ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL
BOARD
April
9,
1992
IN THE MATTER OF:
)
)
PM-lU EMISSION LIMITS FOR THE
)
McCOOK
AND
LAKE CALUMET AREAS
)
OF COOK COUNTY,
ILLINOIS,
AND
)
R91-22
THE GRANITE CITY
AREA
OF
)
(Rulemaking)
MADISON COUNTY, ILLINOIS:
)
AMENDMENTS TO 35 ILL.ADM.CODE
)
PARTS 211
AND
212
)
Adopted Rule.
Final Order.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J. Theodore Meyer):
This matter is before the Board on the Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency’s (Agency) August 19,
1991
proposal.
The proposal is intended to regulate particulate
matter with an aerodynamic diameter less than or equal to a
nominal
10 micrometers, which is known as PM-b.
These rules are
directed at the McCook and Lake Calumet areas of Cook County, and
at the Granite City area of Madison County.
The proposal
represents one part of Illinois’s submittal of a complete state
implementation plan
(SIP)
for the control of PM—lO emissions.
Pursuant to Section 189 of the Clean Air Act,
as amended in 1990,
Illinois was
to adopt and submit its plan by November 15,
1991.
Today the Board adopts these rules, as modified throughout the
rulemaking process.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Board accepted the proposal for hearing on August 22,
1991,
and sent the proposal to first notice on August 26,
1991.
The proposal was first published in the Illinois Register on
September 20,
1991,
at 15 Ill.Reg.
13627.
On September 30,
1991, the Agency moved to substantially
amend its proposal by adding rules necessary for the Granite City
area to •show compliance.
On October 10,
1991,
the Board granted
that motion to amend,
but noted that because of the complexity of
the new proposal, the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act
(APA)
required that the entire proposal be again published for first
notice.
(Ill.Rev.Stat.
1989,
ch. 127,
par. 1001 et seq.)
The
Board noted that returning to first notice would delay completion
of the rulemaking, and that there was no possibility of even
The
Board
wishes
to
acknowledge
the
contributions
of
attorney assistant Elizabeth Schroer Harvey to this rulemaking.
13 3—0
1
2
reaching second notice before the November 15,
1991 federal
deadline.
As it had pointed out in its August 22 and August
26
orders, the Board again stated that because the proposal was
filed on August 19,
1991,
Illinois law made it literally
impossible to meet the federal deadline.
It is not possible to
complete the rulemaking requirements imposed by the APA and the
Environmental Protection Act (Ill.Rev.Stat.
1989,
ch. 111 1/2,
par. 1001 et seg~.) in less than two months.
The Board granted
the Agency’s motion to amend, and stated that it would send the
proposal, as amended, to second first notice.
Also on October
10,
1991,
the Board found that no economic impact study
(EcIS)
was necessary in this proceeding.
On October 22 and 23,
1991, the Agency filed two more
motions to amend the proposal.
The Board granted those motions
to amend on October 24,
1991.
At the Agency’s request,
the Board
had not submitted thepaperwork necessary for publication of the
second first notice,
issued by the Board on October 10,
for
publication in the Illinois Register.
Therefore, the Board
integrated the language proposed in the October 22 and 23 motions
with the language in the October 10 order.
This resulted in an
amended second first notice, which superseded the October 10
order.2
That second first notice was published in the Illinois
Register on November 8,
1991,
at 15 Ill.Reg.
15875, and on
November 15,
1991, at 15 Ibl.Reg.
16564.
Yet another motion to
amend was filed on October 28,
1991.
That motion to amend was
granted by the Board in its February 27,
1992 second notice
opinion and order,
since the nature of the proposed amendments
did not require a separate first notice publication.
Public
hearings were held in Chicago on October 23,
1991,
and in
Edwardsville on October 29,
1991.
A written public comment
period expired on December 30,
1991.
On January 21,
1992,
the
Agency filed additional written comments responding to comments
filed by the United States Environmental Protection Agency
(USEPA).
The Board proposed the rules for second notice on
February 27,
1992,
and submitted the rules for review by the
Joint Committee on Administrative Rules
(JCAR).
JCAR issued its
certification of no objection to the rules on April
7,
1992.
PROPOSAL
tJSEPA established national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQS)
for PM-b
in 1987.
The 24-hour standard is 150 ug/m3 and
the annual standard is 50 ug/m3.
(52 Fed.Reg. 24634
(July 1,
1987).)
On August 7,
1987, USEPA designated Cook and Madison
Counties as Group
I areas for PM—la, because these areas had a
95
probability of not attaining the PM-b
NAAQS.
(52 Fed.Reg.
29383
(August
7,
1987).)
The Clean Air Act, as amended in 1990,
2
For further discussion
on
the necessity of
returning to
first notice, see the Board’s October 24,
1991 order.
133—02
3
requires Illinois to submit a state implementation plan
(SIP)
for
PM—1O.
As discussed above,
the deadline for that SIP submission
to tJSEPA was November 15,
1991.
(42 U.S.C. §~7410,
7513(a).)
In its statement of reasons supporting this proposal, the
Agency outlined its approach to this rulemaking.
When developing
its SIP, Illinois must assume that each source will emit the
maximum amount of particulate matter allowed by regulation,
even
though most facilities in Illinois do not emit to the maximum
extent allowed by the Board’s regulations.
Therefore,
the Agency
used existing Board regulations as the basis for the control of
particulate matter.
The rules considered in this rulemaking
reflect the levels of control which are already in use by most
affected sources.
The rules require further control only where
specifically needed to demonstrate attainment with the NAAQS.
Finally, the Agency worked closely with interested parties,
including affected facilities,
and with the Department of Energy
and Natural Resources
(ENR) during the development of the
proposal.
The Agency developed an inventory of emission sources in the
three study areas
(McCook, Lake Calumet,
and Granite City),
concentrating on quantifying and verifying the emissions from
industrial activities.
(Exh.
D.)
Using those inventories as a
basis, the Agency then performed dispersion modeling to study the
air quality in the three areas.
(Exh.
E.)
Throughout the
development of the proposal, the Agency consulted with USEPA to
ensure that Illinois’ efforts meet federal requirements and
guidance.
The Agency also reviewed the regulatory development
efforts of other states, particularly Michigan, Indiana,
Minnesota,
and Ohio.
The Agency then applied the data to develop
the proposed rules.
For point sources, the Agency has proposed a
general limit of 0.03 gr/scf, with alternative standards for a
few sources.
The Agency contends that most process emission
sources in the three areas are currently meeting the 0.03 gr/scf
standard.
For fugitive particulate matter emissions,
the Agency
proposed opacity limits to ensure that adequate control measures
are applied.3
(Exhs.
Fl,
F2.)
Throughout this proceeding,
it has been obvious that the
Agency’s attempts to involve interested parties, and especially
affected sources, during the development of the proposal have
been very helpful
in resobvin~areas of disagreement.
In
general, affected sources feel that they can meet the proposed
rules, and in many cases are already in compliance with those
rules.
~ For a section—by—section discussion of the proposed rules,
as
submitted
by
the
Agency,
see
pages
17-28
of
the
Agency’s
statement
of
reasons,
and
the Agency’s
motions
to
amend
filed
September 30, October 22, October 23,
and October 28,
1991.
133—03
4
FEDERAL APPROVABILITY
In its statement of reasons supporting this proposal, the
Agency indicated that USEPA had reviewed the proposal, and that
based on that review, the Agency believed that the rules are
federally approvable.
(Statement of reasons at 15.)
The Agency
did recognize that the Clean Air Act requires that SIPS provide
contingency measures to be undertaken if the area does not
subsequently demonstrate compliance after the SIP is in place.
(42 U.S.C.
~7502.)
The Agency stated that USEPA has not yet
interpreted these contingency requirements,
so that it is not
known what kinds of measures are required under this provision.
Jay Bortzer, Chief of the Regulation Development Section, Air and
Radiation Division of USEPA Region V, testified at hearing that
general guidance on the contingency issue had only recently been
issued by USEPA, and suggested that the Board proceed with this
rulemaking.
Mr. Bortzer also testified that the approach used by
the Agency in the proposed rules is acceptable to USEPA, and that
the proposed rules are the types of rules USEPA expects Illinois
to submit.
(Tr2 at 8-il.)
USEPA subsequently submitted more
detailed comments on the proposal
(P.C.#16), and the Agency
responded to those comments (P.C.#l8).
Based on this
information, the Board believes that these rules are federally
approvabie.
CONCLUS IONS
Based upon its consideration of the testimony, exhibits, and
comments received in this proceeding, the Board will adopt these
rules.
The Board finds that these rules are economically
reasonable and technically feasible.
The Board also finds that
the rules will demonstrate attainment with the PM-b
NAAQS,
and
are federally approvable.
The Board has made only minor,
non—substantive changes to
these rules in response to comments from JCAR.
Additionally,
with JCAR’s approval, the Board has corrected clerical errors in
Sections 212.458(b) (9)
and 212.458(b)(23).
With those minor
exceptions, the rules are adopted as proposed for second notice.
ORDER
The Board hereby adopts the following amendments as final
rules.
The Clerk of the Board is directed to file these
amendments with the Secretary of State, and to cause the
publication of the rules in the Illinois Register.
TITLE
35:
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
SUBTITLE B:
AIR POLLUTION
CHAPTER I:
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
SUBCHAPTER
C:
EMISSION STANDARDS
AND
LIMITATIONS
133—04
5
FOR STATIONARY SOURCES
PART 211
DEFINITIONS
AND
GENERAL PROVISIONS
SUBPART A:
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section
211.101
Incorporations by Reference
211.102
Abbreviations and Units
SUBPART B:
DEFINITIONS
Section
211.121
Other Definitions
211.122
Definitions
2l1.Appendix A
Rule into Section Table
2l1.Appendix B
Section into Rule Table
AUTHORITY:
Implementing Sections 9,
9.1 and 10 and authorized by
Section 27 of the Environmental Protection Act
(Ill.
Rev. Stat.
1991,
ch.
111½,
pars.
1009,
1010 and 1027).
SOURCE:
Adopted as Chapter
2:
Air Pollution, Rule 201:
Definitions, R7l—23,
4 PCB 191, filed and effective April
14,
1972;
amended in R74—2 and R75—5,
32 PCB 295,
at
3 Ill. Reg.
5,
p.
777,
effective February
3,
1979; amended in R78—3 and 4,
35
PCB
75
and 243,
at
3
Ill. Reg.
30,
p.
124, effective July 28,
1979;
amended in R80—5, at 7 Ill. Reg.
1244, effective January
21,
1983; codified at
7 Ill. Reg.
13590; amended in R82—1
(Docket
A)
at 10
Ill. Reg.
12624, effective July 7,
1986; amended in R85—
21(A)
at 11 Ill. Peg.
11747, effective June 29,
1987; amended in
P86—34 at 11
Ill. Reg.
12267, effective July
10,
1987;
amended in
P86—39 at 11
Ill. Peg.
20804,
effective December 14,
1987;
amended in R82—l4 and R86—37 at 12 Ill.
Reg.
787, effective
December 24,
1987;
amended in R86—18 at 12
Ill.
Peg. 7284,
effective April
8,
1988; amended in R86—1O at 12 Ill Reg.
7621,
effective April
11,
1988; amended in P88—23 at 13 Ill. Peg.
10862, effective June 27,
1989; amended in R89—8 at 13
Ill. Peg.
17457, effective January 1,
1990; amended in R 89—16(A)
at 14
Ill.
Peg.
9141, effective May 23,
1990; amended in P88—30(B)
at
15 Ill.
Reg. 5223, effective March 28,
1991; amended in R88-14 at
15 Ill. Peg.
7901,
effective May 14,
1991; amended in R9l—10 at
15 Il1.Reg.
15564, effective October 11,
1991;
amended in P91-6
at 15 Ill.Reg.
15673, effective October 14,
1991; amended in P91-
22 at 16 Ill.Peg.
_________,
effective
_________________
Section 211.101
Incorporations by Reference
The following materials are incorporated by reference.
These
incorporations do not include any later amendments or editions.
a)
“Evaporation Loss from Floating Roof Tanks,” American
133—05
6
Petroleum Institute Bulletin 2517,
1962
b)
Ringelmann Chart,
Information Circular 833
(Revision of
lC77l8), Bureau of Nines, U.S. Department of Interior,
May 1,
1967
c)
Standard Industrial Classification Manual,
Superintendent of Documents, Washington,
D.C. 20402,
1972
d)
American Society for Testing and Materials,
1916 Race
Street,
Philadelphia, PA 19103
A.S.T.M.
D-86
A.S.T.M.
D—240—64
A.ST.M.
D-323
A.S.T.M.
D—369—69
(1971)
A.S.T.M.
D—396—69
A.S.T.M.
D—900—55
A.S.T.M.
D—975—68
A.S.T.M.
D—b826—64
A.S.T.M. D—20l5—66
A.S.T.M.
D—2880—71
~j
40
CFR
51.100
(1987)
(Source:
Amended at
16 Ill.Reg.
_______,
effective
_________
Section 211.122
Definitions
“Accelacota”:
a pharmaceutical coating operation which
consists of a horizontally rotating perforated drum in
which tablets are placed,
a coating is applied by
spraying and the coating is dried by the flow of air
across the drum through the perforations.
“Accumulator”:
The reservoir of a condensing unit
receiving the condensate from a surface condenser.
“Acid Gases”:
For the purposes of Section 9.4 of the
Environmental Protection Act
(the Act)
(Ill. Rev.
Stat.
