PROPOSAL:
Amend Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares
SYNPOSIS:
The proposed amendments establish requirements to reduce emissions from
refinery flaring events and allow them to operate for their intended
purpose as a safety device. The monitoring, recordkeeping and reporting
provisions of the rule are also strengthened.
COMMITTEE:
Stationary Source, June 24, 2005, July 22, 2005, September 23, 2005,
and October 28, 2005, Reviewed
RECOMMENDED ACTIONS:
Adopt the attached resolution:
- Certifying the Final Environmental Assessment (EA) for Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 Emissions From Refinery Flares, and
- Adopting Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions From Refinery
Flares.
Barry R. Wallerstein, D.Env.
Executive Officer
Background
In 1998, the Board adopted Rule 1118 - Emissions from Refinery Flares, as
a first step to better define the emissions inventory for oil refineries,
sulfur recovery plants and hydrogen production plants. In the Resolution,
the Board directed staff to analyze the quarterly reports provided by the
subject facilities during the first two years of monitoring and make a
determination whether emissions are significant and determine if controls
are necessary. Staff has compiled the 1999 (fourth quarter) through 2003
data and categorized the circumstances that result in flaring activities and
presented the data and its analysis to the Board on September 3, 2004 in the
Evaluation Report on Emissions from Flaring Operations at Refineries.
Staff concluded that emissions, especially SO2, are significant and that
these emissions could be further minimized and controlled. Staff recommends
that emissions data gathering, monitoring and reporting procedures of the
rule be strengthened. The Board directed staff to amend Rule 1118 to
implement the recommendations stated in the report. AQMD staff evaluated
control strategies and has determined that emission reductions are
technically feasible and cost effective.
Affected Facilities
Sources subject to this rule include refineries, sulfur recovery plants
and hydrogen production plants operated by the following facilities:
Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. BP West Coast Products
Chevron USA Inc. ConocoPhillips
ExxonMobil Corp. Equilon Enterprises LLC, Shell Oil US
Paramount Petroleum Corp. Ultramar Inc.
Public Process
During the rulemaking process, staff worked closely with impacted
parties. A working group comprised of representatives from industry and
community was formed to provide input towards the development of PAR 1118.
The working group met 9 times during the course of the rule development
process, and a public workshop was held on June 29, 2005. The Refinery
Committee, formed at Boards direction and led by Board members, met on
three occasions and provided valuable guidance in developing PAR 1118. In
addition, staff met on numerous occasions separately with individual
stakeholders on the proposed amended rule.
Initially, PAR 1118 was on the Board calendar for a set hearing on July
8, 2005. PAR 1118 was continued at the September 2, 2005 regular Board
meeting. PAR 1118 was on the Board calendar again for a set hearing on
October 7, 2005, with the public hearing set for November 4, 2005, to
provide impacted parties with additional time to review the staff proposal
and resolve outstanding issues. Due to significant changes to the originally
noticed proposal, PAR 1118 was again publicly noticed on October 5, 2005.
The proposed amended rule, the draft staff report and the draft
socioeconomic report were released to the public on October 4, 2005.
Proposal
The primary objective of PAR 1118 is to minimize flaring and reduce
criteria pollutant emissions, such as SOx, NOx, ROG, PM10 and CO emissions
from flares at petroleum refineries, sulfur recovery plants and hydrogen
production plants. The proposed amendment will be implemented starting in
January 2006 and fully implemented by January 2012. PAR 1118 prohibits
flaring of vent gases except for those situations resulting from
emergencies, shutdowns and startups, turnarounds and specific essential
operational needs; establishes operational requirements and diagnostic
practices to minimize flaring; and sets refinery specific annual SO2
performance targets that decrease with time from 2006 to 2012 to ensure that
emissions from flares are reduced on a permanent basis. Exceedance of the
annual performance target by a subject facility would trigger mitigation
fees and the submittal of a Flare Minimization Plan subject to public review
and comment. The plan will outline any equipment installations and policies
and procedures to be implemented by the facility to avoid future exceedances.
PAR 1118 also requires facilities to operate flares in a smokeless
manner, maintain a pilot flame present at all times the flare is in
operation and conduct annual inspections of pressure relief devices directly
connected to flares to identify and repair those that leak, contributing to
flaring. Facilities are required to submit detailed descriptions of their
flare systems, audits of the vent gas recovery, storage and treating
capacity and a summary of the flaring emission reductions achieved to date
and future planned emission reductions. For significant flare events
exceeding certain thresholds the facilities have to conduct specific cause
analyses to identify the cause, implement corrective measures and prevent
future recurrence; for smaller flare events they are also required to
identify the cause, where feasible.
