Colorado Code § 25-7-109

Commission to promulgate emission control regulations
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(1) (a) Except as
provided in sections 25-7-130 and 25-7-131, as promptly as possible, the commission shall
adopt, promulgate, and from time to time modify or repeal emission control regulations which
require the use of effective practical air pollution controls:
(I) For each significant source or category of significant sources of air pollutants;
(II) For each type of facility, process, or activity which produces or might produce
significant emissions of air pollutants.
(b) The requirements and prohibitions contained in such regulations shall be set forth
with as much specificity and clarity as is practical. Upon adoption of an emission control
regulation under subparagraph (II) of paragraph (a) of this subsection (1) for the control of a
specific facility, process, or activity, such regulation shall apply to the exclusion of other
emission control regulations adopted pursuant to subparagraph (I) of paragraph (a) of this
subsection (1); prior to such adoption, the general regulations adopted pursuant to subparagraph
(I) of paragraph (a) of this subsection (1) shall be applicable to such facility, process, or activity.
In the formulation of each emission control regulation, the commission shall take into
consideration the following:
(I) The state policy regarding air pollution, as set forth in section 25-7-102;
(II) Federal recommendations and requirements;
(III) The degree to which altitude, topography, climate, or meteorology in certain
portions of the state require that emission control regulations be more or less stringent than in
other portions of the state;
(IV) The degree to which any particular type of emission is subject to treatment and the
availability, technical feasibility, and economic reasonableness of control techniques;
(V) The extent to which the emission to be controlled is significant;
(VI) The continuous, intermittent, or seasonal nature of the emission to be controlled;
(VII) The economic, environmental, and energy costs of compliance with such emission
control regulation;
(VIII) Whether an emission control regulation should be applied throughout the entire
state or only within specified areas or zones of the state, and whether it should be applied only
when a specified class or type of pollution is concerned.
(2) Such emission control regulations may include, but shall not be limited to,
regulations pertaining to:
(a) Visible pollutants;
(b) Particulates;
(c) Sulfur oxides, sulfuric acids, organic sulfides, hydrogen sulfide, nitrogen oxides,
carbon oxides, hydrocarbons, fluorides, and any other chemical substance;
(d) Odors, except for livestock feeding operations that are not housed commercial swine
feeding operations as defined in section 25-8-501.1 (2)(b);
(e) Open burning activity;
(f) Organic solvents;
(g) Photochemical substances;
(h) Hazardous air pollutants and toxic air contaminants, as defined in section 25-7-109.5
(1)(i).
(3) Emission control regulations adopted pursuant to this section shall include, but shall
not be limited to, regulations pertaining to the following facilities, processes, and activities:
(a) Incinerator and incinerator design;
(b) Storage and transfer of petroleum products and any other volatile organic
compounds;
(c) Activities which frequently result in particulate matter becoming airborne, such as
construction and demolition operations;
(d) Specifications, prohibitions, and requirements pertaining to fuels and fuel additives,
such as tetraethyl lead;
(e) Wigwam waste burners, pulp mills, alfalfa dehydrators, asphalt plants, and any other
industrial or commercial activity which tends to emit air pollutants as a by-product;
(f) Industrial process equipment;
(g) Industrial spraying operations;
(h) Airplanes;
(i) Diesel-powered machines, vehicles, engines, and equipment;
(j) Storage and transfer of volatile compounds and hazardous or toxic gases or other
hazardous substances which may become airborne.
(4) The commission shall promulgate appropriate regulations pertaining to hazardous air
pollutants.
(5) The commission shall promulgate appropriate regulations setting conditions and time
limitations for periods of start-up, shutdown, or malfunction or other conditions which justify
temporary relief from controls. Operations of any air pollution source during periods of start-up,
shutdown, and malfunction shall not constitute representative conditions for the purpose of a
performance or compliance test.
(6) The commission shall establish test methods and procedures for determining
compliance with emission control regulations promulgated under this section and, in so doing,
shall, to the maximum degree consistent with the purposes of this article, consider the test
methods and procedures established by the United States environmental protection agency and
shall adopt such test methods and procedures as shall minimize the possibility of inconsistency
or duplication of effort.
(7) All regulations promulgated pursuant to this section shall conform with the
provisions of part 5 of this article concerning asbestos control.
(8) (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, the commission shall not
regulate emissions from agricultural, horticultural, or floricultural production such as farming,
seasonal crop drying, animal feeding operations that are not housed commercial swine feeding
operations as defined in section 25-8-501.1 (2)(b), and pesticide application; except that the
commission shall regulate such emissions if they are "major stationary sources", as that term is
defined in 42 U.S.C. sec. 7602 (j), or are required by Part C (prevention of significant
deterioration), Part D (nonattainment), or Title V (minimum elements of a permit program), or
are participating in the early reduction program of section 112 of the federal act, or is not
required by section 111 of the federal act, or is not required for sources to be excluded as a major
source under this article.
(b) Nothing in paragraph (a) of this subsection (8), as amended by House Bill 05-1180,
as enacted at the first regular session of the sixty-fifth general assembly, shall be construed as
changing the property tax classification of property owned by a horticultural or floricultural
operation.
