ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    May 24,
    1979
    IN THE MATTER OF A PROPOSAL TO
    RELAX THE SULFUR CONTENT IN RESIDUAL
    )
    R75—8
    AND DISTILLATE
    FUEL OIL IN ILLINOIS,
    EXCEPT COOK COUNTY
    INTERIM OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by Mr. Goodman):
    On April
    14, 1972,
    the Illinois Pollution Control Board
    (Board) adopted the Emission Standards
    of the Air Pollution
    Control Regulations,
    Chapter
    2 of the Board’s Rules and
    Regulations.
    The standards included Rules 204(h)(2)
    and
    204(c)(2),
    sulfur dioxide emission standards for smaller new
    and all existing fuel combustion emission sources burning
    liquid fuel exclusively.
    On May 30,
    1975, Petitioners
    herein, pursuant to Section 28 of the Environmental Protection
    Act
    (Act) proposed to amend Rules 204(b)(2) and 204(c)(2)
    of
    Chapter
    2.
    The proposal was accompanied by the requisite
    number of signatures,
    and on June
    26, 1975,
    the Board authorized
    it for hearing.
    Hearings were held on September
    30,
    1975,
    in Edwardsville, October 26, 1976,
    in Springfield,
    and
    January 17 and 24, 1977 in Chicago.
    On January
    6,
    1977,
    the
    Board ordered Petitioners to answer certain interrogatories.
    The answers were received on January 19,
    1977.
    The Board received the economic impact study of this
    proposal on December
    2,
    1977.
    The study,
    IIEQ Document No.
    77/30,
    is entitled “Economic Impact of Relaxing the Regula-
    tion on Sulfur Content
    of Fuel Oils.”
    Economic impact hear-
    ings were held on March
    21 and April
    24,
    1978,
    in Chicago
    and Springfield,
    respectively.
    Petitioners propose to amend Rules 204(b)(2)
    and 204(c)(2)
    in the following manner:
    1.
    Amend Rule 204(b)(2) to read as follows:
    “(2) Liquid fuel Burned Exclusively.
    (A)
    Except as
    provided in subparagraph B of this part, Nno
    person shall cause or allow the emission of sulfur
    dioxide into the atmosphere
    in any one hour period
    from any new fuel combustion source with actual
    heat input smaller than,
    or equal
    to, 250 million
    btu per hour,
    burning liquid fuel
    exclusively:
    *A+
    (1)
    to exceed ~9
    1.3 pounds of sulfur
    dioxide per million btu of actual heat
    input when residual fuel oil
    is burned;
    and
    33—6 13

    —2—
    fB+
    (2)
    to exceed ~
    0.5 pounds
    of sulfur
    dioxide per million btu of actual heat
    input when distillate fuel oil
    is burned.
    (B)
    No person located within Cook County Illinois,
    shall cause or allow the emission of sulfur
    dioxide into the atomsphere
    in any one hour
    period from any new fuel combustion source with
    actual heat input smaller than,
    or equal
    to,
    250 million btu per hour,
    burning liquid fuel
    (1)
    to exceed 1.0 pounds of sulfur dioxide per
    million btu of actual heat input when resi-
    dual fuel oil is burned;
    and
    (2)
    to exceed 0.3 pounds
    of sulfur dioxide per
    million btu
    of actual heat input when dis-
    tillate
    fuel oil
    is burned.”
    2.
    Amend Rule 204(c)(2) to read as follows:
    “(2)
    Liquid Fuel Burned Exclusively.
    (A)
    Except as pro-
    vided in subparagraph B of this part, Nno person
    shall cause or allow the emission of sulfur dioxide
    into the atmosphere
    in any one hour period from
    any existing fuel combustion emission source,
    burning liquid fuel exclusively:
    +A-)~
    (1)
    to exceed 1.0 pounds of
    sulfur dioxide
    per million btu of actual heat input
    when residual oil
    is burned;
    and,
    ~B+
    (2)
    to exceed 0.3 pounds of
    sulfur dioxide
    per million btu of actual heat input
    when distillate
    fuel oil
    is burned.
    (B)
    No person located outside of Cook County,
    Illinois,
    shall cause
    or allow the emission
    of sulfur dioxide from any existing fuel
    combustion source with actual heat input
    smaller than,
    or equal
    to, 250 million btu
    per hour, burning liquid fuel exclusively:
    (1)
    to exceed 1.3 pounds
    of sulfur dioxide
    per million btu of actual heat input when
    residual
    fuel oil
    is burned;
    and,
    (2)
    to exceed 0.5 pounds of sulfur dioxide
    per million btu of actual heat input when
    distillate
    fuel oil is burned.”
    33—614

