ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
rebruary 27,
1992
IN THE MATTER OF:
)
pM-1O 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
)
proposed
~il~
Second Notice.
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 PM1O.
This proposal is 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-b
emissions.
Pursuant to Section
189 of the Clean Air Act, as amended
lfl 1990,
Illinois was to adopt
and submit its plan by November 15, 1991.
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.
12.7,
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
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,
since the day the proposal was filed, to meet the federal deadline.
The Board granted the Agency’s motion to amend, and stated that it
130—393
2
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 the paperwork 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.1
That
second
first notice
was published
in
the
Illinois Register
on
November 8,
1991, at
15 Il1.Reg.
15875, and on November 15,
1991,
at 15 Ill.Reg. 16564.
Another motion to amend was filed on October
30, 1991.
That motion to amend is granted, since the nature of the
proposed
amendments
do
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.
Proposal
The
United
States
Environmental
Protection
Agency
(USEPA)
established national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQS)
for PM-
10
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—b, 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, requires Illinois to submit
a state implementation plan
(SIP)
for PM-b.
As discussed above,
the deadline
for that SIP submission to USEPA 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 proposed in this rulemaking reflect
the levels of control which are already
in use by most affected
sources.
The proposed rules require
further control only where
specifically
needed
to
demonstrate
attainment
with
the
NAAQS.
Finally,
the
Agency
worked
closely
with
interested
parties,
1
For
further discussion
on the necessity
of
returning to
first notice,
see the Board’s October 24, 1991 order.
130—394
3
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.
(Ex.
D.)
Using those
inventories
as
a
basis, the Agency then performed dispersion modeling to study the
air
quality
in
the
three
areas.
(Ex.
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 qpacity limits to
ensure that adequate control measures are applied.’
(Exs.
Fl, F2.)
Public Comments
The Board received a number of public comments on the October
24 second first notice proposal.
Comments were received from ENR
(P.C.# 3), Waste Management of Illinois, Inc.
(P.C.#4), the City of
Chicago (P.C.#5), the Department of Commerce and Community Affairs
(P.C. #6 and #17),
the Administrative Code Unit
(P.C. #7 and
#8),
Ford Motor Company
(P.C. #9), the Illinois Steel Group
(P.C.#10),
the Grain Companies
(P.C.#ll),
Reynolds Metals Company
(P.C.#l2),
Spectrulite Consortium,
Inc.
(P.C.#l3), Harding Lawson Associates
(P.C.#l4),
the Agency
(P.C.#l5,
#18),
and USEPA
(P.C.#16).3
The
Board
has
considered
all
of
these
comments,
as
well
as
the
testimony and exhibits received at the hearings,
in revising this
proposal for second notice.
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 resolving areas
of disagreement.
In
general,
affected sources feel that they can meet the proposed rules, and in
2
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
September30, October 22, October 23, and October 30,
1991.
~ The Agency
filed
supplemental
comments,
docketed as
P.C.
#18, with a motion for leave to file instanter on January 21, 1992.
Those supplemental comments include responses to the comments filed
by USEPA..
That motion to file instanter is granted.
130—395
4
many cases
are already
in compliance with those rules.
In
its
comments,
the Agency
agrees
with many
of
the
specific changes
suggested by
individual commenters.
The Board will not discuss
each of those changes in detail, but will make those changes as
proposed by the Agency in its comments.
(P.C#
15,
#18.)
However,
there
are
several
suggestions made by commenters
which the Agency opposes.
In particular,
the Agency contends that
suggestions made by Ford Motor Company (P.C.#9) do not improve the
proposed, rules,
and points out that USEPA also objects to Ford’s
suggestion that a State of Michigan measurement method for opacity
from roadways and parking areas be substituted in proposed Section
212.109.
The Board
finds that the responses
of the Agency
and
USEPA sufficiently address the suggestions made by Ford,
and will
not revise the rules
in response to those suggestions.
The Board
particularly points out that proposed Section 212.316(f)
will not
eliminate
Sections
212.122
and
212.123
in
the
three
areas.
Proposed Section
212.316(f)
applies only to fugitive emissions.
Sections
212.122
and
212.123
will
continue
to
apply
to
stack
emissions statewide.
The Agency also objects to Waste Management’s suggested change
to proposed Section 212.316(g) (5), which would require quarterly
reporting of occasions on which necessary fugitive control measures
are not implemented.
Waste Management maintains that quarterly
reporting is excessive for fugitive emissions from roadways,
and
contends that annual reporting would be no less environmentally
protective.
The
Agency
disagrees,
and
argues
that
quarterly
reporting is a vital part of its efforts to insure attainment of
the PN-1O standard.
The Board finds that quarterly reporting will
help
the
Agency
monitor
compliance,
and
is
both
economically
reasonable
and technically
feasible for affected sources.
