NOxSIP_clean-final_SS

NOxSIP_clean-final_SS.docx

NOX Budget Trading Program to Reduce the Regional Transport of Ozone (Renewal)

OMB: 2060-0445

Document [docx]
Download: docx | pdf


INFORMATION COLLECTION REQUEST RENEWAL

FOR THE NOx BUDGET TRADING PROGRAM TO REDUCE THE REGIONAL TRANSPORT OF OZONE


SUPPORTING STATEMENT


EPA ICR No. 1857.07 OMB Control No. 2060-0445


1. IDENTIFICATION OF THE INFORMATION COLLECTION


1(a) Background


This Information Collection Request (ICR) addresses the labor hour burden and costs of State reporting requirements contained in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) rule to control regional transport of ozone season NOx emissions contributing to exceedances of the Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) in the eastern United States, which was published on October 27, 1998 (63 FR 57350). This rule is known informally as the NOx SIP Call. These provisions are incorporated in 40 CFR 51.121 and 51.122. The reporting requirements of this rule under §51.122 are imposed directly on the States, not on industry. However, in order to meet the requirements of this rule, States will of necessity have to impose requirements on industry for installation of continuous emission monitors and for recordkeeping and reporting. Therefore, there will be an indirect record keeping and reporting burden on industry as a result of this rule, and this ICR estimates those burden hours and costs incurred by industry.


The focus of this ICR is the monitoring and reporting burden for States and sources that remain affected by the NOx SIP Call and that are not subject to subsequent rulemaking and addressed in other ICRs. The rule originally encouraged an emissions trading program for fossil fuel-fired NOx sources serving electrical generators (EGUs) with a nameplate capacity greater than 25 MW or boilers, combustion turbines, or combined cycle units with maximum design heat input greater than 250 mm BTU/hr. Under the NOx SIP Call, many States elected to meet much of the required emission reductions through the NOx Budget Trading Program (NBP), a federally administered emissions trading program. Most of the units that originally participated in the NBP subsequently participated in an expanded emissions trading program established in conjunction with the Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR), and now participate in the Cross State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR) emissions trading programs. The burdens and costs for those units are covered under EPA ICR #2391.03, OMB Control Number 2060-0667. The only units still subject to this ICR are certain industrial combustion sources and EGUs that participated in the NBP, and in some cases also the CAIR NOX Ozone Season Trading Program, but are not participating in CSAPR.


1(b) Information to be Collected


To meet the emissions monitoring recordkeeping and reporting requirements, the affected units are required to: (1) submit a monitoring plan and certification of monitors; (2) monitor and record hourly pollutant and flow monitor data; and (3) submit electronic quarterly reports of their emissions data to EPA.


In addition, while many sources have already installed necessary emissions monitoring equipment due to requirements under other regulations, some sources will need to either install new monitors or upgrade existing monitors. Capital costs also usually include the cost of initial certification of new or upgraded monitors as part of start-up costs.


The respondent reporting burden for the collection of information under the NOx SIP Call is estimated to be 144,741 hours each year for the years 2017 through 2019. The burden to EPA is estimated to be 1,840 hours in each year for the years 2017 through 2019.


1(c) Terms of Clearance


Terms of Clearance for the previous ICR renewal: None.


2. NEED FOR AND USE OF THE COLLECTION


This section describes EPA's need for the information collections described above and the legal authority for conducting collections. The users of collected information are also described.


2(a) Need/Authority for the Collection


The State reporting requirements included in the NOx SIP Call are necessary for EPA to carry out properly its evaluation of each State's compliance with its ozone season NOx emissions budget. The legal authority for the reporting requirements resides in Sections 110(a) and 301(a) of the Clean Air Act. Specifically, the requirement in Section 110(a)(2)(D) that SIPs include "adequate provisions" to mitigate certain transport effects on other States implicitly authorizes emissions inventory reporting to EPA, as needed and appropriate to verify that a State is in fact meeting its NOx budget. Section 110(a)(2)(F) provides additional authority for requiring that SIP call submissions include provisions for emissions reporting by sources to a State, correlation of source information by the State, and steps by the State to make the correlated information available to the public. Section 110(a)(2)(K), in turn, requires a State to submit to EPA as requested data related to modeling the effect of NOx and other emissions on ambient air quality. The reported emissions inventory data will be used by EPA in air quality modeling to assess the effectiveness of the transport rulemaking's regional strategy. Finally, Section 301(a) grants EPA broad authority to prescribe such regulations as are necessary to carry out its functions under the Clean Air Act.


