme                       consequence of regulating the HAP
                                                  established regulatory framework of the                 Court’s directive to consider cost, while                emissions from EGUs.30
                                                  CAA. These comments state that criteria                 the agency maintains that a formal                          As an initial matter, the Supreme
                                                  pollutant emissions, like PM, are to be                 benefit-cost analysis is not statutorily                 Court left it to the agency to determine
                                                  addressed through the national ambient                  required or, in the Administrator’s                      a reasonable approach to considering
                                                  air quality standards (‘‘NAAQS’’)                       judgment, the best way to consider cost                  costs in the finding, and the Court
                                                  program under CAA section 109. These                    under CAA section 112(n)(1), we find                     explicitly declined to address whether it
                                                  commenters argued that PM co-benefits                   that the formal benefit-cost analysis                    would be reasonable to consider
                                                  are irrelevant to the ‘‘appropriate’’                   performed for the MATS rulemaking                        monetized co-benefits in evaluating the
                                                  determination and that reliance on                      demonstrates that the benefits of the                    cost of the rule. Michigan v. EPA, 135
                                                  criteria pollutant emission reductions in               rule do substantially outweigh the costs.                S. Ct. at 2711 (‘‘[e]ven if the Agency
                                                  this determination is an impermissible                  That analysis therefore fully and                        could have considered ancillary benefits
                                                  ‘‘end run’’ around the NAAQS program.                   independently supports the EPA’s                         when deciding whether it is appropriate
                                                  Several commenters asserted that the                    finding that the consideration of cost                   and necessary—a point we need not
                                                  EPA double-counts the co-benefits of                    does not cause us to alter our                           address—it plainly did not do so here’’)
                                                  MATS because the criteria pollutant                     conclusion that it is appropriate and                    (emphasis in original). The EPA thus
                                                  emissions reductions should be                          necessary to regulate HAP emissions                      first looks to whether the statutory text
                                                  attributable to other regulations, such as              from coal- and oil-fired EGUs.                           of the CAA addresses this issue. The
                                                  the PM NAAQS or the Cross-State Air                        As discussed in this response, the                    statutory text of CAA section
                                                  Pollution Rule.                                         EPA included the air quality co-benefits                 112(n)(1)(A) supports the EPA’s
                                                     One commenter noted that although                    associated with reductions in PM2.5 and                  conclusion that it is reasonable to
                                                  consideration of co-benefits in a benefit-              SO2 (a PM2.5 precursor) emissions when                   consider monetized co-benefit pollutant
                                                  cost analysis is fully consistent with                  the agency evaluated the direct and                      reductions as part of such an analysis.
                                                  economic principles and guidance                        indirect consequences of MATS in the                     That provision directs the EPA to
                                                  documents, it is irrelevant to the                      RIA.29 Regulation of a particular                        perform a study of the hazards to public
                                                  decision about whether or not to                        pollutant often necessarily and                          health from EGU HAP emissions that
                                                  regulate EGUs that co-benefit reductions                unavoidably results in reductions of                     are likely to remain after imposition of
                                                  are a direct consequence (or even an                    other non-target pollutants. Reductions                  other provisions of the CAA, including
                                                  indirect consequence or mere chance                     of the non-target pollutants are often                   the Acid Rain Program. This
                                                  relation) to HAP reductions. The                                                                                 requirement to consider ancillary (i.e.,
                                                  commenter also asserted that the EPA’s                    29 As noted in the proposed supplemental finding       co-benefit) reductions in HAP emissions
                                                  reliance on OMB guidance (OMB, 2003)                    (80 FR 75041), ‘‘PM2.5 emissions are comprised in        that are the result of other CAA
                                                  is misplaced because the RIA benefit-                   part by the mercury and non-mercury HAP metals
                                                                                                          that the MATS rule is designed to reduce. The only
                                                                                                                                                                   programs highlights Congress’
                                                  cost analysis seeks to achieve a different              way to effectively control the particulate-bound         understanding that programs targeted at
                                                  purpose than is required for                            mercury and non-mercury metal HAP is with PM             reducing pollutants other than HAP can
                                                  determining whether regulating HAP                      control devices that indiscriminately collect all PM     and do result in the reduction of HAP
                                                                                                          along with the metal HAP, which are predominately
                                                  from EGUs is appropriate.                               present as particles. Similarly, emissions of the acid   emissions. The statutory text thus
                                                     The commenters disagreeing with the                  gas HAP (hydrogen chloride, hydrogen fluoride,
                                                  inclusion of co-benefits assert that when               hydrogen cyanide, and selenium oxide) are reduced          30 Consider a hypothetical individual that quits
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                                                  co-benefits associated with PM2.5 are                   by acid gas controls that are also effective at          smoking to decrease the likelihood he will develop
                                                  excluded from the benefit-cost analysis                 reducing emissions of SO2 (also an acid gas, but not     lung cancer later in life. Although the objective of
                                                                                                          a HAP).’’ SO2 emissions form sulfate particles in the    his quitting is to decrease the incidence of lung
                                                  for MATS, the quantified and monetized                  atmosphere and contribute to ambient                     cancer, that individual will also unavoidably
                                                  net benefits are overwhelmingly                         concentrations of PM2.5. In the MATS RIA, the            benefit from a decreased risk of cardiovascular
                                                  negative, which does not support a                      PM2.5 co-benefits estimates included reducing            disease, gum disease, and other health risks. The
                                                                                                          exposure to both directly emitted particles as well      EPA believes that it would be unreasonable not to
                                                  conclusion that it is appropriate to                    as secondarily-formed sulfate particles. The MATS        consider these co-benefits of quitting smoking, even
                                                  regulate HAP emissions from power                       RIA did not quantify the benefits from reducing          though they are not the goal motivating the
                                                  plants.                                                 direct exposure to SO2.                                  individual’s health decision.



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                     24439

                                                  recognizes the relevance of benefits                    Memorandum (pages 22–24) and the                       The EPA’s Guidelines (U.S. EPA, 2010)
                                                  associated with concomitant reductions                  proposed supplemental finding (80 FR                   are based on a well-developed body of
                                                  in pollutants other than the targeted                   75040), neither the statute nor the                    economics literature identifying
                                                  pollutants. See CAA section                             Michigan decision support, much less                   rigorous methods for conducting
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) (requiring consideration of                mandate, that the EPA’s consideration                  benefit-cost analysis, were extensively
                                                  remaining HAP from EGUs ‘‘after                         of benefits must be limited to monetized               peer-reviewed by the independent
                                                  imposition of the other requirements of                 HAP-specific benefits.                                 Environmental Economics Advisory
                                                  this chapter [i.e., the CAA]’’). The                      The EPA further notes that                           Committee,33 and represent the current
                                                  benefits associated with these                          consideration of co-benefits is also                   consensus of the economics discipline
                                                  concomitant reductions are just as real                 consistent with economic principles                    as to the purpose and appropriate
                                                  as benefits from reductions in the                      and best practices, executive guidance                 practice of benefit-cost analysis. As
                                                  targeted pollutants.                                    on regulatory review, and longstanding                 discussed in the proposed supplemental
                                                    In light of the requirement to consider               agency practice under administrations                  finding (80 FR 75039), the core purpose
                                                  the co-benefits of other CAA programs,                  of both parties. Commenters argued, on                 of a benefit-cost analysis is to determine
                                                  the EPA believes that it is reasonable to               the one hand, that the EPA is required                 whether a policy’s overall net benefits to
                                                  conclude that the CAA would also allow                  to undertake a formal benefit-cost                     society are positive. Actions with
                                                  the EPA to consider other pollutant                     analysis to support the finding. At the                positive net benefits (i.e., benefits
                                                  reductions directly resulting from                      same time, commenters contend that the                 exceed costs) increase economic
                                                  regulation of HAP emissions if a                        agency cannot follow standard                          efficiency. A key requirement for
                                                  monetized benefit-cost analysis were                    economic principles when undertaking                   conducting a proper benefit-cost
                                                  required (or used as a means of                         such an analysis in this context. The                  analysis is that all known consequences
                                                  considering cost at the agency’s                        EPA agrees that a formal benefit-cost                  of an action should be considered.34
                                                  discretion) to support the appropriate                  analysis is not the preferred way of                      In conducting benefit-cost analyses,
                                                  and necessary finding. In addition, in                  analyzing cost under CAA section                       the EPA routinely considers
                                                  the legislative history to CAA section                  112(n)(1). However, if a benefit-cost                  consequences (both positive and
                                                  112(d)(2), the Senate Report recognized                 analysis is to be undertaken, and relied               negative) that are ancillary to the
                                                  that MACT standards would have a                        on, to support the finding, it should be               intended purpose of a regulation. For
                                                  collateral benefit of controlling criteria              conducted following standard economic                  example, the $9.6 billion cost estimated
                                                  pollutants as well and viewed this as an                principles. Commenters’ argument that                  in the MATS RIA included costs that
                                                  important benefit of the air toxics                     these principles should not be followed                would be passed on to electricity
                                                  program. See S. Rep. No. 101–228, 101st                 in this context undermines their                       customers and higher fuel costs, which
                                                  Cong. 1st sess. at 172; Legal                           argument that such a formal benefit-cost               are beyond the costs borne by owners of
                                                  Memorandum, page 25.                                    analysis is required. The EPA followed                 coal- and oil-fired units regulated by
                                                    Even if one were to disagree that CAA
                                                                                                          well-established principles for
                                                  section 112(n)(1)(A) and the legislative                                                                       incremental to the regulation or policy under
                                                                                                          conducting such an analysis in the                     consideration. These should include directly
                                                  history expressly support our
                                                                                                          MATS RIA. Consistent with standard                     intended effects and associated costs, as well as
                                                  consideration of monetized co-benefits,
                                                                                                          practice, the benefit-cost analysis for                ancillary (or co-) benefits and costs.’’
                                                  nothing in the CAA, or the supporting                                                                             33 U.S. EPA—Science Advisory Board (U.S. EPA–
                                                                                                          MATS accounted for all of the
                                                  legislative history, suggests that benefits                                                                    SAB). 2009. Science Advisory Board (SAB)
                                                                                                          significant consequences of a policy
                                                  associated with pollutants other than                                                                          Advisory on EPA’s draft Guidelines for Preparing
                                                                                                          decision (i.e., direct and indirect,                   Economic Analyses (2008). EPA–SAB–09–018.
                                                  the targeted pollutants are irrelevant to
                                                                                                          intended and unintended, beneficial                    September. Available at https://yosemite.epa.gov/
                                                  a benefit-cost analysis or must be                                                                             sab/sabproduct.nsf/
                                                  ignored by the EPA in this context.                     and harmful). In commenters’ view,
                                                                                                                                                                 559B838F18C36F078525763C0058B32F/$File/EPA-
                                                  There is no statutory provision                         however, formal benefit-cost analysis is               SAB-09-018-unsigned.pdf.
                                                  prohibiting consideration of direct co-                 not the best tool for evaluating costs and                34 Under a strict economic efficiency test, an

                                                  benefits. The EPA believes that,                        benefits under CAA section 112(n)(1).                  action should only be undertaken if the benefits
                                                                                                          Their conclusion may weigh in favor of                 exceed the costs, assuming all significant
                                                  consistent with economic principles                                                                            consequences can be quantified and monetized.
                                                  and best practices regarding benefit-cost               using an alternate approach such as                    However, as both the EPA’s and OMB’s guidance
                                                  analysis and the fundamental linkages                   EPA’s preferred approach, but it does                  acknowledge, there are often other important
                                                  between reducing HAP emissions and                      not provide a sufficient basis to conduct              considerations, such as distributional concerns, that
                                                                                                          a distorted form of a benefit-cost                     limit the reasonableness of employing strict
                                                  reducing SO2 and PM2.5 emissions as a                                                                          economic efficiency tests in decision-making. As
                                                  direct consequence of actions taken to                  analysis that ignores standard economic                noted in the proposed supplemental finding (80 FR
                                                  meet the standards, it is reasonable to                 principles and well-established                        75040), distributional concerns, such as impacts to
                                                  consider co-benefits in making the                      practices for conducting such analyses.                the most exposed and sensitive individuals in a
                                                                                                            As noted in the proposed                             population, are important for MATS.
                                                  appropriate and necessary finding.                                                                                See p. 1–2 of the EPA’s Guidelines: ‘‘It is
                                                  Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Nat’l Res.                       supplemental finding (80 FR 75039), the                important to note that economic analysis is but one
                                                  Defense Council, 467 U.S. 837 (1984)                    agency is directed to include ancillary                component in the decision-making process and
                                                  (holding that a court will defer to an                  benefits in benefit-cost analysis by                   under some statutes it cannot be used in setting
                                                                                                          economic guidance documents from                       standards. Other factors that may influence decision
                                                  agency’s position on how to interpret an                                                                       makers include enforceability, technical feasibility,
                                                  ambiguous statutory provision if ‘‘the                  OMB (2003) 31 and the EPA (2010).32                    affordability, political concerns, and ethics, to name
                                                  agency’s answer is based on a                                                                                  but a few.’’
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                                                                                                             31 See p. 26 of OMB’s Circular A–4: ‘‘Your
                                                  permissible construction of the                                                                                   See p. 2 of OMB’s Circular A–4: ‘‘Where all
                                                                                                          analysis should look beyond the direct benefits and    benefits and costs can be quantified and expressed
                                                  statute’’); Catawba Cty. V. EPA, 571 F.3d               direct costs of your rulemaking and consider any       in monetary units, benefit-cost analysis provides
                                                  20 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (acknowledging that                 important ancillary benefits and countervailing        decision makers with a clear indication of the most
                                                  the EPA is warranted deference                          risks. An ancillary benefit is a favorable impact of   efficient alternative, that is, the alternative that
                                                  especially when administering                           the rule that is typically unrelated or secondary to   generates the largest net benefits to society (ignoring
                                                                                                          the statutory purpose of the rulemaking.’’             distributional effects). This is useful information for
                                                  complicated provisions of the CAA).                        32 See p. 11–2 of EPA’s Guidelines: ‘‘An economic   decision makers and the public to receive, even
                                                  Further, as explained in previous                       analysis of regulatory or policy options should        when economic efficiency is not the only or the
                                                  Sections of this notice, the Legal                      present all identifiable costs and benefits that are   overriding public policy objective.’’