The
Board will not propose changes to that reporting requirement.
The Illinois Steel Group proposed that language be added
to
Section
212.109 to address the variability of opacity readings.
The Steel Group suggests that new language
in the rule protect
a
source from enforcement if a violation is based on opacity readings
that are subject to variable interpretations.
The Agency strongly
objects to the proposed change,
and argues that Method
9 already
takes variability into account in assessing compliance.
The Board
declines to add language to Section 212.109
as proposed by the
Steel Group.
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,
p.
15.)
The Agency
did recognize that the Clean Air Act requires that SIPs provide
r~ntinqency measures
to
be
undertaken
if
the
area
does
not
130—396
5
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 V1
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 Agen,cy in the proposed rules is acceptable to USEPA, and that
the proposed rules are the types of rules USEPA expects Illinois to
submit.
(Tr2,
pp
8—bl.)
USEPA
subsequently
submitted
more
detailed
comments
on
the
proposal
(P.C.#16),
and
the
Agency
responded-to those comments (PC.#b8).
Based on this information,
bhe
Board
believes
that
these
rules,
as
amended
today,
are
~ederally approvable.
Conclusions
Based upon its consideration of the testimony,
exhibits,
and.
comments received in this proceeding, the Board will propose these
rules for second notice.
The second notice proposal includes those
changes suggested by the Agency.
In Part 211, only one change has
been made:
a non—substantive change to the definition of “PM-b”
in Section 211.122.
Significantly more changes have been made to
the rules proposed in Part 212.
Some of these changes are non—
substantive clarifications, while others represent the agreements
of the Agency and individual affected sources.
Changes have been
made
to
the
following
sections:
212.109,
212.110,
212.210,
212.302, 212.309,
2l2.3b6, 212.324, 212.362, 212.425, 212.458, and
212.464.
These changes have generally been made as proposed by the
Agency
in
its
comments;
however,
the Board
has made some
non—
substantive changes to the language in the interests of clarity and
organization.
The
Board
finds
that these
proposed
rules
are
economically reasonable and technically feasible.
The Board also
finds that the proposed rules will demonstrate attainment with the
PM-b
NAAQS,
and are federally approvable.
ORDER
The Board hereby proposes the following amendments for second
notice.
The Clerk of the Board is directed to file these proposed
amendments with the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules.
TITLE
35:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
SUBTITLE B:
AIR POLLUTION
CHAPTER I:
POLLUTION CONTROL
BOARD
SUBCHAPTER c:
EMISSION STANDARDS
AND
LIMITATIONS
FOR STATIONARY SOURCES
130—397
6
PART 211
DEFINITIONS
AND
GENERAL PROVISIONS
SUBPART A:
GENERAL PROVISIONS
ection
11.101
Incorporations by Reference
11.102
Abbreviations and Units
SUBPART B:
DEFINITIONS
ection
~ll.l21
Other Definitions
~l1.122
Definitions
~l1.AppendixA
Rule into Section Table
~1l.Appendix B
Section into Rube Table
WTHORITY:
Implementing Sections 9,
9.1 and 10 and authorized by
ection
27 of
the Environmental Protection Act
(Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1989,
ch.
111½, pars.
1009,
1010 and 1027).
3OURCE:
Adopted
as
Chapter
2:
Air
Pollution,
Rule
20b:
)efinitions, R71—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—l
(Docket
A)
at
10
Ill.
Reg.
12624, effective July 7, 1986; amended in R85-21(A) at 11 Ill. Reg.
11747, effective June 29,
1987;
amended in R86—34 at 11 Ill.
Reg.
12267, effective July 10,
1987;
amended in R86—39 at lb Ill. Reg.
20804, effective December 14, 1987; amended in R82-14 and R86—37 at
12 Ill. Reg. 787, effective December 24, 1987; amended in R86—b8 at
12 Ill. Reg. 7284, effective April 8, 1988; amended in R86—10 at 12
Ill Reg.
7621,
effective April
lb,
1988;
amended in R88-23 at
13
Ill. Reg.
10862,
effective June 27,
1989;
amended in R89-8
at
13
Ill. Reg.
17457, effective January
1,
1990; amended in R 89-16(A)
at 14 Ill. Reg.
9l4b, effective May 23,
1990; amended in R88—30(B)
at 15
111.
Reg.
5223, effective March 28,
1991; amended in R88-l4
at
15 Ill. Reg. 7901, effective May 14,
1991; amended in R91—10 at
15 Ill .Reg.
____,
effective October 11, ‘1991; amended in R91—22
at
16 Ill.Reg.
_________,
effective
_________________
Section 2bl..10l
Incorporationsby 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,”
Americai
Petroleum Institute Bulletin 2517,
1962
b)
Ringelmann Chart,
Information ‘Circular 833
(Revision
o:
1C7718),
Bureau of Mines,
U.S.
