ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February 16,
1995
IN THE MATTER OF:
)
AMENDMENTS TO THE NEW
)
R92-21
SOURCE REVIEW RULES
)
(Rulemaking-Air)
35 ILL. ADM. CODE 203
)
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by G.
T. Girard)~:
On February
3,
1995,
the Board received a joint motion filed
by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (Agency) and the
Illinois Environmental Regulatory Group
(IERG)
asking the Board
to reconsider its April 22,
1993 adopted rule final opinion and
order
in this proceeding.
The Agency and IERG are asking the
Board to reconsider the inclusion of~an interpretation for
Section 203.209(b)
in the Board’s opinion.
The Board notes that
such a request
is outside of the requirements of the Board’s
procedural
rules; however, the Board stated in the April 22,
1993
opinion:
The Board will allow any party, upon notice of a
different interpretation by USEPA, to move for
reconsideration on this issue at anytime.
Such a
filing may be filed under Section
101.300 or 101.301
and the Board hereby waives,
for purposes of this
issue,
the time deadlines set forth in those procedural
rules.
In support of the motion, the Agency and IERG point out that
the United States Environmental Protection Agency
(USEPA) has
indicated “that it will disapprove Illinois’ NSR new
source
review
Rules SIP submittal unless the Board withdraws its formal
interpretation of Section 203.209(b)”.
(Mot.
at
2, citing 59
Fed.
Reg.
48839.)
The Board had included the interpretation of
Section 203.209(b) at the request of the Agency and IERG.
The
Board understood that such an interpretation might not be
acceptable to the USEPA and therefore included an opportunity to
request reconsideration.
The Board will therefore grant
reconsideration of its April
22,
1993 opinion and order and upon
reconsideration the Board will strike the interpretation of
Section 203.209(b).
The Board is persuaded that the interpretation of Section
203.209(b)
need not be included in the final Board opinion in
R92-21.
Deleting the interpretation will not change the merits
of the rulemaking and the Board will take no further action on
the proceeding.
The Board will repeat the opinion and order from
April
22,
1993,
and stike the subsection entitled “Interpretation
of Section 203.209(b)” which began on page
6 and concluded on the
top of page
9 of the April
22,
1993 opinion and order.
2
ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February 16,
1994
IN THE MATTER OF:
)
AMENDMENTS TO THE NEW
)
R92-21
SOURCE REVIEW RULES
)
(Rulemaking)
35 ILL. ADM. CODE 203
)
Adopted Rule.
Final Order Upon Reconsideration.
OPINION
AND
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by G.
T. Girard):’
On November 13,
1992, the Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency
(Agency)
filed this proposal for rulemaking.
The proposal
is intended to address permitting for the construction and
operation of new or modified major stationary sources
in
nonattainment areas.
The proposal represents one part of
Illinois’
submittal of a complete state implementation plan
(SIP).
Pursuant to Section 182(a)
of the Clean Air Act,
as
amended in 1990,
Illinois
is to adopt and submit its plan by
November 15,
1992.
On November 19,
1992,
the Board adopted the
First Notice Opinion and Order
in this proceeding without comment
on the substance of the rule.
This proposal was filed pursuant to Section 28.5 of the Act
and was accepted for hearing.
(P.A.
87-1213, effective September
26,
1992.)
Pursuant to the provisions of that section the Board
is required to proceed within set time-frames toward the adoption
of this regulation.
The Board has no discretion to adjust these
time—frames under any circumstances.
The Board held two hearings
as prescribed by Section 28.5 on January
6,
1993, and February 5,
1993.
The record in this proceeding was closed on February 23,
1993, fourteen days after the availability
of
transcripts from
the February
5 hearing.
On March
11,
1993, the Board timely adopted the second
notice opinion and order.
The second notice was submitted to the
Joint Committee on Administrative Rules
(JCAR)
on that same day.
On April
22,
1993,
the Board received a certification of no
objection from JCAR.
Today,
the Board acts to send this
rulemaking to final notice.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Board wishes to acknowledge the special contribution
made by Marie
E.
Tipsord, who has served as Hearing Officer
throughout these proceedings.
3
The Agency filed a motion with the proposal on November 13,
asking that the Board waive several requirements which govern the
filing of
a regulatory proposal.
Specifically, the Agency asked
that it be allowed to submit the original and five complete
copies of the proposal and four partial copies of the proposal,
rather than the original and nine complete copies to the Board.
Further, the Agency asked that it not be required to supply the
Attorney General or the Department of Energy and Natural
Resources with a complete copy of the proposal.
Lastly,
the
Agency asked that it not be required to submit documents which
are readily available to the Board on which the Agency will rely
at hearing.
The Board granted the Agency’s motion on November
19,
1992.
At the January 6,
1993,
hearing in this matter, the Board’s
hearing officer entered an order based on arguments made at the
hearing.
The order would allow anyone who argues that they may
be prejudiced by the notice in the Mt. Vernon newspaper to
question Mr. Romaine of the Agency on his testimony given at the
January
6,
1993, hearing.
In addition, the hearing officer
stated that:
“my reading of 28.5
is that the Agency should be
available, and therefore shall be available to answer additional
questions at the second hearing
.
.
.“.
(Tr.
at 124.)
The
hearing officer limited the scope of questioning to unresolved
issues pursuant to Section 28.5(g)(l)(B).
(Tr.
at 127.)
On January 13,
1993, the Board received a filing from the
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency)
entitled
“Agency’s Objection to Hearing Officer’s Ruling, Language Added
to Section 203.112 Pursuant to Hearing Officer Order,
and USEPA’S
September 3,
1992, transition memo”
(objection).
On January 15,
1993,
the Board received a second filing from the Agency entitled
“Motion for Expedited Decision on Agency’s Objection to Hearing
Officer’s Ruling”
(motiOn).
On January 20,
1993,
the Board
received responses to the objection filed by the Illinois
Environmental Regulatory Group
(IERG), Illinois Steel Group
(Steel)
and Stepan Company
(Stepan).
On January 21,
1993, the Board upheld the hearing officer’s
order.
The Board states:
Upon reviewing the transcript and the arguments put forward
by participants,
the Board
is persuaded that hearing officer
has correctly read Section 28.5 of the Act.
Allowing
questions of the Agency at a second hearing will ensure the
development of complete rulemaking record as well as
expediting the process.
Such a reading of Section 28.5(g)
coinports with the legislative goal of expedited rulemaking
under the Clean Air Act.
The Board affirms the hearing
officer order.
(R92-2l, January 21,
1993,
at 5.)
On January 27,
1993,
the Board received a document entitled
4
“Comments of Chicago Lung Association and the Illinois Chapter of
the Sierra Club”.
The document was filed by Mr. Ron Burke on
behalf of Chicago Lung Association and the Illinois Chapter of
the Sierra Club.
The filing states:
“If a waiver from the Board
is necessary, Chicago Lung Association and the Illinois Chapter
of the Sierra Club request one.”
The Board will considered this
filing a motion to waive for good cause the written submission of
testimony 10 days before hearing pursuant to Section 28.5(g)
of
the Act.
On February 4,
1993,
the Board denied the motion.
On January 29,
1993,
the Agency and the Illinois
Environmental Regulatory Group filed a joint motion requesting
that the Board interpret Section 203.209(b)
as set forth
in the
motion.
On February 23,
1993,
a motion to incorporate
information from previous proceedings into this docket filed by
the Illinois Steel Group.
The Board did not receive responses to
this motion and on February 24,
1993,
the American Automobile
Manufacturers filed motion to file its public comment instanter.
The Board did not receive responses to this motion.
On March 11,
1993, the Board denied both motions.
On April
14,
1993,
IERG filed a motion to clarify the
February 5,
1993, testimony of Mr.
Sid Marder.
The motion asks
for clarification of subsection d on page 141 of the transcript.
The motion further states that the Agency does not object to this
clarification.
The clarification would amend the testimony to
read:
d.
In the case where a source has filed a
complete application for a construction
permltT inciwUng a PSD permit,
prior to the
date of an area as nonattainment,
or the
dates given above, whichever occurs later,
the calculation shall not include emission
increases allowed by that permit.
On April 19,
1993, the Board received a response to the
April
14 motion from the Agency indicating support for the motion
and joining with IERG in moving that the Board adopt the
clarification.
