ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
March 7,
1996
IN THE MATI’ER OF:
)
)
CABOT
CORPORATION PETITION
)
AS 96-3
FOR AN ADJUSTED STANDARD FROM
)
(Adjusted
Standard-UIC)
35
ILL.
ADM. CODE PART 738,
)
SUBPART B
)
OPINION
AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by R.C. Flemal):
This matter comes before the Board upon a Petition
for Modification and Reissuance of
Adjusted Standard
filed by Cabot Corporation (Cabot).
The purpose is to conform the
exemption Cabot currently holds under Illinois underground injection control (UIC) law with
exemptions granted to Cabot under federal UIC law.
The requested modifications consist of clarification that leachate and purge water may
be disposed in Cabot’s UIC wells,
in conformity with a similar finding of the United States
Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) issued in November 1994;
and that injection of
restricted waste may take place in Cabot’s new UIC Well #3,
in conformity with
a finding of
USEPA issued in January
1996.
The Board’s responsibility in this matter arises from the Environmental Protection Act
(Act)
(415
ILCS
5/1
et seq.).
The Board is charged therein to
“determine,
define and
implement the environmental control standards applicable in the State of Illinois”
(Act at
Section 5(b)) and to
“grant
.
.
.
an adjusted
standard for persons who can justify
such an
adjustment”
(Act at Section
28.1(a)).
More generally, the Board’s responsibility in
this matter
is based on the system of checks and balances integral to Illinois environmental governance:
the Board is charged with the rulemaking and principal
adjudicatory functions,
and the illinois
Environmental Protection Agency (Agency) is responsible for
carrying out the principal
administrative duties.
The Act also provides that “the Agency shall participate in
adjusted
standard
proceedings”.
(415 ILCS 28.l(d)(3).)
On February
15,
1996 the Agency filed a
recommendation that the instant requested adjusted standard be granted.
The recommendation
was accompanied by a motion to
file instanter.
The motion is hereby
granted.
Based upon the record before it and upon review of the factors involved
in the
consideration of adjusted
standards,
the Board finds that Cabot has demonstrated that grant of
an adjusted standard in
the instant matter is warranted.
The adjusted
standard accordingly will
be granted subject to conditions set out by USEPA on a similar federal exemption.
2
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Cabot has previously been granted an exemption from the general prohibition against
underground injection of restricted waste.
That exemption was initially granted by USEPA in
1990 upon petition from Cabot with support of the Agency’,
and subsequently issued by the
Board in docket AS 92~82. The exemption was
then, as now, based on the “no-migration”
provisions found
under both
federal and Iffinois law.
In late 1994 Cabot sought clarification of its federal UIC exemption from USEPA
such
as to make explicit that certain leachate and purge water could be disposed in the UIC wells.
On November 4,
1994 USEPA entered
this clarification into Cabot’s federal exemption.
(Petition Exh. D.)
Cabot did not at that time request that the Board also introduce the
clarification into State law.
In August
1995 Cabot made a second request regarding its
federal exemption,
specifically requesting that the exemption allow disposal in a new UIC
well, known as Well
#3.
This request was proposed to be granted by USEPA by publication on November 28,
1995 at 60 Fed. Reg.
58623
et seq.
In addition, a public notice,
pursuant to 40
CFR 124.10,
was
published in
the local
papers on December 5,
1995,
and a public hearing was tentatively
set for January
1996; USEPA subsequently canceled the hearing “due
to lack of public interest
in
the decision”
(Supp.
Exh.
at
3).
The
USEPA has now reissued the exemption3,
including
exemption for Well #3,
with an effective
date ofJanuary
22,
1996.
Simultaneously with
filing ofits
federal request regarding Well #3,
Cabot
filed the
instant matter with the Board.
The initial filing
occurred on August
17,
1995;
the petition was
filed under the old docket number, AS 92-8.
By order of September 7,
1995
the Board found
that Cabot’s petition was sufficiently different from the adjusted standard
granted in AS 92-8
to require opening a new docket.
The Board also found the petition insufficient and required
that Cabot submit additional
material to
meet the requirements of Section
106.705 of the
Board’s procedural rules.
(35
111. Mm. Code 106.705.)
Cabot filed an
amended petition curing the insufficiency on October 19,
1995.
Among
the additions made to the peitition was requested language for
the adjusted standard.
‘See 55 Fed. Reg.
49340 (November 27,
1990) and 56 Fed. Reg.
5826
(February
13,
1991).
2
In the Matter of:
Petition of Cabot Corporation for an Adjusted
Standard from 35
Ill. Adm.
