1
    BEFORE THE ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    2
    October 11th, 2006
    3
    4
    IN THE MATTER OF:
    )
    )
    5
    PROPOSED NEW CAIR SO2 CAIR )
    NOx ANNUAL AND CAIR NOx OZONE) R06-26
    6
    SEASON TRADING PROGRAMS, ) (Rulemaking - Air)
    35 ILL. ADM. CODE 225,
    )
    7
    CONTROL OF EMISSIONS
    )
    FROM LARGE COMBUSTION SOURCES)
    8
    SUBPARTS A, C, D AND E
    )
    9
    10
    Proceedings held on October 11th, 2006, at
    11
    1:00 p.m., at the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, 1021 North Grand Avenue East, Springfield,
    12
    Illinois, before John Knittle, Hearing Officer.
    13
    14
    15
    16
    Reported by: Beverly S. Hopkins, CSR, RPR
    17
    CSR License No: 084-004316
    18
    19
    20
    21
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    22
    11 North 44th Street
    Belleville, IL 62226
    23
    (618) 277-0190
    24
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    1

    1
    APPEARANCES
    2
    Board Members present:
    3
    Chairman G. Tanner Girard
    Board Member Andrea S. Moore
    4
    Board Member Thomas Johnson
    Anand Rao, Senior Environmental Scientist
    5
    6
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    BY: Ms. Rachel L. Doctors
    7
    Assistant Counsel
    Division of Legal Counsel
    8
    1021 North Grand Avenue East
    Springfield, Illinois 62794-9276
    9
    On behalf of the Illinois EPA
    10
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    BY: Mr. John J. Kim
    11
    Assistant Counsel
    Air Regulatory Unit
    12
    1021 North Grand Avenue East
    Springfield, Illinois 62794-9276
    13
    On behalf of the Illinois EPA
    14
    SCHIFF HARDIN LLP
    BY: Mr. Stephen J. Bonebrake
    15
    Attorney at Law
    6600 Sears Tower
    16
    Chicago, Illinois 60606
    On behalf of Dynegy and Midwest Generation
    17
    SCHIFF HARDIN LLP
    18
    BY: Ms. Kathleen C. Bassi
    Attorney at Law
    19
    6600 Sears Tower
    Chicago, Illinois 60606
    20
    On behalf of Dynegy and Midwest Generation
    21
    MCGUIRE WOODS LLP
    BY: Mr. David Rieser
    22
    Attorney at Law
    77 West Wacker Drive, Suite 4400
    23
    Chicago, Illinois 60601-1681
    On behalf of Ameren Energy Generating
    24
    Company, AmerenEnergy Resources Generating
    Company and Electric Energy, Inc.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    2

    1
    ENVIRONMENTAL LAW & POLICY CENTER
    2
    BY: Ms. Faith E. Bugel
    Staff Attorney
    3
    35 East Wacker Drive, Suite 1300
    Chicago, Illinois 60601-2110
    4
    On behalf of the Environmental Law
    & Policy Center
    5
    BAKER & MCKENZIE
    6
    BY: Mr. Steven J. Murawski
    One Prudential Plaza, Suite 3500
    7
    130 East Randolph Drive
    Chicago, Illinois 60601
    8
    Interested Party
    9
    SIERRA CLUB
    BY: Mr. Bruce Nilles
    10
    122 W. Washington Avenue, Suite 830
    Madison, Wisconsin 53703
    11
    EXHIBITS
    12
    Agency Exhibit No. 10 -- 4
    13
    Agency Exhibit No. 11 -- 72
    Agency Exhibit No. 12 -- 84
    14
    Agency Exhibit No. 13 -- 85
    Agency Exhibit No. 14 -- 85
    15
    Agency Exhibit No. 15 -- 89
    Agency Exhibit No. 16 -- 92
    16
    Agency Exhibit No. 17 -- 93
    Agency Exhibit No. 18 -- 153
    17
    Agency Exhibit No. 19 -- 153
    18
    19
    20
    21
    22
    23
    24
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    3

    1
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: We're back
    2
    on the record after a lunch recess. My
    3
    understanding, Ms. Doctors, that we are going to
    4
    be presenting the testimony of Mr. Bloomberg?
    5
    MS. DOCTORS: Yes. And I'd like to
    6
    request that his testimony be admitted as read
    7
    and marked as Agency Exhibit 10.
    8
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Any
    9
    objection to his testimony being admitted? I see
    10
    none. That will be admitted as Agency Exhibit
    11
    10. Ms. Doctors, do you have any preliminary
    12
    testimony you wish to elicit?
    13
    MS. DOCTORS: No, I do not.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr.
    15
    Bonebrake? Ms. Bassi?
    16
    MS. BASSI: I have an initial, thank
    17
    you, background type question. You say in your
    18
    testimony that your academic credentials include
    19
    a Bachelor of Science in Ceramic Engineering?
    20
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    21
    MS. BASSI: Do you have more?
    22
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I took all of the
    23
    necessary classes for a master's degree but was
    24
    unable to complete the research.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    4

    1
    MS. BASSI: I know the feeling. Okay.
    2
    That was just my little background. Okay. I
    3
    would like for you to reconcile a couple of
    4
    things for me that are included in the federal
    5
    proposal that -- if you could. At Section
    6
    51.1230, do you have it in terms of the Code of
    7
    Federal Regulations when I refer to a federal
    8
    section?
    9
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I have some parts. I
    10
    don't know that I will have exactly what you're
    11
    --
    12
    MS. BASSI: All right. Then a little
    13
    background. Are you familiar with the purpose or
    14
    with the direction of Section 51 or Part 51 of
    15
    the federal code?
    16
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Part 51 off the top of
    17
    my head, no, I do not have that.
    18
    MS. BASSI: Would it -- does it make
    19
    sense to you that Part 51 would be directed to --
    20
    would be directed to states and what states are
    21
    required to do?
    22
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Off the top of my head
    23
    I can't answer that.
    24
    MS. BASSI: Well, may I show him Part
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    5

    1
    51?
    2
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Yes, you
    3
    may.
    4
    MS. BASSI: This is the Code of
    5
    Federal Regulations, Edition 2005, and I believe
    6
    Part 51 may or may not have been incorporated by
    7
    reference or at least referred to in the Agency's
    8
    submittal. And if you would turn to Section
    9
    51.123(o), Subsection O.
    10
    MS. DOCTORS: Are you referring to
    11
    Illinois state plans?
    12
    MS. BASSI: No. This is about -- this
    13
    is the CAIR.
    14
    MS. DOCTORS: Okay.
    15
    MS. BASSI: This is the general CAIR
    16
    requirements of states. I know it takes a while
    17
    to --
    18
    MS. DOCTORS: Can we have a page
    19
    number?
    20
    MS. BASSI: No, I didn't. Okay.
    21
    Subsection O2 and then little ii and a large B.
    22
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Okay.
    23
    MS. BASSI: Okay. How far in advance
    24
    of a vintage year, meaning, the date that's put
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    6

    1
    on a NOX allowance, does USEPA require a state to
    2
    submit allowance allocation?
    3
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Well, for what it says
    4
    here, we have to have issued allocation by
    5
    October 31st, 2006, for 2009, 10, and 11. And by
    6
    October 31, 2008, and October 31 of each year
    7
    thereafter for the year after the year of the
    8
    notification deadline. Without reading through
    9
    the rest of this off the top of my head, I'm not
    10
    entirely sure what that means.
    11
    MS. BASSI: Well, is the first portion
    12
    of that consistent with the Agency's proposal,
    13
    that you had initially at least planned to make
    14
    your initial allocation for 2009, 10, and 11 in
    15
    2006?
    16
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    17
    MS. BASSI: Okay. And in the Agency's
    18
    submittal some place, I believe it says that
    19
    allocations are due three years in advance of the
    20
    year in which they'll be used? Maybe --
    21
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Allocations are due?
    22
    MS. BASSI: Maybe Ms. Sims back
    23
    there --
    24
    MS. SIMS: Repeat the question.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    7

    1
    MS. BASSI: How far in advance does
    2
    the Agency have to make its allocations to USEPA?
    3
    MS. SIMS: According to our proposed
    4
    Illinois rule, three years in advance.
    5
    MS. BASSI: Three years in advance.
    6
    Okay. Is this a requirement of USEPA?
    7
    MS. SIMS: I'm not sure.
    8
    MS. BASSI: Okay. Do you have Federal
    9
    Register 70, Federal Register 25349 there
    10
    someplace?
    11
    MR. BLOOMBERG: No, I don't.
    12
    MS. BASSI: This is, I think, included
    13
    in the Agency's submittal.
    14
    MS. DOCTORS: Are you -- are you
    15
    asking the witness to interpret --
    16
    MS. BASSI: I want some reconciliation
    17
    of two passages that are in the federal
    18
    requirement.
    19
    MS. DOCTORS: I'm not sure that this
    20
    witness is familiar with -- with these particular
    21
    passages.
    22
    MS. BASSI: That's why I'm asking him
    23
    to read them. Do you have that? Would you get
    24
    that?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    8

    1
    MS. DOCTORS: Repeat that.
    2
    MS. BASSI: 70 Federal Register at
    3
    page 25349.
    4
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: You know
    5
    what part of the Agency's proposal it is at?
    6
    MS. BASSI: Well, this is Part 96 and
    7
    this is -- this is the model rule that we've been
    8
    talking about all along.
    9
    MS. DOCTORS: Okay. 25 --
    10
    MS. BASSI: 25349.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: It'd helpful
    12
    for the record to identify it. You said it was
    13
    part of the Agency's proposal. The exhibit --
    14
    MS. BASSI: The Agency, I believe,
    15
    submitted -- I'm sorry.
    16
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Is it an
    17
    exhibit or a document by reference or part of the
    18
    TSD?
    19
    MS. BASSI: I don't know at -- I can't
    20
    tell you off the top of my head.
    21
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Is this the July 6,
    22
    2005?
    23
    MS. DOCTORS: Or the May 12, 2005?
    24
    MS. BASSI: This is the May 12, 2005.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    9

    1
    MS. DOCTORS: I think we have the
    2
    document and the page number that she's referring
    3
    to. I think it was --
    4
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: And I'm not
    5
    saying you're not going to be able to find it.
    6
    What I wanted is so when people are reading the
    7
    transcript, they know what they're looking for.
    8
    Can you read that?
    9
    MS. DOCTORS: Yes, I could. It's
    10
    Illinois EPA Exhibit No. A from the table of
    11
    contents.
    12
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Thanks.
    13
    MS. BASSI: Thank you. Okay. On page
    14
    25349 at Section 96.141, so it's on that page --
    15
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    16
    MS. BASSI: -- Subsection B1, okay,
    17
    this is -- is this part of the model rule?
    18
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Having just been given
    19
    this, honestly, I don't know the answer.
    20
    MS. BASSI: Can you tell me how many
    21
    years in advance that section says allowances are
    22
    to be made?
    23
    MR. BLOOMBERG: This says the sixth
    24
    year after the year of the applicable deadline.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    10

    1
    However, it's my understanding this is a
    2
    recommendation and states have flexibility,
    3
    especially if it is, as you indicated, the model
    4
    rule.
    5
    MS. BASSI: Right. And that's what I
    6
    wanted you to explain, if you could, as to why
    7
    Illinois was doing it three years in advance for
    8
    the first initial -- for the initial allocation
    9
    as opposed to what the model rule is providing?
    10
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I believe that Jackie
    11
    Sims already answered a very similar question --
    12
    MS. BASSI: Possibly.
    13
    MR. BLOOMBERG: -- discussing the
    14
    faster roll in and the -- bringing new units in
    15
    more quickly, getting shutdowns out more quickly.
    16
    MS. BASSI: With -- And, again, I
    17
    apologize if you're not the right person for
    18
    this. With the FIP, could you explain again
    19
    then, please, why if the FIP goes into a place
    20
    and the FIP includes the model rule, that the
    21
    allocation, the initial allocations, are not as
    22
    set forth in that provision?
    23
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Well, I --
    24
    MS. DOCTORS: Objection. Why -- I
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    11

    1
    don't understand why she's asking the witness to
    2
    explain a Federal Register concerning the FIP.
    3
    That Federal Register needs to speak for itself.
    4
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bassi?
    5
    MS. BASSI: That's fine. I'll
    6
    withdraw the question. Going back to some
    7
    questions that we were asking you before lunch
    8
    regarding -- regarding timely allocation --
    9
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    10
    MS. BASSI: -- at pages 47 to 48 of
    11
    the Statement of Reasons.
    12
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    13
    MS. BASSI: Okay. This is where the
    14
    Statement of Reasons is explaining the shorter
    15
    look-back period that the Agency proposes. All
    16
    right. And does it say in here that the source
    17
    should have excess bank allowances from the year
    18
    prior to an outage that will cover an outage
    19
    year?
    20
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Can you give me a page
    21
    number, please?
    22
    MS. BASSI: 48, the top of the page.
    23
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes, it does.
    24
    MS. BASSI: Okay. And, again, what
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    12

    1
    happens if the Agency does not make its
    2
    allocations timely to -- to make up for the loss
    3
    of allowances during the outage year?
    4
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I am unsure of what
    5
    USEPA will do. However, one point remains that,
    6
    as you noted, we are giving allowances, I
    7
    believe, three years in advance --
    8
    MS. BASSI: Uh-huh.
    9
    MR. BLOOMBERG: -- so that's quite a
    10
    long -- a long time before the transfer deadline.
    11
    And as noted, we have already committed to doing
    12
    it timely.
    13
    MS. BASSI: Does the Agency bear any
    14
    liability for failure to submit allocations
    15
    timely?
    16
    MR. BLOOMBERG: That's a legal
    17
    question. I have no idea.
    18
    MS. BASSI: If the Agency, assuming
    19
    you have no liability or that that would be the
    20
    Agency's position, what recourse do power
    21
    companies have to -- to have allocations made
    22
    timely?
    23
    MR. BLOOMBERG: That's probably
    24
    another legal question, and I can't answer that.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    13

    1
    MS. BASSI: Is this covered in the
    2
    rule?
    3
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Not to my knowledge.
    4
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Mr. Bloomberg, I have
    5
    a question for you and it pertains to page 2 of
    6
    your testimony. It's the third complete
    7
    paragraph.
    8
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    9
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And the second
    10
    sentence in that paragraph starts with the word,
    11
    Among these requirements, and at the end there
    12
    there's a reference to rounded to the nearest
    13
    whole ton?
    14
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    15
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Can you explain to us
    16
    what that means?
    17
    MR. BLOOMBERG: It means that if they
    18
    -- Let me just double check what I said here.
    19
    If, for example, a source emitted 10.3 tons of
    20
    NOX, they would only have to give 10 allowances.
    21
    However, if they held 10.7, they would need to
    22
    hold 11 allowances.
    23
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And what -- what if
    24
    10.5?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    14

    1
    MR. BLOOMBERG: 10.5 USEPA rounds up.
    2
    MR. BONEBRAKE: On page 3 of your
    3
    written testimony, the full -- first full
    4
    paragraph, the last sentence reads, As noted in
    5
    the TSD, electric generating units are currently
    6
    required to report gross electrical output data
    7
    to USEPA. I know you were with us this morning
    8
    when we were talking about this issue.
    9
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    10
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Do you have any
    11
    further information for us about what gross
    12
    electrical output data is submitted to USEPA?
    13
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I do not. I was
    14
    relying upon the TSD.
    15
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I think that's all
    16
    this table has for Mr. Bloomberg.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Rieser?
    18
    MR. RIESER: Yes. Following straight
    19
    under the language that Mr. Bonebrake pointed to
    20
    you on page 3 of the second and bottom paragraph
    21
    of page 3 you talk about, There may be additional
    22
    monitoring, recordkeeping or reporting required
    23
    for any project sponsor of a Clean Air Set-Aside
    24
    request, and you say its requirements will be
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    15

    1
    specific to the project in question and are not
    2
    described in detail within the proposed
    3
    regulations. When and how are these additional
    4
    requirements to be identified for sponsors?
    5
    MR. BLOOMBERG: They would be
    6
    involved, and let me -- let me find -- try and
    7
    find the specific portion of the rule. Excuse me
    8
    one moment while I just check.
    9
    MR. RIESER: No problem.
    10
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yeah, an example would
    11
    be 225.470, CASA Applications. In the discussion
    12
    of what would be sent to us, what would be
    13
    involved in the application, that is when such
    14
    additional requirements might be discussed.
    15
    MR. RIESER: Well, as a specific
    16
    matter of process, would the Agency respond to an
    17
    application saying you need the following things
    18
    and your application is incomplete, or how
    19
    exactly is that intended to work?
    20
    MR. BLOOMBERG: If you look at
    21
    225.470(c), it looks like (c)(6), it talks about
    22
    additional information requested by the Agency to
    23
    determine the correctness of the requested number
    24
    of allowances, etc., so based on that, whoever is
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    16

    1
    requesting the allowances, would apply to us, and
    2
    us being the Agency, and the Agency would respond
    3
    with either an approval or a letter saying we
    4
    need additional information.
    5
    MR. RIESER: And there are also
    6
    monitoring, recordkeeping and requirement --
    7
    requirements -- excuse me, monitoring,
    8
    recordkeeping and reporting requirements that may
    9
    also be added to the Agency that are different or
    10
    beyond what are specified in the regulations?
    11
    MR. BLOOMBERG: We wanted to provide
    12
    flexibility and, therefore, it would be
    13
    impossible to include in the CASA section all of
    14
    the possible permeations of monitoring and
    15
    recordkeeping and reporting. You know,
    16
    obviously, a windmill is going to have different
    17
    requirements than a pollution control upgrade.
    18
    MR. RISER: Is there a section in the
    19
    regulation that describes the type of monitoring,
    20
    recordkeeping or reporting that may be required?
    21
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I do not believe so.
    22
    Although, there is -- are sections about
    23
    information that may be requested or required, so
    24
    you can --
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    17

    1
    MR. RIESER: I'm sorry. Finish your
    2
    answer.
    3
    MR. BLOOMBERG: You can kind of figure
    4
    out from the information required how you would
    5
    need to keep an eye on that information.
    6
    MS. DOCTORS: I think Mr. Ross can
    7
    further answer -- I'm sorry. Mr. Cooper.
    8
    MR. COOPER: Mr. Davis is who -- I
    9
    just ask him to restate the question so I have a
    10
    good idea of what he's asking.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Can you find
    12
    Mr. Rieser's question, please?
    13
    (The Reporter read from the record as
    14
    follows: And there are also
    15
    monitoring, recordkeeping and
    16
    requirement -- requirements -- excuse
    17
    me, monitoring, recordkeeping and
    18
    reporting requirements that may also
    19
    be added to the Agency that are
    20
    different or beyond what are
    21
    specified in the regulations?)
    22
    MR. COOPER: Yes, they're put in the
    23
    CASA Section 225.140, I believe, and those refer
    24
    to the DOE documents, has also been referenced in
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    18

    1
    TSD, the measurement and verification guidelines
    2
    for energy projects.
    3
    MR. RIESER: So you're referring to
    4
    the incorporations by reference, 225.140?
    5
    MS. DOCTORS: May I direct the witness
    6
    to look at section -- I'm showing him Section
    7
    225.470(c)(4)(A). Is this -- I'm going to ask is
    8
    this where we find the requirements for the
    9
    recordkeeping, reporting and monitoring?
    10
    MR. COOPER: Yes, that is.
    11
    MS. BASSI: Would you repeat that
    12
    section again, please?
    13
    MR. COOPER: 225.470.
    14
    MR. BLOOMBERG: C4A.
    15
    MR. RIESER: And is it accurate that
    16
    the Agency is reserving to itself the authority
    17
    to expand on what's required under
    18
    225.470(c)(4)(A)?
    19
    MR. COOPER: In what manner?
    20
    MR. RIESER: Well, the sentence that
    21
    we started this all with was, in Mr. Bloomberg's
    22
    testimony was there may be additional monitoring,
    23
    recordkeeping or reporting required. Now all I'm
    24
    trying to do is get a sense of what the bounds of
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    19

    1
    that -- those -- those types of requirements are
    2
    and where those bounds are discussed in the
    3
    regulation.
    4
    MR. COOPER: I have -- No, I don't
    5
    believe.
    6
    MS. DOCTORS: Rory Davis is going to
    7
    take that, explain what he means by his own
    8
    statement.
    9
    MR. DAVIS: Yeah. The information is
    10
    -- that we need is all listed here. However, the
    11
    methods by which this information -- well,
    12
    actually these are only examples. I should note
    13
    this does say examples.
    14
    MR. RIESER: Okay. When you say here,
    15
    you're referring to?
    16
    MR. DAVIS: 225.470(c)(4)(A).
    17
    MR. RIESER: Thank you. Go ahead.
    18
    MR. DAVIS: And this lists examples,
    19
    again, of some of the information that would be
    20
    provided for in order to obtain allowances from
    21
    the CASA, but it does not go into how this
    22
    information would be determined, again, because
    23
    this way it allows flexibility based on the type
    24
    of project.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    20

