USDA
Agricultural Air Quality Task Force
Meeting
Minutes
Hall of
Rm. 333,
Members present:
|
Bruce Knight, Chair Garth Boyd Tom Coleman Robert Jackman Ray Knighton |
Kevin Rogers Joseph Rudek Rita Sharma Annette Sharp Sally Shaver Douglas Shelmidine Bob Wright
|
Beth Sauerhaft (Designated Federal Official)
Other USDA Personnel:
Rodney Brown, USDA-REE
Larry Clark, USDA-NRCS
Meredith Dahl, USDA-OGC
K. Davis, USDA-CSREES
L. Duriancik, USDA-CSREES
Elvis Graves, USDA-NRCS
Mack Gray, USDA-NRE
Gary Margheim, USDA-NRCS
Donna V. Lamb, USDA-FS
Steven Shafer, USDA-ARS
Brian Shaw, USDA-NRCS
Ray Sinclair, USDA-NRCS-NSSC
Other EPA Personnel:
Kerry Drake
Bob Fegley
Chris Geron
D. Bruce Harris
Dan Kopinski,
Michele Laur
Douglas McKinney
Linda Metcalf
Jean-Mari Peltier
John Pemberton
Public Attendees:
|
Audry Adamson, National Pork Producers Bill Becker, STAPPA/ALAPCO Cynthia Cory, CFBF Rebeckah Freeman, American Farm Bureau Trisha Marsh Johnson, Jones-Hamilton Co. R. C. Johnson, General Chemical Rodney Kamper, Western United Dairymen Nancy Kruger, STAPPA/ALAPCO Amy Royden, STAPPA/ALAPCO |
Allen Schaffer, Diesel Technology Forum Diane Shea, National Governors Association Gerald Talbert, national Association of Conservation Districts John Thorne, Capitolink Simon Vander Woudie, Western United Dairymen Ross Wilson, TCFA Nick Yaksizh, AEM Maggie Kerchner, NOAA |
Prevailing themes of the Agricultural Air Quality Task Force’s
(AAQTF) discussions focused on the need for Task Force oversight of certain
issues and on the areas of policy, research, and emerging technology. Various
presentations updated the members about the current state of USDA and EPA
research and policy and provoked discussion highlighting the chief concerns of
the Task Force. The AAQTF was urged to
recognize the need to take oversight roles to measure the effectiveness of
implemented recommendations and perhaps to focus on issues in the
Beth Sauerhaft made the
opening welcome and preliminary comments, and a picture was taken of the 2003
Task Force. She then introduced the Agricultural Air Quality Task Force (AAQTF)
Chair, Bruce Knight, Chief, Natural Resources Conservation Service. Knight
noted that USDA Secretary Veneman re-chartered the Task Force (with 15
returning members, 9 newly appointed members and 3 ex-officio government
members from USDA) in August 2002 to foster interagency cooperation between
USDA and EPA on issues of air quality. Mack Gray, Deputy Under Secretary of
Natural Resources and the Environment represented Secretary Veneman in
welcoming new members.
Jean-Mari Peltier, Counselor
to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator, described her own
role as that of a conduit between the Task Force and the Administrator. Her
goal was to see that issues in air, water, soil erosion, and pest management
were addressed in such a way that the solutions did not exacerbate other
environmental issues.
After introductions,
Tommy Coleman asked about
competitive research priorities and partnerships.
Phillip Wakelyn felt that
having a summary of the National Air Quality Workshop proceedings mentioned by
Sauerhaft would be worthwhile for the Task Force.
In response to discussion of
the Digester Summit on June 2-4th,
Joseph Rudek cautioned that
linking anaerobic digesters to proper NH4 handling was important in
conservation practices. Beth said that planners were looking at the issues
holistically, and Rudek replied that monitoring the ammonia loss from anaerobic
digestate during soil fertilization or from lagoons receiving the digestate was
important because nitrogen concentrations in digestate could be higher than in
standard lagoons. Higher nitrogen
concentrations could result in more ammonia volatilization. Bruce Knight agreed
that capturing air quality benefits when looking at water and soil quality was
important.