Code 738.Subpart B, AS 92-8,
February 17,
1994.
~USEPA’s Notice of Reissuance is in the record of this matter as an attachment to
Cabot’s
filing ofJanuary 23,
1996,
and is identified as Supplemental Exhibit
cited as
“Supp. Exh.”.
3
Cabot has waived hearing in this matter.
No other person has requested a hearing,
and
accordingly
none has been held.
Cabot has requested expedited consideration by the Board.
By order ofJanuary
18,
1996
the Board granted this request consistent with the Board resources and the need to
complete the record in
this matter.
NATURE OF THE FACILITY AND DISCHARGE
The
facility at issue is located at Tuscola,
Illinois.
It occupies approximately
100 acres
and is located three miles west of Tuscola on Route 36.
Cabot employs
184 people at the
facility which has been in operation
since
1958.
The facility is an inorganic
chemical
manufacturing plant which manufactures fumed
silicon dioxide
(or fumed silica,
SiC)2)
marketed under the registered trademark of Cab-O-Sil®,
Silicon dioxide is used as an additive
in many products.
The production process involves the hydrolysis/oxidation of a chlorosilane feedstock to
produce Si02 and hydrochloric acid (HCI).
(Pet. at 2.)~The
chlorosilane feedstocks include
silicon tetrachioride (SiCl4),
methyl
trichlorosilane (CH3SiC12), and trichlorosilane
(HSiC12).
(Id.)
The central reaction in the manufacturing process is combination of silicon tetrachloride
with oxygen and hydrogen to produce both
fumed
silica and hydrogen chloride vapor.
(USEPA Notice of Intent to Reissue Exemption,
60
FR 58623, 58624.)
Separation results in
fumed silica, product hydrochloric acid, and wastewaters contaminated
with hydrochloric acid;
the latter requires disposal.
Cabot usually injects this waste, along with
rainwater runoff and
seepage into
its UIC wells.
(60 FR
58624.)
Other hazardous waste streams are also generated
at the facility, of which many are
injected into its UIC wells.
(Pet.
at 2.)
Those waste streams injected into the UICs include
acidic wastewater from air pollution control scrubbers,
stack drains,
fan drains,
other
equipment drains and washdown (D002);
surface water drainage,
seepage,
leachate,
monitoring well purge water and groundwater (F039);
spent acetone from
the QC
laboratory
(F003);
and unsalable by-product HC1
(D002).
(Id.)
The
facility has
three UIC wells which have been issued UIC
permits from the Agency.
Wells #1
and #2 have been used pursuant to the existing federal/state exemption
to inject
hazardous waste.
UIC Well #3 has not been used to inject hazardous waste.
However, Cabot
intends to replace Well #1
with Well #3
once Well #3 is authorized; at that time Cabot will
plug and abandon Well #1.
(Id.)
“Cabot’s August
17 petition will be cited as “Pet, at
“;
the Agency’s recommendation
will
be cited as “Agency at
“.
4
UIC ADJUSTED STANDARD PROCEDURE
The illinois Environmental Protection Act at
Section 28.1(415 ILCS 5/28.1(1994))
provides that a petitioner may request, and the Board may impose, an environmental
standard
that is different from the standard that would otherwise apply to the petitioner as the
consequence of the operation ofa rule of general applicability.
Such a standard is called an
adjusted standard.
The general procedures that govern an adjusted
standard proceeding are
found at Section 28.1 of the Act and within the Board’s
procedural rules at 35
Ill. Adm.
Code
Part 106.
Cabot seeks an adjusted
standard from the requirements set forth
at 35
Ill. Adm.
Code
Part 738, Subpart B which prohibit the underground injection of certain restricted hazardous
wastes.
The procedures
via which an adjusted standard from the UIC prohibitions may be
sought, and the level ofjustification required
for a petitioner to qualify for a UIC adjusted
standard, are set out at 35
Ill.
Adm.
Code 738.Subpart C.
