ILLINOIS
    POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    September
    30, 1971
    In
    the’
    rratter of
    #R71—12
    OHIO-WABASH THERMAL STANDARDS
    u~inion
    of
    the Board
    (by Mr.
    Currie):
    We have today adopted new temperature regulations for the
    ohio and Wabash Rivers,
    after public hearings and upon
    the record.
    This coinion gives
    the reasons for our
    action.
    Excessive heat, everyone concedes,
    can pollute.
    As
    is
    extensively discussed in the Board’s opinion in #R 70—2, Thermal
    Standards,
    Lake Michigan
    (June
    9,
    1971), water that
    is too hot
    can seriously disrupt stream or lake ecology
    in
    a number of
    ways,
    such
    as by killing fish,
    by interfering with their re-
    oroductive patterns,
    and by unfavorably affecting
    the algae
    a;d
    other
    plant
    populations.
    How much heat
    is
    too much is
    of course
    a critical and much
    dis~utedquestion, bound up not only with the temperature
    of
    a
    heated
    discharge but also with
    the area of the stream affected,
    which
    in turn depends upon the relative volumes of
    the effluent
    and of
    the receiving body.
    And
    in determining what portions of
    a
    stream,
    if
    any, may be raised above temperatures desirable for
    th2
    natural biota,
    the Board must under
    the statute consider
    the
    o~tcn
    considerable
    costs of providing alternatives
    to the use of
    stream water
    for cooling purposes
    in power generation and
    in industr
    gen?rally.
    Environmental Protection Act, section
    27.
    Present regulations
    (SWB-9 and SWB-l0)
    provide that the
    temper
    ature
    of the Ohio and Wabash Rivers shall not exceed 60°during
    winter nor 90° at other times, and that there shall be no increase
    of more than 5°above natural water temperature.
    These figures
    represent the dual policy that temperatures should be kept near
    normal
    at all seasons and that there
    are certain extremes that rust
    be
    avoided
    even
    when
    normal
    variations
    are
    preserved.
    We
    have
    been
    asked
    by
    the
    federal
    government
    (USEPA)
    to
    rev~
    these
    standards
    slightly
    by
    specifying
    monthly
    rather than seas~. al
    m~::~mum
    temperatures.
    Federal
    approval
    of the Ohio and Wabash
    River
    ~~ndards
    is
    contingent
    upon
    our
    making
    this
    change,
    and federal
    approval
    is
    essential
    to
    full
    federal aid in the funding
    of mun~i~I
    sewage
    treatment
    facilities
    on
    these
    streams,
    The
    suggested
    moo Lhl~~
    ma:~ima have
    been
    adopted
    by
    both
    Indiana
    and
    Kentucky
    to
    govern
    ~
    hertions
    of the
    Ohio
    River
    and
    by
    the
    Ohio River Valley Sanitat~

    Commission
    (ORSANCO),
    to which Illinois is a party,
    to govern the
    entire river.
    They appear
    to be related both to actual tetn~erature
    records
    (P.
    9)
    and to maximum r~err’issihletenp~raturcsconsistent
    with the successful maintenance of the natural ~iota, ~s determined
    by federal biologists
    (P.
    53—S5).
    The
    necessity for
    thlv
    maximum temperatures
    in addition to the general c°-riselir~itatior~
    was
    well
    explained by the statement of Pr.
    flonalc’
    Mount,
    Pireetor
    of the National Water Quality Laboratory:
    Experimental evidenee
    is
    convincing that the teri~~orature
    providing best gro’~th
    of
    fishes is hut a few~degrees cooler
    than a lethal temperature.
    For this reason, sn~~jej~~
    permissible maximum temperatures must he adhered to.
    Even though channel catfish are a bottom dweilinq animal,
    the newly hatched fry stay at the surface for several days
    before moving to the bottom.
    Water that is too warn at
    the surface during that period will completely destroy
    the year class.
    This provides ample reason to adhere to
    the temperature limits prescribed and explains why operation
    of cooling devices for even a few days warrants their cost
    of construction.