Karen Carrington, Office of
General Counsel, reviewed Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA) rules for the
Task Force: membership must be balanced, accountable to the public, and only advise the Secretary of Agriculture as stated in its
charter.
Bob
Wright, USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS), gave a presentation on the
state of ARS research on particulate
and gaseous emissions from agricultural operations. The program is designed to develop and
evaluate methodologies, practices, and tools to measure, predict and control
particulate emissions from agricultural operations such as tillage, harvest,
and burning, and particulate and gaseous emissions from animal feeding
operations. This research is done in
partnership with universities, state and federal agencies, commodity groups and
producers. Several examples of ARS
cooperative research were given including: (I) control of particulate emissions
from production facilities and animal feeding operations; (ii) control of
animal diet to reduce ammonia emissions from manure; (iii) control of ammonia
emissions in poultry broiler and layer houses using solid and liquid alum; (iv)
conducting nitrogen balance studies at swine production operations to measure
inputs and losses from housing, lagoons, and wastewater field application
sites; (v) development of a system of treatment technologies for swine
wastewater that improves liquid/solids separation, reduces ammonia emissions,
kills pathogens, and captures phosphorus; (vi) development of techniques to
measure and predict dispersion of gases from animal feeding operations so that
farm boundary emissions measurements can be used to calculate emission rates
from the source.
Questions:
Joseph Rudek asked how the NAS
report research priority recommendations for EPA and USDA has affected the
recommendations of the Research Priority Committee. Wright responded that recommendations
in the NAS report indicated that ARS was
on track relative to
research on emissions from animal feeding operations. The USDA and EPA
Planning Committee are now discussing CAFOs. Rudek wanted to know whether a
wider group will be included on the committee, and Wright said that he hoped
so.
Ray Knighton stated that Departmental
senior management are evaluating the USDA Partnership
Management Team’s review of the Panel’s recommendations. They will provide conclusions to the Task
Force when they are completed.
Robert Flocchini noted that
the Task Force and ARS worked on different time constants: the Task Force was
extremely short term and ARS operated on a long-term scale. He continued that partnerships must be
two-way and not defined by one side alone, so stakeholders must be involved
early in the decision-making process.
He also requested copies of
all PowerPoint presentations, which Beth Sauerhaft promised, saying that they
would also be posted to the web. Bob
Wright said he agreed with
Annette Sharp asked whether
the Department of Defense was a partner, and Wright stated that he thought
so. She continued that for states to use
that data, EPA must approve the data. Also, both sides must know the tools.
Regulators want the best technology available when drafting rules. She asked
whether LIDAR was used only for emission on farms or also for long-range
dispersion. Wright answered that LIDAR
was used on farms for estimating
plume shape, identifying best locations
for emissions sampling, and for development of dispersion models.
Kevin Rogers spoke of the
critical nature of farm and ranch operations, which for the past 8–10 years
have been filing permits to comply with rules lacking scientific backing. USDA
and ARS should be concerned about this, as producers want solid research
numbers so that they can do the right thing.
Farmers need more money and better science to address current
environmental issues.
Avant asked who was
developing emission factors, as the AP 42 numbers were off by orders of
magnitude. He called for the appropriate researchers to determine the numbers
for agricultural emissions.
Phillip Wakelyn asked for a
list of research projects on ARS’s plate, especially regarding modeling
long-range, down-wind conservation. EPA requires permits based on measurements
at the boundary, but dispersion at the site and over complex terrain are also
important. Wright agreed.
Bruce Knight asked that a
list of brief biographies of participants be added to the action register,
along with the ARS research list and modeling list.
AM Public comment period:
Gerald Talbert, National
Association of Conservation Districts, advocated a market-driven approach to
carbon credit and water quality trading, which would push incentives to improve
technology and efficiency.
Dick Johnson, General
Chemical Corporation, advocated use of aluminum sulfate and ferric sulfate to
bind ammonia for large animal odor control and water purification operations
and asked that all chemical precipitants be included in BMPs
for manure management.
Rodney Kamper,
Maggie Kerchner, NOAA Air
Resources Laboratory, announced the October Workshop on long-term modeling and
an ammonia workshop on quantifying, through measurement and modeling, emissions
and deposition, and overfertilization.