2(b) Practical Utility/Users of the Data


The EPA believes it is essential that compliance with the regional control strategy be verified. Tracking emissions is the principal mechanism to ensure compliance with the budget and to assure the downwind affected States and EPA that the ozone transport problem is being mitigated.


If tracking and periodic reports indicate that a State is not implementing all of its NOx control measures or is off track to meet its statewide budget, EPA will work with the State to determine the reasons for noncompliance and what course of remedial action is needed. The EPA will expect the State to submit a plan showing what steps it will take to correct the problems. Noncompliance with the NOx transport SIP may lead EPA to make a finding of failure to implement the SIP and potentially to implement sanctions, if the State does not take corrective action within a specified time period.


The information collected by the industry sources subject to this ICR provides necessary input data to the State emission inventory needed for tracking regional control strategy compliance.


3. NONDUPLICATION, CONSULTATIONS, AND OTHER COLLECTION CRITERIA


This section describes: (1) efforts by EPA to learn whether the information requested is available from other sources; (2) consultations with respondents and data users to plan collections, monitor their usefulness, and minimize the collection burden; (3) effects of less frequent collections; and (4) justification for deviations from OMB's general guidelines.


3(a) Non-duplication


To minimize the reporting burden on State agencies, the reporting requirements for 40 CFR 51.122 are based on existing annual and periodic emission inventory reporting requirements as much as possible. In large part, the emission inventory requirements under the NOx SIP Call are now met through the comparable requirements associated with CSAPR, and the direct State burdens associated with inventory reporting for the regional control program are now included in the CSAPR ICR. The only burdens remaining under this ICR reflect emissions reporting under the NOx SIP Call for sources not covered under CSAPR that are part of the NOx SIP Call control strategy.


Almost all information requested from respondents under this ICR renewal is not available from other sources. Where EPA needs information that has already been submitted, EPA is simply requiring the retransmission of stored electronic data.


3(b) Public Notice Required Prior to ICR Submission to OMB


For the renewal ICR, a public notice was published in the Federal Register on June 29, 2017 on availability of the draft supporting statement for the ICR renewal. A 60-day comment period for public comments was provided in the notice. EPA received no comments in response to the public notice that was published in the Federal Register (see Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2006-0947).



3(c) Consultations


No recent consultations were used for this specific ICR however EPA has held numerous consultations during the development of the NBP, CAIR, and CSAPR. The burdens accounted for under this renewal ICR reflect that most of the reporting burden under the NOx SIP Call is now addressed under CSAPR.


For the initial rule development, on January 13, 1998, EPA held a one-day pre-proposal workshop with the States to discuss tracking issues. The objective of the workshop was to determine what type and frequency of inventory reporting is feasible for the different source sectors (power generating sources, other point sources, area sources, non-road mobile, and highway mobile sources), to identify key reporting issues related to each sector, and to develop recommendations on reporting requirements to ensure compliance with the NOx budgets. The goal was to share information and ideas rather than to reach consensus. A summary of the meeting is contained in the docket (docket no. A-96-56, item V-B-18) for the NOx SIP Call rulemaking. The reporting requirements included in 40 CFR 51.122 are based, in part, on the suggestions of participants in the workshop.


The recordkeeping and reporting requirements in §51.122 were included in the supplemental proposal (63 FR 25902, May 11, 1998) on which public comments were solicited. Comments received were reviewed and where appropriate were incorporated into the rule requirements as currently given in 40 CFR 51.122.


Finally, as part of updating the ICR for the Acid Rain Program (Part 75) monitoring requirements, EPA also contacted various affected parties to gather information on CEM capital costs, CEM operation and maintenance costs, fuel meter capital costs, and CEM/fuel meter testing costs. That information has been used in this ICR where appropriate.


3(d) Effects of Less Frequent Collection


If this information collection were not carried out annually for sources being controlled to meet the NOx budgets, EPA would not be able to verify that NOx emission reductions necessary to meet each State's NOx emission budget were being achieved.


