No. 28319 (Amendment): R307-101-2. Definitions  

  • DAR File No.: 28319
    Filed: 11/03/2005, 08:15
    Received by: NL

     

    RULE ANALYSIS

    Purpose of the rule or reason for the change:

    The purpose of the changes is to clarify the general definitions that are used throughout Title R307. This amendment is part of revisions to rules related to the federal New Source Review program, commonly called "NSR Reform" (see separate filings on Rules R307-401, R307-405, and R307-410 in this issue). (DAR NOTE: The repeal and reenactment on Rule R307-401 is under DAR No. 28325; the repeal and reenactment on Rule R307-405 is under DAR No. 28322; and the amendment to Rule R307-410 is under DAR No. 28323 in this issue.)

     

    Summary of the rule or change:

    In changes are: amend the reference within the definition of "Allowable Emissions" to match the structure of the new text for Rule R307-401; move the definitions of "Best Available Control Technology" and "Indirect Source" from Section R307-101-2 to Rule R307-401 because the terms are used only in the new text for R307-401; move the definitions of "Vertically Restricted Emissions Release" and "Vertically Unrestricted Emissions Release" from Section R307-101-2 to Rule R307-410 because the terms are used only in the amended text for Rule R307-410; delete the definition of "Air Quality Related Value" and Subsection R307-101-2(2) of the definition of "Significant" because they appear in the federal rules that are incorporated by reference in the new text for Rule R307-405; move the definition of "Baseline Date" from Section R307-101-2 to the new text for Rule R307-405.

     

    State statutory or constitutional authorization for this rule:

    Subsection 19-2-104(3)(q)

     

    Anticipated cost or savings to:

    the state budget:

    The state budget is not affected because all costs for permitting are covered by the fees paid by sources.

     

    local governments:

    The definitions are being moved but not changed; therefore, there is no change in costs for sources subject to the rule.

     

    other persons:

    The definitions are being moved but not changed; therefore, there is no change in costs for sources subject to the rule.

     

    Compliance costs for affected persons:

    The definitions are being moved but not changed; therefore, there is no change in costs for sources subject to the rule.

     

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

    Moving the definitions may make a very small difference in costs for businesses, as the rules will be easier to understand and to use. Dianne R. Nielson, 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 Quality
    150 N 1950 W
    SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116-3085

     

    Direct questions regarding this rule to:

    Jan Miller or Mat E. Carlile at the above address, by phone at 801-536-4042 or 801-536-4136, by FAX at 801-536-4099 or 801-536-0085, or by Internet E-mail at janmiller@utah.gov or MCARLILE@utah.gov

     

    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:

    01/17/2006

     

    Interested persons may attend a public hearing regarding this rule:

    12/14/2005 at 2:00 PM, DEQ Bldg #2, 168 N 1950 W, Room 201, Salt Lake City, UT

     

    This rule may become effective on:

    02/02/2006

     

    Authorized by:

    M. Cheryl Heying, Planning Branch Manager

     

     

    RULE TEXT

    R307. Environmental Quality, Air Quality.

    R307-101. General Requirements.

    R307-101-2. Definitions.

    Except where specified in individual rules, definitions in R307-101-2 are applicable to all rules adopted by the Air Quality Board.

    "Actual Emissions" means the actual rate of emissions of a pollutant from an emissions unit determined as follows:

    (1) In general, actual emissions as of a particular date shall equal the average rate, in tons per year, at which the unit actually emitted the pollutant during a two-year period which precedes the particular date and which is representative of normal source operations. The Executive Secretary shall allow the use of a different time period upon a determination that it is more representative of normal source operation. Actual emissions shall be calculated using the unit's actual operating hours, production rates, and types of materials processed, stored, or combusted during the selected time period.

    (2) The Executive Secretary may presume that source-specific allowable emissions for the unit are equivalent to the actual emissions of the unit.

    (3) For any emission unit, other than an electric utility steam generating unit specified in (4), which has not begun normal operations on the particular date, actual emissions shall equal the potential to emit of the unit on that date.