Following lunch:
After lunch, Steve Shafer,
ARS Global Change Office, gave a presentation on ARS’s
research on the role of agriculture in emissions and sinks of greenhouse gases.
Agricultural greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are 7% of the total GHG emissions,
2.4% of methane, 25% of CO2, and 75% of nitrous oxide emissions. Two
areas of interest in CO2 research are the use of agricultural
systems as “carbon sinks” and the impact of increased atmospheric CO2
on productivity. Research tools include the greenhouse gas reduction through
the agricultural carbon enhancement (GRACEnet) program, the free-air CO2
exchange (FACE) program, open-top chambers, and tunnels.
Questions:
Phillip Wakelyn wanted to
know whether the breadth of study projects in ARS included all greenhouse gases.
Shafer responded negatively and said that the ARS research agenda had now
expanded to genetic resistance to O3 in plants. Wakelyn also wanted
to know about sources of N2O and VOCs in agriculture. Shafer replied that he
did not have any effort devoted to that and that he did not know of any
agricultural impact on it. Wakelyn
agreed but noted that the extant numbers indicate that agriculture can indeed
be held accountable. Shafer said that nitrous oxide may be emitted by rangeland
microbial activity.
Sally Shaver, EPA, spoke on
Title II regulations for irrigation engines.
She also noted the lack of sound data to support CAFO regulations (under
the Clean Air Act) and said that EPA and USDA need to review research, improve
protocols, more clearly characterize farms, and conduct more fate and transport
research. She then turned her time over to Robert Flocchini.
Flocchini summarized the
National Research Council’s report, “Air Emissions from Animal Feeding
Operations: Current Knowledge, Future Needs.”
Sally Shaver continued to say
that EPA was working with the USDA to follow up on process-based modeling and
to develop research interests in process-based approaches for the next five
years with the Initiative for Future Agricultural Assistance and IFAFS.
Due to a settlement agreement
taking effect August 15 regarding AFOs in
The Task Force previously discussed
a Voluntary/Incentive-Based Agricultural Policy). USDA and EPA still have
internal discussions on-going; once all modifications have been worked out
within and between agencies the document will be presented to the Task Force. .
Finally, recent decisions for
criteria standards for the ozone standard and the fine particulate standard
have produced a schedule of evaluation events. A consent decree filed
Questions:
Wakelyn asked for a summary
of the dates Shaver had mentioned as well as the nonattainment maps. Shaver agreed
to give the maps and a chart of the dates to Beth Sauerhaft for distribution.
Parnell asked whether the PM2.5
sampling was done in urban rather than rural areas (as the states normally do)
and whether the EPA and ARS are examining the issue of potential
oversampling. Shaver replied that those
issues were being examined and that they were appropriate for inclusion in the
implementation discussion instead of the standards discussion.
Boyd asked how the EPA viewed
ozone-generating equipment used to improve products by decreasing bacteria.
Shaver said she would check into it.
Rudek asked whether there
would be a public comment period for fugitive emissions issues, and Shaver
replied that there probably would be public comment periods, but that no single
policy for these issues had yet been established.
Ray Knighton, CSREES National
Program Leader in Air Quality, gave a presentation on their Air Quality Program.
CSREES works with land grant universities and other eligible institutions by
providing funds and USDA extramural research and by serving as a link to USDA.
CSREES supports over 9,500 researchers at research stations, laboratories, land
grant universities, small businesses, and various science facilities;
collaborates in eight multi-agency programs; and provides research support
through the National Needs Graduate Fellows Program. Its extension program is present in every
county and provides outreach to local communities and 4-H programs; its primary
function, however, is to provide funding through formula funding, competitive
grant programs, and congressionally targeted programs. Air Quality Program
funding has increased since 2002, with current research investments totaling
approximately $7 million dollars.
Special research grants were awarded to
Questions:
Robert Flocchini noted that
though AQ was high on the priority list for research, it was still very low on
the funding end and asked how long the targeted research programs were meant to
last. Knighton said that many
congressional special research grants had a four-year cycle with a one-year
extension period but that Congress sets the length of most grants. Knighton added
that there was no limit on how many proposals a university may submit and that
the proposals must be very well written and maintain a balance between all
three elements of the program.