    ,(l~. 49—50,
    54).
    in short, the principle of maximum tcmneratures, areaciv
    recogni~ed
    in the Illinois regulations,
    is essentially an analea to the familiar
    regulations prescribing special emission reductions durine air
    pollution emergencies.
    It does no ~nod to nreserve a fish
    population for the bulk of the year and then to snuff them out
    or to destroy a year’s crop of young.
    We aeree that maxima
    must be provided.
    There was objection to the sunqested monthly maxi’~a
    on
    the
    ground they might, as Dr.
    *1r,nnt
    i~rplied,reauire exnensive con-
    struction of standby facilities or
    result
    in
    plant
    shutdowns
    during emergencies
    (P.
    96).
    And so they
    mi&it,
    tuit so
    mi~ht;
    the existing standards.
    A comrarison between the
    eviStit~~i
    and
    the
    proposed maxima demonstrates the likelihood t~mtanyone with su~h
    a problem under th~federal prop~s~l
    would ha~e
    a
    si1a~-
    oroh~
    under the present law:
    Proposed Jan.
    Feb.
    Mar.
    Apr.
    May
    June
    July
    Ang.
    ~ept.
    ~et
    “ov~
    ~
    Ohio(°F.)50
    50
    60
    70
    80
    P7
    ~9
    On
    ~)7
    ~
    r7
    Proposed
    Wabash(°F.)50
    50
    60
    70
    ~‘fl
    90
    7~
    7~
    Present
    60
    60
    60
    90
    50
    ~
    9~
    ~
    90
    ~i
    (~
    Given the fact that
    SUrnmE~
    temzrratures
    in
    th~c~~
    ri;’ers
    naturally
    have
    reache~~~3° en
    0~it—~-
    ~
    ~)
    ,
    +
    soe~
    ci~oar
    that
    the
    present
    regu~
    I
    ~ris
    already
    jnr
    ose
    an
    di seharoers
    tb~
    ö.uty
    to
    provide
    assura
    that
    temperatnres
    at
    times
    ‘7fl1
    nr-~:
    he
    raised
    above
    the
    na~ ~ril.
    Whether
    this
    must
    he
    achieved
    2
    5b4

    once in three years or twice in one,
    if such a comparison
    could
    here
    be made,
    seems not very material,
    since the crux of the
    objection is that
    it is unreasonable
    to require such assurance
    at
    all..
    In short we find that the changes suggested by USEPA,
    while aff.ordlng more precise protection to the environment, do not
    have
    a significantly different effect upon those discharging heated
    effluent than have the existing regulations.
    Much
    is made of the
    fact that
    the maxima change abruptly at the
    end
    of each month
    (R.
    15,
    88),
    but
    the present standard
    is more abrupt yet,
    since
    it
    changes by thirty degrees in
    a single day.
    Short
    of an
    unwieldy table with
    365
    different maxima, we think it would be
    difficult to improve on the proposed table
    in this regard.
    Also
    the subject of
    cofltention at the hearing was
    the
    provision specifying that
    the 5°—rise limit and monthly maxima
    be m’~twithin
    no more than 600’
    from the point
    of discharge
    (R.
    106,
    108, 116—17).
    One witness argued that
    1000’ would be required to
    avoid,
    expensive
    cooling
    devices
    in generating stations
    of over
    600
    mw
    and
    that
    the
    larger zone would not be harmful to the water
    as
    a Whole. Another
    urged
    that
    no
    mixing
    zone
    at
    all
    be
    provided,
    apparently
    intending either,
    as
    in
    the
    Indiana
    regulation,
    that
    opportunity
    be
    given
    for
    ‘Treasonable
    admixture,”
    or
    that
    stream
    temperature
    be
    computed
    on
    the
    assumption
    of complete mixing.
    Neither
    of
    these
    modifications
    would be acceptable.
    Complete
    mixing would allow virtually
    all the river to be raised above the
    standard,
    so long as
    at some point distant .in time and space it
    could theoretically
    be expected to return to normal.