1989,
ch.
ill
~,
par. 1009.4), hydrogen chloride,
hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen bromide, which exist as
gases,
liquid mist,
or any combination thereof.
“Actual Heat Input”:
The quantity of heat produced by
the combustion of fuel using the gross heating value of
the
fuel.
“Aeration”:
The
practice
of
forcing
air
through
bulk
stored grain to maintain the condition of the grain.
133—06
7
“Afterburner”:
A device in which materials in gaseous
effluents are combusted.
“Air Dried Coating”:
Coatings that dry by the use of
air or forced air at temperatures up to 363.15~K (194~
F).
“Air suspension coater/dryer”:
a pharmaceutical
coating operation which consists of vertical chambers
in which tablets or particles are placed, and a coating
is applied and then dried while the tablets or
particles are kept in a fbuidized state by the passage
of air upward through the chambers.
“Annual Grain Through—Put”:
Unless otherwise shown by
the owner or operator,
annual grain through—put for
grain-handling operations,
which have been in operation
for three consecutive years prior to June 30,
1975,
shall be determined by adding grain receipts and
shipments for the three previous fiscal years and
dividing the total by
6.
The annual grain through-put
for grain—handling operations in operation for less
than three consecutive years prior to June 30,
1975,
shall be determined by a reasonable three-year
estimate; the owner or operator shall document the
reasonableness of his three—year estimate.
“Architectural Coating”:
Any coating used for
residential or commercial buildings or their
appurtenances, or for industrial buildings which is
site
applied.
“Asphalt”:
The dark—brown to black cementitious
material
(solid, semisolid or liquid in consistency)
of
which the main constituents are bitumens which occur
naturally or as a residue of petroleum refining.
“Asphalt Prime Coat”:
A low-viscosity liquid asphalt
applied to an absorbent surface as the first of more
than one asphalt coat.
“Automobile”:
Any first division motor vehicle as that
term is defined in the Illinois Vehicle Code (Ill. Rev.
Stat.
1989,
ch. 95½, pars 1—100
et seq.).
“Automobile or Light-Duty Truck Manufacturing Plant”:
A facility where parts are manufactured or finished for
eventual inclusion into a finished automobile or light-
duty truck ready for sale to vehicle dealers, but not
including customizers, body shops and other repainters.
133—07
8
“Batch Loading”:
The process of loading a number of
individual parts at the same time for degreasing.
“Bead-Dipping”:
The dipping of an assembled tire bead
into a solvent-based cement.
“British Thermal Unit”:
The quantity of heat required
to raise one pound of water from 60°F to 61°F
(abbreviated btu).
“Bulk Gasoline Plant”:
Any gasoline storage and
distribution facility that receives gasoline from bulk
gasoline terminals by delivery vessels and distributes
gasoline to gasoline dispensing facilities.
“Bulk Gasoline Terminal”:
Any gasoline storage and
distribution facility that receives gasoline by
pipeline, ship or barge, and distributes gasoline to
bulk gasoline plants or gasoline dispensing facilities.
“Can Coating”:
The application of a coating material
to a single walled container that is manufactured from
metal sheets thinner than 29 gauge
(0.0141
in).
“Certified Investigation”:
A report signed by Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency (Agency) personnel
certifying whether a grain-handling operation (or
portion thereof)
or grain—drying operation is causing
or tending to cause air pollution.
Such report must
describe the signatory’s investigation, including a
summary of those facts on which he relies to certify
whether the grain-handling or grain-drying operation is
causing or threatening or allowing the discharge or
emission of any contaminant into the environment so as
to cause or tend to cause air pollution in Illinois,
either alone or in combination with contaminants from
other sources,
or so as to violate regulations or
standards adopted by the Pollution Control Board
(Board)
under the Environmental Protection Act
(Act).
The certified investigation shall be open to.a
reasonable public inspection and may be copied upon
payment of the actual cost of reproducing the original.
“Choke Loading”:
That method of transferring grain
from the grain—handling operation to any vehicle for
shipment or delivery which precludes a free fall
velocity of grain from a discharge spout into the
receiving container.
“Cleaning and Separating Operation”:
That operation
where foreign and undesired substances are removed from
the grain.
133—08
9
“Clear Coating”:
Coatings that lack color and opacity
or are transparent using the undercoat as a reflectant
base or undertone color.
“Closed Purge System”:
A system that is not open to
the atmosphere and that is composed of piping,
connections, and,
if n.ecessary,
flow inducing devices
that transport liquid or vapor from
a piece or pieces
of equipment to a control device, or return the liquid
or vapor to the process line.
“Closed Vent System”:
A system that is not open to the
atmosphere and that
is composed of piping,
connections,
and,
if necessary,
flow inducing devices that transport
gas or vapor from a piece or pieces of equipment to a
control device,
or return the gas or vapor to the
process line.
“Coal Refuse”:
Waste products of coal mining, cleaning
and coal preparation operations containing coal,
matrix
material, clay and other organic and inorganic
material.
“Coating”:
For purposes of this Part,
a coating
includes a material applied to a substrate for
decorative,
protective or other functional purposes.
Such material shall include but not be limited to
paints, varnishes,
sealers,
adhesives, diluents and
thinners.
“Coating Applicator”:
Equipment used to apply a
surface coating.
“Coating Line”:
An operation where a surface coating
is applied to a material and subsequently the coating
is dried and/or cured.
“Coating Plant”:
Any building, structure or
installation that contains a coating line and which is
located on one or more contiguous or adjacent
properties and which is owned or operated by the same
person
(or by persoTis under common control).
“Coil Coating”:
The application of a coating material
to any flat metal sheet or strip that comes in rolls or
coils.
“Cold Cleaning”:
The process of cleaning and removing
soils from surfaces by spraying, brushing,
flushing or
immersion while maintaining the organic solvent below
its boiling point.
Wipe cleaning is not included in
this
definition.
133—09
10
“Complete Combustion”:
A process in which all carbon
contained in a fuel or gas stream is converted to
carbon dioxide.
“Component”:
Any piece of equipment which has the
potential to leak volatile organic material including,
but not limited to, pump seals, compressor seals,
seal
oil degassing vents, pipeline valves, pressure relief
devices, process drains and open ended valves.
This
definition excludes valves which are not externally
regulated, flanges, and equipment in heavy liquid
service.
For purposes of 35
Ill.
Adin. Code 2l5.Subpart
Q,
this definition also excludes bleed ports of gear
pumps in polymer service.
“Concentrated Nitric Acid Manufacturing Process”:
Any
acid producing facility manufacturing nitric acid with
a concentration equal to or greater than
70
percent
by
weight.
“Condensate”:
Hydrocarbon liquid separated from its
associated gasses which condenses due to changes in the
temperature or pressure and remains liquid at standard
conditions.
“Condensible PM-b”:
PM-b
formed immediately or
shortly after discharge to the atmosphere,
as measured
by the applicable test method specified in 35 Ill.
Adm.
Code 212.110.
Condensible particulate matter exists in
gaseous and/or vapor form prior to release to the
atmosphere, e.g,
in the stack,
and forms particulate
matter upon condensation when subject to conditions of
cooling and dilution in the atmosphere.
“Control Device”:
Equipment,
such as an afterburner,
adsorber,
scrubber, condenser, cyclone or baghouse used
to remove or prevent the emission of air pollutants
from
a contaminated exhaust stream.
For purposes of 35
Ill. Adm. Code 215, Subpart Q,
an enclosed combustion
device, vapor recovery system, flare,
or closed
container.
“Conveyorized Degreasing”:
The continuous process of
cleaning and removing soils from surfaces utilizing
either cold or vaporized solvents.
“Crude Oil”:
A naturally occurring mixture which
consists of hydrocarbons and sulfur, nitrogen or oxygen
derivatives of hydrocarbons and which
•is a liquid at
standard conditions.
133— 10
11
“Crude Oil Gathering”:
The transportation of crude oil
or condensate after custody transfer between a
production facility and a reception point.
“Crushing”:
The fragmentation of non-metallic minerals
by a machine such as a law, gyratory,
cone,
roll,
rod,
mill, hammermill,
and impactor.
“Custody Transfer”:
The transfer of produced petroleum
and/or condensate after processing and/or treating. in
the producing operations, from storage tanks or
automatic transfer facilities to pipelines or any other
forms of transportation.
“Cutback Asphalt”:
Any asphalt which has been
liquified
by
blending
with
petroleum
solvents
other
than
residual
fuel
oil
and
has
not
been
emulsified
with
water.
“Degreaser”:
Any
equipment
or
system
used
in
solvent
cleaning.
“Delivery
Vessel”:
Any
tank
truck
or
trailer
equipped
with
a
storage
tank
that
is
used
for
the
transport
of
gasoline
to
a
stationary
storage
tank
at
a
gasoline
dispensing
facility,
bulk
gasoline
plant
or
bulk
gasoline
terminal.
“Distillate
Fuel
Oil”:
Fuel
oils
of
grade
No.
1
or
2
as specified in detailed requirements for fuel oil
A.S.T.M.
D—369—69
(1971).
“Dry Cleaning Facility”:
A facility engaged in the
cleaning of fabrics using an essentially nonaqueous
solvent by means of one or more solvent washes,
extraction of excess solvent by spinning and drying by
tumbling in an airstream.
The facility includes, but
is not limited to, washers,
dryers,
filter and
purification systems, waste disposal systems, holding
tanks, pumps and attendant piping and valves.
“Dump—Pit Area”:
Any area where grain is received at a
grain-handling or grain-drying operation.
“Effective Grate Area”:
That area of a dump—pit grate
through which air passes, or would pass,
when
aspirated.
“Effluent Water Separator”:
Any tank,
box,
sump or
other apparatus in which any organic material floating
on or entrained or contained in water entering such
tank, box,
sump or other apparatus is physically
133—11
12
separated and removed from such water prior to outfall,
drainage or recovery of such water.
“Emission Rate”:
Total quantity of any air contaminant
discharge into the atmosphere in any one—hour period.
“Enclose”:
with respect to 35 Ill.
Adm. Code
2l5.Subpart T, to cover any volatile organic liquid
surface that is exposed to the atmosphere.
“End Sealing Compound Coat”:
A compound applied to can
ends which functions as a gasket when the end is
assembled on the can.
“Excess Air”:
Air supplied in addition to the
theoretical quantity necessary for complete combustion
of all fuel and/or combustible waste material.
“Excessive Release”:
A discharge of more than 295g
(0.65 pounds)
of mercaptans or hydrogen sulfide into
the atmosphere in any five minute period.
“Existing Grain-Drying Operation”:
Any grain-drying
operation the construction or modification of which was
commenced prior to June 30,
1975.
“Existing Grain-Handling Operation”:
Any grain—
handling operation the construction or modification of
which was commenced prior to June 30,
1975.
“Exterior Base Coat”:
An initial coating applied to
the exterior of a can after the can body has been
formed.
“Exterior End Coat”:
A coating applied by rollers or
spraying to the exterior end of a can.
“External Floating Roof”:
A storage vessel cover in an
open top tank consisting of a double deck or pontoon
single deck which is supported by the petroleum liquid
being contained and
is equipped with a closure seal
between the deck edge and tank wall.
“Extreme Performance Coating”:
Coatings designed for
exposure to any of the following:
the ambient weather
conditions,
temperatures above 368.15°K (203°F),
detergents,
abrasive and scouring agents, solvents,
corrosive atmospheres,
or other similar extreme
environmental conditions.
133—12
13
“Fabric Coating”:
The coating of a textile substrate
including operations where the coating impregnates the
substrate.
“Final Repair Coat”:
The repainting of any coating
which is damaged during vehicle assembly.
“Firebox”:
The chamber or compartment of a boiler or
furnace in which materials are burned, but not the
combustion chamber or afterburner of an incinerator.
“Flexographic Printing”:
The application of words,
designs and pictures to a substrate by means of a roll
printing technique in which the pattern to be applied
is raised above the printing roll and the image carrier
is made of elastomeric materials.
“Floating Roof”:
A roof on a stationary tank,
reservoir or other container which moves vertically
upon change in volume of the stored material.
“Freeboard Height”:
For open top vapor degreasers, the
distance from the top of the vapor zone to the top of
the degreaser tank.
For cold cleaning degreasers, the
distance from the solvent to the top of the degreaser
tank.
“Fuel Combustion Emission Source”:
Any furnace, boiler
or similar equipment used for the primary purpose of
producing heat or power by indirect heat transfer.
“Fuel Gas System”:
A system for collection of refinery
fuel gas including, but not limited to, piping for
collecting
tail gas from various process units,
mixing
drums
and
controls
and
distribution
piping.
“Fugitive Particulate Matter”:
Any particulate matter
emitted into the atmosphere other than through a stack,
provided that nothing in this definition or in
35 Ill.
Adm. Code 212.Subpart
1
shall exempt any source from
compliance with other provisions of 35
Ill. Adm. Code
212 otherwise applicable merely because of the absence
of
a stack.
“Gas Service”:
Means that the component contains
process fluid that is
in the gaseous state at operating
conditions.
“Gasoline”:
Any petroleum distillate having
a Reid
vapor pressure of
4 pounds or greater.
133—13
14
“Gasoline Dispensing Facility”:
Any site where
gasoline is transferred from a stationary storage tank
to a motor vehicle gasoline tank used to provide fuel
to the engine of that motor vehicle.
“Grain”:
The whole kernel or seed of corn, wheat,
oats,
soybeans and any other cereal or oil seed plant;
and the normal fines,
dust and foreign matter which
results from harvesting, handling or conditioning.