    (4) For an electric utility steam generating unit (other than a new unit or the replacement of an existing unit) actual emissions of the unit following the physical or operational change shall equal the representative actual annual emissions of the unit, provided the source owner or operator maintains and submits to the executive secretary, on an annual basis for a period of 5 years from the date the unit resumes regular operation, information demonstrating that the physical or operational change did not result in an emissions increase. A longer period, not to exceed 10 years, may be required by the executive secretary if the executive secretary determines such a period to be more representative of normal source post-change operations.

    "Acute Hazardous Air Pollutant" means any noncarcinogenic hazardous air pollutant for which a threshold limit value - ceiling (TLV-C) has been adopted by the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists in its "Threshold Limit Values for Chemical Substances and Physical Agents and Biological Exposure Indices, pages 15 - 72 (2000)."

    "Air Contaminant" means any particulate matter or any gas, vapor, suspended solid or any combination of them, excluding steam and water vapors (Section 19-2-102(1)).

    "Air Contaminant Source" means any and all sources of emission of air contaminants whether privately or publicly owned or operated (Section 19-2-102(2)).

    "Air Pollution" means the presence in the ambient air of one or more air contaminants in such quantities and duration and under conditions and circumstances, as is or tends to be injurious to human health or welfare, animal or plant life, or property, or would unreasonably interfere with the enjoyment of life or use of property as determined by the standards, rules and regulations adopted by the Air Quality Board (Section 19-2-104).[

    "Air Quality Related Values" means, as used in analyses under R307-401-4(1), Public Notice, those special attributes of a Class I area, assigned by a federal Land Manager, that are adversely affected by air quality.]

    "Allowable Emissions" means the emission rate of a source calculated using the maximum rated capacity of the source (unless the source is subject to enforceable limits which restrict the operating rate, or hours of operation, or both) and the emission limitation established pursuant to R307-401-[6]8.

    "Ambient Air" means the surrounding or outside air (Section 19-2-102(4)).

    "Appropriate Authority" means the governing body of any city, town or county.

    "Asphalt or Asphalt Cement" means the dark brown to black cementitious material (solid, semisolid, or liquid in consistency) of which the main constituents are bitumens which occur naturally or as a residue of petroleum refining.

    "Atmosphere" means the air that envelops or surrounds the earth and includes all space outside of buildings, stacks or exterior ducts.

    "Authorized Local Authority" means a city, county, city-county or district health department; a city, county or combination fire department; or other local agency duly designated by appropriate authority, with approval of the state Department of Health; and other lawfully adopted ordinances, codes or regulations not in conflict therewith.[

    "Baseline Date"

    (1) Major source baseline date means:

    (a) in the case of particulate matter:

    (i) for Davis, Salt Lake, Utah, and Weber Counties, the date that EPA approves the PM10 maintenance plan that was adopted by the Board on July 6, 2005;

    (ii) for all other areas of the state, January 6, 1975;

    (b) in the case of sulfur dioxide:

    (i) for Salt Lake County, the date that EPA approves the Sulfur Dioxide maintenance plan that was adopted by the Board on January 5, 2005;

    (ii) for all other areas of the state, January 6, 1975; and

    (c) in the case of nitrogen dioxide, February 8, 1988.

    (2) Minor source baseline date means the earliest date after the trigger date on which the first complete application under 40 CFR 52.21 or R307-405 is submitted by a major source or major modification subject to the requirements of 40 CFR 52.21 or R307-405. The minor source baseline is the date after which emissions from all new or modified sources consume or expand increment, including emissions from major and minor sources as well as any or all general commercial, residential, industrial, and other growth. The trigger date is:

    (a) In the case of particulate matter and sulfur dioxide, August 7, 1977, and

    (b) In the case of nitrogen dioxide, February 8, 1988.

    "Best Available Control Technology (BACT)" means an emission limitation and/or other controls to include design, equipment, work practice, operation standard or combination thereof, based on the maximum degree or reduction of each pollutant subject to regulation under the Clean Air Act and/or the Utah Air Conservation Act emitted from or which results from any emitting installation, which the Air Quality Board, on a case-by-case basis taking into account energy, environmental and economic impacts and other costs, determines is achievable for such installation through application of production processes and available methods, systems and techniques, including fuel cleaning or treatment or innovative fuel combustion techniques for control of each such pollutant. In no event shall applications of BACT result in emissions of any pollutants which will exceed the emissions allowed by Section 111 or 112 of the Clean Air Act.]

