ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September 6, 1973
REILLY TAP.
AND CHEMICAL CORPORAT ION,
Petitioner,
vs.
)
PCB 73—218
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
Max K.
Naegler, Attorney for Petitioner
Thomas Cengel, Assistant Attorney General for the EPA
OPINION AND ORDER OF
TIlE BOARD (by Mr.
flenss)
Reilly Tar and Chemical Corporation requests a 3 month
variance from Rule 206(c) of the Air Pollution Control Regulations
which on December 31, 1973 will limit the emission of carbon
monoxide.
Petitioner has operated its coal tar distillation plant in
Granite City, Madison County, Illinois since 1932. It purchases
crude high temperature coal tar, a “waste’~ product of steel mills,
and distills it to produce various grades of coal tar pitch and
creosote. The crude coal tar is stored in tanks and transferred
to stills for the distillation process. Petitioner utilizes four
10,000 gallon stills and two 6,000 gallon stills to process about
520,000 lbs. of crude coal tar daily. The plant operates 5 days
per
week
and employs about 54 persons.
After each still is filled with crude, heat is applied, and
this distills off creosote oil vapor and various noncondensable
gasses. The distilled gas and vapors are passed through a condenser
to lic~uify the creosote, which is collected in receivinn pans.
The noncondensable gasses, includinq carbon monoxid~, exit to the
atmosphere throuch vents at the receivinq pan~
An independent test laboratory analyzed these gasses by gas
chromotography in 1972. The test revealed that Petitioner~s total
carbon monoxide release was 1.40 lbs,/hr, Using an air flow rate
of 7 cfm, the Agency estimated the 1.40 lhs./hr. emission rate was
equivalent to about 9,000 ppm. Rule 206(c) allows Petitioner to
emit a maximum of 200 ppm (adjusted to 50 excess air) after
December 31, 1973.
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Petitioner’s first three applications for operating permit
were denied by the Agency for “lack of information, lack of data,
and lack of compliance schedules’t. A fourth application was denied
on May 2, 1973 and Reilly Tar then filed the variance petition.
At this time, there are no control devices on the distillation
unit capable of reducing carbon monoxide emissions to acceptable
levels. Petitioner has submitted a Compliance Plan and Project
Completion Schedule for the installation of a low volume waste gas
burner, type D.F.S. Fumeabator. This device will burn the various
gasses which at the present time are emitted to the atmosphere, so
that the final emission will be essentially water vapor and carbon
dioxide. The installation of this control equipment will be on the
following schedule:
Part A
-
July 1973
-
Evaluation of the Fumeabator on
Petitioner’s new enamel plant (also located
in Granite City).
Part B
-
October 1973
-
Petitioner to apply for a construction
permit for the Fumeabator on its coal tar
refinery.
Part C
-
November 1973
-
Petitioner will enter into a
binding agreement to purchase the equipment.
Part D
—
January 1974
—
Petitioner expects delivery of the
equipment.
Part E
-
March 1974
-
Petitioner expects equipment to be
installed and operational and expects to
demonstrate compliance with Rule 206(c) of
the Air Pollution Control Regulations.
The record shows that a Fumeahator has been installed at
Petitioner’s new enamel plant which is located adjacent to the coal
tar refinery. William Justin, Petitioner’s Director of Environmental
Control, testified that the Fumeabator system at the enamel plant was
received with safety devices normally considered as standard components
of such equipment. However, because of the highly flammable nature of
the Reilly gasses, the Reilly engineering staff decided to devise an
additional protection system to insure that fire could not flash back
through the piping network and cause an explosion. The additional
safety devices include steam—jacketed flame arrestor, steam ejector
to move the gas stream and automatic valves. The presence of naphtha—
lene in the waste gas of the Reilly plant presented a special problem
in the design of the system. Naphthalene solidifies at normal ambient
temperatures and could accumulate at certain critical points in the
piping network thereby plugging the safety devices. These and other
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operational difficulties have delayed start-up of the enamel plant,
but Petitioner advises that the delay probably would not affect the
Project Completion Schedule as submitted. Petitioner indicates
that the installed cost for the incinerator system at the distillation
plant would be about $20,000.
Although Reilly has similar onerations at other locations,
its Granite City facility was selected as the site for installation
and testing of the incinerator control system. Petitioner plans to
use this method of pollution control not only at Granite City but
at its other factories if the method proves satisfactory.
A company official testified that production capacity of
$40,000 to $70,000 per week would be lost if the plant were forced
to cease operations during the first three months of 1974. The
record indicates that Petitioner could install the incinerator
equipment at the distillation plant and have the equipment in
operation by the December 31, 1973 deadline. A back up incinerator
device has been located and is available in the event the first system
is found unsatisfactory.
Initially, the Agency recommended that we deny the variance.
This recommendation was changed after Petitioner demonstrated to
the Agency that, because of the potentially explosive nature of the
waste gas stream, complete testing was necessary to insure the safety
of Reilly’s employees and to protect the plant from fire. In its
Amended Recommendation, the EPA recommends granting the variance.
Petitioner’s carbon monoxide emissions, while above the allow-
able rate, are not alarmingly high. Testimony indicates that
Petitioner’s hourly carbon monoxide emissions are equivalent to
carbon monoxide emissions from 12 automobiles driving 10 miles.
We believe the primary concern in this case must be for the
safety of
the
employees. Petitioner is testing the new incinerator
now. A back up device will
be
available in the event the Fumeabator
system proves unsatisfactory,
The Project
Completion Schedule
indicates
that
Petitioner will
achieve compliance within three months
of the deadline. We do not find this delay unreasonable in view of
the dangers inherent in installation of an untested system. We
shall grant the variance subject to conditions which will assure
installation of the control equipment.
ORDER
It is the order of the Board that:
1. Reilly Tar and Chemical Corporation is granted variance
from Rule 206(c) of the Air Pollution Control Regu-
lations at its Granite City tar distillation plant
until March 31, 1974.
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2. Variance is conditioned upon the submission to the
Agency of quarterly reports detailing progress or
lack of progress in installation of the Fumeabator
or other control equipment at the Granite City tar
distillation plant. Such reports shall commence
on October 1, 1973.
3. Petitioner shall, by October 1, 1973,. post a bond in
the amount of $10,000 in a form acceptable to the
Environmental Protection Agency, quaranteeing the
installation and operation of suitable carbon monoxide
control equipment by March 31, 1974. The bond shall
be mailed to: Fiscal ServicesDivision, Illinois EPA,
2200 Churchill Road, Springfield, Illinois 62706.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, he~ebycertify the above Opinion and Order was adopted
this
(, ~
day of
~Vr4k.w.6.4.&.~
1973 by a vote of 4/ to ~
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