The
grain shall be unaltered by grinding or processing.
“Grain-Drying Operation”:
Any operation,
excluding
aeration, by which moisture is removed from grain and
which typically uses forced ventilation with the
addition of heat.
“Grain-Handling and Conditioning Operation”:
A grain
storage facility and its associate grain transfer,
cleaning, drying, grinding and mixing operations.
“Grain—Handling Operation”:
Any operation where one or
more of the following grain—related processes (other
than grain-drying operation, portable grain-handling
equipment,
one-turn storage space, and excluding flour
mills and feed mills)
are performed:
receiving,
shipping, transferring,
storing, mixing or treating of
grain or other processes pursuant to normal grain
operations.
“Green Tire Spraying”:
The spraying of green tires,
both inside and outside, with release compounds which
help remove air from the tire during molding and
prevent the tire from sticking to the mold after
curing.
“Green Tires”:
Assembled tires before molding and
curing have occurred.
“Gross Heating Value”:
Amount of heat produced when a
unit quantity of fuel is burned to carbon dioxide and
water vapor, and the water vapor condensed as described
in A.S.T.N. D—2015—66,
D—900—55, D—1826—64 and D—240—
64.
“Heavy Liquid”:
Liquid with a true vapor pressure of
less than 0.3 kPa
(0.04 psi) at 294.3°K (70°F) or 0.1
Reid Vapor Pressure as determined by A.S.T.M. method D-
323; or which when distilled requires a temperature of
300°F or greater to recover 10
of the liquid as
determined by A.S.T.M. method D-86.
133—14
15
“Heavy Metals”:.
For the purposes of Section 9.4 of the
Act,
elemental,
ionic, or combined forms of arsenic,
cadmium, mercury, chromium,
nickel and lead.
“Heavy, Off-Highway Vehicle Products”:
For the
purposes of Section 215.204(k), heavy off—highway
vehicle products shall include:
heavy construction,
mining,
farming or material handling equipment; heavy
industrial engines; diesel—electric locomotives and
associated power generation equipment; and the
components of such equipment or engines.
“Hot Well”:
The reservoir of a condensing unit
receiving the condensate from a barometric condenser.
“Housekeeping Practices”:
Those activities
specifically defined in the list of housekeeping
practices developed by the Joint EPA
-
Industry Task
Force and included herein under 35
Ill.
Adin.
Code
212.461.
“Incinerator”:
Combustion apparatus in which refuse
is
burned.
“Indirect Heat Transfer”:
Transfer of heat in such a
way that the source of heat does not come into direct
contact with process materials.
“In—Process Tank”:
A container used for mixing,
blending, heating,
reacting,
holding,
crystallizing,
evaporating,
or cleaning operations in the manufacture
of pharmaceuticals.
“In—situ Sampling Systems”:
Nonextractive samplers or
in—line
samplers.
“Interior Body Spray Coat”:
A coating applied by spray
to the interior of a can after the can body has been
formed.
“Internal Transferring Area”:
Areas and associated
equipment used for conveying grain among the various
grain operations.
“Large Appliance Coating”:
The application of a
coating material to the component metal parts
(including but not limited to doors, cases,
lids,
panels and interior support parts)
of residential and
commercial washers,
dryers,
ranges, refrigerators,
freezers, water heaters, dishwashers, trash compactors,
air conditioners and other similar products.
133—15
16
“Light-Duty Truck”:
Any second division motor vehicle,
as that, term is defined in the Illinois Vehicle~Code,
(Ill.
Rev. Stat.
1989,
ch.
95½,
pars.
1—bOO et seq.)
weighing less than 3854 kilograms
(8500 pounds) gross.
“Liquid-Mounted Seal”:
A primary seal mounted in
continuous contact with the liquid between the tank
wall and the floating roof edge around the
circumference of the roof.
“Liquid Service”: Means that the equipment or component
contains process fluid that is in a liquid state at
operating
conditions.
“Liquids
Dripping”:
Any
visible
leaking
from
a
seal
including
spraying,
misting,
clouding
and
ice
formation.
“Load—Out
Area”:
Any area where grain is transferred
from
the
grain-handling
operation
to
any
vehicle
for
shipment
or
delivery.
“Low
Solvent
Coating”:
A
coating
which
contains
less
organic
solvent
than
the
conventional
coatings
used
by
the
industry.
Low
solvent
coatings
include
water—
borne,
higher
solids,
electro—deposition
and
powder
coatings.
“Magnet Wire Coating”:
The application of a coating of
electrically insulating varnish or enamel to conducting
wire to be used in electrical machinery.
“Major
Dump
Pit”:
Any dump pit with an annual grain
through—put
of
more
than
300,000
bushels, or which
receives
more
than
40
of
the
annual
grain
through—put
of
the
grain-handling
operation.
“Major
Metropolitan
Area
(NNA)”:
Any
county
or
group
of
counties
which
is
defined
by
the
following Table:
MAJOR
METROPOLITAN
AREAS
IN
ILLINOIS
(MMA’s)
MMA
COUNTIES
INCLUDED
IN
NMA
Champaign-Urbana
Champaign
Chicago
Cook, Lake, Will,
DuPage,
McHenry,
Kane, Grundy,
Kendall, Kankakee
Decatur
Macon
Peoria
Peoria, Tazewell
Rockford
Winnebago
Rock Island
--
Moline
Rock Island
133—16
17
Springfield
Sangamon
St. Louis
(Illinois)
St.
Clair, Madison
Bloomington
——
Normal
McLean
“Major Population Area (MPA)”:
Areas of major
population concentration in Illinois,
as described
below:
The area within the counties of Cook;
Lake;
DuPage; Will; the townships of Burton, Richmond,
McHenry,
Greenwood, Nunda, Door, Algonquin,
Grafton and the municipality of Woodstock,
plus a
zone
extending
two miles beyond the boundary of
said
municipality
located
in
McHenry
County;
the
townships
of
Dundee,
Rutland,
Elgin,
Plano,
St.
Charles,
Campton,
Geneva,
Blackberry,
Batavia,
Sugar Creek and Aurora located in Kane County; and
the municipalities of Kankakee, Bradley and
Bourbonnais, plus a zone extending two miles
beyond the boundaries of said municipalities in
Kankakee County.
The area within the municipalities of Rockford and
Loves Park, plus a zone extending two miles beyond
the boundaries of said municipalities.
The
area
within
the
municipalities
of
Rock
Island,
Moline,
East
Moline,
Carbon
Cliff,
Milan,
Oak
Grove,
Silvis,
Hampton,
Greenwood
and
Coal
Valley,
plus
a
zone extending two miles beyond the
boundaries
of
said
municipalities.
The
area
within
the municipalities of Galesburg
and East Galesburg,
plus a zone extending two
miles
beyond
the
boundaries
of
said
municipalities.
The area within the municipalities of Bartonville,
Peoria and Peoria Heights, plus a zone extending
two miles beyond the boundaries of said
municipalities.
The area within the municipalities of Pekin, North
Pekin, Marquette Heights, Creve Coeur and East
Peoria, plus a zone extending two miles beyond the
boundaries of said municipalities.
The area within the municipalities of Bloomington
and
Normal,
plus
a zone extending two miles beyond
the
boundaries
of
said
municipalities.
133—17
18
The area within the municipalities of Champaign,
Urbana and Savoy, plus a zone extending two miles
beyond the boundaries of said municipalities.
The area within the municipalities of Decatur, Mt.
Zion,
Harristown and Forsyth, plus a zone
extending two miles beyond the boundaries of said
municipalities.
The area within the municipalities of Springfield,
Leland Grove,
Jerome, Southern View, Grandview,
Sherman and Chatham, plus a zone extending two
miles beyond the boundaries of said
municipalities.
The area within the townships of Godfrey,
Foster,
Wood River,
Fort Russell, Chouteau, Edwardsville,
Venice, Nameoki, Alton, Granite City and
Collinsville located in Madison County; and the
townships of Stites, Canteen, Centreville,
Caseyville,
St.
Clair, Sugar Loaf and Stookey
located in St. Clair County.
“Manufacturing Process”:
A process emission source or
series of process emission sources used to convert raw
materials,
feed stocks, subassemblies or other
components into a product, either for sale or for use
as a component in a subsequent manufacturing process.
“Marine Terminal”:
A facility primarily engaged in
loading and unloading watercraft.
“Metal Furniture Coating”:
The application of
a
coating material to any furniture piece made of metal
or any metal part which is or will be assembled with
other metal, wood,
fabric, plastic or glass parts to
form a furniture piece including,
but not limited to,
tables,
chairs,
wastebaskets, beds,
desks, lockers,
benches,
shelving, file cabinets,
lamps and room
dividers.
This definition shall not apply to any
coating line coating metal parts or products that is
identified under the Standard Industrial Classification
Code for Major Groups 33,
34,
35,
36,
37,
38,
39,
40 or
41.
“Miscellaneous Fabricated Product Manufacturing
Process”:
A manufacturing process involving one or more of
the following applications, including any drying
and curing of formulations, and capable of
emitting volatile organic material:
133—18
19
Adhesives to fabricate or assemble non-furniture
components or products
Asphalt solutions to paper or fiberboard
Asphalt to paper or felt
Coatings or dye to leather
Coatings to plastic
Coatings to rubber or glass
Curing of furniture adhesives in an oven which
would emit in excess of
10 tons of volatile
organic
material
per
year
if no air pollution
control equipment were used
Disinfectant material to manufactured items
Plastic foam scrap or “fluff” from the manufacture
of foam containers and packaging material to form
resin
pellets
Resin
solutions
to
fiber
substances
Rubber
solutions
to
molds
Viscose
solutions
for
food
casings
The
storage
and
handling
of
formulations
associated with the process described above.
The use and handling of organic liquids and other
substances for clean—up operations associated with
the process described above.
“Miscellaneous Formulation Manufacturing Process”:
A manufacturing process which compounds one or
more
of
the
following
and is capable of emitting
volatile organic material:
Adhesives
Asphalt solutions
Caulks, sealants or waterproofing agents
Coatings,. other than paint and ink
Concrete curing compounds
133—19
20
Dyes
Friction materials and compounds
Resin solutions
Rubber solutions
Viscose solutions
The storage and handling of formulations
associated with the process described above.
The use and handling of organic liquids and other
substances for clean—up operations associated with
the process described above.
“Miscellaneous Metal Parts and Products”:
For the
purpose of 35
Ill. Adm. Code 215.204, miscellaneous
metal parts and products shall include farm machinery,
garden machinery, small appliances, commercial
machinery,
industrial machinery,
fabricated metal
products’and any other industrial category which coats
metal parts or products under the Standard Industrial
Classification Code for Major Groups 33,
34,
35,
36,
37,
38 or 39 with the exception of the following:
coating
lines
subject
to 35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
215.204
(a)
through
(i) and
(k), automobile or light-duty truck
refin.ishing,
the exterior of marine vessels and the
customized top coating of automobiles and trucks if
production is less than thirty-five vehicles per day.
“Miscellaneous Organic Chemical Manufacturing Process”:
A manufacturing process which produces by chemical
reaction, one or more of the following organic
compounds or mixtures of organic compounds and
which is capable of emitting volatile organic
materials:
Chemicals listed in 35 Ill.
Adm. Code 215.
Appendix D.
Chlorinated and sulfonated compounds
Cosmetic, detergent,
soap or surfactant
intermediaries or specialties and products
Disinfectants
Food additives
133—20
21
Oil and petroleum product additives
Plasticizers
Resins or polymers
Rubber additives
Sweeteners
Varnishes
The storage and handling of formulations.
associated with the process described above.
The use and handling of organic liquids and other
substances for clean—up operations associated with
the process described above.
“Mixing Operation”:
The operation of combining two or
more ingredients,
of which at least one is a grain.
“New Grain-Drying Operation”:
Any grain-drying
operation the construction or modification of which is
commenced on or after June 30,
1975.
“New Grain-Handling Operation”:
Any grain-handling
operation the construction of modification of which is
commenced on or after June 30,
1975.
“No Detectable Volatile Organic Material Emissions”:
A
discharge
of
volatile
organic
material
into
the
atmosphere
as
indicated
by
an
instrument
reading
of
less
than
500 ppm above background as determined in
accordance with 40 CFR 60.485(c).
“One Hundred Percent Acid”:
Acid with a specific
gravity of 1.8205 at 30°C in the case of sulfuric acid
and 1.4952 at 30°C in the case of nitric acid.
“One-Turn Storage Space”:
That space used to store
grain with a total ‘annual through—put not in excess of
the total bushel storage of that space.
“Opacity”:
A condition which renders material
partially or wholly impervious to transmittance of
light and causes obstruction of an observer’s view.
For the purposes of these regulations, the following
equivalence between opacity. and Ringelmann shall be
employed:
Opacity Percent
Ringelmann
133—2 1
22
10
0.5
20
1.
30
1.5
40
2.
60
3.
80
4.
100
5.
“Open Top Vapor Degreasing”:
The batch process of
cleaning and removing soils from surfaces by condensing
hot solvent vapor on the colder metal parts.
“Operator of Gasoline Dispensing Facility”:
Any person
who is .the lessee of or operates, controls or
supervises a gasoline dispensing facility.
“Organic
Compound”:
Any
compound of carbon, excluding
carbon
monoxide,
carbon
dioxide,
carbonic
acid,
metal
carbides or carbonates,
and ammonium carbonate.
“Organic Material”:
Any chemical compound of carbon
including diluents and thinners which are liquids at
standard conditions and which are used as dissolvers,
viscosity reducers or cleaning agents, but excluding
methane,
carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, carbonic
acid,
metallic carbonic acid, metallic carbide,
metallic
carbonates
and
aminonium
carbonate.