The Fire Consortia for
Advanced Modeling and Meteorology of Smoke (FCAMMS) are cooperative research
groups that each day deliver two 48-hour prediction models of meteorology,
fire-related phenomena, and smoke dispersion across the country and develop and
support contemporary computational resources needed to deliver timely products
to fire fighters, air quality regulators, and the public.
The Federal Land Manager Air
Quality Working Group works with state air quality officials to identify
particular air quality related values (AQRVs) for
local Class I areas and to come to agreement on AQRV issues and Class I
permitting issues. Forestry Research assists with this through two programs:
Clear Skies, which addresses emissions in the energy-producing sector, and
Questions:
James Vickery,
Special Assistant to the Director of the National Exposure Lab, presented the “Strategic
Research Plan for Particulate Matter,” based on work of the Air Quality
Research Subcommittee of the Committee on the Environment and Natural Resources
(CENR). The goal of formulating a strategic research plan was to protect public
health and the environment through improving the scientific knowledge base on
harmful effects due to airborne particulate matter.
Questions: Phillip Wakelyn asked about the measurement
of PM, the size cutoff point, and oversampling, because the size distribution
impacts what is picked up. Vickery agreed that PM fractionation is important,
but that researchers also need to know exactly what is present in the entire
size range. Wakelyn responded that he wanted to know what the size cutoff point
was when sampling for a specific size and whether methods differed in urban and
rural settings. Vickery replied that the
methods need to be improved and that he would discuss that in his second
presentation (following).
Dr. Vickery
then gave a presentation on the state of PM science for policy makers, in which
he discussed a three-year NARSTO project. NARSTO is a multi-national,
multi-stakeholder entity that periodically conducts evaluations on air
pollutants. The PM assessment’s purpose was to interpret complex science in
such a way that it was useful to regulatory managers, to gather information for
scientists developing causal hypotheses, and to present what is known and not
known about eight major science questions. Its framework consisted of three
parts: the atmospheric environment, exposure and impacts, and analysis and
public policy; and its key research questions included exposure relationships
and concentrations, characterization of emission sources, development and
testing of air quality models, components of particulate matter, mechanisms of
injury, dosimetry and fate, co-pollutant interaction, susceptibility, exposure
misclassification, and cross-cutting issues. NARSTO made six recommendations in
the Assessment: (1) achieve better understanding of carbonaceous aerosols; (2)
perform long-term monitoring of particulate matter, precursors, and
co-pollutants in parallel with health impacts studies; (3) develop and evaluate
chemical transport models; (4) improve emissions inventories and models; (5)
analyze and archive ambient data and foster interdisciplinary research; and (6)
develop more systematic approaches to integrating diverse knowledge bases to
assist in management practices.
Questions:
none.
Doug McKinney,
EPA Office of Research and Development, discussed air emissions from
agricultural sources. The EPA’s agriculture-related air research aims to
improve information about air emissions to support air quality modeling, inventory
development, source-receptor modeling, and deposition to watersheds. Major
program components include emissions from AFOs, nitrogen compound fluxes around
production, and open burning emissions.
AFO emissions vary widely between farms; therefore an accurate process-based
model is important. Agricultural emissions directly impact formation of PM2.5.
Nitrogen compounds have watershed implications, and temperature and
precipitation pattern changes affect wet deposition of ammonium nitrogen. The
Environmental Technology Verification (ETV) Program for ammonia sensors
supports testing for ambient ammonia technologies and develops standard
protocols and quality analysis. Research
programs are consistent with CENR, NARSTO, and NRC recommendations, though
assessments show low confidence in measurements. Focusing on ammonia and
nitrous oxide, collected data will improve methods of flux measurement to
improve emission factors and develop process-based models. Research on PM and
air toxins from wildfires and prescribed burning evaluates size distribution
and chemical characteristics of PM and emission factors for toxins. Major emphases in burning included tracers
that identify what is burning by remote sensing and dioxin and furan air
toxins. EPA collaborates with other institutions in many areas, including swine
and poultry emission factors downwind plume dispersion from animal housing, and
agricultural field burns.