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                                                  24440                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  MATS. If it were unreasonable to                         populations when setting the NAAQS.39                    PM2.5 co-benefits in the RTC document
                                                  consider co-benefits, then it would be                   Further, there is no scientific basis for                for this action.
                                                  unreasonable to consider these ancillary                 ignoring health benefits (including                         The EPA further disagrees that the
                                                  costs. The EPA notes that it similarly                   avoiding premature death) that occur as                  monetized PM2.5 health benefits from
                                                  accounts for negative consequences                       a result of reducing PM2.5. In fact, there               MATS are double-counted with the
                                                  such as increases in pollution emissions                 is a substantial body of scientific                      health benefits achieved by other
                                                  or concentrations (also called                           evidence supporting the existence of                     regulations, such as the Cross-State Air
                                                  ‘‘disbenefits’’) in benefit-cost analyses                health impacts from exposure to PM2.5,                   Pollution Rule or the NAAQS. The
                                                  when they occur.35                                       even at low concentrations below the                     EPA’s standard practice for its rules is
                                                     Because controlling HAP emissions                     NAAQS (U.S. EPA, 2009).40 As a result,                   to estimate, to the extent data and time
                                                  necessarily results in fewer emissions of                consistent with the robust scientific                    allow, all benefits of the emissions
                                                  other non-HAP pollutants, the economic                   evidence and recommendations from                        reductions achieved by a rule beyond
                                                  value of these consequences (i.e., co-                                                                            control requirements for other rules. If
                                                                                                           multiple panels of the independent
                                                  benefits) are clearly within the scope of                                                                         this rule was duplicative with other
                                                                                                           Science Advisory Board, the EPA
                                                  a proper benefit-cost analysis. Based on                                                                          rules, then there would be no additional
                                                  previous peer-reviewed studies (e.g.,                    routinely includes benefits of reductions
                                                                                                           in air pollution at levels below the                     costs or benefits attributable to this rule.
                                                  U.S. EPA, 2011),36 the large economic
                                                                                                           NAAQS in benefits assessments. The                       As stated in the EPA’s previous
                                                  value of reducing air pollution,
                                                                                                           most recent Integrated Science                           response on this issue in the 2011
                                                  particularly ambient PM2.5, is well-
                                                                                                           Assessment for Particulate Matter (PM                    MATS rulemaking (MATS RTC, Vol 2,
                                                  known. Excluding such a large positive
                                                                                                           ISA) concludes that the current science                  pp. 482–484),42 the agency includes
                                                  consequence has no basis in economic
                                                                                                           supports use of log-linear, no-threshold                 other rules such as the Cross-State Air
                                                  principles. Further, such deliberate
                                                                                                           concentration-response functions,                        Pollution Rule in the ‘‘baseline’’ in
                                                  disregard for the important
                                                                                                           recognizing uncertainty in those                         estimating the benefits and costs for
                                                  consequences of an action would result
                                                                                                           relationship at concentrations where                     rules like MATS. Any emission changes
                                                  in a benefit-cost analysis that would not
                                                                                                           little data exists (U.S. EPA, 2009). In                  expected as a result of MATS are
                                                  be recognizable to most economists 37
                                                  and would provide an incorrect                           other words, there is no evidence of a                   additional emission reductions beyond
                                                  conclusion regarding the net impact of                                                                            previous regulations. Therefore, the
                                                                                                           PM2.5 concentration below which health
                                                  MATS on economic efficiency. In                                                                                   benefits from reducing PM2.5 are not
                                                                                                           effects would not occur.41 Based on
                                                  addition, because the monetized value                                                                             double counted—they are real
                                                                                                           these peer-reviewed scientific
                                                  of the PM2.5 co-benefits were estimated                                                                           additional health benefits from
                                                                                                           conclusions in the PM ISA, the EPA                       emissions reductions achieved by
                                                  to be $33 to $90 billion per year, it                    maintains that the most scientifically-
                                                  would likely be unreasonable to fail to                                                                           MATS alone. Further, the PM2.5 health
                                                                                                           defensible approach for estimating the                   benefits expected from MATS are not
                                                  consider such important economic                         benefits from reducing exposure to
                                                  consequences of MATS.                                                                                             double-counted with benefits estimated
                                                                                                           PM2.5 includes benefits both above and                   in the NAAQS RIAs. The NAAQS RIAs
                                                     The EPA also disagrees with                           below the levels of the NAAQS. The
                                                  commenters’ contentions that it is                                                                                hypothesize, but do not predict, the
                                                                                                           EPA responds to additional technical                     control strategies that states may choose
                                                  inappropriate for the EPA to consider                    comments regarding the calculation of
                                                  co-benefits from reducing criteria                                                                                to enact. In implementing MATS,
                                                  pollutants below the level established in                                                                         emission controls may lead to
                                                  the NAAQS program. The EPA believes
                                                                                                              39 In the preamble to the final revisions of the PM
                                                                                                                                                                    reductions in ambient PM2.5
                                                                                                           NAAQS in 2012 (78 FR 3090), the EPA noted that           concentrations below the NAAQS in
                                                  that the commenters mischaracterized                     ‘‘[t]he legislative history of section 109 indicates
                                                  the NAAQS program. As the EPA has                        that a primary standard is to be set at ‘‘the
                                                                                                                                                                    some areas and assist other areas with
                                                  consistently stated, the NAAQS are not                   maximum permissible ambient air level . . . which        attaining these NAAQS. As noted above,
                                                  zero-risk standards.38 Unlike the CAA                    will protect the health of any [sensitive] group of      because the NAAQS are not set at a
                                                                                                           the population,’’ and that for this purpose              level of zero risk and the science fully
                                                  section 112 program, the agency is not                   ‘‘reference should be made to a representative
                                                  required to take into account the health                 sample of persons comprising the sensitive group
                                                                                                                                                                    supports quantifying benefits below the
                                                  effects experienced by the most                          rather than to a single person in such a group.’’ S.     NAAQS, the EPA considers them to be
                                                  susceptible individual within at-risk                    Rep. No. 91–1196, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 10 (1970).’’      legitimate components of the total
                                                                                                              40 U.S. EPA. 2009. Integrated Science Assessment
                                                                                                                                                                    benefits estimate. Subsequent to the
                                                                                                           for Particulate Matter (Final Report). EPA–600–R–        final MATS rule, the EPA proposed and
                                                    35 See   e.g., p. 5–14 of the MATS RIA.                08–139F. National Center for Environmental
                                                    36 U.S.   EPA. 2011. The Benefits and Costs of the     Assessment—RTP Division. December. Available at
                                                                                                                                                                    finalized a revision to the PM NAAQS
                                                  Clean Air Act 1990 to 2020: EPA Report to                http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/cfm/                           (78 FR 3086 (Jan. 15, 2013)). The RIA
                                                  Congress. Office of Air and Radiation, Office of         recordisplay.cfm?deid=216546. Docket ID No. EPA–         accompanying that rule (U.S. EPA,
                                                  Policy, Washington, DC. March. Available at              HQ–OAR–2009–0234–20501.                                  2012) 43 explicitly included MATS in
                                                  https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-            41 The recognition that there is ‘‘no population
                                                  07/documents/fullreport_rev_a.pdf.
                                                                                                                                                                    the baseline (p. 3–6) to avoid double-
                                                                                                           threshold, below which it can be concluded with
                                                     37 See e.g., Chapter 1 (‘‘Introduction’’) of Just,    confidence that PM2.5-related effects do not occur’’
                                                  Richard E., Darrell L. Hueth, and Andrew Schmitz.        (78 FR 3098) and ‘‘there is no evidence of a               42 U.S. EPA. 2011. EPA’s Responses to Public

                                                  2005. The Welfare Economics of Public Policy: A          threshold’’ (78 FR 3119, 3138) is consistent             Comments on EPA’s National Emission Standards
                                                  Practical Approach to Project and Policy                 throughout the 2012 PM NAAQS rulemaking                  for Hazardous Air Pollutants from Coal- and Oil-
                                                  Evaluation. Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham,         process, including in the assumptions for                Fired Electric Utility Steam Generating Units.
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  UK.                                                      quantifying the mortality and morbidity health risks     December. Volume 2 of 2. Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
                                                     38 In the preamble to the final revisions of the PM   in the peer-reviewed risk assessment supporting the      OAR–2009–0234–20126.
                                                  NAAQS in 2012 (78 FR 3090), the EPA noted that           rulemaking.                                                43 U.S. EPA. 2012. Regulatory Impact Analysis for

                                                  ‘‘[t]he CAA does not require the Administrator to           U.S. EPA. 2010. Quantitative Health Risk              the Final Revisions to the National Ambient Air
                                                  establish a primary NAAQS at a zero-risk level or        Assessment for Particulate Matter—Final Report.          Quality Standards for Particulate Matter. EPA–452/
                                                  at background concentration levels, see Lead             EPA–452/R–10–005. Office of Air Quality Planning         R–12–003. Office of Air Quality Planning and
                                                  Industries v. EPA, 647 F.2d at 1156 n.51, but rather     and Standards, Research Triangle Park, NC.               Standards, Health and Environmental Impacts
                                                  at a level that reduces risk sufficiently so as to       September. Available at http://www.epa.gov/              Division, Research Triangle Park, NC. December.
                                                  protect public health with an adequate margin of         ttnnaaqs/standards/pm/data/PM_RA_FINAL_June_             Available at http://www.epa.gov/ttnecas1/regdata/
                                                  safety.’’                                                2010.pdf.                                                RIAs/finalria.pdf.



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                            24441

                                                  counting the benefits and costs of MATS                 and Sherwell, 2015; Drevnick et al.,                     is not justified because these small
                                                  in that rulemaking.                                     2012; Evers et al., 2007; Hutcheson et                   benefits do not exceed the projected
                                                     In conclusion, for all of the reasons                al., 2014; Cross et al., 2015) 45                        $9.6 billion in costs.
                                                  stated above, it is appropriate for the                 demonstrate that reductions in mercury                      Response: For all of the reasons
                                                  benefit-cost analysis to consider co-                   deposition to U.S. ecosystems and                        discussed above in Sections IV.A.1 and
                                                  benefits, which are a direct consequence                resulting human and ecological                           IV.B.1, the EPA disagrees with
                                                  of actions to reduce HAP emissions. It                  exposures were underestimated in the                     commenters that the only benefits that
                                                  is consistent with economic guidance                    MATS RIA.                                                should be included in a benefit-cost
                                                  documents and best practices to include                    Several commenters agreed that                        analysis are the HAP-specific monetized
                                                  such benefits in a formal benefit-cost                  consideration of unquantified benefits is                benefits. When all of the benefits are
                                                  analysis. The inclusion of such benefits                appropriate and consistent with                          properly considered, the monetized
                                                  is consistent with the underlying                       economic principles and best practices,                  benefits of MATS far outweigh the costs.
                                                  science. In addition, including such                    executive guidance on regulatory                            Further, the EPA agrees with the
                                                  benefits is consistent with statutory                   review, and longstanding EPA practice                    commenters stating that the monetized
                                                  requirements in CAA section                             under administrations of both parties.                   mercury health benefits in the MATS
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) and the legislative history                These commenters noted that it is                        RIA significantly underestimate the
                                                  for the CAA section 112(d) maximum                      important to account for the full range                  HAP health benefits associated with
                                                  achievable control technology or MACT                   of benefits associated with the action,                  MATS. In the MATS RIA, the EPA
                                                  program. The final MATS RIA                             including benefits that cannot be                        could only quantify and monetize a
                                                  demonstrates that the quantified and                    monetized due to lack of data. For                       small subset of the health and
                                                  monetized benefits and the unquantified                 example, several commenters noted that                   environmental benefits attributable to
                                                  benefits of the rule significantly                      the monetized mercury benefits in the                    reducing mercury and none of the
                                                  outweighed the costs of the rule; thus,                 MATS RIA did not capture the breadth                     health and environmental benefits
                                                  that analysis fully and independently                   and severity of the hazards that mercury                 attributable to reductions in other HAP.
                                                  supports the EPA’s determination that it                poses to wildlife and the ecosystem                      As noted in the proposed supplemental
                                                  is appropriate to regulate HAP                          services that wildlife provides,                         finding (80 FR 75040), the monetized
                                                  emissions from EGUs.                                    including benefits to fish, sensitive bird               mercury benefits did not account for
                                                                                                          species, marine mammals, and                             ‘‘(1) benefits from reducing adverse
                                                  2. Monetized HAP Benefits                                                                                        health effects on brain and nervous
                                                                                                          amphibian populations. Several
                                                     Comment: Several commenters stated                   commenters asserted that because the                     system development beyond IQ loss; (2)
                                                  that the quantified and monetized                       monetized benefits in the MATS RIA do                    benefits for consumers of commercial
                                                  mercury benefits in the MATS RIA                        not cover all of the benefits from                       (store-bought) fish (i.e., the largest
                                                  vastly understated the full benefits from               reducing HAP emitted from power                          pathway to mercury exposure in the
                                                  reducing mercury emissions and that                     plants, a formal benefit-cost comparison                 U.S.); (3) benefits for consumers of self-
                                                  there are many categories of                            is incomplete and potentially                            caught fish from oceans, estuaries or
                                                  unquantified HAP benefits. These                        misleading. However, these commenters                    large lakes such as the Great Lakes; (4)
                                                  commenters supported this conclusion                    concluded that recent scientific findings                benefits for the populations most
                                                  by submitting recent research to the                    on the quantified and unquantified                       affected by mercury emissions (e.g.,
                                                  docket for this rulemaking, including                   benefits of reducing HAP exposure                        children of women who consume
                                                  studies that quantify additional                        supports the EPA’s determination that it                 subsistence-level amounts of fish during
                                                  categories of benefits not included the                 is appropriate to regulate HAP from                      pregnancy); (5) benefits to children
                                                  MATS RIA. Each of these cited                           power plants after considering the costs.                exposed to mercury after birth; and (6)
                                                  studies 44 indicate that the monetized                     However, numerous other                               environmental benefits from reducing
                                                  mercury benefits from MATS could be                     commenters asserted that the $4 to $6                    adverse effects on birds and mammals
                                                  in the hundreds of millions to billions                 million in monetized mercury benefits                    that consume fish.’’ This is because data
                                                  of dollars per year. For example, the                   in the RIA were the only real benefits                   and methods for monetizing these
                                                  cited Giang and Selin (2016) study                      attributable to MATS, and thus the rule                  benefits are largely unavailable in
                                                  found that the monetized mercury                                                                                 scientific literature, including gaps in
                                                  benefits from implementation of MATS                       45 Zhang et al. 2016. ‘‘Observed decrease in          toxicological data, uncertainties in
                                                  would exceed $3.7 billion (in 2005                      atmospheric mercury explained by global decline in       extrapolating results from high-dose
                                                  dollars) per year in lifetime benefits for              anthropogenic emissions.’’ PNAS 113 (3): 526–531.        animal experiments to estimate human
                                                  affected individuals and $1.1 billion per               Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2009–0234–20558,
                                                                                                          Exhibit 4.
                                                                                                                                                                   effects at lower doses, limited
                                                  year in economy-wide benefits.                                                                                   monitoring data, difficulties in tracking
                                                                                                             Castro, M.S. and J. Sherwell. 2015. ‘‘Effectiveness
                                                  Additional commenters stated that new                   of emission controls to reduce the atmospheric           diseases such as cancer that have long
                                                  studies (e.g., Zhang et al. (2016), Castro              concentrations of mercury.’’ Envtl. Sci. Tech.           latency periods, and insufficient
                                                                                                          49(24): 14000–14007.                                     economic research to support the
                                                     44 Giang, Amanda, and Noelle E. Selin. 2016.            Drevnick, P.E., et al. 2007. ‘‘Spatial and temporal   valuation of the health impacts often
                                                  ‘‘Benefits of Mercury Controls for the United           patterns of mercury accumulation in lacustrine
                                                  States.’’ Proceedings of the National Academy of        sediments across the Great Lakes region.’’               associated with exposure to individual
                                                  Sciences 113 (2): 286–291. Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–        Environmental Pollution 161: 252–260. Evers, D.C.,       HAP. However, the EPA acknowledges
                                                  OAR–2009–0234–20544.                                    et al. 2007. ‘‘Biological mercury hotspots in the        the submission of new research from
                                                     Rice, Glenn E, James K Hammitt, and John S           northeastern United States and southeastern              several commenters that further
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                                                  Evans. 2010. ‘‘A Probabilistic Characterization of      Canada.’’ Bioscience 57(1): 29–43. Docket ID No.
                                                                                                          EPA–HQ–OAR–2009–0234–20559, Exhibit I–22.                corroborates the EPA’s conclusion that
                                                  the Health Benefits of Reducing Methyl Mercury
                                                  Intake in the United States.’’ Environmental Science       Hutcheson, M.S., et al. 2014. ‘‘Temporal and          the HAP benefits are underestimated in
                                                  & Technology 44 (13) (July 1): 5216–24. Docket ID       spatial trends in freshwater fish tissue mercury         the MATS RIA and demonstrates the
                                                  No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2009–0234–19897.                         concentrations associated with mercury emissions         potential extent of that underestimation.
                                                     NESCAUM. 2005. Economic Valuation of Human           reductions.’’ Envtl. Sci. Tech. 48: 2193–2202.           See Section 3–3 of the RTC for the
                                                  Health Benefits of Controlling Mercury Emissions           Cross, F.A., et al. 2015. ‘‘Decadal declines of
                                                  from U.S. Coal-Fired Power Plants. Available at:        mercury in adult bluefish (1972–2011) from the
                                                                                                                                                                   supplemental finding for additional
                                                  http://www.nescaum.org/documents/                       mid-Atlantic coast of the U.S.A.’’ Envtl. Sci. Tech.     details regarding new studies cited by
                                                  rpt050315mercuryhealth.pdf.                             49: 9064–9072.                                           commenters.


