No. 39847 (Amendment): Section R307-415-3. Definitions  

  • (Amendment)

    DAR File No.: 39847
    Filed: 10/15/2015 03:35:07 PM

    RULE ANALYSIS

    Purpose of the rule or reason for the change:

    Due to EPA's good cause final rule to remove portions of its PSD and title V permitting regulations, the Division of Air Quality is proposing changes to Section R307-405-3. These changes will align Utah's rules with EPA's regulations.

    Summary of the rule or change:

    This rule removes the greenhouse gas tailoring rule that regulated new and existing stationary sources.

    State statutory or constitutional authorization for this rule:

    Anticipated cost or savings to:

    the state budget:

    This amendment will save the state budget any costs associated with enforcement and compliance with the greenhouse gas tailoring rule.

    local governments:

    This amendment will not likely affect local governments because the rule would have been administered at the state level.

    small businesses:

    This amendment will not likely affect small businesses because most small businesses were not regulated under the rule. If there were a small businesses that fell under the regulation of this rule, then the affect of this amendment would be a positive in terms of costs. This rule eliminates the greenhouse gas tailoring rule.

    persons other than small businesses, businesses, or local governmental entities:

    Other persons will not likely be affected by this rule. The rule was mainly regulating businesses and government entities. Any other persons affected will likely save money as a result of the rule because the rule is repealing the requirement that some greenhouse gas sources are regulated.

    Compliance costs for affected persons:

    Affected persons will save money regarding compliance because they will no longer have to comply with the greenhouse gas tailoring rule.

    Comments by the department head on the fiscal impact the rule may have on businesses:

    This rule will likely have a positive fiscal impact on businesses. Large businesses that were regulated under this rule will no longer incur costs associated with compliance. Most small businesses will not see an impact either way because they were not regulated under this rule before the amendment.

    Alan Matheson, Executive Director

    The full text of this rule may be inspected, during regular business hours, at the Division of Administrative Rules, or at:

    Environmental Quality
    Air QualityRoom Fourth Floor
    195 N 1950 W
    SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84116-3085

    Direct questions regarding this rule to:

    Interested persons may present their views on this rule by submitting written comments to the address above no later than 5:00 p.m. on:

    12/01/2015

    This rule may become effective on:

    12/08/2015

    Authorized by:

    Bryce Bird, Director

    RULE TEXT

    R307. Environmental Quality, Air Quality.

    R307-415. Permits: Operating Permit Requirements.

    R307-415-3. Definitions.

    (1) The definitions contained in R307-101-2 apply throughout R307-415, except as specifically provided in (2).

    (2) The following additional definitions apply to R307-415.

    "Act" means the Clean Air Act, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.

    "Administrator" means the Administrator of EPA or his or her designee.

    "Affected States" are all states:

    (a) Whose air quality may be affected and that are contiguous to Utah; or

    (b) That are within 50 miles of the permitted source.

    "Air Pollutant" means an air pollution agent or combination of such agents, including any physical, chemical, biological, or radioactive (including source material, special nuclear material, and byproduct material) substance or matter which is emitted into or otherwise enters the ambient air. Such term includes any precursors to the formation of any air pollutant, to the extent the Administrator has identified such precursor or precursors for the particular purpose for which the term air pollutant is used.

    "Applicable requirement" means all of the following as they apply to emissions units in a Part 70 source, including requirements that have been promulgated or approved by the Board or by the EPA through rulemaking at the time of permit issuance but have future-effective compliance dates:

    (a) Any standard or other requirement provided for in the State Implementation Plan;

    (b) Any term or condition of any approval order issued under R307-401;

    (c) Any standard or other requirement under Section 111 of the Act, Standards of Performance for New Stationary Sources, including Section 111(d);

    (d) Any standard or other requirement under Section 112 of the Act, Hazardous Air Pollutants, including any requirement concerning accident prevention under Section 112(r)(7) of the Act;

    (e) Any standard or other requirement of the Acid Rain Program under Title IV of the Act or the regulations promulgated thereunder;