Monitoring will be enhanced by requiring installation of analyzers to
measure the vent gas higher heating value and total sulfur concentration,
and flow meters for purge and pilot gas. PAR 1118 will require that the
existing flare gas flow meters be installed in representative locations or
to be upgraded with totalizing capability such that only an accurate flow to
the flare is registered. Until the analyzers are installed, daily samples
will be required unless there is no flare event. The amended rule will also
establish uniform data substitution procedures and calculations for
reporting emissions when flow meters are not operational, samples are not
collected and analyzed, and during analyzer downtime periods.
Notification and reporting requirements will be enhanced. Based on input
from the Board Refinery Committee, staff has included a provision requiring
refineries to make available to the public a 24 hour telephone number for
inquiries on flaring events. New notification requirements include a 24 hour
notification to the AQMD prior to a large planned flaring event and to
notify the AQMD within 1 hour of large unplanned flaring events. Quarterly
reports detailing flow, emissions and the cause of flare events will be
submitted electronically to the AQMD.
Emission Reductions and Cost Effectiveness Determination
By December 31, 2012, PAR 1118 is expected to achieve a reduction of 1.18
tons per day of SO2 and 1.44 tons per day, less CO, in total criteria air
contaminants. The cost effectiveness of the proposed amendments ranges from
$5,524 and $8,620 per ton of SO2 reduced. When considering additional
reductions in NOx, VOC and PM10, the cost effectiveness ranges between
$4,527 and $7,063 per ton of pollutant reduced.
Key Issues
Staff has worked diligently with the impacted industry and the
environmental community to resolve many of the issues that were raised
during the rule development process. However, there are still concerns about
key issues such as Flare Minimization Plans, annual performance targets with
daily emissions targets, the data substitution procedure, the definition of
Essential Operational Need, and better notification to the public of planned
flaring and emergencies.
Flare Minimization Plans (FMPs)
The environmental community commented that the best way to protect
communities is to institutionalize best practices in the form of requiring
refineries to complete a Flare Minimization Plan, which will also allow for
public participation. The petroleum refineries have stated that PAR 1118
should require annual SO2 performance targets or FMPs, not both since both
approaches would be duplicative.
Staff believes that the multi-pronged strategy established under PAR 1118
that includes provisions that explicitly prohibit unnecessary flaring,
multi-year performance targets of increasing stringency and a substantive
mitigation fee structure is a more enforceable and effective strategy to
minimize flare-related emissions. This comprehensive control strategy
includes many of the elements that would be covered by a Flare Minimization
Plan, such as conducting an audit of flare gas recovery and treatment
capacity and analyzing the cause of significant flare events. Facilities
will be required to submit a more detailed Flare Minimization Plan in the
event they exceed their performance targets.
PAR 1118 will result in emission reductions that are real, quantifiable,
enforceable and permanent. The performance targets, which have been recently
strengthened, are technologically feasible and cost effective and are
designated to exceed the AQMP targets by at least 75 percent.
Annual Performance Targets
The environmental community requests the AQMD lower the annual SO2
performance targets and establish daily targets for SO2 and VOC while the
petroleum refineries have commented that the proposed annual targets are
more stringent than needed due to the fact that reported emissions are well
below the goals established in the 2003 AQMP.
The annual performance target has been lowered to 0.5 ton SO2 per million
barrels of crude oil processed effective January 1, 2012. This revised
proposed target is technologically feasible and cost effective to achieve
and is approximately 70 percent lower than the baseline emissions used in
the cost analysis for this proposed rule and approximately 75 percent lower
than the AQMP Control Measure CMB-07 targets.
In addition to SO2 reductions, PAR 1118 will also reduce other criteria
air contaminants, including VOC. PAR 1118 limits the types of flaring that
are allowed, and requires facilities to minimize flaring. To meet the annual
SO2 performance targets, refineries will have to reduce the amount of vent
gas directed to their flares; reducing flow to the flare will have
commensurate VOC reductions
Relative to establishing daily emission targets, flares are operated to
reduce vent gases resulting, in large part from emergencies, and essential
operational needs. These are random, episodic events and associated
emissions vary significantly. Therefore, establishing a daily emission
target for SO2 or other criteria pollutant may be impractical. However,
staff is committed to further explore the viability of this control concept
in the future. Although the annual SO2 performance targets are below the
AQMP targets, staff believes that the refineries performance demonstrates
that these targets are feasible.
