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Report to Congressional Requesters:

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

August 2003:

Clean Air Act:

EPA Should Use Available Data to Monitor the Effects of Its Revisions 
to the New Source Review Program:

GAO-03-947:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03-947, a report to the Ranking Minority Member of 
the Committee on Environment and Public Works, U.S. Senate, and 
another requester

Why GAO Did This Study:

A recent Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) final rule changing the 
Clean Air Act’s New Source Review (NSR) program—a key means to protect 
public health and enhance air quality—has been under scrutiny by the 
Congress, industry, environmental groups, state and local air quality 
agencies, and the courts. GAO was asked to determine the basis of 
EPA’s conclusions that (1) the rule’s economic impacts would not be 
significant enough to merit a detailed analysis and (2) the NSR 
program, prior to the rule, discouraged some energy efficiency 
projects. GAO, among other things, reviewed EPA’s analysis of the rule 
and its impacts, as well as guidance from EPA and the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) on analyzing such impacts. GAO also met 
with industry and environmental stakeholders.

What GAO Found:

Consistent with agency guidance, EPA used a limited screening analysis 
that relied on staff’s professional judgment and public comments from 
earlier reform proposals to conclude that the final rule would 
decrease emissions and health risks and not impose significant costs. 
EPA determined that neither the rule’s benefits nor its costs would 
exceed a $100 million threshold that triggers requirements to conduct 
a more comprehensive assessment. EPA issued the rule to streamline the 
NSR permitting process and provide flexibility to industry. For 
example, the rule provides a mechanism for companies to develop 
plantwide emissions limits, which would allow them to make changes in 
one part of a facility’s operations as long as they offset emissions 
increases with decreases elsewhere within the facility. While OMB 
agreed with EPA’s conclusion that the rule would not have significant 
economic effects, it determined that the rule was significant for 
policy reasons. Therefore, OMB asked EPA if it could better quantify 
the rule’s potential impacts, but the agency lacked the necessary data 
to do so. EPA lacked comprehensive data on the program’s economic 
impacts, and could not predict how many facilities would use the 
rule’s optional provisions. Several states and environmental groups 
disagree with EPA’s conclusions, claiming that it will enable 
facilities to increase their emissions. These parties have filed suit 
against EPA challenging the rule and also have petitioned EPA to 
reconsider the rule. We did not identify any comprehensive assessments 
that contradicted or supported EPA’s conclusions or the assertions of 
those who oppose the rule. Because of the data limitations, it was not 
possible to verify EPA’s conclusions about the rule’s effects.

Because it lacked comprehensive data, EPA relied on anecdotes from the 
four industries it believes are most affected by NSR to conclude that 
the NSR program (prior to the rule) discouraged some energy efficiency 
projects, such as upgrades to industrial boilers, including some that 
would have decreased emissions. Because the information is anecdotal, 
EPA’s findings do not necessarily represent the program’s effects 
across the industries subject to the program. Several environmental 
groups disputed EPA’s findings. One such group said that factors other 
than NSR, such as economic downturns, discouraged the projects. 
Furthermore, EPA’s conclusion that some projects would have decreased 
emissions assumed that facilities would not increase production after 
performing the projects. However, according to EPA and the executive 
director of an industry group, companies often expand production after 
implementing energy efficiency projects because it is advantageous to 
maximize production at the most efficient facilities. Such expansions 
could increase emissions and related health risks, although EPA 
asserts that this would be offset by decreased production and 
emissions at less efficient facilities.

What GAO Recommends:

Because of the lack of data and uncertainties about the rule’s 
impacts, we recommend that EPA determine what data are available to 
monitor the rule’s effects, identify additional data needs and ways to 
fill them, and use the monitoring results to determine whether the 
rule has created adverse effects that the agency needs to address. EPA 
agreed with GAO’s conclusions and recommendations.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-947.

To view the full report, including the scope
and methodology, click on the link above.
For more information, contact John Stephenson at stephensonj@gao.gov.

Contents:

Letter:

Results in Brief:

Background:

EPA's Economic Analysis of the Final Rule Complied with EPA and OMB 
Cost-Benefit Analysis Requirements, but Some Stakeholders Have Sought 
to Have EPA Reconsider the Rule:

EPA Relied Primarily on Anecdotes from Industries Most Affected by NSR 
to Conclude That it Discouraged Some Energy Efficiency Projects:

Conclusions:

Recommendations for Executive Action:

Agency Comments:

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology:

Appendix II: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

Acknowledgments:

Table:

Table 1: Chronology of the New Source Review Program:

Figure:

Figure 1: Percentage of Total U.S. Emissions Released by Industrial, 
Transportation, and Other Sources in 2001:

Abbreviations:

DOJ: Department of Justice:  

EPA: Environmental Protection Agency:  

NAPA: National Academy of Public Administration:  

NSR: New Source Review:  


OMB: Office of Management and Budget:  

WEPCO: Wisconsin Electric Power Company v. Reilly:

United States General Accounting Office:

Washington, DC 20548:

August 22, 2003:

The Honorable James M. Jeffords 
Ranking Minority Member 
Committee on Environment and Public Works 
United States Senate:

The Honorable Joseph I. Lieberman 
United States Senate:

Recent changes to the Clean Air Act's New Source Review (NSR) program-
-one of the act's key mechanisms for maintaining air quality to protect 
public health--have been the subject of congressional debate and have 
drawn scrutiny from numerous stakeholders, including representatives of 
industry, environmental groups, and state and local air pollution 
control authorities. While some industry officials describe the 
existing program as costly and characterized by uncertainty, 
environmental groups and a coalition of state attorneys general assert 
that it is, and has been, an important component of the Clean Air Act. 
In recent years, the program has become increasingly controversial, as 
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has taken enforcement action 
against companies in several industries, including some electricity 
producers, forest products manufacturers, and petroleum refineries, 
alleging noncompliance with the program. Some of the affected companies 
have agreed to settlements that will cost hundreds of millions of 
dollars and require emissions reductions, while others are in various 
stages of litigation.

The NSR program, which seeks to protect public health, maintain 
compliance with air quality standards, and preserve and enhance air 
quality in national parks and scenic areas, requires companies that are 
major sources of air pollution to install pollution controls in their 
facilities when constructed. The program also requires companies to 
install such controls in existing facilities when making physical or 
operational changes--such as the addition of new production equipment-
-that cause a significant increase in air emissions.[Footnote 1] Such 
changes are called "major modifications." Congress believed that 
incorporating pollution controls into the design and construction of 
new and modified air pollution sources was generally an efficient way 
of controlling air pollution from large industrial sources. Congress 
also excluded existing facilities from NSR requirements until they made 
changes that increased their emissions. Companies that want to make 
major modifications in existing facilities must apply to state or local 
agencies for an NSR permit and then install the controls. The cost of 
installing controls varies but can reach hundreds of millions of 
dollars for some facilities, according to an EPA program manager. 
However, companies can qualify for exemptions from these requirements 
if, for example, (1) a modification is considered "routine maintenance 
and repair," (2) the company agrees not to significantly increase its 
emissions after making a physical or operational change to its 
facility, or (3) the company offsets any emissions increases resulting 
from a change in a facility with emissions reductions achieved 
elsewhere within that facility.