(9) (a) The commission shall adopt a procedure consistent with the federal
environmental protection agency requirements for determining when there has been a net
significant emissions increase which results in a major modification that subjects a source to the
permitting requirements of the prevention of significant deterioration program or the
nonattainment area new source review. The commission's procedure shall also prohibit sources
from circumventing the new source review requirements in a manner consistent with the federal
environmental protection agency guidance. Such procedure shall be the same for both the
prevention of significant deterioration program and the nonattainment area new source review
program and shall not apply to hazardous air pollutants. Such net emissions increase procedure
shall be as described in paragraph (b) of this subsection (9), unless and until the federal
environmental protection agency requires otherwise or unless after January 1, 1998, the
commission:
(I) Undertakes a collaborative process with the affected industries to determine the cost
and emission impacts associated with any proposed changes in this procedure;
(II) Reviews at least three years of emissions increases and decreases under the
procedures described in paragraph (b) of this subsection (9);
(III) Delivers reports on the matters required in subparagraphs (I) and (II) of this
paragraph (a) to the general assembly for its review;
(IV) Determines through rule-making that an applicability procedure for major
modifications more stringent than that described in paragraph (b) of this subsection (9) is
equitable when considering minor, area, and mobile source controls; and
(V) Determines through rule-making that such more stringent applicability procedure is
necessary to attain and to maintain the national ambient air quality standards.
(b) The procedure for determining when there has been a net significant emissions
increase shall be consistent with requirements of the federal environmental protection agency
and:
(I) Such requirements shall apply only if there is, in the first instance, a significant
emissions increase from an individual proposed project or modification. If the individual
proposed project or modification will not result in a significant emissions increase, it shall be
exempt from the prevention of significant deterioration program and the nonattainment area new
source review requirements.
(II) If a project or modification is not exempt under subparagraph (I) of this paragraph
(b), each pollutant for which the project results in a significant emissions increase shall be
subject to the prevention of significant deterioration program or the nonattainment area new
source review requirements only if the sum of all source-wide, non-de minimis,
contemporaneous, and creditable emissions increases and decreases of that pollutant or that
regulated precursor exceed applicable significance levels. Each specific regulated precursor shall
be considered independently in determining applicable significance levels.
(III) In determining the non-de minimis net emissions increase during the
contemporaneous period, the commission's procedures shall be consistent with the federal
environmental protection agency's review procedure for determining net emissions increases and
decreases. Non-de minimis increases shall exclude all increases which would be exempt under
commission rules from a requirement to obtain a construction permit under section 25-7-114.2.
(10) (a) The commission shall adopt rules to minimize emissions of methane and other
hydrocarbons, volatile organic compounds, and oxides of nitrogen from oil and natural gas
exploration and production facilities and natural gas facilities in the processing, gathering and
boosting, storage, and transmission segments of the natural gas supply chain.
(b) (I) The commission shall review its rules for oil and natural gas well production
facilities and compressor stations and specifically consider adopting more stringent provisions,
including:
(A) A requirement that leak detection and repair inspections occur at all well production
facilities on, at a minimum, a semiannual basis or that an alternative approved instrument
monitoring method is in place pursuant to existing rules;
(B) A requirement that owners and operators of oil and gas transmission pipelines and
compressor stations must inspect and maintain all equipment and pipelines on a regular basis;
(C) A requirement that oil and natural gas operators must install and operate continuous
methane emissions monitors at facilities with large emissions potential, at multi-well facilities,
and at facilities in close proximity to occupied dwellings; and
(D) A requirement to reduce emissions from pneumatic devices. The commission shall
consider requiring oil and gas operators, under appropriate circumstances, to use pneumatic
devices that do not vent natural gas.
(II) The commission may, by rule, phase in the requirement to comply with this
subsection (10)(b) on the bases of production capability, type and age of oil and gas facility, and
commercial availability of continuous monitoring equipment. If the commission phases in the
requirement to comply with this subsection (10)(b), it shall increase the required frequency of
inspections at facilities that are subject to the phase-in until the facilities achieve continuous
emission monitoring.
(c) Notwithstanding the grant of authority to the energy and carbon management
commission in article 60 of title 34, including specifically section 34-60-105 (1), the commission
may regulate air pollution from oil and gas facilities listed in subsection (10)(a) of this section,
including during preproduction activities, drilling, and completion.
(d) On or before August 31, 2026, the division shall propose rules designed to reduce
emissions of oxides of nitrogen (NOx) generated by upstream oil and gas operations, as defined
by the commission by rule, including preproduction operations, between May 1 and September
30 in the eight-hour ozone control area and northern Weld county, as those terms are defined by
the commission by rule, by fifty percent by 2030 relative to 2017 NOx emission levels. NOx
emission levels are characterized by the most recent state inventory of NOx emissions for 2017
that the commission adopted for the purpose of inclusion in the state implementation plan for the
2015 eight-hour ozone national ambient air quality standard, or as published concurrently with
proposed rules consistent with this subsection (10)(d) in a notice of proposed rule-making
published in accordance with section 25-7-110 (1).

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