    —3—
    Petitioners in this matter,
    as
    listed on the Petition,
    are:
    Apco Oil Corporation, Champlin Petroleum Company, Con-
    tinental Oil Co.,
    CRA, inc., Explorer Pipeline Co.,
    FS Ser-
    vices,
    Inc., Kerr—McGee Corp.,
    Phillips Petroleum Co.,
    Skelly Oil Co., Sun Oil
    Co.,, Texaco Inc.,
    Union Oil Co.
    of
    California,
    and Williams Pipeline Co.
    Petitioners indicate
    in their Statement of Reasons Supporting Proposal
    that they
    are collectively engaged in the refining,
    transportation and
    distribution
    of distillate and residual fuel oils marketed
    in Illinois.
    In their Statement of Reasons, Petitioners assert that
    recent oil product tests indicate that the sulfur content of
    distillate and residual fuel oil transported for possible
    distribution and marketing in Illinois
    is increasing to the
    extent that it increasingly exceeds
    0.3 and 1.0 percent,
    respectively.
    Petitioners attribute
    this increase
    in sulfur
    content
    to reduced availability of low sulfur crude oils
    in
    refineries serving midwestern states,
    including Illinois.
    Petitioner refiners contend that retention of the current
    standards would force them to either install very costly
    desulfurization and related equipment or discontinue shipment
    of distillate and residual
    fuel oil into Illinois.
    In the
    alternative,
    Petitioner pipeline companies could increase
    their present ability to segregate and/or blend
    fuel oil
    products to supply low sulfur fuel areas.
    Such an approach
    would allegedly require costly installation of additional
    piping and tankage at all loading and distribution points
    and would be viable only
    so
    long
    as
    low sulfur fuel oil com-
    ponents are available and the demand for low sulfur fuel
    remains minimal.
    Before beginning our discussion of the record,
    it
    should be noted that the rules
    in question regulate the
    amount of sulfur dioxide emitted, but the discussion in the
    record focuses on the sulfur content by weight of distillate
    and residual
    fuel oil.
    Sulfur dioxide emissions from fuel
    combustion sources are directly proportionate to the percent
    sulfur content of fuel oils by weight as follows:
    for
    sulfur dioxide emissions
    of 0.3 pounds per million BTU’s of
    actual heat input from burning distillate fuel oil,
    the
    sulfur content by weight would be 0.29;
    for emissions of 1.0
    pounds per million BTU’s from burning residual fuel oil,
    the
    actual sulfur content by weight should be no more than 0.925
    percent
    (R.17).
    Mr. Robert Lindsay of Phillips Petroleum Company testi-
    fied on behalf of Petitioners about the global crude oil
    picture,
    including domestic and foreign production
    (R.28-49).
    During the three years preceeding 1975,
    the average sulfur
    content of refinery crude Mr. Lindsay was concerned with
    increased
    .3 percent, from
    .7 to well over
    1 percent sulfur
    (R,36).
    Mr. Lindsay concluded that, based upon the global
    33—615