    1
    MR. RIESER: And by referencing the
    2
    guidelines in 225.470(c)(4)(A), that's where you
    3
    -- the procedures and methods in those
    4
    guidelines, that's where you would expect to
    5
    derive the monitoring, recordkeeping and
    6
    reporting requirements for an individual project;
    7
    is that correct?
    8
    MR. DAVIS: I would not limit to only
    9
    that particular document as -- I cannot say that
    10
    that document covers all possibilities. However,
    11
    we have -- we would use that and other -- other
    12
    available information.
    13
    MR. RIESER: Thank you.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Anything
    15
    further, Mr. Rieser?
    16
    MR. RIESER: No, that's it. Thank you
    17
    very much.
    18
    MS. BUGEL: Nothing for me. Thank
    19
    you.
    20
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I do have a follow-up.
    21
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Yes, sir,
    22
    Mr. Bonebrake.
    23
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I was going to direct
    24
    that question to Mr. Cooper, but since this
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    21

    1
    section has been implemented by Mr. Bloomberg,
    2
    I'll at least start with you. 225.470(b)
    3
    requires submissions of applications for CASA
    4
    allowances by May 1, is that correct, in a given
    5
    year?
    6
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    7
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And the application to
    8
    be submitted -- contents of application to be
    9
    submitted are set forth in 225.470 Subpart C; is
    10
    that correct?
    11
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I believe that's
    12
    correct.
    13
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And then Subpart C6,
    14
    as you were discussing with Mr. Rieser, contains
    15
    a reference to any additional information
    16
    requested by the Agency, do you see that, Mr.
    17
    Bloomberg?
    18
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    19
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And one inference that
    20
    can be drawn from that is any additional
    21
    information requested by the Agency also needs to
    22
    be submitted by May 1st in order for the
    23
    application to be timely submitted, is that the
    24
    intention of the Agency?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    22

    1
    MR. BLOOMBERG: The way it is written,
    2
    that is correct. That is the way I would
    3
    interpret it.
    4
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So we're in a
    5
    situation then where an initial application needs
    6
    to be submitted by May 1st -- initial application
    7
    has to be submitted by May 1st, the Agency
    8
    requests additional information and that
    9
    additional information also has to be submitted
    10
    by May 1st; is that correct, Mr. Bloomberg?
    11
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I believe what this is
    12
    referring to is additional information that has
    13
    been discussed with the Agency. Obviously, we
    14
    would not expect people to go back in time to
    15
    after they've submitted by May 1st if we request
    16
    additional information.
    17
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Let me make sure I
    18
    understand that answer. If a party timely
    19
    submits an application and the Agency asks for
    20
    additional information, that additional
    21
    information can be submitted after May 1st and
    22
    the application made would still be considered
    23
    timely; is that correct, Mr. Bloomberg?
    24
    MS. SIMS: We have 90 days to review
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    23

    1
    the CASA application and it's in the regulations,
    2
    to tell them if it's complete or not.
    3
    MR. BONEBRAKE: That 90 period -- What
    4
    section are you referring to, Ms. Sims?
    5
    MS. SIMS: I have to find it. It's
    6
    Section 225.475(a)(1).
    7
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So that is
    8
    conceivable, is it not Mr. Bloomberg, that the
    9
    Agency might not even request additional
    10
    information on -- for an application submitted
    11
    before May 1, make -- the Agency may not even
    12
    request additional information until after May
    13
    1st?
    14
    MR. BLOOMBERG: That's correct.
    15
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So in that scenario,
    16
    would the application be considered to be timely
    17
    submitted even though additional information
    18
    would be provided in response to request by the
    19
    Agency after May 1st?
    20
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Could you repeat?
    21
    Sorry.
    22
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Let's assume a
    23
    scenario where an application is submitted before
    24
    May 1st, okay?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    24

    1
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    2
    MR. BONEBRAKE: After May 1st the
    3
    Agency requests additional information, okay?
    4
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    5
    MR. BONEBRAKE: That additional
    6
    information is then submitted by the parties to
    7
    the Agency. Will the application be considered
    8
    complete and timely submitted notwithstanding the
    9
    fact that additional information is submitted
    10
    after May 1st?
    11
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Presuming that the
    12
    additional information is provided, you know,
    13
    timely and -- and that additional information
    14
    answers all of the questions asked by the Agency,
    15
    yes.
    16
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Same question but the
    17
    scenario is the Agency requests additional
    18
    information before May 1st but the additional
    19
    information is provided after May 1st, is the
    20
    application still considered timely?
    21
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I think it would
    22
    depend on how the additional information is
    23
    requested. If the application, for example, is
    24
    submitted in -- on April 1st and we -- the Agency
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    25

    1
    undertakes its review under 225.475 and at that
    2
    point determines the additional information is --
    3
    is required, it would be the same answer that I
    4
    just gave you before. However, if, for example,
    5
    there is an ongoing situation where it's the same
    6
    company applying year after year and they have
    7
    previously been told this is the additional
    8
    information required -- requested by the Agency
    9
    which, I believe, is what is covered in six here,
    10
    and they did not provide it at that point, then
    11
    the application would not be considered complete.
    12
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr.
    13
    Bloomberg, may I interject a question?
    14
    MR. BLOOMBERG: (Nods head.)
    15
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Going back
    16
    to the first scenario --
    17
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    18
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: -- where
    19
    there's a timely submitted application before May
    20
    1st and then afterwards the Agency asks for
    21
    additional information --
    22
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    23
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: -- is there
    24
    any time limit for the Agency to submit that
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    26

    1
    additional information? Is that set forth
    2
    anywhere?
    3
    MR. BLOOMBERG: No, there is nothing
    4
    in the rule at this time.
    5
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: So the
    6
    Agency would just decide what would be a timely
    7
    submission thereafter?
    8
    MR. BLOOMBERG: That's something that
    9
    I think we'll have to discuss and look into
    10
    putting in a date certain.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Thanks.
    12
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And in a scenario
    13
    where the Agency requests information before May
    14
    1st, I'm not sure I fully understood your last
    15
    answer.
    16
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Uh-huh.
    17
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Were you suggesting
    18
    that if the project sponsor submitted the
    19
    application somehow should have anticipated what
    20
    the request would be, that if it was not
    21
    submitted by May 1st it's not timely?
    22
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Well, it's not trying
    23
    to anticipate. This is -- this section, I
    24
    believe, is intended to incorporate the fact
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    27

    1
    that, as I said before, there is some flexibility
    2
    here. It's difficult to write a rule that takes
    3
    into account all possibilities. And so if a
    4
    company comes to us and says we want to apply for
    5
    this and we say, okay, this is what you're going
    6
    to need to give us, even if it doesn't happen to
    7
    be included in this rule, this would be the
    8
    additional information requested. So it's
    9
    something -- it's not asking the company to try
    10
    and guess what the Agency is going to want, but
    11
    rather that the company has already been
    12
    previously told this is what you have to include.
    13
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So are you saying that
    14
    if there is specific information set forth in the
    15
    rule from which a party should determine this is
    16
    something I need to put in my application, then
    17
    if the Agency has to come back and ask for it, in
    18
    that scenario it was submitted after May 1st it's
    19
    not timely, but if there's some information that
    20
    is not identified as required in the rule for the
    21
    application, the Agency has to support that and
    22
    if not submitted until after May 1st that would
    23
    be nonetheless a timely application, is that the
    24
    distinction you're drawing?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    28

    1
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I have to tell you I
    2
    think I got lost somewhere along the way in those
    3
    examples. I think it's safe to say that, you
    4
    know, there has to be a certain amount of common
    5
    sense approach to this. If -- if, you know, one
    6
    small piece of information is left out and
    7
    everything is submitted well in advance, the odds
    8
    of us deeming the entire application untimely is,
    9
    I would say, fairly small. Now obviously we want
    10
    all the information and the rule will dictate
    11
    that we get the information, but it's, I think, a
    12
    common sense approach has to be dealt with as
    13
    well.
    14
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I'm all for common
    15
    sense. I'm just concerned that my view of common
    16
    sense and yours or others in the Agency might
    17
    differ.
    18
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Rieser?
    19
    MR. RIESER: This is more of a process
    20
    question. Is this the appropriate place and the
    21
    appropriate witness with whom to ask -- from whom
    22
    to ask questions regarding the CASA process
    23
    itself because I had a whole series of questions
    24
    along those lines that -- but just looking at the
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    29

    1
    witness list, it's my understanding there's going
    2
    to be a presentation and then we'll sort of get
    3
    into it. So I got questions now or I can wait.
    4
    MR. BLOOMBERG: It is anticipated, or
    5
    I believe it is anticipated, that the compliance
    6
    unit will be the ones reviewing this at the time
    7
    that it is anticipated, so I guess I'm as good as
    8
    anybody.
    9
    MR. RIESER: All right.
    10
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Doctors,
    11
    would you like to wait until after the
    12
    presentation or would you like to have --
    13
    MS. DOCTORS: I think it's up to Mr.
    14
    Bloomberg because he has a time constraint either
    15
    way.
    16
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Rieser,
    17
    do you have a preference?
    18
    MR. RIESER: Whatever works -- I
    19
    assume Mr. Bloomberg will be available tomorrow
    20
    and I don't know what his time constraint is.
    21
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I think it would be
    22
    best to do it now unless some of the questions
    23
    that come up relate specifically to what Mr.
    24
    Cooper will be discussing, but we can tell you
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    30

    1
    that as it happens.
    2
    MS. BASSI: Is this like the
    3
    application, you have to anticipate it?
    4
    MR. BLOOMBERG: That's right.
    5
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I guess depending how
    6
    we interpret description of the CASA process, I
    7
    know we have a lot of questions too, so I don't
    8
    know whether it's best to go onto Mr. Bloomberg
    9
    or Mr. Cooper but just to give you a heads up, we
    10
    have quite a few questions regarding the CASA.
    11
    Some of them I would call them administration
    12
    type questions and I'm not sure who's going to be
    13
    best to do those.
    14
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Mr. Cooper is sitting
    15
    up here too so he can certainly help me out.
    16
    MR. RIESER: Well, let me just dive in
    17
    then. One of the -- along with Mr. Bonebrake,
    18
    and I think everybody here, we understand there
    19
    are differences in how the company and how the
    20
    Agency or citizens for that matter interpret
    21
    common sense. And the bottom line on this is
    22
    that in reviewing the rules, I didn't see that
    23
    there was an opportunity for reviewing any review
    24
    of the Agency's determinations with respect to
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    31

    1
    CASA allowances. I'm wondering if that's correct
    2
    and whether there's a reason for handling it that
    3
    way?
    4
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I do not believe there
    5
    is a such an opportunity.
    6
    MR. RIESER: Okay. Was that a
    7
    conscious decision by the Agency, as opposed to
    8
    an unconscious. Is that a policy determination
    9
    that the Agency made?
    10
    MR. ROSS: I believe we discussed this
    11
    in internal meetings and -- to some degree, yes.
    12
    That was a -- we discussed that in internal
    13
    meetings, and we did decide to write the rule as
    14
    it is that there is no external review of our
    15
    decision.
    16
    MS. BASSI: I'd like to follow-up on
    17
    that, if I may.
    18
    MR. RIESER: Go ahead.
    19
    MS. BASSI: Is this a final Agency
    20
    determination?
    21
    MS. DOCTORS: Objection. This is
    22
    calling for the witness to make a legal
    23
    statement.
    24
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bassi?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    32

    1
    MS. BASSI: You know, I'm afraid I
    2
    have a problem with all of these objections to
    3
    the legal -- to questions about the legality of
    4
    the Agency's actions. An Agency's proposal has
    5
    to be within the scope of its authority. It has
    6
    to be based upon what's in the Act, and somebody
    7
    has to be able to answer those questions about
    8
    those as to whether or not something is within
    9
    the bounds of the Act.
    10
    MR. KIM: But the flip side of that is
    11
    Mr. Ross, or any of the witnesses on this panel,
    12
    are not qualified and I don't think it's going to
    13
    be helpful or relevant to the Board for them to
    14
    give you their legal analysis of your question.
    15
    What Mr. Ross stated was there was a decision
    16
    made not to write in appeal rights into the rule
    17
    and that is why the rule looks as it is. Your
    18
    question as to whether or not the -- this is a
    19
    final administrative decision or presumably your
    20
    next step would be whether the Administrative
    21
    Procedure Act applies I think is a very legal
    22
    question. It is nothing more, nothing less. If
    23
    it's something we need to raise in written
    24
    comments, we can certainly do it that way and so
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    33

    1
    direct it and we would be happy to do so, but I
    2
    don't think it's going to be appropriate or
    3
    helpful for any of the witnesses here to begin to
    4
    go through case law on what is and what is not a
    5
    final administrative decision, what the criteria
    6
    for such decisions, what the appeal process for
    7
    those decisions because frankly I don't think
    8
    anybody here has any idea what the answers to
    9
    that are.
    10
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Anything
    11
    further, Ms. Bassi?
    12
    MS. BASSI: Well, just ask for appeal
    13
    is all so --
    14
    MR. KIM: And I believe the answer was
    15
    we made a decision not to write into the rule
    16
    specific language setting out appeal rights.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: You know,
    18
    I'm going to allow Mr. Ross to attempt to answer
    19
    that question, but I'm generally going to sustain
    20
    that objection. There's only limited amount of
    21
    benefit that will come to the Board for us to
    22
    hear what Mr. Bloomberg or Mr. Cooper intended
    23
    the legal ramifications of the rule and I think
    24
    Mr. Ross is in a position where he is probably
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    34

    1
    considered this issue. Yes, Mr. Rieser?
    2
    MR. RIESER: I was just going to ask a
    3
    different question not -- a different question
    4
    than Ms. Bassi had but I didn't know --
    5
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: I'd like to
    6
    hear the answer -- Mr. Ross to answer Ms. Bassi's
    7
    question, then you can ask whatever question
    8
    you'd like along as Mr. Kim or Ms. Doctors don't
    9
    object to it. The question again was?
    10
    MS. BASSI: Is this a final Agency
    11
    decision?
    12
    MS. DOCTORS: I repeat my --
    13
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Your --
    14
    MS. DOCTORS: It's a term of art
    15
    whether something is a final Agency determination
    16
    that there is case law on it.
    17
    MS. BASSI: Did I use the word final
    18
    Agency action?
    19
    MS. DOCTORS: Okay.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Well, hold
    21
    on Ms. Bassi. Let her finish her clarification
    22
    so we can get on the record.
    23
    MS. DOCTORS: I think I was finished.
    24
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Oh, well,
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    35

    1
    then, Ms. Bassi?
    2
    MR. ROSS: It was our decision to go
    3
    forward with the rule as it is currently written
    4
    which does not contain any appeal process.
    5
    MS. BASSI: Okay. And when I say is
    6
    this a final Agency decision, I don't mean that
    7
    decision. I mean the decision as to what -- what
    8
    -- what the dispensation is or the final decision
    9
    about a CASA application?
    10
    MR. KIM: Same objection.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: The Agency
    12
    objections are noted for the record. Mr. Ross?
    13
    MR. ROSS: I would believe it would be
    14
    final to the point that we don't receive
    15
    additional information somewhere along the CASA
    16
    that would cause us to change our decision.
    17
    MS. BASSI: Thank you.
    18
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Rieser?
    19
    MR. RIESER: And what was the basis
    20
    for the -- for the decision you made with respect
    21
    to the appeal in this case?
    22
    MR. ROSS: Well, it was discussed
    23
    internally that we are -- it was discussed
    24
    internally, as I stated, and we are the
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    36

    1
    implementing Agency of the rule, we could get
    2
    administratively bogged down, tied down in
    3
    appeals, disagreements with our semi or final
    4
    decision on the amount of CASA to allocate, so
    5
    based on our belief, the best way the CASA was
    6
    not to go forward with any appeal rights.
    7
    MR. RIESER: Okay. Turning to
    8
    225.440(h).
    9
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I'm sorry. What was
    10
    that reference?
    11
    MR. RIESER: 225.440(h).
    12
    MR. BLOOMBERG: 440(h)?
    13
    MR. RIESER: 440 -- no, excuse me.
    14
    I'm sorry. Where am I? 440(8).
    15
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Okay.
    16
    MR. RIESER: The last sentence of that
    17
    section talks about, The Agency may from time to
    18
    time elect to retire CAIR NOX allowance in the
    19
    NUSA that are in excess of a certain amount, do
    20
    you see that?
    21
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    22
    MR. RIESER: What would be the basis
    23
    for deciding to retire or not retire and at what
    24
    point in time would that decision be made?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    37

    1
    MS. DOCTORS: Mr. Ross.
    2
    MR. ROSS: Well, we talked about this
    3
    a little bit the other day that one of the
    4
    reasons we would retire allowances would be for
    5
    benefit of air quality and public health.
    6
    Therefore, those would be primary factors in
    7
    obtaining decision to retire that allowance.
    8
    MR. RIESER: Is this a decision -- the
    9
    language says that the Agency may from time to
    10
    time elect to retire NOX allowances that are in
    11
    excess of a certain amount. When are those --
    12
    when are those times and how will the Agency make
    13
    a decision at those specific times?
    14
    MR. ROSS: First, there has to be
    15
    excess allowances available to retire and that
    16
    means that a CASA categories are not being
    17
    utilized wholly.
    18
    MR. RIESER: These are the --
    19
    MR. ROSS: These are NUSA.
    20
    MS. DOCTORS: I was just referring the
    21
    witness to the subsection that we're discussing.
    22
    MR. ROSS: So there would not have
    23
    been sufficient or enough new sources being
    24
    constructed so that the NUSA category is not
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    38

    1
    being utilized and, I believe, it would have to
    2
    have been doubled.
    3
    MS. DOCTORS: Okay. Ms. Sims, do you
    4
    know how many years --
    5
    MS. SIMS: That 15,000 number is five
    6
    times the 5% of the face to NUSA.
    7
    MR. ROSS: So you would have to first
    8
    have an amount of allowances in the NUSA pool
    9
    greater than 15,881 and then we would at that
    10
    time discuss potential retirement of those
    11
    allowances. So from time to time that will occur
    12
    and there would be excess allowances in the NUSA,
    13
    and at that those times we will make a
    14
    determination on what to do with those
    15
    allowances.
    16
    MR. RIESER: And you say that one of
    17
    the criteria will be the public health protection
    18
    that you discussed, but there -- if there is
    19
    situations where you may elect not to retire,
    20
    what would that be based on?
    21
    MS. DOCTORS: Mr. Bloomberg.
    22
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Potentially if we know
    23
    there's an upcoming need for those NUSA
    24
    allowances, new large plants coming in, perhaps
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    39

    1
    there was a delay in building one that was
    2
    expected and that's why it builds up to that
    3
    level. We would evaluate the -- whether or not
    4
    to retire versus holding them to help that new
    5
    unit.
    6
    MR. ROSS: If there was a forecast in
    7
    need for some of those allowances, we would
    8
    perhaps elect not to retire.
    9
    MR. RIESER: Thank you.
    10
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Rieser
    11
    -- I'm sorry.
    12
    MR. JOHNSON: Before we go on for
    13
    anticipating the hearing officer's question, for
    14
    purposes of clarification of the record there are
    15
    two Section Hs in 225.445 according to my copy of
    16
    the notice of proposed rule. You were referring
    17
    to the second H; is that correct?
    18
    MR. RIESER: That's correct.
    19
    MR. JOHNSON: Thank you.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bassi?
    21
    MS. BASSI: On the same section that
    22
    Mr. Rieser was asking questions about, when does
    23
    the Agency -- what is the earliest that the
    24
    Agency could expect the NUSA to accumulate to
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    40

    1
    five times the amount so that the Agency could
    2
    begin to retire allowances?
    3
    MR. ROSS: I mean, we just have to
    4
    speculate to answer that question.
    5
    MS. BASSI: Could it be 2013?
    6
    MR. ROSS: It could be.
    7
    MS. BASSI: And that would be five
    8
    years assuming no allowances were allocated.
    9
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Hypothetically.
    10
    MS. BASSI: Hypothetically. Thank
    11
    you. Is this after the attainment date for ozone
    12
    and for PM2.5?
    13
    MR. ROSS: Yes, but there's a new PM
    14
    standard promulgated recently.
    15
    MS. BASSI: So then any retirement of
    16
    the NUSA could not be used as SIP credit toward
    17
    an attainment demonstration; is that correct?
    18
    MR. ROSS: For a current or planned
    19
    attainment demonstration we can't forecast what
    20
    type of reductions we will need in the future.
    21
    MS. BASSI: Stipulated. But all we
    22
    have to work with right now is the current
    23
    standards; is that correct? Those are the only
    24
    ones that are applicable right now; is that
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    41