The Board grants the motion and will clarify,
in
this opinion, Mr. Marder’s testimony.
The Board also notes that the Agency at the hearing on
February 5 and in its final comment renewed its objection to
answering questions at the second hearing.
(Tr.
at 133; PC
10 at
12_13.)2
The Board notes the objection.
2The transcripts from the 1/6/93 and 2/5/93 hearings were
consecutively numbered and will be cited as “Tr.
at
_“;
testimony was entered as
if read and given an exhibit number,
exhibits will be cited as “Exh.
—
at
_“;
public comments will
5
DISCUSSION
The Board stated at first notice that it was necessary to
format the proposal submitted by the Agency to comport with
filing and other requirements of the Administrative Code Unit of
the Secretary of State’s Office prior to submission for first
notice.
The specific changes necessary were:
1.
The table of contents contained italicized
material;
2.
The authority note did not include Section 10 of
the Act;
3.
Section 203.145 included a Source note incorrectly
numbered;
4.
Section 203.206 contained incorrect strike—through
and underlines and required renumbering;
5.
The indent levels in Section 203.302 (a) (3) (A) and
(B) were incorrect;
6.
Section 203.303 contained incorrect strike-through
and underlines and an error in a citation;
7.
Subpart H in the text had incorrect spacing.
The Board also notes that the text of the proposal contained
several typographical and grammatical errors which the Board
could not correct prior to hearing under the provisions of
Section 28.5(m)
of the Act.
Those corrections were made at
second notice.
The Agency presented testimony in support of the proposal at
the January
6,
1993, hearing.
Mr. Christopher Romaine testified
for the Agency.
Mr. Romaine indicated that the New Source Rules
(NSR)
apply only in nonattainment areas for the contaminants for
which the area is designated nonattainment.
(Exh.
1 at
5.)
The
rules establish a construction permit program with four essential
requirements imposed on owners or operators of major projects.
(Exh.
1 at 2.)
The four requirements are:
1.
The imposition of the lowest achievable
emission rate (LAER);
2.
A major project must be accompanied by
compensating emission offsets from other
sources in the area;
3.
Present compliance by other sources in the
state which are under common ownership or
control with the person proposing the
project;
be cited as “PC
at
6
4.
The final requirement applies only to
nonattainment areas for ozone and carbon
monoxide.
In these areas an analysis of
alternatives to a particular major project
must be made which demonstrates that the
benefits of the project outweigh the
environmental and social costs.
(Exh.
1 at 3—4.)
A source
is considered to be “major”
if there is a new
source,
if there
is a physical change at a source which
is not
major where the physical change itself constitutes
a major
source,
if there is reconstruction of
a major source,
or if there
is a significant modification to a major source.
(Exh.
1
at 4.)
Significant modifications are an emissions increase of 100 and 25
tons per year
(tpy)
for carbon monoxide and particulate matter,
respectively.
A significant modification for volatile organic
compounds,
nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide
is 40 tpy.
(Exh.
1
at 5.)
The adoption of these rules
is important to Illinois in
order to meet our obligations to adopt appropriate new source
review rules and avoid federal sanctions if we do not have rules
in place.
The adoption of these rules will also codify in
Illinois several provisions which USEPA considers requirements
for permit issuance.
(Exh.
I
at
19.)
Further,
in Attachment A
to the Statement of Reasons filed with the proposal, the USEPA
indicated that the proposal is federally approvable.
The Agency
also indicated that the changes discussed below would not alter
the approvability of the proposal.
(PC 10 at 11-12.)
The economic impact of these regulations on sources range
from incidental to a maximum of $6500 per ton for offsets and
control.
The participants in this proceeding were in general
agreement with the proposal.
For the most part in areas where
there was disagreement an agreement was worked out before
submission of final comments.
The discussion following is a
section by section analysis of changes made pursuant to comments,
as well as a discussion of the areas of contention at second
notice.
Section 203.206
Mr. Harder also testified concerning the “dual source
definition” currently contained in Section 203.206.
Mr. Marder
points out that the USEPA in its December 17,
1992, Federal
Register notice of USEPA’s final approval of the state’s existing
new source review rules
(Exh.
4)
discussed the dual source
7
definition.3
The USEPA indicated in that notice that a plant-
wide definition of source would be acceptable under the Clean Air
Act.
(Tr. at 143; Exh.
4 at 59933.)
Thus, Mr. Marder suggested
that Section 203.206(a)
be amended to reflect a plant—wide
definition of source.
(Tr.
at 144.)
The specific language
suggested by Mr. Marder in Section 203.206
is:
a)
For purposes of this Part, the term “major
stationary source” shall exclusively mean
“building,
structure and facility”,
as those
terms are defined in Section 203.113 of this
Part.
(Renumbering the remainder of the Section).
The Steel Group points out in its comments
(PC
6)
that the
current definition of source found
in the Board’s rules allows
for an individual piece of equipment to be considered a major
source
if the emission rate is high enough.
(PC
6 at
3.)
As a
result changes in such equipment would have to be offset by
changes within that “source”.
(PC
6 at
3.)
The Steel Group
maintains that such
a definition acts as a disincentive to the
replacement of control equipment.
(PC at 4.)
The Steel Group
agrees that the change
in Section 203.206(a) proposed by IERG
would have the desired effect.
(PC
6 at 4.)
However, the Steel
Group believes such a change would create a confusing definition
section.
(PC
6 at
4.)
The Steel Group advocates deleting the
definition of “installation” at Section 203.125 to adopt the
plant—wide definition of source.
(PC
6 at 5.)
The Agency at the February 5,
1993, hearing and in its final
comments expressed support for the language proposed by IERG.
(Tr. at 160; PC 10 at 3-4.)
In addition, CPC and Stepan
expressed support for this change.
(Exh.
11 at 4; Exh.
9 at 12.)
The Board agrees that the adoption of a plant-wide source
definition is advisable at this time.
Without discussing the
merits of the two alternatives to adopting the plant—wide
definition the Board will accept the IERG proposal.
The Board
notes that Section 203.125 was not proposed for amendment at
first notice and therefore the Board will not open that section
at this time.
Mr. Ron Burke, testifying on behalf of the Chicago Lung
Association and the Sierra Club, offered an amendment to Section
203.206(d).
Mr.
Burke offered a change regarding fugitive
emissions.
(Tr. at 193.)
Specifically, the amendment would
3The Board notes that the USEPA final approval appeared
after the initial filing of the proposal.
8
include fugitive emissions in calculation of whether a source is
a major source in a nonattaininent area and provides:
d)
For purposes of this Part,
in
areas that are classified
as serious,
severe, or extreme.. nonattaininent,~ the
fTh~itiveemissions of a stationary source shall be
jr~c1uded.in.determinin~.whet~ier.
it is
a major.
stationary source.
In areas that are not c~lassifiedas
serIous, severe or.extreme nonattainment.. the fugitive
emissions of a stationary source shall not be included
in determining whether
it
is
a major stationary source,
unless the source belongs to one of the following
categories of stationary sources.
The Agency supports this change as
it incorporates guidance
received by the Agency from USEPA.
(Exh.
6.)
In addition the
city of Chicago stated in support for the amendment.
(PC 5 at
2.)
The Board will accept the amendment put forward by Mr.
Burke.
Section 203.201
The Illinois Manufacturer’s Association
(IMA)
expressed
concern with the applicability of the proposal to sources with
pending permit applications or which have permits that have not
been constructed.
(PC
4 at 1.)
IMA
asks the Board to exempt
from these regulations any source which had filed its application
on or before the date on which the Clean Air Act required the
states to adopt those rules.
IMA
points out that the provisions
of these regulations include requirements that the control
equipment and process measures produce LAER (Section 203.301)
and
that the source provide offsets
(Section 203.302).
(PC
4 at 2.)
The
IMA
points that both of these procedures are intended to be
met prior to permit application.
(PC
4 at
2.)
The
IMA
also points that Mr. Romaine testified on behalf of
the Agency that the Agency did not intend to apply the amended
provisions to include sources which had applied for their permits
before November
15,
1992.
(PC 4 at 2.)
The
IMA
also cites to
the USEPA transitional guidance document entered in this
proceeding as Exhibit
2 which indicates that sources which
submitted complete applications by the submittal deadline may
receive final permits under the existing rules.
(PC
4 at
3.)