EPA has long recognized a need to revise the NSR program and began a 
reform process in 1992 that resulted in proposed changes to the program 
in 1996 and 1998. The agency received wide-ranging comments from the 
public on how the program should be revised and held meetings with the 
public and other stakeholders, but did not develop final rules by the 
time the new administration took office in 2001. In May 2001, as part 
of its proposed national energy policy, the Vice President's National 
Energy Policy Development Group recommended that EPA report to the 
President on the NSR program's impact on energy efficiency investments, 
among other things. In response to this recommendation, EPA concluded 
in its June 2002 NSR Report to the President, that NSR had discouraged 
some energy efficiency investments at existing industrial facilities.

After completing this report, EPA modified certain of the proposed 1996 
NSR revisions and finalized them as a rule in December 2002 (hereafter 
referred to as the NSR final rule). According to EPA, the rule will, 
among other things, provide greater certainty for facilities regulated 
under the program and streamline the NSR permitting process while 
ensuring the current level of environmental protection. As part of this 
process, EPA analyzed the rule's anticipated economic effects, such as 
its impacts on emissions, health risks, the costs of installing and 
maintaining pollution control equipment, and administrative costs 
incurred by government agencies. Under Executive Order 12866 and the 
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, agencies must perform detailed 
assessments of economically significant rules--those rules that may 
have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more. If a 
rule's impacts are not expected to exceed this threshold, a more 
detailed economic analysis is generally not required. According to the 
Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the agency responsible for 
overseeing agency compliance with Executive Order 12866, agencies may 
use their discretion when conducting a screening analysis to determine 
whether a rule's economic impacts may reach the $100 million threshold 
and require a more detailed assessment. EPA's Office of Air Quality 
Planning and Standards has developed a guidance document that the 
agency uses to analyze the impacts of air quality rules, which 
discusses how to conduct a screening analysis.[Footnote 2]

You asked us to determine the basis of (1) EPA's analysis of the 
economic impacts of the final rule and its conclusion that the rule 
would not create significant enough benefits or costs to require a more 
detailed analysis and (2) EPA's conclusions that the NSR program (prior 
to the final rule) discouraged some energy efficiency projects. You 
also asked us to provide information on several other aspects of the 
final rule and proposed revisions to the definition of routine 
maintenance and repair under NSR, which we will address in subsequent 
reports.

To respond to these objectives, among other things, we used OMB and EPA 
guidance to review EPA's screening analysis of the final rule's 
economic impacts. We also met with the NSR program manager within EPA, 
other senior EPA officials within the agency's Office of Air Quality 
Planning and Standards, and senior OMB staff within the Office of 
Information and Regulatory Affairs who were responsible for reviewing 
EPA's analysis. In addition, we reviewed the information that EPA 
relied on in preparing its findings on the NSR program's effects on 
energy efficiency projects. We also met with representatives of 
industry and an environmental group. Appendix I provides a more 
detailed description of our scope and methodology.

Results in Brief:

EPA relied primarily on the professional judgment of agency staff and 
comments it received on earlier NSR revision proposals to conclude in 
its screening analysis that the final rule would not generate benefits 
or costs of more than $100 million and, therefore, that it could 
proceed with the rule without a detailed economic analysis. In taking 
this approach, the agency complied with its guidance for conducting 
economic analyses, which states that, to focus resources on those rules 
that will have a large impact, a screening analysis of benefits and 
costs may be qualitative or rely on limited data. From this screening 
analysis, EPA concluded that the rule would encourage energy efficiency 
projects while reducing emissions and related health risks without 
imposing significant economic impacts. Senior OMB staff responsible for 
reviewing the analysis said that while OMB concurred with EPA's 
conclusion that the rule was not economically significant, it 
considered the rule significant for policy reasons. As a result, OMB 
sought to determine whether EPA could quantify the final rule's 
potential effects, but concluded that the agency lacked the necessary 
data to do so. For example, EPA does not maintain comprehensive 
information on the economic impacts of the NSR program, and the agency 
could not model how often or when companies would decide to use any of 
the voluntary provisions of the rule. EPA later conducted two 
additional analyses of some of the rule's impacts to provide the public 
with more information and to satisfy requirements of the Paperwork 
Reduction Act, but these were not comprehensive assessments of the 
final rule. Attorneys general from 10 Northeastern states and several 
environmental organizations have filed suit against EPA in a challenge 
to the final rule, asserting, among other things, that the rule will 
allow companies to increase their emissions. If these claims prove 
correct, EPA's screening analysis would have underestimated the rule's 
impacts because it did not account for costs associated with increased 
emissions, such as adverse public health effects. Because of the data 
limitations, it was not possible to verify these parties' or EPA's 
conclusions. As a result, the rule's effects are uncertain. Therefore, 
we are recommending that EPA identify the data it has available, as 
well as additional data it needs and could obtain, to monitor the 
effects of the final rule and use the monitoring results to determine 
whether the rule has created adverse effects that the agency needs to 
address.

EPA relied primarily on anecdotal information from the industries most 
affected by NSR in concluding that (prior to the final rule) the 
program discouraged some energy efficiency projects, including some 
that would have reduced air emissions. EPA staff responsible for this 
analysis said they relied on anecdotal information from industry 
sources such as electricity producers, chemical and forest products 
manufacturers, and petroleum refiners because they lacked comprehensive 
data on the number of projects that did not go forward as a result of 
NSR, such as upgrades to industrial boilers. These anecdotes suggested 
that the NSR program posed several barriers that discouraged some 
energy efficiency projects, such as the high costs of installing 
pollution controls and delays in obtaining permits that in turn delayed 
project construction. Several environmental groups, however, disagreed 
with industry's claims. Because EPA based its conclusion that NSR 
discouraged some energy efficiency projects on anecdotal information 
rather than a comprehensive survey or representative sample of 
industries subject to the program, its findings are not necessarily 
representative of the program's effect on energy efficiency projects 
throughout the industries subject to the program. In addition, EPA's 
finding that some forgone energy efficiency projects would have reduced 
air emissions was based on the assumption that facilities would not 
increase their production levels after performing the projects. 
However, facilities' future levels of production and emissions are 
uncertain because they may fluctuate in response to economic 
conditions, and other factors. For example, according to EPA and the 
executive director of an industry group, companies often expand 
production after implementing energy efficiency projects because it is 
advantageous to maximize production at the most efficient facilities. 
Such expansions could increase emissions and related health risks, 
although EPA asserts that this would be offset by decreased production 
and emissions at less efficient facilities.

Background:

Under the Clean Air Act, EPA establishes health-based air quality 
standards that the states must meet and regulates air pollutant 
emissions from various sources, including industrial facilities and 
mobile sources such as automobiles and other transportation. Figure 1 
compares the emissions of key pollutants from industrial facilities to 
those from transportation and other sources.

Figure 1: Percentage of Total U.S. Emissions Released by Industrial, 
Transportation, and Other Sources in 2001:

[See PDF for image]

Note: Percentages for carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, and sulfur 
dioxide do not total 100 due to rounding.

[End of figure]

EPA has issued health-based air quality standards for six primary 
pollutants--carbon monoxide, lead, nitrogen oxides, ozone,[Footnote 3] 
particulate matter, and sulfur dioxide--that have been linked to a 
variety of health problems. For example, ozone can inflame lung tissue 
and increase susceptibility to bronchitis and pneumonia. In addition, 
nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide contribute to the formation of fine 
particles that have been linked to aggravated asthma, chronic 
bronchitis, and premature death. In 2001 (the most recent year for 
which data were available), 133 million Americans lived in areas with 
air pollution levels above at least one of the health-based air quality 
standards, according to EPA.