Quarterly collection of emissions data for the affected units allows the opportunity to check data for errors and provide rapid feedback on needed adjustments to data collection systems, and thereby promoted accurate and reliable emissions data. For this same reason, existing Federal and State emission monitoring programs often require quarterly reporting, or in some cases, monthly. Less frequent collection, such as semi-annually or annually, would increase the amount of preparation and review time at the end of the reporting period both for regulated sources and for EPA. This would slow down the process for the verification of compliance.


As an option for this program, EPA will allow for ozone season reporting instead of quarterly reports for the entire calendar year. Under this option, units would only be required to submit two reports per year (covering the second and third calendar quarters). However, because the Agency believes that full-year quarterly reporting will be beneficial for both the source and the Agency, this ICR assumes most units will elect to comply with the standard quarterly reporting requirement.


3(e) General Guidelines


This ICR does not violate any of OMB's guidelines for information collections.


3(f) Confidentiality


As required by Section 114 of the Clean Air Act, estimates or measurements of emissions must be treated as non-confidential. Under Agency procedures, data items relating to the computation of emissions may be identified as sensitive by a State and are then treated as "State-sensitive" by EPA. The potentially State-sensitive items include the following: process rate, boiler design capacity, emission estimation codes, percent space heat, operating rate, and maximum operation rate/hour. Where Federal and State requirements are inconsistent, EPA Regional Office should be consulted for final reconciliation.


3(g) Sensitive Questions


Not applicable. This information collection does not ask any questions concerning sexual behavior or attitudes, religious beliefs, or other matters usually considered private.



4. THE RESPONDENTS AND THE INFORMATION REQUESTED


This section lists the major categories of businesses that formerly participated in the NOx Budget Trading Program and that continue to have reporting obligations associated with the NOx SIP Call that are not duplicated under other rules, the data items requested from program participants, and the activities in which the participants must engage to assemble or submit the required data items.


4(a) Respondents/SIC Codes


This ICR estimates the burden for affected industry sources to monitor NOx mass emissions so that states and EPA can track compliance with state emission budgets and NOx control measures. Sources may report data directly to EPA if a source is required to meet the monitoring and reporting requirements of Subpart H of Part 75. Electric utility combustion sources are generally classified as either SIC 4911 - Electric Services, or 4931 - Electric and Other Services Combined [NAICS 221112 Electric Power Distribution]. Large industrial combustion sources (e.g., boilers, turbines, and internal combustion engines) are expected to fall under SIC codes for the manufacturing sector, i.e., SIC Major Groups 29-40 [NAICS 31-33 Manufacturing].


4(b) Information Requested


This section describes the industry reporting requirements needed to enable state agencies to meet their reporting and recordkeeping requirements in §51.122. States must report NOx emissions data as specified in 40 CFR §51.122.


  1. Data Items, Including Recordkeeping Requirements


The affected units will continue to monitor NOx mass emissions, and record and report emissions data using the requirements of 40 CFR Part 75. The emissions monitoring requirements specify that affected sources must: (1) submit a monitoring plan for each affected unit at a source; (2) submit data for certification of each monitor; and (3) record hourly operational, pollutant monitor, and flow monitor data for each affected unit and submit quarterly reports of their emissions data to EPA. Appendices A and B to the Acid Rain Program ICR (EPA ICR # 1633.16) contain a list of the data items required by the recordkeeping and reporting provisions of Part 75.


Respondents are required by 40 CFR 75.64 to submit the quarterly NOx mass emissions data electronically, by direct electronic submission to EPA, and must also include a certification statement by the designated representative of the unit. All monitoring records are to be kept for three years, with one possible exception under a voluntary option for fuel flowmeter calibration testing.


(ii) Respondent Activities


The affected units will (1) complete and submit appropriate monitoring plan forms for each affected source and each affected unit at a source; (2) conduct tests to certify the operation of monitors and submit test results to EPA; (3) record hourly emissions data (this activity generally is performed electronically); (4) conduct operation and maintenance activities associated with the monitoring, including quality assurance activities; (5) assure data quality, prepare quarterly reports of emissions data and submit these reports to EPA; and (6) respond to error messages generated by EPA. In addition, respondents will have to purchase the necessary monitoring hardware and purchase the electronic data reporting software (or software upgrades).