    —4—
    crude oil picture,
    the only method by which refiners can pro-
    duce products with
    low sulfur
    is the installation of additional
    desulfurization equipment
    (R.37).
    Mr.
    ILL.
    Ted
    of Williams Pipeline Company
    in Tulsa,
    Oklahoma,
    testifying on behalf of Petitioners, described
    generally the mid-continent pipeline operations
    of his
    company~ssystem, which
    is a fungible product system,
    and of
    Explorer Pipeline Company, which is a segregated product
    network (R.65).
    In 1974,
    Williams shipped 1.8
    million
    barrels of number two
    oil to Williams—owned terminals and
    2
    million barrels to shipper-owned terminals.
    Mr.
    Teel submitted
    data
    indicating that for five midwest Williams-owned terminals
    for the period of March, 1974,
    through February,
    1975,
    portions
    of the number two burner oil handled exceeded the limits
    (R.70).
    The two solutions available to product pipeline companies
    to assure availability
    of fuel oil complying with the Illinois
    standards are segregation of
    low and high sulfur fuel oils
    or blending of high sulfur oils with products low enough in
    sulfur content
    that the blended product conforms with the
    Illinois limitations
    (R.71).
    Segregation depends upon a
    sufficient supply of low sulfur oils by shippers to meet the
    demands,
    Williams estimates that,
    in order to assure oil
    complying with Illinois limits by means
    of segregation,
    it
    must spend a minimum of $8 million over a period of two
    years
    to construct necessary additional facilities,
    including
    additional tankage and loading facilities
    at Williams—owned
    terminals and at least one additional pipeline segment.
    This amount does not include the additional tankage that may
    be required at shipper—owned terminals
    (R.73).
    In addition,
    Williams would require up to an additional two weeks advance
    notice prior to actual pumping
    (R.73).
    For the segregated
    product pipeline
    systems such as Explorer Pipeline,
    additional
    pipeline segments would not be necessary,
    but additional
    tankage and loading facilities would be.
    Explorer estimates
    that it would have to expend a minimum of $2.2 million for
    added tankage alone to segregate two grades of number two
    burner oil at two of its terminals (R.75).
    Blending
    is not a viable alternative for segregated
    product pipeline operations such as Explorer.
    Blending
    depends upon an adequate supply of low sulfur number one
    fuel
    in order to provide sufficient product upon demand.
    Since 1973,
    the volume of low sulfur number one fuel oil
    offered for Williams transportation has declined at the rate
    of
    19 percent annually (R.76).
    However, even
    if the requisite
    blending stocks are
    available
    at originating locations,
    problems remain
    (See R.75-78).
    Also,
    reliance upon blending
    would require that each pipeline install additional testing
    at each delivery terminal
    in order
    to achieve the proper mix
    (R.78),
    33—616

    —5—
    Mr. Dick McDowell, Chief Engineer at Union Oil’s Chicago
    refinery,
    discussed the typical refining process,
    including
    desulfurization
    (R.125).
    He introduced a chart of a “typical”
    refinery flow distribution with 2
    crude.
    In the example
    used,
    the final product has a sulfur content of 0.53 percent.
    In order to further reduce the sulfur content in order to
    meet the Illinois
    limitations,
    several alternatives are
    available.
    A refinery may add an additional desulfurizer,
    which would allegedly take approximately
    3 years
    to design
    and build
    and,
    for a unit processing 10,000 barrels a day,
    would cost $8-lU million.
    In addition,
    some refineries may
    require installation of adsorption facilities and a sulfur
    unit
    (R.130).
    Other alternatives include obtaining crude
    with
    a sulfur content of between
    .5 and
    1 percent,
    if possible,
    rather than the 2
    used
    in the example, blending products
    with a
    lower sulfur content with the number
    2 fuel oil or
    removing one of the high sulfur components,
    or reducing the
    crude throughput (R.132).
    The
    latter two alternatives will
    create problems in product distribution (R.131).
    On behalf of Union Electric Company,
    Mr. Jerrell Smith
    testified that the company’s Venice Power Plant,
    which has
    six oil—fired boilers,
    has had difficulty meeting the Illinois
    limitations (R.187).
    Mr. Smith stated that the company
    could comply with the limitations
    if it were willing to
    expend the money
    to obtain the lower sulfur oil, but that
    local refineries have been unable to provide
    it (R.193—195).
    An air quality impact study was prepared on behalf of
    Petitioners by Environmental Technology Assessment,
    Inc.
    (ETA)
    (Exhibit 11).
    The Climatological Dispersion Model
    (CDM), which is a part of the UNAMAP system of the U.S.
    EPA,
    was used to model the change in SO2 air quality in the
    Chicago and St. Louis MMA’s as a result of the proposed
    regulation.
    The area source emissions data for fuel oil
    sources were developed by ETA using surrogate variables
    for
    fuel oil useage and results of a survey of two trade associa-
    tions.
    Determinations of possible violations
    of ambient air
    quality standards was made by adding the estimated increases
    in
    SOT, from these sources,
    as
    a result of changing the
    regulation,
    to the measured existing air concentrations of
    SO
    at monitoring stations in the MMA’s.
    The monitored data
    rehect
    all existing sources of
    SO., emissions,
    and the
    modeled increment
    is the additional contribution from small
    fuel oil sources which would result from putting the proposed
    regulation into effect.
    According to ETA the results
    of the
    analysis are “worst case” estimates of air quality impacts,
    based on use of a state—of—the art dispersion model and a
    number of conservative assumptions in modeling work.
    The modeling analysis of the Chicago and East St. Louis
    areas determined that the maximum annual SO2 contribution
    caused by the proposed regulation would be approximately 3.4
    33—617