“Organic
Materials”:
For the purposes of
Section
9.4
of
the
Act, any chemical compound of, carbon including
diluents
and
thinners
which
are liquids at standard
conditions and which are used as dissolvers,
viscosity
reducers or cleaning agents, and polychiorinated
dibenzo—p—dioxins, polychlorinated dibenzofurans and
polynuclear
aromatic
hydrocarbons are organic
materials,
while
methane,
carbon
monoxide,
carbon
dioxide,
carbonic
acid,
metallic
carbonic
acid,
metallic
carbide,
metallic
carbonates
and
ammoniun
carbonate are organic materials.
“Organic Vapor”:
Gaseous phase of an organic material
or a mixture of organic materials present in the
atmosphere.
“Overvarnish”:
A
coating
applied
directly over ink or
printing.
“Owner
of Gasoline Dispensing Facility”:
Any person
who
has
legal or equitable title to a stationary
storage
tank
at
a
gasoline
dispensing
facility.
133—22
23
“Packaging Rotogravure Printing”:
Rotogravure printing
upon paper,
paper board, metal foil,
plastic film and
other substrates, which are,
in subsequent operations,
formed into packaging products or labels for articles
to be sold.
“Paint Manufacturing Plant”:
A plant that mixes,
blends, or compounds enamels,
lacquers,
sealers,
shellacs, stains, varnishes or pigmented surface
coatings.
“Paper Coating”:
The application of a coating material
to paper or pressure sensitive tapes, regardless of
substrate,
including web coating on plastic fibers and
decorative
coatings
on
metal
foil.
“Particulate
Matter”:
Any
solid
or
liquid
material,
other than water,
which exists in finely divided form.
“Petroleum Liquid”:
Crude oil, condensate or any
finished or intermediate product manufactured at a
petroleum refinery, but not including Number
2 through
Number
6 fuel oils as specified in A.S.T.M.
D-396—69,
gas
turbine
fuel
oils
Numbers 2-GT through 4-GT as
specified
in
A.S.T.M.
D—2880—7l
or
diesel
fuel
oils
Numbers
2-D
and
4-D,
as
specified
in
A.S.T.M.
D-975-68.
“Petroleum
Refinery”:
Any
facility
engaged
in
producing
gasoline,
kerosene,
distillate
fuel
oils,
residual
fuel
oils,
lubricants,
or
other
products
through
distillation,
cracking,
extraction
or
reforming
of
unfinished
petroleum
derivatives.
“Pharmaceutical”:
Any compound or mixture, other than
food, used in the prevention,
diagnosis,
alleviation,
treatment or cure of disease in man and animal.
“Pharmaceutical Coating Operation”:
a device in which
a coating is applied to a pharmaceutical,
including any
drying or curing of the coating.
“Photochemically Reactive Material”:
Any organic
material with an aggregate of more than 20 percent of
its total volume composed of the chemical compounds
classified below or the composition of which exceeds
any of the following individual percentage composition
limitations.
Whenever any photochemically reactive
material or any constituent of any organic material may
be classified from its chemical structure into more
than one of the above groups of.organic materials it
shall be considered as a member of the most reactive
13 3—23
24
group, that
is, the group having the least allowable
percent of the total organic materials.
A combination of hydrocarbons, alcohols,
aldehydes, esters, ethers or ketones having an
olefinic or cyclo—olefinic types of unsaturation:
5
percent.
This definition does not apply to
perchlorethylene or trichboroethylene.
A combination of aromatic compounds with eight or
more carbon atoms to the molecule except ethyl-
benzene:
8 percent.
A combination of ethylbenzene, ketones having
branched hydrocarbon structures or toluene:
20
percent.
“Plant”:
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), except the
activities
of
any marine vessel.
Pollutant-emitting
activities shall be considered as part of the same
industrial grouping if they belong to the same major
group
(i.e., which have the same two-digit code)
as
described in the “Standard Industrial Classification
Manual”,
1987.
“PM-lO”:
particulate
matter
with
an aerodynamic
diameter
less
than
or
equal
to
a
nominal
10
micrometers,
as
measured
by
the
applicable test methods
specified
by
rulein
35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
212.110.
Ambient
air
concentrations
for
PM—lO
are usually expressed
in
micrograms
per
cubic
meter
(ug/m3).
“Pneumatic Rubber Tire Manufacture”:
The production of
pneumatic rubber tires with a bead diameter up to but
not including 20.0 inches and cross section dimension
up to 12.8 inches, but not including specialty tires
for antique or other vehicles when produced on
equipment separate from normal production lines for
passenger or truck type tires.
“Polybasic Organic Acid Partial Oxidation Manufacturing
Process”:
Any process involving partial oxidation of
hydrocarbons with air to manufacture polybasic acids or
their anhydrides,
such as inaleic anhyd±ide,phthalic
anhydride, terephthalic acid,
isophthalic acid,
trimelletic anhydride.
133—24
25
“Portable Grain-Handling Equipment”:
Any equipment
(excluding portable grain dryers) that is designed and
maintained to be movable primarily for use in a non—
continuous operation for loading and unloading one-turn
storage space,
and is not physically connected to the
grain elevator, provided that the manufacturer’s rated
capacity of the equipment does not exceed 10,000
bushels per hour.
“Portland Cement Manufacturing Process Emission
Source”:
any items of process equipment or
manufacturing processes used in or associated with the
production of portland cement,
including, but not
limited to,
a kiln, clinker cooler, raw mill system,
finish mill system, raw material dryer, material
storage bin or system, material conveyor belt or other
transfer system, material conveyor belt transfer point,
bagging operation, bulk unloading station, or bulk
loading station.
“Portland Cement Process” or “Portland Cement
Manufacturing Plant”:
Any facility or plant
manufacturing portland cement by either the wet or
dry
process.
“Power Driven Fastener Coating”:
The coating of nail,
staple, brad and finish nail fasteners where such
fasteners are fabricated from wire or rod of 0.0254
inch diameter or greater, where such fasteners are
bonded into coils or strips, such coils and strips
containing
a number of such fasteners,
which fasteners
are manufactured for use in power tools,
and which
fasteners must conform with formal standards for
specific uses established by various federal and
national organizations including Federal Specification
FF-N-lOSb of the General Services Administration dated
August
23,
1977
(does not include any later amendments
or editions; U.S. Army Armament Research and
Development Command, Attn:
DRDAR-TST, Rock Island, IL
61201),
Bulletin UN-25d of the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development
-
Federal Housing
Administration dated September 5,
1973
(does not
include any later amendments or editions; Department of
HUD,
547 W. Jackson Blvd., Room 1005,
Chicago,
IL
60606), and the Model Building Code of the Council of
American Building Officials,
and similar standards.
For the purposes of this definition, the terms
“brad”
and “finish nail” refer to single leg fasteners fabri-
cated in the same manner as staples.
The application
of coatings to staple, brad,
and finish nail fasteners
may be associated with the incremental forming of such
fasteners in a cyclic or repetitious manner
133—25
26
(incremental fabrication) or with the forming of strips
of such fasteners as a unit from a band of wires
(unit
fabrication).
“PPM
(Vol)
-
(Parts per Million)
(Volume)”:
A
volume/volume ratio which expresses the volumetric
concentration of gaseous air contaminant in a million
unit volumes of gas.
“Pressure Release”:
The emission of materials
resulting from system pressure being greater than set
pressure of the pressure relief device.
“Pressure Tank”:
A tank in which fluids are stored at
a pressure greater than atmospheric pressure.
“Prime Coat”:
The first film of coating material
applied in a multiple coat operation.
“Prime Surfacer Coat”:
A film of coating material that
touches up areas on the surface not adequately covered
by the prime coat before application of the top coat.
“Process”:
Any stationary emission source other than a
fuel combustion emission source or an incinerator.
“Process Unit”:
Components assembled to produce,
as
intermediate or final products, one or more of the
chemicals listed in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 2l5.Appendix
D.
A process unit can operate independently if supplied
with sufficient feed or raw materials and sufficient
storage facilities for the product.
“Process Unit Shutdown”:
A work practice or
operational procedure that stops production from a
process unit or part of a process unit.
An unscheduled
work practice or operational procedure that stops
production from a process unit or part of a process
unit for less than 24 hours
is not a process unit
shutdown.
The use of spare components and technically
feasible bypassing of components without stopping
production is not a process unit shutdown.
“Process Weight Rate”:
The actual weight or
engineering approximation thereof of all materials
except liquid and gaseous fuels and combustion air,
introduced into any process per hour.
For
a cyclical
or batch operation,
the process weight rate shall be
determined by dividing such actual weight or
engineering approximation thereof by the number of
hours of operation excluding any time during which the
equipment is idle.
For continuous processes, the
133—26
27
process weight rate shall be determined by dividing
such actual weight or engineering approximation thereof
by the number of hours in one complete operation,
excluding any time during which the equipment is idle.
“Production Equipment Exhaust System”:
A system for
collecting and directing into the atmosphere emissions
of volatile organic material from reactors, centrifuges
and other process emission sources.
“Publication Rotogravure Printing”:
Rotogravure
printing upon paper which is subsequently formed into
books, magazines, catalogues, brochures, directories,
newspaper supplements or other types of non—packaging
printed materials.
“Purged Process Fluid”:
Liquid or vapor from a process
unit that contains volatile organic material and that
results from flushing or cleaning the sample line(s)
of
a process unit so that an uncontaminated sample may
then be taken for testing or analysis.
“Reactor”:
A vat, vessel or other device in which
chemical reactions take place.
“Reasonably Available Control Technology
(PACT)”:
The
lowest emission limitation that an emission source
is
capable of meeting by the application of control
technology that is reasonably available considering
technological and economic feasibility.
“Refinery
Fuel
Gas”:
Any gas which is generated by a
petroleum
refinery
process
unit
and which is combusted
at the refinery, including any gaseous mixture of
natural gas and fuel gas.
“Refinery Unit, Process Unit or Unit”:
A set of
components which are a part of a basic process
operation such as distillation, hydrotreating,
cracking
or reforming of hydrocarbons.
“Refrigerated Conde’nser”:
a surface condenser in which
the coolant supplied to the condenser has been cooled
by a mechanical device,
other than by a cooling tower
or evaporative spray cooling, such as a refrigeration
unit or steam chiller unit.
“Residual Fuel Oil”:
Fuel oils of grade No.
4,
5 and 6
as specified in detailed requirements for fuel oils
A.S.T.N. D—396—69
(1971).
133—2 7
28
“Restricted Area”:
The area within the boundaries of
any “municipality” as defined in the Illinois Municipal
Code (ch.
24, par.
1-1-1 et seq.), plus a zone
extending one mile beyond the boundaries of any such
municipality having
a population of 1000 or more
according to the latest federal census.
“Ringelmann Chart”:
The chart published and described
in the Bureau of Mines,
U.S. Department of Interior,
Information Circular 8333 (Revision of IC77l8) May 1,
1967, or any adaptation thereof which has been approved
by the Agency.
“Roadway”:
Any street,
highway,
road,
alley,
sidewalk,
parking lot,
airport,
rail bed or terminal, bikeway,
pedestrian mall or other structure used for
transportation purposes.
“Roll Printing”:
The application of words, designs and
pictures to a substrate usually by means
of a series of
hard rubber or metal rolls each with only partial
coverage.
“Rotogravure Printing”:
The application of words,
designs and pictures to a substrate by means of a roll
printing technique in which the pattern to be applied
is recessed relative to the non—image area.
“Safety Relief Valve”:
A valve which is normally
closed and which is designed to open in order to
relieve excessive pressures within a vessel or pipe.
“Sandblasting”:
The use of a mixture of sand and air
at high pressures for cleaning or polishing any type of
surface.
“Sensor”:
A device that measures a physical quantity
or the change in a physical quantity such as
temperature, pressure, flow rate,
pH,
or liquid level.
“Set of Safety Relief Valves”:
One or more safety
relief valves designed to open in order to relieve
excessive pressures in the same vessel or pipe.
“Screening”:
Separating material according to size by
pressing undersized material through one or more mesh
surfaces
(screens)
in series,
and retaining oversized
material on the mesh surfaces
(screens).
“Sheet Basecoat”:
A coating applied to metal when the
metal
is in sheet form to serve as either the exterior
13 3—28
29
or interior of a can for either two—piece or three-
piece cans.
“Shotblasting”:
The use of
a mixture of any metallic
or non—metallic substance and air at high pressures for
cleaning or polishing any type of surface.
“Side-Seam Spray Coat”:
A coating applied to the seam
of a three-piece can.
“Smoke”:
Small gas-borne particles resulting from
incomplete combustion,
consisting predominately but not
exclusively of carbon, ash and other combustible
material, that form a visible plume in the air.
“Smokeless Flare”:
A combustion unit and the stack to
which it is affixed in which organic material achieves
combustion by burning in the atmosphere such that the
.smoke or other particulate matter emitted to the
atmosphere from such combustion does not have an
appearance density or shade darker that No.
1 of the
Ringlemann Chart.
“Solvent
Cleaning”:
The process of cleaning soils from
surfaces
by
cold
cleaning, open top vapor degreasing or
conveyorized
degreasing.