    (f) Any requirements established pursuant to Section 504(b) of the Act, Monitoring and Analysis, or Section 114(a)(3) of the Act, Enhanced Monitoring and Compliance Certification;

    (g) Any standard or other requirement governing solid waste incineration, under Section 129 of the Act;

    (h) Any standard or other requirement for consumer and commercial products, under Section 183(e) of the Act;

    (i) Any standard or other requirement of the regulations promulgated to protect stratospheric ozone under Title VI of the Act, unless the Administrator has determined that such requirements need not be contained in an operating permit;

    (j) Any national ambient air quality standard or increment or visibility requirement under part C of Title I of the Act, but only as it would apply to temporary sources permitted pursuant to Section 504(e) of the Act;

    (k) Any standard or other requirement under rules adopted by the Board.

    "Area source" means any stationary source that is not a major source.

    "Designated representative" shall have the meaning given to it in Section 402 of the Act and in 40 CFR Section 72.2, and applies only to Title IV affected sources.

    "Draft permit" means the version of a permit for which the director offers public participation under R307-415-7i or affected State review under R307-415-8(2).

    "Emissions allowable under the permit" means a federally-enforceable permit term or condition determined at issuance to be required by an applicable requirement that establishes an emissions limit, including a work practice standard, or a federally-enforceable emissions cap that the source has assumed to avoid an applicable requirement to which the source would otherwise be subject.

    "Emissions unit" means any part or activity of a stationary source that emits or has the potential to emit any regulated air pollutant or any hazardous air pollutant. This term is not meant to alter or affect the definition of the term "unit" for purposes of Title IV of the Act, Acid Deposition Control.

    "Final permit" means the version of an operating permit issued by the director that has completed all review procedures required by R307-415-7a through 7i and R307-415-8.

    "General permit" means an operating permit that meets the requirements of R307-415-6d.

    "Hazardous Air Pollutant" means any pollutant listed by the Administrator as a hazardous air pollutant under Section 112(b) of the Act.

    "Major source" means any stationary source (or any group of stationary sources that are located on one or more contiguous or adjacent properties, and are under common control of the same person (or persons under common control)) belonging to a single major industrial grouping and that are described in paragraphs (a), (b), or (c) of this definition. For the purposes of defining "major source," a stationary source or group of stationary sources shall be considered part of a single industrial grouping if all of the pollutant emitting activities at such source or group of sources on contiguous or adjacent properties belong to the same Major Group (all have the same two-digit code) as described in the Standard Industrial Classification Manual, 1987. Emissions resulting directly from an internal combustion engine for transportation purposes or from a non-road vehicle shall not be considered in determining whether a stationary source is a major source under this definition.

    (a) A major source under Section 112 of the Act, Hazardous Air Pollutants, which is defined as: for pollutants other than radionuclides, any stationary source or group of stationary sources located within a contiguous area and under common control that emits or has the potential to emit, in the aggregate, ten tons per year or more of any hazardous air pollutant or 25 tons per year or more of any combination of such hazardous air pollutants. Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, emissions from any oil or gas exploration or production well, with its associated equipment, and emissions from any pipeline compressor or pump station shall not be aggregated with emissions from other similar units, whether or not such units are in a contiguous area or under common control, to determine whether such units or stations are major sources.

    (b) A major stationary source of air pollutants, as defined in Section 302 of the Act, that directly emits or has the potential to emit, 100 tons per year or more of any air pollutant [subject to regulation,] including any major source of fugitive emissions or fugitive dust of any such pollutant as determined by rule by the Administrator. The fugitive emissions or fugitive dust of a stationary source shall not be considered in determining whether it is a major stationary source for the purposes of Section 302(j) of the Act, unless the source belongs to any one of the following categories of stationary source:

    (i) Coal cleaning plants with thermal dryers;

    (ii) Kraft pulp mills;

    (iii) Portland cement plants;

    (iv) Primary zinc smelters;

    (v) Iron and steel mills;

    (vi) Primary aluminum ore reduction plants;

