ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September 17, 1987
IN THE MATTER OF:
PROPOSED DETERMINATION OF
)
PCB 87—93
NO SIGNIFICANT ECOLOGICAL
DAMAGE FOR THE JOLIET
GENERATING STATION
ORDER OF THE BOARD (by J.D. Durnelle):
This matter comes before the Board upon a June 19, 1987,
Petition for Thermal Determination under 35 Ill. Adm. Code
302.211(f) filed by the Commonwealth Edison Company (Corn Ed).
Corn Ed requests the Board to determine (1) that the submission of
the Section 302.211(f) petition for the Joliet Station is not
required, or in the alternative (2) that the discharges from the
Joliet Station have not caused, and cannot be reasonably expected
to cause, significant ecological damage to the Five Mile Stretch
within the meaning of Section 302.211(f) of the Board’s Water
Pollution Regulations.
Corn Ed owns and operates the Joliet Station, a steam—
electric generating facility capable of producing 1,414 net
megawatts of electricity. The station is located in Will County,
approximately one mile southwest of the City of Joliet, Illinois,
adjacent to the Des Plaines Rivers The station utilizes Des
Plaines River water for once—through condensor cooling. That
station has two thermal discharges to the Des Plaines River; one
from Unit 6 on the east bank of the river and the other from
Units 7 and 8 on the west bank. The points of discharge are
approximately 7.3 miles upstream of the 1—55 Bridge.
Corn Ed believes that it is not required to make a thermal
demonstration under 35 Ill. Adm. Code 302~2l1(f). Corn Ed argues
that because the Joliet Station discharges into the Des Plaines
River at a point where secondary contact standards govern, the
thermal demonstration required by Section 302~211(f) for
discharges into general use waters is not required.
The Board is not persuaded. Section 302~2ll(f) applies to
waters of the state for which there is no specific designation~.
Although the Joliet Station discharges into water designated
secondary contact, the general use water downstream (the “5—Mile
Stretch”) is also affected.
The Board notes that this is not the first time Corn Ed has
taken the position that it need not make a demonstratiori~ In
its May 25, 1978, Order granting variance, the Board stated:
8 1—283
Edison’s contention that a hearing conducted
pursuant to Rule 203(i)(5) of Chapter 3 is not
appropriate in this case is misplaced. Even
though the Joliet Station discharges into
waters which are covered by Rule 205, the im-
pact of this discharge on Rule 203 waters is
obvious, the Board noted this impact when it
stated:
Edison is required by Sec. 203(i)(5)
to conduct a program to monitor the
effects of their discharges of
heated water from the Joliet Plant
and present the results of that pro-
gram to the Board at a hearing to be
held between March, 1977 and March
1978, If at that time, the Board is
convinced that Edison’s discharge
has not caused, or is not reasonably
expected to cause significant eco-
logical damage to the Des Plaines
River, the Board would not require
Edison to construct cooling facil-
ities... But if the Board is con-
vinced that Edison has caused or is
reasonably expected to cause signi-
ficant ecological damage in the
future, then the Board is required
by Section 203(i)(5) to order Edison
to carry out appropriate measures to
correct ecological damage. (10 PCB
77, 78).
The fact that Edison’s discharge points are
located in Rule 205 waters was known when the
Board made the above quoted statement. There
is nothing in the record of this case which
would persuade the Board to deviate from its
prior position. (Commonwealth Edison Co. v.
Environmental Protection agency, PCB 78—79,
Board Opinion and Order, May 25, 1978, p~
3).
!‘he Board still is not persuaded to deviate from its prior
position.
The Board also notes that Corn Ed has been granted thre~
variances since 1978 from the requirement that it perfoçm a
thermal demonstration. (PCB 78—79, May 25, 1978; PCB 81—24, June
10, 1981; and PCB 84—33, December 20, 1984). The stated purpose
for requesting the variance was to allow the demonstration to be
81—284
—3—
made after the water quality of the river improved to the extent
that temperature was a limiting factor~ In filing the Petition
for Demonstration, Corn Ed would appear to be taking the position
that temperature is now a limiting factor such that a
determination can now be made. This view is further supported by
the fact that Corn Ed had filed a Petition for variance but
subsequently filed a motion to dismiss, which the Board granted
in PCB 87—40. Apparently, Corn Ed believes that the variance is
no longer necessary.
Without determining that the water quality has sufficiently
improved, the Board believes that Corn Ed is required to make a
demonstration that its discharges have not caused and cannot be
reasonably expected to cause significant ecological damage to the
receiving waters (i.e. the 5—Mile Stretch).
The Board therefore accepts the petition and directs the
Clerk’s office to set it for hearing. At hearing, the
participants are expected to address whether temperature is a
limiting factor.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereb certify that
t~e
above Order was adopted on
the
_____________
day of
~
,
1987 by a vote
of
~
.
I
/
/
~
~
1Y1
~
Dorothy M. ,~unn, Clerk
8 1—285