ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
May
3,
1984
VAN LEER CONTAINERS,
INC.,
)
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 83—133
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Respondent.
MR. RICHARD SANDERS (VEDDER, PRICE, KAUFMAN
& KAMMHOLZ) APPEARED
ON BEHALF OF PETITIONERS.
MR.
PETER ORLINSKY (ATTORNEY-AT-LAW) APPEARED ON BEHALF OF RES-
PONDENTS.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(By J.
Theodore Meyer):
On September 14,
1983 then Petitioner, Inland Steel Container
Company,
filed a Petition for Variance for the existing coating
operation at its steel drum manufacturing facility located at
4300 West 130th Street,
Chicago, Cook County,
Illinois.
Therein,
variance from then Rules
205(n)(1)(J), 205(j)(1) and 104(h)(1) of
the Board’s Chapter
2:
Air Pollution was requested.
That Chapter,
since codified,
is now contained in 35
Ill. Adm. Code:
Chapter
I, Subtitle
B, and those particular rules are found in Part 215:
Organic Material Emission Standards and Limitations at Sections
215.204(j):
Emission Limits
for Manufacturing Plants;
Section
215.212:
Compliance Dates and Geographic Areas; and Section
214.212:
Compliance Plans.
Inland Steel Container Company filed
an Amended Petition on November 23,
1983.
The Illinois Environ-
mental Protection Agency (Agency)
filed its Recommendation on
January 11,
1984 and hearing was held on January 17,
1984.
At
hearing and before the Board,
Inland Steel Container Company
filed a Motion for Substitution of Petitioner due to the recent
purchase of the facility by Van Leer Containers,
Inc.
(Van Leer)
on December 30,
1983.
The Board granted the motion on January
26,
1984 contingent upon the filing of a properly amended Petition
identifying the current Petitioner, incorporating by reference
those parts of the prior petitions still accurate and including
any necessary changes of fact.
Petitioner, Van Leer, filed a
Second Amended Petition satisfying the Board’s order on February
15,
1984.
Petitioner’s facility, which employs approximately 400
persons, includes coating operations
for both the exterior and
58-17
interior of metal pails,
intermediate size containers, and drums.
Petitioners’ customers use the containers to package products
which range
from sensitive flavorings and oils to corrosive
cleaners, paints, petroleum products, toxic pesticides, herbicides
and aggressive chemical intermediates.
The containers’
interior
coatings or linings are usually spray applied using clear coatings.
Extreme performance coatings are applied to the exteriors either
by spraying or by using multi—color
flat lithography.
With the
adoption of Section 214.204(j), the interior (clear) coatings
must contain no more than 4.3 pounds per gallon (lbs/gal) of
volatile organic material
(VOM), and the exterior coatings must
contain no more than 3.5 lbs/gal of VON.
Of course, compliance
may be
instead achieved using control equipment pursuant to
Section 215.205, or alternatively demonstrated using the internal
offset provisions set out in Section 215.207 or the alternative
control strategies rules
found in Part 202.
Pursuant to Sections
215.212 and 215.211, respectively, a compliance plan was to have
been submitted to the Agency on August 19,
1983 and compliance
achieved by December 31,
1983.
It
is not clear from the record
whether a compliance plan was timely filed.
Nevertheless, Van
Leer alleges that it cannot comply at this time due to the unavail-
ability of compliance coatings.
Its predecessor, Inland Steel
Container Company, considered alternatives to coating reformula-
tion including stack incineration, carbon absorption, and electro-
static spray coating.
They either proved to be too costly or
technically unsuitable for the current operation.
(Pet. p.
9).
Therefore, Van Leer seeks variance from the three rules
in order
to continue producing industrial shipping containers.
The coatings currently used by Van Leer were formulated to
comply with the general rule for VON control, Section 215.301
(formerly Rule 205(f).
They were developed at an increased cost
of $54,000 to $80,000 per year,
depending on volume
(Pet.
p.
7).
The following table
lists the total VON emissions from Petitioner’s
facility using these coatings for the years
1978 through 1982,
as
compared to the emissions which would be allowable under Section
215.204(j).
Actual
Allowable
Year
Emissions
Emissions
Excess
(IN TONS)
1982
590
417
173
1981
715
485
230
1980
685
473
212
1979
855
600
255
1978
819
636
183
The Petitioner alleges in the Amended Petition that during
1982 approximately 158,125 gallons of exterior coating and 112,600
58-18
—3—
gallons of interior coating were
used.
The average VON content
of the interior coatings was 5.29 lbs/gal, producing emissions
totalling 267 tons.
The average VON content of the exterior
coatings for the same period was 4.56 lbs/gal, totaling 323 tons
(Pet. p.
6).
The Agency,
in its Recommendation, calculated that
the 1982 emissions were 229 tons and 357 tons, respectively.
(Rec.
at p.
3).
