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Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Report Page IV.D-2 ' <br /> Forward Inc. Landfill 2018 Revised Project <br /> Joaquin-Sacramento Delta empties into the San Francisco Bay. The region's topographic <br /> features restrict air movement through and out of the basin. As a result,the SJVAB is highly ' <br /> susceptible to pollutant accumulation over time. Frequent transport of pollutants into the <br /> SJVAB from upwind sources also negatively contributes to air quality. <br /> Wind speed and direction play an important role in dispersion and transport of air pollutants. I <br /> During summer periods,winds usually originate from the north end of the San Joaquin Valley <br /> and flow in a south-southeasterly direction through the valley,through the Tehachapi pass and ' <br /> into the neighboring Southeast Desert Air Basin. During winter months,winds occasionally <br /> originate from the south end of the valley and flow in a north-northwesterly direction. Also, <br /> during winter months,the valley experiences light,variable winds, less than 10 miles per hour ' <br /> (mph). Low wind speeds, combined with low inversion layers in the winter,create a climate <br /> conducive to high concentrations of certain air pollutants. <br /> The SJVAB has an inland Mediterranean climate that is characterized by warm,dry summers ' <br /> and cooler winters. Summer high temperatures often exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit(°F), <br /> averaging from the low 90s in the northern part of the valley to the high 90s in the south. The ' <br /> daily summer temperature variation can be as high as 30 degrees OF. Winters are for the most <br /> part mild and humid. Average high temperatures during the winter are in the 50s,while the <br /> average daily low temperature is approximately 45 degrees OF. Precipitation in the Stockton ' <br /> area falls almost exclusively from mid-November to mid-April from the fringes of mid-latitude <br /> storms. The Stockton area averages 13.5 inches of rain annually. <br /> The vertical dispersion of air pollutants in the valley is limited by the presence of persistent ' <br /> temperature inversions.Air temperatures usually decrease with an increase in altitude.A <br /> reversal of this atmospheric state,where the air temperature increases with height, is termed an ' <br /> inversion.Air above and below an inversion does not mix because differences in air density <br /> thereby restrict air pollutant dispersal. <br /> Regulatory Framework ' <br /> Air quality issues are under the jurisdiction of the United States Environmental Protection ' <br /> Agency (EPA),the California Air Resources Board (CARB), and the SJVAPCD. Regulation of <br /> air pollution is achieved through both Federal and State ambient air quality standards and <br /> emission limits for individual sources of air pollutants. An "ambient air quality standard" ' <br /> represents a level of an air pollutant in the outdoor(ambient) air that is necessary to protect <br /> public health. The ambient standards do not apply to indoor environments. <br /> Again, as required by the federal Clean Air Act(CAA),the EPA identified criteria pollutants ' <br /> and established National Ambient Air Quality Standards(NAAQS, or national standards)to <br /> protect the public health and welfare. There are NAAQS for ozone(03), carbon monoxide <br /> (CO),nitrogen dioxide(NO2), sulfur dioxide(SO2),respirable particulate matter equal to or less ' <br /> than 10 microns in diameter(PMlo), fine particulate matter equal to or less than 2.5 microns in <br /> diameter(PM2.5), and lead (Pb). These pollutants are known as "criteria" air pollutants because <br /> standards have been established to meet specific public health and welfare criteria. ' <br /> I <br /> I <br />