EPA Approves Texas Plan to Tame Houston's Smog Monster
Published Date: 3/23/2026
Rule
Summary
The EPA just gave a thumbs-up to Texas’ updated air pollution plan for the Houston-Galveston-Brazoria area, aiming to cut smog-causing chemicals like VOCs and NOX. This means cleaner air for residents and businesses, with new rules kicking in on April 22, 2026. Texas industries will follow smarter pollution controls without big costs, helping the region breathe easier and meet air quality goals.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 4 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
EPA Approves Texas RACT for HGB
The EPA is approving Texas' updated pollution control plan (RACT) for volatile organic compounds (VOC) and nitrogen oxides (NOX) in the Houston-Galveston-Brazoria (HGB) 2008 8-hour ozone Serious nonattainment area. This final approval is effective April 22, 2026, and confirms Texas' rules meet federal RACT requirements and are intended to help improve air quality in the HGB area.
Negative Declarations for Five Sectors
The EPA is approving Texas' VOC RACT negative declarations for five sectors in the HGB area: fiberglass boat manufacturing materials; manufacturing of pneumatic rubber tires; flat wood paneling coatings; letterpress printing; and automobile and light‑duty truck assembly coatings. By approving these negative declarations, EPA accepts Texas' determination that the listed sectors do not have applicable major sources subject to VOC RACT in the HGB area.
No Additional Federal Requirements
The EPA's final action approves Texas law as meeting federal Clean Air Act requirements and states that this approval does not impose additional federal requirements beyond state law. This action therefore confirms that businesses and other regulated entities in Texas are subject to the approved state rules, with no new federal obligations added by this EPA approval.
Oil & Gas CTG Sources Excluded Here
This approval does not address RACT for sources covered by the 2016 Oil and Natural Gas Control Techniques Guidelines (CTG) because EPA previously approved those SIP revisions through a separate rulemaking. Those oil and gas-related RACT requirements were finalized by EPA in an earlier action.
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