[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 3]
[Revised as of July 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR52.28]

[Page 65-68]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 52--APPROVAL AND PROMULGATION OF IMPLEMENTATION PLANS--Table of Contents
 
                      Subpart A--General Provisions
 
Sec. 52.28  Protection of visibility from sources in nonattainment areas.

    (a) Plan disapproval. The provisions of this section are applicable 
to any State implementation plan which has been disapproved with respect 
to protection of visibility, in mandatory Class I Federal areas where 
visibility is considered an important value, from sources emitting 
pollutants in any portion of any State where the existing air quality is 
not in compliance with the national ambient air quality standards for 
such pollutants. Specific disapprovals are listed where applicable in 
Subparts B through DDD of this part. The provisions of this section have 
been incorporated into the applicable implementation plans for various 
States, as provided in Subparts B through DDD of this part.
    (b) Definitions. For the purposes of this section:

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    (1) Visibility protection area means any area listed in 40 CFR 
81.401-81.436 (1984).
    (2) All other terms shall have the meaning ascribed to them in the 
protection of visibility program (40 CFR 51.301) or the prevention of 
significant deterioration (PSD) program either approved as part of the 
applicable SIP pursuant to 40 CFR 51.24 or in effect for the applicable 
SIP pursuant to 40 CFR 52.21, all as in effect on July 12, 1985.
    (c) Review of major stationary sources and major modifications--
source applicability and exemptions. (1) No stationary source or 
modification to which the requirements of this section apply shall begin 
actual construction without a permit which states that the stationary 
source or modification would meet those requirements. The Administrator 
has sole authority to issue any such permit unless the authority has 
been delegated pursuant to paragraph (i) of this section.
    (2) The requirements of this section shall apply to construction of 
any new major stationary source or major modification that would both be 
constructed in an area classified as nonattainment under section 
107(d)(1)(A), (B) or (C) of the Clean Air Act and potentially have an 
impact on visibility in any visibility proctection area.
    (3) The requirements of this section shall apply to any such major 
stationary source and any such major modification with respect to each 
pollutant subject to regulation under the Clean Air Act that it would 
emit, except as this section otherwise provides.
    (4) The requirements of this section shall not apply to a particular 
major stationary source or major modification, if:
    (i) The source or modification would be a nonprofit health or 
nonprofit educational institution, or a major modification would occur 
at such an institution, and the governor of the State in which the 
source or modification would be located requests that it be exempt from 
those requirements; or
    (ii) The source or modification would be a major stationary source 
or major modification only if fugitive emissions, to the extent 
quantifiable, are considered in calculating the potential to emit of the 
stationary source or modification and the source does not belong to any 
of the following categories:
    (A) Coal cleaning plants (with thermal dryers);
    (B) Kraft pulp mills;
    (C) Portland cement plants;
    (D) Primary zinc smelters;
    (E) Iron and steel mills;
    (F) Primary aluminum ore reduction plants;
    (G) Primary copper smelters;
    (H) Municipal incinerators capable of charging more than 250 tons of 
refuse per day;
    (I) Hydrofluoric, sulfuric, or nitric acid plants;
    (J) Petroleum refineries;
    (K) Lime plants;
    (L) Phosphate rock processing plants;
    (M) Coke oven batteries;
    (N) Sulfur recovery plants;
    (O) Carbon black plants (furnace process);
    (P) Primary lead smelters;
    (Q) Fuel conversion plants;
    (R) Sintering plants;
    (S) Secondary metal production plants;
    (T) Chemical process plants;
    (U) Fossil-fuel boiler (or combination thereof) totaling more than 
250 million British thermal units per hour heat input;
    (V) Petroleum storage and transfer units with a total storage 
capacity exceeding 300,000 barrels;
    (W) Taconite ore processing plants;
    (X) Glass fiber processing plants;
    (Y) Charcoal production plants;
    (Z) Fossil fuel-fired steam electric plants of more than 250 million 
British thermal units per hour heat input;
    (AA) Any other stationary source category which, as of August 7, 
1980, is being regulated under section 111 or 112 of the Act; or
    (iii) The source is a portable stationary source which has 
previously received a permit under this section, and
    (A) The owner or operator proposes to relocate the source and 
emissions of the source at the new location would be temporary; and
    (B) The emissions from the source would not exceed its allowable 
emissions; and
    (C) The emissions from the source would impact no Class I area and 
no area where an applicable increment is known to be violated; and