Therefore, the
IMA
asks that the Board amend Section 203.201
to reflect the policy expressed in the IJSEPA guidance documents
as well as that expressed by the Agency.
That policy
is one
whereby a permit application filed by November 15,
1992, for
nitrogen oxides and volatile organic material emission for
sources located in ozone nonattainment areas are not subject to
these amendments.
Further,
these amendments do not apply to
permit applications filed by June 30,
1992,
for PM1O or by May
9
15,
1992,
for SO2.
(PC 4 at 4.)
The specific change requested
would add to the end of Section 203.201, the following:
Revisions to this Part which were adopted to
implement the Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990 shall not apply to any new major
stationary source or major modification for
which a permit application was submitted by
June 30,
1992, for PM1O, May 15,
1992,
for
SO2,
or by November 15,
1992,
for nitrogen
oxides and volatile organic material
emissions for sources located in all ozone
nonattainment areas.
CPC International,
Inc.,
also expressed concern regarding
the status of construction permits issued where the facility is
not complete.
(Exh.
11 at 4; PC
7
at 5.)
The Agency states that it has “no objection” to the revision
to Section 203.201 being proposed by the IMA.
The Board is
persuaded that the IMA’s offered amendment will accurately
reflect the transition policy of the USEPA and the Agency.
The
Board will amend Section 203.201 as requested by the IMA.
Section 203.303(b)
The Illinois Steel Group recommends that Section 203.303(b)
be amended to clear up an inconsistency within that section.
The
Steel Group points out that Section 203.303(b) (2) directly
conflicts with subsection
(b)(3)
and
(b)(4).
(PC
6 at 16.)
Subsection
(b) (2) could be construed for any source shutdown
whether past or present.
Subsection
(b)(3)
is directed towards
future shutdowns and
(b) (4) toward past shutdowns.
(PC
6 at 17.)
Therefore,
the Steel Group recommends that Section 203.303(b)
be
amended to clear up the inconsistency as follows:
b)
The emission offsets provided:
1)
Must be of the same pollutant and further be of a
type with approximately the same qualitative
significance for public health and welfare as that
attributed to the increase from a particular
change;
2)
Must,
in thc caoc of a ~thutdown,havc ooourrcd
~-inccApril
24, 197~~r .thc d~tcthe are~i~
dc~iignatcdby thc UCEPAUnitcd Statc3 .~nvironmcnt~
Protcoti~n
AQenoy
(UCEPM
c~ a
n~nattairnuerit
area
for the pollutant, whichcvcr Ia marc repent,. and
the. rthutdown Gouroc.i~bcthg.repl~eedby ~~imi1ar
10
~o~roourc~and fa~t, in the case of a fuel
cóinbüst~on
sóürce
be based on the type of
fuel
being burned at the time the permit application is
filed,
and,
if offset is to be produced by
a
future switch to a cleaner fuel,
be accompanied by
evidence that long—term supplies of the clean fuel
are available and a commitment to a specified
alternative control measure which would achieve
the same degree of emission reduction if return of
the dirtier fuel is proposed;
3-)
Must,
in the caac of ~ c~hutdowr~of a
~ow~cc or
permanent curtailment of production or operating
houro ooourr~ngon or ~ftcr the date a permit
application ia filed for
a new or modified aource,
have been made known to the affected work forcc~
4
~.)
Must,
in the case of a past shutdown of a source
or permanent curtailment of production or
operating hours,
have occurred since April
24,
1979, or the date the area is designated
a
nonattainment area for the pollutant,
whichever is
more recent,
and, until the USEPA has approved the
attainment demonstration and state trading or
marketing rules for the relevant pollutant,
the
proposed new or modified source must be
a
replacement for the shutdown or curtailment;
~-
~)
Must be federally enforceable by permit,
~
~)
Must not have been previously relied on,
as
demonstrated by the Agency,
in issuing any permit
pursuant to 35 Ill. Adm. Code 201.142 or 201.143
or this Part,
or for demonstrating attainment
or
reasonable further progress.
The Agency states that it has no objection to the amendment
proposed by the Steel Group.
(PC 10 at 10.)
The city of Chicago
also indicated that it “supports any modifications to the
language in the current proposal that may be necessary in order
to comport with the original intent and to avoid any
inconsistencies that may exist with other subparts of this
section”.
(PC
5 at 2.)
The Board agrees that the language
proposed by the Steel Group will help to make the intent of the
rule clear.
Therefore the Board will adopt the amendment.
Section 203.207
Pennzoil Company raises a concern regarding the major
modification de minimis criteria of 25 tons per year or more of
11
VOCs and NOR.
(PC 2 at 5.)
Pennzoil maintains that the phrase
“an increase
in emissions of 25 tons per year”
in Section
203.207(d)
should include the word “net” before emissions.
Pennzoil believes that such a change is consistent with the Clean
Air Act and reflects the intent of the proposal.
(PC
2 at 5.)
The Steel Group echoes the concern initially brought by
Pennzoil and argues that an amendment to Section 203.207(d)
would
more accurately reflect the intent of the Clean Air Act.
(PC
6
at 13-14.)
The Steel Group states:
The effect of the rule as IEPA has proposed
it,
is that a source which could net out of
the NSR rules under the de minimis exemption
could be brought back into the rules by
proposed Section 203.207(d)
if
it had a
greater than 25 tpy increase at any emission
unit.
(PC
6 at 13.)
The Agency opposes an amendment to Section 203.207(d).
(PC
10 at 6-7.)
The Agency argues that the intent of the Clean Air
Act under these provisions refer to an increase from a single
change.
(PC
10 at 6.)
The Agency states that it
is
inappropriate and inconsistent to introduce the “net increase”
concept of Section 182(c) (6)
of the Clean Air Act into this
section.
(PC 10 at 6.)
The Board finds that the record lacks sufficient information
for the Board to amend Section 203.207(d).
Other Comments
Pennzoil suggested that the definition in Section 203.112(a)
should be revised to include “installation” in order to be
completely consistent with USEPA’s definition.
(PC
2 at 2.)
In
addition, Pennzoil suggested that the listing of sources
in
Section 203.206(a)
should be reorganized so that the listings are
in a more logical order.
(PC 2 at 4.)
The Agency indicated that it did not concur with the changes
suggested by.Pennzoil.
Specifically, the Agency indicated that a
change was not necessary to Section 203.112(a)
given the agreed
upon change Section 203.206(a).
(PC
10 at
5.)
The Agency also
stated that the order of Section 203.206(a)
did not create an
ambiguity.
(PC 10 at 5.)
The Society of Plastics Industry
(SPI) suggested that “non-
volatile compounds also be exempted from the VOC definition”.
(PC
3 at 2.)
The Agency indicated that it had specifically
included the definition promulgated by USEPA in 1992 and that no
12
further change was necessary.
(PC 10 at 7.)
Stepan and CPC also expressed a concern regarding statements
made at hearing by Mr. Romaine on the issue of “negligible”
increases
in emissions.
(PC 8 at 6;
Exh.
9 at
12;
Exh.
11 at 4.)
Stepan and CPC are requesting written guidance from the Agency on
how it will interpret “negligible” increases.
The Agency
indicated in testimony that such written guidance would be
forthcoming.
The Chicago Lung Association and Sierra Club also suggested
that the Agency and the Board amend the rules to include
pollution prevention.
Mr. Burke testified that this was not
federally required at this time.
(Tr. at 203.)
The Board does
not believe that a proceeding brought under Section 28.5 of the
Act is the proper place to address this
issue.
JCAR
& SOS
The Board made several nonsubstantive changes
in response to
comments from JCAR and the Administrative Code Unit of the
Secretary of State’s office.
These changes are reflected in the
Board’s final order.
CONCLUSION
This proposal is necessary to insure USEPA approval of a
state implementation plan under the Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990.
The Agency’s proposal includes economic information,
technical review and indications that the proposal is approvable.
The participants in this proceeding all indicated general
agreement and support of the proposal.
The Board finds that the
record supports proceeding to final notice with the proposal as
amended
in this opinion.
The Board hereby adopts this proposal
for final notice.