5. THE INFORMATION COLLECTED -- AGENCY ACTIVITIES, COLLECTION METHODOLOGY, AND INFORMATION MANAGEMENT

The first part of this section describes Agency (EPA) activities related to the acquisition, analysis, storage, and distribution of the information collected from sources that are required to submit monitoring and test data. The second part describes the information management techniques employed to increase the efficiency of collections. The third part discusses the burden or benefits of the collection activities described in this ICR to small entities. The last part outlines the schedule for collecting information.


5(a) Agency Activities


The tasks that will be performed by EPA include processing, reviewing, and evaluating emissions data reports submitted by the affected units, and conducting appropriate audit activities to verify the information provided.


5(b) Collection Methodology and Management


Several computer systems and associated databases have been developed to record quarterly emissions monitoring data under Part 75. The systems and databases are designed to coordinate the information for easy access and use by the Agency, States, regulated community, and the public.


The EPA also has established a Clean Air Markets Home Page on the internet, which includes detailed information collected from emissions reports. The Air Market Programs Data (AMPD) section of the EPA's Clean Air Markets Home Page on the internet includes detailed information collected from emissions reports, and facility or source data. Those without access to the Internet may use the Clean Air Markets Hotline to request information.


5(c) Small Entity Flexibility


The rulemaking, which EPA published by notice in 63 FR 57356 (October 8, 1998), would simply require States to develop, adopt, and submit SIP revisions. Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), in the rulemaking, the Administrator certified that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.


In addition, under Part 75, there are options for reduced monitoring that may assist smaller sources. The low mass emissions exception (40 CFR 75.19), allows optional reduced monitoring, quality assurance, and reporting requirements for units that combust natural gas and/or fuel oil and that emit no more than 100 tons of NOx annually (or, at the source's election, 50 tons per ozone season) and that calculate no more than the same amount based on specified procedures for calculating and reporting emissions. Qualifying sources are not required to keep monitoring equipment installed on (or conduct fuel sampling for) low mass emissions units, nor are they required to perform quality assurance or quality control tests. Moreover, emissions reporting requirements are significantly simplified for these units.


Even if a gas- or oil-fired unit does not qualify for the "low mass emissions unit" exception, the monitoring provisions of Part 75 do allow for the use of alternative methods to determine emissions. As discussed in the Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) of the final Acid Rain Implementation Regulations (October 19, 1992), smaller utilities are more likely to be dependent on these oil- and gas-fired units, especially very small utilities (see p. 5–14 of that RIA document).


5(d) Collection Schedule


Affected units conduct ongoing monitoring, with quarterly reporting.


6. ESTIMATING THE BURDEN AND COST OF COLLECTIONS


6(a) Determining Wage Rates


In estimating labor costs for industry, EPA used the following amounts: $112.22 per hour for managers and $77.66 per hour for technicians. These rates were updated from the previous NBP ICR rates based on the Current Employment Cost Index, June 2017 (https://www.bls.gov/home.htm).


Federal Agency labor rates were assumed to be $52.16 per hour. This labor rate was derived from the Federal government's 2017 U.S. Office of Personnel Management General Schedule "Salary Table 2017-GS" (https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/salaries-wages/salary-tables/pdf/2017/GS.pdf)using the factors in the following table.


Table 6-1: Determination of Federal Wage Rates


Annual Salary of Technical Staff, GS 11, Step 3


$55,817

Annual Cost of Supervisory Staff, GS 13, Step 3

$79,556


Factor (1/11)

0.09


 


$7,160

Annual Cost of Support Staff, GS 6, Step 6

$37,124


Factor (1/8)

0.13




$4,826

Annual Applicable Salary of Permit Staff


$67,803

Benefits

1.6


Total Cost per FTE


$108,489

Total Hourly Cost (total per FTE dividend divided by 2,080 hours per year)


$52.16



6(b) Estimating Respondent Burden for Affected NBP Units


This section estimates the paperwork burden and cost of submitting monitoring plans, obtaining certification of each monitoring system, conducting monitor quality assurance activities, and recording and reporting data from CEM systems (or approved alternatives), and other ancillary activities (such as responding to EPA generated error messages, or responding to EPA audits). This applies to the affected units that continue to monitor in accordance with Part 75 under the NOx SIP Call.


