RECE~yED
CLERK’S
OFF!CE
BEFORE THE ILLINOIS POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOAR~EB
114
2005
OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS
STATE
OF ILLINOIS
Pollution
Control
Board
INTHEMATTEROF:
)
)
PETITION OF SCA TISSUE NORTH AMERICA, L.L.C.)
AS 2005-
~
FOR AN ADJUSTED STANDARD FROM
)
(Adjusted
Standard-Air)
35
ILL. ADM. CODE 218.301
AND 218.302(C)
)
MOTIONS FOR
INCORPORATION
OF DOCUMENTS
FROM A PRIORDOCKET
AND WAIVER
OF REQUIREMENTS.
The Petitioner, SCA TISSUE NORTH AMERICA, L.L.C. (“SCA Tissue”), by its
attorney, moves
the Illinois Pollution Control Board’s (“Board”) to incorporate certain
documents from a prior docket that are germane to this proceeding and, further, to waive
its
copying requirements for the accompanying Petition for Adjusted Standard filed in the
above-captioned matter.
In support ofthese motions, SCA Tissue states the following:
1.
SCA Tissue previously filed a Petition forAdjusted Standard (hereinafter
referred to
as the “original” or “earlier” Petition) with the Board on October 12, 2004,
and the matter was assigned a docket number ofAS2005-0l.
2.
On December 2, the Board issued an order.requesting that SCA Tissue file
a proofofpublication in accordance with the requirements of415 ILCS
5/28.1(d)(1)
(2002).
Unfortunately, published notice of the earlierpetition was not effectuated until
mid-December of2005.
3.
In a recent order,
issued on January 6, 2005, the Board observed that the
fourteen-day period forpublication was jurisdictional.
Because public notice had not
been published in this instance within fourteen days ofthe date of filing ofthe original
Petition, the Board concluded that it did possess jurisdiction to hear the proceeding.
Accordingly, the Board dismissed the original Petition and closed its
docket.
4.
Section 101.306 ofthe Board’s procedural regulations authorizes any
person to seek incorporation ofmaterials from the record ofanother Board docket into a~
proceeding provided that it is demonstrated that the materials are “authentic,
credible and
relevant” to the proceeding.
See,
35
Ill. Adm.
Code 101.306(a).
5.
The Petition filed in this proceeding, including its
text and
supporting
documentation, is identical to the Petition filed in the Board’s AS2005-01
dpcket and
therefore makes the earlier document both credible and relevant.
The-signed original of
the Petition that accompanies this filing should also adequately demonstrate the
authenticity of the earlier submission.
For these reasons, the Board’s incorporation ofthe
earlier Petition will avoid the expense and burden borne by the petitioner in re-instituting
this regulatory proceeding and ease any inconvenience suffered by the Board from the
receipt ofduplicative copies.
6.
Section 101.302(h) ofthe Board’s procedural regulations provides that
documents filed with the Board must consist ofa signed original and 9 duplicate copies,
unless otherwise ordered by the Board.or as provided by regulation.
See,
35 Ill. Adm.
Code 101.302(h).
Section
101.306 separatelyprovides that any person seeking
incorporation ofmaterials from a prior docket must file four (4) copies ofthe material
with the Board.
See,
35
Ill. Adm.
Code
10 1.306(a).
7.
As previously mentioned, a signed original ofthe Petition has been
included in this
filing.
In view ofthe requested incorporation of the earlier Petition and
the short passage oftime since the closureof the Board’s previous docket from the
AS2005-01
proceeding, SCA Tissue requests that the Board waive the copying
requirements that would ordinarily accompany an original filing or a request for
incorporation.
8.
No prejudice orhardship will result to any party or interested person(s)
from the Board’s granting ofthese Motions.
WHEREFORE, for the reasons set forth above, SCA Tissue moves that the
Board allow the incorporation ofthe earlier Petition from the AS2005-01
docket into this
proceeding and
waive the afore-mentioned copying requirements.
Respectfully submitted,
Williams, P.C.
Petitioner
~5
State Street
—
P.O.
Box 459
Albany, New York
1220 1-0459
Telephone (518) 447-3200
Dated: January31, 2005
ORIGINAL
BEFORE THE ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BQARD
CLERK’S OFFICE
FEB
042005
STATE
OF ILLINOIS
In the Matter ofthe Petition of
Pollution Control Board
SCA TISSUE NORTH AMERICA, L.L.C.
for an Adjusted Standard from 35 Ill. Adm.
Code
§~
218.301
and 218.302(c).
PETITION OF SCA NORTH AMERICA, L.L.C. FOR AN ADJUSTED STANDARD
McNAMEE, LOCHNER, TITUS
& WILLIAMS, P.C.
John J. Privitera, Esq.
Attorneysfor SCA Tissue North America, L.L. C.
75
State Street
—
P.O.
Box 459
Albany, New York
1220 1-0459
(518)
447-3200
DATED:
January 31, 2005
Albany, New York
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
~.
BACKGROUND
2
Corporate Ownership/Operation ofFacility
2
Description ofOperational Processes
~
3
II.
35 ILL. ADMN. CODE
§
104.406 REQUIREMENTS
11
A.
Standard From Which ReliefIs Sought
—
Section
104.406(a)
11
B.
Nature ofthe Regulation ofGeneral Applicability
—
Section 104.406(b)
~
1
C.
Level ofJustification
—
Section 104.406(c)
12
D.
Facility and Process Description
—
Section
104.406(d)
12
E.
Investigation ofCompliance Alternatives:
Methods for
Reducing VOM Emissions from SCA’s Mill
—
Section 104.406(e)
12
F.
SCA’s Proposed Adjusted Standard
—
Section
104.406(f)
18
G.
Quantitative and Qualitative Description ofSCA’s Impact on
the Environment Before and After the Proposed Adjustment
Standard
—
Section
104.406(g)
20
H.