    1
    correct?
    2
    MR. ROSS: That's correct. But we
    3
    have maintenance standards also.
    4
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr.
    5
    Bonebrake?
    6
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And, Mr. Ross, is
    7
    there any provision in the proposed rules that
    8
    would permit appeal or review of the Agency's
    9
    election to retire NUSA allowance?
    10
    MR. ROSS: No, there's not.
    11
    MR. RIESER: My next question involves
    12
    Section 225.455. In C the Agency talks about
    13
    acting as a mediator where more than one project
    14
    sponsor request CAIR NOX allowances for the same
    15
    project. Could you give an example --
    16
    MS. DOCTORS: Objection. I think he's
    17
    misstating the rule. What did --
    18
    MR. RIESER: Will not. Excuse me.
    19
    Thank you. Thank you very much. Even with that
    20
    correction, could you give an example of what
    21
    circumstances where you expect more than one
    22
    project sponsor?
    23
    MS. SIMS: I can give an example. Say
    24
    the City of Chicago wants to get CASA credit for
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    42

    1
    like their rooftops, solar energy panels that
    2
    they've been doing there, and say the City is
    3
    applying for a CASA allowances at the same time
    4
    maybe that apartment building itself those people
    5
    are wanting to get cast CASA allowances for their
    6
    roof tops, solar panel projects. So we can't
    7
    say, well, you can't have them because the City's
    8
    getting them. They will to -- we would reject
    9
    the application and they would have to decide who
    10
    is going to get what.
    11
    MR. RIESER: Can somebody other than
    12
    the owner or operator of the facility that's
    13
    doing whatever the thing is that generates the
    14
    potential for CASA allowances apply for CASA
    15
    allowances?
    16
    MS. DOCTORS: Okay. My -- This
    17
    question needs to be addressed to Mr. Roston.
    18
    Here he is -- Mr. Copper. I'm sorry. This is
    19
    going to be forever a problem for me sitting next
    20
    to Jim Ross and Mr. Cooper on the other side.
    21
    Can you restate the question for Mr. Cooper?
    22
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Could you
    23
    read that back, please, Mr. Rieser's question?
    24
    (The Reporter read from the record as
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    43

    1
    follows: Can somebody other than the
    2
    owner or operator of the facility
    3
    that's doing whatever the thing is
    4
    that generates the potential for CASA
    5
    allowances apply for CASA
    6
    allowances?)
    7
    MR. RIESER: Mr. Cooper, we're looking
    8
    at 225.455 which deals with the issue of more
    9
    than one program sponsor. And the question being
    10
    can somebody other than the owner or operator of
    11
    a facility or source that does the activity that
    12
    generates the basis for asking for allowances
    13
    apply for those allowance?
    14
    MR. COOPER: I would answer -- One
    15
    more time, please.
    16
    MR. RIESER: I'm going to break it
    17
    down and make it much simpler. Who can apply for
    18
    CASA allowances?
    19
    MR. COOPER: I believe the ultimate
    20
    answer would be anyone, and that's the whole
    21
    point of the review process where we determine
    22
    what is eligible and what is not. I believe the
    23
    intent behind this was if two people apply for
    24
    the same -- the same project, an example comes to
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    44

    1
    mind is, I believe, an ESCO, Energy Saving
    2
    Corporation, or something to that effect. That
    3
    may not be the right term. They come in and do a
    4
    building audit and they determine that these
    5
    lights are old and inefficient so they recommend
    6
    an upgrade. We, the diligent EPA, do that. The
    7
    EPA may claim that credit is now ours or the
    8
    ESCO, if that's the right term, may believe those
    9
    are theirs. That is one potential example of
    10
    CASA.
    11
    MS. DOCTORS: We have a clarification.
    12
    MR. BLOOMBERG: There is a definition
    13
    of project sponsor within the rule. It talks
    14
    about who can be a project sponsor.
    15
    MS. DOCTORS: Let the record note
    16
    that's Section 225.130.
    17
    MR. RIESER: Now does the potential
    18
    for a conflict list primarily with respect to
    19
    these energy efficiency issues or does it also
    20
    reflect to things that a utility -- excuse me,
    21
    electrical generator might do at this facility.
    22
    MR. COOPER: I don't believe we had
    23
    any specific group in mind. I believe this was
    24
    in effect covering our basis in the event that
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    45

    1
    this event did arise in the future. I don't
    2
    believe there was any specific people we were
    3
    attempting to prevent this from taking place. We
    4
    simply wanted it put forward that we will not, in
    5
    the event of two people fighting over the same
    6
    chunk of allowances, we wanted nothing to do with
    7
    REA beings over Part B?
    8
    MR. RIESER: Looking at the definition
    9
    it says, Project sponsor be the person -- project
    10
    sponsor means a person including the owner or
    11
    operator of electric generating units that
    12
    implements or helps implement an energy
    13
    efficiency and conservation for renewable energy
    14
    or clean technology project as listed in certain
    15
    sections of the rule. So it's a person that
    16
    implements or helps to implement which is a
    17
    pretty broad -- broad universe. What were you
    18
    trying to capture with that universe?
    19
    MR. COOPER: I believe we were trying
    20
    to capture the specific people undertaking the
    21
    activity. I guess it is conceivable that
    22
    through, again, in my lighting change example, as
    23
    a form of payment to the contractual negotiation
    24
    it could be worked out that in addition to
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    46

    1
    whatever sum of money providing a service, we
    2
    will get your allowance. So I think we -- our
    3
    aim was for the ones undertaking the project.
    4
    MR. RIESER: Okay. Is it your
    5
    intention, again turning to the example of an
    6
    EGU, that if a -- for example, the State of
    7
    Illinois brings an action against an EGU owner
    8
    under the state rule that requires certain
    9
    activities that be done that falls within the
    10
    CASA definitions, that the State of Illinois
    11
    would be eligible of a project sponsor because it
    12
    helped to implement those projects?
    13
    MR. COOPER: No, I do not believe that
    14
    is our intent.
    15
    MR. RIESER: Okay. So when you say
    16
    helps to implement, what did you have in mind?
    17
    MR. COOPER: My thinking is that in
    18
    this ESCO scenario where we, the Agency, are not
    19
    experts on lighting, HVAC, things like that,
    20
    third party firms that specialize in that, I
    21
    believe, they would be who I would classify as
    22
    the helper.
    23
    MR. RIESER: Okay. And so what you're
    24
    describing, correct me if I'm wrong, is a
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    47

    1
    situation where a company that, I guess I would
    2
    characterize as a consultant, goes it a building
    3
    owner and says, look, you can redo your building
    4
    for achieving a lot of energy efficiency, that
    5
    consultant could then independent of the building
    6
    owner apply for CASA allowances?
    7
    MR. COOPER: Conceivably. And therein
    8
    lies the -- not act as the mediator. I believe
    9
    we were attempting to allow the flexibility that
    10
    if you as -- Let's take a school. Maybe a school
    11
    wants nothing to do with allowances because they
    12
    don't watch the allowance market. They don't
    13
    want any of that, but the energy efficiency firm
    14
    does. And in that case if they arrange
    15
    contractually, I believe certainly by the
    16
    language, that we would allow them. Now if the
    17
    school change their mind later, says, you know
    18
    what, the contract aside, we want it, that's
    19
    where the no mediator portion is.
    20
    MS. BASSI: Mr. Rieser, can I ask a
    21
    question?
    22
    MR. RIESER: Yes.
    23
    MS. BASSI: Using your example of the
    24
    school doing something like this, if I were a
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    48

    1
    member of the school board and, therefore,
    2
    affiliated with the school or if I were the
    3
    principal at the school and, therefore,
    4
    affiliated with the school, could I as an
    5
    individual affiliated with the school but not on
    6
    behalf of the school apply for those credits?
    7
    MR. COOPER: If you fell within the
    8
    definition of project sponsor.
    9
    MR. RIESER: What about the truck
    10
    driver that drives the material to the school?
    11
    MR. COOPER: I think a dose of reality
    12
    is needed. We could continue this all the way to
    13
    the people that manufacture the light bulbs. We
    14
    assume everyone helps. The intent was for the
    15
    person or persons or organization that undertakes
    16
    the project. If that language is not clear, I
    17
    think we can work on that.
    18
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I think we're all
    19
    wrestling with the language helps to implement
    20
    and what that means.
    21
    MR. RIESER: Well, and especially in
    22
    the situation, for example, again turning to an
    23
    EGU, an EGU retaining a consultant to do an
    24
    energy efficiency project and obviously contract
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    49

    1
    with that energy efficiency, would that
    2
    consultant to say you're not entitled to these
    3
    allowances, it may or may not occur to the EGU
    4
    not present in this room and not represented by
    5
    the people in this room to review those contracts
    6
    and make that decision and so you would have a
    7
    situation where consultant -- what seems to be
    8
    allowable is the consultant who helps -- who is
    9
    retained to help an EGU perform an energy
    10
    efficiency project would be entitled to claim the
    11
    allowances, and I'm not sure if that's where the
    12
    Agency really wants to go with that or --
    13
    MR. COOPER: I do not believe that is
    14
    the intent as written. It appears that is
    15
    allowable. I would say it is anyone's due
    16
    diligence undertaking those kind of projects that
    17
    it's your job to know the rules. If someone in
    18
    the EGU realm is undertaking this kind of
    19
    project, I would hope that they read the rules
    20
    and would predict the kind of problems and
    21
    contractually enter into their business
    22
    arrangement that these are ours or these are
    23
    yours, we will take a lower payment or --
    24
    MR. RIESER: Yeah, I guess the
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    50

    1
    suggestion is probably going to be in response
    2
    that the Agency might want to review the policy
    3
    behind the helps to implement language.
    4
    MR. COOPER: I believe that is a very
    5
    good comment.
    6
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Just a couple of
    7
    follow-up questions. The term clean coal
    8
    technology project as used in the definition on
    9
    the project sponsor, is that intended to include
    10
    pollution control upgrade projects, that that
    11
    latter term is otherwise used in these
    12
    regulations?
    13
    MR. COOPER: I don't believe so. Can
    14
    you repeat the question?
    15
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Well, there's a term
    16
    used in project sponsor clean -- clean technology
    17
    projects or clean technology project, do you see
    18
    that?
    19
    MR. COOPER: Yes, I do.
    20
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Does that include
    21
    pollution control projects and existing EGUs?
    22
    MR. COOPER: I believe it does, yes.
    23
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And also as the Agency
    24
    considers provisions, I think this situation
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    51

    1
    should also be considered. Is it not true that
    2
    there are some projects that could have been
    3
    performed even before today that would be
    4
    eligible for CASA allowance?
    5
    MR. COOPER: Yes, I believe that when
    6
    I present -- I will discuss, I believe, with that
    7
    briefly the look back for eligibility period
    8
    where we establish certain lines in the sand
    9
    where you are in or you are out.
    10
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And you mentioned that
    11
    a party should pay attention to what the
    12
    regulations are, but parties that were involved
    13
    with projects that could have generated CASA
    14
    allowances where the projects occur before this
    15
    rule was even proposed could not have -- could
    16
    not have had notice of this proposal; right?
    17
    MR. COOPER: Not at the time
    18
    potentially.
    19
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So there would have
    20
    been no way for them to provide any contract
    21
    unless they were clairvoyant to provide them such
    22
    a contract for the allocations of CASA
    23
    allowances, is that not also correct?
    24
    MR. COOPER: That is correct. It is a
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    52

    1
    very good comment.
    2
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So there are some
    3
    parties here who will undertaken activities which
    4
    the Agency has determined worthy of CASA
    5
    allowances would not have been -- not have been
    6
    in a position to protect themselves with respect
    7
    to the project sponsor definition, is that also
    8
    correct?
    9
    MR. COOPER: I believe that is
    10
    accurate.
    11
    MR. RIESER: I am ready to move on to
    12
    225.460(c)(1).
    13
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: Before you do that,
    14
    Mr. Rieser, I'm trying to get a handle on this
    15
    project sponsor idea so I would just ask a
    16
    general question. Is it the Agency's position
    17
    then that if Clean Air Set-Asides are only
    18
    available to owners or operators, it's less
    19
    flexible than if we interject this new concept of
    20
    a project sponsor?
    21
    MR. COOPER: Repeat, please.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Pardon?
    23
    MR. COOPER: Repeat the question,
    24
    please.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    53

    1
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: You're
    2
    asking who to repeat the question? You want Dr.
    3
    Girard to repeat the question or the court
    4
    reporter?
    5
    MR. COOPER: Either or.
    6
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ask me if
    7
    you want the court reporter to read it back and
    8
    I'll decide if we should do that, okay. You can
    9
    repeat that.
    10
    (The Reporter read from the record as
    11
    follows: Before you do that, Mr.
    12
    Rieser, I'm trying to get a handle on
    13
    this project sponsor idea so I would
    14
    just ask a general question. Is it
    15
    the Agency's position then that if
    16
    Clean Air Set-Asides are only
    17
    available to owners or operators,
    18
    it's less flexible than if we
    19
    interject this new concept of a
    20
    project sponsor?)
    21
    MR. COOPER: I -- I don't believe the
    22
    project sponsor is a new concept. I believe our
    23
    intent was to try to make it as broad and
    24
    encompassing as possible to open the universe of
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    54

    1
    sources of people that could apply. Conceivably
    2
    a neighborhood association that installs solar
    3
    cells on each and every one of the houses in the
    4
    block, is that block aggravated enough to be
    5
    eligible, we wanted them to fall under the scope.
    6
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: And will that still
    7
    work if the owners or operators, in that case
    8
    owners of the buildings, could apply for the
    9
    CASA? Why do we have to interject this new
    10
    outfit project sponsor?
    11
    MR. JOHNSON: He said homeowners
    12
    association.
    13
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: Well, homeowners
    14
    association.
    15
    MR. COOPER: Individually they would
    16
    not reach the magnitude, I believe, of the point
    17
    five or greater to roll over but as a collective
    18
    they would.
    19
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Davis?
    20
    MR. DAVIS: Also, we're thinking
    21
    about, for instance, EGU could sponsor an
    22
    efficiency project with another entity and be
    23
    able to apply -- to apply for the CASA credits
    24
    for that efficiency measure. So they wouldn't
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    55

    1
    necessarily be the owner/operator of the business
    2
    that's making the upgrades or efficiency
    3
    measures, taking the efficiency measures.
    4
    However, they can still sponsor that project
    5
    through perhaps discounted electric rates on a
    6
    commercial level or -- it doesn't necessarily
    7
    have to be -- the project sponsor doesn't
    8
    necessarily have to be the owner/operator of the
    9
    facility undertaking the measures.
    10
    MR. ROSS: I believe owner/operator is
    11
    a legal term that is confined by a definition.
    12
    It's used in regard to stationary sources. So
    13
    when we say project sponsor, we bring in others
    14
    from example he's given so I don't think -- I
    15
    think owner/operator was limiting and, therefore,
    16
    we added a definition of project sponsor to
    17
    broaden those eligible for the set aside.
    18
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: Thank you. That's
    19
    -- I was trying to get more examples into the
    20
    record.
    21
    MR. COOPER: Would you like more?
    22
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: Do you have more?
    23
    Go ahead.
    24
    MR. COOPER: Wind farms, a local
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    56

    1
    farmer you can go on the internet and you
    2
    yourself can purchase your own multi kilowatt
    3
    wind turbine. In that example farmers could put
    4
    in a group of them and in that case maybe one
    5
    guy, one farmer does have multiple people's
    6
    properties. In that case he would be the
    7
    owner/operator or project sponsor of those even
    8
    though they would be on other properties. Is
    9
    that the example you were looking for?
    10
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: So sort of like a
    11
    farmers wind farm association?
    12
    MR. COOPER: Which they have. The --
    13
    I believe I talked about that in the TSD in
    14
    Chicago. The Chicago Solar Partnership, if
    15
    memory serves, it's -- the last time I looked it
    16
    was a collection of some 28 odd independent
    17
    sites. Those sites aggregate to something on the
    18
    order of two megawatts worth of solar capacity.
    19
    That would be another example where perhaps the
    20
    Solar Partnership is the project sponsor rather
    21
    than all the independent 28 independents. For
    22
    the moment I'm out.
    23
    MR. JOHNSON: Essentially you want to
    24
    encourage these types of environmentally friendly
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    57

    1
    projects as well as encourage corporate
    2
    landowners?
    3
    MR. COOPER: The attempt was to make
    4
    -- to open a program's doors as wide as possible
    5
    to allow as many as possible that are eligible to
    6
    take advantage of the program. We attempted not
    7
    to say you the homeowner, we don't want to mess
    8
    with you. You the farmers cooperative, we don't
    9
    want to mess with you. You 28 solar, no. We
    10
    tried within the confines of the rule to open the
    11
    doors wide enough so that virtually anyone
    12
    qualified can come in.
    13
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Yes? Sir,
    14
    can you identify yourself?
    15
    MR. NILLES: Bruce Nilles with the
    16
    Sierra Club. If the City of Springfield decides
    17
    to retrofit a certain number of low income
    18
    housing -- low income homes and generates a
    19
    certain amount of energy daily with the NOX
    20
    reduction, is that the kind of project you think
    21
    would be eligible?
    22
    MR. COOPER: I believe that would be
    23
    on the -- yes, I believe that would be. That is
    24
    a form of demand side management.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    58

    1
    MR. NILLES: And the idea is to reward
    2
    the city to do a good project for the city in
    3
    order to save energy as well as generating energy
    4
    savings for low income residents?
    5
    MR. COOPER: Absolutely.
    6
    MS. BASSI: In your example -- in that
    7
    example, if the allowance were sold, who would
    8
    get the income?
    9
    MR. COOPER: If the allowance was sole
    10
    by whom?
    11
    MS. BASSI: So the city of -- In this
    12
    example, does the City of Springfield get the
    13
    allowance?
    14
    MR. HILLES: Yes, the City of the
    15
    Springfield would be the recipient of the NOX
    16
    credit and would be putting up the resources to
    17
    be able to allow the low income housing to be
    18
    retrofitted.
    19
    MR. RIESER: Was your question
    20
    answered?
    21
    MS. BASSI: Yes. Thank you.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Rieser,
    23
    are you ready to continue?
    24
    MR. RIESER: I am. We were -- I was
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    59

    1
    pointing you to 225.460(c)(1) which describes
    2
    both eligible and ineligible air pollution
    3
    control upgrade projects. Among the ineligible
    4
    projects are over fire air techniques and I want
    5
    to ask the basis for excluding over fire air
    6
    techniques as opposed to including selective
    7
    non-catalytic reduction technologies?
    8
    MR. ROSS: We wanted to provide cost
    9
    recovery ability to those controls that cost the
    10
    greatest amount. As we discussed earlier, and
    11
    that gets the greatest benefit that add-on
    12
    controls or coal-fired EGUs such as FGDs, FDRs,
    13
    FMCRs and baghouses can cost tens of millions to
    14
    hundreds of millions of dollars. And they also
    15
    potentially provide the greatest benefit in
    16
    regards to reductions of emissions, and so that's
    17
    where we focus our attention, on those types of
    18
    controls.
    19
    MR. RIESER: If it could be
    20
    demonstrated that a technology such as over fire
    21
    air provided equal or greater benefits to SMCR at
    22
    less cost, isn't that an activity that ought to
    23
    be eligible for CASA allowance?
    24
    MR. ROSS: I mean, we are willing to
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    60

    1
    look at that, but, again, cost is a factor.
    2
    There are -- A trading program in general
    3
    benefits a -- the addition of a control device in
    4
    that by reducing your emissions you are, in
    5
    essence, bringing up allowances to be sold,
    6
    traded, used as the company sees fit. And if
    7
    that control option, in this case an over fire
    8
    air combustion modification, I believe, if it's
    9
    inexpensive, there may be little need for
    10
    additional cost recovery such as that provided by
    11
    the CASA. So we're certainly willing to look at
    12
    something like that but cost is a factor.
    13
    MR. RIESER: When -- Well, for one,
    14
    would it be useful to impedovise (phonetic) the
    15
    installation of lower cost but equally effective
    16
    control strategies to preserve the pool but also
    17
    -- to preserve the allowance pool but also to
    18
    provide for equal -- equal control measures?
    19
    MR. ROSS: Perhaps. I mean, I can see
    20
    where you -- one could argue that, yes. But,
    21
    again, the cap and trade program in itself
    22
    provides an incentive. What we're looking for
    23
    with CASA is to provide additional incentive to
    24
    add-on controls which are more expensive and,
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    61