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                                                  24442               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                    The EPA also agrees that                              social practices of fishing and fish                  inherent risks associated with exposure
                                                  consideration of unquantified benefits is               consumption that are central to many                  to such emissions. Some commenters
                                                  appropriate and consistent with                         tribes’ cultural identity. The commenter              further agreed that these goals apply to
                                                  economic principles and best practices,                 explained that tribes are often                       HAP emissions from EGUs and that the
                                                  executive guidance on regulatory                        connected to particular waters for                    EPA determined a reasonable approach
                                                  review, and longstanding EPA practice.                  cultural, spiritual, or other reasons (and            to incorporating cost into the
                                                  The EPA agrees that it is important to                  others’ fishing rights are limited to                 appropriate and necessary finding in
                                                  recognize the full range of impacts                     certain grounds by treaty), so they                   light of the statute and the Michigan
                                                  associated with an action in a benefit-                 cannot simply move their fishing to                   decision. Several of these commenters
                                                  cost analysis, including those impacts                  another location to avoid mercury                     specifically agreed that cost should not
                                                  that cannot be quantified or monetized                  contamination. In addition, mercury                   be the predominant or overriding factor
                                                  due to a lack of data, for which the                    fish advisories harm Indian subsistence               in the appropriate and necessary
                                                  MATS RIA accounted qualitatively.                       and fishing economies, including                      finding.
                                                    Although the MATS RIA did not                         commercial harvests and tourist                          Response: The EPA agrees that the
                                                  quantify and monetize all of the benefits               revenues. The commenter states that                   interpretation of the statute and the
                                                  that would result from reducing HAP                     MATS provides critical protections for                Michigan decision set forth in the
                                                  emissions, the EPA maintains that the                   Indian health, fishing rights, and                    companion Legal Memorandum is
                                                  benefits of this rule (both quantified and              traditional cultures that help the United             reasonable. As stated above and in
                                                  unquantified) are substantial and far                   States fulfill its legal duties to protect            detail below, the EPA stands by the
                                                  outweigh the costs, which                               tribal rights and resources of American               interpretation in the Legal
                                                  independently supports the                              Indians and tribes.                                   Memorandum in this final action.
                                                  determination that regulating HAP                          Response: The EPA acknowledges the                    Comment: Some state and industry
                                                  emissions from EGUs is appropriate.                     supportive comments of the Indian                     commenters disagreed with several
                                                                                                          tribes and inter-tribal organizations. The            aspects of the EPA’s interpretation of
                                                  3. Impacts to Tribes                                                                                          CAA section 112 and its reading of the
                                                                                                          EPA shares the tribes’ concerns about
                                                     Comment: One commenter                               the potential impact of mercury                       Supreme Court’s decision in Michigan.
                                                  representing several federally-                         emissions on tribes and agrees that                   Several commenters argued that the
                                                  recognized Indian tribes and inter-tribal               tribes are likely to be affected differently          Supreme Court’s decision in Michigan,
                                                  organizations strongly agreed that a                    by mercury contamination compared to                  in essence, requires the EPA to discard
                                                  formal benefit-cost analysis is not a                   the general population. The EPA                       all aspects of the EPA’s prior
                                                  preferred approach to considering                       acknowledges the importance of                        appropriate and necessary finding.
                                                  whether the costs of compliance are                     subsistence fishing and fishing cultures              These commenters implicitly suggest
                                                  reasonable. The commenter stated that                   to numerous tribes and agrees that those              that the Michigan decision by itself
                                                  the EPA’s inclusion of non-quantifiable                 who traditionally consume fish at                     invalidates aspects of the finding
                                                  benefits in the proposed supplemental                   higher rates than the general population              unrelated to EPA’s erroneous
                                                  finding is essential to the commenter’s                 are disproportionately exposed to higher              conclusion that it was not required to
                                                  support of the agency’s methodology                     levels of mercury. The EPA is                         consider cost under section
                                                  because the benefits of MATS are                        committed to honoring and respecting                  112(n)(1)(A). These commenters argued
                                                  difficult to monetize—and in the case of                tribal treaty rights by ensuring that its             that the agency must disregard or
                                                  the impacts to American Indian                          actions do not conflict with those rights,            reevaluate all of its prior findings
                                                  culture—are impossible to monetize.                     and by implementing its programs to                   concerning the hazards to public health
                                                  The commenter stated that benefits of                   enhance protection of treaty rights                   and the environment posed by HAP
                                                  MATS to American Indians are                            where there is discretion to do so. The               emissions from EGUs. They also argued
                                                  fundamentally different in kind than the                EPA believes that MATS will                           that the EPA must reconsider all of its
                                                  economic costs the rule imposes on                      substantially reduce emissions of                     prior interpretations of CAA section
                                                  coal- and oil-fired EGU operators and                   mercury in the U.S. and that this                     112(n)(1), including its conclusion that
                                                  ratepayers and provided examples of                     reduction will benefit communities with               CAA section 112(n)(1) is a listing
                                                  substantial non-quantitative benefits of                subsistence fishing lifeways, including               provision and not a regulatory
                                                  MATS that are unique to tribal                          American Indians and Alaska Natives.                  provision.
                                                  communities. The commenter stated                       The EPA also acknowledges that it was                    For example, these commenters
                                                  that American Indians are                               unable to monetize many of the benefits               asserted the Supreme Court’s decision
                                                  disproportionately impacted by mercury                  of MATS and recognizes the difficulty                 in Michigan requires the EPA to
                                                  emissions because many are subsistence                  in attempting to quantify or monetize                 consider the potential cost of regulating
                                                  fishers that rely on locally-caught fish                impacts to American Indian culture.                   HAP emissions from EGUs under
                                                  for daily sustenance and consume fish                                                                         statutory provisions other than CAA
                                                  at far higher rates than the general                    C. Comments on the Legal Interpretation               section 112(d). Among the approaches
                                                  population. The commenter stated that                   of CAA Section 112(n)(1)                              that the commenters asserted the EPA
                                                  American Indians are therefore at                         Comment: Some states, tribes,                       must consider are regulation of HAP
                                                  unusually high risk for                                 industries, environmental organizations,              emissions under CAA sections 112(n),
                                                  neurodevelopmental disorders,                           and health organizations, and others                  112(f), and 111(d). At least one
                                                  cardiovascular disease, autoimmune                      generally supported the EPA’s                         commenter also asserted that the EPA
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                                                  disorders, infertility, and other adverse               interpretation of the statute as set forth            must determine whether the cost of
                                                  health effects from methylmercury                       in the proposed supplemental finding                  regulation of HAP emissions by the
                                                  exposure, the impacts of which the EPA                  and Legal Memorandum. Some                            individual states would be more cost
                                                  could not monetize. In addition to                      commenters expressly agree that the                   effective than regulation of HAP
                                                  health concerns, the commenter                          purpose of CAA section 112 is to                      emissions from EGUs under the CAA at
                                                  describes how methylmercury                             achieve prompt, permanent and ongoing                 all. No commenter suggested a specific
                                                  contamination threatens longstanding                    reductions in HAP emissions from                      mechanism for regulating under those
                                                  Indian cultural traditions and critical                 stationary sources to reduce the                      other authorities or for determining the


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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         24443

