Source: https://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-idx?node=sp40.7.60.ffff
Timestamp: 2019-09-23 18:56:22
Document Index: 562768668

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Source: 70 FR 74907, Dec. 16, 2005, unless otherwise noted.
(a) If you are the Administrator of an air quality program in a State or United States protectorate with one or more existing OSWI units or air curtain incinerators subject to this subpart as described in §60.2994(b) that commenced construction on or before December 9, 2004, you must submit a State plan to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that implements the emission guidelines contained in this subpart.
No, you are not required to submit a State plan if there are no existing OSWI units or air curtain incinerators subject to this subpart as described in §60.2994(b) in your State and you submit a negative declaration letter in place of the State plan.
Yes, EPA will review your State plan according to §60.27.
If you do not submit an approvable State plan (or a negative declaration letter) by December 17, 2007, EPA will develop a Federal plan according to §60.27 to implement the emission guidelines contained in this subpart. Owners and operators of incineration units not covered by an approved State plan must comply with the Federal plan. The Federal plan is an interim action and applies to units until a State plan covering those units is approved and becomes effective.
Your State plan must include compliance schedules that require OSWI units and air curtain incinerators subject to this subpart as described in §60.2994(b) to achieve final compliance as expeditiously as practicable after approval of the State plan but not later than the earlier of the following two dates:
(b) If you do not submit an approvable plan to implement and enforce the guidelines contained in this subpart by December 17, 2007, EPA will implement and enforce a Federal plan, as provided in §60.2985, to ensure that each unit within your State reaches compliance with all the provisions of this subpart by December 16, 2010.
(1) Approval of alternatives to the emission limitations in table 2 of this subpart and operating limits established under §60.3023 and table 3 of this subpart.
(2) Approval of petitions for specific operating limits in §60.3024.
(6) The status report requirements in §60.3020(c)(2).
(a) The incineration unit is an existing incineration unit as defined in §60.2992.
(b) The incineration unit is an OSWI unit as defined in §60.3078 or an air curtain incinerator subject to this subpart as described in §60.2994(b). OSWI units are very small municipal waste combustion units and institutional waste incineration units as defined in §60.3078.
(c) The incineration unit is not excluded under §60.2993.
(g) Incinerators and air curtain incinerators in isolated areas of Alaska. The incineration unit is excluded if it is used at a solid waste disposal site in Alaska that is classified as a Class II or Class III municipal solid waste landfill, as defined in §60.3078.
(h) Rural institutional waste incinerators. The incineration unit is excluded if it is an institutional waste incinerator, as defined in §60.3078, and the application for exclusion described in paragraphs (h)(1) and (2) of this section has been approved by the Administrator.
(l) Pathological waste incineration units. The institutional waste incineration unit or very small municipal waste combustion unit is excluded from this subpart if it burns 90 percent or more by weight (on a calendar quarter basis and excluding the weight of auxiliary fuel and combustion air) of pathological waste, low-level radioactive waste, and/or chemotherapeutic waste as defined in §60.3078 and the owner/operator of the unit notifies the Administrator that the unit meets these criteria.
(o) Temporary-use incinerators and air curtain incinerators used in disaster recovery. The incineration unit is excluded if it is used on a temporary basis to combust debris from a disaster or emergency such as a tornado, hurricane, flood, ice storm, high winds, or act of bioterrorism and you comply with the requirements in §60.3061.
(b) Air curtain incinerators that burn only less than 35 tons per day of the materials listed in paragraphs (b)(1) through (4) of this section collected from the general public and from residential, commercial, institutional, and industrial sources; or, air curtain incinerators located at institutional facilities that burn only the materials listed in paragraphs (b)(1) through (4) of this section generated at that facility, are required to meet only the requirements in §§60.3062 through 60.3069 and are exempt from all other requirements of this subpart.
(b) In the “model rule” of §§60.3000 through 60.3078, “you” means the owner or operator of an OSWI unit or air curtain incinerator subject to this subpart.
Use the model rule to satisfy the State plan requirements specified in §60.2983(a)(4) and (5).
(a) No OSWI unit can be operated unless a fully trained and qualified OSWI unit operator is accessible, either at the facility or can be at the facility within 1 hour. The trained and qualified OSWI unit operator may operate the OSWI unit directly or be the direct supervisor of one or more other plant personnel who operate the unit. If all qualified OSWI unit operators are temporarily not accessible, you must follow the procedures in §60.3020.
(a) You must obtain operator qualification by completing a training course that satisfies the criteria under §60.3014(c).
(b) Qualification is valid from the date on which the training course is completed and the operator successfully passes the examination required under §60.3014(c)(2).
(a) For a lapse of less than 3 years, you must complete a standard annual refresher course described in §60.3017.
(b) For a lapse of 3 years or more, you must repeat the initial qualification requirements in §60.3016(a).
(8) The waste management plan required under §§60.3010 through 60.3012.