Department of Interior
130—398
7
May 1,
1967
c)
Standard Industrial ClassificationManual, 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.S.T.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—1826—64
A.S.T.M. D—2015—66
A.S.T.M. D—2880—7l
~j
40 CFR 51.100
(1987)
(Source:
Amended at 16 Ill.Reg.
_______,
effective
_________
Section 211.122
Definitions
*IAccelacotavt:
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.
llAccumulator~t:
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.
111
½,
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 prod~,.icedby
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.
“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).
130—399
8
“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 fluidized 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, b975,
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.
“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.
130—400
9
“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.
“CanCoating”:
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.
“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 tç the
atmosphere and that is composed of piping, connections,
130—40 1
10
and,
if necessary,
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 persons 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.
“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 mate~iabincluding,
but not limited to, pump seals,
compressor seals,
seal
130—402
11
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. Adm. 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-la 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.
“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 jaw,
ci’yratory,
cone,
roll,
rod,
mill,
hammermill, and impactor.
130—405
12
“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 Oib”:
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
separated
and
removed from such water prior to outfall,
drainage or
recovery of such water.
“Emission Rate”:
Total quantity of any air contaminant’
lischarge into the atmosphere in any one—hour period.
“Enclose”: ,with respect to 35 Ill. Adm. Code 2l5.Subpart
r,
to cover any volatile organic liquid surface that is
exposed to the atmosphere.
130—406
13
“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.
“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
130—407
14
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 2l2.Subpart K
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.
“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
130—408
15
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.M. 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.
“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.
130—409
16
“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. Adm. 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.
“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—100
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 leaki~igfrom
a
seal
including spraying, misting, clouding and ice formation.
130—410
17
“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 (MMA)”:
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
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.
13
0—4 11
18
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.
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,
Centrevible,
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
130—412
19
materials, feed stocks, subasseinblies 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 waterc~raft.
“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 4b.
“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:
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 o.rganic
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
130—4 13
20
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
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
130—414
21
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 refinishing, 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.
Adin.
Code
215.
Appendix D.
Chlorinated and sulfonated compounds
Cosmetic,
detergent,
soap
or
surfactant
intermediaries Or specialties and products
Disinfectants
Food additives
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.
130—4 15
22
“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
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
Liot
solvent
vapor
on
the
colder
metal
parts.
“Operator of Gasoline Dispensing Facility”:
Any person
who is the lessee of or operates, controls or supervises
~ gasoline dispensing facility.
“Organic Compound”:
Any
compound of carbon, ‘excluding
~arbon monoxide,
carbon dioxide,
carbonic
acid,
metal
;arbides or carbonates,
and ammonium carbonate.
“Organic
Material”:
Any
chemical
compound of
carbon
including
diluents and thinners
which
are liquids
at
3tandard conditions and which are used as dissolvers,
iiscosity
reducers
or cleaning agents,
but
excluding
aethane, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, carbonic acid,
netallic
carbonic
acid,
metallic
carbide,
metallic
;arbonates and ainmonium carbonate.
130—4 16
23
“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 polychborinated dibenzo—
p—dioxins, polychborinated 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.
-
“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,
sheblacs,
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—71 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.
130—4 17
24
“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 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 perchiorethylene
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—lU”:
particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter
less
than
or
equal
to
a
nominal
10
micrometers,
as
measured
by the applicable
test methods
specified ~y
rulein
35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
212.110.
Ambient
air
concentrations
for
PM—b
are
usually
expressed
in
micrograms per cubic meter
(ug/m3).
130—418
25
“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
maleic
anhydride,
phthalic
anhydride,
terephthalic
acid,
isophthalic
acid,
trimelletic anhydride.
“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 manufac-
tured for use in power tools, and which fasteners must
conform with formal
standards for specific uses estab-
lished
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—
130—4 19
26
TST,
Rock
Island,
IL
61201),
Bulletin
UM—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 fabricated 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 (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 215.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
130—420
27
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 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 coñbusted
at
the refinery,
including any gaseous mixture of natural
gas and fuel gas.
“Refinery
Unit,
Process
Unit
or
Unit”:
A
set
of
components which area part of a basic process operation
such
as
distillation,
hydrotreating,
cracking
or
reforming of hydrocarbons.
130—42 1
28
“Refrigerated Condenser”:
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.M. D—396—69
(1971).
“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 IC7718)
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.
130—422
29
“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 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
Ringbemann
Chart.
“Solvent
Cleaning”:
The
process
of
cleaning
soils
from
surfaces
by
cold cleaning, open top vapor degreasing or
conveyori
zed
degreas ing.
“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.
130—423
30
“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).
“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
bevel
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 215.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.
130—424
31
“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.
“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
130—425
32
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.