Justification
—
Section 104.406(h)
20
1.
Factors Relating to
SCA are Substantially and
Significantly Different
20
2.
The Existence ofThose Factors Justifies an
Adjusted Standard
~23
3.
The Requested Standard Will Not Result in Adverse
Environmental Health Effects
23
4.
The Requested Standard is Consistent with Federal Law
24
I.
Hearing—Section 104.46(j)
~24
J.
Supporting Document
—
Section 104.406(k)
24
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
III.
CONCLUSION.
~
25
TABLE OF FIGURES
FIGURE
1
Alsip Pulping Process
Area Flow Diagram
4
FIGURE
2
Alsip Paper Machine Process Flow
Diagram
5
FIGURE 3
Emission Control Cost Summary
~i5
FIGURE 4
Solvent Trial Results
FIGURE
5
Results ofState Regulatory Review
18
LIST OF ATTACHMENTS
Title I Federally Enforceable State Operating Permit
A
Lowest Achievable Emission Rate Evaluation, dated November 2000,
Prepared by RMT, Inc
B
Letter from Illinois Environmental Protection Agency to John J. Privitera,
dated April 22, 2004
C
Consent Order, Entered August 13, 2004
D
Solvent Reduction Equipment Procedures Protocol
~
Solvent VOC lbs per MDT
Emission Calculations
_.....~
~
G
Alsip Mill Solvent Trial Results
- .-~--~
H
Regulatory Evaluation Memorandum
~...
~
11
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
SCA
Tissue
North
America,
L.L.C.
(“SCA”),
through
its
attorneys,
McNamee,
Lochner,
Titus
&
Williams,
P.C.,
and
pursuant
to
35
Ill.
Adnm.
Code
§
104.400,
et seq.,
submits
this
Petition to
the Illinois
Pollution
Control Board
(“IPCB”),
seeking an Adjusted
Standard
from
35
Iii.
Adnm.
Code
§~
218.301
and
218.302(c)
(commonly
known
as the
“Alternative
Standard
Rule”)
as
applied
to
the
emissions
of
Volatile
Organic
Material
(“VOM”) at SCA’s Alsip, Illinois, recycled paper mill (the “Tissue Mill” or “Facility”).
Summaiy ofPetition
Beginning more than a
decade ago,
the owners/operators ofthe Facility have worked
through various process-related changes to reduce VOM emissions from the solvents used to
maintain the paper recycling and manufacturing infrastructure free from intrusions
—
referred
to
herein
as
“stickies.”
The implementation of these changes has resulted in
a 93
percent
reduction in VOM emissions
from the cleaning process described herein.
Thus, the Facility,
P
which is regulated by Rule 2 18.301
-
the
“8
lb/hr Rule”
-
has established its
compliance with
the substantive requirement ofRule 218.302(c), to achieve at least an 85 percent reduction in
VOM emissions.
As
set
forth
more
fully below,
Rule 218.302(c)
was
not
drafted
in
a
manner
that
contemplates
the contribution of process-related changes
and pollution prevention to
overall
emissions
reduction.
As a result, Illinois
EPA has interpreted Rule 218.302(c)
as requiring,
in
all
instances,
“add-on”
pollution
controls
to
achieve the
85
percent
reduction
standard,
despite the benefits that might
accrue
from
allowing
non-control options to
be read into the
language
of the
rule.
SCA
and
its
predecessors
have
explored the
few
available
add-on
1
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
controls
for
this
process
—
none
of
which
has
proven
to
be
as
economically
or
environmentally feasible as current operations.
Further,
Illinois
EPA has rendered
a determination
that the process-related
controls
currently
in
effect
at
the
Facility constitute
the
Lowest
Achievable
Emission
Reduction
(“LAER”), and that it is also
in compliance with Ill.
Adnm.
Code,
218,
Subpart TT.
Illinois
EPA has
also
issued
a
Final Title I Permit,
Attachment A, which
effectively
regulates
and
controls the Facility within the LAER limits.
For the reasons that follow,
SCA respectfully requests that the IPCB grants the instant
Petition for an Adjusted
Standard.
I.
BACKGROUND
Corporate Ownershz~/Operation
ofFacility
This
matter
arises
out
of the
construction
in
1988
-
1989,
by
the
Chicago
Tissue
Company,
L.P., f/kIaJ FSC Paper Company (now known as XCTC, L.P.), of a new facility at
its
recycled paper mill
located
in
the
Village
of Alsip,
Cook
County,
Illinois.
The new
facility
—
referred to
herein as the
“Tissue
Mill”
-
was designed to
recycle magazine
stock
into consumer-grade
tissue products.
Before the Tissue
Mill was
constructed, the Facility
was primarily a Newsprint Mill, engaged in the recycling ofnewspapers into newsprint.
The
Tissue Mill operations largely duplicate the Newsprint Mill operations.
On July 3,
1993,
the Newsprint Mill portion of the Facility was sold to
a third-party,
and FSC Paper Company, L.P., changed its name to
Chicago Tissue Company, L.P.
Chicago
Tissue Company,
L.P.,
continued to
operate
the Tissue
Mill until November
5,
1995,
when
the
Tissue
Mill was
acquired by
WTM
1
Company,
f/k/a! Wisconsin
Tissue Mills,
Inc.,
a
subsidiary ofChesapeake Corporation.
2
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
Wisconsin Tissue operated the Tissue Mill from November
5,
1995,
until October
5,
1999.
On October
5,
1999,
Wisconsin Tissue
transferred the Tissue Mill to
a joint venture
controlled by the Georgia-Pacific Corporation.
On March
3, 2001,
Georgia-Pacific sold the
Facility to
SCA Tissue N.A.,
L.L.C.
