Ozone Transport Commission

The Ozone Transport Commission (OTC) is a multi-state organization founded in 1991 and created under the Clean Air Act.[1] They are responsible for advising EPA on air pollution transport issues and for developing and implementing regional solutions to the ground-level ozone problem in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions. OTC has no regulatory authority, but assists its members in developing model regulations for implementation at the state level. OTC also manages a regional planning organization MANE-VU (Mid-Atlantic Northeast Visibility Union), which is charged with regional multi-pollutant air quality planning.[2] In January 2020, operations of OTC were placed under new management by the Northeast States for Coordinated Air Use Management (NESCAUM) and Washington, DC operations were closed.

Ozone Transport Commission
Key people
Chair: Shawn Garvin, Delaware
Vice-Chair: Terry Gray, Rhode Island
Secretary/Treasurer: Paul Baldauf, New Jersey
Websitewww.otcair.org
Formerly called
Northeast Ozone Transport Commission

Policy Iniatives

OTC NOX Budget Program

In 1994, the OTC adopted a Memorandum of Understanding[3] to adopt a regional emissions trading program for the purpose of reducing emissions of oxides of Nitrogen (NOX). This program dubbed the “OTC NOX Budget Program” set a cap for NOX emissions from nine states and the District of Columbia, which was ratcheted down in three phases, starting in 1995, 1999, and 2003, respectively. During this process a larger group of states in the Eastern United States and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) began meeting as the Ozone Transport Assessment Group (OTAG). Their work wound up being adopted by EPA as a trading program NOX trading program that covered a larger geography (22 states plus the District of Columbia) called the "NOX SIP Call" and the third phase of the OTC NOX Budget Program was incorporated into that larger trading program. This early work by the OTC is consider the precursor to the modern emissions trading program (e.g., Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR)) which reduced interstate ozone pollution in the Eastern United States[4]

OTC Early National Low Emissions Vehicle Program

The state of California updated its Low Emissions Vehicle (LEV) Program to require stricter emissions standards beginning in 1999, which was called LEV II.[5] Starting in 1994, the OTC petitioned EPA under Clean Air Act section 184 (c) to require that jurisdictions in the OTR adopt California's LEV program, which was allowed under Clean Air Act section 177. While the petition, was not accepted, an agreement was reached between EPA, Ozone Transport Commission (OTC) states, and the auto manufacturers to introduce new emission standards in the OTC states beginning with the 1999 model year, two years earlier than national, so called Tier 2, standards in alignment California's LEV program.

OTC Model Rules

Another area that OTC has adopted policies to reduce ozone precursors (NOX and Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) is through model rule development. The OTC has initiated three phases of model rules, each of which culminated signing of a MOU between the member jurisdictions to adopt the model rules as state regulations. The 2001 generation of model rules called for the regulation of Consumer Products, Portable Fueling Containers, Architectural and Maintenance Coatings, Solvent Cleaning, Mobile Equipment Repair and Refinishing, and Additional NOX Controls for Industrial Boilers, Cement Kilns, Stationary Reciprocating Engines, and Stationary Combustion Engines.[6] The 2006 generation of model rules called for the regulation of Diesel Chip Reflash and Adhesive and Sealants and updates to the regulations of Consumer Products and Portable Fueling Container.[7] At the same time the OTC adopted emission limits for Asphalt Paving, Asphalt Production, Cement Kilns, Glass Furnaces, Industrial/Commercial/Insitutional (ICI) Boilers, and Regional Fuels to be implemented in conjunction with upwind regions.[8]

Member jurisdictions

List of past chairs

  1. Robert Perciasepe, Maryland (May 1991 – June 1992)
  2. Dean Marriott, Maine (June 1992 – May 1993)
  3. Scott Weiner, New Jersey (May 1993 – January 1994)
  4. Arthur Davis, Pennsylvania (January 1994 – November 1994)
  5. Timothy Keeney, Connecticut & Rhode Island (November 1994 – May 1996)
  6. Robert Shinn, New Jersey (May 1996 – May 1997)
  7. Christophe Tulou, Delaware (May 1997 – May 1998)
  8. Trudy Coxe, Massachusetts (May 1998 – November 1998)
  9. John P. Cahill, New York (November 1998 – June 2000)
  10. Arthur Rocque, Jr., Connecticut (June 2000 – March 2001)
  11. Nick DiPasquale, Delaware (March 2001 – April, 2001)
  12. Jan Reitsma, Rhode Island (June 2001 – November 2003)
  13. Bradley M. Campbell, New Jersey (November 2003 – June 2005)
  14. Robert Golledge, Massachusetts (July 2005 – June 2006)
  15. David K. Paylor, Virginia (July 2006 – June 2007)
  16. Lisa Jackson, New Jersey (July 2007 – June 2008)
  17. Jared Snyder, New York (July 2008 – June 2009)
  18. Shari Wilson, Maryland (June 2009 – June 2010)
  19. Laurie Burt, Massachusetts (June 2010 – January 2011)
  20. Colin O’Mara, Delaware (January 2011 – June 2012)
  21. Daniel C. Esty – Connecticut (June 2012 – June 2013)
  22. Robert Summers – Maryland (June 2013 – June 2014)
  23. Jane (Kozinski) Herndon – New Jersey (June 2014 – June 2015)
  24. Patricia Aho – Maine (June 2015 – September 2015 )
  25. Jared Snyder – New York (September 2015 - June 2016)
  26. Ben Grumbles - Maryland (June 2016 - June 2018)
  27. Shawn Garvin - Delaware (June 2018 - June 2020)
  28. Terry Gray - Rhode Island (June 2020 - Present)

References

  1. 42 U.S.C. § 7511c
  2. "Visibility - Regional Planning Organizations". Retrieved 17 August 2016.
  3. "MOU 94-2 Regarding Development of a Regional Strategy Concerning the Control of Stationary Source Nitrogen Oxide Emissions." September 27, 1994. https://otcair.org/upload/Documents/Formal%20Actions/MOU%2094_2.pdf
  4. Andrew Aulisi, Jonathan Pershing, Alexander E. Farrell, and Stacy Van Deveer. "Greenhouse Gas Emissions Trading in U.S. States Observations and Lessons from the OTC NOx Budget Program." January 2005. https://wriorg.s3.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/pdf/nox_ghg.pdf
  5. "Attachment A-2: California 2001 through 2014 model criteria pollutant exhaust emission standards and test procedures and 2009 through 2016 greenhouse gas exhaust emission standards and test procedures for passenger cars, light-duty trucks, and medium-duty vehicles" (PDF). California Environmental Protection Agency: Air Resources Board. March 22, 2012. Retrieved 5 December 2018. https://www.arb.ca.gov/msprog/levprog/leviii/attacha2.pdf#page=13
  6. "MOU 01-1 Among the States of the Ozone Transport Commission Regarding New Regional Control Measures in the Ozone Transport Region." https://otcair.org/upload/Documents/Formal%20Actions/MOU_01_1.pdf
  7. https://otcair.org/upload/Documents/Formal%20Actions/MOU.pdf
  8. "RES 06-02 Concerning Coordination and Implementation of Regional ozone Control Strategies for Various Certain Source Categories" https://otcair.org/upload/Documents/Formal%20Actions/RES_06-02_Certain%20Source%20Categories.pdf


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