                                                  cost of such regulation. They appear to                    The same commenters also argued                    after considering a study that addresses
                                                  suggest, however, that the EPA must                     that the EPA must evaluate the cost of                ‘‘hazards to public health’’ that remain
                                                  compare the cost of these undefined                     regulating each HAP individually and                  ‘‘after imposition of the requirements of
                                                  approaches to regulating HAP against                    may only regulate those HAP for which                 this chapter,’’ and ‘‘alternative control
                                                  the potential cost of standards under                   a specific finding is made and then only              strategies for emissions which may
                                                  CAA section 112(d), and that the EPA                    to the level of regulation that is required           warrant regulation.’’ Commenters
                                                  must regulate under the least cost                      to address the identified risk. The                   characterized the EPA’s first task as a
                                                  option or only to the level necessary to                commenters maintained that the EPA                    requirement to find whether a residual
                                                  address the identified risks.                           must separately consider the cost of                  public health hazard is posed by
                                                                                                          regulation of each HAP emitted by EGUs                specific EGU HAP emissions remaining
                                                     As support for their positions,
                                                                                                          under various approaches (as identified               after those emissions have been reduced
                                                  commenters point to the Supreme
                                                                                                          above) before regulating any of the HAP               under other provisions of the Act.
                                                  Court’s Michigan decision; to the CAA
                                                                                                          at all, and certainly before regulating all           Commenters also asserted that, if the
                                                  section 112(n) Revision Rule and the
                                                                                                          the EGU HAP under CAA section                         EPA finds that any remaining EGU HAP
                                                  Clean Air Mercury Rule (CAMR); to the
                                                                                                          112(d).                                               emissions pose a hazard, then the EPA
                                                  requirement in CAA section                                 Commenters also argued that CAA
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) to consider ‘‘alternative                                                                        must determine how and ultimately
                                                                                                          section 112(n)(1)(A) is not a listing                 whether to regulate those emissions
                                                  control strategies’’ for emissions of HAP               provision as the EPA states in the
                                                  that warrant regulation and to regulate                                                                       ‘‘under this section [112].’’ Commenters
                                                                                                          proposal. Legal Memorandum                            argued that the EPA must therefore
                                                  EGUs ‘‘under this section [112]’’; and to               Accompanying at 2, 11–12. The
                                                  statements in the legislative history.                                                                        calculate a ‘‘preliminary estimate’’ of
                                                                                                          commenters argued that CAA section                    the costs of the specific form of CAA
                                                  Specifically as concerning the citation                 112(n)(1)(A) does not mention listing
                                                  to the requirement to consider                                                                                section 112 regulation that it is
                                                                                                          because listing is only a precondition to             considering. Commenters also
                                                  ‘‘alternative control strategies’’,                     regulation under CAA section 112(d),
                                                  commenters asserted that the EPA                                                                              maintained that the EPA’s interpretation
                                                                                                          and that the EPA was not required or                  of the statute—which the commenters
                                                  improperly interpreted the requirement                  even authorized to regulate EGUs under
                                                  when conducting the CAA section                                                                               characterized as mandating regulation
                                                                                                          that subsection. The commenters                       under CAA section 112(d) if the EPA
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) Utility Study that was                     asserted that whether to list EGUs is not
                                                  issued in 1998, and that if the EPA had                                                                       finds that one HAP emitted by one EGU
                                                                                                          the question raised by CAA section                    is found to pose either a residual health
                                                  properly conducted the Utility Study, it                112(n)(1)(A). Instead, the commenters
                                                  would have had the information                                                                                or environmental risk—is no longer
                                                                                                          asserted, the question is whether                     valid because of the Michigan decision.
                                                  necessary to conduct these additional                   additional regulation of EGU HAP
                                                  analyses.                                               emissions under CAA section 112 is                       Commenters also asserted that CAA
                                                                                                          ‘‘appropriate and necessary.’’ The                    section 112(n)(1)(A) is, on its face, a
                                                     Some commenters also challenged the
                                                                                                          commenters argued that the statutory                  residual risk regulatory provision and,
                                                  EPA’s prior findings that HAP emissions
                                                                                                          question calls for a decision to authorize            as such, it requires the EPA to make a
                                                  from EGUs pose hazards to public
                                                                                                          or to preclude specific regulation of                 risk management decision regarding
                                                  health and the environment, specifically
                                                                                                          EGU HAP emissions under CAA section                   whether health risks exist, and if so, the
                                                  the findings for mercury, non-mercury
                                                                                                          112. One commenter further asserted                   degree to which they need to be reduced
                                                  metal HAP, and acid gas HAP. Some of
                                                                                                          that the Supreme Court’s opinion in                   further. The commenters maintained
                                                  these commenters also acknowledged
                                                                                                          Michigan confirms that New Jersey v.                  that regulation must necessarily depend
                                                  that the Supreme Court only addressed
                                                                                                          EPA, 517 F.3d 574 (D.C. Cir. 2008), was               on what remaining risks, if any, are
                                                  the requirement to consider the cost of
                                                                                                          wrongly decided on this point. The                    identified, that certain HAP should only
                                                  regulation in the threshold finding and
                                                                                                          commenter asserted that the New Jersey                be regulated to the extent necessary to
                                                  did not disturb any other findings or
                                                                                                          holding cannot stand because the D.C.                 address the risks and only if the
                                                  legal conclusions in the MATS rule or
                                                                                                          Circuit Court found that even if the                  monetized HAP-specific benefits exceed
                                                  the White Stallion decision. The
                                                                                                          ‘‘appropriate and necessary’’ CAA                     the costs of standards, and that the EPA
                                                  commenters also resubmitted many
                                                                                                          section 112(n) finding and CAA section                must undertake this analysis before
                                                  comments previously submitted on the
                                                                                                          112(c) listing of EGUs were erroneous,                regulating each HAP individually.
                                                  proposed MATS rule and addressed in
                                                                                                          the EPA could only remove EGUs from                   Commenters asserted that the statute
                                                  the D.C. Circuit Court challenge to the
                                                                                                          the list of source categories regulated               allows the EPA to regulate only those
                                                  MATS standards in White Stallion. In
                                                                                                          under CAA section 112(d) if it followed               HAP from EGUs that do pose some risk,
                                                  addition, the comments raised issues
                                                                                                          the delisting requirements of CAA                     and then only to the extent
                                                  that were submitted in petitions for
                                                                                                          section 112(c)(9). Id. at 583. The                    ‘‘appropriate’’ (from a cost point of
                                                  reconsideration on the MATS final rule
                                                                                                          commenter maintained that holding                     view) and ‘‘necessary’’ (from a risk
                                                  and that were denied by the agency.46
                                                                                                          cannot stand because, according to the                reduction point of view). The
                                                  The comments included arguments that
                                                                                                          commenter, the Supreme Court’s                        commenters argued that the EPA’s
                                                  the risk threshold of 1-in-1 million is
                                                                                                          opinion makes clear that the                          approach impermissibly uses the risk
                                                  not reasonable, that the EPA cannot base
                                                                                                          ‘‘appropriate and necessary’’ finding is              allegedly associated with one HAP to
                                                  the appropriate and necessary finding
                                                                                                          the gateway to deciding to regulate EGU               regulate another HAP. The commenters
                                                  on environmental risks, and that the
                                                                                                          HAP emissions under CAA section 112,                  maintain that the EPA must instead
                                                  volume of HAP emissions is not a
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                                                                                                          and if that finding is not made, then                 evaluate different regulatory approaches
                                                  legitimate basis for listing, even when
                                                                                                          regulation cannot be imposed. See                     available to it in order to determine
                                                  the sources are emitting at major source
                                                                                                          Michigan, 135 S. Ct. at 2707.                         costs and benefits on an individual HAP
                                                  levels.
                                                                                                             Commenters further maintained that                 basis. The commenters concluded that
                                                    46 80 FR 24218; ‘‘Denial of Petitions for
                                                                                                          CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) requires the                 the EPA cannot interpret the statute to
                                                  Reconsideration of Certain Issues: MATS and
                                                                                                          EPA to decide whether regulation of                   permit regulation of all HAP under CAA
                                                  Utility NSPS’’ (March 2015). Docket ID No. EPA–         HAP emissions from EGUs ‘‘under this                  section 112(d)(2)–(3) because that
                                                  HQ–OAR–2009–0234–20493.                                 section’’ is ‘‘appropriate and necessary’’            approach results in high HAP control


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                                                  24444               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  costs for no HAP benefit, at least for                  2000 listing and in the reaffirmation of                 It thus remanded the rule to the D.C.
                                                  some pollutants (e.g., acid gases),                     that finding in the MATS rulemaking.47                   Circuit Court ‘‘for further proceedings
                                                  according to the comments.                              In essence, many of the comments                         consistent with this opinion.’’ Id. at
                                                     For acid gas HAP, the commenters                     opposed to the proposed supplemental                     2712.49
                                                  appear to maintain that the EPA could                   finding are premised on a belief that the                   In sum, the Michigan decision
                                                  potentially use CAA section 112(d) to                   Supreme Court decision in Michigan                       obligates the EPA to take cost into
                                                  regulate, but that the nature of such                   invalidated interpretations and analyses                 account when deciding whether
                                                  regulation must change to satisfy the                   presented in the MATS rule that were                     regulation is appropriate and necessary
                                                  Michigan decision. For example, some                    unrelated to the EPA’s erroneous                         but does not disturb other legal
                                                  commenters asserted that the agency                     decision not to consider cost when                       interpretations and technical findings
                                                  could impose less costly health-based                   evaluating whether regulation is                         made by the agency in support of the
                                                  emissions limits for acid gas HAP. The                  appropriate and necessary. That premise                  appropriate and necessary finding. The
                                                  commenters point to other CAA section                   and the assertions on which it is based                  interpretation set forth in the Legal
                                                  112 standards that include CAA section                  lack merit.                                              Memorandum reasonably incorporates a
                                                  112(d)(4) health-based emissions limits                    We note that many of the commenters                   consideration of cost into the
                                                  for the acid gases, including the recently              opposed to the proposed supplemental                     appropriate and necessary finding. The
                                                  promulgated CAA section 112(d)(4)                       finding were parties to the Michigan                     EPA’s legal interpretation of CAA
                                                  standards for hydrogen chloride,                        case. The Court granted certiorari to                    section 112(n)(1)(A) was, with the
                                                  hydrogen fluoride, and chlorine for the                 consider one issue: Whether it was                       exception of the cost issue,
                                                  Brick and Structural Clay Products                      reasonable for the EPA to refuse to                      unanimously upheld by the D.C. Circuit
                                                  Manufacturing and Clay Ceramics                         consider cost when making the section                    Court, and undisturbed by the Supreme
                                                  Manufacturing source categories as                      112(n)(1)(A) ‘‘appropriate and                           Court decision. The agency thus used
                                                  support for their position. 80 FR 65470–                necessary’’ finding. Michigan, 135 S. Ct.                that legal structure as the starting point
                                                  71 (Oct. 26, 2015).                                     at 2704. The Court held that the EPA                     for the incorporation of cost into the
                                                     Response: The EPA does not agree                     was obligated to consider cost, but                      appropriate and necessary finding. See
                                                  with these comments. For the reasons                    emphasized that ‘‘it will be up to the                   White Stallion Energy Center, LLC v.
                                                  set forth below, the EPA stands by the                  Agency to decide (as always, within the                  EPA, 748 F.3d 1222 (D.C. Cir. 2014)
                                                  interpretation of the statute and the                   limits of reasonable interpretation) how                 (Judge Kavanaugh dissented only on the
                                                  Michigan decision set forth in the                      to account for cost.’’ 135 S. Ct. at 2711.48             issue of cost). The commenters opposed
                                                  companion Legal Memorandum.                                                                                      to the EPA’s interpretation make
                                                     These comments focus on several                         47 The record in support of the appropriate and
                                                                                                                                                                   conclusory statements that the prior
                                                  primary arguments: (1) The Michigan                     necessary finding is extensive and includes: (1) The
                                                                                                                                                                   interpretations are rendered invalid
                                                  decision rendered invalid all aspects of                three studies requires by CAA section 112(n)(1) and
                                                                                                          the additional NAS study of methylmercury                because the EPA must consider cost in
                                                  the EPA’s interpretation of CAA section                 directed in the appropriations report for the EPA’s      the appropriate and necessary finding.
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) as set forth in the MATS                   fiscal year 1999 appropriations; (2) the 2000            However, none of the commenters
                                                  record and the portions of the White                    Finding, 65 FR 79825 (December 20, 2000) (Finding
                                                                                                                                                                   opposed to the agency’s interpretation
                                                  Stallion decision upholding the EPA’s                   it appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP
                                                                                                          emissions from coal- and oil-fired EGUs and adding       demonstrate in any substantive way that
                                                  interpretation; (2) the EPA cannot                      such units to the CAA section 112(c) list of sources     the agency’s interpretation in the Legal
                                                  satisfy its obligation to consider cost                 that must be regulated under CAA section 112(d));        Memorandum is unreasonable, and in
                                                  without evaluating alternatives to                      (3) the Proposed MATS rule, 76 FR 24976, 24980–
                                                                                                                                                                   developing the interpretation the agency
                                                  regulating HAP emissions from EGUs                      25020 (May 3, 2011) (The EPA affirmed the 2000
                                                                                                          Finding was valid at the time it was made based          considered not only the Michigan
                                                  under CAA section 112(d); and 3) that                   on the available information, and reaffirmed that it     decision, but also the purpose of the
                                                  the requirement to consider cost renders                remains appropriate and necessary to regulate HAP        1990 amendments to CAA section 112
                                                  invalid and/or insufficient the EPA’s                   emissions from EGUs based on new information
                                                                                                                                                                   to obtain prompt, permanent and
                                                  prior analyses of the significant hazards               and analyses in the proposed MATS rule); and (4)
                                                                                                          the Final MATS rule, 77 FR 9304, 9310–9366               ongoing reductions in HAP emissions;
                                                  posed by HAP emissions from EGUs as                     (February 16, 2012) (reaffirming the appropriate and     the structure and context of the statute;
                                                  well as the EPA’s specific findings                     necessary finding and denying a petition to delist       and the long rulemaking and litigation
                                                  regarding the risks to public health and                coal- and oil-fired EGUs from the CAA section
                                                                                                                                                                   history at issue in this case. The
                                                  the environment. The EPA explains                       112(c) list).
                                                                                                             48 In addition, the Supreme Court specifically        commenters did not clearly articulate an
                                                  below why we disagree with these                        stated in the Michigan decision that ‘‘EPA has           alternative to the EPA’s reasoned
                                                  arguments.                                              interpreted the Act to mean that power plants            interpretation of the role of cost in the
                                                     1. The Michigan decision does not                    become subject to regulation on the same terms as
                                                                                                                                                                   appropriate and necessary finding; thus,
                                                  disturb aspects of the EPA’s                            ordinary major and area sources, see 77 Fed. Reg.
                                                  interpretation of CAA section                           9330 (2012), and we assume without deciding that
                                                                                                          it was correct to do so.’’ Id. at 2705. This statement   beyond the scope of the grant of certiorari to
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) that are unrelated to its                  indicates that the Court did not intend for the          address issues that were decided by the EPA in the
                                                  prior conclusion that cost need not be                  Michigan decision to call into question legal            MATS rulemaking, and either not litigated in the
                                                  considered.                                             interpretations, such as those relating to the terms     lower court or unanimously upheld by that court
                                                     Many of the comments in opposition                   on which power plants are to be regulated if an          in the White Stallion decision.
                                                                                                          appropriate and necessary finding is made, that are        49 On remand, the D.C. Circuit considered
                                                  to the EPA’s interpretation of the statute              beyond the scope of the grant of certiorari. All         competing motions to govern the proceedings.
                                                  are largely, if not wholly, premised on                 aspects of the agency’s interpretation of section        Some states and industry asked for vacatur while
                                                  the position that the Supreme Court’s                   112(n)(1)(A) were commented on during the MATS           the EPA, other states, industry groups and
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                                                  decision in Michigan that the EPA must                  rulemaking and many were challenged and                  environmental NGOs asked the court to remand
                                                                                                          unanimously affirmed in the D.C. Circuit’s White         without vacatur. On December 15, 2015, the same
                                                  consider cost in the appropriate and                    Stallion decision. The parties could have                D.C. Circuit panel that had originally heard the
                                                  necessary finding rendered invalid, in                  petitioned, and in one case did petition, the            challenges to the MATS rule in the White Stallion
                                                  all respects, the EPA’s prior                           Supreme Court to review those other decisions. The       case unanimously decided to remanded the
                                                  interpretation of CAA section                           Supreme Court explicitly limited its grant of            proceeding to the EPA without vacatur of the rule.
                                                                                                          certiorari and addressed only one question, leaving      White Stallion Energy Center, LLC v. EPA, No. 12–
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) and also the specific                      all other aspects of the White Stallion decision in      1100 (Dec. 15, 2015) (order granting remand
                                                  findings that supported the appropriate                 place. It would not be reasonable to interpret the       without vacatur). Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–
                                                  and necessary finding in the original                   Supreme Court’s decision in Michigan as reaching         2009–0234–20567.