    And “reasonable
    admixture” would be too imprecise
    a standard either for enforcement
    purposes
    or for the guidance of those who must design and operate
    facilities
    for the control
    of heated discharges.
    It
    is our
    obligation
    to specify c~arlywhat area,
    if any,
    is exempt from
    the standards.
    It would of course be possible to
    do without mixing zones
    and to require that
    water
    quality
    standards
    be
    met
    at every point
    in the stream.
    This
    is obviously
    a desirable goal.
    It woicld
    reouire, as we have proposed (#R 70—8) for a number of toxLc
    contaminants,
    that effluents discharged themselves meet the standards
    for the receiving stream.
    But such a requirement would have its
    costs,
    for it would sharply restrict the use of the streams for
    purposes of cooling and
    of waste
    ~
    The
    coneeot
    of
    ,~ht
    mixing
    zone is
    a compromise designed
    to allow relatively snail pertions
    of~
    a stream to
    be degraded below
    desirable conditions
    in order
    to
    reduce the
    cost. of pollution control.
    This compromise
    is built into the existing regulations dWB—9
    and SWB—lO, which provide that water quality standards must be met
    everywhere except “inmediately adjacent to outfalls” and after
    opportunity
    for “admixture”
    of stre~imand effluent.
    No
    figures
    specifying the
    size
    of the exen~ptedarea appear
    in the regulations
    themselves, but
    in
    order
    to provide guidelines for design and en-
    forcement the Technical Secretary of the Sanitary Water Board,
    which
    ~3’~’rtod
    the
    ~
    ~
    ~
    ~.s
    ,
    I .~:ei~o
    ir
    T ~‘roretatiori~f
    7
    565

    the rules in Technical Release 20—22, which provides that
    reasonable admixture
    is deemed to occur within 600’
    from the outfall.
    In re Commonwealth Edison Co.
    (Dresden),
    #
    70—21
    (March
    3,
    1971),
    this Board held that
    it would adhere to the Technical Secretary’s
    interpretation of the size
    of the mixing
    zone
    in the comparable
    regulations
    SWB—8,
    governing
    the
    Illinois
    River.
    Thus
    the present
    proposal to specify
    a 600’
    zone
    is nothing more than a restatement
    of
    the
    present
    law
    as
    it
    has
    been
    construed
    by
    this
    Board.
    We
    are
    aware
    that
    the
    600’
    zone
    may
    or
    may
    not
    be
    the
    ultimate
    best provision on this subject.
    For one thing,
    it was apparently
    based
    upon
    a
    misconception
    as
    to
    the
    distance
    within
    which
    heat
    from a rather large electric plant
    could
    be
    dissipated
    without
    special cooling de~’ices (R.
    27).
    Whether that criterion, with or
    without the misconception,
    is appropriate is another question,
    depending on the cost of
    cooling methods
    and
    the effect of zones
    cf that size upon the particular stream.
    Moreover,
    a complete
    program
    of
    proteqtion
    against
    thermal
    pollution must consider
    not
    only the
    area
    of
    an
    individual
    mixing
    zone
    but
    the
    number
    of
    zones:
    The ob~ervationsemphasize the need for better conditions
    in the bulk of
    the
    receiving
    water
    than
    exist
    in
    the
    plume.
    The f2sh are found to leave the plume because
    it is unsuitable,
    and
    nbviously it follows that they must
    find a cooler place
    to ~o.
    (R.
    51).
    Further, consideration must be given to forbidding zones that
    block passage up or down a stream, and to special provisions for
    avoiding interference with spawning grounds, the shore,
    or the
    bottom (R.
    6—7,
    56—57).
    Some of these considerations have been
    incorporated into
    our
    new Lake Michigan thermal standards,
    #r~
    7O-2~
    and
    some have been made part of the regulation adopted today.
    We recognize therefore the desirability
    of further reexamination
    of the standards today adopted.
    Indeed we have already begun
    hearings on a comprehensive proposal
    (#H71-14
    )
    to overhaul and
    restate the entire package of water pollution regulations, and
    additional provisions regarding thermal pollution are included.