“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:
Chborodifluoroethane (HCFC-l42b)
Chborodifluoromethane
(CFC-22)
Chboropentafluoroethane
(CFC-ll5)
2—Chloro-b, 1,1,
2,—tetrafluoroethane
(HCFC-124)
Dichborodifluoromethane
(CFC-l2)
Dichborofluoroethane (HCFC-l4lb)
Dichboromethane
(Methylene chloride)
Dichlorotetrafluoroethane
(CFC-ll4)
Dichborotrifluoroethane (HCFC-l23)
1, 1—Difluoroethane (HFC-l52a)
Ethane
Methane
Pentafluoroethane
(HFC-125)
Tetrafluoroethane (HFC-l34a)
1,1,2, 2—Tetrafluoroethane (HFC-134)
Trichloroethane
(Methyl chloroform)
Trichlorofluoromethane
(CFC-1l)
Trichlorotrifluoroethane (CFC-ll3)
1,1,1—Trifluoroethane (HFC-l43a)
Trifluoromethane
(FC-23)
and the following classes of compounds:
Cyclic,
branched,
or
linear, completely
fluorinated alkanes.
130—426
33
Cyclic,
branched,
or linear, completely
fluorinated ethers with no unsaturations.
Cyclic,
branched,
or
linear, completely
fluorinated
tertiary
amines
with
no
unsaturations.
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
of
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
VOMs
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
“VOMC”:
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) VON/liter (lb VON/gallon)
of
coating or coating solids,
or kg VOM/kg
(lb VOM/ib)
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
manufacturing
nitric
acid
with
a
concentration of bess than 70 percent by weight.
130—427
34
“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
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—lU 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
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
Section
212.121
212.122
212.123
212.124
212.125
212.126
Section
212.181
212.182
212.
183
212
.
184
212.185
130—428
35
Section
212.201
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
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
SUBPART
L:
PARTICULATE MATTER
EMISSIONS
FROM
PROCESS
EMISSION
SOURCES
Section
212.321
212.322
212.323
212
.
324
New
Process
Sources
Existing Process Sources
Stock
Piles
Process
Emission
Sources
in
Certain
Areas
SUBPART
N:
FOOD
MANUFACTURING
Section
212.361
212.362
Corn
Wet
Milling
Processes
Sources
in
Certain
Areas
SUBPART 0:
PETROLEUM
REFINING,
PETROCHEMICAL
AND
130—429
36
CHEMICAL
MANUFACTURING
Section
212.381
Catalyst
Regenerators
of Fluidized Catalytic Converters
SUBPART
Q:
STONE,
CLAY,
GLASS
AND
CONCRETE
MANUFACTURING
Section
212.421
New
Portland
Cement
Processes
212.422
•
Portland
Cement
Manufacturing
Processes
212.423
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
Scarf ing
Machines
Measurement
Methods
Highlines
on
Steel
Mills
Certain Small Foundries
Certain Small Iron—melting Air Furnaces
Sources
in
Certain
Areas
SUBPART S:
AGRICULTURE
Grain
Handling
and
Drying
in
General
Grain
Handling
Operations
Grain
Drying
Operations
Sources
in
Certain
Areas
SUBPART T:
CONSTRUCTION
AND
WOOD PRODUCTS
Section
212.681
Grinding,
Woodworking,
Sandblasting
and
Shotbbasting
Section
212.461
212.462
212.463
212.464
130—430
37
2l2.Appendix A
Rule into Section Table
212.Appendix
B
Section
into
Rule
Table
2l2.Appendix C
Past Compliance Dates
Illustration
A:
Allowable
Emissions
from
Solid
Fuel
Combustion Emission Sources Outside Chicago
Illustration
B:
Limitations
for
all
New
Process
Emission
Sources
Illustration
C:
Limitations
for
all
Existing
Process
Emission
Sources
Illustration
D:
McCook
Vicinity
Map
Illustration
E:
Lake
Calumet
Vicinity
Map
Illustration
F:
Granite
City
Vicinity
Map
AUTHORITY:
Implementing
Section
10
and
authorized
by
Section
27
of
the
Environmental
Protection
Act
(Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1989,
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,
R7l—23,
4
PCB
191,
filed
and
effective
April
14,
1972;
amended
in
P17—15,
32
PCB
403,
at
3
Ill.
Reg.
5,
p.
798,
effective
February
3,
1979;
amended
in
R78—bO,
35
PCB
347,
at
3
Ill.
Reg.
39,
p.
184,
effective
September
28,
1979;
amended
in
R78—l1,
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
R79—ll,
43
PCB
481,
at
5
Ill.
Reg.
11590,
effective
October
19,
1981;
codified
at
7
Ill.
Reg.
13591;
amended
in
R82—1
(Docket
A),
10
Ill.
Reg.
12637,
effective July
9,
1986;
amended
in
R85—33
at
10
Ill.