ORDER
The Board directs the Clerk to cause the filing of the
following proposal for second notice with the Joint Committee on
Administrative Rules:
TITLE 35:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
SUBTITLE
B:
AIR POLLUTION
CHAPTER
I:
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
SUBCHAPTER a:
PERMITS AND GENERAL PROVISIONS
PART 203
MAJOR STATIONARY SOURCES CONSTRUCTION AND MODIFICATION
13
SUBPART A:
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section
203.101
203.103
203. 104
203.107
203. 110
203. 112
203. 113
203. 116
203.117
203. 119
203.
12~W~
203.
123-a
203.123
203
.
124
203
.
125
203. 126
203.127
203.128
203. 131
203. 134
203. 136
203. 145
203. 150
203.155
Definitions
Actual Construction
Actual Emissions
Allowable Emissions
Available Growth Margin
Building, Structure and Facility
Commence
Construction
Dispersion Enhancement Techniques
Emission Baseline
Emission Offset
Emissions Unit
Federally Enforceable
Fugitive Emissions
Installation
LAERLowest Achievable Emission Rate
Nonattainment Area
Potential to Emit
Reasonable Further Progress
Secondary Emissions
Stationary Source
Volatile Organic CompoundMaterial
Public Participation
Severability (Repealed)
Section
SUBPART
B:
MAJOR STATIONARY EMISSIONS SOURCES IN
NONATTAINMENT AREAS
203.201
203.202
203.203
203.204
203.205
203.206
203.207
203.208
203.209
203.210
203.211
Prohibition
Coordination with Permit Requirement and Application
Pursuant to 35 Ill.
Adm. Code 201
Construction Permit Requirement and Application
Duration of Construction Permit
(Repealed)
Effect of Permits
Major Stationary Source
Major Modification of a Source
Net Emission Determination
Significant Emissions Determination
Relaxation of a Source-Specific Limitation
Permit Exemption Based on Fugitive Emissions
SUBPART
C:
REQUIREMENTS FOR MAJOR STATIONARY SOURCES IN
NONATTAINMENT AREAS
Section
203.301
203.302
Lowest Achievable Emission Rate
Maintenance of Reasonable Further Progress and Emission
Offsets
14
203.303
203.304
203.305
203.306
Baseline and Emission Offsets Determination
Exemptions from Emissions Offset Requirement
(Repealed)
Compliance by Existing Sources
Analysis of Alternatives
SUBPART
F:
OPERATION OF A MAJOR STATIONARY SOURCE OR MAJOR
MODIFICATION
Section
203.601
203.602
203.603
Lowest Achievable Emission Rate Compliance Requirement
Emission Offset Maintenance Requirement
Ambient Monitoring Requirement
(Repealed)
SUBPART G:
GENERAL MAINTENANCE OF EMISSION OFFSETS
Section
203.701
General Maintenance of Emission Offsets
SUBPART H:
OFFSETS FOR EMISSION INCREASES FROM ROCKET
ENGINES AND MOTOR FIRING
Section
203.801
Offsetting by Alternative or Innovative Means
AUTHORITY:
Implementing Section 9.1 and
10 and authorized by
Section 27 of the Environmental Protection Act
(Ill. Rev.
Stat.
1991,
ch.
111 1/2,
pars.
1009.1,
1010 and 1027)
415
ILCS 5/9.1,
10 and 27.
SOURCE:
Adopted and codified at
7
Ill.
Reg.
9344,
effective July
22, 1983;
codified at
7 Ill.
Reg.
13588; amended
in R85—20 at
12
Ill. Reg.
6118,
effective March 22, 1988; amended
in R91—24 at 16
Ill.
Reg.
13551, effective August 24,
1992;
amended
in
_______
at
—
Ill. Reg.
,
effective
___________________
SUBPART A:
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section 203.101
Definitions
Unless
-~
otherwise specified within
this
Part,
the definitions of the
terms used j~#e~this Part shall be the same as those used
in the
Pollution Control Board
(Board)
Rules and Regulations
35 Ill.
Adm. Code 201 and 211.
(Source:
Amended at
17 Ill.
Reg.
_______,
effective
________
Section 203.107
Allowable Emissions
a)
“Allowable emissions” means the emission rate of a
stationary source calculated using the maximum rated
capacity of the source
(unless the source is subject to
15
federally enforceable permit conditions or other such
federally enforceable limits which restrict the
operating rate,
or hours of operation,
or both)
and the
most stringent of the following:
1)
Any applicable standards adopted by the United
States Environmental Protection Agency
(USEPA)
pursuant to Sections 111 and 112 of the Clean Air
Act
(42 U.S.C.
7401,
et s.eq.)
and made applicable
in Illinois pursuant to Section 9.1 of the
Environmental Protection Act
(Act)
(Ill. Rev.
Stat.
19851991,
ch.
111 1/2, pars.
1001 et seq.)
415
ILCS 5/1 et seq.1
2)
The applicable emission standards or limitations
contained in this Chapter and approved by ~4~e
United Statc3 Environmental Protection Agency
-f-USEPA* pursuant to Section 110(a) (2)
or 110
(a) (3)
of the Clean Air Act, including those
standards or limitations with a future compliance
date and any other emission standard or limitation
enforceable under the Environmental Protection Act
or by the USEPA under Section 113 of the Clean Air
Act; or
3)
The emissions rate specified as
e-i~
a federally
enforceable permit condition including those
emissions rates with a future compliance date.
b)
The allowable emissions may be based on e~
~,
federally
enforceable permit condition limiting material or fuel
throughput.
c)
If a source is not subject to an emission standard
described in subsection
(a)
above and is not subject to
a permit condition described in subsection
(b)
above,
the allowable emissions shall be the source’s potential
to emit.
(Source:
Amended at 17
Ill.
Reg.
______,
effective
_________)
Section 203.110
Available Growth Margin
“Available ~growth Mnjargin” means the portion which remains of
any emission allowance for new or modified major stationary
sources expressly identified in the attainment demonstration
approved by the United StatesU.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
(UCEPA~under Section
172(~c)(~4)
of the Clean Air Act
(42 U.S.C.
7502(~)(~))for a particular pollutant and area in a zone
(within a nonattainment area) to which economic development
should be targeted,
in accordance with Section 173(a) (1) (B)
of
the Clean Air Act
(42 U.S.C.
7503(a) (1) (B)).
16
(Source:
Amended at 17 Ill.
Reg.
______,
effective
_________)
Section 203.112
Building,
Structure and Facility
a)
The terms “building”,
“structure”, and “facility”
include all of the pollutant-emitting activities which
belong to the same industrial grouping, are located on
one or more contiguous or adjacent properties, and are
under the control of the same person
(or persons under
common control).
Pollutant-emitting activities shall
be considered as part of the same “Major Group”
(i.e.,
which have the same two-digit code) as described in the
Standard Industrial Classification Manual,
1972,
as
amended by the 1977 Supplement
(U.S. Government
Printing Office stock numbers 4101-0066 and
003—005—00176—0,
respectively)
incorporated by
reference in 35
Ill.
Admn.
Code
720.111.
b)
The terms “building”,
“structure”, and “facility” shall
also include:
1)
the transfer of materials, including but not
limited to grain, gasoline,
petroleum liquids,
coal,
fertilizer,
crushed stone and ore, from
vessels, motor vehicles or other conveyances,
irrespective of ownership or industrial grouping,
to or from a building,
structure,
or facility as
defined in subsection
(a)
above,
and
2)
activities at or adjacent to such building,
structure or facility which are associated with
such transfer,
including but not limited to idling
of propulsion engines, the operation of engines to
provide heat, refrigeration or lighting, operating
of auxiliary engines for pumps or cranes, and
transfer of materials from hold to hold or tank to
tank during onloading or offloading operations
except those activities causing emissions
resulting directly from internal combustion
engines from transportation purposes or from a non
road engine or non road vehicle as defined in
Section 216 of the Clean Air Act
(42 U.S.C.
7401
et seq.).
(Source:
Amended at 17
Ill.
Reg.
______,
effective
__________
Section 203.12~
Emission Offset
“Emission offset” means a creditable emission reduction used to
compensate for the increase in emissions resulting from a new
major source or a major modification in accordance with Sections
17
203.302 and 203.303 of this Part.
(Source:
Section 203.121 renumbered from Section 203.122 and
amended at
17
Ill. Reg.
______,
effective
___________)
Section 203.123-2.
Emissions Unit
“Emissions ~nit”
means any part of a stationary source which
emits or has the potential to emit any ~
pollutant subject to
regulation under the Act or this Chapter or by the United States
Environmental Protection Agency UCEPA under the Clean Air Act
(42
U.S.C.
