ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November
6,
1975
ILLINOIS POWER COMPANY,
Petitioner,
v
)
PCB 75—110
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF TUE BOARD
(by Mr. Goodman):
This case arises upon a Petition for Variance
filed on
March
10,
1975.
Amended petitions were filed on May 19 and
July
7 in response to Board orders seeking additional infor—
mation.
On September
25,
1975 Petitioner filed
a Waiver of
Right
to Decision in this matter until November
6,
1975.
No
hearing has been held.
Illinois Power owns and operates an electric power
generating station located at Wood River,
Madison County,
Illinois.
Units
1-3 are fired with distillate fuel oil.
Unit
4
is coal—fired and is equipped with a catalytic-
oxidation
(“Cat—Ox”)
sulfur removal system.
Unit
5 is
equipped with an electrostatic precipitator to remove
fly
ash.
Illinois Power alleges that the average sulfur content
of the coal burned in these latter two units
is 3.14.
The
Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency)
claims it to be
2.95.
Sulfur dioxide emissions from Unit
5,
according to
Illinois Power,
are 5.52 lbs per million BTU.
According to
the Agency,
emissions from both boilers are 5.37 lbs per
million BTU,
although estimated emissions from Unit
4
when the “Cat-Ox” system is operating at designed efficiency
would be only .74 lbs/mBTU.
Illinois Power seeks variance
for Units
4 and 5 from Rule 204(c) (1) (A)
of Chapter
2, PCB
Rules and Regulations, which requires that a sulfur dioxide
emission rate of 1.8 lbs/mBTU have been achieved by May 30,
1975.
Illinois Power proposes to bring its two coal-fired
units into compliance by switching to low-sulfur coal.
It
alleges that prior experience with Unit
4 indicates that the
“Cat-Ox” system is not consistent or reliable enough to
warrant a renewal of its operating permit, which expired on
May
30,
1975.
It further alleges that conversion to low
sulfur coal will involve several considerations,
including
acquisition of
a coal supplier, delivery and handling
facilities,
and possible modification
to its precipitator
if
the new coal results
in lower efficiency.
Thus,
a compliance
19—
217
—2—
schedule for both units has been proposed which
is
identical
to that contained in
a consent order between Illinois Power
and the Federal Environmental Protection Agency.
That
consent order, attached as an exhibit to the amended peti-
tion, calls for conversion of Unit
5 to low sulfur coal as
follows:
SELECT FUEL
MARCH
1, 1976
COMPLETE COAL HANDLING FACILITIES
JANUARY
1,
1978
MODIFY ELECTROSTATIC PRECIPITATOR
FEBRUARY
1,
1978
COMPLETE COAL TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM
JUNE
1,
1978
COMPLIANCE WITH RULE 204(c) (1) (A)
JUNE
1,
1978
In its second amended petition Illinois submitted
ambient air quality data for the vicinity of its Wood River
Power Plant.
It alleged that the data,
covering a period
from April,
1970 to April
30,
1975 showed~seven values
exceeding Federal standards, but that “those standards allow
one value per year to be above the maximums.”
(Second
Amended Petition, p.1).
The data for 1974 included 3-hour,
24—hour and annual values from four monitors.
It revealed
only one infringement
-
a “daily maximum” standard of
.168
ppm in March,
1974 at the Rosewood Heights monitor.
The
1975 data, through April, covered three monitors and re-
vealed no infringements.
The monitoring locations were
recommended to Illinois Power by the Battelle Memorial
Institute.
On the basis of this data Illinois Power con-
tends that sulfur dioxide emissions from the Wood River
Station will not cause or contribute to
a violation of
national ambient air quality standards.
The Agency Recommendation,
filed September
18,
1975,
disputes such a contention.
It points out that the closest
monitor operated by Illinois Power is 2.5 miles from the
plant.
The closest monitor operated by the Agency
is
approximately one mile from the plant.
The following data
for 1974 was provided:
Annual
(Standard)
3-hr Average
24-hr Average
(Standard)
1st
2nd
No.
1st
2nd
No.
.033
(0.03 ppm)
.587
.543
2
.241
.237
3
(0.14)
The Agency concluded that both an annual and short term
sulfur dioxide problem exist near the Wood River Plant.
The
Agency further pointed out that Illinois Power had not
indicated its methodology for determining monitoring loca-
tions or performed any dispersion modeling to determine its
contributions to air quality violations
in Wood River.
On
the basis of the data presented by both parties
in this case
we feel that Illinois Power has failed to meet its burden of
proving that a variance would not result in a failure to
achieve
or maintain national ambient air quality standards.
19
—
218
—3—
Illinois Power requested a similar variance for Unit
5
soon after Rule 204 was adopted in
1972.
In that proceeding
the Board found that Illinois Power had failed to demon-
strate that alternatives were unavailable or that compliance
would create an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship.
Illinois
Power Co.
(Wood River
#5)
v. Environmental Protection Agency,
PCB
72-190,
6PCB
17,
30
(1972).
The Opinion noted that
Illinois Power had failed to prove that it may take four
years
(from that time)
to arrange for low-sulfur coal.
It
continued:
We shall entertain a request for more time
upon presentation of a control program indicating
specifically what is
to be done to meet the
standard, when,
and why it cannot reasonably
be done sooner.
6 PCB at
30.
In the present case, Illinois Power has
requested such additional time and presented a control
program.
It has totally
failed,
however,
to indicate why
such
a program could not have been achieved earlier.
In the
previous case Illinois Power had alleged that conversion
to
low-sulfur coal might take up to four years
(6PCB at 30).
If such were the case,
the schedule in the instant case need
only call for a variance until mid-1976 rather than mid—
1978.
The record shows no efforts by Illinois Power to
secure such coal
in the long interim period between the two
cases.
As noted by the Agency in its Recommendation,
a
compliance plan should have been submitted to the Agency by
May
1,
1973 pursuant to Rules
103(b)
and 104 of Chapter 2
(Agency
Rec. pp.4-5).
For these reasons we must hold that
any present hardship to Illinois Power in achieving com-
pliance with Rule 204 (c) (1) (A)
is self-imposed.
Furthermore, Illinois Power,
aside from describing the
steps necessary to implement a conversion
to low—sulfur
coal,
has failed to support the relatively
lengthy time-
frame proposed.
The petition merely alleges hypothetical
problems in the conversion, rather than indicating specific
efforts made at obtaining the coal, preparing unloading and
handling facilities,
or testing for precipitator degradation.
While it
is possible that
a showing may have been made to
the Federal Environmental Protection Agency to support the
consent order reached in the Federal proceeding, no such
showing has been made here.
Illinois Power has thus failed
to meet its burden of proving an arbitrary or unreasonable
hardship.
For this reason,
and for failure
to prove that
the variance would not result in a failure to achieve or
maintain national ambient air quality standards,
this peti-
tion
is denied.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s
findings of fact
and conclusions of law.
19— 219
—4—
ORDER
The Petition for Variance from Rule 204(c) (1) (A)
for
Illinois Power Company’s Wood River Station, Units
4 and
5,
is denied.
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
I, Christan
L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify the above Opin~~~ Order
were adopted on the
_____________
day of
f)
1975 by a vote of
4_~
~
Illinois Pollution c~trol Board
19
—
220