    1
    therefore, less likely to be undertaken or as
    2
    readily undertaken as something that's multiple
    3
    times lower in cost. I believe when over fire
    4
    air is a NOX control option, SCR is a NOX
    5
    controlled option, SCR is an add-on control
    6
    device which can cost in the neighborhood, you
    7
    know, anywhere, I believe, from 20 million
    8
    upwards to 60 million. A lot of it intended on
    9
    the size of the generating unit. Over fire air
    10
    on the other hand, as my understanding and I
    11
    believe we expressed this in our Technical
    12
    Support Document, where we have tables addressing
    13
    the cost of different control options, it's
    14
    multiple times lower in cost than SCR. So,
    15
    therefore, any additional cost recovery provided
    16
    to installing an SCR makes that type of control
    17
    more likely to be installed.
    18
    MR. RIESER: When you say that you're
    19
    willing to take a look at this, is that in the
    20
    context of this regulatory process, or would you
    21
    consider language that allowed for those types of
    22
    individual technology demonstrations to allow for
    23
    eligibility within the rule itself?
    24
    MR. ROSS: Say that again, I'm sorry.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    62

    1
    MR. RIESER: As soon as I got two
    2
    thirds of the way through that I knew it was
    3
    going to make no sense at all so I'm going to
    4
    break it down. You said you would take a look at
    5
    this issue --
    6
    MR. ROSS: Right.
    7
    MR. RIESER: -- and is it your
    8
    intention to take a look at it in the context of
    9
    this -- the regulatory language that we've got
    10
    before the Board?
    11
    MR. ROSS: Well, I would say that we
    12
    looked at it already and decided against over
    13
    fire air. I believe it was primarily based on
    14
    cost is what I previously discussed. Given to
    15
    the extent that we are provided additional
    16
    information, we are willing to look further into
    17
    that and other issues that are being raised at
    18
    the hearing. And if an amendment to the rule is
    19
    determined appropriate, then we are willing to do
    20
    that.
    21
    MR. RIESER: Would that consideration
    22
    include adding language to this eligibility
    23
    discussion that you got in C1 that would provide
    24
    for an unnamed -- either technologies that are
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    63

    1
    currently named or for future developed unnamed
    2
    technology to be presented to the Agency for
    3
    eligibility and have the Agency make a
    4
    determination regarding its eligibility at the
    5
    time it's presented to them?
    6
    MR. ROSS: I believe the answer to
    7
    your question is yes. We could potentially amend
    8
    the rule to include something like that. And
    9
    what I am currently looking at is something
    10
    similar to that already exists in the rule.
    11
    Because I know we had discussed and contemplated
    12
    that in our internal meeting. Again, that there
    13
    may be some new technology that comes on to the
    14
    scene that can provide substantial reductions in
    15
    NOX or SO2 that we would like to provide an
    16
    incentive for. And given that, we would be open
    17
    to amending the rule or giving CASA such a
    18
    project and I think we incorporated that in to
    19
    some degree into the rule.
    20
    MR. RIESER: 460(e).
    21
    MS. DOCTORS: Section 225.460(e)?
    22
    MR. RIESER: But this does not allow
    23
    for the inclusion of anything that is
    24
    specifically excluded under 460(c)?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    64

    1
    MR. ROSS: It does not allow for the
    2
    inclusion of over fire air which is what you have
    3
    specifically raised, that's correct.
    4
    MR. RIESER: And would there be any
    5
    consideration to softening that not specifically
    6
    excluded language?
    7
    MR. ROSS: Yes, we could give
    8
    consideration based on information provided in a
    9
    review -- internal review that would indicate
    10
    that it's appropriate to even include something
    11
    such as over fire air.
    12
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Okay. I have a
    13
    follow-up just on that section if you don't mind.
    14
    Section C, Subsection C that we were just talking
    15
    about, the delete in language is clean technology
    16
    project and then below that we have two subparts,
    17
    Subpart 1 refers to air pollution and control
    18
    equipment and Subpart 2 clean coal technologies.
    19
    And when I first read C, I had been under the
    20
    impression that both -- both C1 and C2 were both
    21
    categories of clean coal technology. And if you
    22
    go to, however, 225.465, which is the next
    23
    Section A, Subpart 2 refers to air pollution
    24
    control equipment and Subpart 3 separately refers
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    65

    1
    to clean coal technology which created an
    2
    ambiguity in my mind at least. So my question
    3
    was: Subpart C of 225.460, which Mr. Rieser was
    4
    just asking you about which refers to clean coal
    5
    technologies, are clean coal technologies, as
    6
    that term is used in this rule, intended to
    7
    capture all of the projects that are identified
    8
    both in C1 and C2?
    9
    MS. DOCTORS: Mr. Cooper needs to
    10
    answer that question.
    11
    MR. COOPER: I apologize.
    12
    MR. KIM: I apologize.
    13
    MR. BONEBRAKE: You need all that
    14
    again?
    15
    MR. COOPER: I believe so.
    16
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I have practice so
    17
    I'll try to make this quick. 225.465(a)(2)
    18
    refers to air pollution control equipment and A3
    19
    clean coal technologies, do you see that, Mr.
    20
    Cooper?
    21
    MR. COOPER: A2 and A3?
    22
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Right.
    23
    MR. COOPER: 465.
    24
    MR. BONEBRAKE: That's where my
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    66

    1
    question starts and I'll go back to 460.
    2
    MR. COOPER: A2 and A3, yes.
    3
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And that suggested to
    4
    me that air pollution control equipment of the
    5
    category was separate and apart from clean coal
    6
    technology?
    7
    MR. COOPER: It is, yes, I believe.
    8
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Now if we go back to
    9
    460(c).
    10
    MR. COOPER: It says clean technology
    11
    projects, not clean coal technology.
    12
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So clean technology
    13
    projects include both air pollution control
    14
    equipment upgrades and clean coal technology?
    15
    MR. COOPER: I believe, yes.
    16
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Okay. So whenever we
    17
    see the term clean technology projects in the
    18
    proposed rule, we are attending to capture both
    19
    of those categories?
    20
    MR. COOPER: I believe so, yes.
    21
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bassi?
    22
    MS. BASSI: I'd like to go back to
    23
    460(d) and (e), please.
    24
    MR. COOPER: 460 what?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    67

    1
    MS. BASSI: Subsection D and E. Okay.
    2
    In Subsection E it appears to me that this is the
    3
    other category where something is not
    4
    specifically listed, someone could apply to the
    5
    Agency for a CASA allowance for those things
    6
    unless they are not specifically excluded by
    7
    Subsection D. Subsection D appears to exclude
    8
    only nuclear power projects, projects required to
    9
    meet emission standards required by other state
    10
    or federal laws except for baghouses or projects
    11
    required to meet the -- to comply with the
    12
    consent decree or SEP; is that correct? Whoever
    13
    is answering.
    14
    MR. COOPER: I missed your question.
    15
    You read it but I missed your question.
    16
    MS. BASSI: Well, did I read it
    17
    correctly?
    18
    MR. COOPER: I believe you read the
    19
    words.
    20
    MS. BASSI: That's all I asked so far.
    21
    Okay. If that is the case, would not an over
    22
    fire air project be eligible for consideration
    23
    under E because it's not excluded under D?
    24
    MR. COOPER: I believe it's excluded
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    68

    1
    under the definition of the clean -- I believe
    2
    it's excluded under the definition of clean
    3
    technology project.
    4
    MS. BASSI: But E does not say what is
    5
    excluded under A and C. This is for projects
    6
    other than those that are listed under A and C?
    7
    MS. DOCTORS: E1 through C23.
    8
    MS. BASSI: What?
    9
    MR. BLOOMBERG: It is listed in C. It
    10
    is a project specifically listed and excluded in
    11
    C.
    12
    MS. BASSI: But E doesn't say the ones
    13
    that are excluded in C.
    14
    MR. BLOOMBERG: No, but it is
    15
    specifically listed. It says for projects that
    16
    are not specifically listed in Subsections A
    17
    through C. Over fired air is listed in C. It
    18
    also happens to be excluded in C.
    19
    MS. BASSI: But it's listed -- it is
    20
    not listed in C as one of the types of projects
    21
    that would be in other, in quotes, under E?
    22
    MR. BLOOMBERG: That's not what E
    23
    says. It says not specifically listed. And over
    24
    fired air is specifically listed in C. It is
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    69

    1
    also specifically excluded in C, but the more
    2
    importantly in this case it is specifically
    3
    listed in C.
    4
    MS. BASSI: With all do respect, I
    5
    don't think that's very clear and something you
    6
    might consider.
    7
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Okay.
    8
    MS. BASSI: Because it appears -- it
    9
    appears from the reading of this, the only
    10
    exclusion are the ones that are listed in D.
    11
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I'm sure we can work
    12
    on some clarifying language.
    13
    MS. BASSI: But Mr. Rieser wants it
    14
    included on the other.
    15
    MR. BLOOMBERG: We know.
    16
    MR. RIESER: And I think we'll be
    17
    happy to submit our comment on what we prefer.
    18
    MS. BASSI: Just trying to help.
    19
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Rieser,
    20
    I think we're back to you.
    21
    MR. RIESER: The next series of
    22
    questions I have have to do with the -- what I
    23
    call the pour over among the different
    24
    categories, so I don't know if that's suited for
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    70

    1
    Mr. Bloomberg or is a Mr. Cooper question.
    2
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Do you mean the
    3
    overflow?
    4
    MR. RIESER: Yeah.
    5
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Mr. Cooper will be
    6
    specifically addressing that in his presentation.
    7
    MR. RIESER: Then I'll hold those
    8
    until he does that.
    9
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Are you
    10
    finished with your remaining questions, Mr.
    11
    Reiser?
    12
    MR. REISER: Yes.
    13
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bugel?
    14
    MS. BUGEL: I have nothing. Thank
    15
    you.
    16
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Let's go off
    17
    the record a second.
    18
    (A discussion was held off the
    19
    record.)
    20
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Let's meet
    21
    back at three o'clock.
    22
    (A short break was taken.)
    23
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Let's go
    24
    back on the record. We're going to have a brief
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    71

    1
    presentation from Mr. Cooper and then -- so we're
    2
    going to vacate the front table and then come
    3
    back up before we start the questioning.
    4
    MS. DOCTORS: This would be Agency
    5
    Exhibit 11.
    6
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Is there
    7
    going to be any objection to the Exhibit 9,
    8
    Agency Exhibit 9? Seeing none, this will be
    9
    admitted into the record as Exhibit 9. No, no.
    10
    I'm way off. It's Agency Exhibit No. 11.
    11
    MR. RIESER: Which one is this?
    12
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: What you
    13
    have in front of you is Agency Exhibit No. 9, the
    14
    presentation.
    15
    MR. REISER: Thank you.
    16
    MR. COOPER: Good afternoon.
    17
    Everybody situated? Yeah. This is a
    18
    presentation that briefly summarizes the CASA
    19
    which is unique to Illinois. I don't believe
    20
    we've tried something like this before. This
    21
    presentation is very similar to a presentation
    22
    that was performed during the outreach, so for
    23
    some of you it will be old hat and for the Board
    24
    hopefully it clarifies and summarizes some of
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    72

    1
    what we're trying to get across.
    2
    As you can see by this slide, these
    3
    are the topics we'll be covering. As we've
    4
    discussed at great length there are four
    5
    categories of which Illinois' CASA attempts to
    6
    incentivise. Energy efficiency/renewable
    7
    projects, pollution control upgrades, clean coal
    8
    technology and early adopters which is somewhat
    9
    of a confusing term. I'm liking it to a timing
    10
    bonus. Some acceptable projects are those before
    11
    you. We've mentioned a couple of them yet today.
    12
    I believe actually the demand side management
    13
    came up as an example from Mr. Nilles. We've
    14
    also anticipated that there may be energy
    15
    efficient new construction would be green
    16
    buildings and the like, supply side energy
    17
    efficiency which would specifically supply to a
    18
    generating unit; high efficient power; wind,
    19
    solar and the rest. Next please.
    20
    Specifically under pollution control
    21
    upgrades, as the rule is currently proposed,
    22
    there are only four types that would be
    23
    allowable: The FGD, baghouse, SCR/SNCR. And as
    24
    was discussed earlier, there are a host of
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    73

    1
    projects which are specifically excluded at least
    2
    in the current draft. As far as clean coal
    3
    technology, not to specifically be confused with
    4
    clean technology, there are IGCC, integrated
    5
    gasification combined cycle plants, as well as
    6
    fluidized bed coal combustion. The timing bonus
    7
    quite simply are projects that come in prior to
    8
    those within that window of time, effectively,
    9
    the early adopter category is an attempt to gain
    10
    emissions sooner through this -- or gain emission
    11
    reductions, pardon my misstatement, emission
    12
    reduction sooner than someone otherwise perhaps
    13
    would have done. It provides basically an
    14
    additional kick of allowances as we'll talk about
    15
    a little bit later. Next, please.
    16
    We won't go through all these
    17
    calculations. They were provided for
    18
    completeness. We will touch on just a few, but
    19
    they all generally work the same way. As you can
    20
    see for the energy efficiency and conservation
    21
    projects, it's a rather simple formula where a
    22
    number of allowances is directly related to the
    23
    megawatt hours that a project offsets. The 1.5
    24
    is a constant, the 2000 is a conversion to tons.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    74

    1
    Next, please.
    2
    A short example, a very real example,
    3
    a facility like this or any other across the
    4
    entire state undergoes a lighting and motor
    5
    upgrade project. And in this particular
    6
    hypothetical example they offset 10,000 megawatts
    7
    hours. You plug it in and it equates out very
    8
    simply that. And, again, we won't go through all
    9
    of these. The exact same procedure, the only
    10
    difference being in this case is the amount
    11
    generated rather than conserved and there's a
    12
    different multiplier. There's a short example.
    13
    Again, same basic form at a different multiplier.
    14
    Example for your own.
    15
    Now we'll pause for a moment on this
    16
    one. Air pollution control upgrades as we
    17
    previously stated: FGD, SCR/SNCR and then there
    18
    is baghouse, that comes later. There's a
    19
    separate equation. Essentially what that
    20
    equation says is that during -- or we create a
    21
    baseline emission, so two years prior to the
    22
    installation of the control device, we are going
    23
    to create a baseline. That's the ERB factor.
    24
    ERA then is every years annual average. Allowing
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    75

    1
    for this difference actually provides incentive
    2
    to the utility to operate their equipment as low
    3
    as possible as to them as economically viable.
    4
    The K factor is a de-rating factor to keep the --
    5
    because the megawatts generate for a plant are so
    6
    large so the K factor brings it down in scope.
    7
    And as you can see there is a difference for the
    8
    K, for NOX and SO2 and the difference being the
    9
    drastic reductions in NOX -- or in SO2, excuse me,
    10
    that could be had from an FGD.
    11
    A small example here, again a very
    12
    real example. There's -- This is not a
    13
    particular plant. This is totally made up data.
    14
    This is no one in specific. But a plant chooses
    15
    to undergo a project. Their prior two year
    16
    baseline was 1.8 pound per megawatt hour, not
    17
    million BTU, and after the upgrade they were able
    18
    to achieve a 50% reduction apparently. And in a
    19
    given year they generated 2.8 million megawatts.
    20
    As you can see, all of factors plug into the
    21
    equation and we arrive at 126 allowances.
    22
    So the baghouse, not quite as
    23
    complicated of an equation, same as before except
    24
    a different factor. Similar example. Again, a
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    76

    1
    utility installs the baghouse, 2.8 million. We
    2
    plug them in and we arrived with 280 allowances.
    3
    Very similar except we've defined in this case
    4
    with the 1.0 as to what we are considering a
    5
    baseline of clean is. An example.
    6
    So here's the early adopter, and
    7
    people that qualify by the way of the structure
    8
    of the formula is they should qualify for at
    9
    least one. That's the leading factor. But
    10
    centrally it's 10% of the sum of everything else
    11
    that they otherwise qualified for. So if they
    12
    installed within a period of time a controlled
    13
    device as well as a wind farm, we're going to
    14
    recognize that. In this case in one of the
    15
    previous examples, the wind farm was installed
    16
    prior to the -- or within the window of time and
    17
    the equation runs as such. Had there been more
    18
    than one project, there would be more than one in
    19
    the summation.
    20
    Allowance distribution period. The
    21
    slide pretty well speaks for itself, I believe.
    22
    I don't know what more I can say on that at this
    23
    point. Look back for eligibility. This is, I
    24
    believe, verbatim from the proposed rule. There
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    77

    1
    are windows of time which we have allowed a
    2
    project in the not too distance past to qualify
    3
    for.
    4
    Here we get to the topic of under and
    5
    over subscription which has been the topic of
    6
    some of the debate I'm to understand. The first
    7
    goal of this -- and there will be a slide that
    8
    follows. I don't know if it helps to look at
    9
    that now before we go on. But the first aim is
    10
    that a category doubles, so it's business as
    11
    usual until a category doubles. Once the
    12
    category doubles, that excess then is eligible to
    13
    spill to its neighboring categories. Our aim is
    14
    to first apply that spillover to those other
    15
    categories that are over subscribed. Once the
    16
    over subscribed categories are filled to the zero
    17
    line where all requests have been met, then those
    18
    allocations begin to fill the neighboring
    19
    categories that have not yet doubled.
    20
    And as has been brought up earlier, if
    21
    under some scenario all categories were to
    22
    eventually become full by double their amount,
    23
    there is flexibility for the Agency to retire
    24
    those excess allowances. What I was reminded of
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    78

    1
    is that this slide is not indicative of the rule
    2
    as it is currently written per se. The coming
    3
    amendment which is close --
    4
    MS. DOCTORS: Close.
    5
    MR. COOPER: Close. This is the aim
    6
    of the current amendment. I believe that it's a
    7
    -- for the most part a clarification of what our
    8
    intent was, what the new language is saying. But
    9
    any rate, here's a purely hypothetical scenario.
    10
    Again, this is not -- it is sort of based on
    11
    reality but at the same time perhaps not. We can
    12
    see that four categories. These categories are
    13
    roughly to scale. In this case the first, and
    14
    we're looking at the before side, the first set
    15
    of columns have the EE/RE category has filled
    16
    beyond its first full point. It is working on
    17
    becoming doubly full. In this scenario the
    18
    pollution control upgrade category is completely
    19
    over subscribed. There are the red boxes
    20
    indicating that there are more requests than
    21
    allowances available.
    22
    In the next category, the clean coal
    23
    technology category, apparently in this example
    24
    there wasn't much interest and it has much more
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    79

    1
    than doubled in its size. And the last category,
    2
    zero the adopters is also over subscribed. How
    3
    this, with the amendment, would be run now, we're
    4
    on the right-hand side, the after filling
    5
    portion. The box over clean coal technology,
    6
    that represents that amount of allocations has
    7
    spilled to those that are over subscribed first.
    8
    As you can see in the picture by the now white
    9
    boxes with the dotted lines, their needs have
    10
    been fully met.
    11
    MS. DOCTORS: Is this slide number 25?
    12
    MR. COOPER: It's what it says. This
    13
    is slide number 25. Is that what I was supposed
    14
    to say?
    15
    MS. DOCTORS: Yes.
    16
    MR. COOPER: Fair enough. Pause on
    17
    that note. I was saying something about filling.
    18
    Okay. So we've -- our first priority has been to
    19
    meet the needs of their requests that have been
    20
    over subscribed, and in this particular example
    21
    we were able to achieve that. So both the
    22
    pollution control upgrade category as well as the
    23
    early adopter categories were able to have every
    24
    request met. And as this example would have it,
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    80

    1
    there turned out to be a little extra. That
    2
    little extra then gets divvied amongst the other
    3
    remaining categories in an attempt now to fill
    4
    them to their doubling point. I think we're
    5
    holding. So I hope that gives a visual
    6
    representation of what the amended language is
    7
    trying to achieve. I'm not sure that it does. I
    8
    hope it does. I hope it brings it more into
    9
    focus what our goals are.
    10
    First and foremost we don't waste a
    11
    drop. Once something is doubled, every effort is
    12
    made to fill the need. Not one -- one allowance
    13
    will be retired until every need is met. I think
    14
    that's important to stress.
    15
    Preempting a potential question for
    16
    later, I decided to throw this in and this
    17
    essentially gives a justification for the waiting
    18
    choices in the various equations. Briefly the
    19
    point five as noted, I believe, in the TSD as
    20
    well is less than the other amounts. The reason
    21
    being, those particular units will generate NOX.
    22
    An example of this would be a landfill gas
    23
    methane to energy project. While we do want to
    24
    encourage that, at the same time we do recognize
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    81