7401,
the Act or et seq.).
(Source:
Former Section 203.122 renumbered to Section 203.121,
Section 203.122 renumbered from Section 203.123, and Section
amended at
17
Ill. Reg.
_____,
effective
______________)
Section 203.123
Federally Enforceable
“Federally enforceable” means enforceable by the United States
Environmental Protection Agency.
(Source:
Former Section 203.123 renumbered to Section 203.122,
new Section 203.123 added at 17
Ill.
Reg.
_____,
effective
______
_________________
)
Section 203.126
LAERLowest Achievable Emission Rate
“LAER” is an abbrcviationacronym for lowest achievable emission
rate.
(Source:
Amended at 17 Ill. Reg.
______,
effective
___________
Section 203.128
Potential to Emit
“Potential to ~mit”
means the maximum capacity of
a stationary
source to emit a pollutant under its physical and operational
design.
Any physical or operational limitation on the capacity
of the source to emit a pollutant,
including air pollution
control equipment and restrictions on hours of operation or on
the type or amount of material combusted,
stored, or processed,
shall be treated as part of its design only if the limitation or
the effect
it would have on emissions is federally enforceable.
Secondary emissions do not count in determining the potential to
emit of a stationary source.
(Source:
Amended at 17 Ill. Reg.
______,
effective
___________
Section 203.145
Volatile Organic CoinpoundMaterial
•.ypj~jpe
uLu~’n’~
Lumpound” means “volatile organic material”,
as
3.
~— —
3.
4—
~
__4
~
4-
,
-r
1
1
18
“Volatile organic material”
(VOM) means any com~oundof carbon,
excluding carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide. carbonic acid,
metallic carbides or carbonates, and ammonium carbonate,
which
participates in atmospheric photocheinical reactions.
~j
This includes any such organic compound other than the
following, which have been determined to have
negligible photochemical reactivity:
methane; ethane;
methvlene chloride
(dichloromethane),
1,1,1-trichiorethane
(methyl chloroform);
1. 1,1-trichloro-2,2,2—trifluoroethane (CFC-113)
trichlorofluoromethane
(CFC-1l);
dichlorodifluoromethane
(CFC-12); chlorodifluoromethane
(CFC-22); trifluoromethane
(FC-23): 1,2—dichloro
1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethane
(CFC-l14);
cloropentafluoroethane
(CFC-115);
1,1, 1—trifluoro
2, 2-dichloroethane
(HCFC-123);
1,1, 12-tetrafluoroethane
(HFC-l34a); 1,1-dichloro 1-fluoroethane
(HCFC—l4lb);
1-chloro l,l-difluoroethane (HCFC-l42b);
2—chloro—l, 1,1,2—tetrafluoroethane (HCFC-124);
pentafluoroethane
(HFC-l25);
1,1,2,2—tetrafluoroethane
(1-IFC—134); 1,1,1—trifluoroethane (HFC—143a);
1, 1-difluroethane
(HFC-152a); and perfluorocarbon
compounds which fall into these classes:
fl
Cyclic,
branched,
or linear, completely
fluorinated alkanes
21.
Cyclic,
branched,
or linear, completely
fluorinated ethers with no unsaturations
~j
Cyclic,
branched, or linear, completely
fluorinated tertiary amines with no unsaturations
and
j)
Sulfur containing perfluorocarbons with no
uiisaturations and with sulfur bonds onlY to carbon
and fluorine.
~j
For Purposes of determining VOM emissions and
compliance with emissions limits, VOM will be measured
by the test methods
in the approved implementation elan
or 40 CFR Part 60, Appendix A, incorporated by
reference at Sections 215.105,
218.112, and 219.112,
as
applicable or by source—specific test methods which
have been established pursuant to a permit issued
pursuant to a program approved or promulgated under
Title V of the Clean Air Act or under 40 CFR Part 51,
Subpart
I or Appendix 5,
incorporated by reference at
Sections 218.112 and 219.112 or under 40 CFR Part
52.21, incorporated by reference at Sections 218.112
and 219.112.
as applicable.
Where such a method also
19
measures compounds with negligible photochemical
reactivity, these negligibly-reactive compounds may be
excluded as VOM if the amount of such compounds is
accurately quantified,
and such exclusions are a~~roved
by
the Agency.
gj
As
a precondition to excluding these
negligibly-reactive compounds
as VOM or at any time
thereafter, the Agency may require an owner or oPerator
to provide monitoring or testing methods and results
demonstrating, to the satisfaction of the Agency, the
amount of negligibly—reactive compounds in the source’s
emissions.
~j
The United States Environmental Protection A~encvshall
not be bound bY any State determination as to
appropriate methods for testing or monitoring
negligibly-reactive compounds if such determination is
not reflected in any of the provisions of paragraph
f2).
(Source:
Amended at
17
Ill.
Reg.
________,
effective
_________)
Section 203.150
Public Participation
Prior to the initial issuance or revision of a permit pursuant to
Subpart
B, the Agency shall provide~at a minimum, notice of the
proposed issuance of a permit~ei~4a comment period,
and
opportunity for public hearing pursuant to the Agency public
participation procedures found at set forth at
35 Ill.
Adm. Code
4-66 252.
(Source:
Amended at
17
Ill.
Reg.
_____
,
effective
___________)
SUBPART B:
MAJOR STATIONARY EMICCIONS SOURCES
IN
NONATTAINMENT AREAS
Section 203.201
Prohibition
In any nonattainment area,
no person shall cause or allow the
construction of a new major stationary source or major
modification that is major for the pollutant for which the area
is designated a nonattainment area,
except as in compliance with
this Part for that pollutant.
In areas designated nonattainment
for ozone, this prohibition shall apply to new maior stationary
sources or major modifications of sources that emit volatile
organic materials or nitrogen oxides. Revisions to this Part
which were adopted to implement the Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990 shall not apply to any new malor stationary source or malor
modification for which a permit application was submitted by June
20
30,
1992,
for PM-b, May 15,
1992,
for
SO2,
or by November 15,
1992,
for nitrogen oxides and volatile organic material emissions
for sources located in all ozone nonattainment areas.
(Source:
Amended at 17
Ill. Reg.
_____,
effective
____________)
Section 203.203
Construction Permit Requirement and
Application
a)
A construction permit is required prior to actual
construction of a major new source or major
modification.
b)
Applications for construction permits required under
this Section shall contain sufficient information to
demonstrate compliance with 35 Ill.
Adm.
Code 201 and
the requirements of this Subchapter Part including,
but
not limited to,
Subpart C.
c)
The permit shall include conditions specifying the
manner in which the requirements of Subparts B and C of
this Part are satisfied.
d)
No permittee shall violate any condition contained in a
construction permit issued for a new major stationary
source or major modification which is subject to this
Part.
(Source:
Amended at 17
Ill. Reg.
_____,
effective
____________
Section 203.206
Major Stationary Source
~j
For purposes of this Part, the term “major
stationary source” shall exclusively mean
“building, structure and facility,” as those
terms are defined in Section 203.113 of this
Part.
a~) The following constitute a major stationary source:
1)
Any stationary sOurce of air pollutants which
emits, or has the potential to emit,
100 tons per
year or more of
~nv
nollutant for which pollutant
the area is a nonaiL~inmentarca.For an area
designated as nonattainment for ozone,
a malor
stationary source is a stationary source which
emits or has the potential to emit volatile
organic material
in an amount equal to or greater
than the following:
~j
100 tons per year in an area classified as
21
marginal or moderate nonattainment for ozone
~j
50 tons per year in an area classified as
serious nonattainment for ozone
~j
25 tons per year in an area classified as
severe nonattainment for ozone; and
Qj
10 tons per year in an area classified as
extreme nonattainment for ozone.
2)
Any physical change that would occur at a
L3t.uLiOnury
~ouruc
not qualifying under paragraph
1
~ri
ri
m-iig-~r
t1-n-~rkr1J
iirc~r~
~f
thc~
change
wnnld
constitute
a major 3tationary source by itself.
For an area designated as nonattainment for
nitrogen dioxide,
a major stationary source is
a
stationary source which emits or has the øotential
to emit 100 tons per year or more of nitrogen
dioxide.
