ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June
2,
1983
IN THE MATTER OF:
R81—20
ALTERNATIVE CONTROL STRATEGIES,
)
(Docket B)
FINAL RULE
(DOCKET
B)
)
PROPOSED RULE.
FIRST NOTICE.
PROPOSED OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J.
Anderson):
The Final Rule
in
this matter is hereby divided into
two dockets to enable the Board to take final action on the
regulations prescribing
the Alternative Control Strategies
(ACS) permit program, while considering an amendment to Section
202.145 of those regulations.
Docket A contains the Final Rule
in this matter in the exact form in which it was submitted to
the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules and published in
the Board’s Second Notice order of December
2, 1982.
Under a
separate Opinion and Order the Board is today ordering that
Docket
A be
adopted and filed with
the
Secretary of State.
This docket, entitled “Docket B”,
contains
a Board proposal
to amend Section 202,145 of Docket
A,
after it
is filed with the
Secretary of State.
This proposal
is made
in response
to
some
of the concerns raised
in the combined economic and technical
hearings held on March
7 and 11,
1983.
It will be published
in the Illinois Register in accordance with Section 5.1 of the
Administrative Procedure Act.
In the Interim and Final Rule
proceedings, the Board received testimony and comments on the
appropriateness of using the “useful
life”
of an emission reduc-
tion credit
(ERC)
as
a limit on its duration,
and on prescribing
a five year maximum life for ERC’s generated by emission source
shutdowrts.*
At this time the Board solicits public comment on
the more flexible approach to determining “useful life” which
is proposed in this docket.
Public comment will be accepted on
this proposal
up to and including August 19,
1983.
The proposed amendment deletes the five year maximum life
for an ERC generated by a shutdown and adds a new subsection
(b)
which mandates that the Agency determine
a specific useful
life
for each shutdown emission source which contributes
an emission
reduction to an ACS.
Subsection
(h) also mandates that the
Agency include consideration of certain factors bearing upon
*The history or
trie development of the “useful
life”
and “5
year limitation” provisions can be reviewed in the Board’s May 13,
1982 Opinion and Order on the Interim Rule and December
2,
1982
Opinion and Order on the Final
Rule.
52-349
2
“useful
life”
in making its determination.
It is the Board’s
intention to insure that ambiguity or indefiniteness as to the
lifetime of an ERC be resolved before an ACS permit is issued
by a numerical specification of the duration of any shutdown ERC
used in the ACS.
It
is also the Board~sintention to provide
some guidance as to the minimum demonstration that the ACS
applicant must make with regard to useful life.
The Board agrees with the testimony given in the March
7 and
11,
1983 hearing
(R.
874—878,
892—896,
904—914,
941—943), and
public comment received thereafter
(P.C.
45), which support the
“useful
life” provision, hut recommend deletion of any “across—
the—board”, fixed maximum life in the rule.
In
light of these
comments, as well
as the addendum to the Economic Impact Study
(EcIS)
(Ex.
1 Econ.
Hearings) presented at the March
11, 1983
hearing, the Board agrees that any specification in the rule of
a maximum “useful life” would be arbitrary and inequitable.
The
addendum to the EcIS,
Part B of which focused on the impact of
the five year limitation in the useful
life provision,
concluded
that the percent of polluting equipment with a remaining useful
life of five years or less ranged from 0,5 to 48.9
depending on
the industrial class involved,
The addendum concludes that sub-
stantial cost savings would be foregone for some industries by use
of the
5 year maximum life without a corresponding environmental
benefit.
Since
it is the function of this provision and these
rules in general
to insure “equivalence”, the Board concludes that
it is inappropriate to build into this rule this type of inequity
and disincentive to use of an ACS.
The particular factors which
the
proposed amendment directs
the Agency to consider were developed by the Board from points
raised in the most recent testimony,
For example, witnesses
pointed out that the age of
a piece of equipment alone may not
be determinative of its operational
remaining life.
Thus,
among
other things,
this subsection directs consideration of the level
of use received by and wear
to the principle components as well
as operating efficiency.
The Board believes another relevant
consideration is the actual, documented operational lifetime of
other functionally or catagorically similar pieces of equipment.
Given this information, the Agency can compare the useful life
proposed by an ACS applicant to a “norm” for the same type of
equipment.
The Board particularly solicits comments on the
adequacy of the factors proposed.
ORDER
Section 202.145
Duration
a)
A permit containing an ACS shall he issued for no
—
longer than five years,
or for such shorter period as
the Agency may specify as necessary for periodic review
of the ACS or to accomplish the purposes of the Act or
52-350
3
of this Chapter.
However,
an ACS permit may not he
issued for a period of time which
is greater than the
useful
life of
an
emission source which contributes an
emission reduction to the ACS,
The burden of proving
the
useful
life of the emission source is on the
applicant
~
~
e?—~eefe—a~~±ve-yeafs~
b)
Prior to the issuance ~
shall
consider all factors which
it reasonab~ç~~ruesas
~
sion
source,
and
shall determine~~2~ecific
useful life for each shutdown
emission source which contributes an emission reduction
toan ACS,
Factors which the Aa~~considers shall
md
udet~~ollowina:
1)
The
antici ated useful life of
t~~rinc~pj~
p
nts
of the emission sour
onpurchase;
2)
~
aeoft
r~ilecp~p~en~sof_the
emission source;
3)
The level
of use received b~and wear
to the
principle co~p~nentsof_the_emission_source;
4)
The ~
atini_efficiencyof the emission source
atU~en~and
5)
The demonstrated useful
life of emission sources
of ~
IT IS SO
ORDERED.
I,
Christan
L.
Moffett, Clerk
of
the Illinois Pollution
Control Board,
hereby
certify that
the
above
Opinion and Order
was adopted~onthe
~
day
of
~—i~_~c~
_____,
1983 by
a
vote of
‘F-O
Christan L, Moffek~jClerk
Illinois Pollution
Control Board
52-351