    "Board" means Air Quality Board. See Section 19-2-102(6)(a).

    "Breakdown" means any malfunction or procedural error, to include but not limited to any malfunction or procedural error during start-up and shutdown, which will result in the inoperability or sudden loss of performance of the control equipment or process equipment causing emissions in excess of those allowed by approval order or Title R307.

    "BTU" means British Thermal Unit, the quantity of heat necessary to raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit.

     

    . . . . . . .

     

    "Incinerator" means a combustion apparatus designed for high temperature operation in which solid, semisolid, liquid, or gaseous combustible wastes are ignited and burned efficiently and from which the solid and gaseous residues contain little or no combustible material.[

    "Indirect Source" means a building, structure or installation which attracts or may attract mobile source activity that results in emission of a pollutant for which there is a national standard.]

    "Installation" means a discrete process with identifiable emissions which may be part of a larger industrial plant. Pollution equipment shall not be considered a separate installation or installations.

     

    . . . . . . .

     

    "Secondary Emissions" means emissions which would occur as a result of the construction or operation of a major source or major modification, but do not come from the major source or major modification itself.

    Secondary emissions must be specific, well defined, quantifiable, and impact the same general area as the source or modification which causes the secondary emissions. Secondary emissions include emissions from any off-site support facility which would not be constructed or increase its emissions except as a result of the construction or operation of the major source or major modification. Secondary emissions do not include any emissions which come directly from a mobile source such as emissions from the tailpipe of a motor vehicle, from a train, or from a vessel.

    Fugitive emissions and fugitive dust from the source or modification are not considered secondary emissions.

    "Significant" means:

    (1) In reference to a net emissions increase or the potential of a source to emit any of the following pollutants, a rate of emissions that would equal or exceed any of the following rates:

    Carbon monoxide: 100 ton per year (tpy);

    Nitrogen oxides: 40 tpy;

    Sulfur dioxide: 40 tpy;

    PM10: 15 tpy;

    Particulate matter: 25 tpy;

    Ozone: 40 tpy of volatile organic compounds;

    Lead: 0.6 tpy.[

    (2) For purposes of R307-405 it shall also additionally mean for:

    (a) A rate of emissions that would equal or exceed any of the following rates:

    Asbestos: 0.007 tpy;

    Beryllium: 0.0004 tpy;

    Mercury: 0.1 tpy;

    Vinyl Chloride: 1 tpy;

    Fluorides: 3 tpy;

    Sulfuric acid mist: 7 tpy;

    Hydrogen Sulfide: 10 tpy;

    Total reduced sulfur (including H2S): 10 tpy;

    Reduced sulfur compounds (including H2S): 10 tpy;

    Municipal waste combustor organics (measured as total tetra- through octa-chlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans): 3.2 grams per year (3.5 x 10-6 tons per year);

    Municipal waste combustor metals (measured as particulate matter): 14 megagrams per year (15 tons per year);

    Municipal waste combustor acid gases (measured as sulfur dioxide and hydrogen chloride): 36 megagrams per year (40 tons per year);

    Municipal solid waste landfill emissions (measured as nonmethane organic compounds): 45 megagrams per year (50 tons per year);

    (b) In reference to a net emissions increase or the potential of a source to emit a pollutant subject to regulation under the Clean Air Act not listed in (1) and (2) above, any emission rate.

    (c) Notwithstanding the rates listed in (1) and (2) above, any emissions rate or any net emissions increase associated with a major source or major modification, which would construct within 10 kilometers of a Class I area, and have an impact on such area equal to or greater than 1 ug/cubic meter, (24-hour average).]

    "Solid Fuel" means wood, coal, and other similar organic material or combination of these materials.

    "Solvent" means organic materials which are liquid at standard conditions (Standard Temperature and Pressure) and which are used as dissolvers, viscosity reducers, or cleaning agents.