The New Source Review program was established in 1977 and is intended 
to protect public health, as well as national parks and wilderness 
areas, from additional air pollution when new industrial facilities are 
built and existing ones expand. The fundamental logic of the program, 
according to EPA, is that industrial facilities should install modern 
pollution controls at the time of construction or when making physical 
or operational changes, such as adding new production equipment, that 
cause a significant increase in air emissions. Subject to EPA's 
oversight, state and local air quality agencies generally administer 
air quality programs, including the NSR program. In recent years, EPA 
has taken enforcement action against companies in several industries, 
including some electricity producers, forest products manufacturers, 
and petroleum refineries, alleging noncompliance with the program. Some 
of these parties settled these cases soon after the enforcement actions 
were filed, although electricity producers assert that the actions are 
inconsistent with the Clean Air Act, according to the U.S. Department 
of Justice (DOJ). In January 2002, however, DOJ concluded that the 
enforcement actions are consistent with the act.

Recognizing the need for revisions to the NSR program, EPA began a 
reform effort in 1992 and 1993 when it held workshops with stakeholders 
and established a federal advisory committee in 1993. Largely on the 
basis of this committee's recommendations, EPA issued proposed NSR 
revisions in 1996 that were intended to reduce costs imposed on 
companies that undergo NSR permitting without interfering with efforts 
to attain air quality goals. EPA solicited public comment on the 
proposals at that time and again in 1998, when it sought additional 
information on an alternative method for determining whether a facility 
modification should be subject to NSR. The agency received numerous 
comments that provided wide-ranging views on how the program should be 
revised. Despite additional public meetings and discussions with 
stakeholders on NSR reforms, EPA had not developed final rules by the 
time the new administration took office in 2001.

In May 2001, when the Vice President's National Energy Policy 
Development Group issued its proposed national energy policy, it 
recommended that EPA report to the President on the NSR program's 
impact on investments in new utility and refinery generation capacity, 
energy efficiency, and environmental protection. In response to this 
recommendation, and given that EPA does not maintain such information, 
the agency solicited public input on how the NSR program had affected 
the ability of companies to undertake energy efficiency projects in 
their existing facilities. EPA defined energy efficiency projects as 
those that would have produced greater output per unit of fuel input 
(e.g., more electricity per ton of coal burned), regardless of the 
effect on emissions. In its June 2002 NSR Report to the President, EPA 
concluded, among other things, that NSR had not affected investments in 
new power plants and refineries but had discouraged some energy 
efficiency projects at existing facilities, including some that would 
have reduced air emissions.

After completing this report, EPA modified the 1996 proposed NSR 
revisions to provide regulatory flexibility to industrial facilities so 
that they could pursue energy efficiency projects, among other things. 
EPA assessed the economic impacts of implementing these revisions, and 
finalized them as a rulemaking--hereafter referred to as the "final 
rule"--in December 2002. Table 1 provides a chronology of the NSR 
program.

Table 1: Chronology of the New Source Review Program:

Date: 1970; Description: Clean Air Act became law.

Date: 1972; Description: EPA created the Prevention of Significant 
Deterioration Program by rulemaking. This program implemented NSR in 
areas that meet air quality standards.

Date: 1977; Description: Clean Air Act Amendments of 1977 became law.

Date: 1990; Description: Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 became law.

Date: 1992-1994; Description: EPA issued notices of violation to 
companies in the plywood and wood products industry.

Date: 1993; Description: EPA convened a federal advisory committee to 
address policy and technical issues associated with revising NSR.

Date: 1996; Description: EPA issued a NSR Simplification Proposal to 
streamline permitting, relieve regulatory burden, and provide states 
with flexibility. EPA also began investigating coal-fired electricity 
producers, petroleum refiners, and the pulp and paper industry for 
violations of NSR rules.

Date: 1998; Description: EPA solicited further public comment on NSR 
revisions.

Date: 1999; Description: DOJ filed lawsuits against seven electricity 
producers charging that 17 power plants made major modifications 
without installing required pollution control equipment.

Date: 2000-2003; Description: EPA settled several NSR cases with 
electricity producers and refiners.

Date: May 2001; Description: The administration's proposed energy 
policy called for EPA and the Department of Energy to review the 
implementation of NSR regulations, and for DOJ to review existing NSR 
legal actions. DOJ later reported that the actions were consistent with 
the Clean Air Act.

Date: June 2001; Description: EPA issued a NSR background paper as a 
partial response to recommendations in the energy plan.

Date: June 2002; Description: EPA issued New Source Review: Report to 
the President and recommendations for improving the NSR program.

Date: December 2002; Description: EPA issued the NSR final rule and 
nine northeast states filed suit challenging the final rule.

Date: January 2003; Description: A tenth northeast state filed suit 
challenging the rule, and these states, California, and four California 
air quality agencies petitioned EPA to reconsider the final rule.

Date: July 2003; Description: EPA announced that it would reconsider 
parts of the NSR final rule.

Source: EPA and National Academy of Public Administration.

[End of table]

Specific revisions in the final rule include the following:

* a revised method for determining a facility's baseline emissions 
level that a company would use as the starting point for determining 
whether any changes in emissions resulting from a planned physical 
change or change in the method of operation subjected the company to 
NSR;

* a revised test that a company would use after establishing a 
facility's baseline emissions level to determine if a physical or 
operational change would increase emissions beyond the NSR threshold;

* exemptions from the program if companies demonstrate that (1) 
equipment qualifies as a "clean unit" because they already use state-
of-the-art pollution control equipment or (2) a proposed modification 
specifically controls air pollution and achieves an environmental 
benefit; and:

* a mechanism for companies to work with state or local permitting 
authorities to develop plantwide emissions limits, which would allow 
companies to make changes in one part of a facility's operations as 
long as they offset any emissions increases with decreases elsewhere 
within the facility.

In addition to the final rule, EPA has proposed further NSR revisions 
that the agency believes will provide greater certainty about 
activities that are considered routine maintenance, repair, and 
replacement. According to a NSR program manager, the agency is 
reviewing public comments on this proposal and expects to finalize the 
rule by December 2003.

EPA's Economic Analysis of the Final Rule Complied with EPA and OMB 
Cost-Benefit Analysis Requirements, but Some Stakeholders Have Sought 
to Have EPA Reconsider the Rule:

EPA relied primarily on the professional judgment of its staff, as well 
as public comments on the agency's prior proposal to revise the NSR 
program, in concluding from its screening analysis that the final rule 
would not create benefits or costs beyond the $100 million threshold 
that triggers requirements for a more detailed economic analysis. EPA's 
approach, while limited, is consistent with agency guidance for 
assessing the economic impacts of proposed rules. In addition, EPA 
would have had difficulty conducting a more quantitative analysis 
because of data limitations. OMB agreed that the rule would not have a 
significant economic impact but was significant for policy reasons. OMB 
asked EPA if it could better quantify impacts and was convinced that 
the agency lacked the necessary data to do so. EPA did later conduct 
two additional analyses of some of the rule's costs and benefits, but 
they also were not comprehensive economic assessments. Some 
stakeholders have formally asked EPA to reconsider the rule, arguing, 
among other things, that it will enable facilities to increase their 
emissions. Because of the limited data on the NSR program, it was not 
possible to verify agency or stakeholder conclusions about the rule's 
anticipated economic impacts.