SCA’s sole member is SCA Tissue North America, Inc.,
a Delaware corporation that
is a wholly owned subsidiary ofSvernska Cellulosa Aktiebolaget
SCA (pubi), a Swedish Corporation.
SCA is the current owner and operator ofthe Facility.
Description of Operational Processes
Initial
operation
of
the
Tissue
Mill
began
in
December
1989,
and
continuous
production
began
in
February
of
1990.
The
Facility
currently
manufactures
tissue
and
toweling products
from recycled wastepaper at a rate of approximately 200 tons
per
day of
product.
The
wastepaper
received
by
the
mill
requires
pulping,
cleaning,
de-inking
and
bleaching to
produce a clean fiber source for papermaking.
Once
the fiber stock is prepared,
it
is
fed between
two
rapidly moving
wires
on
the
paper machine.
As
the
paper
sheet
progresses through
the paper machine,
water is
drained, pressed and
evaporated
from
the
sheet.
At the end of the paper machine, the product
is
continuously wound into large rolls.
These large rolls constitute the Tissue Mill’s final product.
Pulping Process
The Pulping
Process encompasses
those
processes to
convert the wastepaper into a
fiber sluny
(pulp)
suitable
for use
on
a paper machine.
The major steps
include
pulping,
contaminant removal,
de-inking, bleaching
and
storage.
Figure
1
shows
the
process
flow
diagram from the Tissue Mill Pulping Process.
3
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
The
pulp
thereafter undergoes
a
series
of cleaning
and
screening
steps
to
remove
increasingly finer contaminants.
Reject streams are further processed to recover usable fiber
prior to being conveyed to the reject system.
The cleaning and screening steps are conducted
in
enclosed units
in
which
no
chemicals
are added,
and
from
which
no
emissions
occur.
After the process of de-inking, bleaching
and
storage has occurred, the pulp
is
ready to
be
introduced to the paper machines.
4
FIGURE 1
Alsip Pulping Process Area Flow Dia2ram
Vent
& Fugitive
Stack
Emissions
Emissions
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
Paper Machine Operations
The paper machine operations begin with refining pulp, and end with the paperreel at
the end of the paper machine.
Figure
2
shows the process flow diagram for the Tissue Mill
papermachine.
FIGURE
2
Alsip Paper Machine Process Flow Diagram
Roof Vents,
Windows,
Doors
The paper
machine
forming
section or
“wet
end”
is
where
formation
of the sheet
occurs.
Dilute
pulp
from the
headbox
is
distributed
across the
convergence
gap
of the
two
fast
moving wires of the twin
wire
press,
creating
a wire
web.
Sheet
formation
is
nearly
instantaneous.
The
remainder
of the
wire
section
is
for
dewatering
of the
sheet.
The
dewatering
action
is
due
to
pressure
set
up
by
the
tension in
the
two
wires and
by
water
drainage elements outside ofthe wires.
The sheet is transferred from the twin wires to
a fast
5
Stack Emissions
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
moving
felt.
Most of the water generated during this
process
is
screened for useable
fiber
and recycled back into the process.
Paper Machine Wire and Felt Cleaning
During initial
operation
of the Tissue
Mill,
it was discovered
that
the recycling
of
magazines
and
similar
wastepaper
containing
glued-on
labels
or
other
glued-on
material
resulted in “stickies” adhering to one of the two, tissue machine forming wire webs described
above.
The
“stickies” remain attached to
the wire web and
felt rolls and often leave holes in
the
sheet
with
each
rotation of the wires,
thus
degrading
the
product.
This
represents
a
significant operational constraint.
The problem is most severe with the paper machine wires.
The paper machine wires
are therefore
cleaned periodically,
dependent upon
the
quality of the
furnish (wastepaper),
the effectiveness of screening and
filtering operations in the stock preparation area, and the
grade of paper being produced.
As detailed below, this
cleaning operation
is
the source of
the VOM emissions that are addressed in the instant Petition for Adjusted
Standard.
Removal ofStickies
To
remove the
“stickies,” the Facility operators
spray solvent onto
the wire
web
to
wash away the glue and papermaterial so that it will not interfere with production.
SCA and
its
predecessors
have
refined
this
process
to
the
extent
that
Illinois
EPA
has
formally
determined that
the use ofpulp
screening and
cleaning systems
and process operations that
restrict
the use of cleaning
solvents
and
that limit the
cleaning solvent VOC
content
to
50
percent by weight, complies with Part 218, Subpart TT and constitutes LAER.
6
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
Enforcement/Compliance with LAER and Subpart TT
On March 27,
1998,
U.S.
EPA Region V, issued a Notice of Violation to
Wisconsin
Tissue,
alleging
that VOM
emissions
from
the
paper machine
at the Tissue
Mill were
in
violation of the
federal
Clean Air Act
and
pertinent portions
of the Illinois
air regulations,
specifically Subpart TT,
35
Ill. Admn. Code
§~
218.980 through 218.988
(the “1998 NOV”).
Subpart
TT
requires
overall
81
control
of VOM
emissions
unless
the
solvent
can
be
considered a
“coating.”
U.S.
EPA and Illinois EPA took the position that the solvent clean-
up
operation
described
herein
does
not
constitute
a
“coating”
operation
under
Illinois
regulations.
On May 17,
1999, U.S.
EPA, Region V, issued a Notice of Violation to
XCTC,
L.P.,
alleging
that
construction
of
the
Tissue
Mill
in
1988
and
1989
violated
the
Illinois
Environmental
Protection
Act
and
Illinois
New
Source
Review regulations,
35
Ill.
Admn.
Code
§~
203.301 and 203.601.
On May 18,
1999, the Illinois EPA issued separate Notices of
Violation to both Wisconsin Tissue and XCTC alleging violations at the Tissue Mill of35
Ill.
Adnm.
Code
§~
218.986,
203.201,
203.202,
203.301
and
203.302.