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                  24445

                                                  the EPA finds no reason to revise the                   most importantly, cost of compliance—                 Michigan decision does not undermine
                                                  interpretations set forth in the proposed               before deciding whether regulation is                 the legitimacy of any prior
                                                  supplemental finding and the                            appropriate and necessary.’’ 135 S. Ct.               interpretation except the conclusion
                                                  companion Legal Memorandum.                             2711. The ‘‘cost of compliance’’ at issue             that cost need not be considered. It was
                                                     Furthermore, while not expressly                     in that case was the cost of MATS, and,               thus reasonable for the EPA to take
                                                  stated, the commenters appear to                        as the EPA finds that the costs                       these prior conclusions into
                                                  assume that the EPA could never justify                 associated with the rule are reasonable               consideration when determining the
                                                  the cost of the MATS rule and that no                   under several different metrics, the                  manner in which to incorporate a
                                                  analysis of whether the costs of the rule               agency cannot and should not ignore                   consideration of cost into the
                                                  are reasonable would even be relevant.                  those conclusions. The Michigan                       appropriate and necessary finding.
                                                  The Administrator disagrees and                         decision itself does not, as some                        The EPA discussed the Michigan
                                                  believes the EPA should evaluate and                    commenters appear to suggest, draw any                decision in the proposed supplemental
                                                  consider the cost of the MATS rule.                     conclusions regarding whether the cost                finding and explained how cost can be
                                                  Furthermore, having concluded that the                  of MATS is reasonable, or otherwise                   reasonably incorporated into the
                                                  cost of MATS is reasonable under                        undermine the EPA’s conclusion that                   statutory structure that was otherwise
                                                  several metrics and that the rule will not              the costs are reasonable. In addition, the            unanimously affirmed by the D.C.
                                                  impair the ability of the industry to                   EPA does not rely on this conclusion                  Circuit. Thus, the agency expressly
                                                  provide reliable electricity, the                       alone to support a determination that                 stated in the proposed supplemental
                                                  Administrator believes she must                         regulation is appropriate and necessary.              finding that it was not reopening or
                                                  consider those conclusions. In light of                 Instead, as explained in greater detail in            requesting comment on issues beyond
                                                  those conclusions and the findings that                 the proposed notice and this final                    its proposed approach to incorporating
                                                  HAP emissions pose significant hazards                  action, the EPA’s conclusion that the                 a consideration of cost as an additional
                                                  to public health and the environment                    cost of MATS is reasonable is but one                 factor into the appropriate and
                                                  that will not be addressed through                      of the factors the agency considers when              necessary finding. 80 FR 75028.
                                                  imposition of the other requirements of                 determining whether regulation is                     Comments on other interpretations are
                                                  the CAA, the Administrator concludes                    appropriate and necessary.                            therefore outside the scope of this
                                                  in this final notice that regulation is                    2. Cost considerations can reasonably              rulemaking. Nonetheless, the EPA
                                                  appropriate and necessary.50 The EPA                    be incorporated as an additional factor               explains below why it disagrees with
                                                  went through an extensive process that                  to be considered under CAA section                    the comments and also addresses the
                                                  spanned approximately 20 years before                   112(n)(1)(A) without disturbing the                   specific arguments raised by the
                                                  finally establishing standards for HAP                  EPA’s prior interpretation of the                     commenters in support of their
                                                  emissions from EGUs in 2012. The                        statutory structure.                                  positions.
                                                  agency took comment on its legal                           The agency has reversed its prior                     As background, the EPA issued MATS
                                                  interpretations and on its findings that                conclusion that cost need not be                      in response to the New Jersey decision
                                                  HAP emissions from EGUs pose hazards                    considered when making an appropriate                 vacating the EPA’s CAA Section 112(n)
                                                  to public health and the environment.                   and necessary finding and adopted a                   Revision Rule removing coal- and oil-
                                                  Many of those interpretations and                       new interpretation of the role of cost in             fired EGUs from the CAA section 112(c)
                                                  findings were challenged in the D.C.                    that finding. That new interpretation is              list and CAMR regulating such units
                                                  Circuit Court in petitions to review                    consistent with the Michigan decision                 under CAA section 111(d) instead of
                                                  MATS, and some were not. With the                       and the EPA’s non-cost-related                        CAA section 112(d). New Jersey v. EPA,
                                                  exception of the cost issue, the                        interpretations of CAA section                        517 F.3d 574 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (vacating
                                                  challenges were unanimously rejected                    112(n)(1)(A) that went through notice                 the delisting action as inconsistent with
                                                  by that Court in the White Stallion                     and comment during the MATS                           the statute because the EPA did not
                                                  decision.51                                             rulemaking and were upheld in White                   comply with the requirements for
                                                     The EPA’s approach to evaluating cost                Stallion. The commenters appear to                    delisting in CAA section 112(c)(9), and
                                                  is also supported by the Michigan                       assume, without much explanation, that                also vacating CAMR because the EPA
                                                  decision wherein the Court directed the                 the requirement to consider cost renders              stated that the rule could not be legally
                                                  agency to ‘‘consider cost—including,                    the EPA’s prior interpretation                        supported if EGUs remained on the
                                                                                                          unreasonable because, according to the                CAA section 112(c) list). The New Jersey
                                                     50 In light of New Jersey v. EPA, 517 F.3d 574       commenters, the approach set forth in                 court did not address the legal
                                                  (D.C. Cir. 2008), the EPA may only remove coal and      the proposed supplemental finding did                 interpretations of CAA section
                                                  oil-fired EGUs from the CAA section 112(c) list if      not, in their view, give sufficient weight            112(n)(1)(A) nor the conclusions that
                                                  it demonstrates that the delisting criteria in CAA      to cost. The commenters seek to                       HAP emissions from EGUs did not pose
                                                  section 112(c)(9) have been met. A finding by the
                                                  EPA that regulation of these sources is not
                                                                                                          overturn several of the EPA’s prior                   a hazard to public health that supported
                                                  appropriate or necessary would not be a sufficient      conclusions regarding CAA section                     the appropriate and necessary finding.52
                                                  basis for the EPA to remove EGUs from the CAA           112(n)(1)(A) such as: (1) The                            The EPA recognized in MATS that it
                                                  section 112(c) list, but the D.C. Circuit Court could   appropriate and necessary finding can                 must reevaluate the prior interpretations
                                                  vacate the rule upon review if the court concluded                                                            of the statute and the technical findings
                                                  the agency’s revised finding was unreasonable.
                                                                                                          be based on a finding that significant
                                                     51 Judge Kavanaugh dissented on the cost issue       hazards to public health and/or the                   concerning the hazards to public health
                                                  but otherwise joined the majority on all other          environment remain after imposition of                from HAP emissions from EGUs as part
                                                  challenges to the appropriate and necessary finding     the requirements of the Act; (2) the
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                                                  and HAP standards, including the EPA’s decision         finding can be based on an identified                   52 Several commenters wrongly asserted that the
                                                  to decline to establish a health based emission limit                                                         Section 112(n) Revision Rule was based on a
                                                  for acid gas HAP under section 112(d)(4) and to
                                                                                                          hazard for any one HAP; and (3) the
                                                                                                                                                                determination that it was neither appropriate nor
                                                  establish a more stringent beyond-the-floor standard    most reasonable approach to regulating                necessary to regulate HAP emissions because of
                                                  for Hg from certain coal-fired EGUs. The fact that      HAP emissions from EGUs is listing                    cost. In fact, the EPA concluded that cost need not
                                                  Judge Kavanaugh dissented on the cost issue alone       under CAA section 112(c) and                          be considered in that revised finding because the
                                                  suggests that it is separate and distinct and that a                                                          agency concluded that HAP emissions from EGUs
                                                  decision that cost must be taken into consideration
                                                                                                          regulation under CAA section 112(d)                   did not pose a hazard to public health warranting
                                                  does not upend the other holdings in White              after a finding that regulation is                    regulation based on the agency’s interpretations of
                                                  Stallion.                                               appropriate and necessary. The                        the statute in the 112(n) Revision Rule.



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                                                  24446                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  of the appropriate and necessary                         in the MATS rule and the proposal                    provisions of section 112 in directing
                                                  finding. In the process of reviewing the                 notice. Among other things, as                       EPA’s action under section 112(n)(1)(A).
                                                  conclusions in the Section 112(n)                        discussed below, the alternatives offered            Congress directed the agency to regulate
                                                  Revision Rule, the EPA determined that                   by commenters lack structure, are not                utilities ‘‘under this section’’ not ‘‘under
                                                  the interpretations contained in that                    easily supported by the statutory                    this subparagraph [112(n)],’’ and
                                                  rule should be revised to better reflect                 language, and do not further the                     accordingly EGUs should be regulated
                                                  the structure and intent of the statute                  statutory goals better than the EPA’s                under section 112 in the same manner
                                                  and concluded that the prior technical                   approach.                                            as other categories for which the statute
                                                  findings were either insufficient (e.g.,                    Under the commenters’ approaches,                 requires regulation.’’ See Final MATS,
                                                  for mercury) or essentially absent (e.g.,                the EPA would be required to make                    77 FR 9326. The agency also cited the
                                                  non-mercury metal HAP and acid gas                       specific separate cost findings for each             New Jersey case wherein the D.C. Circuit
                                                  HAP). Thus, the agency addressed in                      HAP, but only if the EPA has                         Court found that CAA section 112(n)(1)
                                                  detail how it intended to interpret the                  determined that the HAP at issue poses               ‘‘governs how the Administrator decides
                                                  statute going forward, how the                           a hazard to public health (not the                   whether to list EGUs’’ and that once
                                                  interpretation of the statute in MATS                    environment). The commenters argued                  listed, EGUs are subject to the
                                                  was consistent with the 2000 Finding,                    that the Michigan decision mandates                  requirements of section 112. Id. citing
                                                  and how the new interpretation differed                  this approach, but it does not. The                  New Jersey, 517 F.3d at 583 The New
                                                  from the interpretation in the Section                   Supreme Court did not disturb the                    Jersey court expressly noted that ‘‘where
                                                  112(n) Revision Rule. See 76 FR 24986–                   EPA’s prior conclusions (which were                  Congress wished to exempt EGUs from
                                                  24998. The agency received numerous                      upheld in White Stallion) that the                   specific requirements of section 112, it
                                                  comments on the interpretations and the                  appropriate and necessary finding can                said so explicitly,’’ noting that ‘‘section
                                                  EPA responded to those comments in                       be based on a finding that any one HAP               112(c)(6) expressly exempts EGUs from
                                                  the final MATS rule and the RTC                          emitted by EGUs poses a hazard to                    the strict deadlines imposed on other
                                                  document. See 77 FR 9319–9336; see                       public health or the environment, that               sources of certain pollutants.’’ Id. The
                                                  also MATS RTC, Vol. I.53 In affirming                    the statute contemplates that regulation             EPA concluded that ‘‘Congress did not
                                                  all of the changes in interpretation, the                under CAA section 112 will occur by                  exempt EGUs from the other
                                                  White Stallion court found that the                      listing pursuant to CAA section 112(c)               requirements of section 112, and, once
                                                  agency has authority to change its                       based on the appropriate and necessary               listed, the EPA is reasonably regulating
                                                  interpretation of CAA section                            finding, and that EGUs are regulated                 EGUs pursuant to the standard-setting
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) as long as ‘‘the policy is                  like other sources once listed. In fact,             provisions in section 112(d), as it does
                                                  permissible under the statute, that there                the Supreme Court specifically limited               for all other listed source categories.’’ Id.
                                                  are good reasons for it, and that the                    its grant of certiorari and did not, as
                                                                                                                                                                   During the MATS rulemaking, the
                                                  agency believes it to be better.’’ White                 some petitioners had requested, grant
                                                                                                                                                                EPA explicitly considered and rejected
                                                  Stallion, 748 F.3d at 1235. Stated                       certiorari on the question of whether the
                                                                                                                                                                comments suggesting that the agency
                                                  another way, a change is prohibited                      EPA ‘‘may regulate EGU HAP emissions
                                                                                                                                                                could regulate under CAA section
                                                  unless the agency determines that the                    that pose no hazard to public health.’’
                                                                                                                                                                112(n)(1), and neither the EPA’s
                                                  alternative is legally permissible, that                 See UARG Petition for Writ of
                                                                                                                                                                conclusion nor its rationale are affected
                                                  there is a good reason for the change,                   Certiorari, July 14, 2014.54 The request
                                                                                                                                                                by the Michigan decision. As the agency
                                                  and that the alternative interpretation is               for certiorari on this question focused
                                                                                                           on the lower court’s conclusion that it              explained ‘‘even assuming for the sake
                                                  better. Id. As explained further below,
                                                                                                           was permissible for the EPA to regulate              of argument, that we could issue
                                                  the commenters’ suggested alternatives
                                                                                                           acid gas HAP from EGUs absent specific               standards under section 112(n)(1), we
                                                  may not be reasonably supported under
                                                                                                           conclusions regarding public health                  would decline to do so because there is
                                                  the terms of the statute. In addition, the
                                                                                                           hazards associated with such emissions               nothing in section 112(n)(1)(A) that
                                                  EPA neither believes there are good
                                                                                                           from EGUs. The Supreme Court also                    provides any guidance as to how such
                                                  reasons to adopt the alternatives offered
                                                                                                           explicitly acknowledged and did not                  standards should be developed.’’ Id. The
                                                  nor finds that they would better address
                                                  the identified risks and further the goals               disturb the conclusion that once the                 EPA noted that ‘‘[a]ny mechanism we
                                                  of the statute. The commenters appear                    agency finds it appropriate and                      devised, absent explicit statutory
                                                  to (and in at least one case expressly)                  necessary to regulate HAP emissions                  support, would likely receive less
                                                  place cost above all other considerations                from EGUs, power plants are regulated                deference than a CAA section 112(d)
                                                  and the agency does not see ‘‘good                       like other sources. See Michigan at                  standard issued in the same manner in
                                                  reasons’’ for adopting that interpretation               2705. The approach selected by the EPA               which the Agency issues standards for
                                                  above our own in the comments, in the                    is consistent with these undisturbed                 other listed source categories.’’ Id.55 A
                                                  statute, or in the legislative history. See              prior conclusions, and nothing in                    requirement to consider cost does not
                                                  Legal Memorandum. There is no basis                      Michigan mandates that the EPA take a                change these conclusions.
                                                  for concluding that any of these                         different approach now.
                                                                                                                                                                   55 Several commenters asserted that the EPA
                                                  alternative approaches are mandatory,                       The rationale for these conclusions is
                                                                                                                                                                indicated that it must regulate HAP emissions from
                                                  and the agency does not believe they are                 valid and in no way undermined by the                EGUs under CAA section 112(d), but this argument
                                                  ‘‘better’’ than the approach we set forth                conclusion that the EPA must                         is contradicted by the quoted statement from the
                                                                                                           incorporate cost considerations into the             final rule explaining that any other mechanism
                                                     53 The commenters do not in any meaningful way
                                                                                                           appropriate and necessary finding. The               would likely receive less deference. The EPA
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                                                  attempt to demonstrate why the prior reasoned                                                                 maintained in the MATS rule that the best reading
                                                                                                           EPA stated in MATS that ‘‘the use of the             of the statute was that an affirmative appropriate
                                                  interpretations are suddenly unreasonable because
                                                  of cost. The agency maintains the lack of specificity    terms section, subsection, and                       and necessary finding should be followed by listing
                                                  and failure to explain more fully why those prior        subparagraph in section 112(n)(1)(A)                 under CAA section 112(c) and regulation under
                                                  interpretations must be rejected because of cost is      demonstrates that Congress was                       CAA section 112(d). See e.g., 77 FR 9326. The EPA
                                                  a significant flaw in the comments. See CAA                                                                   did not, however, identify an alternative approach
                                                  section 307(d)(7)(B) (‘‘Only an objection to a rule or
                                                                                                           consciously distinguishing the various               to regulation ‘‘under this section [112]’’ that is as
                                                  procedure which was raised with reasonable                                                                    reasonable or defensible as the approach we
                                                  specificity during the period for public comment           54 Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2009–0234–             followed, and the commenters have not provided
                                                  . . . may be raised during judicial review.’’).          20563.                                               any.