EPA's Reliance on Professional Judgment Was Consistent with Agency 
Guidance for Screening the Economic Impacts of Rules:

EPA's screening analysis of the final rule's anticipated effects was 
consistent with the agency's guidance for conducting economic analyses. 
According to senior OMB staff, the office does not have guidance for 
agencies to use when conducting a screening analysis to determine 
whether a rule will impose significant economic impacts and, thus, 
merit further analysis. Therefore, agencies have latitude in 
determining how best to conduct a screening analysis. EPA's Office of 
Air Quality Planning and Standards has developed a guidance document 
that describes the process agency economists should use when analyzing 
air quality rules. Recognizing the need to focus agency resources on 
rules that have a large impact, the guidance states that a screening 
analysis of benefits and costs may be qualitative in nature or rely on 
limited data.

According to a NSR program manager in EPA, agency staff relied 
primarily on their professional judgment in estimating the rule's 
economic impacts, such as its effect on air pollutant emissions and the 
costs companies incur when they install pollution controls, as well as 
public comments the agency received on its 1996 and 1998 NSR revision 
proposals. For example, several industry trade associations submitted 
information asserting that the ability to use plantwide emissions 
limits would reduce costs for industry and provide other benefits 
without compromising air quality.[Footnote 4] On the basis of this 
information, EPA staff determined that the rule would lead to overall 
economic and environmental benefits by encouraging energy efficiency 
projects, reducing emissions and related health risks, and providing 
economic benefits to companies affected by the NSR program, according 
to the NSR program manager. For example, EPA forecasted that the rule 
would encourage companies to implement energy efficiency projects that 
would reduce emissions, such as upgrades to boilers used to generate 
power.

In its screening analysis, EPA assumed that the final rule would not 
impose significant economic costs on companies because the rule created 
voluntary options and companies would most likely only elect to use 
them if they thought the provisions would achieve an overall economic 
benefit. Therefore, the agency assumed that any time a company opted to 
use one of the provisions, the benefits to the company would outweigh 
any costs incurred. In addition, because EPA concluded that the rule 
would decrease emissions, it did not forecast any increases in public 
health costs resulting from the final rule, such as increased incidence 
of asthma or other respiratory problems. Consistent with its guidance, 
EPA then concluded that, because the rule was not expected to create 
$100 million in benefits or costs, the agency could proceed in 
finalizing the rule without a more quantitative and comprehensive 
analysis.

EPA Lacked Data to Conduct a More Comprehensive Analysis of the 
Economic Impacts of the NSR Final Rule:

Even if EPA had been required to conduct a more detailed economic 
analysis, it would have had difficulty doing so because the agency is 
not required to systematically collect comprehensive data on the 
economic effects of the NSR program.[Footnote 5] Regarding the benefits 
of the program, EPA does not maintain comprehensive data on the number 
and type of facilities that obtain NSR permits, or the reduced air 
emissions achieved after facilities install pollution controls, 
according to a senior agency economist. In 2001, EPA attempted to 
estimate the emissions reductions at facilities that obtained NSR 
permits; however, senior agency officials responsible for the analysis 
acknowledged that it had several limitations.[Footnote 6] For example, 
these officials said the analysis included only facilities that were 
located in areas that met federal air quality standards, thereby 
excluding a large portion of the universe of affected facilities. In 
addition, EPA had incomplete data on facilities located in EPA region 
6, which includes Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. 
Furthermore, the analysis did not distinguish between benefits that 
resulted from the installation of pollution controls at new facilities 
and those at existing facilities, which are the focus of the final 
rule. With respect to costs, EPA is not required to maintain 
comprehensive information on the costs of the NSR program, and would 
therefore have had difficulty quantifying all of the costs of the rule, 
according to a NSR program manager.

In addition to EPA's lack of data on the NSR program's benefits and 
costs, a senior agency economist said that uncertainty about the extent 
to which companies might elect to use the NSR alternatives provided in 
the final rule also limited EPA's ability to estimate the rule's 
impacts. For example, the economist said that the final rule allows 
companies to develop a plantwide emissions limit as an alternative to 
NSR, but only those companies that find this provision advantageous are 
likely to use it and EPA could not accurately determine how many 
companies this might include. According to EPA, companies' decisions 
about whether to pursue voluntary options are case-specific and 
dependent on a number of factors. Therefore, the agency was unable to 
model how often and when the final rule's options would be used. In 
contrast, most of the other rules EPA develops generally impose new 
requirements on a known universe of companies, according to a NSR 
program manager. In these cases, it is much easier to determine the 
costs and benefits of a rule because the agency can gather information 
from the affected companies. For example, if EPA required all companies 
within a particular industry to install certain pollution controls, it 
could gather information on the average costs of such equipment and the 
anticipated reductions in air emissions. Because of these data 
limitations we identified, it was not possible to conduct our own 
assessment of the final rule's possible effects and verify EPA's 
analyses and conclusions.

OMB Concurred with EPA's Analysis and Conclusions and Determined That 
Data Limitations Precluded More Quantitative Analysis:

According to senior EPA and OMB staff, OMB agreed with EPA's finding 
that the final rule was not economically significant because it was not 
expected to impose costs or provide benefits beyond the $100 million 
threshold that triggers requirements to conduct a more thorough 
analysis. Nevertheless, according to senior OMB staff responsible for 
reviewing the analysis, while the office found EPA's analysis--which 
was presented in an oral briefing but not documented--persuasive, OMB 
determined that the final rule was significant for policy reasons. 
Under Executive Order 12866, rules that "raise novel legal or policy 
issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's priorities" or 
other criteria can be categorized as significant. According to the 
Executive Order, when rules fall into this category, the agency issuing 
the rule must provide OMB with an assessment of the potential costs and 
benefits of the regulatory action, but the order does not elaborate on 
the form of the assessment. The senior OMB staff said that EPA's 
screening analysis satisfied this requirement. Nevertheless, OMB staff 
asked EPA if it would be possible to conduct an analysis that 
quantified the rule's effects. However, as we previously discussed, EPA 
identified numerous data limitations that it claimed prevented its 
staff from conducting such an analysis, and OMB acknowledged these 
limitations and concurred with EPA.

EPA Conducted Two Additional Analyses of the Rule's Effects, but They 
Did Not Comprehensively Assess Economic Impacts:

In November 2002, EPA issued a supplemental analysis intended to 
provide the public with additional information on the rule's potential 
environmental effects. According to EPA, this analysis was not intended 
as a comprehensive economic analysis of the rule's benefits and costs 
and was not used to make decisions about the rule. Like the screening 
analysis, it relied primarily on qualitative information and arrived at 
similar conclusions. For example, EPA asserted that the exemption for 
companies that use state-of-the-art pollution controls would save 
companies NSR permitting costs. EPA also asserted that this provision 
would induce facilities to voluntarily install controls to avoid NSR, 
thereby reducing emissions.

While the supplemental analysis was qualitative, it used some data from 
a limited number of facilities to estimate the effects of some of the 
rule's provisions on a wider universe of facilities. Specifically, the 
analysis considered the experiences of six companies that had used 
regulatory options similar to those provided for in the final rule to 
determine that such limits would lead to emissions reductions. For 
example, on the basis of these six case studies, EPA stated that if 75 
percent of facilities in three industry sectors opted to use plantwide 
emissions limits, emissions of volatile organic compounds could be cut 
by up to 17,000 tons annually (less than 1 percent of the total 
volatile organic compounds emitted in 2001, the most recent year for 
which data were available). EPA also said that the emissions reductions 
would be greater if the analysis was extended to other industry sectors 
and pollutants.

