ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February 15,1979
IN THE MATTER OF:
PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO
)
R77-3
RULE 205(g) (1)
OF THE
AIR POLLUTION CONTROL
REGULATIONS
PROPOSED OPINION OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Dumelle):
This proceeding was initiated by
a Petition from The
Sherwin-Williams Company, Monsanto Company, The B.F. Goodrich
Company, and Borg-Warner Corporation
(Petitioners) which was
filed with the Board on February
15,
1977 and published in
Environmental Register #143 on March
21,
1977.
An Amended Petition
filed on August
26,
1977 served as the basis for all evidence
received.
The Amended Petition was summarized in Environmental
Register #156 dated September 26,
1977.
Hearings were held
on November
30,
1977 and January
30,
1978
in Chicago and Janu-
ary 12,
1978 in Peoria.
A study entitled “Economic Impact of
the Proposed Change in the Hydrocarbon Emission Limitation for
Petrochemical Manufacturing Processes
(R77-3)”
(INR Document
#78/30)
(Ex.
14) was received by the Board from the Institute
of Natural Resources on October
31, 1978.
Hearings were held on
the study on December
4,
1978
in Chicago and December 18, 1978
in
Ottawa.
This Proposed Opinion supports
a Proposed Order adopted
by the Board on January
4,
1979.
The Board has proposed to
adopt this amendment in the form
in which
it appeared in the
Amended Petition.
NEED FOR THE REGULATION
On December 18, 1975 the Board ruled that the organic
emissions from a para—cresol manufacturing process were covered
by Rule 2O5(g) (1) (C)
of the Air Pollution Control Regulations
(The Sherwin-Williams Company
v. EPA, PCB 75-268,
19 PCB 478).
This decision meant that many petrochemical manufacturing processes
whose organic emissions had been covered by Rule 205(f)
(8 pounds
per hour or 85
removal for photochemically reactive material)
would now be required to meet a standard of 100 ppm equivalent
methane.
Petitioners claimed that this would result in exorbitant
expense with very little benefit.
The Agency felt that the rule
could not be applied equitably and that a concentration based
standard was undesirable
in this instance.
Petitioners have proposed to allow affected sources to
choose between the limitations
of Rule 205(f)
or the present
limitation provided there
is no increase
in total organic emissions.
New sources would have the same choice except all organic emissions,
32—601
—2—
not just photochemically
reactive emissions,
would have
to be
controlled.
EFFECT ON AIR QUALITY
The Agency estimated that adoption of Petitioners’ proposal
would forego control of 871.2 pounds of organic emissions per
hour
or 2200 tons per year
(R.221).
This estimate was based on
a
review of the permit files which disclosed 58 affected facilities
with approximately 800 sources.
(Ex.
6).
The Petitioners translated this amount of reduction through
the Empirical Kinetic Modelling Approach (EKMA)
to obtain
a con-
servatively high estimate of 0.5
reduction
in organic emissions
and 0.25
reduction in ozone formation which would be foregone
if the proposal was adopted and all affected sources were located
in the Chicago area.
(R.288, Ex.
11)
This
reduction amounts
to
one part per billion or less and could not be measured by any
routine monitoring method.
(R.290)
The effect of the proposal
on air qualiLy appears
to be
negligible.
TECHNICAL FEASIBILITY AND ECONOMIC REASONABLENESS
Petitioners and Northern Petrochemical Company showed that
although they could comply with the present Rule 205(g)(1)(C), the
cost to do so would be very high and quite variable
(Ex.
1,2,3,7,8).
The wide variations confirm the Agency’s claim that the present
rule
is inequitable.
~1henthese costs
are compared with the
insignificant improvement in air quality,
they are rendered
unreasonable.
ECONOMIC IMPACT
The authors
of the economic impacL study concluded that
compliance with the present
standard would require approximately
$83 million in capital costs and $26 million in annualized opera-
ting costs.
These amounts can be translated
to approximately
$2750 per year per ton of hydrocarbon emissions eliminated.
The
study authors reviewed the literature on the health effects
of
exposure to ozone.
They concluded that there was no way to
measure any adverse effects from such
a small increment.
(Ex.14,
p.38).
Consequently the Board can conclude that adoption
of the proposal will have no significant adverse impact on the
people of the State of Illinois.
32—602
—3—
I, Christan
L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify the above Proposed Opinion was
adopted on the
_____________
day of
‘~~~jj~)jj
,
1979
by a vote of
_______________
Christan L.
Moffett, Cl~’±k
/
Illinois Pollution Control Board
32—603