~j
For an area designated as nonattainment for ozone.
a major stationary source is a stationary source
which emits or has the potential to emit nitrogen
oxides in an amount eaual to or greater than the
following, unless United States Environmental
Protection Agency
(USEPA)
has made a finding under
Sections 110 and 182(f)
of the Clean Air Act that
controlling of emissions of nitrogen oxides from
such sources shall not be required:
~j
100 tons per year in an area classified as
marginal or moderate nonattainment
for ozone,
~j
50 tons per year in an area classified as
serious nonattainment for ozone,
Qj.
25 tons per year in an area classified as
severe nonattainment for ozone,
and
pj
10 tons per year in an area classified as
extreme nonattainment for ozone.
j)
For an area designated nonattainment for PM—b,
a
major stationary source
is a stationary source
which emits or has the potential to emit:
~.j. 100 tons per year or more of PM—b
in an area
classified as moderate nonattainment area,
or
~J.
70 tons per year or more of PM—b
in an area
22
classified
as serious nonattainment.
~j
For an area designated nonattainment
for carbon
monoxide,
a malor stationary source
is a
stationary source which emits or has the potential
to emit:
~j
100 tons Per year or more of carbon monoxide
in
a nonattainment area, excePt as provided
in
(B) below,
~j
50 tons per year or more in an area
classified as “serious” nonattainment for
carbon monoxide where stationary sources
significantly contribute to ambient carbon
monoxide levels, as determined under rules
issued by USEPA,
pursuant to the Clean Air
Act.
~j
For an area designated nonattainment for a
pollutant other than ozone, nitrogen dioxide,
PM—b
or carbon monoxide,
a malor stationary
source
is a stationary source which emits or has
the potential to emit bOO tons ~er year or more of
the pollutant.
~c)
A major stationary source that is a major for volatile
organic compounds shall be considered major for ozone.
AnY physical change that occurs at a stationary source
which does not qualify under subsection
(a)
of this
Section as a maior stationary source will be considered
a malor stationary source,
if the change would
constitute
a malor stationary source by itself.
e~) The reconstruction of
a major stationary source will be
treated as the construction of
a new major stationary
source if the fixed capital cost of new components
exceeds approximately half of the fixed capital cost of
an entirely new stationary source.
Determining whether
reconstruction will occur
is based on the following:
1)
Fixed capital cost shall mean the capital needed
to provide all the depreciable components;
2)
The fixed capital cost for the replacements in
comparison to the fixed capital cost that would be
required to construct a comparable entirely new
source;
3)
The estimated life of the source after the
replacements compared to the life of a comparable
entirely new source; and
23
4)
The extent to which the components being replaced
cause or contribute to the emissions from the
source.
8~)
For purposes of this Part,
in areas that are classified
as serious,
severe,
or extreme nonattainment, the
fugitive emissions of a stationary source shall be
included in determining whether
it is a malor
stationary source.
In areas that are not classified as
serious, severe or extreme nonattainment, the fugitive
emissions of a stationary source shall not be included
in determining whether it is a major stationary source,
unless the source belongs to one of the following
categories of stationary sources:
1)
Coal cleaning plants
(with thermal dryers);
2)
Kraft pulp mills;
3)
Portland cement plants;
4)
Primary zinc smelters;
5)
Iron and steel mills;
6)
Primary aluminum ore reduction plants;
7)
Primary copper smelters;
8)
Municipal incinerators capable of charging more
than 250 tons of refuse per day;
9)
Hydrofluoric,
sulfuric,
or nitric acid plants;
10)
Petroleum refineries;
11)
Lime plants;
12)
Phosphate rock processing plants;
13)
Coke oven batteries;
14)
Sulfur recovery plants;
15)
Carbon black plants
(furnace process);
16)
Primary lead smelters;
17)
Fuel conversion plants;
18)
Sintering plants;
24
19)
Secondary metal production plants;
20)
Chemical process plants;
21)
Fossil-fuel boilers
(or combination thereof)
totaling more than 250 million Btu per hour heat
input;
22)
Petroleum storage and transfer units with a total
storage capacity exceeding 300,000 barrels;
23)
Taconite ore processing plants;
24)
Glass fiber processing plants;
25)
Charcoal production plants;
26)
Fossil fuel-fired steam electric plants of more
than 250 million Btu per hour heat input;
27)
Any other stationary source categor
which was
regulated as of August
7,
1980 by UCEPA by a
standard promulgated under Section 111 or 112
of
the Clean Air Act
(42 U.S.C.
7411,
7412), but only
with respect to those air pollutants that have
been regulated for that category
~j
Any other stationary source cateaorv designated by
the USEPA by rule.
(Source:
Amended at
17 Ill. Reg.
_____,
effective
____________)
Section 203.207
Major Modification of a Source
a)
Except as provided in &~ubsection (c)
below,
a physical
change,
or change in the method of operation of
a major
stationary source that would result in a significant
net emissions increase of any pollutant £or which the
area is designated a nonattainment area,
shall
constitute a major modification of a source.
b)
Any net emissions increase that is significant for
volatile organic compounds material or nitrogen oxides
shall be considered significant for ozone.
c)
A physical change or change in the method of operation
shall not include:
1)
Routine maintenance,
repair,
and replacement which
does not constitute reconstruction pursuant to
Section 203.206(c).
25
2)
Use of an alternative fuel or raw material by
reason of any order under Sections 2(a)
and
(b)
of
the Energy Supply and Environmental Coordination
Act of 1974
(15 U.S.C.
791),
the Power Plant and
Industrial Fuel Use Act of 1978
(42 U.S.C.
8301)
(or any superseding legislation)
or by reason of a
natural gas curtailment plan pursuant to the
Federal Power Act
(16 U.S.C.
791,
et seq.).
3)
Use of an alternative fuel by reason of an order
or rule under Section 125 of the Clean Air Act
(42
U.S.C.
7425).
4)
Use of an alternative fuel at a steam generating
unit to the extent that the fuel
is generated from
municipal solid waste.
5)
Use of an alternative fuel or
raw material by a
stationary source which:
A)
Was capable of accommodating such alternative
fuel or raw material before December 21,
1976,
and which has continuously remained
capable of accommodating such fuels or
materials unless such change would be
prohibited under any enforceable permit
condition established after December 21,
1976, pursuant to 40 CFR
52.21,
this Part,
or
35 Ill. Adm. Code 201.142 or 201.143,
or
B)
Is approved for use under any permit issued
pursuant to this Part or
35 Ill. Adm. Code
201.142 or 201.143.
6)
An increase in the hours of operation or in the
production rate,
unless such change is prohibited
under any enforceable permit condition which was
established after December 21,
1976 pursuant to 40
CFR 52.21,
this Part,
or
35 Ill. Adm.
Code 201.142
or 201.143.
7)
Any change in ownership at a stationary source.
~j
In areas classified as serious or severe nonattainment
for ozone, beginning November 15,
1992,
or such later
date that an area is classified by the United States
Environmental Protection Agency
(USEPA)
as
a serious or
severe nonattainment area for ozone,
any physical
chan~eor chance in the method of operation of a malor
stationary source which results in an increase in
emissions of 25 tons per year or more of volatile
organic material or nitrogen oxides from any discrete
26
operation,
unit,
or other pollutant emitting activity
at the source shall be considered a major modification
unless:
fl
The emissions and potential to emit emissions of
such pollutant,
i.e., volatile organic material or
nitrogen oxides,
are less than 100 tons per year,
and
21
The owner or operator of the source elects to
offset the increase by a greater reduction in
emissions of such pollutants
i.e., volatile
organic material or nitrogen oxides,
from other
operations,
units,
or activities within the source
at an internal offset ratio of at least
1.3 to
1.
~j
In areas classified as extreme nonattainment for ozone,
beginning on the date that an area
is classified by
USEPA as an extreme nonattainment area for ozone,
any
physical change in or change in the method of operation
of a malor stationary source which results
in any
increase
in emissions of volatile organic material or
nitrogen oxides from a discrete operation,
unit,
or
other pollutant emitting activity shall be considered a
malor modification.
(Source:
Amended at
17
Ill.
Reg.
______,
effective
___________)
Section 203.208
Net Emission Determination
A net emissions increase is the amount by which the sum of any
increase in actual emissions from a particular physical change or
change in method of operation at a source, and any other
increases and decreases in actual emissions at the source that
are contemporaneous with the particular change and are otherwise
creditable,
exceeds zero.