    (vii) Primary copper smelters;

    (viii) Municipal incinerators capable of charging more than 250 tons of refuse per day;

    (ix) Hydrofluoric, sulfuric, or nitric acid plants;

    (x) Petroleum refineries;

    (xi) Lime plants;

    (xii) Phosphate rock processing plants;

    (xiii) Coke oven batteries;

    (xiv) Sulfur recovery plants;

    (xv) Carbon black plants, furnace process;

    (xvi) Primary lead smelters;

    (xvii) Fuel conversion plants;

    (xviii) Sintering plants;

    (xix) Secondary metal production plants;

    (xx) Chemical process plants;

    (xxi) Fossil-fuel boilers, or combination thereof, totaling more than 250 million British thermal units per hour heat input;

    (xxii) Petroleum storage and transfer units with a total storage capacity exceeding 300,000 barrels;

    (xxiii) Taconite ore processing plants;

    (xxiv) Glass fiber processing plants;

    (xxv) Charcoal production plants;

    (xxvi) Fossil-fuel-fired steam electric plants of more than 250 million British thermal units per hour heat input;

    (xxvii) Any other stationary source category, which as of August 7, 1980 is being regulated under Section 111 or Section 112 of the Act.

    (c) A major stationary source as defined in part D of Title I of the Act, Plan Requirements for Nonattainment Areas, including:

    (i) For ozone nonattainment areas, sources with the potential to emit 100 tons per year or more of volatile organic compounds or oxides of nitrogen in areas classified as "marginal" or "moderate," 50 tons per year or more in areas classified as "serious," 25 tons per year or more in areas classified as "severe," and 10 tons per year or more in areas classified as "extreme"; except that the references in this paragraph to 100, 50, 25, and 10 tons per year of nitrogen oxides shall not apply with respect to any source for which the Administrator has made a finding, under Section 182(f)(1) or (2) of the Act, that requirements under Section 182(f) of the Act do not apply;

    (ii) For ozone transport regions established pursuant to Section 184 of the Act, sources with the potential to emit 50 tons per year or more of volatile organic compounds;

    (iii) For carbon monoxide nonattainment areas that are classified as "serious" and in which stationary sources contribute significantly to carbon monoxide levels as determined under rules issued by the Administrator, sources with the potential to emit 50 tons per year or more of carbon monoxide;

    (iv) For PM-10 particulate matter nonattainment areas classified as "serious," sources with the potential to emit 70 tons per year or more of PM-10 particulate matter.

    "Non-Road Vehicle" means a vehicle that is powered by an internal combustion engine (including the fuel system), that is not a self-propelled vehicle designed for transporting persons or property on a street or highway or a vehicle used solely for competition, and is not subject to standards promulgated under Section 111 of the Act (New Source Performance Standards) or Section 202 of the Act (Motor Vehicle Emission Standards).

    "Operating permit" or "permit," unless the context suggests otherwise, means any permit or group of permits covering a Part 70 source that is issued, renewed, amended, or revised pursuant to these rules.

    "Part 70 Source" means any source subject to the permitting requirements of R307-415, as provided in R307-415-4.

    "Permit modification" means a revision to an operating permit that meets the requirements of R307-415-7f.

    "Permit revision" means any permit modification or administrative permit amendment.

    "Permit shield" means the permit shield as described in R307-415-6f.

    "Proposed permit" means the version of a permit that the director proposes to issue and forwards to EPA for review in compliance with R307-415-8.

    "Renewal" means the process by which a permit is reissued at the end of its term.