    1
    that there is a NOX consequence and, therefore,
    2
    the lower rate. The 1.0 is what we're deeming as
    3
    a clean unit and, as stated, necessary for
    4
    attainment. The 1.5 is fairly standard. I
    5
    believe the standard allocation methodology uses
    6
    that. And the final point, the 2.0, the reason
    7
    this is more is because these units generate
    8
    electricity with no associated emissions. So
    9
    that's something we first want to very heavily
    10
    promote as well as its definitely in step with
    11
    the Governor's goals.
    12
    A combination of set asides, as can be
    13
    read, we fully encourage entities to undertake as
    14
    many projects that would fall within these
    15
    categories. And we definitely will allow you to
    16
    reap each category that you can get.
    17
    As was stated earlier, I believe,
    18
    there are almost innumerable projects, so that's
    19
    what the first bullet point is referring to. The
    20
    pollution control upgrade category I felt was
    21
    important to note that it is specifically denoted
    22
    for the EGUs and then, as taken from the rule,
    23
    commercially generating for eight years is what
    24
    we're going to call an existing unit.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    82

    1
    Building off the first bullet point
    2
    from the last slide, the pollution control
    3
    upgrade category represents 20% of our CASA.
    4
    Again, the sole beneficiaries of that category
    5
    are the EGUs. Additionally, in the EE/RE
    6
    category, there would be supply side energy
    7
    projects. Again, the only people that would be
    8
    eligible for that would be the EGUs. So those
    9
    are two earmark sections designed for those
    10
    sources.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Thank you,
    12
    Mr. Cooper. It's my understanding that Ms.
    13
    Doctors has some preliminary questions she wants
    14
    to ask of Mr. Cooper before you start asking
    15
    questions of him; is that correct?
    16
    MS. DOCTORS: Yes. I'd start by
    17
    getting his testimony admitted as if read. I
    18
    believe this is Agency Exhibit 12. Yesterday
    19
    there was a question --
    20
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Can you just
    21
    hold on a second, please. We need to get a copy
    22
    of the testimony and get it in the record. Any
    23
    objection to the admission of the testimony as if
    24
    read into the record? That will be admitted as
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    83

    1
    Agency Exhibit No. 12. All right, Ms. Doctors,
    2
    you may proceed.
    3
    MS. DOCTORS: Okay. Yesterday Ms.
    4
    Bassi asked for information on the current
    5
    construction projects. We have an exhibit off of
    6
    our Website, I believe.
    7
    MR. COOPER: Yes.
    8
    MS. DOCTORS: This would be marked as
    9
    Agency Exhibit 13. I'd like to have this
    10
    admitted.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Is this --
    12
    MR. COOPER: Ms. Bassi had asked a
    13
    question earlier about the number of projects,
    14
    utility projects. And during the break I was
    15
    able to run and produce a document that lists
    16
    them all. I thought it would be useful.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Very
    18
    efficient.
    19
    MR. COOPER: Thank you.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bassi,
    21
    is there going to be any objection to this?
    22
    MS. BASSI: I'd like to see it first.
    23
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Rieser,
    24
    any objection to this?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    84

    1
    MR. REISER: No.
    2
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: This will be
    3
    admitted as well as Exhibit 13. I'm sorry. Ms.
    4
    Doctors, you may proceed.
    5
    MS. DOCTORS: Okay. Ms. Bassi had
    6
    also and Mr. Reiser had asked which states had
    7
    output -- output based allocation schemes or
    8
    methodology. This is from UCPA's Website, I
    9
    believe. I'd like to mark it as Agency Exhibit
    10
    14. Mr. Cooper, could you tell us a little bit
    11
    about this document.
    12
    MR. COOPER: This document is titled
    13
    as the -- or done by EPA and the CHP Partnership.
    14
    There is a table on the first page that answers
    15
    -- partially answers the question from Mr.
    16
    Davis's testimony as to what are the benefits of
    17
    efficiency on page 3, I believe. There is also a
    18
    table of current state output based regulations.
    19
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Any
    20
    objection to the admission of this document?
    21
    MR. BONEBRAKE: No objection.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Seeing none,
    23
    this be admitted as Agency Exhibit No. 14.
    24
    MS. BASSI: Can I ask a question about
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    85

    1
    this?
    2
    MR. COOPER: Sure.
    3
    MS. BASSI: Am I reading this
    4
    correctly, these are the states that currently
    5
    have state output based regulations as opposed to
    6
    those that are proposing them under the CAIR; is
    7
    that correct?
    8
    MR. COOPER: I'm reading it the same
    9
    way you are. Table 1 states output based
    10
    regulations. I made an effort to go and pull
    11
    this data also at the break. And I believe it
    12
    addresses at least in part some of your previous
    13
    questions.
    14
    MS. BASSI: Thank you.
    15
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And in that same Table
    16
    1 there's a reference to DG rule, do you know
    17
    what that means?
    18
    MR. DAVIS: I do. Distributed
    19
    generations.
    20
    MR. COOPER: Yes. I believe it states
    21
    the abbreviation for that at the top of page 2,
    22
    third -- second bullet point emission limits for
    23
    small distributed generations (DG). Second page,
    24
    top right column, second bullet point.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    86

    1
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And to your knowledge,
    2
    Mr. Cooper, is Table 1 an exhaustive list of
    3
    state regulations that have output based
    4
    regulations?
    5
    MR. COOPER: I am not aware of that.
    6
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: I'm sorry.
    7
    Ms. Doctors?
    8
    MS. DOCTORS: We have three more
    9
    documents.
    10
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Okay. Were
    11
    all these copied by Mr. Cooper on a break?
    12
    MS. DOCTORS: No. We'd like to have
    13
    -- we've -- there was a question raised by Mr.
    14
    Rieser and Ms. Bassi concerning the 15% set aside
    15
    and the guidance that we dated from the NOX SIP
    16
    Call.
    17
    MR. REISER: I'm not sure I asked that
    18
    question.
    19
    MS. DOCTORS: No, I'm sorry. Wrong
    20
    person. Mr. Bonebrake asked it and Kathleen
    21
    Bassi.
    22
    MR. BONEBRAKE: It all looks the same
    23
    on the transcript.
    24
    MS. DOCTORS: I'm sorry. I misspoke.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    87

    1
    This is -- we had asked about what states had
    2
    done in terms of set asides and this document
    3
    dated from September 16th, 2005, draft is a draft
    4
    report prepared by the Climate Protection
    5
    Partnership Division, that's a division of USEPA,
    6
    and that would be marked Agency Exhibit 14.
    7
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: 15.
    8
    MS. DOCTORS: 15.
    9
    MR. COOPER: Specific interest with
    10
    reference to that document, I believe, is page 3.
    11
    Page 3 provides a Table 1 size of set aside
    12
    account by state.
    13
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Before we
    14
    get into this, let's see if we're going to admit
    15
    it. Do you have any objections? Do you need a
    16
    minute to take a look at this?
    17
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Give us just a minute.
    18
    MS. BASSI: Is this a year-old draft;
    19
    is that correct?
    20
    MR. COOPER: That is the date on the
    21
    document.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Yes, Mr.
    23
    Rieser?
    24
    MR. REISER: Yeah. Do you know
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    88

    1
    whether this is -- whether there is a final
    2
    version of this?
    3
    MR. COOPER: No, I do not. The last
    4
    time I looked at this was during the drafting --
    5
    during our initial round table period.
    6
    MR. REISER: So you haven't looked
    7
    back to where this was to verify whether this has
    8
    been finalized or not?
    9
    MR. COOPER: I have not.
    10
    MR. REISER: Maybe if we could suggest
    11
    that that be done just to verify whether there is
    12
    a more recent and final document.
    13
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Yeah, I
    14
    think that would be a good idea for the Agency to
    15
    do that.
    16
    MR. REISER: Subject to that I don't
    17
    have any objection.
    18
    MR. BONEBRAKE: That will be my only
    19
    concern as well.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: We'll admit
    21
    this as Agency Exhibit No. 15, but we direct the
    22
    Agency to attempt to discover whether there is a
    23
    more recent version of this draft.
    24
    MS. DOCTORS: We will. This next one
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    89

    1
    discusses the 15% -- I mean, guidance on set
    2
    asides and it's alternative NOX allowance
    3
    allocation language for the Clean Air Interstate
    4
    Act and that would be Agency -- would be Agency
    5
    Exhibit 16.
    6
    MR. REISER: I think we have to start
    7
    taking shorter breaks.
    8
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Yeah, I
    9
    think you're probably right.
    10
    MS. BASSI: Could I make a
    11
    clarification about Exhibit 15 again also,
    12
    please?
    13
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bassi?
    14
    MS. BASSI: The title of Exhibit 15,
    15
    this draft report, it refers to the NOX budget
    16
    trading program, would you stipulate that that is
    17
    NOX SIP Call?
    18
    MR. COOPER: I believe so.
    19
    MS. BASSI: Okay. Thank you.
    20
    MS. DOCTORS: Okay. We have one more
    21
    document.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: One second,
    23
    Ms. Doctors. You move this for admission;
    24
    correct?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    90

    1
    MS. DOCTORS: Yes, I do.
    2
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Any
    3
    objection to the admission of this document?
    4
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Can we hear a little
    5
    bit about the source from somebody from the IEPA
    6
    side of the table describe what this document is
    7
    first?
    8
    MS. DOCTORS: You talking about which
    9
    one, the alternative?
    10
    MR. BONEBRAKE: The one that says
    11
    about STAPPA and ALAPCO on the front.
    12
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: That's
    13
    right. Agency No. 16.
    14
    MS. BASSI: You should issue
    15
    magnifying glasses.
    16
    MR. COOPER: Your question was what?
    17
    MR. BONEBRAKE: What is the source of
    18
    this document and if you could just briefly
    19
    describe what it is?
    20
    MR. COOPER: I believe it's STAPPA and
    21
    ALAPCO, the State and Territorial Air Pollution
    22
    Program Administrators; ALAPCO, Association of
    23
    Air Pollution Control Officials.
    24
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Is this a publicly
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    91

    1
    available document?
    2
    MR. COOPER: I believe so, yes.
    3
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I have no objection to
    4
    it as an exhibit.
    5
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Rieser?
    6
    MR. REISER: No objection.
    7
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bugel?
    8
    MS. BUGEL: No objection.
    9
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: This will be
    10
    admitted as Agency Exhibit No. 16. And, Ms.
    11
    Doctors, you may now proceed.
    12
    MS. DOCTORS: Agency Exhibit 17. This
    13
    is another document that was prepared for the
    14
    Energy Services Coalition. Also discusses state
    15
    emissions allocation -- allowance set aside
    16
    programs. That has been a question has other
    17
    states done emission allowance set asides.
    18
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bugel,
    19
    any objection to the introduction of this as an
    20
    exhibit?
    21
    MS. BUGEL: No objection.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Rieser?
    23
    MR. REISER: I guess can you tell us
    24
    the source and what the Energy Emission Coalition
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    92

    1
    and what is this about?
    2
    MR. COOPER: In all honesty, I don't
    3
    recall what specific sources it was pulled from.
    4
    It was a web resource pulled off as a PDF.
    5
    MR. RIESER: Okay. And was this a
    6
    part of the Agency's thinking or analysis as it
    7
    was putting this program together?
    8
    MR. COOPER: I wouldn't necessarily
    9
    classify it as that. This was ground level
    10
    research into what other states had done. Toward
    11
    the tail end of the document is a summary of what
    12
    other states had done. I don't know that it
    13
    wasn't relied upon.
    14
    MR. REISER: Thank you. No objection.
    15
    MR. BONEBRAKE: No objection.
    16
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: This will be
    17
    admit as Agency Exhibit No. 17.
    18
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I do have a question
    19
    pertaining to this document. Though given the
    20
    date, September 2001, would the Agency agree that
    21
    Exhibit 17 relates to the NOX SIP Call?
    22
    MR. COOPER: I would agree with that.
    23
    MS. DOCTORS: For the OTC trading
    24
    program.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    93

    1
    MR. COOPER: As a follow-up to that, I
    2
    believe it was stated earlier that at the time we
    3
    undertook this, and I believe still is the case,
    4
    there aren't many other states, it was somewhat
    5
    new territory so we had to use data that we --
    6
    that was available.
    7
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Which at that time
    8
    would have related to the NOX SIP Call?
    9
    MR. COOPER: In this case, yes.
    10
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And was that -- was
    11
    this it for the additional documents?
    12
    MS. DOCTORS: Yeah, I think there
    13
    were -- That was it.
    14
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I did have a follow-up
    15
    question. My impression had been from the
    16
    dialogue we had yesterday there was some IEPA
    17
    authored document that might be a summary of
    18
    what's -- what states were doing with respect to
    19
    the CAIR rules. And maybe I misunderstood that
    20
    but my impression there was such a document.
    21
    MR. COOPER: With respect to CAIR?
    22
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Yes.
    23
    MR. COOPER: I don't --
    24
    MR. DAVIS: I believe I testified I
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    94

    1
    can try to track that information down. I don't
    2
    know if there is a composite in the document.
    3
    MR. BONEBRAKE: If there is such a
    4
    document, we would like to see that.
    5
    MS. DOCTORS: Let me just clarify,
    6
    what you're looking for is to see if the Agency
    7
    has compiled a list of other states proposed CAIR
    8
    rule and whether they have set asides?
    9
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Or adopted. I imagine
    10
    there was may be some adopted CAIR rules but CAIR
    11
    implementation rules at this point in time.
    12
    MS. DOCTORS: That I'm not sure.
    13
    There may be.
    14
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And first glance it
    15
    looks to the extent that these documents are
    16
    memorializing what states have done in connection
    17
    with the NOX SIP Call as opposed to CAIR NOX rule?
    18
    MS. DOCTORS: I have a couple
    19
    clarifying questions.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Yes, you may
    21
    proceed.
    22
    MS. DOCTORS: There was a question
    23
    that came up about exhibit -- it refers to the
    24
    15% NOX. We had introduced some guidance dated
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    95

    1
    from 1999 that concerned the NOX SIP Call and
    2
    whether -- the question was raised as to whether
    3
    it was relevant in the CAIR -- the -- this CAIR
    4
    rulemaking proceeding. Do you have any other
    5
    information about types of guidance that -- that
    6
    -- that USEPA recommended for developing the CAIR
    7
    rule in set asides?
    8
    MR. COOPER: I believe the Federal
    9
    Register, it looks like page 25279, I believe it
    10
    was dated somewhere. I don't have the date
    11
    handy, but it was 8D1B. It spoke briefly on the
    12
    topic.
    13
    MS. DOCTORS: We're looking at the
    14
    final CAIR rule dated May 12, 2005, on page
    15
    25279.
    16
    MR. COOPER: There's a paragraph on
    17
    that page that includes, The EPA maintains that
    18
    offering such flexibility -- this is in reference
    19
    to set asides, The EPA maintains that offering
    20
    such flexibility as it did in the NOX SIP Call
    21
    does not compromise the effectiveness of the
    22
    trading program.
    23
    MS. DOCTORS: Is there any other
    24
    document?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    96

    1
    MR. COOPER: The STAPPA and ALAPCO
    2
    document which was just recently handed out dated
    3
    August 2005.
    4
    MS. DOCTORS: This is Agency Exhibit
    5
    16.
    6
    MR. COOPER: Page 10 of that document
    7
    and, again, this -- this document developed by
    8
    STAPPA and ALAPCO specifically for the Clean Air
    9
    Interstate Rule, page 10 they state, EPA has
    10
    developed certain guidance documents on the
    11
    allocation of EE/RE set aside. And I believe the
    12
    documents they are referring to are the -- the
    13
    one document was the -- I don't know the
    14
    referenced number but Ms. Bassi had called
    15
    concern to it.
    16
    MS. BASSI: I believe the one was
    17
    Exhibit E to the Statement of Reasons or the TSD.
    18
    Is that the March 1999 document is what you were
    19
    referring to?
    20
    MR. COOPER: Yeah, EE/RC set aside, I
    21
    believe.
    22
    MS. BASSI: Yeah.
    23
    MS. DOCTORS: I think that's all.
    24
    MR. COOPER: Yeah, that was my only
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    97

    1
    comment on that.
    2
    MS. DOCTORS: And in some statements
    3
    made about what the purpose -- primary purpose of
    4
    the CASA was.
    5
    MR. COOPER: Yes, I wanted to
    6
    emphasize the point, I believe, there were
    7
    questions earlier from Mr. Bonebrake to Jim Ross
    8
    on what the purpose of the CASA is -- was. And I
    9
    wanted to drive home the point that since
    10
    outreach -- all of the outreach documents as well
    11
    as in the TSD, page 12, the primary purpose of
    12
    the CASA has been as an incentive, not
    13
    specifically directly to lower emissions. I
    14
    wanted to make that point as a point of
    15
    clarification.
    16
    MR. BONEBRAKE: A follow-up question
    17
    to you is incentive to do what?
    18
    MR. COOPER: To install wind farm, to
    19
    undertake a pollution control upgrade project, to
    20
    partake in those particular categories.
    21
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And what does the
    22
    Agency expect will come from such projects.
    23
    MR. COOPER: A benefit to the
    24
    environment.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    98

    1
    MR. BONEBRAKE: In the form of reduced
    2
    emissions?
    3
    MR. COOPER: That would be one.
    4
    MS. DOCTORS: What other benefits are
    5
    you thinking?
    6
    MR. COOPER: There potentially could
    7
    be economic benefits if someone installs a wind
    8
    farm in Illinois, a construction firm would be
    9
    required, materials would be needed. So there
    10
    are other benefits other than emission reduction
    11
    associated with undertaking CASA.
    12
    MS. DOCTORS: Okay. We're -- that was
    13
    --
    14
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Nothing
    15
    further, Ms. Doctors?
    16
    MS. DOCTORS: Nothing further.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Were you
    18
    willing to present Mr. Cooper for questions then
    19
    I take it?
    20
    MS. DOCTORS: I think it's open.
    21
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Let's
    22
    proceed to questions.
    23
    MR. BONEBRAKE: A follow-up question.
    24
    I first had a question as to what has been marked
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    99

    1
    as Exhibit No. 13 and I think you indicated, Mr.
    2
    Cooper, this is a document that was generated
    3
    from IEPA's Website?
    4
    MR. COOPER: Excuse me?
    5
    MR. BONEBRAKE: It's entitled Electric
    6
    Power Plant Generating Unit Construction
    7
    Projects.
    8
    MR. COOPER: Yes.
    9
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And you said you
    10
    printed this off IEPA Website; is that correct?
    11
    MR. COOPER: Yes, the Website is at
    12
    the bottom.
    13
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Can you identify for
    14
    us what types of projects are listed on page 1
    15
    and running over to page 2 of this document?
    16
    MR. COOPER: As the headings read,
    17
    page 1 listing of new coal and solid fuel fired
    18
    units; page 2 listing of simple cycle turbine
    19
    projects; page 3 listing of active combined cycle
    20
    turbine projects.
    21
    MR. BONEBRAKE: With respect to the
    22
    first heading listing of new coal and solid fuel
    23
    fired unites, are these units that's have been
    24
    built or permitted, or what is the status of
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    100

    1
    these units and how is it that they arrive on
    2
    this list?
    3
    MR. COOPER: I believe the status is
    4
    the right most column. It denotes whether a
    5
    permit was issued. For example, of the CWLP or
    6
    Christian County Generation, application under
    7
    review.
    8
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So have any of these
    9
    projects then listed in the listing of new coal
    10
    and solid fuel fire -- have any of the units in
    11
    this category been listed as constructed -- have
    12
    they have been constructed at this point in time?
    13
    MR. COOPER: I missed your question.
    14
    MR. BONEBRAKE: With respect --
    15
    MR. COOPER: Has anything been built?
    16
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Yes.
    17
    MR. COOPER: On this particular
    18
    listing?
    19
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Correct.
    20
    MR. COOPER: The first page of the
    21
    entire document?
    22
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Well, what I
    23
    specifically was asking about was the listing of
    24
    new coal and solid fuel fired units.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    101