“Specialty
High
Gloss
Catalyzed
Coating”:
Commercial
contract
finishing
of
material
prepared for printers
and
lithographers
where
the
finishing
process
uses
a
solvent—borne
coating,
formulated
with
a
catalyst,
in
a
quantity of no more than 12,000 gallons/year as
supplied, where the coating machines are sheet fed and
the
coated
sheets are brought to a minimum surface
temperature
of
190°
F,
and
where
the
coated
sheets
are
to achieve the minimum specular reflectance index of 65
measured at a
60 degree angle with a gloss meter.
“Splash Loading”:
A method of loading a tank,
railroad
tank car, tank truck or trailer by use of other than a
submerged loading pipe.
“Stack”:
A flue or conduit, free—standing or with
exhaust port above the roof of the building on which
it
is mounted, by which air contaminants are emitted into
the atmosphere.
“Standard Conditions”:
A temperature of 70°F and
a
pressure of 14.7 pounds per square inch absolute
(psia).
133—29
30
“Standard Cubic Foot (scf)”:
The volume of one cubic
foot of gas at standard conditions.
“Startup”:
The setting in operation of an emission
source for any purpose.
“Stationary Emission Source”:
An emission source which
is not self—propelled.
“Stationary Storage Tank”:
Any container of liquid or
gas which.is designed and constructed to remain at one
site.
“Submerged Loading Pipe”:
Any loading pipe the
discharge opening of which
is entirely submerged when
the liquid level
is
6 inches above the bottom of the
tank.
When applied to a tank which is loaded from the~
side, any loading pipe the discharge of which is
entirely submerged when the liquid level is 18 inches
or two times the loading pipe diameter, whichever is
greater,
above the bottom of the tank.
The definition
shall also apply to any loading pipe which
is
continuously submerged during loading operations.
“Sulfuric Acid Mist”:
Sulfuric acid mist as measured
according to the method specified in 35 Ill.
Adm. Code
214.101(b)
“Surface Condenser”:
A device which removes a
substance from a gas stream by reducing the temperature
of the stream, without direct contact between the
coolant and the stream.
“Synthetic Organic Chemical or Polymer Manufacturing
Plant”:
A plant that produces,
as intermediates or
final products, one or more of the chemicals or
polymers listed in 35 Ill.
Adm. Code 2l5.Appendix
D.
“Tablet Coating Operation”:
A pharmaceutical coating
operation in which tablets are coated.
“Top Coat”:
A film of coating material applied in a
multiple coat operation other than the prime coat,
final repair coat or prime surfacer coat.
“Transfer Efficiency”: ratio of the amount of coating
solids deposited ontO a part or product to the total
amount of coating solids used.
“Tread End Cementing”:
The application of a solvent—
based cement to the tire tread ends.
133—30
31
“True Vapor Pressure”:
The equilibrium partial
pressure exerted by a petroleum liquid as determined in
accordance with methods described in American Petroleum
Institute Bulletin 2517,
“Evaporation Loss From
Floating Roof Tanks”
(1962).
“Turnaround”:
The procedure of shutting down an
operating refinery unit,
emptying gaseous and liquid
contents to do inspection, maintenance and repair work,
and putting the unit back into production.
“Undertread Cementing”:
The application of a solvent—
based cement to the underside of a tire tread.
“Unregulated
Safety
Relief
Valve”:
A safety relief
valve which cannot be actuated by a means other than
high pressure in the pipe or vessel which
it. protects.
“Vacuum Producing System”:
Any reciprocating,
rotary
or centrifugal blower or compressor,
or any jet ejector
or device that creates suction from
a pressure below
atmospheric and discharges against a greater pressure.
“Valves
Not
Externally Regulated”:
Valves that have no
external
controls,
such
as
in—line
check
valves.
“Vapor
Balance
System”:
Any
combination
of
pipes
or
hoses
which
creates
a
closed
system
between
the
vapor
spaces of an unloading tank and a receiving tank such
that vapors displaced from the receiving tank are
transferred to the tank being unloaded.
“Vapor Collection System”:
All piping,
seals, hoses,
connections, pressure—vacuum vents,
and other possible
sources between the gasoline delivery vessel and the
vapor processing unit or the storage tanks and vapor
holder.
“Vapor Control System”:
Any system that prevents
release to the atmosphere of organic material
in the
vapors displaced from a tank during the transfer of
gasoline.
“Vapor-Mounted Primary Seal”:
A primary seal mounted
with an air space bounded by the bottom of the primary
seal, the tank wall, the liquid surface and the
floating roof.
“Vinyl Coating”:
The application of a topcoat or
printing to vinyl coated.fabric or vinyl sheets;
provided, however, that the application of an organosol
or plastisol is not vinyl coating.
13 3—3
1
32
“Volatile Organic Liquid”:
Any liquid which contains
volatile organic material.
“Volatile Organic Material”:
Any organic compound which participates in
atmospheric photochemical reactions unless
specifically exempted from this definition.
Volatile organic material emissions shall be
measured by the reference methods specified under
40 CFR 60, Appendix A
(1986)
(no future amendments
or editions are included),
or, if no reference
method is applicable, may be determined by mass
balance calculations.
For purposes of this definition,
the following are
not volatile organic materials:
Chlorodifluoroethane (HCFC-l42b)
Chborodifluoromethane (CFC—22)
Chloropentafluoroethane
(CFC-l15)
2-Chloro-1,l,l,
2-tetrafluoroethane
(HCFC-l24)
Dichlorodifluoromethane
(CFC-l2)
Dichlorofluoroethane (HCFC—l4lb)
Dichioromethane
(Methylene chloride)
Dichlorotetrafluoroethane
(CFC—ll4)
Dichborotrifluoroethane
(HCFC-123)
1, 1—Difluoroethane
(HFC-l52a)
Ethane
Methane
Pentafluoroethane
(HFC-l25)
Tetrafluoroethane
(HFC-l34a)
1, 1,2,2—Tetrafluoroethane
(HFC—l34)
Trichloroethane
(Methyl chloroform)
Trichlorofluoromethane
(CFC-ll)
Trichborotrifluoroethane (CFC-l13)
1,1,b-Trifluoroethane
(HFC-l43a)
Tn
fluoromethane
(FC—2 3)
and the following classes of compounds:
Cyclic, branched, or linear, completely
fluorinated alkanes.
Cyclic, branched, or linear, completely
fluorinated ethers with no
unsaturations.
Cyclic, branched, or linear, completely
fluorinated tertiary amines with no
unsaturations.
133—32
33
Sulphur-containing perfluorocarbons with
no unsaturations and with sulfur bonds
only to carbon and fluorine.
BOARD NOTE:
USEPA or the Agency may
require monitoring to demonstrate the
amount cf an exempted compound in a
source’s emissions on a case—by—case
basis as a pre-condition to exemption of
that compound under certain
circumstances, such as where VON5 and
exempted compounds are mixed together,
there are a large number of exempted
compounds, or the chemical composition
of the exempted compounds is not known.
See
35 Ill.
Adm. Code 215.108;
56
Fed.Reg.
11419—20.
“Volatile Organic Material Content” or “VONC”:
the
emissions of volatile organic material which would
result from the exposure of a coating, printing ink,
fountain solution, tire spray, dry cleaning waste or
other similar material to the air,
including any drying
or curing,
in the absence of any control equipment.
VOMC is typically expressed as kilogram
(kg) VOM/liter
(lb VOM/gallon)
of coating or coating solids,
or kg
VOM/kg (lb VON/lb)
of coating solids,
of coating
material or material.
“Volatile Petroleum Liquid”:
Any petroleum liquid with
a true vapor pressure that is greater than 1.5 psia
(78
millimeters of mercury)
at standard conditions.
“Wastewater
(Oil/Water)
Separator”:
Any device or
piece
of
equipment
which
utilizes
the
difference
in
density
between
oil
and
water
to
remove
oil
and
associated chemicals of water, or any device,
such as a
flocculation tank or a clarifier,
which removes
petroleum derived compounds from waste water.
“Weak Nitric Acid Manufacturing Process”:
Any acid
producing facility ~manufacturingnitric acid with a
concentration of less than 70 percent by weight.
“Woodworking”:
The shaping, sawing,
grinding,
smoothing, polishing and making into products of any
form
or
shape
of
wood.
(Source:
Amended at
16
Ill.
Reg.
,
effective
)
133—33
34
TITLE 35:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
SUBTITLE B:
AIR POLLUTION
CHAPTER I:
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
SUBCHAPTER
C:
EMISSION STANDARDS AND
LIMITATIONS FOR STATIONARY SOURCES
PART 212
VISIBLE
AND
PARTICULATE
MATTER EMISSIONS
SUBPART A:
GENERAL
Section
212.100
212.107
212.108
212.109
212.110
212.111
212.112
212.113
Scope
and
Organization
Measurement
Method
for
Visible
Emissions
Measurement
Methods
for
PM—b
Emissions
Measurement Methods for Opacity
Measurement Methods For Particulate Matter
Abbreviations and Units
Definitions
Incorporations by Reference
SUBPART
B:
VISIBLE
EMISSIONS
Opacity
Standards
Limitations
for
Certain
New
Sources
Limitations
for
All
Other
Sources
Exceptions
Determination of Violations
Adjusted Opacity Standards Procedures
SUBPART
.D:
PARTICULATE
MATTER
EMISSIONS FROM INCINERATORS
Section
212.201
Limitations
for
Incinerators
Aqueous
Waste
Incinerators
Certain Wood Waste Incinerators
Explosive Waste Incinerators
Continuous Automatic Stoking Animal Pathological Waste
Incinerators
SUBPART E:
PARTICULATE MATTER EMISSIONS
FROM FUEL COMBUSTION EMISSION SOURCES
Existing Sources Using Solid Fuel Exclusively Located
in the Chicago Area
212.202
Existing Sources Using Solid Fuel Exclusively Located
Outside the Chicago Area
212.203
Existing Controlled Sources Using Solid Fuel
Exclusively
Section
212.121
212.122
212.123
212.124
212.125
212.126
Section
212. 181
212.182
212.183
212.184
212.185
133—34
35
212.204
New Sources Using Solid Fuel Exclusively
212.205
Existing Coal-fired Industrial Boilers Equipped with
Flue Gas Desulfurization Systems
212.206
Sources Using Liquid Fuel Exclusively
212.207
Sources Using More Than One Type of Fuel
212.208
Aggregation of Existing Sources
212.209
Village of Winnetka Generating Station
212.210
Emissions Limitations For Certain Fuel Combustion
Emission Sources Located in the Vicinity of Granite
City
SUBPART
K:
FUGITIVE
PARTICULATE
MATTER
Section
212.301
212.302
212.304
212.305
212.306
212.307
212.308
212.309
212.310
212.312
212.313
212.. 314
212 .315
212.316
Fugitive
Particulate
Matter
Geographical Areas of Application
Storage
Piles
Conveyor Loading Operations
Traffic Areas
Materials
Collected
by
PollUtion Control Equipment
Spraying
or
Choke-Feeding
Required
Operating
Program
Minimum Operating Program
Amendment to Operating Program
Emission Standard for Particulate Collection Equipment
Exception
for
Excess
Wind
Speed
Covering for Vehicles
Emission Limitations for Sources in Certain Areas
Section
SUBPART
L:
PARTICULATE
MATTER
EMISSIONS FROM PROCESS
EMISSION SOURCES
212.321
212.322
212.323
212.324
New
Process
Sources
Existing
Process
Sources
Stock Piles
Process Emission Sources
in Certain Areas
Section
SUBPART N:
FOOD MANUFACTURING
212.361
Corn Wet Milling Processes
212.362
Sources in Certain Areas
Section
212.381
SUBPART
0:
PETROLEUM
REFINING,
PETROCHEMICAL
AND
CHEMICAL MANUFACTURING
Catalyst Regenerators of Fluidized Catalytic Converters
SUBPART
Q:
STONE,
CLAY,
GLASS
AND
CONCRETE
MANUFACTURING
133—35
36
New Portland Cement Processes
Portland Cement Manufacturing Processes
Emission Limits for the Portland Cement Manufacturing
Plant Located in LaSalle County, South of the Illinois
River
212.424
Fugitive Particulate Matter Control for the Portland
Cement Manufacturing Plant and Associated Quarry
Operations Located in LaSalle County,
South of the
Illinois River
212.425
Sources in Certain Areas
SUBPART
R:
PRIMARY
AND FABRICATED METAL PRODUCTS
AND
MACHINERY MANUFACTURE
Section
212.441
212.442
212.443
212.444
212.445
212.446
212.447
212.448
212.449
212.450
212.451
212.452
212.455
212.456
212
.
457
212.458
Steel Manufacturing Processes
Beehive Coke Ovens
By-Product Coke Plants
Sinter
Processes
Blast Furnace Cast Houses
Basic Oxygen Furnaces
Hot
Metal
Desulfurization
Not
Located
in
the
BOF
Electric Arc Furnaces
Argon—Oxygen Decarburization Vessels
Liquid Steel Charging
Hot Scarfing Machines
Measurement Methods
Highlines on Steel Mills
Certain Small Foundries
Certain
Small
Iron-melting
Air
Furnaces
Sources
in
Certain
Areas
SUBPART
S:
AGRICULTURE
Section
212.461
212.462
212.463
212.464
Grain Handling and Drying in General
Grain Handling Operations
Grain Drying Operations
Sources
in Certain Areas
Section
212.681
SUBPART T:
CONSTRUCTION
AND
WOOD PRODUCTS
Grinding, Woodworking, Sandblasting and Shotblasting
2l2.Appendix
A
2l2.Appendix B
2l2.Appendix
C
Rule into Section Table
Section into Rule Table
Past Compliance Dates
Section
212.421
212.422
212.423
2l2.Illustration A: Allowable Emissions from Solid Fuel
Combustion Emission Sources Outside Chicago
133—3 6
37
2l2.Illustration
B: Limitations for all New Process Emission
Sources
2l2.Illustration
C: Limitations for all Existing Process Emission
Sources
212.Illustration
D: NcCook Vicinity Map
2l2.Illustration E:
Lake Calumet Vicinity Map
2l2.Illustration
F: Granite City Vicinity Map
AUTHORITY:
Implementing Section 10
and authorized by Section 27
of the Environmental Protection Act (Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1991,
ch.