The following steps determine whether
the increase or decrease in emissions is available.
a)
Except for increases or decreases in volatile organic
material and nitrogen oxides emissions in serious and
severe ozone nonattainment areas which are addressed in
Section 203.209(b), an increase or decrease in actual
emissions is contemporaneous only if it occurs between
the date that an increase from a particular change
occurs and the date five years before a timely and
complete application
is submitted for the particular
change.
It must also occur after either April
24,
1979, or the date the area is designated by the
U.C.United States Environmental Protection Agency
-fUCEPA)
as a nonattainment area for the pollutant,
whichever is more recent~.
27
b)
An increase or decrease in actual emissions is
creditable:
1)
Only if there is not
in effect for the source at
the time the particular change occurs,
a permit
which relied on the same increase or decrease in
actual emissions; and
2)
Only to the extent the new and old levels differ.
C)
A decrease in actual emissions
is creditable to the
extent that:
1)
It
is federally enforceable at and after the time
that actual construction on the particular change
begins;
2)
It has approximately the same qualitative
significance for public health and welfare as that
attributed to the increase from the particular
change;
3)
The old level of actual emissions or the old level
of allowable emissions, whichever is
lower,
exceeds the new level of actual emissions; and
4)
It
is demonstrated by the Agency not to have been
previously relied on in issuing any permit
pursuant to this part or
35 Ill. Adm.
Code 201.142
or 201.143 or for demonstrating attainment or
reasonable further progress in the nonattainment
area which the particular change will impact.
d)
An increase that results from a physical change at a
source occurs when the emissions unit on which
construction occurred becomes operational and begins to
emit
a particular pollutant.
Any replacement unit that
requires shakedown becomes operational only after a
shakedown period not to exceed 180 days.
(Source:
Amended at
17 111.
Reg.
_____,
effective
____________
Section 203.209
Significant Emissions Determination
,~j
A net emission increase
in the pollutant emitted is
significant if the rate of emission is equal to or in
excess of the following:
lal
Carbon monoxide:
100 tons per year
(tpy)
2~1
Nitrogen oxides:
40 tpy for a nonattainment area
for nitrogen dioxide and 40 tpy for an ozone
28
nonattainment area, except as provided in
subsection
(b)
of this Section
~ej
Sulfur dioxide:
40 tpy
48j
Particulate matter measured as PM-bO:
25 tpy
5e)
Ozone:
40 tpy of volatile organic compounds
material,
except as provided jn subsection
(b)
of
this Section
~)
Lead:
0.6 tpy
~
For areas classified as serious or severe nonattainment
for ozone, an increase in emissions of volatile organic
material or nitrogen oxides shall be considered
significant if the net emissions increase of such air
p~llutantfrom
a stationary source located within such
area exceeds
25 tons when aggregated with all other net
increases in emissions from the source over any period
of
5 consecutive calendar years which includes the
calendar year in which such increase occurred.
This
provision shall become effective beginning November
15,
1992,
or such later date that an area is classified as
a serious or severe nonattainment area for ozone.
(Source:
Amended at
17
Ill.
Reg.
______,
effective
___________)
SUBPART
C:
REQUIREMENTS FOR
MAJOR
STATIONARY
SOURCES
IN
NONATTAINMENT AREAS
Section 203.301
Lowest Achievable Emission Rate
a)
For any source,
lowest achievable emission rate
(LAER)
will be the more stringent rate of emissions based on
the following:
1)
The most stringent emission limitation which
is
contained in the implementation plan of any state
for such class or category of stationary source,
unless it
is demonstrated that such limitation is
not achievable; or
2)
The most stringent emission limitation which
is
achieved in practice by such a class or category
of stationary source.
This limitation, when
applied to a modification, means the lowest
achievable emissions rate for the new or modified
emissions units within the stationary source.
In
no event shall the application of this term permit
a proposed new or modified stationary source to
emit any pollutant in excess of the amount
29
allowable under an applicable new source
performance standard adopted by United States
Environmental Protection Agency
(USEPAI pursuant
to Section 111 of the Clean Air Act and made
applicable in Illinois pursuant to Section 9.1 of
the Act.
b)
The owner or operator of a new major stationary source
shall demonstrate that the control equipment and
process measures applied to the source will produce
LLAER.
C)
The owner or operator of a major modification shall
demonstrate that the control equipment and process
measures applied to the major modification will produce
LAER.
This requirement applies to each emissions unit
at which a net increase in emissions of the pollutant
has occurred or would occur as a result of a physical
change or change in the method of operation.
d)
The owner or operator shall provide
a detailed showing
that the proposed emission limitations constitute LAER.
Such demonstration shall include:
1)
A description of the manner in which the proposed
emission limitation was selected, including a
detailed listing of information resources,
2)
Alternative emission limitations, and
3)
Such other reasonable information as the Agency
may request as necessary to determine whether the
proposed emission limitation is LAER.
~j
In areas classified as serious or severe nonattairiment
for ozone,
for modifications which are major pursuant
to the applicability provisions of Section 203.207(d)
for volatile organic material and nitrogen oxide
emissions, LAER shall apply except as provided as
follows:
fl
In the case of a stationary source which does not
emit or have the potential to emit 100 tons per
Year or more of volatile organic material or
nitrogen oxides,
a requirement for Best Available
Control Technobo~v (BACT)
as defined in Section
169 of the Clean Air Act
(42 U.S.C.
7401 et seq.)
substitutes for LAER.
BACT shall
be determined in
accordance with policies and procedures published
by the USEPA.
.21
In the case of a stationary source which emits or
30
has the ~otentia1 to emit 100 tons ~er year or
more of volatile organic material or nitrogen
oxides, the requirements for LAER shall not apply
if the owner or operator of the source elects to
offset the increase by a greater reduction in
emissions of such pollutant from other operations,
units or activities within the source at an
internal offset ratio of at least
1.3 to
1.
(Source:
Amended at
17 Ill.
Reg.
______,
effective
___________)
Section 203.302
Maintenance of Reasonable Further Progress
and Emission Offsets
a)
The owner or operator of a new major source or major
modification shall provide emission offsets equal to or
greater than the allowable emissions from the source or
the net increase
in emissions from the modification
sufficient to allow the Agency to determine that the
source or modification will not interfere with
reasonable further progress as set forth in Section 173
of the Clean Air Act
(42 U.S.C.
7401 et seq.).
fl
For new major sources or major modifications
in
ozone nonattainment areas the ratio
of total
emission reductions provided by emission offsets
for volatile organic material or nitrogen oxides
to total increased emissions of such contaminants
shall be at least as follows:
~j
1.1 to
1 in areas classified as marginal
~j
1.15 to
1
in areas classified as moderate
~çj
1.2 to
1 in areas classified as serious
Qj
1.3 to
1 in areas classified as severe; and
~
1.5 to
1
in areas classified as extreme.
21
The offset requirement provided in subsection
(1)
above shall not be applicable in extreme areas to
a modification of an existing source:
~j.
if such modification consists of installation
of equipment required to comely with the
implementation plan or the Clean Air Act; or
~j
if the owner or operator of the source elects
to offset the increase by a greater reduction
in emissions of such pollutant from other
31
discrete operations,
units,
or activities
within the source at an internal offset ratio
of at least 1.3 to
1.
b)
The Agency shall allow the use of all or some portion
of the available growth margin to satisfy subsection
(a)
above if the owner or operator can present evidence
that the possible sources of emission offsets were
investigated~a~ none were available at that time ~
the new or modified major stationary source is located
in
a zone
(within the nonattainment area)
identified by
United States Environmental Protection Agency,
in
consultation with the Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development,
as a zone to which economic devebo~ment
should be targeted.
(Source:
Amended at 17
Ill.
Reg.
______,
effective
___________
Section 203.303
Baseline and Emission Offsets Determination
a)
An emission offset must be obtained from a source in
operation prior to the permit application for the new
or modified source.