Reg.
18030,
effective
October
7,
1986;
amended
in
R84-48
at
11
Ill.
Reg.
691,
effective
December 18,
1986; amended in R84—42
at
11
Ill.
Reg.
1410,
effective December 30,
1986; amended in R82-1
(Docket
B)
at
12
Ill.
Reg.
12492, effective July 13,
1988; amended
in R9b—10 at
15
Ill.Reg.
15595, effective October 11,
1991; amended in R9b-6 at
15 Ill.Reg.
____,
effective October 14,
1991; amended in P21-22
at
16 Ill. Reg.
‘
,
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, Appendix A,
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
__________
______
.)
130—431
38
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.
fl
Method
201,
40
CFR
51,
Appendix
N,
incorporated
by
reference
in
Section
212.113.
fl
Method 201A,
40
CFR
51.
Appendix
N,
incorporated
by reference in Section 212.113.
,~j
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-b.
~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
CFR
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-b
emission source subiect to this
Section shall conduct the applicable testing for 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.
~.j
A
person
planning
to
conduct
testing
for
PM-b
emissions
to
demonstrate
compliance
shall
give
written
notice
to
the
A~ency 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.
~
The
owner
or
operator
of
an
emission
source
subject
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))..
130—432
39
(Source:
Added
at
16
Ill.
Reg.
______,
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
212.123, measurements of opacity shall be conducted in accordance
with
Method
9.
40
CFR
Part
60~ A~~endixA,
incorporated bY
reference
in
Section
212.113.
except
that
for
roadways
and,
parkin~
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. Reg.
______,
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 volumetric
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 60.675(c) and
(d), incorporated by
reference in Section 212.113.
d)
Visible
Emissions
Measure.
DctcctionA determination as
to
the
presence
or
absence
of
visible
emissions from
all
process
emission
sources
and
fugitive
particulate
emission
sources
required
to
meet
a
“no
vi3ibbe
cmi33iono”
3tandard,
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, except that the length of the
observing period shall be at the discretion of the
observer, but not less than one minute.
130—433
40
e)
Test Methods
for
PM—b
Emissions.
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.
1)
40 CFR 51, Appendix M, Method 201, incorporated by
reference in Section 212.113.
2)
40 CFR 51, Appendix H, Method 201A, 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-bc.
f)
Test Methods for Condensible PM-lU Emissions.
Emissions of condensibbe PM-b
shall be measured by 55
Fed. Reg. 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—lU 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
____________
130—434
41
Section 212.113
Incorporations by Reference
The following materials are incorporated by reference.
,These
incorporations do not include any later amendments or editions.
a)
Ringelmann Chart, Information Circular 833
(Revision of
IC7718),. Bureau of Mines, U.S. Department of Interior,
May
1,
1967.
b)
,
40
CFR
60,
Appendix
A
(1990):
1)
Method
1:
Sample
and
Velocity
Traverses
for
Stationary
Sources;
2)
Method
IA:
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 Rate 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 5:
Determination of Particulate Emissions
From Stationary Sources;
~J
Method 5A:
Determination of Particulate Emissions
From the Asphalt Processing and Asphalt Roofing
Industry
3JJ
Method 5D:
Determination of Particulate Matter,
Emissions From Positive Pressure Fabric Filters
3~j) Method SE:
Determination of Particulate Emissions
From the Wool Fiberglass Insulation Manufacturing
Industry
~9U)Nethod
9:
Visual Determination of the Opacity of
Emissions from Stationary Sources;
130—435
42
~*,~j)Method22:
Visual Determination of Fugitive
Emissions from Material Sources and Smoke
Emissions from Flares.
C)
40 CFR 51 Appendix N
(1990):
1)
Method 201:
Determination of PM-lU Emissions:
2)
Method 2UbA:
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 Niles Road,
St. Joseph, MI 49085.
g)
U.S. Sieve Series, ASTM-Ell, American Society of
Testing Materials,
1916 Race Street,
Philadelphia,
PA
19103.
h)
55 ~RFed. Reg.
41546,- (October 12,
1990), Method 202:
Determination of Condensible Particulate Emissions from
Stationary Sources.
(Source:
Amended at 16
Ill.
Reg.
______,
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
mnthtu)
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.
130—436
43
(Source:
Added at 16 Ill.
Reg.
______,
effective
___
SUBPART K:
FUGITIVE PARTICULATE MATTER
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,
Peotone,
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, Rock Island, South Rock
Island
LaSable:
LaSalle, Utica
Madison:
Alton,
Chouteau, Colbinsvilbe,
Edwardsville, Fort Russell, Godfrey,
Granite City, Nameoki, Venice, Wood
River
St.
Clair:
Canteen, Caseyville,
Centerville,
St.