However, EPA did not use statistically valid methods to identify the 
six companies on which it based this portion of its analysis. 
Therefore, the experiences of these companies may not be representative 
of how plantwide limits will affect emissions at other industrial 
companies that may opt to use this provision. In addition, the 
Secretary of the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and 
Environmental Control--the state in which one of the six companies was 
located--wrote the EPA Administrator cautioning against using the 
experience of the Delaware company to support the final rule. The 
Secretary noted that the regulatory option used by that company 
provided for emissions reductions as a prerequisite for participation, 
while EPA's plantwide emission limit does not.

As noted above, EPA could not determine with any certainty the number 
of facilities that would opt to use the final rule's voluntary 
provisions, or the changes in the number of NSR permits, amount of 
emissions, or other effects that would result. However, EPA was 
required under the Paperwork Reduction Act to assess some of the costs 
and benefits that would accrue to companies and government agencies 
under the final rule. Specifically, the act requires agencies to 
estimate the record keeping burden associated with a rule and report 
this information to OMB. Therefore, EPA relied on limited available 
data and its professional judgment to make estimates necessary to 
satisfy this requirement. In February 2003, after issuing the final 
rule, EPA estimated that it would impose about $6.5 million in annual 
burden on state and local air quality agencies, which include legal and 
other costs associated with incorporating the final rule into the 
state's air pollution control plan, collecting public comment on the 
changes, and obtaining state legislatures' approval of the 
changes.[Footnote 7] This analysis also estimated that 14 facilities 
would use the final rule's provisions during each of the first 3 years 
of implementation, reducing the previous annual burden by $650,000. 
This analysis, like the screening analysis, found that the rule would 
impose less than $100 million in annual costs on companies and 
government agencies. However, a senior EPA economist said this was a 
limited analysis intended to identify information collection and record 
keeping requirements that the final rule would impose. In addition, 
this analysis does not comprehensively address all of the costs that 
are likely to result from implementation of the rule.

Some State Attorneys General and Environmental Organizations Question 
EPA's Conclusions and Assert That the Final Rule Will Increase 
Emissions, Harming Public Health:

Nine northeast states filed a petition in the U.S. Court of Appeals for 
the District of Columbia Circuit on December 31, 2002--the day the rule 
was finalized--disagreeing with EPA's conclusions about the rule's 
effects.[Footnote 8] They asserted, among other things, that the final 
rule violated the Clean Air Act and would enable companies to increase 
their emissions because, by using the provisions to opt out of NSR, 
they will no longer be required to install pollution control 
equipment.[Footnote 9] According to New York's Attorney General, the 
final rule will lead to more smog, asthma, and respiratory disease. In 
addition, Earthjustice--acting on behalf of a coalition of 
environmental and public health advocacy groups--filed similar 
petitions for review, also in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 
District of Columbia Circuit. According to the American Lung 
Association, one of the groups represented by Earthjustice, the final 
rule creates loopholes that allow companies to increase their emissions 
without installing pollution controls. Similarly, Environmental 
Defense, another group represented by Earthjustice, claims that the 
final rule will enable thousands of factories, power plants, and other 
industrial companies to pollute more.[Footnote 10] On February 6, 2002, 
the nine Northeast states, along with Pennsylvania, filed a motion, 
which the court denied, seeking to halt implementation of the final 
rule pending a ruling on the earlier petitions.

While these parties do not support the final rule, several states, 
including Indiana, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Carolina, 
South Dakota, and Utah, as well as the American Petroleum Institute and 
other industry groups, have filed petitions with the court in support 
of the final rule. In July 2003, EPA responded in part to the petitions 
for reconsideration by requesting public comment on six limited issues 
in the final rule. The agency said that the decision to reconsider 
these issues did not mean that EPA had decided to change any aspect of 
the rule and that the agency would make that decision after the comment 
period closed.

Our review did not identify any comprehensive assessments of the final 
rule's effects that contradicted or supported the results of EPA's 
analysis or the assertions of those who oppose the final rule. As a 
result, the economic impacts of the final rule are uncertain. Two 
studies commissioned by the Environmental Integrity Project of the 
Rockefeller Family Fund and performed by Abt Associates, an EPA 
contractor, focused on facilities that obtained NSR permits and 
installed emissions controls prior to the final rule. The studies found 
that the facilities would not have been required to install pollution 
controls if they had made their modifications after implementation of 
the final rule, and could have increased their emissions. However, 
because these analyses focus on just two facilities and only one of the 
four provisions of the final rule, their results may not be 
representative of the rule's overall environmental effects. In 
addition, EPA asserts that these studies were based on an incorrect 
interpretation and application of the final rule's provisions.

EPA Relied Primarily on Anecdotes from Industries Most Affected by NSR 
to Conclude That It Discouraged Some Energy Efficiency Projects:

EPA relied primarily on anecdotal information from industry in 
concluding that the NSR program, prior to the final rule, discouraged 
some energy efficiency projects--such as upgrades to industrial 
boilers--including some projects that would have reduced air emissions. 
The anecdotes, which were provided primarily by four of the industries 
most affected by the NSR program, suggested that the program imposed 
several barriers that deterred energy efficiency projects, including 
delays in obtaining permits and the high costs of installing pollution 
controls. Several environmental groups disputed EPA's findings, and a 
representative of one group cited other factors, such as poor economic 
conditions and a lack of willingness to control air pollution, as the 
barriers to energy efficiency projects, although EPA program managers 
said that the agency found industry's claims to be more persuasive. 
Nonetheless, because EPA relied on anecdotal information rather than a 
statistically valid sample or industrywide survey, the agency's 
findings do not necessarily represent NSR's effect on energy efficiency 
projects throughout the industries subject to the program.

EPA's Conclusion That NSR Discouraged Energy Efficiency Projects Was 
Based Primarily on Anecdotes from Four of the Industries It Believes 
Are Most Affected by the Program:

According to EPA officials responsible for the NSR Report to the 
President, during development of the proposed NSR revisions, the agency 
received information regarding the program's effect on energy 
efficiency projects from numerous stakeholders. This input included 
written responses to EPA's request for information, as well as case-
specific anecdotes and supplemental documents. In assessing this 
information, the agency defined any project that included a facility 
modification that would directly result in greater output per fuel 
input (such as more electricity generated from each ton of coal burned) 
as an energy efficiency project. Although EPA based its conclusion 
about NSR's impact on such projects on the total available information, 
it relied heavily on anecdotes describing cases in which chemical 
manufacturers, electric utilities, forest products manufacturers, and 
petroleum refineries--four of the industries EPA identified as most 
affected by the program--had decided not to pursue energy efficiency 
projects because of NSR. While EPA also received comments from several 
environmental organizations and state and local air quality agencies 
that disputed industry's claims, an EPA program manager said that the 
specific examples provided by industry were convincing.

After obtaining the anecdotes submitted to EPA by the parties the 
agency identified as its primary data sources--including trade 
associations, individual firms, and other business interests--and 
removing those that did not address energy efficiency or contain 
complete information, we reviewed 69 anecdotes that described how NSR 
deterred companies from making energy efficiency investments. We 
determined that these anecdotes generally went through two rounds of 
review. First, trade associations said that their members reviewed and 
discussed the anecdotes before submitting them to EPA. After receiving 
the submissions, EPA program managers said they used their expertise 
and judgment to evaluate the credibility and reliability of the 
anecdotes. According to these managers, they paid specific attention to 
whether (1) the project described in an anecdote was technically 
feasible; (2) an anecdote's conclusions about how NSR discouraged a 
project were consistent with EPA's understanding of how the NSR 
provisions would apply to that project; and (3) the conclusions were 
based on "real-life," rather than hypothetical, situations. EPA program 
managers found the anecdotes to be generally credible. While some may 
have been more relevant than others (e.g., "real life" examples were 
more relevant than hypothetical ones), none was dismissed for failing 
to meet these criteria, according to an EPA program manager. Agency 
staff familiar with the NSR program then compiled, reviewed, and 
synthesized this information and concluded that complying with NSR may 
have deterred some investments in energy efficiency projects, including 
some that may have reduced air emissions. It is important to note that 
the energy efficiency findings in the Report to the President were not 
the basis of the analysis of the economic impacts of the final rule, 
which found that the final rule would encourage energy efficiency 
projects, according to an EPA manager of the NSR program.