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                       24447

                                                    The White Stallion court upheld the                      There is no basis for commenters’                       by the statute for the reasons above and
                                                  EPA’s determination to regulate under                   assertion that these interpretations are                   as explained further below.
                                                  CAA section 112(d) and held:                            rendered unreasonable or otherwise                            As an initial matter, the commenters
                                                     EPA acted properly in regulating EGUs                invalid by the requirement that the EPA                    do not suggest a clear framework for
                                                  under § 112(d). Section 112(n)(1)(A) directs            consider cost as part of the appropriate                   developing standards under those
                                                  the Administrator to ‘‘regulate electric steam          and necessary determination. Moreover,                     alternative approaches and the statute
                                                  generating units under this section, if the             the agency’s incorporation of a                            does not provide one. The D.C. Circuit
                                                  Administrator finds such regulation is                  consideration of cost into the prior                       stated that the EPA is not required to
                                                  appropriate and necessary.’’ CAA                        interpretation is reasonable, supported                    adopt a ‘‘hypothetical framework not
                                                  § 112(n)(1)(A). EPA reasonably interprets the           by the statutory text and context of the                   elaborated in the statute’’; thus, even if
                                                  phrase ‘‘under this section’’ to refer to the                                                                      HAP emissions could theoretically be
                                                  entirety of section 112. See Desert Citizens
                                                                                                          provision, and consistent with the
                                                                                                          purpose of the statute. See Legal                          regulated under the alternative
                                                  Against Pollution v. EPA, 699 F.3d 524 (D.C.
                                                  Cir. 2012). Under section 112, the statutory            Memorandum.                                                provisions of the CAA identified by the
                                                  framework for regulating HAP sources                                                                               comments, the agency could reasonably
                                                                                                             3. The EPA is not required to consider
                                                  appears in § 112(c), which covers listing, and                                                                     decline to adopt those alternative
                                                                                                          the potential cost of alternative
                                                  § 112(d), which covers standard-setting. See                                                                       approaches in lieu of the reasonable
                                                                                                          approaches to regulating HAP emissions
                                                  CAA § 112(c), 112(d). This court has                                                                               approach affirmed in White Stallion.
                                                  previously noted that ‘‘where Congress                  from EGUs before finding that
                                                                                                                                                                     See 748 F.3d at 1244.
                                                  wished to exempt EGUs from specific                     regulation is appropriate and necessary.                      The lack of a statutory framework for
                                                  requirements of section 112, it said so                    As explained above, commenters                          the alternative approaches suggested by
                                                  explicitly.’’ New Jersey, 517 F.3d at 583. EPA          maintain that listing under CAA section                    commenters would frustrate if not
                                                  reasonably concluded that the framework set
                                                                                                          112(c) and regulation under CAA                            wholly undermine the agency’s ability
                                                  forth in § 112(c) and § 112(d)—rather than
                                                  another, hypothetical framework not                     section 112(d) is not reasonable for                       to achieve prompt, permanent and
                                                  elaborated in the statute—provided the                  EGUs and that the EPA must instead                         ongoing reductions in HAP emissions
                                                  appropriate mechanism for regulating EGUs               look to other provisions of the statute to                 from EGUs after completion of the
                                                  under § 112 after the ‘‘appropriate and                 develop a regulatory approach that is                      studies, thus unduly frustrating the
                                                  necessary’’ determination was made.                     only as costly as necessary to address                     purpose of CAA section 112. As the EPA
                                                  Therefore, EPA’s interpretation is entitled to          specifically identified hazards to public                  explained in the Legal Memorandum,
                                                  deference and must be upheld.                           health (hazards to the environment                         CAA section 112(n)(1) required the
                                                    White Stallion, 748 F.3d at 1243–44                   would not be sufficient to justify                         agency to conduct the three studies that
                                                  (emphasis added).                                       regulation of any HAP according to                         Congress thought most relevant to a
                                                    The White Stallion court also                         many commenters opposed to the                             determination of whether to regulate
                                                  addressed, and rejected, arguments that                 agency’s interpretation). The                              HAP emissions from EGUs within 4
                                                  the EPA erred by regulating all HAP                     commenters point to various provisions                     years of the 1990 amendments to ensure
                                                  emissions from EGUs:                                    including CAA sections 112(n)(1),                          that the EPA would have the
                                                     Although the petitioners attempt to                  112(f), and 111(d), and to the potential                   information required to make the
                                                  distinguish National Lime on grounds that it            for state action,57 and the commenters                     appropriate and necessary finding. Legal
                                                  concerned ‘‘major sources’’ rather than EGUs,           assert that the EPA must consider all                      Memorandum at 13–18. The EPA
                                                  they have not provided any compelling                   these different approaches for each                        maintains that this direction ensured
                                                  reason why EGUs should not be regulated the             HAP, in addition to, or instead of,                        that the agency could list and regulate
                                                  same way as other sources once EPA has                  evaluating the cost reasonableness of                      HAP emissions from EGUs if warranted.
                                                  determined that regulation under § 112 is
                                                                                                          MATS. The EPA does not agree that                          Conversely, the commenters’ different
                                                  ‘‘appropriate and necessary.’’ It also bears
                                                  emphasis that the plain text of § 112(n)(1)(A)          these alternative approaches are                           and supposedly mandated approaches
                                                  directs the Administrator to ‘‘regulate electric        mandated by the Michigan decision or                       would make it virtually impossible to
                                                  utility steam generating units’’—not to                                                                            obtain prompt reductions in HAP
                                                  regulate their emissions as petitioners                 position and rely instead on a convoluted argument         emissions,58 and none of the approaches
                                                  suggest. This source based approach to                  associated with the EPA’s inability to delist a listed     would require ongoing evaluation of
                                                  regulating EGUs HAPs was affirmed in New                sources category without complying with CAA
                                                                                                          section 112(c)(9). However, the commenters failed
                                                                                                                                                                     HAP emissions from EGUs. In addition,
                                                  Jersey, 517 F.3d at 582, which held that EGUs                                                                      because of the legal uncertainty
                                                  could not be delisted without demonstrating             to acknowledge that the EPA is not the only entity
                                                                                                          that can remove a source category from the section
                                                  that EGUs, as a category, satisfied the
                                                                                                          112(c) list, and the other entity, in this case the D.C.     58 We note that collectively the comments would
                                                  delisting criteria set forth in § 112(c)(9). The        Circuit Court, is not required to comply with the          mandate a significant process after the agency
                                                  notion that EPA must ‘‘pick and choose’’                section 112(c)(9) requirements. CAA Section                completes the section 112(n) studies that would
                                                  among HAPs in order to regulate only those              112(e)(4) of the statute clearly authorizes judicial       necessarily delay potential regulation indefinitely.
                                                  substances it deems most harmful is at odds             review of any listing decision pursuant to section         Even if we assume that the commenters would
                                                  with the court’s precedent.                             307(d) when the EPA issues section 112(d)                  argue that EPA need not take the time to evaluate
                                                                                                          standards. The courts thus have authority to               the cost of standards under section 112(d) (i.e., the
                                                     White Stallion, 748 F.3d at 1244–45.56               determine that a listing was improper and to vacate        MATS HAP standards), a position with which we
                                                                                                          any such listing. In this manner, an improper              disagree as explained above, the different
                                                    56 The findings in the White Stallion are premised    source category listing could be corrected.                approaches to considering cost under the different
                                                  in part on the holding in the New Jersey decision         57 The comments suggesting that the EPA must             provisions would be difficult for a number of
                                                  and those findings undermine many of the                consider potential state action prior to making the        reasons, including the fact that there are no defined
                                                  commenters’ arguments against the EPA’s                 appropriate and necessary finding is in direct             mechanisms for setting the level of the standard and
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                                                  interpretation of the proper role of cost in the        conflict with CAA section 112(n)(1)(A). That               there is no indication in the comments when the
                                                  appropriate and necessary finding. This fact            provision only requires the agency to consider the         EPA would be authorized to conclude that
                                                  explains why the commenters opposed to EPA’s            potential impact of CAA requirements on HAP                sufficient alternatives had been evaluated. Even if
                                                  interpretation argue that the Michigan decision         emissions from EGUs when determining whether               only one of the alternative approaches were chosen,
                                                  demonstrates that the New Jersey decision was           hazards to public health remain ‘‘after imposition         because there are no defined standards, commenters
                                                  wrongly decided. The commenters are incorrect in        of the requirements of this chapter [the CAA].’’ See       could provide endless alternative approaches with
                                                  their assertions and certain commenters petitioned      CAA section 112(n)(1)(A). In light of this limitation,     different costs and benefits. The EPA declines to
                                                  the Supreme Court for certiorari to review the New      we do not believe the agency could reasonably defer        interpret the statute in ways that are not mandated
                                                  Jersey decision, and the request was denied. The        federal regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs              by the statute and that we believe would frustrate
                                                  commenters point to no legal precedent for their        because of potential state action.                         the purpose of the statute.