This discrepancy,
as well as
a discrepancy in
figures estimating allowable emissions, was discussed at hearing.
Petitioner alleged that the Agency’s calculations for the exterior
coatings failed to take into account a 10 percent reduction in
emissions due to internal combusion in the ovens.
(R.
9—10).
The Agency did not refute this at hearing.
Petitioner agreed
with the Agency calculations for interior coatings, admitting
that an error had been made in solid gallon calculations for the
interior coatings.
(R. 11).
Internally, Petitioner’s predecessor has attempted to formu-
late, in cooperation with resins suppliers,
interior coatings
within the compliance
limit.
These efforts, along with external
attempts, have been unsuccessful to date because, according to
Petitioner,
the high molecular weight resins required to provide
adequate storage life do not exist
(Pet. p.
4.).
The interior
coatings must satisfy the variety of customer needs described
above.
In 1982 alone,
Petitioner was required to apply 45 different
lining materials on an even greater number of single,
double and
combination coat specifications.
(Pet.
p.
3,
Ex. IV).
After
consultations with the United States Environmental Protection
Agency on December 13,
1983 and various coating manufacturers,
the Agency is in agreement with Petitioner that interior coatings
within Section 215.204(j)
compliance levels are not readily
available.
(Rec.
pp.
4—5).
The problems encountered in developing interior linings
satisfactory to the variety of customers’ specifications are not
as difficult with respect to developing exterior coatings.
Over
the last three years over 70 laboratory trials of high solid
coatings have been conducted.
Seven line trials have likewise
been undertaken and the drum paint booth modified at a cost of
$25,000
(Pet, p.
8,
Ex. VI).
Further modifications at that booth
were anticipated by the end of 1983, bringing the cost to $36,000.
Compliance coatings for the black and white exterior coatings,
which constitute 62
of exterior spray paints, have been developed
and were to be in use by December 31,
1983.
(Pet,
p.
8),
By that
date, Petitioner was to have eliminated a second pail shift,
further reducing emissions.
A second booth for drum parts has
been purchased at the cost of $85,000.
It is designed to reduce
overspray and solvent emissions but actual reductions figures will
not be known until
it is put on on—line.
(Pet,
p.
8).
Petitioner’s compliance plan is primarly premised on reducing
the VON content of the exterior coatings sufficiently below the
Board’s limitation
so as
to offset the excess attributable to the
58-19
interior coatings.
In addition to the progress achieved by Dec-
ember,
31,
1983 Petitioner anticipates that by December,
31,
1984
it will have converted to 3.5 lbs/gal coatings
for black,
white
and gray spray paints and will have reduced the clear varnish at
its pail operations to 4.0 lbs/gal.
By December 31, 1985,
it
anticipates that all colors of exterior coatings used will meet
the 3.5 lbs/gal
level,
The remaining two years of the time
requested are alleged necessary so that with the research begun
now,
it will be able to sufficiently reduce emissions through one
or a combination of the following eight methods in order to be in
compliance
with both the exterior and interior coating limitations.
Petitioner will explore 1)
reducing all exterior spray paints to
3.0 lbs/gal;
2) converting the exterior pail coating operation to
electrostatic spray;
3) developing
a more efficient overspray
collection system
at all spray booths;
4) improving the oven’s
natural incineration;
5)
developing lower solvent interior coat-
ings,
6) eliminating
final varnish passes by developing no varnish
bases and inks resistant to fabrication abrasion;
7)
improving
spray gun transfer efficiency; and 8) changing to roller coating
of pail body stock.
(Pet. pp.
14—15),
The Agency agreed that the investigated alternative methods
of compliance such as stack incineration and carbon absorption
were not workable,
It further stated that compliance could only
be achieved, at this time,
if afterburners were installed.
Since
afterburners consume natural gas and do not have to be operated
during the non—ozone season, pursuant to Section 214,106, the
Agency believed annual VON emissions would be greater than if the
paints are reformulated.
However, the Agency argued that Peti-
tioner should accelerate its comliance efforts,
(Rec.
p.
5).
At hearing, that possibility was probed.
Petitioner ex-
plained that converting all exterior colored coatings to compli-
ance levels would take until the end of 1985 due to the difficulties
experienced in spraying two high solid coatings at one time.
Further reducing exterior coatings to a
3.0 lbs/gal level, and
interior coatings below the current level, as
well, as engineering
the other reduction methods were anticipated to take longer than
two years.
(R. pp. 14—17).
Petitioner, as a formulator and
paint buyer, claimed dependancy on outside suppliers,
and stated
that since
it
is not a large consumer,
it could not effectively
accelerate their suppliers’ efforts,
(R.
p.
18),
Furthermore,
Petitioner pointed out that because 50 percent of the containers
produced have interior linings and 60 percent require exterior
lithography, it has difficulty in quickly achieving compliance
through the internal offset provisions or an alternative control
strategy.
(Pet.
p.
