Progress Report - Program Compliance and Market Activity
Program Compliance and Market Activity
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Last updated on September 18, 2023
Data current through 2022
Overview
Compliance for the Acid Rain Program (ARP) and each of the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR) trading programs is assessed on an annual basis, while market activity (i.e., allowance trading) is monitored throughout the year. Each regulated facility must hold an amount of allowances equal to or greater than its emissions for the relevant compliance period by each program’s allowance transfer deadline. If a facility fails to hold the allowances by the relevant deadline, it is subject to additional allowance surrenders. In addition, “assurance provisions” are included in the CSAPR programs to help ensure that each covered state achieves the required emissions reductions (visit EPA's CSAPR Assurance Provisions for more information). Historically, these programs achieve exceptionally high rates of compliance. This performance continued in 2022 as demonstrated in the table below.
For additional information on how emissions trading programs work review the story map, "Allowances: The Currency of EPA's Emissions Trading Programs", and visit EPA’s Emissions Trading Resources.
Trading Program | Pollutant | Control Period | Facilities Holding Sufficient Allowances (%)* | Assurance Provisions Triggered? |
---|---|---|---|---|
Acid Rain Program | SO2 | Annual |
100
|
N/A |
CSAPR SO2 Group 1 | SO2 | Annual |
100
|
No
|
CSAPR SO2 Group 2 | SO2 | Annual |
100
|
No
|
CSAPR NOx Annual | NOx | Annual |
100
|
No
|
CSAPR NOx Ozone Season Group 1 | NOx | Ozone Season† |
100
|
No
|
CSAPR NOx Ozone Season Group 2 | NOx | Ozone Season† |
100
|
No
|
CSAPR NOx Ozone Season Group 3 | NOx | Ozone Season† |
100
|
No
|
* Percentages are as of each program's compliance date and may not include any data resubmissions that may occur.
† Ozone Season runs May 1st to September 30th
Program Compliance
EPA tracks allowances directly allocated to sources, deducted for compliance, and carried over or “banked” for future compliance years. The interactive charts below detail how the ARP and CSAPR trading programs' allowances were used to cover emissions for each year of a selected program’s history (In contrast to the ARP and CSAPR programs, the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS) rule is not an emissions trading program).
Select a program to view its compliance information graphs.
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The graph below shows allowance allocations and deductions by state for each program year. Use the dropdown to select an order preference and the range slider to select a compliance year.
Market Activity
Market-based programs encourage participants to find cost-effective ways to comply with the emissions limit (or cap) set by EPA. Companies accomplish this by finding the most efficient and economically viable emission reductions not only among their own generating assets, but across the entire marketplace of power generators. Market participants may buy, trade, sell, or bank allowances for use in future years. In addition to ensuring compliance, EPA tracks allowance holdings and records transactions to better understand market trends.
Select a program to view its market activity graphs.