    "Source" means any structure, building, facility, or installation which emits or may emit any air pollutant subject to regulation under the Clean Air Act and which is located on one or more continuous or adjacent properties and which is under the control of the same person or persons under common control. A building, structure, facility, or installation means all of the pollutant-emitting activities which belong to the same industrial grouping. Pollutant-emitting activities shall be considered as part of the same industrial grouping if they belong to the same "Major Group" (i.e. which have the same two-digit code) as described in the Standard Industrial Classification Manual, 1972, as amended by the 1977 Supplement (US Government Printing Office stock numbers 4101-0065 and 003-005-00176-0, respectively).

    "Stack" means any point in a source designed to emit solids, liquids, or gases into the air, including a pipe or duct but not including flares.

    "Standards of Performance for New Stationary Sources" means the Federally established requirements for performance and record keeping (Title 40 Code of Federal Regulations, Part 60).

    "State" means Utah State.

    "Synthesized Pharmaceutical Manufacturing" means the manufacture of pharmaceutical products by chemical synthesis.

    "Temporary" means not more than 180 calendar days.

    "Temporary Clean Coal Technology Demonstration Project" means a clean coal technology demonstration project that is operated for a period of 5 years or less, and which complies with the Utah State Implementation Plan and other requirements necessary to attain and maintain the national ambient air quality standards during the project and after it is terminated.

    "Threshold Limit Value - Ceiling (TLV-C)" means the airborne concentration of a substance which may not be exceeded, as adopted by the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists in its "Threshold Limit Values for Chemical Substances and Physical Agents and Biological Exposure Indices, pages 15 - 72 (2000)."

    "Threshold Limit Value - Time Weighted Average (TLV-TWA)" means the time-weighted airborne concentration of a substance adopted by the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists in its "Threshold Limit Values for Chemical Substances and Physical Agents and Biological Exposure Indices, pages 15 - 72 (2000)."

    "Total Suspended Particulate (TSP)" means minute separate particles of matter, collected by high volume sampler.

    "Toxic Screening Level" means an ambient concentration of an air contaminant equal to a threshold limit value - ceiling (TLV- C) or threshold limit value -time weighted average (TLV-TWA) divided by a safety factor.

    "Trash" means solids not considered to be highly flammable or explosive including, but not limited to clothing, rags, leather, plastic, rubber, floor coverings, excelsior, tree leaves, yard trimmings and other similar materials.[

    "Vertically Restricted Emissions Release" means the release of an air contaminant through a stack or opening whose flow is directed in a downward or horizontal direction due to the alignment of the opening or a physical obstruction placed beyond the opening, or at a height which is less than 1.3 times the height of an adjacent building or structure, as measured from ground level.

    "Vertically Unrestricted Emissions Release" means the release of an air contaminant through a stack or opening whose flow is directed upward without any physical obstruction placed beyond the opening, and at a height which is at least 1.3 times the height of an adjacent building or structure, as measured from ground level.]

    "Volatile Organic Compound (VOC)" as defined in 40 CFR 51.100(s)(1), as effective on July 1, 2004, and amended on November 29, 2004, by 69 FR 69290 and 69 FR 69298, is hereby adopted and incorporated by reference.

    "Waste" means all solid, liquid or gaseous material, including, but not limited to, garbage, trash, household refuse, construction or demolition debris, or other refuse including that resulting from the prosecution of any business, trade or industry.

    "Zero Drift" means the change in the instrument meter readout over a stated period of time of normal continuous operation when the VOC concentration at the time of measurement is zero.

     

    KEY: air pollution, definitions

    [September 8, 2005]2006

    Notice of Continuation June 5, 2003

    19-2-104

     

     

     

     

Document Information

Effective Date:
2/2/2006
Publication Date:
12/01/2005
Type:
Notices of Proposed Rules
Filed Date:
11/03/2005
Agencies:
Environmental Quality,Air Quality
Rulemaking Authority:

Subsection 19-2-104(3)(q)

 

Authorized By:
M. Cheryl Heying, Planning Branch Manager
DAR File No.:
28319
Related Chapter/Rule NO.: (1)
R307-101-2. Definitions.