5),
Petitioner claims that failure to receive variance would
force it to curtail
its operation at this facility.
It would
have to either produce and use coatings which would not satisfy
customer’s specifications or install control equipment at an
58-20
expense which would reduce its competitiveness.
The Agency
agreed with Petitioner’s assessment of hardship and that there
would be no adverse impact on human, plant or animal life in the
vicinity of the facility since Petitioner will be required to
comply with its Episode Action Plan.
(Rec,
pp.
6—7).
The Board finds that Petitioner has demonstrated that com-
pliance at this time with Sections 215.204(j)
and 215.212 would
impose an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship.
However, the Board
is anxious that reductions in VON emissions continue as quickly
as possible.
Therefore, the Board will order that Petitioner use
coatings with no greater VON concentrations than currently applied,
and that
it abide by the compliance schedule it described in its
Petition.
Furthermore,
the Board shall only grant variance until
the end of 1985.
Petitioner will be required to submit such a
compliance schedule and routinely report its progress to the
Agency.
In granting this variance, the Board assumes that the
reductions attributed to the discontinuation of the second pail
shift and conversion to 3.5 lbs/gal high solids black and white
drum coatings were in fact achieved by December 31,
1983.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
conclusions of law in this matter,
ORDER
Van Leer Containers,
Inc., Petitioner,
is hereby granted
variance from Sections 212.204(j),
215,211 and 215.212 in accord-
ance with the
following conditions.
1)
Prior to December 31,
1984 Petitioner shall not allow
the average volatile organic material content of its exterior
coatings to exceed 4.56 lbs/gal, or that of its interior
coatings
to exceed 5.29
lbs/gal.
2)
After December 31,
1984,
Petitioner shall use only
coatings with volatile organic material contents of 3,5
lbs/gal or less when spray—applying black, white or gray
exterior coatings.
3)
After December 31,
1984 Petitioner shall use clear
varnish coatings on pails with a volatile organic material
content of 4.0 lbs/gal or less,
4)
After December 31,
1985,
Petitioner shall use exterior
coatings with 3,5 lbs/gal volatile organic material content
or
less at all exterior spraying operations.
5)
During the course of this variance, Petitioner shall
expeditiously develop reformulated coatings with reduced
volatile organic materials for both its exterior and interior
58-21
coating
operati.ons,
and develop
ancillary
facilities
and
equipment
to
reduce
volatile
organic
emissions
from
its
coating
operation.
6)
Within
45
days
of
this
Order,
Petitioner
shall
execute
a Certificate
of
acceptance
and
Agreement
to
be bound to all
terms and conditions of this Variance,
Said
Certificate
shall
he submitted to both the Illinois Environmental Protec-
tion Agency at 2200 Churchill Road,
Springfield, Ilinois
62706 and the Pollution Control Board at 309
W. Washington,
Chicago,
Illinois
60606.
The 45 day period shall
be held
in abeyance during any period this matter may be appealed.
The form of said Certificate shall be
as follows:
CERTIFICATION
__________________________________
hereby
accepts
and
agrees
to
he
bound
by
all
terms
and
conditions
of
the
Order
of
the
Pollution
Control
Board
in
PCB
#
dated_______________________
Petitioner
By________________________
Authorized
Agent
Title
Date
—
7)
By
July
1,
1984 and
every third
month
thereafter,
Petitioner
shall submit written reports to the
Agency
detail-
ing
all
progress
made in
achieving
compliance
with
Section
215.204(j).
Said reports shalL include information on the
names of replacement coatings and
the
manufacturers speci-
fications
including per cent solids by
volume and weight,
per
cent
VOC by
volume and weight, density of
coating,
and
recommended operating parameters,
detailed description of
each test conducted including test protocol, number of runs,
and complete original test results;
the quantities and VOC
content of
all
coatings utilized during the reporting
period;
the quantity of VOC reduction during the reporting
period;
progress in developing ancillary facilities and
equipment
which reduce volatile organic material emissions;
and
any
other
information which may
be
requested
by
the
Agency.
The
reports
shall he sent
to
the
following
addresses:
58-22
—7—
Environmental
Protection
Agency
Division of
Air
Pollution Control
Control Programs Coordinator
2200 Churchill
Road
Springfield,
IL
62706
Environmental Protection Agency
Division of Air Pollution Control
Region 1,
Field Operations Section
1701 South First Avenue
Suite 600
Maywood,
IL
60153
8)
Within 28
days
of the Board’s Final Order herein,
petitioner shall apply to the Agency for all requisite
operating permits pursuant to Section 201.160(a).
9)
This Variance shall expire on December 21,
1985.
IT IS SO ORDERED,
B.
Forcade concurred.
I, Christan L.
Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify that the above Opinion and Order
was adopted on the~~~dayof
,
1984 by a vote of
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______
Christan
L. Moffett, C~ftk
Illinois Pollution Con~crolBoard
58-23