To estimate the burden and/or cost, EPA has relied on the estimates included in the most recent Acid Rain Program ICR (OMB Control Number 2060-0258) renewal for labor hour estimates of each activity. In addition, the hourly labor rates for managerial, technical, and clerical staff reflect the 2012 labor rates used in the previous ICR adjusted to 2017 dollars consistent with Agency ICR guidance.


Affected sources are required to complete and submit a monitoring plan and obtain certification of each monitor (on standard forms) for each affected unit at the source. These plans and certifications, which are only submitted once, have already been submitted for most units. Sources, however, may need to submit revised plans or even recertify if they change some aspect of their existing plan. New units will still need to submit plans and certifications for the first time. In addition, all affected units are required to submit quarterly reports of their emissions data to EPA. These reports include much of the basic monitoring plan data as well.


To develop this renewal ICR, EPA relied primarily on the extensive efforts to identify and calculate burdens for the prior two ICR renewals and the CAIR ICR (OMB Control Number 2060-0570).





Estimating Respondent Burden


The primary tasks performed by owners and operators of affected units are: (1) reviewing the regulations, forms and instructions; (2) responding to EPA generated error messages and audits; (3) reprogramming a DAHS and debugging the software; (4) completing and submitting monitoring plans for each unit at the source; (5) performing appropriate tests and providing test results to certify each monitor; (6) performing quality assurance testing and maintenance upon monitors; (7) assuring the quality of emissions data, preparing quarterly reports of emissions data, and submitting reports to EPA; and (8) fuel sampling.


(i) Regulatory Review.


The estimate for time to review instructions and requirements remains consistent with the labor estimates used in previous ICRs (four manager hours and four technician hours) where no substantial changes have been made to the Rule. EPA continues to make available online fully searchable versions of the Part 75 Emissions Monitoring Policy Manual and the Emissions Collection and Monitoring Plan System (ECMPS) Reporting Instructions and searchable version of Part 75. In addition, EPA in 2005 posted online a text version of its Plain English Guide to Part 75.


(ii) Response to Error Messages/Audits.


The EPA provides feedback to sources so that suspected errors in submissions by sources are noted and corrected. With the use of the ECMPS software, EPA believes that the burdens for this activity have decreased over time. At the same time, however, EPA has increased its audit oversight and expects to conduct a number of electronic and field audits of facilities over the next few years. In particular, EPA anticipates making significant use of electronic audits as a means to provide continuous data quality improvement. This effort will result in increased burdens for respondents.


(iii) DAHS Debugging.


Each source must purchase (or create) and install computer software designed to implement the electronic data reporting formats required under the Acid Rain Program. EPA promulgated revisions to Part 75 in late 2007 to accommodate changes in EPA's data systems that manage the data submitted by respondents. These data system changes were necessary to modernize EPA's data systems and streamline reporting. The costs of the required upgrade were analyzed in a separate ICR that was issued in conjunction with the Part 75 revisions. For the time period of this ICR, 2017-2019, no other changes would require a DAHS upgrade and therefore there are no burden hours for this activity.


(iv) Monitoring Plans.


Consistent with the existing ICR, completing and submitting monitoring plans is estimated to require an average of about 20 hours per unit initially. For existing units, initial monitoring plan submissions will be received prior to the time period covered in this renewal ICR, and, consistent with the existing ICR, EPA does not include burden hours for existing units under this initial monitoring plan development task area during 2017 – 2019. The burden associated with revising the monitoring plan is included in the time for preparing and submitting each quarterly emissions report.


For new units, EPA has used an estimated number of new units as a projection for the average number of new units expected in 2017 – 2019. These units have a separate line item for initial monitoring plan preparation.


(v) Monitor Certification.


For existing units, only re-certifications are included in the estimated activities for 2017 – 2019. The Agency estimates a labor burden of 50 hours and a contractor cost of $3,400 per respondent. The cost and burden figures exclude the costs and burdens associated with conducting a RATA as part of the recertification process because those costs are incorporated within the annual QA costs for previously certified monitoring systems.