    "Responsible official" means one of the following:

    (a) For a corporation: a president, secretary, treasurer, or vice-president of the corporation in charge of a principal business function, or any other person who performs similar policy or decision-making functions for the corporation, or a duly authorized representative of such person if the representative is responsible for the overall operation of one or more manufacturing, production, or operating facilities applying for or subject to a permit and either:

    (i) the operating facilities employ more than 250 persons or have gross annual sales or expenditures exceeding $25 million in second quarter 1980 dollars; or

    (ii) the delegation of authority to such representative is approved in advance by the director;

    (b) For a partnership or sole proprietorship: a general partner or the proprietor, respectively;

    (c) For a municipality, State, Federal, or other public agency: either a principal executive officer or ranking elected official. For the purposes of R307-415, a principal executive officer of a Federal agency includes the chief executive officer having responsibility for the overall operations of a principal geographic unit of the agency;

    (d) For Title IV affected sources:

    (i) The designated representative in so far as actions, standards, requirements, or prohibitions under Title IV of the Act, Acid Deposition Control, or the regulations promulgated thereunder are concerned;

    (ii) The responsible official as defined above for any other purposes under R307-415.

    "Stationary source" means any building, structure, facility, or installation that emits or may emit any regulated air pollutant or any hazardous air pollutant.

    ["Subject to regulation" means, for any air pollutant, that the pollutant is subject to either a provision in the Clean Air Act, or a nationally-applicable regulation codified by the Administrator in subchapter C of 40 CFR Chapter I, that requires actual control of the quantity of emissions of that pollutant, and that such a control requirement has taken effect and is operative to control, limit or restrict the quantity of emissions of that pollutant released from the regulated activity. Except that:

    (a) "Greenhouse gases (GHGs)," the air pollutant defined in 40 CFR 86.1818-12(a) (Federal Register, Vol. 75, Page 25686) as the aggregate group of six greenhouse gases: carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide, methane, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, and sulfur hexafluoride, shall not be subject to regulation unless, as of July 1, 2011, the GHG emissions are at a stationary source emitting or having the potential to emit 100,000 tons per year (tpy) CO2 equivalent emissions.

    (b) The term "tpy CO2 equivalent emissions (CO2e)" shall represent an amount of GHGs emitted, and shall be computed by multiplying the mass amount of emissions (tpy), for each of the six greenhouse gases in the pollutant GHGs, by the gas's associated global warming potential published at Table A-1 to subpart A of 40 CFR Part 98--Global Warming Potentials, that is hereby incorporated by reference (Federal Register, Vol. 74, Pages 56395-96), and summing the resultant value for each to compute a tpy CO2e.]

    "Title IV Affected source" means a source that contains one or more affected units as defined in Section 402 of the Act and in 40 CFR, Part 72.

     

    KEY: air pollution, greenhouse gases, operating permit, emission fees

    Date of Enactment or Last Substantive Amendment: [March 7, 2012]2015

    Notice of Continuation: June 6, 2012

    Authorizing, and Implemented or Interpreted Law: 19-2-109.1; 19-2-104

     


Document Information

Effective Date:
12/8/2015
Publication Date:
11/01/2015
Type:
Notices of Proposed Rules
Filed Date:
10/15/2015
Agencies:
Environmental Quality, Air Quality
Rulemaking Authority:

Section 19-2-104

Authorized By:
Bryce Bird, Director
DAR File No.:
39847
Summary:

This rule removes the greenhouse gas tailoring rule that regulated new and existing stationary sources.

CodeNo:
R307-415-3
CodeName:
{6938|R307-415-3|R307-415-3. Definitions.}
Link Address:
Environmental QualityAir QualityRoom Fourth Floor 195 N 1950 WSALT LAKE CITY, UT 84116-3085
Link Way:

Ryan Stephens, by phone at 801-536-4419, by FAX at 801-536-0085, or by Internet E-mail at rstephens@utah.gov

AdditionalInfo:
More information about a Notice of Proposed Rule is available online. The Portable Document Format (PDF) version of the Bulletin is the official version. The PDF version of this issue is available at http://www.rules.utah.gov/publicat/bull-pdf/2015/b20151101.pdf. The HTML edition of the Bulletin is a convenience copy. Any discrepancy between the PDF version and HTML version is resolved in favor of the PDF version. Text to be deleted is struck through and surrounded by brackets ([example]). ...
Related Chapter/Rule NO.: (1)
R307-415-3. Definitions.