111 1/2,
pars.
1010 and 1027).
SOURCE:
Adopted
as
Chapter
2:
Air
Pollution,
Rules
202
and
203:
Visual and Particulate Emission Standards and Limitations,
P71-23,
4
PCB
191,
filed
and
effective
April
14,
1972;
amended
in
P77—15,
32 PCB 403,
at
3 Ill.
Reg.
5,
p.
798, effective February
3,
1979; amended in R78—lO,
35 PCB 347,
at 3
Ill.
Reg.. 39,
p.
184, effective September 28,
1979; amended in P78—il,
35 PCB 505,
at 3
Ill. Reg.
45,
p.
100, effective October 26,
1979; amended in
R78—9,
38 PCB 411,
at
4 Ill. Reg.
24,
p.
514, effective June 4,
1980;
amended in P79—li,
43 PCB 481, at 5 Ill. Peg.
11590,
effective October 19,
1981; codified at 7 Ill. Reg.
13591;
amended in P82-1
(Docket A),
10 Ill.
Peg.
12637,
effective July
9,
1986; amended in R85—33 at 10
Ill. Peg.
18030,
effective
October
7,
1986; amended in R84-48 at 11
Ill. Peg.
691, effective
December 18,
1986; amended in P84—42 at
11 Ill. Reg.
1410,
effective December 30,
1986; amended in R82-1 (Docket
B) at
12
Ill. Peg.
12492,
effective July 13,
1988;
amended in R9l—6 at 15
Ill.Reg.
15708,
effective
October
14,
1991;
amended
in
P89-7(B)
at 15
Ill.Reg.
17710,
effective November 26,
1991;
amended in
P91—22
at
16
Ill.
Peg.
____________,
effective
SUBPART A:
GENERAL
Section 212.107
Measurement Method for Visible Emissions
Detection of visible emissions from both process emission sources
and fugitive particulate matter emission sources shall be
conducted in accordance with Method 22.
40 CFR 60, A~~endixA.
incorporated by reference
in Section 212.113, except that the
length of the observing period shall be at the discretion of the
observer, but not less than one minute.
(Source:
Added at 16 Ill.Reg.
__________,
effective
___________
Section 212.108
Measurement Methods for PM-b
Emissions
.~j
Emissions. of PM-b
shall be measured by any of the
following methods at the option of the owner or
operator of an emissions source.
133—3
7
38
fl
Method 201,
40 CFR 51, Appendix N, incorporated by
reference
in Section 212.113.
~j
Method 2OlA,
40 CFR 51, Appendix M, incorporated
by reference in Section 212.113.
~
Method
5,
40 CFR 60, Appendix A, incorporated by
reference
in Section 212.113, provided that all
particulate matter measured by Method 5 shall be
considered to be PM-la.
~J
The volumetric flow rate and gas velocity shall be
determined in accordance with Methods
1,
lA,
2,
2A,
2C,,
2D,
3 or 4,
40 CFP 60 Appendix A, incorporated by
reference in Section 212.113.
~j
Upon a written notification by the Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency (Agency), the owner or
operator of a PM—l0 emission source subiect to this
Section shall conduct the applicable testing for PM-lO
emissions, opacity,
or visible emissions at such
person’s own expense, to demonstrate compliance.
Such
test
restilts
shall
be
submitted
to
the
Agency
within
30
days after conducting the test unless an alternative
time for submittal
is agreed to by the Agency.
~.j
A person planning to conduct testing for PM-b
emissions to demonstrate compliance shall give written
notice to the Agency of that intent.
Such notification
shall be given at least
30 days prior to initiation of
the test unless a shorter pre—notification is agreed to
by the Agency.
Such notification shall state the
specific test methods from subsection
(a) that will be
used.
~j
The owner or operator of an emission source
sub-iect to
this Section shall retain records of all tests which
are performed.
These records shall be retained for at
least three years after the date
a test is performed.
~j,
This Section shall not affect the authority of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency under
Section 114 of the Clean Air Act
(42 U.S.C.
~ 7414
(1990))
(Source:
Added at 16 Ill. Peg.
______,
effective
____________
212.109
Measurement Methods for Opacity
Except as otherwise provided in this Part, and except for the
methods of data reduction when applied to Sections 212.122 and
133—38
39
212.123. measurements of opacity shall be conducted
in accordance
with Method
9.
40 CFR Part
60, Appendix A, incorporated by
reference in Section 212.113.
except that for roadways and
parking areas the number of readings required for each vehicle
pass will be three taken at 5—second intervals.
The first
reading shall be at the point of maximum opacity and second and
third readings shall be made at the same point,
the observer
standing at right angles to the plume at least
15 feet away from
the plume and observing 4 feet above the surface of the roadway
or parking area.
After four vehicles have passed, the 12
readings will be averaged.
(Source:
Added at 16 Ill.
Peg.
______,
effective
_______________
Section 212.110
Measurement Methods For Particulate Matter
a)
Particulate Matter Measurement.
Particulate matter
emissions from stationary emission sources subject to
this Part shall be conducted in accordance with 40 CFR
60 Appendix A Method~5,
5A.
SD,
or 5E,
as incorporated
by reference in Section 212.113.
b)
Flow Rate and Gas Velocity Measurement.
The volumettic
flow rate and gas velocity shall be determined in
accordance with 40 CFR 60, Appendix A, Methods
1,
1A,
2,
2A,
2C,
2D,
3 and 4, incorporated by reference in
Section 212.113.
c)
Opacity Measurement.
Measurement of opacity shall be
conducted in accordance with 40 CFR 60, Appendix A,
Method
9 and 40 CFR 63.675(c)
and
(d), incorporated by
reference in Section 212.113.
d)
Visible Emissions Measure.
DctcctionA determination a~
to the presence or absence of visible emissions from
all process emission sources and fugitive particulate
emission sources required to meet a “no vir3iblc
cmi~c~ion~”
standard,
except with respect to Section
212.301, shall be conducted in accordance with 40 CFR
60, Appendix A, Method 22, incorporated by reference in
Section 212.113, excqpt that the length of the
observing period shall be at the discretion of the
observer, but not less than one minute.
e)
Test Methods for PM-b
Emissions.
Emissions of PM-la
shall be measured by any of the following methods at
the option of the owner or operator of an emissions
source.
1)
40 CFR 51, Appendix M, Method
201,
incorporated by
reference in Section 212.113.
133—39
40
2)
40 CFR 51, Appendix M, Method 2OlA,
incorporated
by-
reference in Section 212.113.
3)
40 CFR 60, Appendix A, Method
5, incorporated by
reference in Section 212.113, provided that all
Particulate Matter measured by Method
5 shall be
considered to be PM-b.
f)
Test Methods for Condensible PM—b
Emissions.
~niissionsof condensible PM—ic shall be measured by 55
Fed.
Peg. 41546 Method 202 incorporated by reference in
Section 212.113.
g)
Upon a written notification by the Agency, the owner or
operator of a PM-b
emission source subject to this
Part shall conduct the applicable testing for PM-b
emissions, condensible PM—b
emissions,
opacity,
or
visible emissions at such person’s own expense,
to
demonstrate compliance.
Such test results shall be
submitted to the Agency within 30 days of conducting
the
test
unless
an
alternative time for submittal
is
agreed to by the Agency.
h)
A
person
planning
to
conduct
testing
for
PM-b
or
condensible
PM—b
emissions
to
demonstrate
compliance
shall give written notice to the Agency of that intent.
Such notification shall be given at least 30 days prior
to the initiation of the test unless a shorter period
is agreed to by the Agency.
Such notification shall
state the specific test methods from this Section that
will be used.
i)
The owner or operator of an emission source subject to
this Part shall retain records of all tests which are
performed.
These records shall be retained for at
least three years after the date a test is performed.
j)
This Section shall not affect the authority of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency under
Section 114 of the Clean Air Act
(42 U.S.C.A.
Par. 7401
et seq.
(1990)).
(Source:
Amended at 16 Ill.Reg.
_______,
effective
_____________
________
.)
Section 212.113
Incorporations by Reference
The
following
materials
are
incorporated
by
reference.
These
incorporations do not include any later amendments or editions.
133—40
41
a)
Pingelmann Chart,
Information Circular 833
(Revision of
IC77b8), Bureau of Mines, U.S. Department of Interior,
Nay 1,
1967.
b)
40 CFR 60, Appendix A
(1990):
1)
Method
1:
Sample and Velocity Traverses for
Stationary Sources;
2)
Method bA:
Sample and Velocity Traverses for
Stationary Sources with Small Stacks or Ducts;
3)
Method
2:
Determination of Stack Gas Velocity and
Volumetric Flow Rate
(Type
S pitot tube);
4)
Method 2A:
Direct Measurement of Gas Volume
Through
Pipes
and
Small
Ducts;
5)
Method 2C:
Determination of Stack Gas Velocity
and Volumetric Flow Pate in Small Stacks or Ducts
(Standard Pitot Tube);
6)
Method 2D:
Measurement of Gas Volumetric Flow
Rates
in Small Pipes and Ducts;
7)
Method 3:
Gas Analysis for Carbon Dioxide,
Oxygen,
Excess Air, and Dry Molecular Weight;
8)
Method 4:
Determination of Moisture Content in
Stack Gases;
9)
Method S:
Determination of Particulate Emissions
From Stationary Sources;
jQJ
Method
5A:
Determination
of
Particulate
Emissions
From the Asphalt Processing and Asphalt Roofing
Industry
~jj
Method SD:
Determination of Particulate Matter
Emissions From Positive Pressure Fabric Filters
j~j Method 5E:
Determination of Particulate Emissions
From the Wool Fiberglass Insulation Manufacturing
Industry
913)Method
9:
Visual
Determination
of
the
Opacity
of
Emissions from Stationary Sources;
~l4)Method
22:
Visual Determination of Fugitive
Emissions from Material Sources and Smoke
Emissions from Flares.
133—4
1
42
c)
40
CFR
51
Appendix
N
(1990):
1)
Method
201:
Determination
of
PM—b
Emissions:
2)
Method 201A:
Determination of PM—b
Emissions
(Constant Sampling Rate Procedure).
d)
40 CFR 60.672
(b),
(c),
(d), and
(e)
(1990).
e)
40 CFR 60.675(c)
and
(d)
(1990).
f)
ASAE Standard 248.2, Section
9, Basis for Stating
Drying Capacity of Batch and Continuous-Flow Grain
Dryers, American Society of Agricultural Engineers,
2950 Miles Road, St~Joseph, MI 49085.
g)
U.S.
Sieve
Series,
ASTM—Elb,
American
Society
of
Testing Materials,
1916 Race Street, Philadelphia, PA
19103.
h)
55 FRFed. Req.
41546,- (October 12,
1990), Method 202:
Determination of Condensjble Particulate Emissions from
Stationary Sources.
(Source:
Amended at 16
Ill. Peg.
______,
effective
____________
SUBPART E:
PARTICULATE MATTER EMISSIONS FROM FUEL COMBUSTION
EMISSIONS SOURCES
Section 212.210
Emissions Limitations for Certain Fuel
Combustion Emission Sources Located in the
Vicinity of Granite City
a)
No person shall cause or allow emissions of PM—b
into
the atmosphere to exceed 12.9 ng/J
(0.03 lbs. per
minbtu)
of heat input from fuels other than natural gas
during any one hour period from any industrial fuel
combustion emissions source,
other than in an
integrated iron and steel plant,
located in the
vicinity of Granite City, which area is defined in
Section 212.324(a) (1) (C).
~j
Compliance Date.
Sources shall comply with the
emissions limitations of this Section within one year
following its effective date,
or by December 10,
1993,
whichever is earlier.
(Source:
Added at 16
111.
Peg.
______,
effective
______________
SUBPART
K:
FUGITIVE
PARTICULATE
MATTER
133—42
43
Section
212.302
Geographical
Areas
of
Application
~j
Except
for
those
operations subject to Subpart S
(Grain-Handling and Grain-Drying Operations) that are
outside the areas defined in Section 212.324(a)’ (1),
Sections 212.304 through 212.310, and 212.312 shall
apply to all mining operations (SIC major groups
10
through 14), manufacturing operations
(SIC major groups
20 through 39), and electrIc generating operations
(SIC
group 491), which are located in the areas defined by
the boundaries of the following townships,
notwithstanding any political subdivisions contained
therein, as the township boundaries were defined on
October 1,
1979,
in the following counties:
Cook:
All townships
Lake:
Shields, Waukegan, Warren
DuPage:
Addison, Winfield, York
Will:
DuPage, Plainfield, Lockport, Channahon,
Peoto.ne,
Florence, Joliet
Peoria:
Richwoods, Limestone, Hollis,
Peoria,
City of Peoria
Tazewell:
Fondulac,
Pekin, Cincinnati, Groveland,
Washington
Macon:
Decatur,
Hickory
Point
Rock Island:
Blackhawk, Coal Valley, Hampton, Moline,
South Moline, Pock Island,
South Rock
Island
LaSalle:
LaSalle, Utica
Madison:
Alton,
Chouteau, Collinsville,
Edwardsville, Fort Russell, Godfrey,
Granite City, Nameoki, Venice, Wood
River
St. Clair:
Canteen,
Caseyville,
Centervible,
St.