    —6—
    micrograms per cubic meter at Waukegan,
    which is 4.3
    of the
    annual
    standards.
    The maximum 24—hour incremental contribu-
    tion predicted was 18,1 micrograms per cubic meter at the
    Maywood monitor,
    which
    is
    5 percent of the 24—hour short—term
    SO2 standard.
    The maximum 3—hour incremental contribution
    predicted was 54.4 micrograms per cubic meter,
    also at the
    Maywood monitor, which is about 4.2 percent of the correspon-
    ding SO2 standard,
    The SO2 contribution from the proposed
    regulation would not cause any monitors which are currently
    below the ambient air quality standards to exceed the long
    or short—term standards.
    Finally, SO~levels already exceeding
    the short and long—term standard would be increased less
    than 2,3 percent
    in all cases
    (P.235—236).
    The author of the economic impact study
    (Ex.12) conclu-
    ded that continuation of the current regulation would result
    in an increase of
    5 to
    10
    cents per gallon of fuel oil, which
    would be
    15 to 30
    above current prices.
    This price increase
    would amount
    to a total increase of $150 to $300 million to
    Illinois fuel oil users.
    This cost was based upon the cost
    of additional desulfurization equipment that he assumed would
    need to be installed and the author’s determination that this
    cost would be passed on to customers.
    The author also conclu-
    ded that the residential heating oil portion of the costs would
    amount to $75 to $150 per year per household or
    0.7 to 1.4
    percent of average pre—tax household income.
    The author
    used the Illinois Bureau of the Budget 1972
    Input/Output
    Model to estimate the increased costs
    of goods and services
    resulting from application of the current regulation.
    The
    model results showed that the fuel oil cost increase would
    cause inflation of up to $110 million
    in the total 1972
    Illinois consumption expenditure of
    $45 billion.
    The author noted that no environmental benefits would
    result from the proposed regulation.
    Environmental costs
    investigated were health,
    ecological and material costs.
    The author concluded that changes in some health effects
    indices caused by enacting the proposed regulation,
    including
    increases
    in mortality rates and decrease in pulmonary
    functions, were highly unlikely and that changes in several
    other indices, including general morbidity rates, were
    impossible
    to predict.
    The author predicted no economic
    loss to agriculture but did estimate that total material
    damage costs
    in Illinois resulting
    from the proposed regula-
    tion would range from $1 to $20 million with a best estimate
    of roughly $4 million.
    Having reviewed the testimony and exhibits,
    the Board
    finds that it does not have enough information at the present
    time to allow it to make a decision in this matter.
    Although
    the record contains much conclusory information,
    it contains
    little of the data necessary to give the Board a representative
    picture of the industry and to convince the Board of the neces-
    sity for the proposed change.
    33—618