These
Notices
of
Violation were substantially identical.
In January 2000 (as amended from
time to time thereafter), Georgia-Pacific caused to
be filed with Illinois EPA (with copies to U.S.
EPA, Region V), a LAER
Evaluation Report,
seeking a
determination that the process modifications
and
other improvements unilaterally
implemented
at
the
Facility
constituted
LAER
under
the
Non-Attainment
New
Source
Review provisions ofthe federal
Clean Air Act.
See Attachment B.
The salient conclusions
of the LAER report may be summarized as follows:
7
Reproducedon Recycled Paper
1.
Because ofthe lack of any state or federal regulatory
standards
for
paper
machine-specific
VOC
limits,
there
are
no
VOC
emission
limitations which
establish
a baseline
from which
to
evaluate VOC
emission control requirements for the Facility’s
papermill
operations;
2.
No add-on VOC
emission controls have been applied to paper
machine
operations
in
the
United States that
are
of the
same
class or category as the paper machine at the Facility.
The sole
paper machine identified in the country which utilizes an add-
on
VOC
control
device
for
paper
machine
emissions
is
controlled only during the cleaning operation and has potential
VOC
emissions
which
are
100
times
greater
than the
solvent
cleaning emissions from the Facility;
3.
While
the
application of add-on
controls may be
technically
feasible,
the resulting
increase in
emissions of nitrogen
oxide
and carbon monoxide generated by an emission control device
could
be
greater
than
the
reduction
in
VOC
achieved.
Moreover,
the
substantial
cost-per-ton
of
VOC
emission
reductions with add-on controls would, as described more fully
below,
be
greatly
out
of proportion
with
the
minimal
VOC
reductions that would result.
In the spring of2002, the Illinois
EPA referred the Alsip
Tissue Mill permit matter to
the Illinois
Attorney General for
enforcement.
In June 2002,
the
Illinois
Attorney General
filed an enforcement action in the Circuit Court for Cook
County.
The named defendants in
that
suit
are SCA
Tissue
(the current owner of the
Alsip
Tissue Mill)
and
all
three former
owners
of the
Facility:
Georgia-Pacific,
Wisconsin Tissue/Chesapeake
and
XCTC.
The
lawsuit
seeks
civil
penalties
for
past
violations
of
the
Illinois
air
permit
laws
and
for
injunctive reliefmandating compliance with the
State air permit requirements.
Subpart G Compliance Issues
In September
2002,
the parties commenced settlement
negotiations with
the Illinois
Attorney
General
and
Illinois
EPA with
regard to
the
enforcement case.
In early 2003,
a
complication developed in the settlement negotiations regarding the Tissue Mill’s compliance
8
Reproducedon Recycled Paper
with Subpart G
—
Rule 2 18.301.
The general rule under Subpart G requires the Tissue Mill to
meet a VOM emission limit of 8 lbs/hr.
However, Rule 218.302(c) provides
an “Alternative
Standard”
from
the
Rule
218.301
emission
limitation if approved
“Air
Pollution
Control”
equipment is
used to
reduce organic material
emissions,
including
VOM, by
85
percent
or
more.
Rule
211.410
defines
the
phrase
“Air
Pollution
Control
Equipment”
as
“any
equipment
or
apparatus
of a
type
intended
to
eliminate,
prevent,
reduce
or
control
the
emission ofair contaminants to the atmosphere.”
In
late
2003,
SCA
presented
Illinois
EPA
with
a
“Subpart
G
Compliance
Demonstration,” in which it maintained that a reasonable regulatory definition of “apparatus”
would
include the various process related changes
that had been implemented at the Facility
to
reduce VOM emissions over the last decade
and that the Facility did in
fact comply
with
Subpart
G,
since it had
achieved a 93
percent reduction
in historic
VOM emissions,
which
exceeds the Subpart G, 85 percent reduction standard.
In
or
about
April
2004,
Illinois
EPA
rejected
SCA’s
Subpart
G
compliance
demonstration, finding
“the definition does not
support equating the process-related changes
referenced
in
the
Subpart
G
Compliance
Demonstration
with
the
types
of conventional
control
technologies that
are
mentioned throughout the Board’s
Part
218
regulations”
and
“While Illinois EPA encourages pollution prevention,
including the types of
process-related
equipment changes that
resulted in
emission reductions from
the
spray solvent operations,
Illinois
EPA
is
not
prepared to
depart from
its
traditional
notions
of what
constitutes
air
pollution control equipment.”
See Attachment C.
On
or
about
May
23,
2004,
the
Illinois
EPA
circulated
for
public
review
and
comment
a
Federally
Enforceable
State
Operating
Permit
(“FESOP”).
The
FESOP
was
9
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
issued
in its
final form on
July 23,
2004.
The FESOP
states, “Illinois EPA has determined
that
the
plant
will
meet
the Lowest
Achievable Emission
Rate,”
and
also
establishing
the
Facility’s compliance with Subpart TT.
See Attachment A.
The parties also
agreed on
the terms of a
Consent
Order,
which
was entered
in
the
Circuit Court
of Cook
County,
Illinois
County Department, Chancery Division,
on August
13,
2004.
The
Consent
Order,
attached
hereto
as
Attachment D,
provides
as
follows,
in
contemplation of the instant Petition for Adjusted Standard:
(5)
SCA
shall file a petition for adjusted standard (“Petition”)
with the Board within 60
days following entry ofthis
Consent
Order, pursuant
to
Section
28.1
of the
Act,
415
ILCS
5/28.1
(2002),
and
the
regulations
of the Board
under
35
Ill.
Adm.
code Part
106.
The petition shall address the factors set forth
in
Section
28.1(c)
of
the
Act
and
shall
seek
the
Board’s
approval
of
an
adjusted
standard
that
authorizes
SCA
to
comply with the Illinois
EPA LAER determination, as well as
the
requirements
of
an
approvable
equivalent
alternative
control plan under
Subpart TT, in lieu of the 8 lbs/hr
limitation
of35 Ill. Adm.