Under Part 75, sources are required to recertify the monitoring systems whenever the source makes a replacement, modification, or change in a certified CEMS or continuous opacity monitoring system that may significantly affect the ability of the system to accurately measure or record the NOx concentration, stack gas volumetric flow rate, NOx emission rate, percent moisture, or to meet the QA and QC requirements. Recertification is also necessary whenever the source makes a replacement, modification, or change to the flue gas handling system or the unit operation that may significantly change the flow or concentration profile. Examples of changes which require recertification include: replacement of the analyzer, change in location or orientation of the sampling probe or site; and complete replacement of an existing CEMS or continuous opacity monitoring system.


For new units, the monitor certification costs are included in the capital/startup costs.


(vi) Quality Assurance.


Quality assurance (QA) testing and maintenance upon monitoring systems is the largest burden item under the monitoring, reporting and recordkeeping requirements. The requirements include daily, quarterly and annual QA requirements, depending on the monitoring approach being used. For reporting units that use flow and NOx CEMS, the Agency has developed a per unit labor burden based primarily on information gathered from affected sources. For units that rely on the excepted methods under both Appendix D and E (i.e., units without CEMS), the burden estimates are reduced further because no CEMS QA is required. For the relatively small number of units that require moisture correction, labor burdens for moisture monitoring QA activities have been added based on information supplied by an affected utility (see Docket A-97-35, Item II-D-94).


(vii) Quarterly Reports.


Tasks performed by utilities in preparing quarterly reports include: (1) assuring the quality of the data; (2) preparing the quarterly report; (3) revising the monitoring plan, if necessary; (4) preparation of hard copy documentation accompanying the quarterly reports; and (5) managerial review. EPA has been improving electronic file transfer procedures over the past few years and has been developing automated tools that allow sources to quality assure their reports. EPA believes these efforts have reduced the average burdens per report over time. In addition, because the program is maturing, the respondents have developed procedures and methods to increase their efficiency with reporting.


Estimating Respondent Costs


Table 6-2 summarizes the annual respondent costs. The following discussion describes how those costs were derived.


(i) Estimating Total Capital and Annual Operations and Maintenance Costs


Capital/start-up costs include the cost of installing required CEMS or alternatives. The Agency developed the capital cost estimates for the CEM and other equipment based on EPA CEM cost models, existing ICRs, and comments from various affected utilities. The cost estimates vary depending on the number and type of monitors that are required. These annualized capital costs are from the Rule to Reduce Interstate Transport of Fine Particulate Matter and Ozone (Clean Air Interstate Rule) EPA ICR #2152.04. The annualized costs ranged from $28,879 for units with a full set of CEMS, to $18,750 for a unit that uses NOx CEMS and Appendix D methods, to $2,250 for units that use both Appendix D and Appendix E methods without any CEMS. There are no capital/start-up costs for LME units. A discussion of how the capital/start-up costs were annualized follows in Section (iii), below.


In addition to capital/start-up costs, respondents incur operation and maintenance costs (exclusive of labor costs) that reflect ongoing costs to a unit. These costs include both contractor costs for the required recertification, diagnostic, and quality assurance (QA) testing, and other direct maintenance-related expenses (e.g., spare parts and calibration gases). The cost estimates used in this renewal ICR are generally the same as the cost estimates from the Rule to Reduce Interstate Transport of Fine Particulate Matter and Ozone (Clean Air Interstate Rule) EPA ICR #2152.04, and have been derived from EPA CEM cost models, existing ICRs, Agency staff experience under the Acid Rain Program, information gathered during development of the 1999 and 2002 Part 75 revisions, and supplemental estimates provided by affected utilities and others related to the various cost items (see, e.g., EPA Air Docket A-97-35, Item II-D-48). The total cost for these operation and maintenance cost items (other than fuel sampling) is estimated at $31,200 for a unit with a full set of CEMS, while units that use alternate methodologies have reduced costs.