Questions:
Don Kopinski,
EPA, spoke about AQ issues for mobile and nonroad diesel sources and the Tier 4
Program, a new, non-incremental program for nonroad diesel engines. The Tier 4
Program seeks to regulate fuel and engines so as to enable engines to change to
catalytic converters. The transition
requires a 6–10 year lead-time and regulatory flexibility. The Tier 4 program
requires a 7–year phase in for sulfur reduction to occur prior to introduction
of new diesel engines and will result in a 1–2% increase in cost to produce the
engine. Smaller engines, being a greater proportion of smaller equipment, will
impact overall cost proportionately more. The net fuel increase will be
approximately 1.5 cents per gallon. NOX
will also decrease significantly, and given the growth in the sector, NOX
pollution would increase without the proposed changes. Health benefits have been calculated to be up
to 81B dollars per year in comparison to 1.5B dollars per year to implement the
Tier 4 Program. Biodiesel fuel is also
good, due to its lubricity, and ought to be considered as an additive.
Retrofits will not be available as they are not economically feasible, and the
decreased sulfur content will eliminate distinctions between on and off-road
diesel fuels.
Questions:
Kevin Rogers asked if there were
an additional cost for biodiesel.
Kopinski replied that in a cost per gallon comparison, biodiesel added
10–20 cents more per gallon and without the tax rebate afforded by sulfur-free
diesel fuel.
PM Public Comment Period:
Nick Yaksizh, Vice President
of the Association for Equipment Manufacturers, addressed EPA’s proposed
off-road regulations. His association’s
major concerns included ensuring the availability of ultra-low sulfur fuel in
rural areas; a meaningful evaluation of the economic and technological impact;
ensuring a global alignment of requirements; ensuring a reasonable lead time
and stability between requirement changes for manufacturers to recoup capital
investments and implementation flexibility; technological review; and an
evaluation of the potential impact on equipment manufacturers, the equipment,
and on the end user.
Trisha Marsh Johnson, Jones-Hamilton
Co., spoke about litter amendment treatments and indicated that her company had
a 95% market share in the poultry industry. She emphasized the importance of
testing and evaluating which treatment actually work and warned that some
treatments were banned due to adverse reactions in birds and employees. She asked the Task Force to recommend
amendment technologies that show a positive food safety benefit without having
other adverse impacts and offered to share the Jones-Hamilton database of
variables such as season, bird density, and ventilation type from three
thousand farms.
Alan Shafer of the Diesel
Technology Forum made five points: (1) diesel fuel is valuable on farms due to
its reliability and efficiency; (2) the industry has already made progress,
reducing emissions by 13% over 10 years; (3) new engines, regulated since 1996,
have also shown great progress and are very effective; (4) challenges facing
the industry are aggressive, but as everyone wants good products, costs and
benefits must be balanced; (5) instead of building new engines, one could
retrofit, repower, refuel, rebuild, repair, or replace an existing engine.
USDA
Agricultural Air Quality Task Force
Meeting
Minutes
Hall of
Rm. 333,
The main agenda item for the second
day of the meeting was to set goals for Task Force’s tenure. Robert Flocchini requested that CDs with a copy of all the
presentations on it be distributed to the Task Force. Annette Sharp and Kevin
Rogers prefaced the discussion with an overview of past issues addressed by the
Task Force. See Appendix B for complete
discussion of this.
Bruce Knight introduced Bob Ensor who then facilitated the discussion. Ensor set up a chart that listing the Task Force’s
objective of advising the Secretary of Agriculture on air quality issues, goals
and actions including responsibilities and timelines. Task Force members
generated a list of goals they thought were appropriate for the Task
Force. Similar goals were merged, and
then the group decided how to categorize them.
The rough outline of goals is presented in Appendix A.
After considerable
discussion, the four categories decided upon were: Research, Policy, Emerging
Issues and Education/Technology Transfer.
