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Public Meeting to Receive Comments on NC’s Potential Recommendation

Designations for PM 2.5 in North Carolina. Public Meeting to Receive Comments on NC’s Potential Recommendation. What are Designations?. Federal Action under the Clean Air Act In Code of Federal Regulations, CFR

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Public Meeting to Receive Comments on NC’s Potential Recommendation

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  1. Designations for PM2.5 in North Carolina Public Meeting to Receive Comments on NC’s Potential Recommendation

  2. What are Designations? • Federal Action under the Clean Air Act • In Code of Federal Regulations, CFR • Based on Measured Air Quality Levels; Non-Attainment - Areas Exceeding Federal Ambient Air Quality Standards

  3. Which Air Pollutants are Involved? • Ground Level Ozone, 8 - Hour Average • Designation Recommendations Due July 15, 2003 • Fine Particle, PM 2.5 • Designation Recommendations Due February 15, 2004 • Today’s meeting is focused on PM2.5

  4. PM2.5 (2.5 µm) PM10 (10µm) Particulate Matter: What is It? A complex mixture of extremely small particles and liquid droplets Hair cross section (70 mm) Human Hair (70 µm diameter) M. Lipsett, California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment

  5. Fine Particles: Why You Should Care

  6. Public Health Risks Are Significant Particles are linked to: • Premature death from heart and lung disease • Aggravation of heart and lung diseases • Hospital admissions • Doctor and ER visits • Medication use • School and work absences • And possibly to • Lung cancer deaths • Infant mortality • Developmental problems in children, such as low birth weight

  7. Particles Affect the Lungs and Heart • Respiratory system effects • Chronic bronchitis • Asthma attacks • Respiratory symptoms (cough, wheezing, etc.) • Decreased lung function • Airway inflammation • Cardiovascular system effects • Heart attacks • Cardiac arrhythmias • Changes in heart rate and heart rate variability • Blood component changes

  8. Some Groups Are More at Risk • People with heart or lung disease • Conditions make them vulnerable • Older adults • Greater prevalence of heart and lung disease • Children • More likely to be active • Breathe more air per pound • Bodies still developing

  9. We Must Move Ahead • Implementation of the fine particle standards is estimated to prevent: • Thousands of premature deaths from heart and lung disease every year • Tens of thousands of hospital admissions and emergency room visits • Millions of school and work absences due to aggravated asthma and other lung and heart diseases

  10. PM 2.5 In Ambient Air: A Complex Mixture

  11. EPA’s Role: Protecting and Improving Air Quality • EPA set national air quality standards for fine particles in 1997 • Annual std: 15 micrograms per cubic meter, averaged over 3 years • 24-hour std: 65 micrograms per cubic meter, 98th percentile averaged over 3 years • New standards withstood all legal challenges • Moving forward now to implement standards

  12. PM2.5 Standards Under Review • Ongoing work to evaluate current standards • Potential lowering of both annual and 24 hour average standard • Potential new PM coarse standard • Not likely to be issued for two years • Today’s meeting is to focus on current standards

  13. Average Annual PM2.5 Concentrations July 2000 – June 2003

  14. Hickory Area Design Values

  15. Charlotte Area Design Values

  16. Triad Area Design Values

  17. What is EPA’s Guidance? • Any county with a violating PM2.5 monitor and nearby contributing areas need to be designated as non-attainment • EPA recommends the full Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) or CMSA serve as the presumptive boundary for PM2.5 non-attainment areas • Whole counties • Match 8-Hour Ozone Boundaries

  18. Factors to be Considered for Larger or Smaller than MSA • Emissions and AQ in Adjacent Areas • Population Density • Monitoring Data • Location of Emissions Sources • Traffic and Commuting Patterns • Expected Growth • Meteorology

  19. Factors to be Considered for Area Larger or Smaller than MSA • Geography/Topography • Jurisdictional Boundaries • Level of Control of Emission Sources • Regional Emission Reductions

  20. Option E: Consideration of Spatial Averaging • EPA allows establishment of Community Monitoring Zones (CMZ’s) • NC has three CMZ’s – Buncombe County, Forsyth County, Mecklenburg County • NC can use a spatial averaging technique in these CMZ’s • If spatial averaging is used, then the monitors in Forsyth and Mecklenburg attain the PM2.5 annual NAAQS

  21. Option E: Continued • NC is taking comment on whether spatial averaging should be used • The monitors in Forsyth and Mecklenburg Counties may attain by the end of the fourth quarter of 2003 without spatial averaging • If they do not, however, spatial averaging is allowed and could show compliance with the standard

  22. Reducing Fine Particles • Approach must include national, regional and local strategies • National efforts under way: • Existing programs such as Acid Rain program and fuel sulfur limits • Rules not yet in effect, such as rule to control emissions from non-road vehicles & equipment • The Clear Skies Act • NOx/SO2 Transport Rule

  23. What is NC doing to solve the air quality problems? • Participation in the Southern Appalachian Mountain Initiative • Adoption of Clean Air Bill of 1999 • Adoption of NOx SIP Call Rule • Adoption of Clean Smokestacks Act • Encouraging neighboring States to adopt similar legislation • Participation in Southeast’s Regional Haze Planning Organization (VISTAS)

  24. Some Local Reduction Programs • Opportunities to address PM-2.5 nonattainment • Making vehicles cleaner • Diesel engine retrofit programs • Clean vehicle fleet programs • Diesel idling, smoking cars reduction programs • Reducing the impact of burning • Wood stove retrofit incentives • Open burning impact reduction

  25. Review: Next Steps • Public Meetings – December 2-4, 2003 • Public Comment Period – December 31, 2003 • Consider Comments • Consult with Other Departments • Send Draft Recommendation to Governor – January 23, 2004 • State Sends Recommendation to EPA – February 15, 2004

  26. How Do I Comment? • E-mail: • Daq.publiccomments@ncmail.net • Send e-mails by December 31, 2003 • Mail: • Sheila Holman • NC Division of Air Quality • 1641 Mail Service Center • Raleigh, NC 27699-1641 • Send comments so that they are received by December 31, 2003

  27. PM2.5 Implementation Timeline 2003: • Dec. Propose implementation rule 2004: • Feb. States/Tribes submit nonattainment area recommendations • SpringPropose PM-2.5 transport rule • Dec. Finalize implementation rule • Dec. EPA designates nonattainment areas 2005: • Spring EPA finalizes PM2.5 transport rule 2007: • Dec. States/Tribes submit implementation plans 2009: • Dec. Attain standards

  28. For More Information: • Visit our website: • Division of Air Quality – www.ncair.org • e-mail; phone: • brock.nicholson@ncmail.net; (919) 715-0587 • Sheila.holman@ncmail.net; (919) 715-0971 • Michael.Landis@ncmail.net; (704) 663-1699 • Paul.muller@ncmail.net; (828) 251-6208 • Myron.whitley@ncmail.net; (336) 771-4600 • Don Willard, willadr@co.mecklenburg.nc.us; (704) 336-5500 • Bob Fulp, fulprr@hathor.co.forsyth.nc.us; (336) 727-8060

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