ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
July
27,
1989
CONTAINER CORPORATION OF
AMERICA (Carol Stream Plant),
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 87—183
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
CONCURRING OPINION
(by B. Forcade):
I
agree with everything stated in the majority opinion, but
feel an additional comment
is
in order.
At about
the time this variance petition was being
filed,
the Board decided Ekco Glaco Corp.
v. EPA, PCB 87—41
(December
17,
1987).
The Board held that a
47 ton per year hydrocarbon
source which was unwilling
to commit
to a compliance plan should
be denied a variance.
In part
that denial was based on the fact
that Northern Illinois had a substantial air pollution problem
with ozone and that the source contributed to the problem.
The
Board found:
Ekco Glaco submits
that its VOM emissions will
not
cause
a
significant adverse
impact on air
quality.
This argument misses the point.
The
number
of
hydrocarbon
sources
in
northern
Illinois
that contribute
to the ozone problem
is
large.
That
number
includes every type of
hydrocarbon source from the automobile
to Ekco
Glaco.
It
would
be
impossible
to
conclude
that
any
one
source
“causes
a
significant
adverse impact.~
Yet
the ambient air quality
standards
are violated.
The Board finds
that
Ekco Glaco
is
a
source
of hydrocarbons which,
to
an
unquantified
degree,
contributes
to
frequent, pervasive and substantial violations
of ambient
air quality
standards
for ozone
in
Northern ILlinois.
(pp.
4—5).
In
that proceeding,
the Board found that the health based
air quality standards set under the Clean Air Act were violated
frequently,
pervasively, and substantially.
An unstated, but
well understood,
corollary
to that finding was the proposition
that to achieve compliance
with
the health based standards would
101—243
—2—
require additional hydrocarbon emission reductions that were
“frequent, pervasive, and substantial.”
In December of
1987,
this Board may not have known exactly how much hydrocarbon
reduction the modelling would predict,
but we knew
it would be
“substantial.”
En
a July 11,
1989 Federal Register Notice
(54 FR 29065),
the USEPA stated that the required hydrocarbon emission reduction
would be 72 percent of the 1988 emissions.
Whether or not the 72
percent figure ultimately proves
to be accurate,
it underscores
the fact that required reductions
in hydrocarbon emissions will
be “substantial.”
The point
of the preceding paragraphs
is to demonstrate that
this Board has been aware,
at least
since
1987,
of
the incredible
magnitude of the problem and the correspondingly difficult
decisions that would be required
if our air quality
is to achieve
the health based standards.
Those decisions are difficult
because they require substantial and expensive pollution
reductions
from facilities
that are not guilty of malvolence or
poor pollution control practices
in the past.
This Board cannot modify atmospheric chemistry,
it can only
choose between continued violations of health based standards or
substantial reductions
in existing hydrocarbon emission levels.
If each hydrocarbon emission source makes a “substantial”
reduction,
the burden would be shared equitably.
Each decision
to not require substantial reductions from a particular source
must be viewed
in the context of where else reductions can be
made.
Otherwise,
the problems continue.
Recently, Container Corporation of America has averaged
about 490
tons of VOM emissions per year.
It still has not
committed
to
a compliance plan.
I believe variance denial
is
appropriate.
Bill S.’~Fcrr~ade,Board Meiñber\
I,
Dorothy
M. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Concurring Opinion was
submitted on the
~
day
of
~-,‘
,
1989.
~.
Dorothy M.
nn, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
101 --7
‘h’!