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                                                  24448                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  surrounding the alternative approaches,                  provision authorizes setting standards,              ‘‘supposed’’ to do in the study, it would
                                                  the potential for loss in court makes the                in the first instance, based on a CAA                have had the information commenters
                                                  risk that the standards will not be                      section 112(f) risk analysis. In addition,           maintain is necessary to properly
                                                  permanent arguably unacceptable.                         the fact that CAA section 112(n)(1)(A)               consider cost. The commenters’
                                                     We next address the commenters’                       uses the terms ‘‘section, ‘‘subsection’’             argument is flawed for several reasons.
                                                  assertion that the EPA could regulate                    and ‘‘subparagraph’’ in a very careful               First, a natural reading of the statute
                                                  under CAA section 112(f) and that such                   and deliberate manner is an indication               does not support the type of analysis the
                                                  an approach is proper because CAA                        that Congress consciously directed the               commenters suggest is mandated and
                                                  section 112(n)(1)(A) is a residual risk                  EPA to the relevant provisions of CAA                the legislative history does not support
                                                  provision.59 As a legal matter, the                      section 112. If Congress intended the                that conclusion either. In addition, the
                                                  commenters have failed to explain how                    EPA to regulate under CAA section                    EPA completed the Utility Study in
                                                  the EPA could jump to regulation under                   112(f), it could have directed the EPA to            1998 and to comply with the
                                                  CAA section 112(f)(2) when that                          that provision; in fact, however, the                requirement to consider alternative
                                                  provision, on its face, only applies after               statute directs the agency to regulate               control strategies the agency considered
                                                  promulgation of CAA section 112(d)                       under CAA section 112 as a whole.                    mechanisms to reduce HAP from EGUs
                                                  standards. See CAA section 112(f)(2)(A)                     Commenters’ challenges based on the               before, during, and after combustion.
                                                  (requiring review ‘‘within 8 years after                 legislative history are equally                      See Utility Study, Chapter 13. The
                                                  promulgation of standards . . .                          misplaced. The EPA has reviewed the                  Utility Study was the last of the CAA
                                                  pursuant to subsection (d) of this                       legislative history cited by the                     section 112(n)(1) studies completed and
                                                  section’’). In addition, CAA section                     commenters and the agency does not                   Congress never indicated that the
                                                  112(f)(2) embodies the failed approach                   agree that it mandates or even supports              agency erred in the conduct of that
                                                  to regulating HAP that existed prior to                  the commenters’ assertions concerning                study. Conversely, in the EPA’s Fiscal
                                                  the 1990 amendments wherein the                          the proper consideration of cost.                    Year 1999 appropriations report,
                                                  agency listed as HAP only those air                      Commenters on the MATS rule used                     Congress did direct the agency to fund
                                                  pollutants that the agency determined                    much of the same legislative history to              a NAS study to determine a reference
                                                  pose a risk and then regulate sources of                 argue against the non-cost related                   dose for methylmercury, which is
                                                  those identified HAP based solely on                     aspects of EPA’s interpretation of CAA               essentially the same study that was
                                                  the risk to human health. See Legal                      section 112(n)(1)(A), and the agency                 required in CAA section 112(n)(1)(C),
                                                  Memorandum at 9. As explained in the                     explained why the legislative history                and the appropriations report stated that
                                                  Legal Memorandum, the statute was                        did not undermine the EPA’s                          the EPA should not make the
                                                  completely revised in 1990 to ensure                     interpretation or compel a different                 appropriate and necessary finding until
                                                  that there would be prompt, permanent                    approach. See e.g., 77 FR 9320–9323.                 after consideration of the NAS study.
                                                  and ongoing reductions in HAP                            The Michigan decision did not rely on                See Legal Memorandum, citing H.R.
                                                  emissions from stationary sources that                   the legislative history at all in its                Conf. Rep. No 105–769, at 281–82
                                                  meet the listing criteria. Id. at 6–7. CAA               opinion, much less adopt the                         (1998). The fact that Congress
                                                  section 112(d) contains the statutory                    commenters’ interpretation of that                   specifically requested more information
                                                  mechanism adopted to ensure prompt                       history. Instead, the Supreme Court                  in relation to one of the CAA section
                                                  reductions and the risk approach                         relied on the context of the statute,                112(n)(1) studies undermines the
                                                  incorporated into CAA section 112(f)                     specifically citing the requirement to               commenters’ position that the EPA erred
                                                  was explicitly relegated to secondary                    consider cost in the Mercury Study                   in the conduct of the Utility Study.
                                                  status. Id. at 6–11. Under this statutory                required pursuant to CAA section                     Finally, the commenters fail to note that
                                                  scheme, the risk analysis is conducted                   112(n)(1)(B). See Michigan, 135 S. Ct. at            CAA section 112(n)(1)(A), unlike CAA
                                                  when standards are reviewed and no                       2708 and 2710. For these reasons, and                section 112(n)(1)(B), did not require the
                                                                                                           after review of the additional legislative           agency to consider the cost of the
                                                     59 The characterization of CAA section                history cited, the EPA confirms that the             alternative control strategies that the
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) as a residual risk provision of a kind      legislative history does not mandate a               agency identified, thus further
                                                  with the CAA section 112(f) residual risk program
                                                  is not reasonable. As indicated in the Legal
                                                                                                           particular approach to considering cost              undermining their position that EPA
                                                  Memorandum, the only EGU specific regulatory             pursuant to section 112(n)(1)(A). See                erred in its conduct of the Utility Study.
                                                  program enacted in the 1990 amendments to the            RTC, Chapter 1 (providing additional                 Congress could have explicitly required
                                                  CAA was the title IV acid rain program (ARP). The        discussion of the legislative history                the EPA to consider the costs of
                                                  ARP was a trading program directed at the
                                                  reduction in SO2 and NOX. Conversely, under CAA          cited by commenters).                                alternative control strategies under CAA
                                                  section 112(f), the EPA evaluates whether a residual        Commenters also argue that the                    section 112(n)(1)(A). The fact that it did
                                                  risk from HAP emissions remains within 8 years of        direction to conduct the Utility Study in            not do so is significant, particularly in
                                                  implementation of section 112(d)(2) MACT                 CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) required the                light of the fact that it did include such
                                                  standards. See CAA section 112(f)(2)(A). The
                                                  requirement to comply with a trading program that
                                                                                                           agency to consider regulation of HAP                 a requirement in the very next
                                                  does not require controls on any particular source       under other CAA authorities and that                 subsection. For all these reasons, we
                                                  or for any HAP does not in any meaningful way            the agency incorrectly interpreted the               reject the contention that the EPA erred
                                                  compare to the application of MACT standards that        scope of the study. Specifically, the                in the conduct of the Utility Study.
                                                  require reductions in all HAP emitted from a source
                                                  category. As explained throughout the MATS
                                                                                                           commenters assert that the requirement                  4. The Michigan decision does not
                                                  rulemaking, CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) was included        to ‘‘develop and describe . . .                      affect the EPA’s prior analyses and
                                                  in the CAA in large part because EGUs were               alternative control strategies’’ for HAP             conclusions regarding the risks of HAP
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                                                  uniquely affected by the ARP and there was a belief      emissions was a requirement to devise                and its prior findings of hazards to
                                                  that ARP trading program and other CAA programs
                                                  applicable to all major stationary sources (e.g., NSR,
                                                                                                           alternative regulatory approaches (other             public health and the environment from
                                                  PSD, haze) might address any risks associated with       than CAA section 112(d)) for reducing                EGU HAP emissions.
                                                  HAP emissions from EGUs. CAA section                     HAP emissions from EGUs and further                     The commenters challenge either
                                                  112(n)(1)(A) required the EPA to estimate potential      required the agency to evaluate the                  expressly or impliedly the legal and
                                                  HAP risk after implementation of the ARP and other
                                                  programs, and the EPA found unacceptable risks
                                                                                                           comparative cost of the different                    technical bases on which the agency
                                                  remain in 2000 and again in 2012, more than 20           approaches. The commenters argue that                determined that HAP emissions from
                                                  years after the CAA amendments.                          if the EPA had done what it was                      EGUs pose hazards to public health and


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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                     24449

                                                  the environment. Specifically, the                      regulate EGUs under § 112, because EPA                     Concerning the consideration of the
                                                  commenters state that environmental                     did not base its decision solely on                     volume of HAP emissions in the
                                                  harms cannot form the basis for a                       environmental effects’’, and they argue                 appropriate finding, the EPA explained
                                                  finding that it is appropriate to regulate              that because the agency must consider                   in the Legal Memorandum why volume
                                                  HAP emissions from EGUs, that the 1-                    cost, the appropriate finding for acid gas              of HAP is relevant to the appropriate
                                                  in-1 million standard is not reasonable,                HAP cannot stand because it was based                   finding because one of the goals of the
                                                  that HAP volume (particularly major                     only on environmental effects.60 748                    CAA is to obtain permanent reductions
                                                  source levels) is not a basis for                       F.3d at 1242. Initially, we note that the               in the volume of HAP emissions from
                                                  determining risk, and that the agency                   commenters are not correct that the                     major stationary sources. See, e.g., Legal
                                                  has not demonstrated that a sufficient                  appropriate finding for acid gas HAP                    Memorandum at 17. The commenters do
                                                  risk exists to warrant regulation of HAP                was based solely on environmental                       not directly address the EPA’s argument
                                                  emissions from EGUs. While we believe                   effects, as it was also based on the major              and instead state that CAA section
                                                  these comments are outside the scope of                 source status of almost all EGUs and the                112(n)(1)(A) clearly prohibits the
                                                  the proposed supplemental finding                       concern about the potential for these                   consideration of the volume of HAP as
                                                  because they raise issues unrelated to                  emissions to add to the already high                    a basis for regulating HAP emissions
                                                  cost, we respond briefly below.                         atmospheric levels of other chronic                     from EGUs.62 The commenters’ next
                                                     As to the consideration of                           respiratory toxicants. See, e.g., 76 FR                 point to acid gas HAP specifically and
                                                  environmental harms and the 1-in-1                      25015–16; 77 FR 9363. More                              argue that the EPA cannot consider
                                                  million standard, the White Stallion                    importantly, as with all of these                       major source levels of those HAP
                                                  court unanimously affirmed the                          comments, the arguments are based on                    because CAA section 112(n)(1)(A) was
                                                  reasonableness of these standards for                   an assumption that the EPA’s prior                      enacted in part because of the Acid Rain
                                                  evaluating whether it is appropriate to                 interpretations of the act are invalid                  Program and if Congress wanted to
                                                  regulate HAP emissions from EGUs.                       (e.g., that the EPA will list under CAA                 regulate major source levels of HAP
                                                  White Stallion, 748 F.3d at 1236                        section 112(c) and regulate under CAA                   from EGUs it would simply have
                                                  (finding that ‘‘EPA reasonably relied on                section 112(d) if we determine                          directed the agency to list and regulate
                                                  the § 112(c)(9) delisting criteria                      regulation is appropriate and necessary;                EGUs. That argument is unpersuasive as
                                                  [including the 1-in-1 million standard]                 that the EPA can base the finding on a                  Congress could have just as easily
                                                  to inform the interpretation of the                     hazard from one HAP), and we explain                    prohibited the EPA from regulating acid
                                                  undefined statutory term ‘hazard to                     above why the consideration of cost                     gas HAP emissions from EGUs if that
                                                  public health.’ ’’), and 748 F.3d at 1242               does not mandate or otherwise support                   was the intent. In addition, the EPA
                                                  (finding that ‘‘[i]n the absence of any                 a change in the agency’s interpretation                 does not believe the commenters’
                                                  limiting text, and considering the                      in the MATS rule, as supplemented by                    interpretation is better than the agency’s
                                                  context (including § 112(n)(1)(B)) and                  the Legal Memorandum.61                                 in light of the overall context of the
                                                  purpose of the CAA, the EPA reasonably                                                                          CAA and the purpose of the 1990 CAA
                                                  concluded that it could consider                           60 The commenters’ argument against regulating       amendments. The history of CAA
                                                  environmental harms in making its                       acid gas HAP does not apply to the non-mercury          section 112(n)(1)(A) suggests that it was
                                                                                                          metal HAP risk assessment because that assessment
                                                  ‘appropriate and necessary’                             found a hazard to public health, and commenters
                                                                                                                                                                  included due to uncertainty about
                                                  determination.’’). The Michigan                         agreed that hazards to public health form a valid       whether the Acid Rain Program in Title
                                                  decision indirectly confirms that                       basis for the appropriate finding. For this reason,     IV and other CAA programs would
                                                  environmental harms are a valid basis                   the commenters instead attempt to reargue issues        sufficiently reduce HAP emissions from
                                                                                                          raised and responded to in the MATS rule and the
                                                  for the finding because it is CAA section               agency’s response to petitions for reconsideration.     EGUs and Congress’ interest in better
                                                  112(n)(1)(B) that the Supreme Court                     See 80 FR 24218 (April 30, 2015) (providing notice      understanding the impact of such
                                                  cites as the context that demonstrates                  of the document titled ‘‘Denials of Petitions for       reductions on risk before authorizing
                                                  costs are relevant to the appropriate                   Reconsideration of Certain Issues: MATS and
                                                                                                          Utility NSPS’’, March 2015. Docket ID No. EPA–
                                                  finding. The Michigan decision noted                    HQ–OAR–2009–0234–20493). Specifically, the
                                                                                                                                                                  to regulate). The commenters have not shown in
                                                  that the EPA used CAA section                                                                                   any way how a consideration of cost necessarily
                                                                                                          commenters cited data submitted after the final
                                                                                                                                                                  implicates the actual development of the specific
                                                  112(n)(1)(B) to justify (in part) the                   MATS rule was issued as supporting their
                                                                                                                                                                  risks finding in the MATS record, and the agency
                                                  consideration of environmental harms                    conclusion that non-mercury metal HAP do not            explained in the Legal Memorandum that cost plays
                                                                                                          pose a significant risk. The EPA responded to the
                                                  in support of the appropriate finding so                petitions in the reconsideration denials document,
                                                                                                                                                                  no role in those analyses. See Legal Memorandum
                                                  it was unreasonable in the majority’s                                                                           at 10–11. Instead, cost is a factor only if the agency
                                                                                                          and certain commenters are currently challenging        has first concluded that HAP emissions from EGUs
                                                  view to ignore costs, which were also a                 the agency’s denial of that petition for                pose a hazard to public health or the environment
                                                  required consideration under that                       reconsideration in the D.C. Circuit Court. For these    that will not be addressed through imposition of the
                                                  provision. Michigan, 135 S. Ct. at 2708.                reasons, the specific arguments challenging the         other requirements of the act. Id. For these reasons,
                                                                                                          sufficiency of the finding are outside the scope of     neither the requirement to consider cost nor issues
                                                  It is unreasonable to conclude based on                 this action and they require no additional response.    related to the manner in which the EPA
                                                  the Michigan decision that the statute                     61 Though some commenters acknowledged that
                                                                                                                                                                  incorporated cost into the appropriate and
                                                  requires a consideration of cost and                    the findings from the lower court were not              necessary finding, has any impact on the health and
                                                  precludes in any way a consideration of                 disturbed, they appear to ignore the fact that the      environmental findings, and commenters’
                                                                                                          White Stallion court unanimously found that the         challenges are thus beyond the scope of this
                                                  environmental impacts. Id. (‘‘Chevron                   hazards to public health from mercury emissions         rulemaking.
                                                  allows agencies to choose among                         alone supported the appropriate finding. 748 F.3d          62 The commenters appear to assume that the EPA
                                                  reasonable interpretations of a statute; it             at 1245. The commenters’ attempt to use the limited     was concerned only with the volume of acid gas
                                                  does not license interpretive                           nature of the White Stallion decision (i.e., find the   HAP emissions from EGUs. In fact, the EPA
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                                                  gerrymandering under which an agency                    determination sufficiently supported by the             determined that EGUs emitted almost half of all
                                                                                                          mercury health risks alone) as a justification for      U.S. anthropogenic emissions of mercury, and more
                                                  keeps parts of statutory context it likes               rearguing the merits of the other technical findings    than half of all U.S. anthropogenic emissions of
                                                  while throwing away parts it does                       the EPA cited in support of the conclusion that         selenium, hydrogen chloride, hydrogen fluoride,
                                                  not.’’).                                                regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs is                and arsenic, along with significant volumes of other
                                                     Commenters note that the White                       appropriate and necessary (e.g., the non-mercury        HAP such as nickel. The agency maintains it would
                                                                                                          metal HAP related health findings, the mercury-         be unreasonable not to at least consider the
                                                  Stallion court specifically declined to                 related environmental findings, the acid gas HAP-       significant contribution of HAP emissions from
                                                  determine ‘‘whether environmental                       related environmental findings, and the finding that    EGUs in light of the statutory goals as discussed in
                                                  effects alone would allow the EPA to                    the volume of HAP from EGUs support the decision        the MATS record and the Legal Memorandum.