Data Substitution Procedure
The petroleum refineries commented that the data substitution procedure
is critical to implementation of PAR 1118, based on the lower proposed
annual SO2 performance targets and the high mitigation fees for exceedence
of the targets, while the environmental community commented in support of
staffs proposal, which takes into account both maximum and average values
over a five-year period.
Accurate flow and concentration data are the cornerstone to determine
compliance with PAR 1118. The proposed amendments must provide incentives to
regularly collect required data and yet provide reasonable estimates during
flow meter, sampling and analyzer down periods or when the representative
samples are not measured and recorded pursuant to the proposed rule
requirements. Data substitution is not required if it can be demonstrated to
the satisfaction of the Executive Officer that there was no flow to the
flare during the flow meter and/or analyzer outage or a sample was not taken
and analyzed. In the event there is flow to the flare, the proposed data
substitution procedures allow the facility to use calculation procedures
based on engineering principles to estimate their emissions. These
calculation procedures and emission estimates are subject to the Executive
Officers approval. The rule also establishes default calculation procedures
that will serve as backstops in the event the Executive Officer disapproves
the emission estimates submitted by a facility.
The default calculation procedure proposed by staff provides a method to
conservatively estimate flow, higher heating value and concentration data
that were not collected, as required by PAR 1118. The procedure was based on
the operational history of the refinery flares operated in the AQMD. The
large range and randomness exhibited by the flow, total sulfur concentration
(reported as SO2), and the higher heating value data posed a challenge to
staff in developing a procedure to reasonable estimate substitute data and
at the same time provide a deterrent to facilities not collecting required
data. Staff has determined that substituting data should be determined by
looking at the last five years (20 quarters) of collected data and
calculating the substituted value(s) based on the maximum value minus 50
percent of the difference between the maximum value minus the average value.
Essential Operational Need Definition
The definition of Essential Operational Need (EON) is critical to both
parties. The petroleum refineries believe that a comprehensive list of EONs
is necessary for safe operation of the refinery. The environmental community
believes that without the FMP and the public comment process, the AQMD needs
to tighten the list of acceptable EONs and to require the refineries to
demonstrate to the AQMD why these practices are essential.
In developing the proposed definition of EON, staff carefully analyzed
which specific operations are essential and can not be reasonably controlled
by the facilities subject to PAR 1118. In addition, as suggested to
alleviate any potential lack of clarity, the EON definition has been more
clearly delineated by including language that allows the AQMD to make a
determination that the EON meets the definition/description of the listed
EONs.
Public Notification of Planned Flaring and
Emergencies
Notification requirements during planned events and emergencies are
inadequate and should be improved; the AQMD should facilitate this process
through appropriate language in PAR 1118.
Effective January 1, 2006, PAR 1118 now requires refineries to provide a
24-hour telephone service to answer public inquiries about planned and
current flare events. Staff has also committed through the Board Resolution
to continue to work with industry and community members, and other public
agencies to ensure that emergency notification procedures address the
community needs.
AQMP and Legal Mandates
PAR 1118 will implement Step II of 1997/99 AQMP and the 2005 AQMP Control
Measure CMB 07, which will result in emission reductions that are needed
to meet federal and state standards for ozone, PM10 and PM2.5. Control
Measure CMB-07 seeks to reduce SOX emissions to less than 2.1 tons per day.
PAR 1118 far exceeds this target by reducing emissions to less than 0.5 ton
per day.
California Environmental Quality Act
Pursuant to California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) Guidelines §15252
and AQMD Rule 110, the AQMD has prepared an Environmental Assessment (EA)
for PAR 1118. The Draft EA was released for a 30-day public review and
comment period beginning June 30, 2005 and ending July 29, 2005. Responses
to the comments on the Draft EA are included in the Final EA, included as
Attachment G of this Governing Board package.
Socioeconomic Analysis
The proposed rule will affect 7 refineries, one sulfur recovery plant and
one hydrogen production plant located in the AQMD. The average annual cost
of implementing the proposed amendments for all affected facilities is
projected to be $5.22 million, of which refineries have a 99-percent share.