Clair, Stites, Stookey, Sugar Loaf,
Millstadt
~j
In the geographical areas defined in Section
212.324(a). (1), Sections 212.304 through 212.310,’
212.312, and 212.316 shall apply to all sources
identified in subsection
(a), and shall further apply
to the following operations:
grain-handling and
grain-drying
(Subpart S).
transportation,
communications,
electric, gas, and sanitary services
(SIC malor groups 40 through 49).
Additionally,
Sections 212.304 through 212.310, 212.312, and 212.316
shall apply to wholesale trade-farm supplies (SIC
130—43
7
44
Industry No.
5b9l)
located in the vicinity of Granite
City, as defined in Section 212.324(a) (1) (C).
,gj
Compliance Date.
Compliance with subsection
(b)
is
required one year following its effective date, or by
December 10,
b993, whichever is earlier.
(Source:
Amended at 16
Ill. Reg.
______,
effective
___________
Section ~12.309
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.
~j
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.
Reg.
______,
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).
~j
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.
~j
Emission Limitations for Roadways or Parking Areas.
No
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 shalb 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
130—438
45
emissions from any storage pile to exceed an opacity of
10,
to be measured four feet from the pile surface.
~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 slag 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.
~j
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, to
exceed an opacity of 5.
fl
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 R or
S. no
person shall
cause or allow fugitive particulate matter
emissions from any source to exceed an opacity of 20.
gJ
.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 be needed for compliance
with the opacity limitations of this Section and
shall submit to the Agency an annual report’
containing a summary of such information.
21
The records required under this subsection shall
include at least the following:
~j
the name and address of the plant
130—439
46
~
the name and address of the owner and/or
pp~rator
of
the plant
çj
a map or diagram showing the location of all
emission sources controlled including the
location,
identification,
length, and width
of roadways
~
for each application of water or chemical
solution to roadways by truck:
the name and
location of the roadway controlled,
application rate of each truck,
frequency of
each application, width of each application,
ident fication of each truck used,
total
quantity of water or chemical used for each
application and, for each application of
chemical solution, the concentration and
identity of the chemical.
~j
for application Of physical or chemical
control agents, the name of the agent1
application rate and frequency,
and total
quantity of agent and,
if diluted, percent of
concentration, used each day
,~j
a bog recording incidents when control
measures were not used and a statement of
explanation.
~j.
Copies of alb records required by this Section
shall be submitted to the Agency within ten
(10)
working days of a written request by the Agency
and shall be transmitted to the Agency by a
company-designated person with authority to
release such records.
,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.
~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
130—440
47
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
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. Reg.
________,
effective
____________
SUBPART
L:
PARTICULATE MATTER EMISSIONS FROM
PROCESS EMISSION SOURCES
Section 212.324
Process Emission Sources in Certain Areas
~j
Applicability.
j)~.
This Section shall apply to any process emission
source located in any of the following areas:,
AL
That area bounded by lines from Universal
Transmercator
(UTM)
coordinate ‘428000mE,
463b000mN, east to 435000mE, 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
~
That area bounded by lines from Universal
Transmercator
(UTM)
coordinate 445000mE,
4622l80mN, 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
~
That area bounded by lines from Universal
Transmercator
(UTN) coordinate 744000mE,
4290000mN,
east to 753000mE, 4290000mN, south
to 753000mE,
4283000mN, west to 744000mE,
4283000mN,
north to 744000inE, 4290000mN,
in
the vicinity of Granite City in Madison
County,
as shown in Illustration
F.
21
This Section shall not alter the applicability of
Sections 212.321 and 212.322 of this Part.
130—44 1
48
~j.
The emission limitations of this Section are not
applicable to any source sub-ject to a specific
emissions standard or limitation contained in any
of the following Subparts:
IlL
Subpart N, Food Manufacturing;
(ii)
Subpart 0,
Stone.
Clay, Glass and
Concrete Manufacturing;
(iii)
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 (0.03
g,r/scf) during any one hour period.
cj
Alternative Emission Limitation.
In lieu of the
emission limit of 68.7 mg/scm
(0.03 gr/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
Shotblasting emissions
22.9 mg/scm
0.01
sources in the Village
gr/scf
of McCook equipped with
fabric filter(s)
as of
June
1.
1991
aL
All process emissions
5
opacity
5
opacity
sources at manufacturers
of steel wool with soar
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 Emi,ssions Limitation for Fuel-Burning Process
Emissions Sources in the Vicinity of Granite City.
No
person shall cause or allow emissions of PM—lU into the
atmosphere to exceed 12.9 ng/J (0.03
lbs. per mmbtu)
of
130—442
49
heat input from the burning of fuel other than natural
gas at any process emissions source located
in the
vicinity of Granite City as defined in subsection
(a) (1) (C)
fl.
Maintenance and Repair.