The anecdotes generally cited three ways in which these industries 
believe complying with NSR discouraged energy efficiency projects, 
including concerns that (1) EPA would subsequently determine that 
projects companies initiated as routine maintenance, repair, and 
replacement without an NSR permit were actually major modifications 
subject to NSR and enforcement action; (2) the test used to measure the 
emissions impacts of company modifications was not fair; and (3) the 
NSR permitting process caused unanticipated project delays and 
increased costs.

The first barrier, concerns about possible enforcement actions, stemmed 
from recent EPA enforcement litigation against certain electricity 
producers in which EPA contested industry's claims that certain 
projects were exempt from NSR because they qualified as routine 
maintenance. EPA maintained that these projects were in fact major 
modifications that should have triggered NSR. According to senior 
industry representatives, this meant that EPA could consider 
potentially thousands of projects that industry had previously 
completed without an NSR permit under this exemption as NSR violations, 
including some that state and local air quality agencies had approved 
and confirmed did not trigger NSR. This prompted some industry 
officials to allege that EPA was reinterpreting what could be 
considered routine maintenance exempt from NSR. EPA's Office of 
Enforcement, however, maintains that the agency is correctly 
interpreting and enforcing the program.

According to senior representatives of the electric utility and 
refining industries, this litigation has produced substantial 
uncertainty for companies pursuing facility modifications. Part of this 
uncertainty may stem from what industry officials describe as a lack of 
clear policy guidance on what qualifies as routine maintenance. EPA has 
never explicitly defined routine maintenance since the exclusion was 
established, although some clarification has grown out of EPA 
enforcement, most notably in the case of Wisconsin Electric Power Co. 
v. Reilly (WEPCO). This court decision upheld EPA's consideration of 
the nature, extent, purpose, frequency, and cost of facility 
modifications, as well as other relevant factors, when determining 
whether a project qualifies for the routine maintenance and repair 
exemption. EPA maintains that it takes a case-by-case approach to 
determining whether a modification constitutes routine maintenance, and 
has cited WEPCO as support for its recent enforcement actions.

However, industry comments submitted to EPA claim that the agency's 
enforcement actions, combined with what they regard as a lack of clear 
guidance, make it difficult for them to reliably predict when their 
projects will trigger NSR, especially when EPA may later disagree with 
state and local NSR determinations. Companies are therefore reluctant 
to perform projects that could trigger NSR or possible enforcement 
litigation, including, they assert, energy efficiency projects. 
According to EPA, the agency's proposed rule on the routine maintenance 
exemption would address some of these concerns by changing its 
definition. EPA expects to issue the rule by the end of 2003.

Several environmental groups disputed EPA's findings. For example, an 
environmental advocacy group involved in NSR issues claimed that the 
proposed rule would simply broaden the exemption in violation of the 
Clean Air Act. One alternative in the proposed rule would allow 
companies to claim as routine maintenance any modifications as long as 
they cost less than a certain percentage--depending on the industry--of 
the total cost of the polluting unit, such as a boiler, or the entire 
facility. Another alternative would allow companies to invoke the 
routine maintenance exemption if they are replacing equipment that 
performs the same function as its predecessor and does not alter the 
basic design of a facility. Environmentalists assert that these 
exemptions will allow companies to falsely treat major plant 
modifications as routine maintenance, avoid NSR requirements, and 
increase emissions.

The second barrier cited in the anecdotes was the test used to 
determine whether a modification would increase emissions beyond the 
NSR threshold. Under the program prior to the final rule, companies 
making physical or operational changes that did not qualify for 
exemptions, such as the routine maintenance exemption, had to undergo 
this test to gauge the changes' effects on emissions. Before the final 
rule, a company was to compare a facility's emissions during the 
previous 24 months to its future potential emissions if its facility 
was run at maximum capacity or the highest capacity allowed by the 
existing NSR permit after making the change, even if the facility had 
not run at this level before, or did not plan to in the future. If the 
expected future emissions resulting from the change were more than 40 
tons per year higher after making the change, the project qualified as 
a significant emission increase and triggered NSR.[Footnote 11] 
Companies (except electric utilities) could request that the permitting 
agency allow the use of any different two-year period based on a 
demonstration that it is more representative of normal operation. 
Electric utilities may use any 2-year period in the previous 5 years as 
their actual emissions baseline.

Industry submissions to EPA on the NSR program asserted that having to 
assume maximum capacity biased the test and significantly overstated 
the true emissions impact of a project. They cited cases where they 
expected a project to reduce emissions, but the test showed that it 
would increase them. For example, a refinery planned to implement a 
project that it expected would improve the energy efficiency of a 
furnace by 5 percent. While the furnace was permitted to emit 45 tons 
of air pollution per year, it was not operating at full capacity and 
was therefore only emitting 35 tons per year. According to the 
facility's submission, the project would decrease annual emissions to 
32 tons per year through more efficient fuel combustion while running 
at the same capacity. However, the emissions test required the refinery 
to compare its historical emissions--35 tons per year--with its future 
potential emissions running at full capacity--45 tons per year. Because 
the facility was located in an area where a 10 ton per year increase 
triggers NSR requirements, the facility would have had to obtain an NSR 
permit for the modification.

Likewise, a pulp and paper mill planned to install an air flow system 
that would allow its boiler to more efficiently burn natural gas, 
creating annual savings of $1 million. By using less fuel, the project 
was also expected to reduce future emissions of carbon monoxide, 
nitrogen oxides, and volatile organic compounds. However, the facility 
had been operating below its maximum capacity during the 24 months 
preceding the planned installation. Therefore, when managers compared 
the facility's actual emissions during this period to its future 
potential emissions, assuming it would operate at maximum capacity 
after the modification, the projected emissions increase qualified as a 
major modification, even though the project was expected to reduce 
emissions. If the company proceeded with the project under NSR and 
installed the best available pollution controls, it would incur $17 
million in total costs, making the project cost-prohibitive, according 
to the industry submission.

While these anecdotes assert that having to assume maximum capacity 
under this test was unfair, the NSR program required facilities to 
assume that the changed equipment would operate at the maximum level 
allowed in its operating permit unless the owners or operators of the 
facility made a legally binding commitment to operate at lower 
production levels, according to EPA. Otherwise, EPA and state and local 
air quality agencies would have no way of ensuring that companies would 
not have a significant increase in emissions under the NSR rules after 
making a physical change, according to EPA. In addition, EPA 
acknowledged in its Report to the President that performing an energy 
efficiency project can provide an economic incentive to increase 
production levels at more efficient facilities, potentially resulting 
in increased emissions. However, EPA's new final rule now gives a 
company the option to compare a facility's previous emissions to its 
projected actual emissions, instead of its maximum potential emissions. 
EPA believes that this new test will remove disincentives that 
discourage facilities from making the types of changes that improve 
operating efficiency, implement pollution prevention projects, and 
result in other environmentally beneficial changes. In addition, EPA 
asserts that the new record keeping and reporting measures required 
with this option will provide the information necessary for reviewing 
authorities to ensure that such changes are made consistent with the 
Clean Air Act.