Based on the $5.22 million cost and the resulting additional sales to
vendors of control devices, macroeconomic analysis was performed to assess
the overall job impacts of the proposed amendments on the entire local
economy. It is projected that an average of nine jobs would be created
annually from 2006 to 2020 in the four county area. There is nearly no job
impact on the affected industries because these industries are capital
intensive and the positive job impacts from the investment in control
devices offset any potential negative job impact due to the additional
control cost.
Implementation and Resources
No additional AQMD resources are required to implement the proposed
amendments.
Attachments
(EXE 3.44 MB)
A. Summary of Proposal
B. Rule Development Process
C. Key Contacts List
D. Resolution
E. Rule Language
F. Final Staff Report
G. Final Environmental Assessment
H. Final Socioeconomic Impact Analysis
ATTACHMENT A
SUMMARY OF PROPOSED AMENDMENTS
Effective January 1, 2006:
Flares must operate in a smokeless
manner.
Flares must have pilot flames present
whenever they are in operation.
Annual inspections of pressure relief
devices directly connected to flares.
Specific Cause Analysis of flare
events exceeding 500 pounds SO2, 100 pounds VOC, or 500,000 standard
cubic feet of flared gas.
Relative cause analysis, where
feasible, for flare events exceeding 5,000 standard cubic feet of gas
flared but less than amounts required for a specific cause analysis.
Effective September 1, 2006:
Facilities must submit a detailed
technical description of their flare system(s), including an audit of
the vent gas recovery capacity, a summary of the flaring emissions
reductions achieved to date and future planned flare emission
reductions.
Effective January 1, 2007:
Flaring of vent gases is prohibited
except during an emergency, shutdown, startup, turnaround and essential
operational need.
Effective January 1, 2009:
H2S concentration of flared gas, averaged over 3 hours, cannot exceed
160 ppm, except for an emergency, shutdown, startup, process upset and
relief valve leakage.
Refinery specific annual performance targets for SO2 emissions
based on crude processing capacity in 2004 and averaged over one
calendar year:
- 1.5 tons per million barrels processing capacity,
effective January 1, 2006;
- 1.0 ton per million barrels processing capacity, effective
January 1, 2008;
- 0.7 ton per million barrels processing capacity, effective
January 1, 2010; and
- 0.5 ton per million barrels processing capacity, effective
January 1, 2012.
- Exceedance of the annual performance target may result in the
issuance of a Notice of Sulfur Dioxide Exceedance by the Executive
Officer.
Mitigation fees for SO2 are calculated as follows :
- Exceedance less than 10%, $25,000/ton for each ton
above the annual performance target;
- Exceedance more than 10% but less than 20%, $50,000/ton for each
ton above the annual performance target;
- Exceedance more than 20%, $100,000/ton for each ton above the
annual performance target.
- Total mitigation fees in any one year not to exceed $4,000,000.
Required any time the annual performance target is exceeded;
Must contain a description of equipment to be installed and
policies and procedures to be implemented to avoid future exceedance;
Subject to public review and comment.
Must be complete and include all actions to be taken by the
facility to meet the performance targets for approval.
Disapproval of the Flare Minimization Plan or noncompliance with
any of the provisions of an approved Flare Minimization Plan shall be
considered a violation of the rule.
- Monitoring and Recording
Effective January 1, 2006:
Daily samples for flare events.
On or before June 30, 2006:
Submit a Revised Flare Monitoring and Recording Plan.
Effective July 1, 2006:
Video monitoring and recording with date and time stamp of flare
activity.
Effective January 1, 2007:
Vent gas flow meters to be located at representative locations or be
equipped with low flow and totalizing capability; and
Flow meters are required for purge and pilot gas lines.
Effective July 1, 2007:
Continuous analyzers for monitoring vent gas higher heating value and
total sulfur concentration.
- Recordkeeping
Video monitoring records to be kept for 90 days and all other required
records for a period of five years.
- Notification and Reporting
Provide a 24-hour telephone service for access by the public for
inquiries about flare events;
1 hour notification to AQMD of flare events exceeding 500 pounds SO2,
100 pounds VOC or 500,000 standard cubic feet of flared vent gas;
24 hour advance notification to AQMD of planned flare events exceeding
500 pounds SO2, 100 pounds VOC or 500,000 standard cubic feet of flared
vent gas;
Quarterly reports submitted in electronic form, certified by the
responsible official, to include daily and quarterly emissions and cause
of flare events.