Code 218.301.
(6)
The Illinois EPA shall timely submit a recommendation to
the
Board
pursuant
to
35
Iii.
Adm.
Code
106.714
that
the
Board
grant the Petition of SCA.
In the
event that
the Board
grants
SCA’s
Petition,
the Illinois
EPA shall thereafter timely
submit
notice
to
USEPA/Region
5
of the
Board’s
adjusted
standard ruling and request that the
State Implementation Plan
(“SIP”) be modified
accordingly.
Attachment D, pp.
16-17.
With execution ofthe Consent Order, the Illinois EPA and AG agree that the facility
complies with Part 203 and Part 218,
Subpart TT.
Attachment D, pp.
15.
After
carefully
examining
its
operations
to
determine
the
feasibility
of
using
traditional, add-on controls
to
comply with Subpart
G,
and having concluded for the reasons
set
forth below
that it is
infeasible to
do
so, SCA is
compelled to
petition the IPCB
for an
10
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
adjusted
standard.
Accordingly,
SCA
offers
the
following
reasons
as
to
why
it
should
receive an
adjusted standard with respect to the 8 lb/hr rule:
II.
35 ILL.
ADMN.
CODE
§
104.406 REQUIREMENTS
A.
Standard From Which Relief Is Sought
—
Section
104.406(a)
SCA
requests
an
Adjusted
Standard
from
35
Ill.
Admn.
Code
§
218.301
(use of
organic material,
otherwise known as the
“8
lb/hr. rule”) and 218.302(c)
(requirement to
use
add-on
controls to
achieve capture rate).
Illinois’ organic material emission limitations
were
last
amended
at
17
I1l.Reg.
16636,
effective
September
27,
1993.
Section
218.301
now
provides:
No person shall cause or allow the discharge of more than 3.6
kg/hr.
(8
lb/hr.) of organic material
into the atmosphere
from
any
emission
unit,
except
as
provided
in
Sections
218.302,
218.303,
218.304
of this Part
and
the following exception:
If
no
odor
nuisance
exists
the
limitation
of this
Subpart
shall
apply only to photochemicallyreactive material.
35
Iii.
Adnm.
Code
§
2 18.104
states
that
“the definitions of 35
Ill. Admn.
Code 211
apply to this Part.”
Pursuant to
35
Iii.
Admn.
Code
§
211.1950,
“emission unit” means
“any
part or activity at a stationary source that emits or has the potential to emit any air pollutant.”
Additionally, Section 211.4250(b) defines “organic material”
as:
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,
but
excluding methane, acetone,
carbon monoxide,
carbon dioxide,
carbonic
acid, metallic
carbonic
acid, metallic carbonates,
and
ammonium carbonate.
B.
Nature ofthe Regulation of General Applicability
—
Section
104.406(b)
This
regulation was
promulgated
to
implement
the
federal
requirements
under
the
Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C.
§
7401,
et seq.
11
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
C.
Level ofJustification
—
Section
104.406(c)
The regulation of general
applicability from which SCA
seeks an Adjusted Standard
does not specify a level ofjustification for an Adjusted Standard.
D.
Facility and Process Description
—
Section
104.406(d)
A
description
of the
Facility
and
the
process
that
is
the
subject
of
the
instant
application is
provided in the “Background”
section, supra.
In summary,
SCA utilizes low-
VOC
photochemically reactive solvents
to remove stickies
from the wire web that it uses to
dry pulp
into fiber, suitable
for installation
on
rolls.
As
a result of the proactive activities
described below,
SCA has reduced VOM
emissions
from
this
aspect
of its
operations in
excess ofthe
85 percent reduction mandated by Subpart G.
B.
Investigation
of
Compliance
Alternatives:
Methods
for
Reducing
VOM
Emissions from
SCA’s Mill
—
Section 104.406(e)
SCA and its predecessors have performed extensive
evaluations and improvements at
the Tissue
Mill
to
reduce VOM
emissions
to their Lowest
Achievable Emissions
Rate, as
reflected
in
the
FESOP.
In
approximately
1991,
the
process
of
continuous,
unmetered
spraying of cleaning
solvent
for
10
to
25
minutes
was replaced
with
a three-part
process,
utilizing new equipment that applies a controlled solvent spray, followed by a soak cycle, and
power wash with water.
The equipment for this new process was designed and
engineered to
reduce the release of solvents to
3
to
5
minute
spray periods,
followed by a
“rest” period to
allow
the
solvent to
“soak
in”
and
loosen
the
stickies.
A
high-pressure
water wash was
subsequently
designed
and
installed
to
physically
remove
the
stickies.
On
infrequent
occasions, this “spray-wait-power wash” cycle is repeated.
The Facility also changed the pulp detacifier and wire polymer application equipment
to
reduce stickie build up
and, hence, reduce the number ofwire
solvent cleanings
required.
12
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
This
redesign
and
reengineering of the
process
equipment
for
solvent
cleaning
did
not
increase the number of solvent cleaning cycles and, therefore, a 30 to
80 percent reduction in
VOM emissions for each cleaning cycle was realized due to less
solvent usage
per cleaning.
This
process
redesign
is
described
in
Attachment
B,
which
is
SCA’s
Solvent Reduction
Equipment Procedures Protocol (“Solvent Reduction Protocol”).
Additional
process
and
equipment
modifications
were
made
in
the
late
1990s
to
further reduce the amount of solvent that
is
used on the machines.
To
physically remove a
greater quantity
of stickies
prior
to
applying
pulp
furnish to
the paper machine wires,
the
centrisorter screens
were
redesigned to
reduce the
slot
size and
the c-slot
was redesigned.