The anecdotes also identified a third barrier. According to industry, 
unpredictable delays associated with the NSR process disrupt a 
project's planning and construction timetables, increasing project 
costs. Program managers and technical directors representing forest 
product companies, chemical manufacturers, refineries, and utilities 
commented on this issue, stating that the NSR permitting process can 
last anywhere from 6 to 24 months, thereby delaying or disrupting 
project planning and construction. Petroleum refinery representatives 
claimed to be uniquely affected by this, asserting that NSR permitting 
delays made it difficult for them to meet federal mandates and 
deadlines for producing cleaner-burning gasoline, potentially 
subjecting them to fines and enforcement actions. Industry officials 
also claimed that project delays they attributed to NSR permitting 
resulted in equipment wearing out, increasing replacement costs, and 
raising safety issues. They also stated that certain repair projects 
required quick decisions and turnaround, both of which are not 
compatible with the amount of time it takes to obtain an NSR permit and 
install the appropriate pollution controls. An EPA NSR program manager 
confirmed that permitting delays could hinder energy efficiency 
upgrades in emergency situations where a company needs to quickly 
replace broken or worn out machinery and would like to install more 
efficient equipment. However, the program manager said such situations 
are rare and that the timelines for planned facility upgrades are 
generally compatible with the NSR permitting schedule. In addition to 
permitting delays, some of the anecdotes also asserted that, if a 
project triggered NSR requirements, the costs of installing pollution 
controls would have outweighed the anticipated benefits of the project.

The National Academy of Public Administration and Environmental 
Stakeholders Reached Different Conclusions about NSR's Effects on 
Energy Efficiency:

In an April 2003 report to the Congress on the NSR program, the 
National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA) stated that while a 
lack of data prevented the organization from determining the extent to 
which NSR has impeded energy efficiency improvements, NSR might indeed 
have discouraged some industrial sources from undertaking economically 
and environmentally sound maintenance and energy efficiency projects. 
However, according to NAPA, some facilities continue to operate without 
modern pollution controls because of widespread noncompliance with NSR 
or flaws in its implementation. NAPA said that these facilities have an 
advantage over their competitors because they have not incurred the 
costs of controlling emissions, and that such facilities have little 
basis to complain that NSR has adversely affected the efficiency of 
their operations. An EPA manager for the NSR program took exception to 
NAPA's findings, stating that EPA and the states have enforced the 
program over the years. The official also said that facilities only 
trigger NSR when they make physical changes in, or changes in the 
method of operation of, their facilities that significantly increase 
emissions. Therefore, if the facilities NAPA refers to have not 
undertaken such modifications, they have complied with the program, 
according to the official.

Several environmental groups experienced in NSR issues disagreed with 
industry's claims about the NSR program's effects on energy efficiency. 
A representative of one such group, who has testified before the 
Congress on NSR, pointed out that if companies truly wanted to avoid 
NSR, they could accept an emissions limit in their operating permit and 
make a formal commitment to not emit above the NSR threshold. Companies 
that agree to such limits may make any modifications they want without 
triggering NSR, provided they do not exceed the limit. With this option 
available, the representative asserted that the NSR process could not 
deter energy efficiency projects that were expected to reduce emissions 
because they would not trigger NSR, since they would not increase 
emissions above the program threshold. For example, a source with an 
operating permit limit could make a physical or operational change 
without an NSR permit and increase emissions by 39.9 tons per year 
(where the threshold is 40 tons per year) and not trigger NSR. The 
environmental representative cited other factors, such as poor economic 
conditions and a lack of willingness to control air emissions, as the 
primary factors hindering companies from pursuing these projects, 
rather than compliance with NSR.

Representatives of the chemical, forest products, and electric utility 
industries disagreed with this position and said that companies are 
reluctant to accept an operating permit limit because they would be 
giving up their flexibility to increase production in response to 
changing economic and market conditions, just for the sake of one 
energy efficiency project. A trade association representing the 
chemical industry also told us that the lengthy and protracted process 
for obtaining an operating permit makes it impractical to renegotiate a 
permit limit every time a company wants to undertake an energy 
efficiency project.

The Anecdotes Do Not Necessarily Represent NSR's Effect on Energy 
Efficiency Projects Industrywide or Their Overall Impact on Emissions:

As EPA notes in its Report to the President, its conclusions about the 
effect of NSR on energy efficiency projects are based on anecdotal 
information because the agency lacked comprehensive data on the number 
of projects that did not go forward as a result of NSR, according to 
EPA program managers. Because EPA based its conclusions on anecdotes, 
the agency's findings do not necessarily represent NSR's effect on 
energy efficiency projects within the industries that provided the 
anecdotes or across all industries subject to the program. Reaching 
such conclusions about the program's broader effects on energy 
efficiency projects would have required gathering information from 
either a statistically valid sample of companies subject to the program 
or a comprehensive survey of affected industries. Conducting such an 
analysis, however, would have required substantial resources.

In addition, EPA's conclusion that the NSR program had discouraged some 
energy efficiency investments that would have reduced emissions was 
based on the assumption that the companies would not increase their 
production after completing the energy efficiency project, according to 
an EPA official responsible for the analysis. Under this assumption, 23 
of the 69 anecdotes predicted that the proposed projects would decrease 
emissions, 11 predicted an increase, 2 predicted no change, and 33 (or 
48 percent) did not include sufficient data to determine the emissions 
impact.[Footnote 12] However, facilities' future production levels and 
air pollutant emissions may fluctuate in response to changing economic 
conditions and other factors. In addition, performing an energy 
efficiency project can provide an economic incentive to increase 
production levels at more efficient facilities, potentially increasing 
emissions and related health risks.

The executive director of one industry trade association stated that it 
would make economic sense to increase production at more efficient 
facilities. The representative "could not imagine a utility spending 
money on extra capacity, and then not utilizing it." In addition, 
according to EPA, production at more efficient facilities could 
supplant that at less efficient and higher-emitting facilities. 
Therefore, even in cases where an energy efficiency project was 
expected to reduce emissions, future increases in production after 
implementing a project could possibly increase emissions, as well as 
related health risks, past the NSR threshold.

On the other hand, according to an EPA official responsible for the 
agency's energy efficiency analysis, the agency expected that if a 
company increased production at its more efficient facilities, it could 
decrease production at its less efficient facilities. Therefore, any 
emissions increases due to higher production levels at more efficient 
facilities would be offset by decreased production elsewhere. In 
addition, a facility's emissions could decrease more than expected 
after implementing an energy efficiency project if the facility 
decreased production, for example, due to poor economic conditions. An 
EPA program manager said that the agency has not analyzed the air 
pollution impacts of shifts in production that facilities make after 
implementing energy efficiency projects.

Conclusions:

While EPA determined that the final rule would lead to overall economic 
and environmental benefits, these effects are uncertain because of 
limited data and difficulty in determining how industrial companies 
will respond to the rule. Consistent with the relevant executive order 
and guidance, EPA conducted a limited analysis that determined that the 
rule was not economically significant, and OMB concurred. In addition, 
EPA identified data limitations that prevented the agency from 
conducting a more quantitative analysis. Some stakeholders disagree 
with EPA about the rule's effects, contending that the rule will allow 
companies to increase air pollutant emissions, resulting in adverse 
public health effects. If these stakeholders are correct, the final 
rule could exacerbate existing air pollution problems--133 million 
Americans already live in areas with air pollution levels above at 
least one of the health-based air quality standards--and impose 
negative economic impacts that EPA did not account for in its analysis 
of the rule.