- Testing and Monitoring Methods
Annual verification of the vent gas flow meter accuracy.
- Exemptions
No sampling required if not feasible due to catastrophic events or
presents a safety hazard.
Emissions resulting from natural disasters, acts of war or terrorism
or external power curtailment do not count against the performance
targets.
- Flare Monitoring System Requirements
Delineates specifications for flare monitoring systems.
- Guidelines for Calculating Flare Emissions
Specifies the procedure for substituting data when required measured
data is not obtained.
ATTACHMENT B
PAR 1118 RULE DEVELOPMENT PROCESS

ATTACHMENT C
KEY CONTACTS LIST
Affected Facilities
| Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. |
BP West Coast Products |
| Chevron USA Inc. |
ConocoPhillips |
| ExxonMobil Corp. |
Equilon Enterprises LLC, Shell Oil US |
| Paramount Petroleum Corp. |
Ultramar Inc. |
Others
Western States Petroleum Association
Western Independent Refiners Association
Communities for Better Environment
Natural Resources Defense Council
California Environmental Rights Alliance
Coalition for Clean Air
Regulatory Agencies:
California Air Resources Board
U.S. EPA
ATTACHMENT D
RESOLUTION NO. 2005-xx
A Resolution of the South Coast Air Quality Management District Governing
Board (AQMD Governing Board) certifying the Final Environmental Assessment
for Proposed Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares.
A Resolution of the AQMD Governing Board adopting Amended Rule 1118
Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares.
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has determined with certainty that
Proposed Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, is a
project pursuant to the terms of the California Environmental Quality Act
(CEQA); and
WHEREAS, the AQMD has had its regulatory program certified pursuant
to Public Resources Code §21080.5 and has conducted CEQA review pursuant to
such program (AQMD Rule 110); and
WHEREAS, AQMD staff has prepared a Draft Environmental Assessment
(EA) pursuant to its certified regulatory program and state CEQA Guidelines
§15252 setting forth the potential environmental consequences of Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares; and
WHEREAS, the Draft EA was circulated for public review, comments
received were responded to, and a Final EA has been prepared; and
WHEREAS, the adequacy of the Final EA, including responses to
comments, has been determined by the AQMD Governing Board prior to its
certification; and
WHEREAS, a Mitigation Monitoring Plan pursuant to Public Resources
Code §21081.6, has not been prepared since no mitigation measures are
necessary; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board voting on Proposed Amended Rule
1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, has reviewed, considered,
and hereby certifies the Final EA; and
WHEREAS, the Governing Board finds and determines, taking into
consideration the factors in §(d)(4)(D) of the Governing Board Procedures,
that the modifications adopted which have been made to PAR 11118 Control
of Emissions from Refinery Flares, since notice of public hearing was
published do not significantly change the meaning of the proposed rule
within the meaning of Health and Safety Code §40726 and would not constitute
significant new information requiring recirculation of the Draft CEQA
document pursuant to CEQA Guidelines § 15088.5; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has determined that the
Socioeconomic Impact Assessment and Final Staff Report of the Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, is consistent
with the Governing Board March 17, 1989 and October 14, 1994 resolutions and
the provisions of Health and Safety Code Sections 40440.8, 40728.5 and
40920.6; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has determined that the Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, will result
in increased costs to industry, yet is considered cost-effective with a
cost-effectiveness as described in the Socioeconomic Impact Assessment and
Staff Report; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has actively considered the
Socioeconomic Impact Assessment and has made a good faith effort to minimize
such impacts; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has reviewed and considered the
staff's findings related to cost and employment impacts of the Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, set forth in
the Socioeconomic Impact Assessment and Final Staff Report made public with
the agenda package for this meeting, and hereby find and determines that
cost and employment impacts are as set forth in that assessment; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has determined that a need exists
to adopt the Proposed Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery
Flares, to reduce sulfur dioxide and other criteria pollutants from flare
events at petroleum facilities by implementing Step II of Control Measure
CMB-07 of the 1999 and 2003 AQMP and to achieve federal PM10 and ozone
standards in 2006 and 2010 respectively; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board of the South Coast Air Quality
Management District obtains its authority to adopt, amend or repeal rules
and regulations from Sections 39002, 40000, 40001, 40440, 40441, 40702,
41508 and 41700 of the California Health and Safety Code; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has determined that Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 - Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, as proposed
to be adopted is written or displayed so that its meaning can be easily
understood by the persons directly affected by it; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has determined that Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, as proposed