Clair,
Stites,
Stookey,
Sugar Loaf,
Millstadt
ki
In
the
geographical
~~asdefjned
in Section
212.324(a) (1), Sections 212.304 through 212.310,
212.312, and 212.316 shall a~~lvto all sources
identified in subsection
(a). and shall further apply
to the following operations:
grain-handling and
grain-drying (Subpart S4, transportation,
communications,
electric, gas, and sanitary services
(SIC major groups 40 through 49).
Additionally,
Sections 212.304 through 212.310,
212.312, and 212.316
shall apply to wholesale trade—farm supplies
(SIC
Industry No. 5191)
located in the vicinity of Granite
City, as defined in Section 212.324 (a) (1) (C).
133—43
44
~j
Compliance Date.
Compliance with subsection
(b)
is
required one year following its effective date,
or by
December 10,
1993,
whichever is earlier.
(Source:
Amended
at
16
Ill.
Peg.
,
effective
_____________
Section
212.309
Operating
Program
~J
The sources described in Sections 212.304 through
212.308 and Section 212.316 shall be operated under the
provisions of an operating program, consistent with the
requirements set forth in Sections 212.310 and 212.312
of this Part,
and prepared by the owner or operator and
submitted to the Agency for its review.
Such operating
program shall be designed to significantly reduce
fugitive particulate matter emissions.
kI
Compliance Date.
The amendment to this Section
incorporating the applicability of Section 212.316
shall apply one year following its effective date or on
December
10,
1993, whichever is earlier.
(Source:
Amended at
16 Ill. Peg.
______,
effective
_____________
Section 212.316
Emission Limitations for Sources
in Certain
Areas
~j
Applicability.
This Section shall apply to those
operations specified in Section 212.302 and that are
located in areas defined in Section 212.324(a) (1).
~
Emission Limitation for Crushing and Screening
Operations.
No person shall cause or allow fugitive
particulate matter emissions generated by the crushing
or screening of slag, stone,
coke or coal to exceed an
opacity of 10.
gj
Emission Limitations for Roadways or Parkinci.Areas.
Mo
person shall cause or allow fugitive particulate matter
emissions from any roadway or parking area to exceed an
opacity_of 10,
except that the opacity shall not
exceed
5
at quarries with a capacity to produce more
than
1 million tons per year of aggregate.
~j
Emission Limitations for Storage Piles.
No person
shall cause or allow fugitive particulate matter
emissions from any storage pile to exceed an opacity of
10.
to be measured four feet from the pile surface.
133—44
45
~j
Additional Emissions Limitations for the Granite City
Vicinity as Defined
in Section 212.324(a)’ (1) (C).
fl
Emissions Limitations for Roadways or Parking
Areas
Located
at
Slag
Processing
Facilities
or
Integrated
Iron
and
Steel
Manufacturing
Plants.
No person shall cause or allow fugitive
particulate matter emissions from any roadway or
parking area located at a sla~processing facility
or integrated iron and steel manufacturing plant
to exceed an opacity of 5.
21
Emissions Limitations for Marine Terminals.
~j
No person shall cause or allow fugitive
particulate matter emissions from any loading
spouts for truck or railcar to exceed an
opacity of 10.
~
No person shall cause or allow fugitive
particulate matter emissions generated at
barge unloading, dump pits,
or conveyor
transfer points including, but not limited
to, transfer onto and off of a conveyor,
tà
exceed an opacity of 5.
j)
Emission Limitation for All Other Sources.
Unless a
source has been assigned a particulate matter, PM—b,
or fugitive particulate matter emissions limitation
elsewhere in this Section or in Subparts P or
5, no
person shall cause~ allow fugitive particulate matter
emissions from any source to exceed an opacity of 20.
aL
Recordkeeping and Reporting
fl
The owner or operator of any fugitive particulate
matter emission source subiect to this Section
shall keep written records of the application of
control measures as may he needed for compliance
with the opacity limitations of this Section and
shall
submit to the~g~ncyan annual report
containing a
&Ummarv
of such information.
21
The
records
required
under this subsection shall
include at least the following:
~
the name and address of the plant
~
the name and address of the owner and/or
operator of the plant
133—45
46
~j
a map or diagram showing the location of all
emission sources controlled including the
location, identification,
length, and width
of roadways
Qj
for e~chapplication of water or chemical
~n1ir’—ir~n
t~e rc~dw~vs
hv
trlc~k!
the
~
and
boat~ionof the roadway controlled,
appJ.cation
rate of each truck,
frequency of
each application,
width of each application,
identification of each truck used, total
quantity of water or chemical used for each
..,~icationand,
for each application of
chem~.calsolution, the concentration and
identity
of
the
chemical.
~J
for application of physical or chemical
control agents: the name of the agent,
application rate and frequency, and total
quantity of agent and,
if diluted, percent of
concentration, used each day
fi
a log recording incidents when control
measures were not used and a statement of
explanation.
~j
Copies of all records required by this Section
shall be submitted to the Agency within ten
(10)
working days after
a written request by the Agency
and shall
be transmitted to the Agency by a
company-designated person with authority to
release such records.
41
The records required under this Section shall be
kept and maintained for at least three
(3),
years
and shall be available for inspection and copying
by Agency representatives during working hours.
~j
A quarterly report shall be submitted to the
Agency stating the following:
the dates any
necessary control measures were not implemented,
a
listing of those control measures, the reasons
that the control measures were not implemented,
and any corrective actions taken.
This
information includes, but is not limited to,
those
dates when controls were not applied based on
a
belief that application of such control measures
would have been unreasonable given prevailing
atmospheric conditions,
which shall constitute a
defense to the requirements of this Section.
This
report shall be submitted to the Agency
30
calendar days from the end of a quarter.
Quarters
133—46
47
end March 31, June
30.
September 30, and December
31.
~j
Compliance Date.
Sources shall comply with the
emissions limitations and recordkeeping and reporting
requirements of this Section within one year following
the effective date of this Section, or by December 10,
1993,
whichever is earlier.
(Source:
Added at 16 Ill.
Peg.
________,
effective
____________
SUBPART L:
PARTICULATE MATTER EMISSIONS FROM
PROCESS EMISSION SOURCES
Section 212.324
Process Emission Sources in Certain Areas
~j
Applicability.
jj
This Section shall apply to any process emission
source located in any of the following areas:
~j
That area bounded by lines from Universal
Transmercator
(UTM) coordinate 428000mE,
463l000mN,
east to 435000rnE,
463b000mN, south
to 435000mE,
4623000mN, west to 428000mE,
4623000mN,
north to 428000mE, 463b000mN,
in
the vicinity of McCook in Cook County,
as
shown in Illustration D
~j
That area bounded by lines from Universal
Transmercator
(UTM)
coordinate 445000mE,
462218OmN,
east to 456265mE, 4622180mN,
south
to 456265E, 4609020N, west to 445000mE,
4609020mN,
north to 445000mE,
4622l80mN,
in
the vicinity of Lake Calumet
in Cook County,
as shown in Illustration E
çj
That area bounded by lines from Universal
Transinercator (UTM)
coordinate 744000mE,
4290000mN, east to 753000mE, 4290000mN,
south
to 753000mE,
4283000mN, west to 744000inE,
4283000m1j~northto 744000mE, 4290000mN,
in
the vicint~y~ofGranite City in Madison
County,
as
shown
in
Illustration
F.
21
This
Section
shall
not
alter
the applicability of
Sections 212.32.
and 212.322 of this Part.
~j.
The emission limitations of this Section are not
applicable to. any source subject to a specific
13 3—4
7
48
emissions standard or limitation contained in any
of the following Subparts:
jJJ
Subpart N, Food Manufacturing;
(ii)
Subpart 0. Stone, Clay, Glass and
Concrete Manufacturing;
liii)
Subpart R, Primary and Fabricated Metal
Products and Machinery Manufacture;
and
(iv)
Subpart S.
Agriculture.
~j.
General Emission Limitation.
Except as otherwise
provided in this Section, no person shall cause or
allow the emission, into the atmosphere,
of PM—b
from
any process emission source to exceed 68.7 mg/scm
(0.0-3
gr/scf) during any one hour period.
~j
Alternative Emission Limitation.
In lieu of the
emission limit of 68.7 mg/scm
(0.03
cir/scf) contained
in subsection
(b). no person shall cause or allow the
emissions of the following sources to exceed the
corresponding limitations in the following table:
Source
Emissions Limit
Metric
English
fl
Shotbbasting emissions
22.9 mg/scm
0.01
sources in the Village
~r/scf
of McCook equipped with
fabric filter(s)
as of
June
1,
1991
21
All process emissions
5
opacity
5
opacity
sources at manufacturers
of steel wool with soap
pads located in the
Village of McCook
~j
Exceptions.
The mass emission limits contained in
subsections
(b) and
(c)
shall not apply to those
sources with no visible emissions other than fugitive
particulate matter.
~j
Special Emissions Limitation for Fuel—Burning Process
Emissions Sources in the Vicinity of Granite City.
Mo
person shall cause or allow emissions of PM-b
into the
atmosphere to exceed 12.9 nq/J (0.03 lbs. per
mmbtu)
of
heat’ input from the burning of fuel other than natural
gas at any process emissions source located in the
133—48
49
vicinity of Granite City as defined in subsection
(a) (1) (C).
~‘j
Maintenance and Repair.
For any process emission
source subiect to subsection
(a), the owner or operator
shall maintain and repair all air pollution control
equipment in a manner that assures that the emission
limits and standards in this Section shall be met at
all times.
This Section shall not affect the
applicability of Section 201.149.
Proper maintenance
shall include the following minimum requirements:
fl
Visual inspections of air pollution control
equipment
21
Maintenance of an adequate inventory of spare
parts;
and
~
Expeditious repairs, unless the source is
shutdown.
gj
Recordkeepina of Maintenance and Repair.
.~j
Written records of inventory and documentation of
inspections, maintenance,
and repairs of all air
pollution contrç~leauip2nent shall be kent in
accordance with subsection
(f) of this Section.
21
The owner or c~oeratorshall document any period
during which am’ process emission source was
in
operation when the air pollution control equipment
was not
in operation or was malfunctioning so as
to cause an emissions level
in excess of the
emissions limitation.
These records shall include
~Qgumentation of causes for pollution control
~ipment
not operating or such malfunction and
shall
state what corrective actions were taken and
what repairs were made.
fl
A written record of the inventory of all spare
parts not readily available from local suppliers
shall be kent and updated.
41
Copies of all records’ required by this Section
shall be submitted to the Agency within ten
(10)
working days of a written request by the Agency.
~j
The records required under this Section shall be
kept and maintained for at least three
(3)
years
and shall be available, for inspection and copying
by Agency representatives during working hours.
133—
~9
50
~j
Upon written request by the Agency a report shall
be submitted to the Agency for any period
specified
in the request statinct the following:
the dates during which any process emissions
source was in operation when the air pollution
control equipment was not in operation or was not
operating properly, documentation of causes for
pollution control equipment not operating or not
operating properly, and a statement of what
corrective actions were taken and what repairs
were made.
bi
Compliance Date.
Sources shall comply with the
emissions limitations and recordkeeping and reporting
requirements of this Section within one year of the
effective date of this Section,
or by December
10.
1993, whichever is earlier.
(Source:
Added at 16 111. Peg.
,
effective
_____________
SUBPART N:
FOOD MANUFACTURING
212.362
Sources in Certain Areas
~j
Applicability.
~j.
Subsections
(b)(1)
through
(b)(4)
shall apply to
those sources engaged in food manufacturing, and
‘located in the Village of Bedford Park west of
Archer Avenue and in the area defined in Section
212.324 (a) (1) (A).
21
Subsection
(b) (5)
applies to an instant tea
manufacturing plant
in Granite City,
as defined in
Section 212.324(a) (1) (C).
~J
Emission Limitation.
No person shall cause or allow
the_emission of PM-b.
other than that of fugitive
particulate matter,
into the atmosphere to exceed the
following limits during any one hour period:
jj
22.9 mg/scm (0.01 gr/scf)
for dextrose dryers,
dextrose melt tank systems, bulk dextrose loading
systems, house dry dextrose dust systems, dextrose
bagging machine dust systems; dextrose expansion
dryer/cooler and packing systems and 2034 dextrose
dryer/cooler dust collecting systems
21
34.3 mg/scm
(0.015 gr/scf)
for feed dryers, gluten
dryers,
germ
dryers, and heat recovery scrubbers
133—50
51
~J
68.7 mg/scm
(0.03 gr/scf)
for germ cake transport
systems. spent flake transport/cooling systems,
bleaching clay systems, dust pickup bin systems
in
Building 26.
and ~elbet cooler systems
41
45.8 mg/scm
(0.02 ~r/scf) for germ transport
systems, starch dust collection systems, dicalite
systems, starch processing/transport systems,
starch dryers,
starch transport systems, calcium
carbonate storaae systems; starch loading systems,
corn unloading systems, germ transfer towers,
dextrose transport systems, soda ash unloading
systems, corn silo systems, filter aid systems,
spent flake storage systems, corn cleaning
transport systems, feed transport cooling systems,
gluten cooling systems, gluten transport systems,
feed dust systems, gluten dust systems. pellet
dust systems, spent flake transport systems, rail
car maintenance system building, and dextrose
expansion milling and stora~esystems.