Note that testing contractor costs for certification, recertification, and annual RATAs also are presented as other direct costs and are not converted to equivalent source labor hours. This approach is consistent with the common business practice for obtaining outside contractors to conduct certification/recertification tests and annual relative accuracy test audits. For initial certification, the certification test costs are commonly bundled with equipment purchase contracts, according to information provided by a range of CEMS equipment vendors. For RATAs that are conducted either as part of the annual quality assurance requirements or as part of recertification, industry contacts have indicated that RATA testing is usually performed on a fixed price contract basis, except for travel costs that may be billed on an hourly basis beyond the basic contract cost. For annual RATAs, the sources indicated that an annual contract between a testing company and utility is often used. One municipal utility representative indicated that the applicable municipal regulations required that outside contracts be on a flat fee, not hourly, basis.


(ii) Capital/Start-up vs. Operating and Maintenance (O & M) Costs


Capital costs reflect one-time costs for purchase of equipment which will be used over a period of years. Conversely, operating and maintenance costs are those costs which are incurred on an annual or other scheduled basis. For instance, costs associated with quality assurance activities, such as spare parts or contractor costs for work, will be incurred on an annual basis.


(iii) Annualizing Capital Costs


The relevant capital costs for the emissions trading portion of this ICR were annualized at a rate of seven percent (i.e., the annualized capital cost was calculated assuming money to purchase the capital equipment was borrowed at a seven percent annual interest rate). The cost of the loan was amortized over the life of the loan to repay the original borrowed amount plus interest. The result is the annualized capital cost reported. The annualized cost of the necessary capital purchases varies from $2,250 to $ 28,879, per year, per unit, depending on the type of monitoring methodology. The capital costs are from the Rule to Reduce Interstate Transport of Fine Particulate Matter and Ozone (Clean Air Interstate Rule), EPA ICR #2152.02.


(iv) Fuel Sampling


To calculate heat input where the source is using the fuel flowmeter option for an oil or gas-fired unit, the source must obtain gross calorific value (GCV) data from sampling in accordance with Appendix D of Part 75. For purposes of this ICR, it is assumed that the GCV data would be collected as part of standard business operating procedures to assure compliance with contractual specifications. Thus no additional fuel sampling burdens or costs should be incurred. This is consistent with the Rule to Reduce Interstate Transport of Fine Particulate Matter and Ozone (Clean Air Interstate Rule), EPA ICR #2152.04.


Estimating the Respondent Universe and Total Burden and Costs for Affected NBP Units


EPA estimates that there are 460 affected units that will continue to conduct monitoring in accordance with Part 75 solely under the NOx SIP Call. Table 6-2 shows the total burden and total cost for this respondent universe.


Estimating Agency Burden and Cost


The tasks that will be performed by EPA include processing, reviewing, and evaluating emissions data reports submitted by the affected units, and conducting appropriate audit activities to verify the information provided. Assuming that the 460 affected units will submit 1600 quarterly emission reports to EPA each year, the total annual burden incurred by the Agency will be 3200 hours. (The estimated annual total of 1600 quarterly emissions reports is based on an assumption that 340 units will submit reports for all four quarters each year and 120 units will submit reports only for the two quarters each year that encompass the May-September ozone season.) The total annual cost to EPA for processing, reviewing, and evaluating these quarterly emissions reports will be approximately $166,912. Table 6-3 summarizes the Agency burden and costs associated with emissions reporting.

TABLE 6-2: ANNUAL RESPONDENT BURDEN/COST ESTIMATES FOR AFFECTED UNITS

Information Collection Activity

Mgr. $112.22/ Hour

Tech. $77.66/ Hour

Respondent Hours/Year

Labor Cost/Year

Cont./ O&M Cost

Capital/ Startup Cost

Number of Respondents

Total Hours/
Year

Total Cost/Year

1. Review Instructions and Requirements

4

4

8

$760

$0

$0

75

600

$56,964

2. Respond to EPA Generated Error Messages, Field Audits

6

18

24

$2,071

$0

$0

460

11,040

$952,752

3. DAHS Debugging

4

12

16

$1,381

$0

$0

460

7,360

$635,168

4. New Unit Monitoring Plans

10

10

20

$1,899

$0

$0

46

920

$87,345

5. Recertify Monitors

38

12

50

$5,196

$3,400

$0

46

2300

$395,429

6. Startup/Capital Items and Perform QA Testing and Maintenance

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(a) NOx and Flow CEMS

50

480

530

$42,888

$31,200

$28,879

84

44,520

$8,649,211

(b) NOx CEM and Fuel Flowmeter

20

375

395

$31,367

$17,400

$18,750

183

72,285

$12,355,593

(c) App. E and Fuel Flowmeter

5

30

35

$2,891

$1,800

$2,250

12

420

$83,291

(d)LME

4

12

16

$1,381

$1,991


181

2,896

$610,296

7. Assure Data Quality, Prepare Reports (inc. monitoring plan update), Submit Reportsa

20

82

102

$8,613

$0

$0

460

46,920

$3,961,759

TOTAL:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

189,261

$27,787,807

a Based on an assumption of 340 annual reporting and 120 Ozone Season only reporting facilities.

