ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
May 8, 1975
MT. CARMEL PUBLIC UTILITY COMPANY,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 75-41
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
INTERIM OPINION AND ORDER OFRespondent
THE BOARD0 (by Mr. DuInelle)
This petition for variance was filed on January
27,
1975~. It contains a waiver from a right to decision within
ninety days. Petitioner, Mt. Carmel Public Utility Company
(Mt. Carmel), seeks an extension of a variance from Rule 2—
2.53 of the Rules and Regulations Governing the Control of
Air Pollution and from Rule 203(g) (1) (B) of Pollution Control
Board Regulations, Part II, Chapter 2 until December 31,
1975.
The City of Mt. Carmel, located in Wabash County,
operates a facility for generating electricity and supplying
process steam. The facility’s boilers No. 1 and 4, the
subject of this petition, utilize approximately 25,000 tons
of coal per year with an approximate ash and sulfur content
of 7.5 and 2.28, respectively. Heating value of the coal
is 12,026 BTUt5 per pound.
This operation has been the subject of numerous prior
Board actions. For purposes of brevity the reader is referred
to our Opinion in PCB 74-280, 14 PCB 211 for a summary of
these actions. That Opinion, issued on October 17, 1974,
granted Mt. Carmel a variance from Rule 2-2.53 until April
30, 1975 but required additional evidence to justify granting
the variance for the full extent of the requested period
(October 31, 1975). In this petition, Mt. Carmel seeks to
supply such evidence and further seeks a new extension until
December 31, 1975.
Mt. Carmel’s compliance program consists of two steps.
First, it intends to retire Boiler No. 4 upon the completion
of an interconnection with Central Illinois Public Service
(CIPS) at its substation at Albion. Second, it proposes to
install equipment to control particulate emissions from
Boiler No. 1.
16 —599
—2—
The petition contains an extensive explanation of Mt.
Carmel’s attempts to secure completion of the interconnection.
Segments of this interconnection have been constructed
and
completed. A 69 KV transmission
line from the Company~s
generating
station at Mt. Carmel to
a substation located at
the Amax Coal Mine near the Village
of Keensburg was completed
before January 30, 1973 as
ordered by the Board in an Order
entered on November 11,
1971 and extended on October 31,
1972. Another segment of 69 KV line
from the Amax Coal Mine
to the eastern terminal point of a proposed 138 KV line has
also
been completed, Mt. Carmel alleges that a third phase
of
this construction program
—
the
acquisition of easements
required for the 138
NV
line ran into opposition
from
landowners along the proposed route. The petition records
the
protracted legal steps, beginning on October
4, 1972,
taken by Mt. Carmel to effectuate
the necessary
condemnations.
Filing
of the condemnation judgments with respect to the
last remaining parcels of land was finally accomplished on
October 1, 1974. Meanwhile, clearing operations and some
erection of
H-frame structures
for the 138 Ky line
were
commenced in early August, 1974. In the middle
of
November
bad weather forced a temporary discontinuance, and construction
operations have continued intermittently as the weather
permits. Mt. Carmel expects to complete construction by
December 31, 1975. Mt. Carmel alleges that it
has already
expended a sum totalling
over
$850,000
in the
construction
of
this interconnection. It
estimates additional expenditures
for completion of the
138 KV line at
$40,000,
The
Environmental Protection Agency, in
a Recommendation
filed March 11, 1975, stated that
it is
of the opinion
Mt.
Carmel has made reasonable progress toward completing the
interconnection,
and that the delays
did
not appear to have
been
caused
by
the Comeany. Accordingly
it
recommended the
grant of a variance for :Boiier No.
4.
We agree that a
variance would
be appropriate here, since the petitioner has
acted in good
faith, at a considerable expense and for a
period of time stretching over several years, to achieve
compliance.
We note that, unlike
other cases
in which
we have
denied variances
based on interconnection proposals, the
petitioner here
has
actually progressed toward construction
and
completion
of
the necessary lines as opposed to simply
awaiting the approval of
an
interconnection
agreement.
16—600
—3—
(See City of Highland v. EPA, PCB 73-288, 13 PCB 167 (July
25, 1974) and City of Carlyle v. EPA, PC~73-264 (January
16, 1975)
With respect to Mt.