~j
22.9 mg/scm
(0.01 gr/scf)
for any process
emissions
source
at
an instant tea manufacturing
plant
in Granite City,
except the spray dryer,
raw
tea storage silo,
and instant tea filling
machines.
gj
Exceptions.
The emission limits contained in
subsection
(b)
shall
j~pt
a~p1yto those sources with
rio
visible emissions oth
_than fugitive matter.
~j
Maintenance, Repair, and Recordkeeping.
The
requirements of subsections
(f)
and
(q)
of Section
212.324 shall also apply to this Section.
~j
Compliance Date.
Sources shall comply with the
emissions limitations and recordkeepin~and reporting
requirements of this Section within one year of the
effective date of this Section, or by December
10,
1993,
whichever is earlier.
(Source:
Added at 16
Ill. Peg.
______,
effective
_____________
SUBPART
Q:
STONE,
CLAY,
GLASS
AND
CONCRETE MANUFACTURING
212.425
Sources in Certain Areas
~j
Applicability.
This Section shall apply to those
sources located in those areas defined in Section
212.324(a)
(1).
13 3—5
1
52
~j
Emission
Limitation.
No
person
shall
cause
or
allow
the emission of PM-b,
other than that of fugitive
particulate matter, into the atmosphere to exceed the
following limits during any one hour period:
fl
57.2 mp/scm (0.025 gr/scf)
for coater and cooling
loon ventilator at roofing asphalt manufacturing
plant located in the Village of Summit
21
34.3 mg/scm (0.015 gr/scf)
for mineral filler
handling sources at roofing asphalt manufacturing
plant located in the Village of Summit
fl
0.03 kg/Mg
(0.06 lb/T)
of asphalt mixed for
asphalt mixer at roofing asphalt manufacturing
plant located
in the Village of Sumxnit~
41
91.6
mg/scm
(0.04 gr/scf)
for roofing asphalt
blowing stills,
except stills Nos.
1 and
2,
at
roofing asphalt manufacturing plant located in the
Village of Summit
~j
45.8 mg/scm
(0.02 gr/scf)
for kilns
in the lime
manufacturing
industry
~j
22.9 mg/scm
(0.01 ~r/scfl for all other process
emission sources in the lime manufacturing
industry
fl
0.325 kg/Mg (0~65lb/T)
of glass produced for all
glass melting furnaces.
~j
Exceptions.
The emission limits contained in
subsection
(b)
of this Section shall not apply to those
sources with no visible emissions other than fugitive
particulate matter.
~j.
Maintenance, Repair, and Recordkeeping.
The
requirements of subsections
(f) and
(g)
of Section
212.324 shall also apply to this Section.
~j
Compliance Date.
Sources shall comply with the
emissions limitations and recordkeeping and reporting
requirements of this Section within one year of the
effective date of this Section,
or by December 10,
1993, whichever is earlier.
(Source:
Added at 16 Ill.
Peg.
______,
effective
______________
SUBPART R:
PRIMARY
AND
FABRICATED METAL PRODUCTS
AND
MACHINERY MANUFACTURE
133—52
53
212.458
Sources
in
Certain
Areas
~j
Applicability.
This Section shall apply to those
sources located in those areas defined in Section
212.324 (a) (1).
j~j
Emission Limitation.
No person shall cause or allow
emissions of PM-bO,
other than that of fugitive
particulate matter,
into the atmosphere to exceed the
following limits during any one hour period:
fl
15.9 np/J
(0.037 lbs. per mmbtu) of heat input
from any fuel combustion source located at the
steel plant between 106th and 111th Streets in
City of Chicac~ç~
21
22.9 mp/scm
(0.01 gr/scf)
for the basic oxygen
furnace additive systems in the Village of
Riverdale
~j
4.3 ng/J (0.01
lbs. per mxnbtu) of heat input from
the burning of fuel in the soaking pits in the
Village of Riverdale
41
64.08 mp/scm (0.028 gr/scf)
from the electrostatic
precipitator discharge of the basic oxygen process
in the Village of Riverdale
~j
45.8 mg/scm
(0.02 gr/scf) from the pickling
process at a steel plant in the Village of
Riverdale
~
5
opacity for coal handling systems equipped with
fabric filter(s~at steel plant located in the
City of Chicag~
21
22.9 mp/scm (0.01 gr/scf) from any process
emissions source located at integrated iron and
steel plants in the vicinity of Granite City,
as
defined in Section 212.324(a) (1) (C), except as
otherwise provided
in’ this Section or in Sections
212.443 and 212.446
~j
5
opacity for continuous caster spray chambers or
continuous casting operations at steel plants in
the vicinity of Granite City,
as defined in
Section 212.324 (a) (1) (C)
~j
32.25 ~g/J
(0.075 lbs ~er mitibtu) of heat input
from the burning of coke oven gas at all sources,
other than coke oven combustion stacks,
at steel
13
3—53
54
plants
in the vicinity of Granite City, as defined
in Section 212.324(a) (1) (C)
IQI
38.7 ng/J
(0.09 bbs. ~er minbtu)
of heat input from
the slab furnaces at steel plants in the vicinity
of Granite City, as defined in Section
212.324 (a) (1) (C)
fl~
22.9 mg/scm
(0.01 gr/scf)
for all process
emissions sources at secondary lead processing
plant located in Granite City,
except the salt
flux crusher
1.21
22.9 mg/scm
(0.01 gr/scf)
for any melting furnace
at secondary aluminum smelting and refining plant
in the vicinity of Granite City,
as defined in
Section 212.324(a) (1) (C)
fl~
45.8 mg/scm
(0.02 gr/scf)
from No.
6 mill brusher,
and metal chip handling system at secondary
aluminum smelting and refining plant located in
the vicinity of Granite City, as defined in
Section 212.324 (a) (1) (‘C)
.~4j
0.05 kg/Mg
(0.01 bb/T)
of sand processed from
molding sand forming systems at steel foundry
plant
located in Granite City
~
0.01 kg/Mg
(0.02
lbs/T)
of sand processed from
recycle sand shakeouts at steel foundry plant
located in Granite City
1~1
22.9 mg/scm
(0.01 gr/scf)
for all other process
emissions sources at steel foundry plant
in
Granite City,
except the sand dryer,
sand cooler,
chill tumbler, paint booth, chromite reclamation
and core baking ovens
~fl
41.2 mg/scm
(0.018 gr/scf)
for cold rolling mill
emissions sources at metal finishing plant located
in the Village of McCook
~fl
2.15 ng/J
(0.005 lbs/mmbtu)
of heat input from the
burning of fuel in any process emission source at
secondary aluminum smelting and refining plant
and/or aluminum’finjshjng plant
~j
22.9 mg/scm
(0.01 gr/scf)
from dross pad, dross
cooling,
and dross mixing sources at secondary
aluminum smelting and refining, plant and/or
aluminum finishing plant
133—54
55
ZQI
12.9 ng/J
(0.03 lbs/mmbtu)
of
heat
input
from
any
fuel combustion ‘emission source that heats air for
space heating purposes at secondary aluminum
smelting and refining plant located in the
vicinity of Granite City~as defined in Section
212.324 (a)
(b):(CU
~jj
68.7 mp/scm
(.0.03 ar/scf)
for any holding furnace
at secondary aluminum smelting and refining plant
in the vicinity of Granite City,
as defined in
Section 212.324(a) (1) (C)
2.21
2.15 ~g/J
(0.005 lbs ~oermiubtu)
of heat input from
the steel works boilers located at the steel
making facilities at steel plant in the vicinity
of Granite City,
as d~jped in Section
212.324 (a) (1) (C)
~j
31.1 kg
(68.5 Ibs)
~or the total of all basic
oxygen furnace processes described in Section
212.446(a) and jocated at steel plant
in the
vicinity of Granite City,
as defined in Section
212.324 (a) (1) (C)
2.41
North and South ~urnaces at secondary aluminum
smelting and refining plant located in the
vicinity of Granite City,
as def~inedin Section
212.324(a)(j.)i(C). cannot be operated
simultaneously
2~1
Magnesium pot furnaces at secondary aluminum
smelting and refining plant located in the
vicinity of Granite City,
as defined in Section
212.324(a) (1) (C), can be operated only one line at
a time
2~1
2.15 ~g/J (0.005 lbs/mmbtu) of heat input from any
fuel combustion source at secondary aluminum
smelting and refining plant and/or aluminum
finishing plant except as provided in subsection
(b) (20
)
221
91.6
mg/scm
(0.040
~r/scf)
and
0.45 ku/hr
(1
lb/hr)
for melting furnaces Nos.
6,
7, and
8 at
metal finishing plant in the Village of McCook,
with operation limited to no more than two of
these furnaces at one time
2fl
183 mg/scm
(0.080 gr/scf) and 0.91 ku/hr
(2
lbs/hr)
for holding furnaces Nos.
6,
7, and
8 at
metal finishing plant in the Village of McCook,
13 3—55
56
with operation limited to no more than two of
these furnaces at one times
2.21
54.9 mg/scm (0.024 gr/scf) and 1.81 kg/hr
(4
lbs/hr)
for melting furnaces Nos.
24,
25, and 26
at metal finishing plant in the Village of McCook
.~Q1
34.3 mg/scm (0.015 gr/scf) and 1.81 kg/hr
(4
lbs/hr)
for melting furnaces Nos.
27,
28,
29, and
30 at metal finishing plant in the Village of
McCook
~JJ
32.0 mg/scm
(0.014 gr/scf) and 0.45 kg/hr
(1
bb/hr)
for holding furnaces Nos.
24,
25,
and 26 at
metal
finishing plant in the Village of McCook,
except that during fluxing operation those
furnaces may emit 195 mg/scm
(0.085 gr/scf)
and
2.72 kg/hr
(6 lb/hr)
~.21
34.3 mg/scm (0.015 gr/scf) and 0.45 kg/hr
(1
lb/hr)
for holding furnaces Nos.
27,
28,
29, and
30
at
metal finishing plant in the Village of
McCook,
except that during fluxing operation those
furnaces may emit 217 mg/scm
(0.095 gr/scf)
and
2.72 kg/hr
(6 lb/hr)
~fl
Fluxing operations
at holding furnaces Nos.
24,
25,
26,
27,
28,
29,
and 30 at metal finishing
plant
in the Village of McCook shall be limited to
no more than three at any one time.
gj
Exceptions.
The mass emission limits contained in
subsection
(b)
shall not apply to those sources with no
visible emissions other than that of fugitive
particulate matter.
~j
Maintenance, Repair, and Pecordkeeping.
The
requirements of subsections
(1) and
(g) of Section
212.324 shall also apply to this Section.
~j
Compliance Date.
Compliance with this Section is
required by December b0.
1993.
(Source:
Added at 16 Ill.Reg.
_________,
effective
_______
SUBPART 5:
AGRICULTURE
Section 212.464
Sources in Certain Areas
133—56
57
Applicability.
Notwithstanding Section 212.461, this
Section shall appbyj.o those sources located in the
Lake Calumet area as defined in Section
212.324 (a) (b) (B).
~j
Emission Limitations
fl
No person shall cause or allow the emission of PM—
10, other than that of fugitive particulate
matter,
into the atmosphere to exceed 22.9 mg/scm
(0.01 gr/scf) during any one hour period from any
process emissions source engaged in the drying,
storing, mixing or treating of grain except for
column grain dryers;
in addition, no person shall
cause or allow visible emissions of PM—b
other
than fugitive particulate matter from grain
conveying, transferring,
loading, or unloading
operations,
including garners,
scales, and
cleaners.
21
No person shall cause or allow the emission of
fugitive particulate matter into the atmosphere
from barges and other watercraft,
truck or rail
loading or unloading systems to exceed the limits
specified in Section 212.123.
~j.
Column grain dryers shall not be eligible for the
exemptions as provided in Section 212.461(g).
g~
Exceptions.
The
mass
emission
limits
contained
in
subsection
(b)
shall not apply to those sources with no
visible
emissions
other
than
fugitive
particulate
matter.
~J
Maintenance,
Repair,
and
Recordkeeping.
The
requirements
of
subsections
(f)
and
(g)
of Section
212.324 shall also apply to this Section.
~j
Compliance Date.
Sources shall comply with the
emission
limitations
and
recordkeeping
and reporting
requirements of this Section within one year following
the effective date ~f this Section, or by December 10,
1993,
whichever
is
earlier.
(Source:
Added
at
16
Ill.Reg.
_________,
effective
____________
133—57
58
212.lilustration
1)
463
1000
4629000
4627000
4625000
4623000
tlcCook
Vicinity
Map
429000
831000
~330O0
4350~J
133—58
59
212.Illustration
E
Lake
Calumet
Vicinity
Map
462
100C
‘0 ~
A
I
irr~r.
446000
448000
450000
452000
454000
456000
133—59
60
212.Illustration
F
4290&20
4286C”.’~’
4256300
~28~C’C’2
744000
Granite City Vicinity Map
746000
748000
750000
752000
133—60
61
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
Section
41
of
the
Environmental
Protection
Act
(Ill.Rev.Stat.
1989,
ch.
111
1/2,
par.
bO4b)
provides
for
the
appeal of final Board orders.
The Rules of the Supreme Court of
Illinois establish filing requirements.
I, Dorothy N. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certif
that the a~veopinion and order was
adopted on the
~‘
day of
~-~-iL1
,
1992, by a vote
of
7-e
.
/,7
7/
‘I
-
Dcrothy M.
G4ftn,
Clerk
Illinois Pol-lution Control Board
133—6 1