    These hearings will afford an ample opportunity to revisit the
    troublesome question of the mixing zone as well
    as the monthly
    maximum figures..
    In the meantime we have insufficient basis for
    altering the present law as to the 600’ mixing zone, and we there-
    fore continue it in effect by adopting the proposed Ohio and
    Wabash standard.
    We are asked to provide that the standard apply
    to
    a 24—hour
    average temperature, rather than to a single sample
    (R.
    91—92).
    Once again we are unwiling
    at this point to change the present
    law without more proof, especially
    since
    to re~ju~re
    evidence of
    such an average temperature might impose quite an impracticable
    burden on the enforcement process.
    2—566

    On the other hand we think it wise
    to permit
    monthly
    maximum
    temperatures
    to
    be
    exceeded
    by not more than
    30,
    so
    long
    as
    the
    5°-rise
    limit
    is
    adhered
    to,
    for time periods too brief to have biological significance,
    and
    we have added
    a provision to that effect.
    We have
    also,
    for
    reasons given in the Mississippi case,
    added
    a provision specifying
    that
    the monthly maxima are to be met in the main part of the
    river, believing this will afford adequate protection against
    excessive temperatures
    in the naturally warmer shallow backwaters.
    The Illinois Evvironmental Protection Agency, while generally
    acceding
    to the proposed standard,
    asks that we make
    it applicable
    to new sources only
    CR.
    11) and that we couple it with an ORSANCO
    formula for determining permissible discharges
    (R.
    6,
    21-22).
    We
    decline to do so.
    The present standard applies to existing sources;
    we
    see
    no
    reason
    why
    the
    new
    one,
    which
    as
    we
    have
    said
    is
    not
    substantially
    different,
    should not do so too.
    And the ORSANCO
    formula has not been shown to assure that the water quality
    standards will be met at the
    edge of the mixing zone.
    The formula
    may
    be
    an acceptable means
    of defining
    a mixing zone otherw~se
    unspecified, but
    it has not been shown to fit with
    our standard,
    and whether
    it adequately provides
    for emergency situations
    is
    unclear.
    This cuestion too can be further explored in future.
    One
    final point must be considered.
    One witness questioned
    our authority
    to regulate the Ohio River on the ground that
    it
    lies entirely
    in Kentucky,
    the state
    line falling at the low-water
    mark on the Illinois
    side
    (P.
    116—17)
    .
    We disagree.
    Illinois
    has long had water quality standards for the Ohio,
    and federal
    law
    requires
    that we have
    if we are to receive
    full federal funding
    for sewage treatment plants, concededly our responsibility,
    that
    discharge into
    that
    river.
    We have
    a duty to Kentucky and other
    river states
    to limit pollution of the Ohio from Illinois sources,
    and
    the statute expresses
    the state’s
    strong policy
    of protecting
    the quality of border waters
    for the benefit of Illinois citizens
    who use them and for
    the protection of riparian interests
    of Illinois
    landowners.
    Section
    13
    of the Act authorizes
    the adoption of water
    quality standards
    for all “waters,” and “waters”
    are specifically
    defined
    to include not only those ‘~ihich “are wholly or partially
    within”
    or “flow through” Illinois, but
    also those which “border
    upon this State”
    (section
    3(o)).
    Our statutory power
    is clear,
    and
    the strong and obvious interests of Illinois
    in the condition
    of
    this bordering stream are ample
    to sustain the constitutionality
    of
    our
    jurisdiction.
    In sum we think it aenrorriate,
    pending further review of the
    entire thermal
    ccllution issue
    in pending hearings,
    to assure the
    ‘rovision
    of federal funds
    for sewage treatment plant construction
    b!
    ;mdooting the monthly maximum temperatures proposed by USEPA
    for
    the Ohio and Wabash
    Rivers,
    and in other respects
    to preserve
    2
    .
    56/

    existing
    law.
    The
    amendment,
    as
    we
    have
    said,
    should
    afford
    more precise protection to the biota without imposing any
    significant
    new
    burden
    on
    those
    utilizing
    the
    streams
    for
    cooling
    purposes.