For any process emission
source sublect to subsection
(a)
•
the owner or operator
shall maintain and repair all air pollution control
e~ipmentin 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 ade~ateinventory of spare
parts;
and
fl
Expeditious repairs, unless the source
is
shutdown.
gj
Recordkeeping of Maintenance and Repair.
fl
Written records of inventory and documentation of
inspections, maintenance, and repairs of all air
pollution control equipment shall be kept in
accordance with subsection
(f) of this Section.
21
The owner or operator shall document any period
during which any 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
documentation of causes for pollution control
equipment 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 suppbiers
shall be kent and updated.
il
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
130—443
50
and shall be available for inspection and copying
by Agency representatives during working hours.
.~j.
Upon written request by the Agency ~a report shall
be submitted to the Agency for any period
specified in the request stating 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.
~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. Reg.
______,
effective
______________
SUBPART N:
FOOD MANUFACTURING
2b2.362
Sources in Certain Areas
~
Applicability.
fl
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:
fl
22.9 mg/scm (0.01 gr/scf)
for dextrose dryers,
dextrose melt tank systems, bulk dextrose loading
system, house dry dextrose dust system, dextrose
bagging machine dust system; dextrose expansion
dryer/cooler and packing system and 2034 dextrose
dryer/cooler dust collecting system
130—444
51
21
34.3 mg/scm (0.015 gr/scf)
for feed dryers, gluten
dryers,
germ dryers, heat recovery scrubbers
~j
68.7 mg/scm
(0.03 gr/scf)
for germ cake transport
systems, spent flake transport/cooling systems.
bleaching clay system, dust pickup bin system in
Building 26, and pellet cooler systems
j).
45.8 mg/scm
(0.02 gr/scf)
for germ transport
systems, starch dust collection systems, dicalite
system,
starch processing/transport systems.
starch dryers, starch transport systems, calcium
carbonate storage system, starch loading systems,
corn unloading systems,
germ
transfer towers,
dextrose transport systems, soda ash unloading
system, corn silo system,
filter aid systems,
spent flake storage systems, corn cleaning
transport systems,
feed transport cooling system,
gluten cooling system, gluten transport system,
feed dust system. gluten dust system. pellet dust
system,
spent flake transport system, and rail car
maintenance system building and dextrose expansion
milling and storage systems.
~
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.
~j
Exceptions.
The emission limits contained in
subsection
(b)
shall not apply to those sources with no
visible emissions other than fugitive matter.
~j
Maintenance. Repair, and Recordkeeping.
The
requirements of subsections
(f) and
(a)
of Section
212.324 shall also apply to this Section.
g)
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,
b993, whichever is earlier.
(Source:
Added at 16 Ill. Reg.
______,
effective
____________
SUBPART
Q:
STONE,
CLAY, GLASS
AND’ CONCRETE MANUFACTURING
212.425
sources in Certain Areas
130—445
52
,~j
Applicability.
This Section shall apply to those
sources located in those areas defined in Section
212.324 (a) (1)
~j
Emission Limitation.
No person shall cause or allow
the emission of PM-b.
other than that of fugitive
particulate matter,
into the atir~osphereto exceed the
following limits during any one hour period:
fl
57.2 mg/scm (0.025 gr/scf)
for coater and cooling
loop 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 Summit
il
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 gr/scf)
for all other process
emission sources in the lime manufacturing
industry
fl
0.325 kg/Mg
(0.65 lb/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.
130—446
53
(Source:
Added at 16 Ill. Reg.
______,
effective
SUBPART R:
PRIMARY AND FABRICATED METAL PRODUCTS
AND MACHINERY
MANUFACTURE
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
Emission Limitation.
No person shall cause or allow
emissions of PM-b,
other than that of fugitive
particulate matter,
into the atmosphere to exceed the
following limits during any one hour period:
fl
15.9
ng/J
(0.037 bbs. per mmbtu)
of heat input
from any fuel combustion source located at the
steel Plant between 106th and 111th Streets in
City of Chicago
21
22.9 ma/scm
(0.01 gr/scf)
for the basic oxygen
furnace additive systems in the Village of
Riverdale
~j
4.3 ng/J (0.01 bbs. per minbtu)
of heat input from
the burning of fuel in the soaking pits in the
Village of Riverdale
~j
64.08 mp/scm (0.028 gr/scf)
from the electrostatic
precipitator discharge of the basic oxygen process
in the Village of Riverdabe
~j
45.8 mg/scm
(0.02 gr/scf)
from the pickling
process at a steel plant in the Village of
Riverdale
~j
5
opacity for coal handling systems equipped with
fabric filter(s) at steel plant located in the
City of Chicago
fl
22.9 ma/scm
(0.01 ar/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
130—44 7
54
the vicinity of Granite City,
as defined in
Section 212.324(a) (1)
(C).