Recommendations for Executive Action:

Because of the lack of data and uncertainties about the NSR final 
rule's impacts, we recommend that the EPA Administrator:

* determine what data are available that the agency could use to 
monitor the emissions impacts of the rule,

* work with state and local air quality agencies to identify any 
additional data needs and possible ways to fill them, and:

* use the monitoring results to determine whether the rule has created 
adverse effects that the agency needs to address.

Agency Comments:

We provided EPA and OMB with a draft of this report for review and 
comment. We subsequently received comments from both agencies. EPA said 
that the report was accurate and that the agency agreed with our 
conclusions and recommendation. OMB said that the report was accurate 
but raised several questions about EPA's potential implementation of 
the recommendation. Specifically, OMB said it would be difficult for 
EPA to gather data to monitor the rule's effects and that attributing 
emissions changes to the final rule would pose challenges. For example, 
OMB said that it would be difficult to determine the level of emissions 
facilities would have released in the absence of the final rule. EPA, 
however, said that the recommendation acknowledges these challenges and 
provides flexibility for the agency to work with state and local 
agencies to identify data collection strategies. EPA and OMB also 
recommended a number of technical changes to the report, which we have 
incorporated into this report as appropriate.

As agreed with your offices, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 10 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies to the EPA 
Administrator, the Director, Office of Management and Budget, 
interested congressional committees, and other interested parties. We 
will also make copies available to others upon request. In addition, 
this report will be available at no charge on GAO's Web site at http:/
/www.gao.gov.

If you or your staffs have any questions, please call me at (202) 512-
3841. I can also be reached at StephensonJ@gao.gov. Key contributors to 
this report are listed in appendix II.

John B. Stephenson 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment:

Signed by John B. Stephenson: 

[End of section]

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology:

The Ranking Minority Member of the Senate Environment and Public Works 
Committee and Senator Lieberman asked us to determine the basis of (1) 
EPA's analysis of the economic impacts of the final rule and its 
conclusion that the rule would not create significant enough benefits 
or costs to merit a more detailed analysis and (2) EPA's conclusions 
that the NSR program (prior to the final rule) discouraged some energy 
efficiency projects.

To respond to the first objective, we used OMB and EPA guidance to 
review EPA's screening analysis of the final rule's economic impacts. 
EPA issued its guidance to ensure that its economic analyses comply 
with the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 and Executive Order 
12866. These directives require federal agencies to analyze the 
economic effects of rules that may impose annual costs on the 
government or private entities of more than $100 million. In addition 
to reviewing EPA, OMB, and other federal requirements and guidance on 
conducting economic analyses of proposed rules, we reviewed two 
additional EPA analyses of the final rule's effects, as well as 
documents from environmental groups, industry trade associations, and 
other interested parties related to the costs and benefits of the final 
rule. Furthermore, we met with the NSR program manager within EPA and 
other senior officials within the agency's Office of Air Quality 
Planning and Standards. We also met with senior OMB staff responsible 
for reviewing EPA's analysis within the Office of Information and 
Regulatory Affairs.

To respond to the second objective, we reviewed information provided to 
EPA by outside organizations that the agency relied on in preparing its 
findings on the NSR program's effects on energy efficiency projects at 
industrial companies. This information consisted of written comments, 
case-specific examples of foregone energy efficiency projects, and 
supplemental documentation submitted to EPA by individual firms, 
industry trade associations, and environmental advocacy groups during 
EPA's public comment period. We obtained documents through the EPA 
public docket A-2001-19, and directly from those companies and 
organizations who submitted information to EPA. We also obtained 
documents or conducted interviews with parties identified by EPA as the 
primary data sources underlying its energy efficiency findings, 
including representatives of the American Chemistry Council, the 
American Forest and Paper Association, the American Petroleum 
Institute, the American Public Power Association, British Petroleum, 
Detroit Edison, Duke Energy, the Edison Electric Institute, Excel 
Energy, Exxon Mobil, the National Coal Council, and the National 
Petrochemical & Refiners Association. Once we obtained anecdotes 
provided by the parties EPA identified as its primary data sources, we 
removed those that did not pertain to the NSR program's effects on 
energy efficiency as well as those that did not provide sufficient 
information for analysis. We then reviewed the 69 remaining anecdotes 
to assess their anticipated effects on emissions. We did not 
independently verify the factual basis of the anecdotes. We also spoke 
with the Natural Resources Defense Council, a national environmental 
advocacy organization that disputed EPA findings. Finally, we spoke 
with the NSR program manager within EPA and another official within the 
agency's Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards who were 
responsible for the Report to the President.

We conducted our work between August 2002 and August 2003 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards.

[End of section]

Appendix I: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

GAO Contacts:

John B. Stephenson (202) 512-3841 Eileen R. Larence (202) 512-6510:

Acknowledgments:

In addition to the individuals named above Tim Guinane, David Hancock, 
and Michael Hix made key contributions to this report. Nancy Crothers, 
Karen Keegan, Jeffrey Larson, Judy Pagano, Lisa Turner, and Laura 
Yannayon also made important contributions.

FOOTNOTES

[1] The thresholds for these so-called major modifications--physical or 
operational changes that cause a significant increase in emissions--
vary by pollutant and the air quality status of the area in which a 
facility is located. 

[2] OAQPS Economic Analysis Resource Document, U.S. Environmental 
Protection Agency, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards 
Innovative Strategies and Economics Group, April 1999. 

[3] Ozone forms when nitrogen oxides react with volatile organic 
compounds in the presence of heat and sunlight. 

[4] EPA also relied on an analysis of flexible permitting programs as 
part of the basis for the agency's findings regarding the benefits of 
plantwide emissions limits. 

[5] Under section 312 of the Clean Air Act, EPA periodically reports on 
the overall costs incurred and benefits achieved under the act. 
However, in fulfilling this requirement, the agency generally provides 
a comprehensive assessment of such impacts and does not provide a 
breakout of the costs and benefits of individual programs under the 
act. 

[6] This analysis was summarized in an October 2001 EPA memorandum, 
Benefits of the Prevention of Significant Deterioration Program. 

[7] During the first 3 years of implementation, the final rule will 
only affect regulatory agencies and companies in jurisdictions that 
meet the federal air quality standards. According to EPA, about 10 to 
12 percent of all affected companies are located in such areas. Other 
jurisdictions are not required to revise their NSR programs to 
accommodate the final rule until 2006. Therefore, the final rule is not 
expected to impose costs on regulatory agencies and companies in these 
areas until 2006.

[8] According to DOJ, EPA has also received eight formal petitions 
seeking to have EPA reconsider the NSR final rule. In addition to the 
parties identified above, four air quality agencies within the state of 
California, and the state itself have formally requested that EPA 
reconsider the final rule. 

[9] Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New 
Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont were the original 
petitioners. A tenth state, Pennsylvania, filed a petition for review 
on January 28, 2003. 

[10] This report does not address the merits of the claims made by the 
litigants in these cases. 

[11] Forty tons per year is the threshold for emissions of nitrogen 
oxides, sulfur dioxide, and volatile organic compounds in areas with 
good air quality, but the level can be lower in areas with poorer air 
quality. 

[12] The anecdotes did not always include sufficient information to 
determine the magnitude of anticipated emissions changes after 
completing an energy efficiency project. 

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