AM Public Comment Session:
Trisha Marsh Johnson of Jones-Hamilton Company addressed the Task Force about the EQIP
program. She stated that it was
antiquated in design and did not allow for funding the needs of vertically
integrated animal agriculture. The most
effective management (e.g., feed management) of litter amendments would be
improved if integration were implemented and funded. EQIP does not support
integration, and therefore the farmer will not decide to use it. Some states
and approximately 5–10 counties have implemented vertical integration; however
it is difficult to advise the family farmer because they are not the decision-makers.
Following lunch:
The Task Force agreed that
they would prioritize the goals by teleconference and bring to the next meeting
for discussion goals that would be concise, replicable (if involving research
experiments), and verifiable with measurable outcomes.
Discussion followed about
potential meeting dates and locations.
It was agreed upon that the next meeting would be in
APPENDIX A
The following are the four
categories decided upon by the group which goals should fall into and the
members associated with these groups (name in italics is subcommittee
chair/co-chair):
Research-Avant, Coleman, Boese,
Lamb, Wright, Wakelyn, Flocchini,
Parnell
Policy-Bunker, Shaver, Jackman,
Roper, Rudek,
Whalen, Shelmidine
Emerging Issues-Rogers, Sweeten, Parnell, Isom, Trotter, Aneja
Education/Technology Transfer-Maupin, Boyd,
Sharma, Sharp, Knighton
The following are the 53
goals the group recommended for possible pursuit during this charter separated
by grouping:
Education/Technology Transfer
1. Dev recommendations for immediately decreasing
ammonia/odor emissions from CAFOs.
2. Minimize detrimental air emissions from
agriculture,
4. Help determine how large a part
agriculture plays in our airsheds.
5. Create farmer friendly system.
7. Identify technologies to help agriculture meet
NAAQS.
10. Help agencies identify & evaluate standards
& practices.
11. Evaluate effectiveness of existing practices for
emissions reduction.
12. Recommend public education/outreach for air
quality.
15. Ensure requirements and standards are practical
and economical to ensure participation.
16. What are impediments to using biomass to energy fuels.
17. Development of good science for emission factors
and BMP’s that maximize reductions in a
cost-effective manner.
18. Provide information need and suggested approaches
for agricultural sector involvement in development of State Implementation
Plans (SIPs) and Smoke management plans (SMPs) for PM2.5, ozone, and regional haze.
21. Improve use of public/private partnerships to
increase speed/delivery of air research initiatives.
23. Develop incentive-based approach prior to
regulatory approach.
24. Evaluate agriculture energy emissions for various
technologies.
26. Give Secretary honest advice
27. Any system must be understandable, have reasonable
reporting standards & tasks that can be accomplished.
29. Work toward development of standards/markets for
economic income for agriculture—i.e, C-credits,
fuels.
35. Provide list of requirements, steps to follow, who
are resources, etc., to those who will comply—that is easy to follow.
39. Agencies--identify standards/practices available
in agricultural
40. Assure coordinated public/private agenda to
address priority needs
43. Identify detrimental air emissions from
agriculture.
47. Catalyst for jointly educating agriculture and
regulatory communities together on issues, limitations of knowledge and
science-based mitigation technologies.
50. Provide reasonable economic alternatives to
agricultural burning.
51. Provide information and suggestions for
agricultural involvement in RPO’s for air quality.
Policy
1. Dev recommendations for immediately decreasing
ammonia/odor emissions from CAFOs.
2. Minimize detrimental air emissions from
agriculture,
3. Ensure USDA/EPA support for AG Air Group proposal
to EPA for scientific monitoring of emissions from AFO/CAFOs.
4. Help determine how large a part
agriculture plays in our airsheds.
7. Identify technologies to help agriculture meet
NAAQS.
8. Develop framework for merging water and air quality
interests—agendas.
9. Shorten
agency time constants.
10. Help agencies identify & evaluate standards
& practices.
11. Evaluate effectiveness of existing practices for
emissions reduction.
15. Ensure requirements and standards are practical
and economical to ensure participation.
16. What are impediments to using biomass to energy fuels.
17. Development of good science for emission factors
and BMP’s that maximize reductions in a
cost-effective manner.
18. Provide information need and suggested approaches
for agricultural sector involvement in development of State Implementation
Plans (SIPs) and Smoke management plans (SMPs) for PM2.5, ozone, and regional haze.