    1
    MR. COOPER: To my knowledge on this
    2
    particular listing it looks like the Southern
    3
    Illinois Power Cooperative unit is the only one
    4
    to my knowledge, second page.
    5
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And that dates back to
    6
    yet an application date of July 12, 2000?
    7
    MR. COOPER: That is what the date
    8
    application received appears to be.
    9
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So any new coal and
    10
    solid fuel fired unit for which there was an
    11
    application submitted in 2000 or thereafter is
    12
    reflected in this first listing of units; is that
    13
    correct?
    14
    MR. COOPER: To my knowledge. I don't
    15
    generate this list. I have nothing to do with
    16
    maintaining this. I merely printed it as is. So
    17
    I'm taking this at face value.
    18
    MR. ROSS: And just to provide an
    19
    update, I believe Taylorville Energy Center
    20
    project, that permit has gone to public notice.
    21
    I believe a hearing is scheduled in November in
    22
    Taylorville.
    23
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: I have a question,
    24
    Mr. Cooper. On page 2 at the bottom there's some
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    102

    1
    notes that refer to some of the abbreviations of
    2
    the table. What -- what would be the difference
    3
    between an I or E date permit issued or date
    4
    permit effective?
    5
    MR. COOPER: I believe I would state
    6
    that --
    7
    MS. BASSI: If I could jump in. An
    8
    example of that is in the Prairie State
    9
    Generating Project. It has --
    10
    MR. ROSS: Right.
    11
    MS. BASSI: -- an R, an I and an E.
    12
    MR. ROSS: After -- I don't want to
    13
    make assumptions here, but after a permit is
    14
    issued, it can be appealed in which case it is
    15
    not effective. They cannot construct under that
    16
    permit until the appeal is resolved.
    17
    MS. BUGEL: If you look underneath the
    18
    graph it says R, the date of the application is
    19
    received, I is the date the permit issued, and E
    20
    is the state the permit is effective. Was that
    21
    the question?
    22
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: Well, what I was
    23
    trying to understand was why the Southern
    24
    Illinois Power Coop is operating when it has a
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    103

    1
    date permit issued and the Prairie State, for
    2
    example, has a permit issued on April 28th, '05,
    3
    and it has an effective permit on August 24th,
    4
    '06. So if it relates to appeals, that might
    5
    help explain it.
    6
    MR. ROSS: Absent an appeal, a permit
    7
    would be effective the date it's issued. Those
    8
    two dates would be identical.
    9
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Although, wouldn't
    10
    that May 16, '01, permit reference for SIPC have
    11
    been a construction permit for that particular
    12
    unit? Would you know, Mr. Ross, if that permit
    13
    was appealed?
    14
    MR. ROSS: I do not believe the SIP
    15
    Call permit was appealed.
    16
    MS. BASSI: And these permits and
    17
    dates and so forth, these are all construction
    18
    permits, correct, of various types as opposed to,
    19
    for example, Title 5 permits.
    20
    MR. ROSS: I believe so, yes. They're
    21
    certainly not Title 5 permits, I can tell you
    22
    that.
    23
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: Well, I'm curious
    24
    about Enviropower down there, the last item on
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    104

    1
    the table, where the permit was issued in '01 and
    2
    the project status is now under investigation.
    3
    What does that mean?
    4
    MR. ROSS: Well, for a construction
    5
    permit there must be a continual process of
    6
    construction. If there's a certain lapse time
    7
    frame in which no construction occurs, the permit
    8
    is no longer considered effective, so I believe
    9
    Enviropower had a period where no construction
    10
    was taken place. And, I believe, I would have to
    11
    discuss this with our legal department, but I
    12
    believe it's our position that their permit may
    13
    no longer be valid due to this last period of no
    14
    construction period.
    15
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: Probably enough said
    16
    since we may see an appeal at some point. Okay.
    17
    I won't ask any more questions. Thank you.
    18
    MS. BASSI: May I start?
    19
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Oh, yes,
    20
    please do.
    21
    MS. BASSI: Thank you. Mr. Cooper, I
    22
    had a couple of questions about your slide.
    23
    MR. COOPER: Sure.
    24
    MS. BASSI: You told me I had to wait.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    105

    1
    On 519, 519 provides an example of the
    2
    installation of a fluidized bed combustion boiler
    3
    and then there's a formula down below on the
    4
    second dot. And I was looking at that compared
    5
    with the Agency's Exhibit No. 1, number 11 on
    6
    number 1, this is the errata sheet and it appears
    7
    that the formula in number 11 B1 in Exhibit 1 is
    8
    different from the formula on Slide 19. And I
    9
    just want to be sure that Exhibit 1 is the -- is
    10
    the formula that applies?
    11
    MS. DOCTORS: Your number -- which
    12
    number on your --
    13
    MS. BASSI: It was number 11.
    14
    MR. BONEBRAKE: It's on page 2.
    15
    MS. BASSI: Yeah.
    16
    MS. DOCTORS: We're cross referencing
    17
    it with Section 225.465.
    18
    MS. BASSI: And I did not do that
    19
    cross reference. I apologize.
    20
    MS. DOCTORS: Okay. Do you want to
    21
    ask your question?
    22
    MS. BASSI: Well, my question is: Is
    23
    number 11 on Exhibit 1 talking about the same
    24
    thing as Slide 19?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    106

    1
    MR. COOPER: I -- I believe the errata
    2
    sheet does not translate well to which -- I
    3
    believe the first sentence does not -- if you
    4
    look at 225.465(b)(1), that is the equation.
    5
    This is not saying fluidized coal combustion is
    6
    this equation. That equation is as remains on
    7
    225.465(b)(5).
    8
    MS. BASSI: Okay. Which is the same
    9
    as what you have in Slide 1?
    10
    MR. COOPER: It should, yes.
    11
    MS. BASSI: Okay. Thank you.
    12
    MR. COOPER: You're welcome.
    13
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And I'm sorry, Mr.
    14
    Cooper, the item 11 on page 2 of Exhibit 1 has a
    15
    1.5 pound per megawatt hour entry whereas item 5
    16
    in the portion of the rule that you just
    17
    mentioned has a 1.0 megawatt hour corresponding
    18
    reference, so which of those numbers is what the
    19
    Agency intends?
    20
    MS. DOCTORS: It -- We did not change
    21
    -- there was no intent with the errata sheet to
    22
    change that equation.
    23
    MR. COOPER: If you look at
    24
    225.465(b)(1), the equation is missing a left
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    107

    1
    paren.
    2
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Well, okay, and item
    3
    11 reads Section 225.465(a) -- I see. So the
    4
    only thing you're intending for subdivision five
    5
    of that part of the rule was the additional
    6
    reference to clean coal technology --
    7
    MS. DOCTORS: Correct.
    8
    MR. BONEBRAKE: -- in lieu of IGCC.
    9
    Thank you for that clarification.
    10
    MS. BASSI: I have a question also
    11
    about Slide 25 which is the spillover. Should I
    12
    go over that? Anybody have questions about this?
    13
    MR. BONEBRAKE: We can get into that
    14
    now.
    15
    MS. BASSI: On Slide 27. 27, please.
    16
    MR. COOPER: 27?
    17
    MS. BASSI: 27.
    18
    MR. COOPER: Yes.
    19
    MS. BASSI: Do I understand this slide
    20
    correctly and your presentation of this correctly
    21
    to mean that a single project could apply for
    22
    allowances under the CASA in multiple categories
    23
    as they may apply. So, for example, if I were
    24
    going to add to my pulverized coal boiler in my
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    108

    1
    back yard, a solar panel and I'm going to put on
    2
    a baghouse and I'm going to do all of this early
    3
    before the rule is applicable, can I get a
    4
    pollution control upgrade, because theoretically
    5
    it has something already, and a zero emission
    6
    safe for the solar panel which is connected to
    7
    the boiler and an early adopter?
    8
    MR. COOPER: I believe that is the
    9
    point, yes.
    10
    MS. BASSI: Okay. Thank you.
    11
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Mr. Cooper, I had some
    12
    questions related to your testimony and also the
    13
    regulation and exhibit that was presented
    14
    yesterday. First, with respect to your written
    15
    testimony on page 1, you refer to the fact that
    16
    you have assisted in developing a number of
    17
    regulatory programs, stationary sources. Other
    18
    than the Illinois CAIR rule, can you identify
    19
    what regulatory programs you would have assisted?
    20
    MR. COOPER: I have participated to
    21
    some extent with the IC Engine Rule, coming IC
    22
    Engine Rule, as well as upcoming NOX RACT rule.
    23
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And what has been your
    24
    involvement with respect --
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    109

    1
    MS. BASSI: Wait. He might not be
    2
    done.
    3
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I'm sorry. Were you
    4
    finished?
    5
    MR. COOPER: Quite.
    6
    MR. BONEBRAKE: What was your
    7
    involvement with respect to those two
    8
    rulemakings?
    9
    MR. COOPER: They are upcoming so the
    10
    involvement is continuing, but in a similar
    11
    manner is this rule a representative from the
    12
    permit section providing insight and the tax
    13
    assigned.
    14
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Do either of those two
    15
    rulemakings involve emission trade, allowance
    16
    trade?
    17
    MR. COOPER: No.
    18
    MR. BONEBRAKE: On page 2 of your
    19
    written testimony, the first full paragraph in
    20
    the Clean Air Set-Aside overview section, the
    21
    last sentence reads, The set aside of CAIR, NOX
    22
    allowances is not a reduction of the overall NOX
    23
    budget as it is not a retirement of allowances.
    24
    Do you see that, Mr. Cooper?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    110

    1
    MR. COOPER: I do.
    2
    MR. BONEBRAKE: There was a slide that
    3
    you presented regarding what happens to
    4
    allowances in categories that are under
    5
    subscribed. After completion of the refilling of
    6
    other -- other categories, is it true that the
    7
    Agency has discretion to retire allowances at
    8
    that juncture?
    9
    MR. COOPER: As the rule is written,
    10
    yes.
    11
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And what are the
    12
    factors that the Agency will consider in whether
    13
    to retire allowances?
    14
    MR. COOPER: That won't be a decision
    15
    that I will make. I'm not --
    16
    MR. ROSS: Those factors are similar
    17
    to as we discussed for the new source set aside.
    18
    At that time we will make a decision. The
    19
    retirement of those allowances is appropriate
    20
    based upon a need to benefit air quality and
    21
    public health.
    22
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And when is it that
    23
    the Agency will make that -- make those kind of
    24
    decisions?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    111

    1
    MR. ROSS: When there are excess
    2
    allowances such that all the over subscribed
    3
    categories are filled -- well, I think each
    4
    category has to be double, that's correct, right,
    5
    and there have to be a total of excess allowances
    6
    that the category would essentially not be deemed
    7
    used to any great level so that there was a
    8
    spillover -- all the more at least double and
    9
    there was spillover.
    10
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And can you envision a
    11
    circumstance, Mr. Ross, where -- when that
    12
    scenario presents itself that the Agency would
    13
    not retire NOX allowances?
    14
    MR. ROSS: Potentially.
    15
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Can you describe for
    16
    us what you have in mind when you say
    17
    potentially?
    18
    MR. ROSS: Well, we could make a
    19
    decision to leave those set asides there. If, as
    20
    for the new sources, it would envision that there
    21
    could be an increasing need or they would serve a
    22
    greater purpose to the public health and
    23
    environment if we left them there for future use.
    24
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Is there any provision
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    112

    1
    set forth in the proposal for view of the
    2
    Agency's decision concerning retirement of
    3
    allowances in the circumstances we've been
    4
    talking about?
    5
    MR. ROSS: No, there is not.
    6
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And what would the
    7
    reason for the Agency's decision not to include
    8
    such a provision?
    9
    MR. ROSS: We believe that was our
    10
    decision to make.
    11
    MS. BASSI: Will that decision be
    12
    published somehow?
    13
    MR. ROSS: I would -- I believe it
    14
    would be made known. We would probably seek
    15
    input from stakeholders, I believe, and we
    16
    certainly wouldn't do it in a vacuum.
    17
    MS. BASSI: Are there provisions for
    18
    that in the rule?
    19
    MR. ROSS: No.
    20
    MR. BONEBRAKE: The next sentence in
    21
    that same paragraph, Mr. Cooper, starting with
    22
    the word instead, Instead the CASA are intended o
    23
    be allocated to eligible applicants who in turn
    24
    are expected to trade those allowances to the
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    113

    1
    utilities for their compliance needs. Do you see
    2
    that?
    3
    MR. COOPER: I sure do.
    4
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And by the use of the
    5
    term utilities in that sentence, do you mean
    6
    electric generators?
    7
    MR. COOPER: That is the intended
    8
    meaning, yes.
    9
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And is it true that if
    10
    allowances are traded through such generators, in
    11
    fact, the generators are buying those allowances?
    12
    MR. COOPER: Possibly.
    13
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Wouldn't you expect,
    14
    Mr. Cooper, that generators in order to acquire
    15
    allowances from another party would have to buy
    16
    them?
    17
    MR. COOPER: I would expect that is
    18
    not the only way.
    19
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So would you also
    20
    expect that if CASA allowances are, in fact,
    21
    allocated to a third party, that the allocation
    22
    of the third party has an -- increases the cost
    23
    of compliance for generators because generators
    24
    must purchase allowances from such third parties?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    114

    1
    MR. COOPER: I'm unsure.
    2
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I want to work a
    3
    little bit through your discussion of the -- I'll
    4
    call it the stop over into other categories for
    5
    lack of a better word. I'm going to work a
    6
    little bit with the regulations in terms of both
    7
    application and then what happens to the Agency's
    8
    processes. And 225.470 addresses CASA
    9
    applications; is that correct?
    10
    MR. COOPER: That appears to be, yes.
    11
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And then 225.475 is a
    12
    separate section that addresses Agency action on
    13
    applications for CASA allowances; is that right?
    14
    MR. COOPER: Yes.
    15
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Now under 225.470, as
    16
    we were talking about a little bit earlier,
    17
    applications for CASA allowances need to be
    18
    submitted by May 1st; is that correct? I'm
    19
    looking --
    20
    MR. COOPER: I believe in 225.470(b).
    21
    MR. BONEBRAKE: That's what I'm
    22
    looking at, that's correct.
    23
    MR. COOPER: Yes.
    24
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And is says, By May 1
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    115

    1
    of the control period for which the allowances
    2
    are being requested.
    3
    MS. DOCTORS: I think -- I think Mr.
    4
    Bloomberg may have to answer some of these
    5
    application questions rather than the more
    6
    technical. Why don't you go ahead with your
    7
    question.
    8
    MR. BONEBRAKE: What I was trying to
    9
    understand then is when the -- the timing
    10
    deadline there is suggesting that the application
    11
    needs to be submitted before May 1 in the year
    12
    for which you are actually seeking the CASA
    13
    allowances; is that correct?
    14
    MR. BLOOMBERG: That is my
    15
    understanding.
    16
    MR. COOPER: And in a scenario where
    17
    multiple applications would be -- are submitted
    18
    for CASA allowances from the same category and
    19
    the total amount of allowances is greater than
    20
    the allowances in that category, will you walk me
    21
    through the process on how the Agency will
    22
    determine who gets how many allowances?
    23
    MR. BLOOMBERG: If there's more than
    24
    we have available, and part of this is not going
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    116

    1
    to track exactly with the rule because we do have
    2
    this commitment coming, but I apologize for
    3
    knowing something that you guys haven't seen yet.
    4
    But when it comes in, we will -- the Agency will
    5
    approve the project, approve the amount that is
    6
    to be allocated. If there is more than in the
    7
    category and there is no overflow, then it will
    8
    be allocated pro rata according to the approved
    9
    amount. So in other words, if -- if there are
    10
    100 allowances available and two companies or two
    11
    project sponsors ask for 500 allowances each,
    12
    they would each get 50. However, if one was
    13
    approved for 600 and one was approved for 400,
    14
    the one would get 60 and the other would get 40.
    15
    Now, again, that is presuming that there is not
    16
    any overflow. If there is overflow, as Mr.
    17
    Cooper showed in the slide, then an attempt would
    18
    be made to fulfill the entire approved amount
    19
    with that overflow.
    20
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And a couple of
    21
    related questions for you. You just described a
    22
    pro rata distribution. In that circumstance as
    23
    contemplated by the proposed rule, is the
    24
    sequence of the applications of any consequence
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    117

    1
    so long as all the applications are submitted by
    2
    May 1st?
    3
    MR. BLOOMBERG: No.
    4
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And are you familiar
    5
    with the concept of FIFO, first in first out with
    6
    respect --
    7
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Familiar with it.
    8
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I take it from the way
    9
    you described the NOX CASA process, that the
    10
    Agency is not using a FIFO process; is that
    11
    correct?
    12
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Correct. It's not
    13
    erased.
    14
    MS. BASSI: Excuse me. What does
    15
    their being erased have to do with FIFO?
    16
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Well, it's not erased.
    17
    If everything is due by May 1st and someone
    18
    submits April 28th, they're not going to get a
    19
    benefit over someone who submits April 29th.
    20
    MS. BASSI: In the concept of first in
    21
    first out, looking at this at slightly a
    22
    different way, the first allowances -- the older
    23
    allowances are the first ones into a category and
    24
    those under a FIFO concept those would be the
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    118

    1
    first ones that are allocated when you have
    2
    accumulated several years worth of allowances in
    3
    a category, is that your understanding of FIFO?
    4
    MR. BLOOMBERG: My understanding from
    5
    Mr. Bonebrake was saying first in first out is
    6
    the first people to get in here with an
    7
    application would get the allowances. If
    8
    misunderstood, I apologize.
    9
    MR. BONEBRAKE: No, my question was
    10
    just limited to just the first in first out in
    11
    terms of the application process for that
    12
    particular time period. That's all I was asking
    13
    about.
    14
    MS. BASSI: Okay. Then I -- then this
    15
    needs to be clarified -- in terms -- and because
    16
    this needs to be clarified because the vintage
    17
    year of an allowance will have some meaning under
    18
    the MPS; is that correct?
    19
    MR. ROSS: It does.
    20
    MS. BASSI: And so considering that
    21
    the vintage year of allowances have meaning under
    22
    the MPS, does the Agency intend to -- if a source
    23
    came in that is -- that has opted into the MPS
    24
    and is qualifying for some allowances for
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    119

    1
    whatever reason related to the MPS and those --
    2
    and it's qualifying for these allowances in 2013,
    3
    will he be issued 2010 allowances because they're
    4
    in the category?
    5
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I don't believe it's
    6
    something we specifically addressed, but under
    7
    normal circumstances for other trading programs,
    8
    first in first out does generally apply. So if
    9
    there were still 2010 allowances sitting in the
    10
    pool and as well as 11, 12, and 13, then the 10
    11
    would likely be the ones to go first.
    12
    MS. BASSI: I would like to suggest
    13
    that might be something that you consider as a
    14
    clarification in your rule someplace.
    15
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I think we'll consider
    16
    it.
    17
    MS. BASSI: Thank you.
    18
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And similar just to
    19
    follow-up to a question that Ms. Bassi had, in
    20
    the scenario where there's a pro rata
    21
    distribution then the vintage of allowance
    22
    question, I guess, also arises how the Agency
    23
    would handle that -- the vintage question in the
    24
    context of a pro rata distribution.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    120

    1
    MR. BLOOMBERG: We could evenly divide
    2
    the vintages up as well. Although, it -- I mean,
    3
    in all likelihood if we're down to the point
    4
    where we have depleted an entire category, then
    5
    probably they will all be the vintage. If there
    6
    are varying vintages, it would make sense to --
    7
    if it is an issue, it would make sense to divide
    8
    up the vintages pro rata as well.
    9
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And is there anything
    10
    in the proposed rule currently that describes or
    11
    identifies what -- what vintage allowances would
    12
    be allocated when out of CASA?
    13
    MR. BLOOMBERG: No.
    14
    MR. BONEBRAKE: You also mentioned in
    15
    your prior answer the concept of overflow when
    16
    you were talking about the pro rata distribution
    17
    and I wasn't sure of the timing that you had in
    18
    mind that we were discussing overflow. Can you
    19
    tell us when the overflow allowance is -- would
    20
    the allocated to those who only had received a
    21
    partial distribution and when?
    22
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Under the amendment
    23
    the -- It is all done at once. And that's a
    24
    clarification of the process describing the
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    121

    1
    initial proposed rule because the initial
    2
    proposed rule is kind of an iterative process.
    3
    It smooths it out it, it takes place all at once.
    4
    So if there is an over subscription, the overflow
    5
    will take place immediately to fill that same
    6
    season or year, the same control period, I guess.
    7
    MR. KIM: If you're at a stopping
    8
    point, I can wait, but I have the Motion to Amend
    9
    the Rulemaking that we've been promising for so
    10
    long. I can hand it out now or I can wait until
    11
    you're done with this line of questioning. We
    12
    just found it on the Board's COOL page, so these
    13
    are just courtesy copies of the motion itself.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Any
    15
    preference from anybody?
    16
    MR. BONEBRAKE: I guess my thought
    17
    would be let's finish up this line of questioning
    18
    and --
    19
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Yes, Mr.
    20
    Rieser?
    21
    MR. REISER: And, again, this may be
    22
    answered when we see the new rule, but is there a
    23
    time frame -- is there a time frame set out in
    24
    the rule for when the pour overs occur? What the
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    122