These
engineered changes
increased
the removal of stickies
by
approximately
80
percent,
thus
reducing the
overall
number of required solvent cleanings.
Second,
the
solvent spray
nozzles
were
replaced
with
a
reconfigured
design
to
reduce
solvent
overspray.
This
modification reduced the quantity ofsolvent utilized during each solvent cleaning event.
The
equipment
changes
described
above
resulted
in
substantial
organic
material
emission reductions, based on VOM emission data previously submitted to the Illinois EPA.
For instance,
1990
solvent cleaning VOM
emissions
were
documented at
182.25
tons
per
year at a
corresponding production rate of 36,900
machine dried tons
(MDT) of production
during
that
year.
For comparison purposes,
SCA
normalized
VOM
emission
rates
on
a
production specific basis because current production rates are nearly twice those during the
early years ofthe machine operation.
The
1990 VOM emission rate prior to
the equipment
changes
described
above
was
9.9
pounds
per
MDT.
After
the
implementation
of the
equipment
changes,
the
average
VOC
emission rate
due
to
the
use
of cleaning
solvent
decreased to
5.0
pounds ofVOM per MDT.
This emission rate is based on the
1991
through
13
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
1994 solvent usage information presented in Attachment F to
this Petition.
These years were
used because a solvent change occurred in
1995
that
further reduced VOM emissions.
That
subsequent reduction in VOM emissions is not included in the calculation of VOM emission
reductions achieved by
the above equipment changes; therefore,
actual emissions have been
reduced to
an even greater extent than is reported.
The VOM emission reductions due to
the air pollution
control equipment changes
in
the late
1990’s
can be
documented in
a
similar
manner by
comparing
the
actual
solvent
cleaning emissions prior to
the changes with those
subsequent to
the changes.
Again,
using
the data presented in Figure
1
of Attachment F, the solvent cleaning emission rates prior to
the air pollution
control
equipment changes
are represented
by VOM
emissions
during
the
years
1995
and
1996
which
averaged
3.5
pounds
VOM per
MDT.
The
solvent cleaning
emissions
subsequent to
the equipment changes
are represented by
VOM emissions
during
the
years
1997
through
2000,
which
averaged
0.6
pounds of VOM per
MDT.
Emission
calculations
are
presented
in
Attachment
G
that
document
an
overall
VOM
emission
reduction due to
equipment changes of 93
percent,
substantially in excess of the
85
percent
requirement.
Section 6.63 of the attached LAER
Report (Attachment B,
p.
26) documents that the
application ofadd-on controls is economically infeasible, due to
the extremely high cost-per-
ton ofVOC emissions reduction.
Preliminary budget
level cost estimates were developed for
five
(5)
different
potential
add-on VOC
emission control
technologies.
The cost
estimates
for these control technologies were based on guidance
adapted from the
U.S.
EPA Office of
Air Quality
Planning
and
Standards,
Control
Cost
Manual (EPA 453/B-96-001,
Fifth
Ed.,
February 1996) and appropriate escalation indices.
14
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
The
LAER
Report
concludes
that,
of the
scenarios
analyzed,
the
application
of
catalytic regenerative incineration
to the cyclone
exhaust was the most
cost
effective.
This
scenario would
result in a
total
annualized cost
of approximately $265,734
per year for the
removal
of
5.8
tons
per
year
VOC.
See
Figure
3.
Thus,
the
cost
effectiveness
of this
proposal is
$45,706//ton of VOC removed.
That cost is clearly excessive when compared to
the potential
increase of emissions
of other pollutants
and
the minimal
VOC reduction that
would be achieved through add-on controls.
FIGURE
3
Emission Control Cost Summary
Scenario
Catalytic
Regenerative
Incineration
(S/ton VOC
Controlled)
Catalytic
Recuperative
Incineration
(S/ton VOC
Controlled)
Thermal
Regenerative
Incineration
($/ton
VOC Controlled)
Thermal
Recuperative
Incineration
(S/ton VOC
Controlled)
Carbon
Adsorption
($/ton
VOC
Controlled)
All sources
$107,362
$152,757
$120,596
$204,887
Not Feasible
All Paper
Machine
Sources
$84,647
$120,180
$98,063
$158,521
Not Feasible
All Pulping
Process
Sources
$170,057
$252,040
$194,930
$327,771
Not Feasible
Vacuum
System
$99,574
$136,605
$118,349
$171,946
Not Feasible
Cyclone
$45,706
$63,903
$58,346
$79,915
$48,312
Washers
$152,196
$228,141
$178,672
$293,727
Not Feasible
Yankee Dryer
$380,857
I
$541,565
$468,117
$703,191
Not Feasible
Furthermore, on
March
8,
1996
the
US
EPA proposed NESHAP
at pulp
and paper
mills.
The
goal
of the
NESHAP
is
to
require
implementation
of maximum
achievable
control technology
(“MACT”)
to
reduce hazardous
air pollutant
(“HAP”)
emissions.
The
proposed
rule
included
standards
for
MACT
III
sources,
which
includes
secondary
fiber
deinking mills
and paper machines such as the paper machine at the Facility.
Essentially all
of the HAP addressed in the MACT rule are also VOC.
15
Reproducedon Recycled Paper
For the MACT III source category,
the US EPA contacted
representatives ofmajor
industry,
state
and
environmental
groups
and
held
discussions
with
a
team
of state
and
industry
representatives.
The
team
evaluated
the
existing
information
and
established
“Presumptive
MACT”
for mills
such as
the Facility.
The information
gathered
during
the
Presumptive MACT process indicates that there are no
air pollution control devices in place
on MACT III sources, except for those associated
with chlorine bleaching processes
—
which
are not at issue here.
Based
on this finding, US EPA determined that the “MACT Floor” for
these
sources
is
no
control
at
all,
at
least
with
respect
to
pulping
and
the
associated
wastewater, paper machines and nonchlorine bleaching.