738.Subpart C has the following
organization:
PART 738
HAZARDOUS WASTE INJECTION
RESTRICTIONS
SUBPART C:
PETITION STANDARDS AND
PROCEDURES
Section
738.120
Petitions
to Allow Injection of Prohibited Waste
738.121
Required Information
to Support Petitions
738.122
Submission, Review
and Approval or Denial of Petitions
738.123
Review of Adjusted Standards
738.124
Termination of Approved Petition
Each
of the
Part 738
sections is identical-in-substance
with the federal UIC exemption
provisions,
with
the correspondence as follows:
State Regulation
Federal Regulation
Section 738.120
40CFR 148.20 (1988)
Section 738.121
40CFR 148.21 (1988)
Section 738. 122
40CFR 148.22 (1988)
Section 738. 123
40CFR 148.23 (1988)
Section 738.124
40CFR 148.24 (1988)
Section 738.120(a) specifies:
Any person seeking
an exemption from a prohibition under SubpartB for the
injection of a restricted hazardous waste into
an injection well or wells shall submit
5
a petition for
an adjusted
standard to the Board,
pursuant to
35 Ill. Adm. Code
106.Subpart G, demonstrating that,
to a reasonable degree of certainty, there will
be no migration of hazardous constituents from the injection zone for as long as the
waste remains hazardous.
The
demonstration that must be made to gain the “no-migration exemption”
here
requested is found at Section 738. 120(a)(1)(A).
A
showing is required that:
Fluid movement conditions are such that the injected
fluids will not migrate
within
10,000 years:
i)
Vertically upward
out
of the injection zone;
or
ii)
Laterally within the injection zone
to a point of discharge or interface
with
an Underground Source ofDrinking Water (USDW) as defined in
35
Ill, Adm.
Code 730.
USEPA’SMODIFICATIONS OFEXEMPTION
Cabot’s instant request is for two modifications of the existing State exemption.
These
are (1)
that there be explicit identification that multi-source leachate from Cabot’s leachate
collection system or purged
from on-site monitoring wells (purge water) is among the wastes
for which underground injection may occur,
and (2)
that Well #3 be explicitly identified as a
well within which underground injection may
occur.
Both
modifications have already been
granted
by USEPA with respect to federal
law.
The multi-source leachates at issue
are
classified asRCRA F039 wastes. The original
USEPA exemption did specifically identifyF039 waste as one of the wastes for which
exemption
was granted;
so did the Board’s February 1994
grant of adjusted standard.
However,
the content of Cabot’s specific multi-source leachates did not correspond fully with
the chemical constituents listed
in
the original federal exemption.
To rectify this situation,
Cabot in August
1994 requested that USEPA modify the
exemption.
Cabot supplied USEPA
with the full
additional list ofconstituents.
(Petition Exh.
C.)
On November 4,
1994
USEPA issued Cabot a modification of the exemption that added
the new constituents in question to the list of exempted wastes for Wells
#1
and #2.
(Petition
Exh. D.)
USEPA found
that Cabot’s original no-migration demonstration remained valid even
considering
the disposal
of the leachate
and purge water.
(Id.;
Pet, at 4.)
Cabot’s argument to
USEPA regarding the use of Well #3 was made on
the same basis
as the original grant of exemption for Wells #1
and #2.
That is,
Cabot
argued, and USEPA
agreed,
that use of Well #3 presented a no-migration hazard.
In awarding the exemption for
Well#3, USEPA noted:
6
As required by 40 CFR part
148, Cabot has demonstrated,
to a reasonable
degree of certainty,
that there will be no migration of hazardous constituents
from the injection zone for as long as the waste remains hazardous.
This fmal
decision allows the initiation of underground injection by Cabot of specific
restricted hazardous wastes, including
hydrochloric acid and wastewaters
contaminated with hydrochloric
acid which are hazardous because
they are
corrosive (Waste Code D002), a multi-source leachate (Waste Code F039)
contaminated with
small amounts of 1. l-dichloroethylene,
1.2-dichloroethylene,
methylene chloride, phenol, tetrachloroethylene,
and trichloroethylene from a
closed waste storage impoundment, and low concentrations of residual,
spent
acetone (Waste Code F003)
rinsed from laboratory
glassware cleaned with
solvent, into a Class I hazardous waste injection well, specifically identified as
Well No.
3, at
the Tuscola facility.
This reissuance also incorporates
conclusions based on geological data gathered during construction of that well
and contained
in the petition for reissuance dated August 16,
1995,
into the
Administrative Record of the decision to grant Cabot Corporation an exemption
from the Land Disposal Restrictions.
This
decision constitutes a final USEPA
action for
which there is no administrative appeal.
(Supp.
Exh. at 3.)
DISCUSSION
AND
CONCLUSION
In its granting the original UIC exemption to Cabot in AS 92-8,
the Board
placed
weight both on the quality ofUSEPA’s technical review and on the need to
keep Illinois’
identical-in-substance environmental
programs in conformity with the corresponding federal
programs.
The
Board today again gives weight to
both of these considerations.
As regards the technical merits of the Cabot’s request, the Board observes that
awarding of any exemption for underground injection of wastes requires a substantial
demonstration on the
part of an applicant.