    1
    rule sets out is basically two days -- three
    2
    days, actually, for this particular process. Is
    3
    it the May 1st date by which applications have to
    4
    be submitted, the Agency has 90 days to make a
    5
    determination as to whether the allocation should
    6
    be recorded given those applications and then
    7
    there's another date for which, I think, is about
    8
    30 days after that 90 day date by which the
    9
    Agency submits its allocations -- submits it's
    10
    allocation to USEPA, correct?
    11
    MS. DOCTORS: Not more.
    12
    MR. REISER: More or less?
    13
    MS. DOCTORS: The CASA allowances go
    14
    to USEPA December 1st.
    15
    MR. REISER: December 1st. So a
    16
    longer time period?
    17
    MS. DOCTORS: I'd like to --
    18
    MS. SIMS: Look at 430(b).
    19
    MS. DOCTORS: He's asked a different
    20
    question. And I believe I'm going to show Mr.
    21
    Bloomberg Section 225.475(a). Is there another
    22
    date?
    23
    MR. BLOOMBERG: By October 1st is when
    24
    the Agency shall determine the total number of
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    123

    1
    allowances that are approvable for allocation
    2
    project sponsors based on the application.
    3
    MR. REISER: And that's -- this is --
    4
    unfortunately, this is a side issue, but that's a
    5
    different date than the notification that is
    6
    indicated in 225.475(a)(1) that goes out 90 days
    7
    after an application is submitted, that's a
    8
    different notice than what's described in A,
    9
    475(a).
    10
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Right. Because A1
    11
    talks about the Agency notifying the project
    12
    sponsor if it is approvable, non-approvable or
    13
    additional information is needed. And so if
    14
    they're due May 1st, 90 days, July, August, it
    15
    gives the project sponsors a certain amount of
    16
    time to come back and -- and as discussed before,
    17
    there's no specific deadline that says they have
    18
    to come back, but obviously the drop dead date
    19
    will be sometime before October 1st because
    20
    that's when they made the final determination.
    21
    MR. RIESER: And then after you make
    22
    the final determination on October 1st, there's
    23
    another 60 days before that determination is
    24
    reported to USEPA; correct?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    124

    1
    MR. BLOOMBERG: That's my
    2
    understanding based on what it says.
    3
    MR. REISER: Okay. Where in that time
    4
    frame do you make the decisions about these pour
    5
    overs from one category to another?
    6
    MR. BLOOMBERG: According to the new
    7
    language that was just filed, what it states is
    8
    that if any allowances remain more than double
    9
    and it does -- it does not specify a date, okay.
    10
    It just talks about that the remaining allowances
    11
    will accrue. If there are excess overflow, then
    12
    these shall be allocated for any over subscribed
    13
    category or distributed and allocated.
    14
    MR. RIESER: Is that decision -- is
    15
    that decision made only once per control period,
    16
    I should say this context, once per year or is --
    17
    is it possible there could be two or more of
    18
    those types of decisions during the year
    19
    depending on sort of the flow of the projects and
    20
    what's approved and what's not approved?
    21
    MR. BLOOMBERG: In this case it's
    22
    better to use control period because there is a
    23
    seasonal and an annual so it should only occur
    24
    once per control period because the Agency will
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    125

    1
    determine what's been approved and what, if
    2
    anything, is over subscribed, is there any
    3
    overflow, this will all be done at once.
    4
    MR. REISER: And the functional
    5
    manner, whether it's in the regulation or not,
    6
    does the Agency have either an idea or intention
    7
    or a plan as to when in the process this will
    8
    occur before October 1st, after October 1st?
    9
    MR. BLOOMBERG: It should occur after
    10
    October 1st because -- well, the rule -- what the
    11
    rule says is by October 1st. So it is possible
    12
    we could do it -- the Agency could do it sooner.
    13
    MR. RIESER: Well, by October 1st is
    14
    when the Agency --
    15
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Determines the total
    16
    number of allowances that are approvable for
    17
    allocation. So once that number has been
    18
    determined, that is what will then tell the
    19
    Agency do we any over subscribed categories, do
    20
    we have any categories that are more than
    21
    doubled, so first a determination has to be made
    22
    as to the number of approvable allowances.
    23
    MR. RIESER: And isn't it possible
    24
    that once you make that first decision and then
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    126

    1
    there is reorganization of categories, then you
    2
    have other decisions to make because now there
    3
    are allowances that are available that weren't
    4
    previously available?
    5
    MR. BLOOMBERG: No, they're separate
    6
    -- and, again, part of this is because I got this
    7
    year. Like I said, it was previously an
    8
    iterative process in the version that I know you
    9
    guys have. But it's really two separate things.
    10
    First, the Agency approves the project, okay, and
    11
    that takes place outside of any determination of
    12
    what's available. It's simply this much is
    13
    approved.
    14
    MR. RIESER: And hence the language in
    15
    A that are approvable --
    16
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Correct.
    17
    MR. RIESER: -- for allocation?
    18
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Correct.
    19
    MR. RISER: And so the actual
    20
    allocation doesn't happen until the report is
    21
    made to USEPA on December 1st; is that correct?
    22
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Right.
    23
    MR. BONEBRAKE: David, a suggestion at
    24
    this point in time since the witness is starting
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    127

    1
    to talk about specifics of the amendment which
    2
    isn't before the rest of us, I think it would
    3
    probably make some sense to distribute that
    4
    document now so we can all be on the same page
    5
    literally and figuratively.
    6
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Mr. Rieser,
    7
    do you have any problem with that?
    8
    MR. REISER: Not at all.
    9
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Let's go off
    10
    the record a second.
    11
    (A short break was taken.)
    12
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: I was going
    13
    to ask your -- Mr. Kim or Ms. Doctors, are you
    14
    intending to introduce this as an exhibit?
    15
    MR. KIM: I think we were just
    16
    offering it demonstratively.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Everybody's
    18
    information?
    19
    MR. KIM: Yes.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: And you
    21
    represent that this was filed today before the
    22
    Board on COOL?
    23
    MR. KIM: Yes.
    24
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Which is
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    128

    1
    Clerks Office on Line. So this is a public
    2
    record for anyone to see and it has the same --
    3
    is a Motion to Amend the Rulemaking Proposal.
    4
    There's, of course, a 14-day response period
    5
    which I'm sure you guys can take advantage of if
    6
    you like. Off the record we discussed whether or
    7
    not to proceed today or whether or not to take
    8
    some time to digest this, but I think we have
    9
    some questions that don't really touch on the
    10
    Motion to Amend that we want to proceed with.
    11
    Ms. Bassi?
    12
    MS. BASSI: I have a quick question on
    13
    Section 470(b) and (c) where we were before.
    14
    This is a just a clarification to be sure I
    15
    understand what the rule says, make sure I
    16
    understand it correctly. In Subsection B it says
    17
    that a person can apply by May 1st for CASA
    18
    allowances, and then Subsection C it says the
    19
    allocation will be based on electricity conserved
    20
    or generated in the control period preceding the
    21
    calendar year in which the application is
    22
    submitted. So just by way of example, if someone
    23
    applied for a CASA allowance by May 1st, 2009,
    24
    would the project for which the allowance was
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    129

    1
    applied for have to have occurred in 2008?
    2
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I'm told that may be a
    3
    typo. Excuse one moment. I'm sorry. Okay. No
    4
    typo. Sorry. Of course, I've forgotten the
    5
    question by this point but I believe that --
    6
    well, you just better restate it, Ms. Bassi.
    7
    MS. BASSI: All right. If I applied
    8
    for a CASA allowance by May 1st of 2009, did the
    9
    project have to have done its emissions or done
    10
    its electricity savings in 2008?
    11
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes.
    12
    MS. BASSI: So then the allowances
    13
    that one is applying for are after the fact,
    14
    they're after the fact of activity for which
    15
    you're applying for the allowances?
    16
    MR. BLOOMBERG: Yes. And that ensures
    17
    that we know exactly what was done.
    18
    MS. BASSI: Is that the same for the
    19
    NUSA, new unit set aside? Does somebody --
    20
    MS. SIMS: I don't -- I don't
    21
    understand your question.
    22
    MS. BASSI: When you're applying for
    23
    allowances under the new unit set aside, is it
    24
    the same concept where you apply after you've
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    130

    1
    done the emitting, so I would apply in 2010 for
    2
    emissions that occurred in 2009?
    3
    MS. SIMS: Yes. But you would get
    4
    allocations for that previous -- for that
    5
    previous year you were operating.
    6
    MS. BASSI: I would get allowances for
    7
    operation in 2009 allocated to me in 2010; is
    8
    that correct?
    9
    MS. DOCTORS: Can I ask a clarifying
    10
    question? Isn't it true that source -- I'm
    11
    looking at Section 225.445 of the proposal.
    12
    Isn't it true that sources -- new units report
    13
    their data after the close of the control period?
    14
    MS. SIMS: Which section are you
    15
    looking at again?
    16
    MS. DOCTORS: Subsection B. They
    17
    report them January 15th.
    18
    MS. SIMS: B. I thought you said D.
    19
    B as in boy?
    20
    MS. DOCTORS: Yes, B as in boy.
    21
    MS. SIMS: That is correct.
    22
    MS. DOCTORS: And isn't it true that
    23
    in Subsection G it states the Agency shall
    24
    allocate the CAIR NOX allowances to new units no
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    131

    1
    later than February 15 after the applicable
    2
    control period?
    3
    MS. SIMS: That's true.
    4
    MS. DOCTORS: And is this before, you
    5
    know, the allowance transfer deadline for the --
    6
    in your example, the 2009 control period?
    7
    MS. SIMS: I don't understand what you
    8
    mean by transfer deadline.
    9
    MS. DOCTORS: The deadline that
    10
    sources need to have allowances in their account,
    11
    isn't that prior to?
    12
    MS. SIMS: Yes.
    13
    MS. BASSI: It's still after the fact
    14
    but prior to the time you have to surrender them?
    15
    MS. DOCTORS: Correct.
    16
    MS. BASSI: Thank you.
    17
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Just a related
    18
    question for Mr. Bloomberg in the scenario that
    19
    Ms. Bassi described where the party has the
    20
    activity generating whatever it is that its
    21
    seeking the CASA allowances for in 2008 and make
    22
    a submission of an application in 2009 for CASA
    23
    allowances. What would be the vintage on the
    24
    allocation that would be provided in response to
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    132

    1
    that application?
    2
    MR. BLOOMBERG: In that particular
    3
    example, 2009. And then, I guess, what I would
    4
    suggest at this point, I think, Mr. Nilles, you
    5
    were indicating you had some questions that were
    6
    not implicating the amendment set forth in the
    7
    motion so I guess maybe what we could do is
    8
    proceed with that.
    9
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: Before we go to
    10
    that, let me ask a question to Mr. Cooper that
    11
    goes to dates. Mr. Cooper, on page 4 of your
    12
    testimony -- if you look at that page 4, it's the
    13
    second full paragraph there, in this paragraph I
    14
    think it relates to the draft proposal. It's
    15
    Section 225.470 but it's in this paragraph you
    16
    talk about the time frames in which project
    17
    construction must begin in order for a project to
    18
    be eligible for the NOX allowances from the Clean
    19
    Air Set-Asides.
    20
    MR. COOPER: Which paragraph are you
    21
    referring to?
    22
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: It's the second full
    23
    paragraph on page 4.
    24
    MR. COOPER: Yes.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    133

    1
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: And you got -- we've
    2
    got three different dates there depending on what
    3
    type of project it is. Either commence either by
    4
    January 1st, 2003, or January 1st, 2001, or after
    5
    July 1st, 2006, to be eligible for the
    6
    allowances. Why were three different dates
    7
    picked, and why do some of these dates go five
    8
    years in the past before the rule's even in
    9
    place?
    10
    MR. COOPER: Before I answer that, Jim
    11
    would you like to answer that?
    12
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: Well, I can -- I
    13
    mean, the question is you're looking at the
    14
    second full paragraph there on page 4 also
    15
    relates the dates of Section 225.470 and that
    16
    detailed the time frames in which construction
    17
    must begin to be eligible for these, you know, NOX
    18
    allowances from the CASA. But you got three
    19
    different dates there depending on what type of
    20
    project it is: January 1st, 2003; January 1st,
    21
    2001; July 1st, 2006. First of all, why do you
    22
    have three different dates and, second, you know,
    23
    why are we going back to January 1st, 2001, for
    24
    the commence of some of these projects?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    134

    1
    MR. ROSS: Well, we contemplated two
    2
    different approaches: One, just looking forward
    3
    and starting from the date the rule is -- is
    4
    promulgated on; two, looking back some amount of
    5
    time in giving some credit to sources that have
    6
    undertaken projects that are environmentally
    7
    beneficial in order to further incur or further
    8
    promote and provide some level of cost recovery
    9
    to those projects. We went with the second
    10
    approach. That is, in particular, for the
    11
    fluidized bed boilers we decided for a look back
    12
    until 2001 to give some level of credit to
    13
    companies that undertook what we would consider a
    14
    clean technology, clean coal project.
    15
    MR. JOHNSON: So are there specific
    16
    sources that you know of that have done that?
    17
    MR. ROSS: Yes, there is. Southern
    18
    Illinois Power Company is eligible for that set
    19
    aside.
    20
    MS. BASSI: Is this the only source
    21
    eligible for that set aside as of today that
    22
    you're aware of?
    23
    MR. COOPER: You asking are there
    24
    others that we're aware of?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    135

    1
    MS. BASSI: Uh-huh.
    2
    MR. COOPER: I'm not directly certain.
    3
    Although, that category the language in the rule
    4
    reads, I believe, fluidized bed coal combustion
    5
    is highly efficient power generation and there
    6
    are -- is -- there is definition for highly
    7
    efficient projects, so that may encompass other
    8
    projects. I'm not certain.
    9
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Excuse me.
    10
    Ms. Bugel?
    11
    MS. BUGEL: Mr. Ross, why is there an
    12
    incentive needed for projects that are already
    13
    constructed and not operating?
    14
    MR. ROSS: I wouldn't say it was an
    15
    incentive. It was perhaps more of an
    16
    acknowledgement that they constructed a boiler
    17
    that is generally less polluting than pulverized
    18
    coal-fired boilers which by far is the typical
    19
    type of boiler in Illinois.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Yes, sir?
    21
    MR. NILLES: On the point of the TSD
    22
    boiler you're stating it is generally cleaner,
    23
    where in the RACT is there any information the
    24
    TSD boilers are, in fact, cleaner than pulverized
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    136

    1
    coal?
    2
    MR. ROSS: Where specifically? I
    3
    believe it's addressed in our Technical Support
    4
    Document that would certainly -- there are
    5
    emission factors readily available, AP-42 in
    6
    particular, in which we can provide which shows
    7
    that the factors for the emissions of NOX from
    8
    fluidized bed boilers is a lower emission factor
    9
    than for any type of pulverized coal boiler. By
    10
    any type, whether it's tangentially fired
    11
    boilers, cyclone fired boilers, so in general
    12
    fluidized bed boilers are lower emitting for the
    13
    pollutants of concern than the pollutant
    14
    addressed in CAIR.
    15
    MR. NILLES: But isn't the Southern
    16
    Illinois facility that you have carved out the
    17
    exception for, does that have any post combustion
    18
    control?
    19
    MR. ROSS: Yes, I believe the
    20
    fluidized bed boiler, SIPCO has a baghouse and an
    21
    SNCR, selective non-catalytic reduction.
    22
    MR. NILLES: And it's your
    23
    understanding it has lower emission than the
    24
    pulverized coal plants with post combustion
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    137

    1
    control?
    2
    MR. ROSS: It has lower emissions than
    3
    many pulverized coal-fired boilers, but in
    4
    general what I'm speaking to is the emissions
    5
    prior to add-on control devices, that's where we
    6
    make our comparison, so it's a cleaner starting
    7
    point for a boiler, then the next step of
    8
    controlling the emissions from a boiler would be
    9
    add-on control device much like there are many
    10
    uncontrolled pulverized coal-fired boilers in
    11
    Illinois and they can reduce their emissions
    12
    through add-on control devices. So you would
    13
    have a fluidized bed boiler prior to any add-on
    14
    control devices when compared to a pulverized
    15
    coal-fired boiler prior to any add-on control
    16
    device. The fluidized bed boiler would be the
    17
    many less NOX and SO2.
    18
    MR. NILLES: I guess I'm trying to
    19
    understand the rationale. There are pulverized
    20
    coal boilers in Illinois, Havana Unit 9 is a
    21
    great example -- Havana Unit 9 has pulverized
    22
    coal boiler with a post combustion control of an
    23
    SCR, has a much lower NOX rate than an Illinois
    24
    project that we're singling out as a cleaner coal
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    138

    1
    project. And I guess I'm trying to understand
    2
    why we're rewarding Southern Illinois when there
    3
    are other pulverized coal plants that are doing
    4
    better? What's the rationale? What we care
    5
    about is air pollution, we don't care about what
    6
    their inherent -- I mean, if what we care about
    7
    is what's coming out of smokestacks rather than
    8
    making smart investments?
    9
    MR. ROSS: I have to examine the
    10
    emissions from Havana Unit 9 to verify what you
    11
    are saying, but in general a fluidized bed boiler
    12
    is cleaner prior to add-on control. What you're
    13
    saying is Havana Unit 9 has an SCR. I stated
    14
    that the SIPCO unit has an SNCR so perhaps we
    15
    have to examine these in a little bit more detail
    16
    or knowledge that I have readily available but
    17
    perhaps the Havana unit has spent more money to
    18
    reduce emissions, perhaps the SCR costs more and
    19
    is not as cost effective, but I would say in
    20
    general the emissions of particulate matter from
    21
    the SIPCO unit are in all likelihood much less
    22
    than from Havana Unit 9 and that is because
    23
    the --
    24
    MR. NILLES: We're talking about NOX.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    139

    1
    I'm sorry.
    2
    MR. ROSS: Well, we're talking about
    3
    NOX but in greater picture of what CAIR is
    4
    intended to do, we're talking about PM2.5 and
    5
    ozone.
    6
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bugel?
    7
    Oh, I'm sorry.
    8
    MR. NILLES: The question about
    9
    singling out circulating fluidized beds for
    10
    preferential treatment, this one unit, isn't it
    11
    true that circulating fluidized bed boilers often
    12
    put out a large amount of nitrous oxide,
    13
    otherwise known as N2O, at a pulverized coal
    14
    plant and coal classification projects don't?
    15
    MR. ROSS: Yeah, I believe due to the
    16
    lower temperature that fluidized bed boilers
    17
    operate at, they do emit more N2O, nitrous oxide,
    18
    laughing gas than --
    19
    MR. NILLES: Laughing gas, isn't it
    20
    very potent to global warming.
    21
    MR. ROSS: Yes, I believe it's greater
    22
    than 250 times or at least one document site,
    23
    that it is 250 times worse for greenhouse -- the
    24
    greenhouse effect than PO2 which that was
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    140

    1
    recently brought to our attention by you, I might
    2
    add, and we appreciate that and we are examining
    3
    that document. In fact, we have assigned some
    4
    staff to review this issue of fluidized bed
    5
    boilers emitting N2O and we will take it from
    6
    there. We'll see what our research finds. We
    7
    also believe that there is the possibility that
    8
    fluidized bed boilers may emit some amount less
    9
    of CO2. We're uncertain there. We're examining
    10
    that also. CO2 is also a greenhouse gas that
    11
    we're looking at, that relationship, so based
    12
    upon new information that recently has been or
    13
    made -- we've been made aware of, we'll reexamine
    14
    our treatment of fluidized bed boilers.
    15
    MR. NILLES: One quick question back
    16
    to the presentation, on page 29, Mr. Cooper, I
    17
    believe, you mentioned coal-fired utilities are
    18
    also eligible for supply side energy efficiency
    19
    projects. Can you elaborate what you mean by
    20
    supply side?
    21
    MS. DOCTORS: Before we go into supply
    22
    side, we have a couple of documents that may help
    23
    with the Agency's position on the fluidized
    24
    boiler issue, the AP-42 factors, and we have a
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    141