to be adopted is in harmony with, and not in conflict with or contradictory
to, existing federal or state statutes, court decisions, or regulations; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has determined that that Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, as proposed
to be amended does not impose the same requirements as any existing state or
federal regulation and the proposed rule is necessary and proper to execute
the powers and duties granted to, and imposed upon the AQMD; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has determined that Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, as proposed
to be amended, references the following statutes which the AQMD hereby
implements, interprets or makes specific: California Health and Safety Code
sections 41700 (Nuisance), 40440(a) (Rules to Implement Plan), 40440(b)
(Best Available Retrofit Technology) and Title 42 U.S.C. Section 7502(c)(1)
(Reasonably Available Control Technology); and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has determined that there is a
problem that Proposed Amended Rule 1118 will help alleviate, i.e., the Basin
does not meet the ambient air quality standards for ozone, PM10 and PM2.5
standards, and the Proposed Amended Rule will promote attainment of these
standards; and
WHEREAS, a public hearing has been properly noticed in accordance
with the provisions of Health and Safety Code Section 40725; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has held a public hearing in
accordance with all provisions of law; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board specifies the manager of Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, as the
custodian of the documents or other materials which constitute the record of
proceedings upon which the adoption of this proposed amendment is based,
which are located at the South Coast Air Quality Management District, 21865
Copley Drive, Diamond Bar, California; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has determined that Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, should be
adopted instead of the more stringent option of recovering all vent gases
routed to flares except for emergency vent gases because the incremental
cost effectiveness of the more stringent option exceeds $155,918 per ton of
sulfur dioxide reduced; and
WHEREAS, that the AQMD Governing Board hereby directs staff to work
closely with Western States Petroleum Association and its members and other
interested parties in conducting a pilot program to demonstrate the
technical feasibility of total sulfur analyzers; evaluate all data collected
from the use of higher heating value analyzers that may be presented by
industry; and, no later than December 2006, report the results of the pilot
program and data analysis, including any recommendations relative to these
analyzers, to the Stationary Source Committee; and
WHEREAS, that the AQMD Governing Board hereby directs staff to
provide annual status reports on overall industry performance and updates on
annual sulfur dioxide performance targets exceedances to the Stationary
Source Committee and to develop the air quality improvement projects to be
funded by mitigation fees collected as a result of those exceedances, in
cooperation with representatives of both the community impacted and the
source of the release; and
WHEREAS, that the AQMD Governing Board hereby directs staff to
continue to work with industry, community members and other regulatory
agencies on community notification procedures; and
WHEREAS, that the AQMD Governing Board hereby directs staff to
evaluate the feasibility of establishing a daily emission target and the
appropriateness of annual emissions targets and whether any refinements to
those targets are warranted and report back to the AQMD Governing Board with
any recommendations; and
WHEREAS, that the AQMD Governing Board hereby directs staff to
evaluate the use of the data substitution procedures by industry during the
first year of implementation of PAR 1118 and report back to the AQMD
Governing Board with any recommendations; and
WHEREAS, that the AQMD Governing Board hereby directs staff to
evaluate the Bay Area Air Quality Management District Rule 12 Flares at
Petroleum Refineries requirement to implement Flare Minimization Plans and
the resultant installation of controls and report back to the AQMD Governing
Board with any recommendations;
WHEREAS, that the AQMD Governing Board hereby directs staff to review the
definition of Essential Operational Need and report back to the AQMD
Governing Board with any recommendations; and
WHEREAS, the AQMD Governing Board has determined that Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 - Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, should be
adopted for the reasons contained in the Final Staff Report, and
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the AQMD Governing Board hereby
certifies, pursuant to the authority granted by law, the Final EA for
Proposed Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that because no significant adverse
environmental impacts were identified as a result of implementing Proposed
Amended Rule 1118 Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, a Statement
of Findings, a Statement of Overriding Considerations, and a Mitigation
Monitoring Plan are not required; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the AQMD Governing Board does hereby
adopt, pursuant to the authority granted by law, Proposed Amended Rule 1118
Control of Emissions from Refinery Flares, as set forth in the attached
and incorporated herein by reference; and
Date:____________________
_____________________________________________________
Clerk of
the Boards
/ / / |