These are
detailed in the Board’sorder in AS 92-8,
and
will not berepeated in full here.
As regards the identical-in-substance nature of today’s adjusted
standard request,
the
Board observes, as it did in
AS 92-8, that because
the Illinois
UIC program is identical-in-
substance with
the federal UIC program, it is intended to be no more (or less) stringent than
the federal program.
(AS 92-8 at p. 7.)
The
Board today finds,
also as it did in
AS 92-8
(Id,),
that
State denial of the exemption granted Cabot under federal law would cause a more
stringent
State law to apply to
Cabot.
In sum, the Board finds that Cabot has
demonstrated that grant of an adjusted
standard
is warranted.
The Board has also reviewed thejustification
provided by
Cabot to
USEPA, and
fmds that Cabot has made all
the
demonstrations required pursuant to the identical-in-substance
regulations at 35 Ill, Adm.
Code 738.Subpart C.
7
The Board further finds that the conditions imposed by USEPA on
the similar federal
exemption are necessary limitations on the grant
ofthis adjusted standard.
Accordingly, the
adjusted
standard will be
granted subject to those conditions.
These include addition to the
Board’s
February
1994 grant of
adjusted standard language that reflects the USEPA
modifications of November
4, 1994 regarding limits onF039
waste
and of
January
22,
1996
regarding use of Well #3.
This opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and conclusions of law in this
matter.
ORDER
Cabot Corporation is hereby
granted an adjusted
standard from the requirements of 35
Ill. Adm, Code 738, Subpart B, for
the
underground injection control
Wells #1,
#2, and
#3
at
its Tuscola,
illinois,
facility.
This adjusted
standard constitutes an exemption from
the
prohibitions of Subpart B such as to allow the underground injection disposal of wastes
classified as acidic water (D002), by-product hydrochloric (D002),
spent acetone (F003) and
multi-source leachate (F039).
This adjusted standard
is subject to the following conditions:
a)
The monthly average injection rate must not exceed
400
gallonsper minute;
b)
The concentrations of the
constituents included in the injected leachate will not
exceed the following values:
Acetone
47,000.00
mg/L
Tetrachloroethylene
1.66mg/L
Methylene chloride
59.0 mg/L
Trichioroethylene
1.66mg/L
1,2 Dichloroethylene
.33mg/L
1,1 Dichloroethylene
2.33mg/L
Phenol
12,000.00
mg/L
1,1 Dichloroethane
.33mg/L
1,2 Dichloroethane
1.66mg/L
Trans 1,2 Dichioroethane
33.33mg/L
Cis 1,2 Dichioroethane
23.33mg/L
1,1,1 Trichloroethane
66.66mg/L
1,1,2 Trichloroethane
1.66mg/L
Vinyl Chloride
.66mg/L
Chioroethane
3.33
mg/L
Chloroform
.33 mg/L
Ethylbenzene
233.33 mg/L
Xylene
(Total)
3333.33mg/L
8
Toluene
333.33mg/L
1,1,1,2 Tetrachioroethane
.33mg/L
1,1,2,2 Tetrachioroethane
.33mg/L
Cyanide
(Total)
66.66mg/L
Barium
666.66
mg/L
Cadmium
1.66 mg/L
Chromium
33.33 mg/L
c)
Direct
injection shall occur only into the Franconia, Potosi, and Eminence
Dolomites and the Gunter Sandstone;
d)
The injection zone consists of the Franconia, Potosi, Eminence and Oneota
Dolomites
and the Gunter Sandstone, found between 4,421
and 5,400 feet in
Cabot’s Well #1,
between 4,442
and 5,400 feet in Cabot’s Well
#2,
and
between 4,452
and 5,400 feet in Cabot’s Well #3; and
e)
Cabot must be in
full compliance with all conditions of its permits
and other
conditions relating to
the exemption found in
35
Ill. Adm.
Code 738.123
and
738. 124.
IT IS SOORDERED.
Section 41 of the Environmental Protection Act, 415 ILCS 5/41 (1994), provides for
appeal of final orders of the
Board
within
35
days. The Rules of the Supreme Court of Illinois
establish filing
requirements.
(See also 35 Iii. Adm.
Code
101.246,
Motions for
Reconsideration.)
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control Board, hereby certify that
theabove opinion and order
was
adopted on the
T~
day of
L07
~&c-(:i’
1996,byavoteof
7-/)
.
Dorothy M.,’~unn,Clerk
Illinois Pol~y~ion
Control Board