~j
32.25 ng/J
(0.075 lbs per
mmbtu)
of heat input
from the burning of coke oven gas at all sources
at steel plants in the vicinity of Granite City,
as defined in Section 212.324(a) (1) (C)
J,~QJ
38.7 ng/J (0.09 lbs. per mmbtu)
of heat input from
the slab furnaces at steel plants in the vicinity
of Granite City,
as defined in Section
212.324 (a) (b) (C);
111
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
jfl
22.9 ma/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 2b2.324(a) (1). (C).
~j.
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).
141
0.05 kg/Mg
(0.01 lb/T)
per ton of sand processed
from ‘molding sand forming systems at steel foundry
plant located in Granite City
~j
0.01 kg/Mg
(0.02 lbs/T) per ton of sand processed
from recycle sand shakeouts at steel foundry plant
located in Granite City
~j
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
.3fl
2.15 ng/J (0.005 bbs/mmbtu)
of heat input from the
burning of fuel in any process emission source at
secondary aluminum smelting and refining plant
and/or aluminum finishing plant
130—448
55
~j~j 22.9 mg/sôm (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
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 ~bant located in the
vicinity of Granite City.
as defined in Section
212.324 (a) (1) (C
)
211.
68.7
mg/scm
(0.03
gr/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)
.221
2.15 ng/J
(0.005 lbs per
mmbtu)
of
heat
input
from
the
steel
works
boilers
located
at
the
steel
making facilities at steel plant in the vicinity
of
Granite
City,
as
defined
in
Section
212.324
(a)
(1)
(C
)
~
29.71 kg (65.5 bbs)
for the total of all basic
oxygen furnace processes described in Section
212.446(a)
and
located
at
steel
plant
in
the
vicinity
of
Granite
City,
as
defined
in
Section
212.324
(a)
(1) (C)
,a41
North
and
South furnaces at secondary aluminum
smelting and refining plant located in the
vicinity of Granite City,
as defined in Section
212 .324
(a) (1)
(C),
cannot
be
operated
simultaneously
~j
Magnesium pot furnaces at secondary aluminum
smelting and refining ~1ant 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
~fl
2.15
~g/J
(0.005
lbs/inmbtu)
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
gr/scf)
and
o.4s
kg/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
130—449
56
j~j
183
mg/scm
(0.080
ar/scf)
and
0.91
kg/hr
(2
lbs/hr)
for holding 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
~j
54.9 mp/scm
(0.024 gr/scf) and 1.81 kg/hr
(4
lbs/hr)
for
melting
furnaces
Nos.
24,
25,
and
26
at metal finishing ~1ant in the Village of McCook
.~Qj
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
mp/scm
(0.014
gr/scf)
and
0.45
ku/hr
(1
lb/hr)
for
holding
furnaces
Nos.
24,
25,
and
26
at
metal
finishing
~bant
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 bb/hr)
~21
34.3 ma/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 ku/hr
(6 lb/hr)
~j
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 Recordkeeping.
The
requirements of subsections
(f) and
(g)
of Section
212.324 shall also apply to this Section.
~j
Compliance Date.
Compliance with this Section
is
required by December 10.
1993.
(Source:
Added at 16 Ill.Reg.
,
effective
________
SUBPART
S:
AGRICULTURE
130—450
57
Section
212.464
Sources
in
Certain
Areas
~j
Applicability.
Notwithstanding
Section
212.461,
this
Section shall apply to 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.
~
Column grain dryers shall not be eligible for the
exemptions as provided in SectiOn 212.461(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.
Maintenance, Repair, and Recordkeeping.
The
requirements of subsections
(f) and
(g)
of Section
212.324 shall alsO apply to this Section.
Compliance Date.
Sources shall comply with the
emission limitations and recordkeeping and reporting
requirements of this Section within one year.folbowing
the effective date of this Section, or by December 10,
1993, whichever is earlier.
(Source:
Added at 16 Ilb.Reg.
________,
effective
130=45 1
58
Illustration
0
MCCOOk Vicinity
4631000
4629000
4627000
4625000
4623000
429000
43
lOOC)
43300()
435000
130—4 52
59
Illustration
E
Lake
Calumet
Vicinity
462
‘1202
~6
190’~’)0
4617002
~“:220
42
‘1000
AR
1
“fl’~fl
~1,,
4
609000
446320
448000
450002
452000
454000
45600C
130—453
60
Illustration F
Granite City Vicinity’
4290000
4288000
4286000
4284000
744000
746000
748000
750000
752000
130—454
61
IT
IS
SO
ORDERED.
I,
Dorothy
M.
Gunn,
Clerk
of
the
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board,
hereby
certify
that
the
above
Opinion
and
Order
was
adopted
on
the
~7~’
day
of
_______________,
1992,
by
a
vote
of
•7-O
~
~.
Dorothy M. ~nn,
Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
130—455