ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February
9,
1977
COMMONWEALTH EDISON COMPANY,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 74—16
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by
Mr.
Goodman):
This matter comes before the Board upon the Petition of
Commonwealth Edison Company
(Edison)
for Emergency Relief from its
Waukegan Station Compliance Plan,
filed February
4,
1977.
The Peti-
tion was originally construed as
a variance petition and docketed as
PCB 77—44.
However, the Board hereby construes
the Petition as
a
Motion for Modification of the Board’s Order in PCB 74-16, which
bound Commonwealth Edison
to
a compliance plan for its Waukegan
Station.
PCB 77-44
is hereby dismissed as moot.
The problem presented herein is an emergency situation created
by the severity of this winter season.
According to Petitioner,
the
coal
in 600 railroad cars at Petitioner’s Powerton Station is frozen
and cannot be unloaded at that station.
Because of the lack of rail-
road cars,
two mines have been idled since January 11,
1977, render-
ing unemployed over 500 miners.
The Board has received telegrams
from
the
coal,
companies
which
own
the
mines
invol
ved
herein
verify-
ing this sharp reduction
in the labor force
at these mines due to
the unavailability of the railroad cars.
The only alternative method
for returning the cars to service that Edison has found
is to move
them to Edison’s Waukegan station where
there are existing facilities
for handling railroad cars to thaw the coal sufficiently so it can be
unloaded.
This alternative would necessitate burning this Illinois
coal, with a sulfur content of about
3.5,
at the Waukegan Station,
where Edison has committed not to burn coal with a sulfur content in
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757
—2—
excess of
1.
Edison indicates
that this coal would be burned at the
Waukegan Station over a period of 20-30 days and would represent up
to
50
of the Station’s total coal burn.
The Agency,
in
a recommendation filed on February
8,
1977,
points
out that several safeguards against any potential violation of the
ambient air quality standards are built into Waukegan’s
situation.
Under its compliance plan,
Edison has installed eleven monitoring
stations in the vicinity of its plant, at locations determined
by
modeling.
Furthermore,
the Agency indicates that the meteorological
conditions most likely to occur during the mid-February
to mid-March
period coupled with the location of the Waukegan plant render very
unlikely the possibility of an air quality excursion due to this plant
during the period for which modification
is sought.
The Board finds that the severe economic and social hardship
caused by the unavailability
of the railroad cars coupled with the
safeguards against excursions over the air quality standards
for this
limited period of time warrant modification of the Board’s decision
in PCB
74-16.
This departure from the Board’s policy of not granting
motions for modification beyond the time period established in Pro-
cedural
Rule 333
is due solely to the severe hardship evidenced here-
in.
The Board will allow Edison to burn this high sulfur coal at its
Waukegan Station until March
6,
1977,
provided that such utilization
shall be suspended during any t.me period in which a violation of the
primary 24—hour or secondary 3—hour ambient air quality standard for
SO2 would be likely to occur.
The Board hereby modifies its Order in PCB 74-16 by adding the
following addendum:
ADDENDUM
The Board’s Order herein shall not apply
to Edison’s Waukegan
Plant from February
9,
1977,
to March
6,
1977 to the extent that
Edison
may
burn
at
fhi s planL
the
co~fl con
Ini
ned
in 600 rail
cars
currently located at the Powerton Station and described
in Edison’s
February
4,
1977 Petition,
subject to the followinq conditions:
1.
Edison shall develop and implement
a meteorological fore-
casting scheme which is capable of identifying the conditions
under which the burning of fuel at the Waukegan Station
containing up
to 50
high sulfur coal
(3.5
sulfur)
would
be likely to cause violations
of the primary 24—hour or
secondary
3-hour
air
quality
standard
for
sulfur
dioxide.
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758
—3—
2.
Edison shall utilize such scheme to identify time
periods when utilization of high sulfur coal would need
to be suspended in order to protect air quality and shall
suspend
such
utilization
during
such
time
periods.
3.
Edison shall notify the Agency immediately in the event
any
air
quality
standard
for
SO2 or particulate violation is
registered at the
Zion or Waukegan monitoring network.
4,
Edison shall submit to the Agency and the Attorney
General detailed meteorological and air quality data from
its meteorological tower at Zion and from the monitoring
network
at
Waukegan
within
fifteen
days
after
March
6,
1977.
Such data shall be supplemented with data as
to the relative
quantities of
high
and
low
sulfur
coal
burned
at each of the
three units on
a daily basis.
I, Christan
L.
Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
hereby (ert i ly
t
he
aI~)ve
Orc1~
‘r
was
adopt
ed
on
I he
-
7~’
day
11977 by
a vote
of
3.- ~
_______
Christan
L. Moff~tffJC1erk
Illinois Po11utioi~”~ontro1Board
Boa
of
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759