    —7—
    First of
    all,
    aside from the discussion of available
    crude
    oil from which residual oil
    is refined, the record
    contains no information on residual oil.
    Williams and
    Explorer ship only distillate
    (R.102), and the No.
    2 fuel
    oil discussed by Union Oil
    is also distillate
    (R.133).
    The
    record contains little information on the quantities or sulfur
    contents of residual oils consumed
    in Illinois,
    where they
    are refined, what desulfurization capability those refineries
    have,
    or methods
    of transport.
    As to the world crude oil pic-
    ture, the record contains no data on the quantity and sulfur
    content of fuel oil consumed annually in Illinois itself over
    the last several years and the effect worldwide changes will
    have on the sulfur contents of crudes used in Illinois.
    As to the product pipeline companies and the problems
    they face in supplying oil which complies with Illinois
    standards, testimony presented concerned only the Williams
    and Explorer Pipeline Companies.
    Mr. Teel indicated that
    there are other pipeline companies serving Illinois, but he
    did not know how many
    (R.88).
    The Board has no means
    of
    assessing whether the problems faced by Williams and Explorer
    are indeed representative
    of industry as a whole.
    The
    record lacks an inventory of product pipelines transporting
    distillate oil
    to Illinois purchasers, capacities of the
    pipelines,
    storage capacities
    at receiving terminals,
    capability
    of segregating
    low sulfur fuels during transport and storage,
    capability of blending oils to obtain compliance,
    and the
    cost of such blending and/or segregation.
    Information
    in the record on refineries serving Illinois
    is equally scant.
    The record lacks
    an inventory of refineries
    producing oil for Illinois,
    the quantity and sulfur content
    of oil received and produced by each refinery, present
    desulfurization capacities of the refineries and how much of
    that capacity
    is being used,
    the flexibility in the refining
    process itself to allow for blending
    of products,
    and the cost
    for each refinery of additional equipment,
    if necessary,
    in
    order to produce oil complying with the current standards.
    The record contains no evidence on the sulfur standard
    applicable in other states which Petitioners supply and no
    explanation of why the sulfur standard
    is proposed to remain
    unchanged for Cook County.
    Finally,
    the record is devoid of
    information or testimony,
    other than that presented by Union
    Electric, on behalf of sources to whom the regulatory proposal
    would apply and their current or prospective inability to meet
    the limitations.
    The author of the economic impact study specifically
    noted at page
    16 of the study
    (Ex.
    12)
    that:
    “Customarily,
    in proposing a regulation,
    the petitioner
    lays out not only the benefits but also the rationale or
    33—619

    —8—
    evidence on which these benefits are based.
    In this case,
    the petitioners were unwilling to provide the supporting
    evidence necessary to determine the validity of their
    claims.”
    The author assumed that existing Illinois-supplying refiners
    were at or near desulfurization and fuel oil blending capacity.
    However,
    the author noted that this fact was indeterminant
    (Ex.
    12,
    p.17).
    Furthermore,
    the author found that the evidence
    appears
    to substantiate petitioners’
    contention that substan-
    tially all middle distillate components would have to be treated.
    However, we find that the author’s conclusion in this regard
    was based upon speculation and was not substantiated by evidence
    obtainable only through petitioners.
    The Board attempted to obtain much of the requisite infor-
    mation in the Interrogatories it ordered Petitioners to answer.
    The answers were insufficient, and the Board has no other means
    of obtaining
    it.
    On May
    16,
    1979, Petitioners filed a Motion for Substitution
    of Counsel,
    Reopening of the Record and Identification of Infor-
    mation.
    The Motion is hereby granted.
    The Board will allow
    petitioners six months from the date of this Order
    to submit
    the information which the Board has herein identified as neces-
    sary for
    it to decide this matter.
    In providing the requisite
    information, Petitioners should update information in the record
    and should complete and update answers
    to the interrogatories
    addressed to Petitioners by the Board previously.
    The Board
    orders that another hearing be set in this matter at which
    Petitioners may present this information.
    Failure to submit
    the requisite information within six months will subject this
    proposal to dismissal.
    ORDER
    It is the Order of the Pollution Control Board that:
    1)
    The Motion for Substitution of Counsel, Reopening
    of the Record and Identification of Information,
    filed by Petitioners on May
    16,
    1979,
    is hereby
    granted.
    Petitioners shall
    submit the information
    identified
    in the above Interim Opinion within six
    months of the date of this Order.
    Failure to sub-
    mit the requisite information shall subject the
    petition to dismissal.
    2)
    An additional hearing shall be held in this matter
    within six months of the date of this Order.
    Dr. Satchell abstained.
    33—620

    —9—
    I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
    Control Board,
    herepy certify the above Interim Order was
    adopted on the ~‘/
    day of
    ______________,
    1979 by a vote
    Christan L. Moffet
    lerk
    Illinois Pollution
    ontrol Board
    33—6 2 1

    Back to top