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    (D) Reasonable notice is given to the Administrator, prior to the 
relocation, identifying the proposed new location and the probable 
duration of operation at the new location. Such notice shall be given to 
the Administrator not less than 10 days in advance of the proposed 
relocation, unless a different time duration is previously approved by 
the Administrator.
    (5) The requirements of this section shall not apply to a major 
stationary source or major modification with respect to a particular 
pollutant if the owner or operator demonstrates that, as to that 
pollutant, the source or modification is located in an area designated 
as attainment under section 107 of the Clean Air Act.
    (6) The requirements of this section shall not apply to a major 
stationary source or major modification with respect to a particular 
pollutant, if the allowable emissions of that pollutant from the source, 
or the net emissions increase of that pollutant from the modification:
    (i) Would impact no Class I area and no area where an applicable 
increment is known to be violated, and
    (ii) Would be temporary.
    (d) Visibility Impact Analyses. The owner or operator of a source 
shall provide an analysis of the impairment to visibility that would 
occur as a result of the source or modification and general commercial, 
residential, industrial and other growth associated with the source or 
modification.
    (e) Federal land manager notification. (1) The Federal land manager 
and the Federal official charged with direct responsibility for 
management of Federal Class I areas have an affirmative responsibility 
to protect the air quality related values (including visibility) of such 
lands and to consider, in consultation with the Administrator, whether a 
proposed source or modification will have an adverse impact on such 
values.
    (2) The Administrator shall provide written notification to all 
affected Federal land managers of any permit application for any 
proposed new major stationary source or major modification that may 
affect visibility in any visibility protection area.The Administrator 
shall also provide for such notification to the Federal official charged 
with direct responsibility for management of any lands within any such 
area. Such notification shall include a copy of all information relevant 
to the permit application and shall be given within 30 days of receipt 
and at least 60 days prior to any public hearing on the application for 
a permit to construct. Such notification shall include an analysis of 
the proposed source's anticipated impacts on visibility in any 
visibility protection area. The Administrator shall also notify all 
affected FLM's within 30 days of receipt of any advance notification of 
any such permit application.
    (3) The Administrator shall consider any analysis performed by the 
Federal land manager, provided within 30 days of the notification 
required by paragraph (e)(2) of this section, that such proposed new 
major stationary source or major modification may have an adverse impact 
on visibility in any visibility protection area. Where the Administrator 
finds that such an analysis does not demonstrate to the satisfaction of 
the Administrator that an adverse impact on visibility will result in 
the visibility protection area, the Administrator must, in the notice of 
public hearing, either explain his decision or give notice as to where 
the explanation can be obtained.
    (f) Public participation. The Administrator shall follow the 
applicable procedures of 40 CFR part 124 in processing applications 
under this section. The Administrator shall follow the procedures at 40 
CFR 52.21(q) as in effect on August 7, 1980, to the extent that the 
procedures of 40 CFR part 124 do not apply.
    (g) National visibility goal. The Administrator shall only issue 
permits to those sources whose emissions will be consistent with making 
reasonable progress toward the national goal of preventing any future, 
and remedying any existing, impairment of visibility in visibility 
protection areas which impairment results from man-made air pollution. 
In making the decision to issue a permit, the Administrator may take 
into account the costs of compliance, the time necessary for compliance, 
the energy and nonair quality environmental impacts of compliance, and 
the useful life of the source.

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    (h) Monitoring. The Administrator may require monitoring of 
visibility in any visibility protection area near the proposed new 
stationary source or major modification for such purposes and by such 
means as the Administrator deems necessary and appropriate.
    (i) Delegation of authority. (1) The Administrator shall have the 
authority to delegate the responsibility for conducting source review 
pursuant to this section to any agency in accordance with paragraphs 
(i)(2) and (3) of this section.
    (2) Where the Administrator delegates the responsibility for 
conducting source review under this section to any agency other than a 
Regional Office of the Environmental Protection Agency, the following 
provisions shall apply:
    (i) Where the delegate agency is not an air pollution control agency 
it shall consult with the appropriate State and local air pollution 
control agency prior to making any determination under this section. 
Similarly, where the delegate agency does not have continuing 
responsibility for managing land use, it shall consult with the 
appropriate State and local agency primarily responsible for managing 
land use prior to making any determination under this section.
    (ii) The delegate agency shall submit a copy of any public comment 
notice required under paragraph (f) of this section to the Administrator 
through the appropriate Regional Office.
    (3) The Administrator's authority for reviewing a source or 
modification located on an Indian Reservation shall not be redelegated 
other than to a Regional Office of the Environmental Protection Agency, 
except where the State has assumed jurisdiction over such land under 
other laws. Where the State has assumed such jurisdiction, the 
Administrator may delegate his authority to the States in accordance 
with paragraph (i)(2) of this section.

[50 FR 28551, July 12, 1985]