SCA
has
also
concluded
that
no
cleaning
solvent
alternatives
are
available
that
provide acceptable cleaning characteristics and
can reduce VOM emissions below 8 pounds
per
hour
or
be
nonphotochemically
reactive.
Figure
4
provides
a
summary
of
some
seventeen solvent trials completed by SCA to
support this conclusion. The cleaning products
evaluated were either low or non-VOM products or those using nonphotochemically reactive
constituents.
See also Attachment H.
Additionally, Figure
5
provides a regulatory summary
of other
States’ treatment
of this
issue
and
supports the
conclusion that
there has
been
no
demonstration
of a
non-photochemically
reactive
material
that
can be
used
as
a
cleaning
solvent for tissue mills.
See also Attachment I.
16
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
FIGURE
4
Solvent Trial Results
Trial Date
Method
Product
Results
Comments
10/8/02
Machine
Felt Solv II
Stripped the wire, no effect
on stickies
Conducted trial last
year with lower VOC
product
7/10/03
Bench
Acetone-Walgreens
100
No results
Evaporated too fast for
the produce to react to
stickeis
7/12/03
Bench
Aquamark, Inc Degreaser-l
No effect on stickies
Applied at
50
and
100
strength with
similar results
8/5/03
Machine
Anchor 7860
No effect
Used in the printing
industryto remove ink
8/5/03
Machine
Anchor 7427
No effect
The product separated
too fast.
8/5/03
Machine
Tabco 84
Stripped the wire coating,
but no effect on the stickies
8/14/03
Machine
Johnson-Diversey
X-Cell 242
No effect
Odor didnot irritate
operators, stickies were
white_latex_type
8/14/03
Machine
Tabco 79
No effect
Solvent produced a nail
polish remover odor
which strongly affected
the operators, stickies
were_white_latex_type
8/14/03
Bench
west Penetone
HTSR-3
Removed only small black
stickies
Had to heat solvent to
200
F. would need to
develop handling and
application_system.
8/14/03
Bench
west Penetone
HTSR-2
Removed only small black
stickies
Had to heat solvent to
176
F Would needed to
develop
handling and
application system.
8/18/03
Bench
West Penetone
HTSR-2
Removed only small black
stickies
Had to heat solvent up
to 188
F.
Would need
to develop handling
systemto apply at high
temp.
8/18/03
Bench
West Penetone
HTSR-3
Removed only small black
stickies
Had to heat solvent up
to 195 F, Heavy
solvent odor, Would
need to develop
handling and
application_system.
9/15/03
Bench
Nalstrip 2634
Stripped the wire, no effect
on stickies
9/15/03
Bench
Nalstrip 1702
Stripped the wire, no effect
on stickies
9/17/03
Bench
Penetone CFW4
Stripped the wire, no effect
on stickies
9/17/03
Bench
Penetone CBO1A
Stripped the wire, no effect
on stickies
9/17/03
Bench
Buchman 2460
No
effect
17
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
218.301.
Rule
218.301
was
adapted
from
35
Ill.Adm.Code
§
215.301,
which
was
first
promulgated in
1971
as Chapter 2: Air Pollution, Rule 205.
Because
§
215.301
was adopted
over
30 years
ago,
it
is
difficult, if not
impossible,
to know exactly what
factors the Board
relied
upon
in
adopting
this
Rule.
However,
based
upon
Illinois
Pollution
Control Board
case law
and
a common
sense reading of the Rule,
SCA
believes that
the factors primarily
relied upon
by the
Board
involved
concerns about preventing
ozone formation.
In fact, it
appears
that
the
main
intent
of the
Rule
was
to
ensure
that
operations
emitting
organic
material utilize control equipment already in place to ensure
that their facilities
do not cause
a
violation
of the
one-hour
ozone
standard nor create an odor nuisance.
For example, in
Illinois
v. Processing and Books, Inc.,
the IPCB explained:
Rule
205:
Organic material
emission standards
serve both to
achieve and maintain compliance
with the Federal Air Quality
standard
for photochemical oxidants
(0.08 ppm for one hour
not
to
exceed
more than once per year,
36
Fed.
Reg.
22
385,
November
25,
1971)
and
to
prevent
local
nuisances
...
The
major
purpose
of
these
regulations
is
for
control
of
photochemical
oxidants.
In
addition,
odor
causing
organic
emissions
were
included
if
a
local
odor
nuisance
exists
These provisions
are designed to require the use of equipment
that is already in use in numerous facilities
1977 WL 9986, *4 (Illinois Pollution Control Board).
From
this
explanation it is
evident
that
the Board
was
most
concerned
with:
(1)
protecting
ambient air quality by preventing
any
violation of the one-hour
ozone NAAQS;
and
(2) controlling
any odor nuisances from manufacturing operations.
A review of SCA’s
operations
shows
that
the
main
purposes
of this
rule
are not
furthered
through
its
strict
application to SCA:
first,
as thoroughly discussed in Section II G ofthis petition, SCA meets
the
85
percent
reduction
Alternative
Standard;
therefore,
approval
of the
instant
Petition
would not cause a violation of the ozone NAAQS.
Second, SCA has the technology in place
21
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
and
permit controls as explained in Attachment A to
ensure that its
operations do
not cause
an odor nuisance.
The
above
quote from
the Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board
also
shows
that,
when
adopting
the Rule in
1971,
the Board
most
likely relied
upon
the fact that
facilities
would
have no problem complying with the rule by utilizing equipment already available and in use
by most
facilities subject to the
rule.
It is clear that this rule was promulgated as a catch-all
provision,
intending
to
cast
a
wide
net
over
all
operations
that
emit
organic
materials.
However, the Board could not possibly have contemplated all of the circumstances in which
organic material would be emitted as technology advanced, and in fact, there is no indication
that the Board considered the fact that
is peculiar to
paper manufacturing when adopting this
rule.
