ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October
31, 1972
OLIN CORPORATION,
a Virginia
corporation~
vs.
)
PCB 72—357
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENCY
Patrick
0.
Boyle,
Attorney
for
Petitioner
Thomas
J.
Iminel,
Assistant Attorney General for the EPA
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Henss)
Petitioner, the manufacturer of military flares, missile and
rocket igniters and jet aircraft starter cartridges, seeks
a one
year exter~sionof a variance which was granted by this Board in
decisions found at PCB71-60 and PCB 71-371.
The Variance, which
is to expi:~November
24,
1972,
authorizes the open burning of
explosive wastes by Olin Corporation on 290 acres of strip mined
land in Williamson County,
Illinois.
Both parties refer to this
as a “remote” area.
The materials used in Olin’s production include explosives,
pyrotechnics, propellants
and various inert components.
About
2
percent of this hazardous material becomes
scrap along with packaging
material which has become contaminated and is treated as explosive
waste.
The actual amounts of waste to be burned vary according to
production volume.
Maximum amounts to be burned in any week are:
Ammonium nitrate propellant
300
lbs.
Double base propellant
40 lbs.
Single base propellant
20 lbs.
Pyrotechnic flare mix
(high
magnesium content)
1500
lbs.
Fuel Oil
Sufficient to immerse pyrotechnic
mix
as required for safety
reasons
Contaminated packaging and
transfer materials
100
lbs.
The EPA calculates that this burning would cause weekly particulate
emissions of
822.3
lbs.,
CO emissions of
516
lbs. and NO emissions of
435 lbs.
These materials constitute a severe fire and explosion hazard.
Open burning has been acknowludged to be the only safe method of disposal
6
—
121
-2—
Failure
to
dispose
of
the
wastes
on
a
regular
basis
would
result
in
the closing of the Petitioners’ manufacturing plant.
Pursuant to the existing variance Olin Corp. is designing and
constructing an
experimental
incinerator
for
the
disposal
of
the
explosive wastes.
The anticipated completion date of July 1972 was
not met because severe flooding in Pennsylvania delayed the shipment
of necessary incinerator components.
The Variance Petition estimated
the completion date as October 1, 1972.
The EPA indicated that
completion was expected in September 1972.
Petitioner needs five
months for testing of the incinerator following its construction.
No reason is suggested for extending the variance a full year.
The EPA recommends that the
variance
be extended through March 31, 1973
or
until
the
incinerator
is
operational,
whichever
is
sooner
•
We
believe
the
eighteen
week
extension
is
sufficient
on
the
record
before
us.
If
problems
are
encountered
during
testing
which
make
a
further
extension
necessary
those
prqblems
sl3ould
be
brouqht
to
our
attention.
It
is
the
order
of
the
Pollution
Control
Board
that
the
Variance
granted
in
PCB
71-60
and
subsequently
extended
in
PCB
71—371
be
further
extended
through
March
31,
1973,
or
until
the
incinerator
is
operational,
whichever
time
is
shorter,
sufrject
to
all
conditions
of
the
Board’s
Orders in the two previous decisions.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and O;fler was adopted this
.jJô1
day of October, 1972 by a vote of
~
to
3
~,4Lt
IC’
thristan L. Moffett,,~*4erk
Illinois Pollution Control
Board
6—122