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                                                  24450               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  regulation of HAP emissions from EGUs                   EPA considered and rejected the                       standards themselves, as part of the
                                                  under CAA section 112. The Acid Rain                    establishment of a CAA section                        proposed action. The final MATS
                                                  Program required significant reductions                 112(d)(4) standard in the MATS                        standards were supported by an
                                                  in EGU SO2 emissions and, as explained                  rulemaking. In the proposed MATS rule,                extensive administrative record and
                                                  in the MATS record, other acid gases                    the EPA stated its basis for declining to             based on available control technologies
                                                  (e.g., hydrogen chloride and hydrogen                   establish a CAA section 112(d)(4)                     and other practices already used by the
                                                  fluoride) are removed from flue gas                     standard, which included concern over                 better-controlled and lower-emitting
                                                  more easily than SO2 such that control                  the combination of EGU acid gases with                EGUs, and the EPA previously
                                                  of that pollutant could potentially                     other acid gases emitted from other                   concluded that the standards are
                                                  address the acid gas HAP emissions,                     sources, and the agency requested data                achievable and reduce hazards to public
                                                  and to a lesser extent mercury and non-                 that would support the establishment of               health and the environment from HAP
                                                  mercury metal HAP emissions. In fact,                   such standard. The commenters on the                  emitted by EGUs. 76 FR 24976 (MATS
                                                  as the record reflects, the Acid Rain                   MATS rule objected to the                             proposal); 77 FR 9304 (MATS final).
                                                  Program led to the installation of far                  determination but provided no data to                 Further, the public had ample
                                                  fewer controls than estimated at a cost                 support their position. The agency’s                  opportunity to comment on all aspects
                                                  that was considerably below estimates                   decision was challenged in White                      of the CAA section 112(d) standards, the
                                                  at the time of promulgation. As a result                Stallion, and the D.C. Circuit                        RIA, and the appropriate and necessary
                                                  the co-benefit HAP reductions                           unanimously rejected those challenges.                finding beyond the consideration of
                                                  attributable to the Acid Rain Program                   White Stallion, 748 F.3d at 1248. While               cost; and the EPA responded to all of
                                                  and other CAA programs were limited.                    the commenters again renew their                      the significant comments.63
                                                  The EPA believes adopting the                           arguments, they still have not provided                  The Supreme Court’s decision in
                                                  commenters’ interpretation that the                     the information that the agency                       Michigan neither called into question
                                                  agency must ignore the volume of HAP                    indicated in the MATS proposal (in May                nor reversed the portions of the D.C.
                                                  from EGUs would potentially                             2011) was necessary to establish a CAA                Circuit Court’s opinion unanimously
                                                  undermine one of the purposes of CAA                    section 112(d)(4) standard for acid gas               rejecting all other challenges to the
                                                  section 112, and we therefore decline to                HAP from EGUs with their comments                     appropriate and necessary interpretation
                                                  adopt that interpretation in the absence                on the cost proposal.                                 and finding and the HAP emission
                                                  of express statutory support. For all                                                                         standards that the EPA promulgated in
                                                                                                          D. Comments on Topics That Are                        the final MATS rule. Industry, states,
                                                  these reasons, we maintain our position
                                                                                                          Beyond the Limited Scope of the                       environmental organizations, and public
                                                  from the MATS rule that the volume of
                                                                                                          Supplemental Finding                                  health organizations challenged many
                                                  HAP emissions from EGUs, including
                                                  acid gas HAP emissions, may form the                      Because of the limited nature of the                aspects of the EPA’s appropriate and
                                                  basis for finding that HAP emissions                    Supreme Court’s remand, the EPA only                  necessary finding and the MATS
                                                  from EGUs pose a hazard to public                       solicited comments on its consideration               emissions standards, including: (1) The
                                                  health and the environment that is                      of cost in its proposal reaffirming the               EPA’s reliance on the CAA section
                                                  appropriate to regulate. See e.g. Legal                 appropriate determination. We                         112(c)(9) delisting criteria for
                                                  Memorandum at 10–11.                                    explained that analyses presented in the              determining the level of risk worth
                                                     The EPA also disagrees with                          proposed notice and in the                            regulating; (2) the EPA’s decision not to
                                                  commenters’ assertion that the acid gas                 accompanying Legal Memorandum did                     consider cost in making the appropriate
                                                  HAP that are emitted from EGUs do not                   not affect or alter other aspects of the              and necessary determination and listing
                                                  warrant regulation under CAA section                    appropriate and necessary interpretation              of EGUs; (3) the EPA’s use of identified
                                                  112. CAA Section 112(b) identifies the                  or finding or the CAA section 112(d)                  environmental harms as a basis for
                                                  HAP that Congress determined warrant                    emission standards promulgated in                     finding it appropriate and necessary to
                                                  regulation under CAA section 112.                       MATS. The EPA also clearly explained                  regulate HAP emissions from EGUs; (4)
                                                  Congress also provided a mechanism to                   that the analyses in the proposed                     the EPA’s consideration of the
                                                  remove pollutants from the CAA section                  supplemental finding did not, in any                  cumulative impacts of HAP emissions
                                                  112(b) list. See CAA section 112(b)(3). If              way, alter the RIA prepared for the final             from EGUs and other sources in
                                                  such HAP are not harmful to human                       MATS.                                                 determining whether EGUs pose a
                                                  health or the environment as the                          Therefore, we clearly stated that we                hazard to public health or the
                                                  commenters contend, they may petition                   would not accept comment on the                       environment; (5) the EPA’s regulation of
                                                  the Administrator to remove those                       scientific or technical aspects of the                EGUs pursuant to CAA section 112(d)
                                                  pollutants from the CAA section 112(b)                  prior findings or the analyses                        after adding EGUs to the CAA section
                                                  list. If the EPA grants such a petition,                supporting our conclusions regarding                  112(c) list pursuant to the appropriate
                                                  the agency would not be required to                     the hazards to public health and                      and necessary finding; (6) the EPA’s
                                                  regulate such emissions from EGUs or                    environmental benefits from HAP                       determination that all HAP from EGUs
                                                  any other sources. Absent such an                       emissions from EGUs. These findings                   should be regulated; (7) the EPA’s
                                                  action, the EPA must regulate all HAP                   include that mercury and other HAP                    technical basis for concluding that EGUs
                                                  on the CAA section 112(b) list. See e.g.,               emissions pose significant hazards to                 pose a hazard to public health or the
                                                  Sierra Club v. EPA, 479 F.3d 875, 883                   public health and the environment, that               environment; (8) the EPA’s
                                                  (D.C. Cir. 2007); Nat’l Lime Ass’n v.                   EGUs are the largest emitter of many                  determination to regulate all EGUs as
                                                  EPA, 233 F.3d 625, 634 (D.C. Cir. 2000).                HAP, that effective control strategies for            defined in CAA section 112(a)(8) in the
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                                                     Finally, the agency also does not agree              HAP emissions are available, and that                 same manner whether or not the
                                                  that it may establish a standard under                  HAP hazards remain after
                                                  CAA section 112(d)(4), which allows the                 implementation of other CAA                             63 77 FR 3919–62; 77 FR 9386–9423; U.S. EPA.

                                                  agency to factor health thresholds into                 provisions.                                           2011. EPA’s Responses to Public Comments on
                                                  its decisions on standards in cases                       The EPA did not open for comment or                 EPA’s National Emission Standards for Hazardous
                                                                                                                                                                Air Pollutants from Coal- and Oil-Fired Electric
                                                  where health thresholds have been                       propose to revise any other aspects of                Utility Steam Generating Units. December 2011.
                                                  established for pollutants, simply based                the appropriate and necessary                         Volumes 1 and 2. Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–
                                                  on cost and the Michigan decision. The                  interpretation or finding, or the MATS                2009–0234–20126.



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          24451

                                                  individual units are located at major or                A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory                  G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
                                                  area sources of HAP; (9) the EPA’s                      Planning and Review and Executive                     Children From Environmental Health
                                                  emissions standards for mercury and                     Order 13563: Improving Regulation and                 Risks and Safety Risks
                                                  acid gas HAP, including the EPA’s                       Regulatory Review                                       The EPA interprets Executive Order
                                                  decision not to set health-based                                                                              13045 as applying only to those
                                                  emission standards for acid gas HAP;                      This action is a significant regulatory
                                                                                                                                                                regulatory actions that concern
                                                  (10) the EPA’s use of certified data                    action that was submitted to OMB for                  environmental health or safety risks that
                                                  submitted by regulated parties; (11) the                review because it ‘‘raises novel legal or             the EPA has reason to believe may
                                                  EPA’s denial of a delisting petition filed              policy issues arising out of legal                    disproportionately affect children, per
                                                  by an industry trade group; (12) the                    mandates.’’ Any changes made in                       the definition of ‘‘covered regulatory
                                                  EPA’s decision not to subcategorize a                   response to OMB recommendations                       action’’ in section 2–202 of the
                                                  certain type of EGU; and (13) the EPA’s                 have been documented in the docket.                   Executive Order. This action is not
                                                  decision to allow EGUs to average HAP                   The EPA does not project any                          subject to Executive Order 13045
                                                  emissions among certain EGUs. The                       incremental costs or benefits associated              because it does not concern an
                                                  D.C. Circuit Court denied all challenges                with this supplemental finding because                environmental health risk or safety risk.
                                                  to the CAA section 112(n)(1)(A)                         this action does not impose standards or
                                                  appropriate and necessary finding and                   other requirements on affected sources.               H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
                                                  to the CAA section 112(d) MATS rule,                                                                          Concerning Regulations That
                                                  and, with the exception of the cost issue               B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)                      Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
                                                  relevant to the CAA section 112(n)(1)(A)                                                                      Distribution, or Use
                                                                                                            This action does not impose an
                                                  finding, all the challenges were                                                                                This action is not a ‘‘significant
                                                                                                          information collection burden under the
                                                  unanimously rejected. For that reason,                                                                        energy action’’ because it is not likely to
                                                  the EPA clearly explained in the                        PRA. There are no information
                                                                                                          collection requirements in this action.               have a significant adverse effect on the
                                                  proposed supplemental finding that it                                                                         supply, distribution, or use of energy.
                                                  was not soliciting comment nor                          C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)                   This action is not anticipated to have
                                                  revisiting, in any way, those final                                                                           notable impacts on emissions, costs, or
                                                  actions that were unanimously upheld                       I certify that this action will not have           energy supply decisions for the affected
                                                  in White Stallion Energy Center v. EPA,                 a significant economic impact on a                    electric utility industry as this action
                                                  748 F.3d 1222 (April 15, 2014). 80 FR                   substantial number of small entities                  does not impose standards or other
                                                  75028–29.                                               under the RFA. This action will not                   requirements on affected sources.
                                                     The EPA further clarified that                       impose any requirements on small
                                                  reference or citation to any final                      entities. The EPA does not project any                I. National Technology Transfer and
                                                  decision, interpretation, or conclusion                 incremental costs or benefits associated              Advancement Act (NTTAA)
                                                  in the MATS record does not constitute                  with this supplemental finding because                   This action does not involve technical
                                                  a re-opening of the issue or an invitation              this action does not impose standards or              standards.
                                                  to comment on the underlying decision                   other requirements on affected sources.
                                                  in which the EPA considered some cost                                                                         J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
                                                  of MATS (e.g., in CAA section 112(d)                    D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                       Actions To Address Environmental
                                                  beyond-the-floor analyses either                        (UMRA)                                                Justice in Minority Populations and
                                                  establishing or declining to establish a                                                                      Low-Income Populations
                                                  standard more stringent than the MACT                      This action does not contain any                      The EPA believes the human health or
                                                  floor).                                                 unfunded mandate as described in                      environmental risk addressed by this
                                                     Despite the very clear direction that                UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does                    action will not have potential
                                                  the EPA provided in the proposal and                    not significantly or uniquely affect small            disproportionately high and adverse
                                                  solicitation, numerous commenters                       governments. The action imposes no                    human health or environmental effects
                                                  submitted comments that were beyond                     enforceable duty on any state, local, or              on minority, low-income, or indigenous
                                                  the limited scope identified in the                     tribal governments or the private sector.             populations because it is limited in
                                                  proposed supplemental finding. In                                                                             scope and only considers the cost of
                                                                                                          E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
                                                  many cases, the submissions contained                                                                         whether it is appropriate to regulate
                                                  comments on issues that the EPA had                       This action does not have federalism                HAP emissions from EGUs.
                                                  considered in Petitions for                             implications. It will not have substantial
                                                  Reconsideration (80 FR 24218) or that                                                                         K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
                                                                                                          direct effects on the states, on the
                                                  had been upheld in White Stallion and                   relationship between the national                       This action is subject to the CRA, and
                                                  not disturbed by the Supreme Court’s                    government and the states, or on the                  the EPA will submit a rule report to
                                                  decision in Michigan. Those comments                    distribution of power and                             each House of the Congress and to the
                                                  are noted in Section 5.0 of the Response                responsibilities among the various                    Comptroller General of the United
                                                  to Comments document. However, the                      levels of government.                                 States. This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’
                                                  EPA has no obligation to respond to                                                                           as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
                                                  comments beyond the scope of the                        F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
                                                                                                                                                                L. Determination Under CAA Section
                                                  rulemaking and the EPA has not                          and Coordination With Indian Tribal
                                                                                                                                                                307(d)
                                                  provided extensive responses to such                    Governments
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                                                  comments.                                                                                                        Pursuant to CAA section 307(d)(1)(V),
                                                                                                             This action does not have tribal                   the Administrator determines that this
                                                  V. Statutory and Executive Order                        implications as specified in Executive                action is subject to provisions of section
                                                  Reviews                                                 Order 13175. It would neither impose                  307(d). Section 307(d) establishes
                                                    Additional information about these                    substantial direct compliance costs on                procedural requirements specific to
                                                  statues and Executive Orders can be                     tribal governments, nor preempt Tribal                rulemaking under the CAA. CAA
                                                  found at https://www.epa.gov/laws-                      law. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does                 section 307(d)(1)(V) provides that the
                                                  regulations/laws-and-executive-orders.                  not apply to this action.                             provisions of CAA section 307(d) apply


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                                                  24452               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 79 / Monday, April 25, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  to ‘‘such other actions as the                          112, 301, 302, and 307(d)(1) of the CAA                 Dated: April 14, 2016.
                                                  Administrator may determine.’’                          as amended (42 U.S.C. 7412, 7601, 7602,               Gina McCarthy,
                                                  VI. Statutory Authority                                 7607(d)(1)). This action is also subject to           Administrator.
                                                                                                          section 307(d) of the CAA (42 U.S.C.                  [FR Doc. 2016–09429 Filed 4–22–16; 8:45 am]
                                                    The statutory authority for this                      7607(d)).                                             BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
                                                  proposed action is provided by sections
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Document Created: 2016-04-23 01:38:28
Document Modified: 2016-04-23 01:38:28
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal supplemental finding.
DatesThis final supplemental finding is effective on April 25, 2016.
ContactDr. Nick Hutson, Energy Strategies Group, Sector Policies and Programs Division (D243-01), U.S. EPA, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711; telephone number (919) 541-2968,
FR Citation81 FR 24419 
RIN Number2060-AS76

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