    As
    in other cases,
    we also require that the effects
    of new large sources be studied and that correction be made
    if
    significant harm is shown.
    The present standards are based on
    current
    knowledge,
    which
    is
    incomplete;
    we
    must
    review
    them
    in
    the
    light
    of
    future
    learning.
    2

    ORDER
    I.
    Rule
    l.05c
    of
    Rules
    and
    Regulations
    SWB—9
    and
    SWB—l0
    are hereby amended to read as follows:
    All sources of heated effluents shall meet the following
    restrictions outside of
    a mixing
    zone which shall extend
    no
    farther
    in
    any
    direction
    from
    an
    effluent
    discharge
    than
    600
    feet.
    The
    mixing
    zone
    shall
    include
    no
    more
    than one-fourth of the cross sectional area of the river
    nor
    shall
    it,
    at any time,
    extend
    to more than one—half
    of
    the
    surface of any river sector.
    A.
    There shall be no abnormal temperature changes that
    may affect aquatic life unless caused by natural conditions.
    B.
    The normal daily and seasonal temperature fluctuations
    that existed before the addition of heat due to other than
    natural causes shall be maintained.
    C.
    The maximum temperature rise at any
    time
    or place above
    natural temperatures
    shall not exceed 5°F.
    D.
    In addition,
    the water temperature at representative
    locations
    in the main river shall not exceed the maximum
    limits
    in the following table during more than one percent
    of the hours
    in the 12-month period ending with any month.
    Moreover,
    at no time shall the water temperature at such
    locations exceed
    the maximum limits in the following table
    by more than 3°F.
    JAN.
    FEB.
    MAR.
    APR. MAY JUNE JULY AUG.
    SEPT.
    OCT.
    NOV.
    DEC.
    Ohio
    River(°F)
    50~ 50°60°
    70° 80°87° 89° 89° 87°
    78° 70° 57°
    Wabash River
    & Other
    In—
    terstate
    50° 50°60°
    70°80°90° 90° 90° 90°
    78° 70° 57°
    Tributaries
    (°F)
    Main river temperatures
    are temperatures
    of those
    portions
    of the river essentially similar to and
    following the same thermal regime as the temperatures
    of the main flow of the river.

    II.
    A.
    The
    owner
    of
    operator
    of
    a
    source
    of
    heated
    effluent
    which
    discharges
    0.5
    billion British thermal units per
    hour
    or
    more
    shall
    demonstrate
    in
    a
    hearing
    before
    this
    Board
    not
    less
    than
    5
    nor
    more
    than
    6
    years
    after
    the
    effective date of these regulations
    or,
    in the case of
    new
    sources,
    after
    the
    commencement
    of
    operation,
    that
    discharges
    from
    that
    source
    have
    not
    caused
    and
    cannot
    be
    reasonably
    expected
    to
    cause significant ecological
    damage
    to
    the
    River.
    If
    such
    proof
    is
    not
    made
    to
    the
    satisfaction of
    the Board appropriate corrective measures
    shall
    be
    ordered
    to
    be
    taken within a reasonable time as
    determined
    by
    the
    Board.
    B.
    Permits for heated effluent discharges, whether issued
    by
    the
    Board
    or
    the
    Environmental
    Protection
    Agency
    shall
    be subject to revision
    in the event that reasonable
    future development creates
    a need for reallocation of
    the assimilative capacity of the river as defined
    in the
    regulation above.
    C.
    The owner or operator of
    a source of heated effluent
    shall maintain such records and conduct such studies of
    the effluents from such source and
    of their effects
    as
    may be required by the Environmental Protection Agency
    or
    in any permit granted under the Environmental Protection
    Act.
    D,
    Appropriate
    corrective
    measures
    will
    be
    required
    if,
    upon
    complaint
    filed in accordance with Board
    rule’s,
    it
    is found at any time that any heated effluent causes
    significant ecological damage to the River.
    III.
    Paragraph
    4 of Rule 1.08 of SWB-9
    and SWB-lO
    is hereby
    repealed.
    2
    57C

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