Title: Agriculture
1Agriculture Air Policyin California
Summary prepared for the PA Ag Air Quality Task
Force Penn State Cooperative Extension Kristen
Saacke Blunk Extension Associate in Nutrient
Water Policy December 4, 2007
2Why look at Californias ag air policies?
- Clean Air Act requires states to adopt and
implement State Implementation Plans (SIPs) - Achieve air quality standards for the criteria
air pollutants. - Historically ag operations have been exempt
from air quality regulations - Including permitting.
3Why look at Californias ag air policies?
- Beginning in 2003 California has begun to
impose permits on ag operations. - Non-attainment areas struggling to meet deadlines
- Urban areas continuing to encroach on farming
areas. - California has set trends nationally for air
emissions control strategies. - Will other states follow suit?
4Source CA EPA Air Resources Board website
5A time table for change in California air policy
1990
2000
2010
- Ammonia as a PM10 Precursor
- Urbanization forced dairies to establish east of
Los Angeles County. - Emissions from vehicles industries ammonia
emitted from dairies secondary aerosol
particulate that contributed to peak PM10. - Air Quality Plans Focused on ammonia emission
reduction through BMPs for manure disposal
requirements as strategy for PM10 attainment .
6A time table for change in California air policy
- PM10 Dust Rules
- South Coast Air Quality Management District
(SCAQMD) placed PM10 dust rule on crop farms in
the Coachella Valley (Greater Palm Springs desert
vicinity) - Required reduced or ceased tilling during high
winds.
7A time table for change in California air policy
- PM10 Dust Rules
- SCAQMD amended the rule to require 2 to 5 BMPs
implemented for the South Coast air basin. The
menu of BMPs included - High-wind tilling restrictions.
- Mulching
- Windbreaks
- Watering and stabilization of unpaved roads
during harvest.
8Source CA EPA Air Resources Board website
9A time table for change in California air policy
- PM10 Dust Rules
- San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control
District (SJVAPCD) - Adopted Conservation Management Practices in one
of the nations most productive ag areas. - More detailed than the earlier BMPs and
crop-specific. - Farms required to submit CMP plan for approval.
10A time table for change in California air policy
- Ammonia as a PM10 Precursor
- SJVAPCD is awaiting results of CA Regional
Particulate Air Quality Study to determine the
role of ammonia reductions in meeting its PM10
and PM2.5 standards. - Study results reviewed in 2007 to better ID how
urban emissions interact with rural emissions
particulates formed by the interaction of
nitrogen oxide and ammonia.
11Source CA EPA Air Resources Board website
12A time table for change in California air policy
- PM10 Dust Rules
- Imperial County
- Adopted San Joaquin Valley approach
13A time table for change in California air policy
- EPA approved Californias Title V program for
major sources as identified by the CAA. - California exempted agricultural emissions from
permitting requirements. - Environmental groups sued.
14A time table for change in California air policy
- California Senate Bill 700 which removed air
permit exemptions from agriculture. - SB 700 went beyond what EPA required following
the lawsuit.
15California Senate Bill 700
- Defined agricultural sources in the law.
- Removed state restriction prohibiting air
districts from permitting ag sources. - Established specific permit exemption
requirements for ag sources
16California Senate Bill 700
- Requires emission control regulations in PM10,
non-attainment areas - Requires permits and emissions mitigation for
large confined animal facilities (LCAFs) and - Requires that the CA Air Pollution Officers Assoc
create a clearinghouse of info about ag source
emission and mitigation strategies.
17California Senate Bill 700
- Air districts are responsible for adopting and
implementing regs for farms. - California Air Resources Boards is responsible
for sponsorship of emission studies, impact,
research.
18A time table for change in California air policy
- California Air Resources Board (CARB) adopted its
large confined animal facilities permitting
thresholds. - By June 2006 permitting rules must be in place
in nonattainment areas.
19Large Confined Animal Facilities (LCAF)
Thresholds
- LIVESTOCK CATEGORY
- Dairy
- Beef Feedlots
- Other cattle operations
- Chickens Broilers
- Chickens Egg Layers
- Swine
- Horses
- NONATTAINMENT AREAS
- 1,000 milk producing cows
- 2,500 beef cattle
- 7,500 calves, heifers, other
- 650,000
- 650,000
- 3,000
- 2,500
ATTAINMENT AREAS 2,000 milk producing
cows 5,000 beef cattle 15,000 calves, heifers,
other 1,300,000 1,300,000 6,000 5,000
20Timeline for Federal Ag Air Quality Policy
Cure Period Ends 10/08
21Sources and Resources
- Abdalla, Charles W., Emerging Policy Issues
Extension Inservice, Department of Agricultural
Economics and Rural Sociology, Penn State
University, June 2007 - Becker, John C., Air Emissions from Agricultural
Enterprises A Review of Applicable Laws,
Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural
Sociology, Penn State University. - Workshop on Agricultural Air Quality, State of
the Science Proceedings, June 5-8, 2006, Potomac,
MD - Lester, J.C., The Evolution of Agricultural Air
Quality Regulations ENVIRON International
Corporation
22Sources and Resources, contd
- Conservation Management Practices adopted by the
San Joaquin Valley Unified air Pollution Control
District www.valleyair.org/farmpermits/updates/cmp
_handbook.pdf - California Air Pollution Officers Association
www.capcoa.org/sb_700.htm - California Air Resources Board www.arb.ca.gov/ag/r
esearch/research.pdf - UC Davis Cooperative Extension
23Discussion
Nutrient Water Policy Program Contact Dr.
Charles Abdalla Professor of Agricultural and
Environmental Economics Penn State Department of
Agricultural Economics Rural Sociology cabdalla_at_
psu.edu