Put simply, stickies
are a substantial barrier to producing the recycled tissue rolls
and
the solvent cleaning operations with
low
VOM materials
and
controls described herein are
the only demonstrated technology for reducing and/or eliminating that problem.
Finally,
there
is
no
indication
that
the
IPCB
considered
the
advantages
to
the
environment
obtained
through
pollution
prevention
in
adopting
§
218.302(c).
With
advancing
technology,
relatively
new
products
have
enabled
SCA
to
reduce
the
VOM
content
of the
clean-up
solvents
used
in
this
process.
This
allows
compliance
with
the
emissions reduction requirement of
§
218.301(c) in a manner not anticipated just a little over
a decade ago.
While
SCA’s efforts have demonstrated dramatic reductions in yearly solvent
use, those
efforts have still not
allowed the Facility to contain organic
compound emissions
below 8 lb/hr due to the amount of solvent that must be used in each solvent cleaning
event.
The large surface area of the wires to
be cleaned necessitates the use of substantially more
than
8 pounds ofsolvent during each cleaning event.
22
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
As
pollution
prevention
is
currently
recognized
as
perhaps
the
preferred
means of
reducing pollutant
exposure
to
the environment,
this
Adjusted
Standard reflects
approaches
not necessarily available or considered preferable at the time that
§
218.302(c) was adopted.
Moreover,
although
it
cannot
achieve
an
emission
rate of
8
lb/hr
consistently,
SCA
is
achieving LAER at the Facility.
2.
The Existence ofThose Factors Justifies an Adjusted
Standard.
As
discussed
fully
in
Section
II
B
of this
Petition
and
its
Attachments,
SCA
has
investigated numerous
compliance
alternatives that
have proven
to be
neither
economically
nor
technically
feasible
due
to
the
substantially
different
factors
relating
to
paper
manufacturing
operations.
The
existence
of
these
factors,
coupled
with
Illinois
EPA’s
anticipated support of SCA’s
efforts to
obtain
an Adjusted
Standard, and
express finding of
SCA’s compliance with LAER, justifies the granting ofthe instant request.
3.
The
Requested
Standard
Will
Not
Result
in
Adverse
Environmental
Health Effects.
As
discussed previously
in
Section
II
G
of this
Petition,
the
requested
Adjusted
Standard will
have
little,
if
any
adverse
impact
on
the
environmental
health.
SCA has
dramatically
reduced
its
VOM
emissions
through
the
implementation
of
the
measures
described herein.
SCA’s
emissions
technically meet
the
Subpart
G,
85
percent
reduction
Alternative Standard.
Therefore, SCA’s
operations do not cause or contribute to
any adverse
environmental health
effects.
In
fact, with reductions exceeding the 85
requirement of
§
218.302(c), this Adjusted Standard will result in a qualitative benefit to the environment.
23
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
4.
The Requested Standard is Consistent with Federal Law.
The granting of this
proposed Adjusted
Standard
is
consistent
with
federal
law
and
will not violate any provision of the Federal Clean Air Act.
Specifically,
there is
no
Clean
Air Act equivalent rule or regulation prohibiting paper manufacturers’ from utilizing process-
related
controls
to
reduce
VOM
emissions
below
the
85
percent
Alternative
Standard.
Because SCA is proposing to comply with Subpart G, albeit through an Alternative Standard,
the proposed Adjusted Standard will be consistent with federal law.
Moreover, under federal
law the Board’s grant of this adjusted standard will be
submitted to US
EPA for inclusion
in
Illinois’
SIP.
It
will
also
comport
with
federal
procedural
requirements
of notice
and
comment.
I.
Hearing
-
Section
104.406(j)
SCA requests a hearing in this matter.
J.
Supporting Document
-
Section 104.406(k)
Attachments A through I, to
this Petition
constitute the relevant technical documents
that support the instant request.
A.
Title I Federally Enforceable State Operating Permit;
B.
LAER Report, RMT,
Inc., November 2000;
C.
April 22, 2004,
Letter from Illinois EPA;
D.
Final Consent Order, People ofState ofIllinois ex rel. Lisa Madigan, Attorney
General of State of Illinois v.
XCTC
Limited Partnership,
et a!.,
No.
03-CH-
09501;
B.
SCA Solvent Equipment Procedures Protocol, 12/2003;
F.
Table “Cleaning Solvent VOM Emissions”;
G.
Emissions Calculations;
24
Reproduced on Recycled Paper
H.
SCA
Solvent Trial Results; and
I.
Regulatory Evaluation Memoranda, RMT, Inc.,
September 16, 2003.
III.
CONCLUSION
The
requested
Adjusted
Standard
should
be
granted
as
an
alternative
to
SCA’s
compliance with 35
Ill. Admn. Code
§
2 15.302(c).
To
require SCA to
comply with the Rule
of general applicability would result in
substantial economic hardship
to
SCA with minimal
environmental
benefit,
and
would
ignore
a
decade’s
worth of process-related
and
design
improvements that have resulted in VOM emissions reduction
far in excess ofthe regulatory
standard of 85
percent reduction,
which reductions already constitute the Lowest Achievable
Emission Rate.
WHEREFORE,
SCA respectfully requests
an Adjusted Standard from 35 Ill.
Adnm.
Code
§
215.302(c),
authorizing the process-related improvements described herein in lieu of
add-on controls to reach the desired result ofenvironmental protection.
DATED:
January 31, 2005
Albany, New York
Respectfully submitted,
McNAMEE, LOCHNER, TITUS
& WILLIAMS, P.C.
By:
___
o
J. Priv~era
tt
rn
sf
rSCA
Tissue
North
merica LLC
75
State Street
—
P.O. Box 459
Albany, New York 12201-0459
25
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