TABLE 6-3: ANNUAL AGENCY BURDEN/COST ESTIMATES
FOR AFFECTED UNITS


Tasks

Quarterly Burden Hours per Report

Quarterly Cost per Reporta

Number of Reportsb

Total Burden per Year (hours)
(2017–2019)

Total Cost

Process, review, and evaluate quarterly report and issue feedback letter.

2

$104.32

1,600

3,200

$166,912

a Based on an average total compensation rate of $52.16 per hour.

b Based on an assumption of 340 annual reporting and 120 Ozone Season only reporting facilities.



6(d) Summary of Burden Hours and Costs


Table 6-4 summarizes the annual aggregate burden and cost estimates to both the respondents and the agency for the period of 2017 through 2019.


TABLE 6-4: AGGREGATE ANNUAL RESPONDENT AND AGENCY BURDEN AND COST OF COLLECTIONS (2017 – 2019)


Program

Total Annual Burden (Hours)

Total Annual Costsa

Annual Industry Respondent Burden

189,261

$27,787,807

Annual Agency Burden

3,200

$166,912

TOTAL

192,461

$27,954,719

a 2017 dollars.


6(d) Reasons for Change in Burden


Hourly burden estimates per respondent in this ICR renewal are the same as those in the previous ICR. Industry and government wage rates are higher based on the Employee Cost Index and General Schedule. The total burden and cost have increased primarily due to the increased number of units now reporting under this program instead of under other programs. The information collection burden for reporting ozone season NOX mass emissions data for all sources that were formerly subject to the CAIR NOX Ozone Season Trading Program and are not covered by CSAPR is now covered under this ICR. Previously, the burden for reporting ozone season NOX mass emissions data for some of these sources was covered under the CAIR Program ICR (EPA ICR No. 2152.05, OMB Control No. 2060-0570).


6(e) Burden Statement

The annual public reporting and recordkeeping burden for this collection of information is estimated to average 118 hours per response. Burden means the total time, effort, or financial resources expended by persons to generate, maintain, retain, or disclose or provide information to or for a Federal agency. This includes the time needed to review instructions; develop, acquire, install, and utilize technology and systems for the purposes of collecting, validating, and verifying information, processing and maintaining information, and disclosing and providing information; adjust the existing ways to comply with any previously applicable instructions and requirements; train personnel to be able to respond to a collection of information; search data sources; complete and review the collection of information; and transmit or otherwise disclose the information. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control numbers for EPA's regulations are listed in 40 CFR part 9 and 48 CFR chapter 15.


To comment on the Agency's need for this information, the accuracy of the provided burden estimates, and any suggested methods for minimizing respondent burden, including the use of automated collection techniques, EPA has established a public docket for this ICR under Docket ID Number EPA-HQ-OAR-2006-0947, which is available for online viewing at www.regulations.gov, or in person viewing at the Air and Radiation docket in the EPA Docket Center (EPA/DC), EPA West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C. The EPA Docket Center 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 Reading Room is (202) 566-1744, and the telephone number for the Air and Radiation docket is (202) 566-1742. An electronic version of the public docket is available at www.regulations.gov. This site can be used to submit or view public comments, access the index listing of the contents of the public docket, and to access those documents in the public docket that are available electronically. When in the system, select "search," then key in the Docket ID Number identified above. Also, you can send comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20503, Attention: Desk Officer for EPA. Please include the EPA Docket ID Number EPA-HQ-OAR-2006-0947 and OMB Control Number 2060-0445 any correspondence.





File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
AuthorUS EPA
File Modified0000-00-00
File Created2021-01-22

© 2024 OMB.report | Privacy Policy