Carmel’s
compliance program
for
Boiler No. 1, the
Agency
has recommended denial of
the
variance on the ground that the boiler can now operate on
iueL oil.
It recommended that the Company continue to seek
Thean
allocationAgency
grantedby
workingMt.
Carmelwith athepermitIllinoisto convertEnergy thisOffice0
boiler from
coal
to dual fuel on January 16, 1974, it was
taken
out of
service October
30, 1974
and
conversion was
completed
by January 10, 1975 at a cost of oVer $4:L,000
(~p~ndifnr~s
to December 31,
1974)
Mt. Camel has now
poseponea the fuel oil operation of th.is boiler as a result
of supply ~
ff1
~‘ii1 f~
i
~
,
and now proposes a. program to install
particulate
control equipment to achi.eve compliance with
Rule 203(g) (1) (B)
.
Ou.r Order of October :L7, 1974 in ICE ~
280, cirantina Mt. Cammel a. varier cc extension, critlc:Lzed.
that petition for its omission of any discussion of the
possibility
of installing such control devices,
The instant
petition satisfies that omission,
Moreover, ii: indicates
that a mechanical dust collector for the system has already
been ordered, at a cost of $15,510, with delivery expected
the last week in February, 1975. In addition, a new induced
draft fan
has been ordered, with delivery expected by July
1,
1975. Mt. Carmel alleges that since this latter delivery
cannot be accomplished prior to the period of peak demand,
the particulate control system cannot he completed
prior to
the winter of 1975.
in its petition and in a reply to the Agency P~~mm~nd~tthn,
filed on March 20, 1975, Mt.
Cannel
related its attempts to
secure additional fuel oil, It expressed limited confidence
in
the promise of aid :Erom the Illinois Energy Office in
obtaining an additional allocation of fuel oil since the
Federal Energy Administration had already denied an
application
on December 3, 1974, It did indicate, however, that it had
written to the Illinois Energy Office and asked for advice
and assistance in gaining the additional allocation.
We are of the opinion that
Mt.
Carmel has made out a
case that it cannot at this time secure the necessary allocation
to run its Boiler No. 1 on fuel oil. Again we find the
sufficient degree of good faith here, both in the original
conversion of the boiler and in the instant progress toward
installation of control equipment, to normally warrant the
grant, of a variance until the controls are installed, or
until an additional allocation is obtained.
16
—601
—4—
We feel precluded, however, by a recent United States
Supreme Court case, from granting a variance beyond July 1,
1975
—-
the date Illinois, is to have attained national
primary ambient air standards under the Clean Air Act
--
without a showing that the variance will not jeopardize such
national standards. Train v. National Resources Defense Council,
et al., 43 LW 4467 (April 16, 1975). In this instance, no
information has been submitted indicating ambient air quality
with respect to particulates with which to enable us to make
such a determinatidn, We therefore remand this case to
allow the city 120 days within which to supply such data.
Finally, Mt.
Carmel requests the release of a $500,000
performance bond required by the Board on November 11,
1971.
It cites the fact that
it has already spent over one million
dollars on its compliance plan
-
compared to an original
estimate of $680,000. It expects the completion of the
program to cost an additional $100,000, including $60,000
for the particulate control system on Boiler No. 1 and
$40,000 for additional expenditures for the completion of
the 138 NV line. It also cites expected difficulty in
refinancing a $270,000 bond issue due December 1, 1975 if
the performance bond is not released because of the contingent
liability involved. In light of Mt. Carme1~s past performance,
we accept the Agency Recommendation to lower the performance
bond and lower it to $25,000.
This Interim Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings
of fact and conclusions of law.
ORDER
It is the Order of the Pollution Control Board that:
1. Petitioner, Mt. Carmel Public Utility Company,
supply the Board, within 120 days of the date
~of
this Order,
with ambient air quality information with respect to particulates.
2. The Mt. Carmel Public Utility Company performance
bond posted in PCB 7l-l5R to guarantee completion of its
program of compliance shall be in the amount of $25,000
instead of $500,000 heretofore required under PCB 74-280.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify ~he above Interim Opinion and
Order were adopted on the ~~day
of May, 1975 by a vote of
A
Christan L. Moffe~t.;~~Clerk
/
Illinois Pollutionl Oôntrol Board
16—602