    1
    fact sheet briefed by the Department of Energy
    2
    that talks about the relative emissions.
    3
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: Let me ask one final
    4
    question of Mr. Ross before we get too far away
    5
    from these dates here. So getting back to that
    6
    Section 225.470 which has these different
    7
    eligibility dates for these projects, I mean,
    8
    would there be a problem if we had one date, say,
    9
    you know, projects that have commenced
    10
    construction on or after July 1st, 2006?
    11
    MR. ROSS: Well, that certainly is a
    12
    -- is a possibility that would eliminate the
    13
    availably of the CASA for SIPCO. It is one thing
    14
    that we could do. It would --
    15
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: But there aren't any
    16
    legal regulatory problems?
    17
    MR. ROSS: The dates are somewhat
    18
    arbitrary in that we arrived at them through
    19
    discussion, debate and selected certain dates.
    20
    So, no, I don't think they're set in stone in any
    21
    way, shape or form by any legal obligation
    22
    somewhere. They can be altered as appropriate.
    23
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: And the primary
    24
    purpose of the CASA program is to provide
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    142

    1
    incentives?
    2
    MR. ROSS: That's correct.
    3
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: For energy
    4
    efficiency?
    5
    MR. ROSS: And the other categories.
    6
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: And the other
    7
    categories?
    8
    MR. ROSS: That's correct.
    9
    CHAIRMAN GIRARD: Thank you.
    10
    MS. MOORE: And could I just follow-up
    11
    to help me understand. There's a finite number
    12
    of set asides?
    13
    MR. ROSS: Correct.
    14
    MS. MOORE: So if we go back to 2001
    15
    and those allocations are made, that's reduced
    16
    from our finite number of set asides that would
    17
    be available to incentivise others putting in new
    18
    equipment; is that correct?
    19
    MR. ROSS: Well, there's a -- there's
    20
    a finite number each year, so going back and
    21
    giving credit to SIPCO does reduce the available
    22
    set aside for others in the event that there
    23
    would only be so many set asides to give out.
    24
    That is, if that particular category came over
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    143

    1
    subscribed somehow, other units would apply for
    2
    that and, yes, SIPCO -- the amount of credit
    3
    given to SIPCO would be unavailable to others.
    4
    MR. JOHNSON: For that year?
    5
    MR. ROSS: For that year and following
    6
    years since the credit --
    7
    MS. MOORE: That is in the control
    8
    period?
    9
    MR. ROSS: For clean coal technology
    10
    is ongoing for that absent the (inaudible).
    11
    COURT REPORTER: I'm sorry. I didn't
    12
    hear you.
    13
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: First, Mr.
    14
    Bonebrake?
    15
    MR. BONEBRAKE: Mr. Ross, do you
    16
    recall when the SIPCO Unit 1, 2, 3 the fluidized
    17
    bed boiler was constructed?
    18
    MR. ROSS: Recently. I believe 2003,
    19
    2004.
    20
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And did it replace
    21
    older units?
    22
    MR. ROSS: Yes, it did. And it
    23
    replaced an older, dirtier unit.
    24
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So there was an
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    144

    1
    environmental benefit associated with
    2
    construction of Unit 1, 2, 3?
    3
    MR. ROSS: Yes.
    4
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And SIPCO operated
    5
    more than one unit at Marion?
    6
    MR. ROSS: Yes, they do.
    7
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And do companies make
    8
    dispatch decisions, that is, which unit they will
    9
    run based upon economic drivers?
    10
    MR. ROSS: I believe so.
    11
    MR. BONEBRAKE: And would the
    12
    variability of additional allowances for a unit
    13
    potentially increase the situations in which a
    14
    boiler would be operated or potentially operated
    15
    at higher level of capacity because of the
    16
    economics associated with the additional
    17
    allowance?
    18
    MR. ROSS: Perhaps.
    19
    MR. BONEBRAKE: So, in fact, the
    20
    variability of allowances for a fluidized bed
    21
    boiler could provide continuing incentives into
    22
    the future to operate a low emitting unit; is
    23
    that correct?
    24
    MR. ROSS: That's true.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    145

    1
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bugle
    2
    was next and then Ms. Bassi.
    3
    MS. BUGEL: Mr. Ross, with the debate
    4
    that we've had about what's cleaner PC with
    5
    control, PC without control, fluidized beds with
    6
    control or without control. Would an easier way
    7
    to achieve the same goal to be simply set an
    8
    emission level that projections would have to
    9
    meet to be eligible for credit in the Clean Air
    10
    Set-Aside?
    11
    MR. ROSS: That would be one way to
    12
    approach it.
    13
    MR. DAVIS: Not the way we selected.
    14
    We actually do that with an emission level than a
    15
    clean coal technology has. We have an emission
    16
    level that a clean coal technology has to be
    17
    below and they get the difference between that
    18
    and it's one mega -- it's one pound per megawatt
    19
    hour, so anything below you will receive that
    20
    much credit, as Mr. Cooper's example showed, if a
    21
    plant was operating at .07 pounds per megawatt
    22
    hour, they would get .3 pounds per megawatt hour
    23
    credit. So there is that level they have to
    24
    operate below in order to earn any CASA credit.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    146

    1
    MS. BUGEL: Is it possible to
    2
    translate that to pounds per million BTU?
    3
    MR. DAVIS: .7, or its factor.
    4
    MR. COOPER: .07.
    5
    MS. BUGEL: And generally in new units
    6
    that are being permitted, new facilities that are
    7
    being permitted in Illinois, do you know what
    8
    they're being permitted at?
    9
    MR. ROSS: I think .07 pounds per
    10
    million BTU as a NOX emission rate is generally
    11
    recognized as low, clean -- a clean rate.
    12
    MS. BUGEL: To back up a little bit,
    13
    you said that -- did the Agency consider not
    14
    specifying technology and just including an
    15
    emission rate?
    16
    MR. COOPER: Say it again, please.
    17
    MR. BUGEL: Did the Agency consider
    18
    not specifying technology such as CFBs and just
    19
    including an emission rate perhaps something
    20
    lower than?
    21
    MR. COOPER: In terms of a CASA?
    22
    MS. BUGEL: Yes.
    23
    MR. COOPER: Not to my recollection.
    24
    MR. DAVIS: I should point out the
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    147

    1
    CASA gives credit to SCR and clean coal
    2
    technology.
    3
    MS. BUGEL: One more question, page 18
    4
    of the slide, what does highly efficient power
    5
    generation mean, is that --
    6
    MR. COOPER: It's defined.
    7
    MS. BUGEL: Okay.
    8
    MR. COOPER: By the rule. It
    9
    establishes criteria for what it needs be, highly
    10
    efficient.
    11
    MS. BUGEL: So on this page that is
    12
    not a substitute for CFB, is it?
    13
    MR. COOPER: I don't believe that is
    14
    the intent, no. The CFB is included in the
    15
    definition of clean coal technology.
    16
    MS. BUGEL: Okay. Thank you. That
    17
    was --
    18
    MR. COOPER: We --
    19
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Before we
    20
    pass out the documents, Ms. Bassi had a question.
    21
    MS. BASSI: Just to provide another
    22
    level of perspective, Mr. Cooper, how many
    23
    allowances are in the CASA category from which
    24
    SIPC [sic] would -- would apply for allowances
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    148

    1
    for its CFB?
    2
    MR. COOPER: The clean coal technology
    3
    category as a whole is 6% of the CASA, 4,573
    4
    annual allowances, 1,842 seasonal allowances.
    5
    MS. BASSI: And does the Agency have
    6
    an estimate of how many allowances SIPC would be
    7
    eligible for from that annual category?
    8
    MS. DOCTORS: I'd like to note that
    9
    the witness is looking at Exhibit 5 that -- so
    10
    that you still have questions on, Mr. Bonebrake.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Agency
    12
    Exhibit 5?
    13
    MS. DOCTORS: Yes. Okay.
    14
    MR. COOPER: Table 1 of that.
    15
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Looking at
    16
    that, what is your answer, sir?
    17
    MR. COOPER: My answer is I don't have
    18
    that particular calculation in front of me.
    19
    MS. BASSI: Do you have it somewhere?
    20
    MR. COOPER: Perhaps long ago. It
    21
    could be regenerated, but I don't --
    22
    MS. BASSI: Is it less than a
    23
    thousand?
    24
    MR. COOPER: Honestly, I don't recall.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    149

    1
    I would have to run the math.
    2
    MS. BASSI: Can we have that tomorrow
    3
    maybe?
    4
    MR. COOPER: Excuse me?
    5
    MS. BASSI: Can we have that tomorrow
    6
    maybe?
    7
    MR. COOPER: I can make an attempt,
    8
    yes.
    9
    MS. BASSI: Thank you.
    10
    MR. COOPER: I have to call the
    11
    relevant data, and I don't want to make a
    12
    guarantee if the Website is down.
    13
    MS. BASSI: Right.
    14
    MR. NILLES: Just a quick
    15
    clarification. So the data we're asking for is
    16
    what was the NOX emission for the 2005 for the
    17
    SIPCO unit we're working out of how much of the
    18
    Clean Coal Set-Aside would consume, is that what
    19
    we're trying to do?
    20
    MS. BASSI: Yes, approximately -- an
    21
    estimate how much of the Clean Coal Set-Aside
    22
    SIPC would consume from the 4,000 allowances on
    23
    an annual basis.
    24
    MR. COOPER: This is 2005?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    150

    1
    MS. BASSI: Oh, I don't care what
    2
    year. 2005 is fine.
    3
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Do you have
    4
    any other questions not related to the new motion
    5
    to amend? One more. Yes, you.
    6
    MR. HILLES: Page 29 of the slide
    7
    talks about the supply side energy efficiency
    8
    project of EGUs.
    9
    MR. COOPER: Yes.
    10
    MS. DOCTORS: I was trying to get the
    11
    2010.
    12
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Oh, I'm
    13
    sorry, sir. You'll have a shot in just a second.
    14
    Ms. Doctors, you have documents you want to
    15
    submit?
    16
    MS. DOCTORS: Yes, I thought I was
    17
    done, but I have two more.
    18
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Let's submit
    19
    those and we'll finish up with the questions and
    20
    then we'll go home.
    21
    MS. DOCTORS: Agency Exhibit 19 and
    22
    it's just the relevant emission factors from
    23
    1842.
    24
    MS. BASSI: What's Exhibit 18?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    151

    1
    MS. DOCTORS: Is it 18 or -- Okay, 18.
    2
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: We're on
    3
    Agency Exhibit 18.
    4
    MR. COOPER: This document represents
    5
    the compilation of air pollution -- air pollutant
    6
    emission factor. The document encompasses many
    7
    types of combustion technology among which it
    8
    provides emission factors for both pulverized
    9
    coal boilers of many different types as well as
    10
    two different types of fluidized boilers.
    11
    MS. DOCTORS: And the second document
    12
    it's called -- it's from the -- this would be
    13
    Agency Exhibit 19. He's going to --
    14
    MR. COOPER: The second document is
    15
    just a simple two-page cut sheet developed
    16
    apparently by the US Department of Energy's NETL,
    17
    the National Energy Technology Laboratory, and in
    18
    this particular document they make several
    19
    references to both the efficiencies as well as
    20
    the pollutant emission rates for this type of
    21
    boiler. The second page has a table that details
    22
    both apparently typical SO2 and NOX rates and on
    23
    the left-hand side there's couple of relevant
    24
    facts.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    152

    1
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Do you have
    2
    -- we have any objections to Agency Exhibit No.
    3
    18, the Compilation of Air Pollutant Emission
    4
    Factors? Seeing none, that will be admitted as
    5
    Agency Exhibit 18. How about Agency Exhibit 19,
    6
    the Program facts on Fluidized Bed Combustion
    7
    Program?
    8
    MS. BASSI: No objection.
    9
    MR. NILLES: I would just note it's
    10
    outdated regarding to old performance standards
    11
    -- it's outdated. The fact sheet talks about new
    12
    performance standards and it's dated 2000 -- it's
    13
    dated 2000 and it's comparing circulating
    14
    fluidized bed technology to the new source
    15
    performance standards that were in effect in
    16
    2000. Since 2000 this NSPS has been updated. So
    17
    the comparison of CFBs and NSPS are all outdated.
    18
    So in terms of showing benefits, I just point out
    19
    these numbers are outdated.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: We're going
    21
    to admit that with your clarification duly noted.
    22
    And, Ms. Doctors, do you have any other documents
    23
    you would like to submit?
    24
    MS. DOCTORS: Not at this time?
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    153

    1
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: And it was
    2
    Mr. Nilles?
    3
    MR. NILLES: Nilles.
    4
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: You had some
    5
    additional questions you wanted to ask?
    6
    MR. NILLES: I just want to go back to
    7
    the CFB versus pulverized coal. The City of
    8
    Springfield just received a permit for pulverized
    9
    coal boiler, it's the cleanest coal boiler permit
    10
    in the state, pulverized coal.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Question?
    12
    MR. NILLES: It's in the process of
    13
    agreeing to a limit that it's significantly lower
    14
    than SIPCO units to CFBs. My question is: Why
    15
    would the Agency be rewarding CILCO which has a
    16
    much dirtier unit as NOX and excluding the City of
    17
    Springfield with a pulverized boiler when it's
    18
    going further achieving our overall goal of
    19
    NOx --
    20
    MR. RIESER: CILCO or SIPCO?
    21
    MR. NILLES: SIPCO. Sorry.
    22
    MR. ROSS: Well, you say the City of
    23
    Springfield has agreed to lower emission rates in
    24
    a permit. I think I've seen those rates. I'm
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    154

    1
    not certain that they've been demonstrated.
    2
    There's no testing of those rates. They're
    3
    theoretically achievable emission rates; correct?
    4
    MR. NILLES: The Agency issued a
    5
    permit and the federal complied (inaudible).
    6
    COURT REPORTER: I'm sorry, I didn't
    7
    hear you.
    8
    MR. ROSS: I think the emission rate
    9
    you're referring to are attachment to the permit;
    10
    correct?
    11
    MR. NILLES: Correct.
    12
    MR. ROSS: They weren't limits set per
    13
    se by the Agency. They were limits that were
    14
    agreed to by -- agreed to by City Water, Light
    15
    and Power and Sierra Club is my understanding.
    16
    And to say that, I believe City Water, Light and
    17
    Power would be eligible for the set aside, for
    18
    any -- they would be eligible for NUSA, new
    19
    source set asides, new unit set aside.
    20
    MS. BASSI: Would they be eligible for
    21
    early adopter set aside possibly?
    22
    MR. COOPER: They wouldn't be
    23
    undertaking any projects.
    24
    MS. BASSI: Would they be eligible for
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    155

    1
    the control devices that they're putting in?
    2
    MR. ROSS: No, that's for existing
    3
    units.
    4
    MR. COOPER: That's where the rule
    5
    specifically states existing units have to be
    6
    commercially operated for a minimum of eight
    7
    years.
    8
    MR. ROSS: We're certainly not in any
    9
    way, shape or form punishing you, City Water,
    10
    Light and Power for agreeing to lower emission
    11
    limits. The fact of the matter is though that a
    12
    fluidized bed boiler is -- if City Water, Light
    13
    and Power would have chosen a fluidized bed
    14
    boiler they may have, I can't say this with
    15
    certainty, but they may have been able to agree
    16
    to even lower limits than what was agreed to
    17
    between the Sierra Club and City Water, Light and
    18
    Power, that being based upon the theory that they
    19
    be starting from a lower emission rate.
    20
    Fluidized bed boilers uncontrolled prior to the
    21
    installation of the control equipment emit less
    22
    NOX and SO2 than pulverized coal boilers. So city
    23
    Water, Light and Power is putting on pulverized
    24
    -- or installing, proposing to install a new
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    156

    1
    pulverized coal boiler with several items of
    2
    add-on control equipment in order to reach this
    3
    greed upon limit. They could perhaps, as I
    4
    mentioned, agree to an even lower limit with a
    5
    fluidized bed boiler.
    6
    MR. NILLES: I guess to get back, our
    7
    request is that you consider the way it's set up
    8
    now which seems to be helping the 2001 project
    9
    and there's a 2006 project being proposed as much
    10
    cleaner does not get the benefit because you're
    11
    depicting one technology, CFB, over pulverized
    12
    coal. And our point is what we care about is
    13
    emission rate so let's help emission rate
    14
    problems rather than technology. We're
    15
    reiterating our request that that be done.
    16
    MS. BASSI: Would such an emission
    17
    rate coincide with the heat input based for
    18
    allocation.
    19
    MR. ROSS: It's probably not
    20
    printable.
    21
    MR. HILLES: Page 29 of the
    22
    presentation, supply side energy efficiency
    23
    project, the last bullet.
    24
    MR. COOPER: Yes.
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    157

    1
    MR. NILLES: What are those?
    2
    MR. COOPER: I would refer back to the
    3
    document that was provided during outreach. It's
    4
    still available on our Website even yet today.
    5
    Are you looking for examples?
    6
    MR. NILLES: Yes, please.
    7
    MR. COOPER: Turbine upgrade,
    8
    performance optimization, smart software
    9
    management, high efficiency motors, pumps --
    10
    sorry, turbine upgrade, performance optimization,
    11
    smart software management, high efficiency
    12
    motors, pumps, compressors, steam systems, fans,
    13
    transformers, air pre-heaters or condensers and
    14
    as far as we're concerned these are effectively
    15
    parasitic losses from the plant. These are --
    16
    these are the types of things that chew out of
    17
    gross and then leaves net, potentially improve
    18
    maintenance activities, other heat rate
    19
    improvements. In that particular outreach
    20
    document there's actually an example provided
    21
    from the Southern Company, I believe, that
    22
    details one particular scenario and what their
    23
    effort were able to achieve.
    24
    MR. NILLES: Let me ask. We have a
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    158

    1
    challenge. We have 22 old, very old coal burning
    2
    power plants in the state. It's an ongoing
    3
    source of much discussion about should they be
    4
    retired, should they be upgraded, should they put
    5
    them on pollution control. And my question is:
    6
    Supply side energy efficiency projects seem to
    7
    get awfully close to overhauling power plants
    8
    which triggers a whole fleet of obligations under
    9
    the new source program and how -- how is the
    10
    Agency planning on making sure that facilities
    11
    aren't rebuilding and triggering their
    12
    obligations to put on modern pollution control
    13
    that many of us was thinking happened decades
    14
    ago?
    15
    MR. COOPER: The exact same way that
    16
    even without the CASA. Wipe the CASA off the
    17
    board today, what would prevent a company from
    18
    going in and performing anything that would
    19
    trigger new source review. Nothing. It's our
    20
    monitoring, our recordkeeping, our recording and
    21
    our inspection process that we catch new source
    22
    review violators and then through the subsequent
    23
    legal process do we enforce upon them and consent
    24
    court orders and whatnot. That same mechanism is
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    159

    1
    in place. This -- And I believe this exact
    2
    question was brought up during outreach. This
    3
    does not waive or negate the right, the
    4
    requirement for a EGU to file the appropriate
    5
    permit if necessary.
    6
    MR. BLOOMBERG: I might add it's an
    7
    additional piece of information that they will be
    8
    submitting to us, tell us that they're doing it
    9
    that they would not otherwise have to file with
    10
    us thereby possibly alerting us to any potential
    11
    issues.
    12
    MR. NILLES: And that emission will
    13
    all be public; right?
    14
    MR. ROSS: I believe so subject to a
    15
    Freedoms of Information Act request. So, yes, it
    16
    would be public, available to the public.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Ms. Bugel?
    18
    MS. BUGEL: Nothing further for me.
    19
    Thank you.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER KNITTLE: Let's wrap
    21
    up today. Thank you all very much for your time
    22
    and attention today. See you back here tomorrow
    23
    morning at nine.
    24
    (Hearing recessed at 5:45 p.m.)
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    160

    1
    STATE OF ILLINOIS
    2
    COUNTY OF FAYETTE
    3
    4
    C E R T I F I C A T E
    5
    6
    I, BEVERLY S. HOPKINS, a Notary Public
    7
    in and for the County of Fayette, State of
    8
    Illinois, DO HEREBY CERTIFY that the foregoing
    9
    156 pages comprise a true, complete and correct
    10
    transcript of the proceedings held on October
    11
    11th, 2006, at the Illinois Pollution Control
    12
    Board, 1021 North Grand Avenue East, Springfield,
    13
    Illinois, in proceedings held before Hearing
    14
    Officer John Knittle, and recorded in machine
    15
    shorthand by me.
    16
    IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set
    17
    my hand and affixed by Notarial Seal this 15th
    18
    day of October, 2006.
    19
    20
    _____________________________
    Beverly S. Hopkins, CSR, RPR
    21
    Notary Public, Fayette County
    CSR License No. 084-004316
    22
    23
    24
    KEEFE REPORTING COMPANY
    161

    Back to top