20. Bring science-based and common sense
recommendations to decision makers.
22. Give USDA Secretary and EPA a system to measure success.
24. Evaluate agriculture energy emissions for various
technologies.
25. USDA provide leadership
for creating agricultural production and sales of renewable fuels from farm
byproducts.
26. Give Secretary honest advice
29. Work toward development of standards/markets for
economic income for agriculture—i.e, C-credits,
fuels.
30. Work toward increased funding for research and
education.
37. Provide for understanding by USDA and production
agriculture of process, timeline, and impact of air quality requirements.
39. Agencies--identify standards/practices available
in agricultural
43. Identify detrimental air emissions from
agriculture.
45. Define differences between farming/ranching and
agriculture.
49. Develop process for resolving recommendations to
Secretary on all issues such as CERCLA and CAFO’s.
54. Make sure recommendations to Secretary include
full range of agricultural interests including minority farmers.
Research
6. Develop accurate agricultural emission factors.
13. Appropriate regulation of air emissions from agriculture
operations.
14. USDA should assist EPA in revision of emission
factors using best available data.
19. Animal’s role in the issue to decrease emissions
(water and air).
33. Improve fate and transport models.
34. New methodology for regulating air emissions from
agricultural operations based on process-based models.
36. Recommendations regarding monitoring protocols in
agriculture.
41. Develop recognized standard as system for
measurement of agricultural air emissions.
42. Provide details for implementation of NRC CAFO
research priorities.
44. Funding details related to NRC CAFO research
priorities.
46. Resolve the PM monitor bias issue.
48. Implement recommendations associated with findings
11, 12, and 13 of NRC Report.
50. Provide reasonable economic alternatives to
agricultural burning.
52. Quantify other social, health and environmental
benefits that are associated with AQ research.
Emerging Issues
28. Call for research summit for Ag emission factors
protocol development.
31. Recognize emerging technologies
32. Anticipate major AQ issues before they emerge.
38. Call a research summit on agricultural AQ
modeling.
APPENDIX B
Sharp and
Sharp and Rogers resumed
their presentation by continuing to describe recommendations made to EPA and
USDA heads about Title V Permit requirements for agricultural sources. They followed with a list of topics pursued
for agricultural interest, such as PM10 monitors and sampling bias,
definitions of agriculture and farming, and global warming, and concluded that
it was important to understand what drives air quality regulations regarding
agriculture.
Dave Roper asked about the
discrepancy between applying manure fertilizer and commercial fertilizer to
land: emissions for manure applications are to be reported, and the reporting
requirements are unclear. Annette Sharp agreed about the discrepancy and
pointed out that there are regulations for air, solids, and water. State
agencies are too compartmentalized and need a bigger picture. She recommended keeping the issue in front of
the states and to request policy clarifications in writing. Also, if the
operation employs fewer than 350 people, it qualifies for Small Business
Assistance Programs, which offer free consultation to assist farmers in knowing
their responsibilities and in filling out proper forms. Dave Roper asked if that would be on the List
of Technical Service Providers, and how would forms be completed if the state
did not have permitting authority. Sharp replied that would be a big issue. While
Annette Sharp asked about the
agricultural burning policy, except in Western states, where the Western
Regional Air Planning, developed under CAA in 1991, improved visibility in
Class 1 wilderness areas, and how smoke management planning was going in the
four regional planning areas. Allen Riebau replied that it may be tardy.
Other topics of interest to
agriculture include global warming and carbon sequestration; clean energy
issues (especially how to sell it); the ability to model agricultural air
quality emissions; agricultural conservation practices that equate to air
quality control practices; tillage and harvesting practices (tours help
regulators understand better what occurs on a farm); the variation of ammonia
standards between states (some of which are based on faulty science); the NAS
CAFO study; regional haze based on the National Ambient Air Quality Standards
for ozone, PM, SOX, NOX, lead, and carbon monoxide; PM fugitive emissions; fuel
issues; and recommendations for research priorities that would provide solid
science for agricultural air quality programs and promoting education between
producers and state regulators. The regional haze decision was new and
beneficial in that it forced states to work together as “airsheds.”
Dave Roper said that