Emission offsets must be effective
prior to start—up of the new or modified source.
b)
The emission offsets provided:
1)
Must be of the same pollutant and further be of a
type with approximately the same qualitative
significance for public health and welfare as that
attributed to the increase from a particular
change;
2)
Must,
in the case of a shutdown,
have occurred
since April
24,
1979 or the date the area
is
dccignatcd by the UCEPA as a nonattainmcnt area
~ii~
poJ.kuLanL, wnicncvcr
.i~
inorc
rcucnt,
and
the shutdown source is being replaced by a similar
new source; and must,
in the case of a fuel
combustion source,
be based on the type of fuel
being burned at the time the permit application is
filed,
and,
if offset is to be produced by a
future switch to a cleaner fuel,
be accompanied by
evidence that long—term supplies of the clean fuel
are available and a commitment to a specified
alternative control measure which would achieve
the same degree of emission reduction if return of
the dirtier fuel is proposed;
3)
Must,
in the case of
a shutdown of a source or
r~t~rin-~nrn~—
r~iii-$—r~
ii
mrnt
f
nrndui~t
i
nn
n~—
ina
32
application is
have been made
filed
known
for
to
a
the
now or modified
affected work
source,
force;
43)
Must,
in the case of a past shutdown of a source
or permanent curtailment of production or
operating hours, have occurred since April
24,
1979, or the date the area is designated a
nonattainment area for the pollutant, whichever
more recent, and, until the United States
Environmental Protection Agency has approved the
attainment demonstration and state trading or
marketing rules for the relevant pollutant, the
proposed new or modified source must be a
replacement for the shutdown or curtailment;
5~) Must be federally enforceable by permit;
is
65)
Must not have been previously relied on,
as
demonstrated by the Agency,
in issuing any permit
pursuant to 35
Ill.
Admn.
Code 201.142 or 201.143
or this Part, or for demonstrating attainment or
reasonable further progress.
c)
The baselines for determining
follows:
4
-~
Except as provided in subsection
(2), tlhe
baseline for determining the extent to which
emission reductions are creditable as offsets
shall be the actual emissions of the source from
which the offset
is to be obtained, to the extent
they are within any applicable emissions
limitations of this Chapter or the Act or any
applicable standards adopted by USEPA pursuant to
Section 111 and 112 of the Clean Air Act, and made
applicable in Illinois pursuant to Section 9.1 of
the Environmental Protection Act
(Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1991 ch.
111 1/2, par.
1009.1)
1415 ILCS 5/9.1).
If the demonstration of reasonable further
progress and attainment of ambient air quality
‘~tandards
‘~——~-~‘—-‘
.
~1~1~nt
tr~
~r-r~t
I
by uSEP:.
110(a) (2)
or 110(a) (3)
of
based on the applicable emission limitations of
this Chapter or the Act or any applicable
and
112
of the Clean Air
Act and made
applicable
in Illinois pursuant to Section 9.1 of the
Environmental Protection Act for sources within an
arca,
and the sourcc from which the offset is to
be obtained is subject to such limitations, the
baseline for offsets shall be the looser of such
...
~.
~Iv
Arf
4
2+
33
limitation or the p
izil to emit of the
d)
The location of sources providing the emission
offscts:reductions to fulfill the offset requirements
of this Section:
t.
#snflt
S__
I
\“
~j
An owner or operator may obtain the necessary
emission reductions from another
nonattainment area where such other area has
an equal or higher nonattainment
classification than the area in which the
source
is
located, and
~j
The emission reductions from such other area
contribute to a violation of the national
ambient air quality standard in the
nonattainment area in which the new or
Must,
tor nicrr~rfcn
uxiue~, i~cin
~iiC
vicinity of the proposed new or moairi~
sourcc.Must,
for particulate matter,
sulfur
dioxide and carbon monoxide, be such that,
relative to the site of the proposed new or
modified source, the location of the offset,
1)
Must,
for particulate matter, sulfur dioxide and
carbon monoxide,
be such that, relative to the
site of the proposed new or modified source, the
location of the offset, together with its
effective stack height, ensures
a positive net air
quality benefit.
This shall be demonstrated by
atmospheric simulation modeling, unless the
irr~r~-i
r~rn’uI
~-i
I
r~rr ths-~
nff~r~t
vrr~ t~r~
thr
~nmr~
~••L
—
.J~
~
~4_
.A
St
~SS’~
L1ttSIfl~.~.t .l~~t
~-
—‘~-te vicinity ef the ~ev
e~modified
c.nd the polluten-te -~i~
from substantially the same effective stack
height.
In determining effective stack height,
credit shall not be given for dispersion
enhancement techniques.
The owner or operator of
a proposed new or modified source shall perform
the analysis to demonstrate the acceptability of
the location of an offset,
if the Agency declines
to make such analysis.
Effective stack height
means actual stack height plus plume rise.
Where
—~
stack
exceeds good engineering
ursuant to 40 CFR 51.100
J.noi.Uacu),
cnc
creditable stack height shall bc
used.
Must be achieved in the same nonattainment
area as the increase being offset, except as
provided as follows:
21
modified source is
located.
—
—
—
I
—
—
i_
—
I
—
—
34
together with its effective stack height, ensures
a mositive net air quality benefit.
This shall be
demonstrated by atmospheric simulation modeling,
unless the sources providing the offset are on the
same premises or in the
irrurnediate vicinity of the
new or modified source and the pollutants disperse
from substantially the same effective stack
height.
In determining effective stack height,
credit_shall not be given for dispersion
enhancement techniques.
The owner
or oPerator of
a proposed new or modified source shall Perform
the analysis to demonstrate the acceptability of
the location of an offset,
if the Agency declines
to make such analysis.
Effective stack height
means actual stack height Plus plume
rise.
Where
actual stack height exceeds good engineering
practices,
as determined Pursuant to 40 CFR 51.100
(1987)
(no future amendments or editions are
included), the creditable stack height shall be
used.
s-)-
Must,
for volatile organic compounds,
be in the
broad vicinity of the proposed new or modified
source; that is, offsets must be obtained from
within the Air Quality Control Region of the new
or modified source,
or from other areas which may
~e contribu-t-Inrr to the ozone r~roblcmat the site
of the new or modified source.
e)
Replacement of one volatile organic compoundmaterial
with another of lesser reactivity does not constitute
an emission reduction.
Z1
Emission reductions otherwise required by the Clean Air
Act
(42 U.S.C.
7401 et seq.)
shall not be creditable
for purposes of any such offset requirement.
Incidental emission reductions which are not otherwise
required by the Clean Air Act shall be creditable as
emission reductions for such purposes if such emissions
reductions meet the requirements of this Subpart.
(Source:
Amended at
17
Ill.
Reg.
______,
effective
__________
Section 203.306
Analysis of Alternatives
For emission of volatile organic compounds or ~~on
monox~~,
~The owner or operator shall demonstrate that benefits of the new
major source or major modification significantly outweigh the
environmental and social costs imposed as a result of its
location, construction,
or modification, based upon an analysis
35
of alternative sites,
sizes, production processes and
environmental control techniques for such proposed source.
(Source:
Amended at 17 Ill.
Reg.
______,
effective
________
SUBPART H:
OFFSETS FOR EMISSION INCREASES FROM ROCKET
ENGINES AND MOTOR FIRING
Section 203.801
Offsetting by Alternative or Innovative Means
A source may offset, by alternative or innovative means. emission
increases from rocket engine and motor firing, and cleaning
related to such firing,
at an existing or modified major source
that tests rocket engines or motors under the following
conditions:
~j
Any modification proposed
is solely for the purpose of
~panding
the testing of rocket engines or motors at an
existing source that is permitted to test such engines
on November 15, 1990
~j
The source demonstrates to the satisfaction of the
Agency that it has used all reasonable means to obtain
and utilize offsets, as determined on an annual basis,
for the emissions increases beyond allowable levels,
that all available offsets are being used.
and that
sufficient offsets are not available to the source
~
The source has obtained a written finding from the
DePartment of Defense, Department of Transportation,
National Aeronautics and Space Administration or other
appropriate Federal agency, that the testing of rocket
motors or engines at the facility is required for a
program essential to the national security; and
~j
The source will comply with an alternative measure,
imposed bY the Agency or Board, designed to offset any
emission increases beyond permitted levels not directly
offset bY the source.
(Source:
Added at
17 Ill.
Reg.
______,
effective
36
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Board member Joseph Yi abstains.
I, Dorothy H. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby cer~i.~y
that the abg~veopinion and order was
adopted
n the
/(öW~ day of
cA-C
,
1995,
by a vote
of
~
Dorothy/~*.Gunn,
Clerk
IllinoiW Pollution Control Board