(2) Records showing the names of the OSWI unit operators who have completed the operator training requirements under §60.3014, met the criteria for qualification under §60.3016, and maintained or renewed their qualification under §60.3017 or §60.3018. Records must include documentation of training, the dates of the initial and refresher training, and the dates of their qualification and all subsequent renewals of such qualifications.
(a) When all qualified operators are not accessible for 12 hours or less, the OSWI unit may be operated by other plant personnel familiar with the operation of the OSWI unit who have completed review of the information specified in §60.3019(a) within the past 12 months. You do not need to notify the Administrator or include this as a deviation in your annual report.
(b) When all qualified operators are not accessible for more than 12 hours, but less than 2 weeks, the OSWI unit may be operated by other plant personnel familiar with the operation of the OSWI unit who have completed a review of the information specified in §60.3019(a) within the past 12 months. However, you must record the period when all qualified operators were not accessible and include this deviation in the annual report as specified under §60.3051.
(i) A qualified operator is accessible as required under §60.3014(a).
If you use an air pollution control device other than a wet scrubber or limit emissions in some other manner to comply with the emission limitations under §60.3022, you must petition EPA for specific operating limits, the values of which are to be established during the initial performance test and then continuously monitored thereafter. You must not conduct the initial performance test until after the petition has been approved by EPA. Your petition must include the five items listed in paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section.
(f) All pollutant concentrations, except for opacity, must be adjusted to 7 percent oxygen using Equation 1 in §60.3076.
(a) Use Equation 1 in §60.3076 to calculate emissions at 7 percent oxygen.
(b) Use Equation 2 in §60.3076 to calculate the 12-hour rolling averages for concentrations of carbon monoxide.
(a) If you are using a wet scrubber to comply with the emission limitations under §60.3022, you must install, calibrate (to manufacturers' specifications), maintain, and operate devices (or establish methods) for monitoring the value of the operating parameters used to determine compliance with the operating limits listed in table 3 of this subpart. These devices (or methods) must measure and record the values for these operating parameters at the frequencies indicated in table 3 of this subpart at all times.
(c) If you are using a method or air pollution control device other than a wet scrubber to comply with the emission limitations under §60.3022, you must install, calibrate (to the manufacturers' specifications), maintain, and operate the equipment necessary to monitor compliance with the site-specific operating limits established using the procedures in §60.3024.
(5) For OSWI units that establish operating limits for controls other than wet scrubbers under §60.3024, you must maintain data collected for all operating parameters used to determine compliance with the operating limits.
(e) Identification of calendar dates and times for which monitoring data show a deviation from the carbon monoxide emissions limit in table 2 of this subpart or a deviation from the operating limits in table 3 of this subpart or a deviation from other operating limits established under §60.3024 with a description of the deviations, reasons for such deviations, and a description of corrective actions taken.
(f) Calendar dates when continuous monitoring systems did not collect the minimum amount of data required under §§60.3041 and 60.3044.
(h) Records of the calibration of any monitoring devices required under §60.3043.
(j) Records showing the names of OSWI unit operators who have completed review of the information in §60.3019(a) as required by §60.3019(b), including the date of the initial review and all subsequent annual reviews.
(k) Records showing the names of the OSWI unit operators who have completed the operator training requirements under §60.3014, met the criteria for qualification under §60.3016, and maintained or renewed their qualification under §60.3017 or §60.3018. Records must include documentation of training, the dates of the initial and refresher training, and the dates of their qualification and all subsequent renewals of such qualifications.
(n) The information listed in §60.3019(a).
(a) The complete test report for the initial performance test results obtained under §60.3030, as applicable.
(b) The values for the site-specific operating limits established in §60.3023 or §60.3024.
(c) The waste management plan, as specified in §§60.3010 through 60.3012.
You must submit an annual report no later than 12 months following the submission of the information in §60.3049. You must submit subsequent reports no more than 12 months following the previous report.
The annual report required under §60.3050 must include the ten items listed in paragraphs (a) through (j) of this section. If you have a deviation from the operating limits or the emission limitations, you must also submit deviation reports as specified in §§60.3052 through 60.3054.
(d) The values for the operating limits established pursuant to §60.3023 or §60.3024.
(g) Information recorded under §60.3046(b)(6) and (c) through (e) for the calendar year being reported.
(i) If you met the requirements of §60.3035(a) or (b), and did not conduct a performance test during the reporting period, you must state that you met the requirements of §60.3035(a) or (b), and, therefore, you were not required to conduct a performance test during the reporting period.
In each report required under §60.3052, for any pollutant or operating parameter that deviated from the emission limitations or operating limits specified in this subpart, include the seven items described in paragraphs (a) through (g) of this section.
(b) If your unit was shut down by EPA, under the provisions of §60.3020(c)(2), due to a failure to provide an accessible qualified operator, you must notify EPA that you are resuming operation once a qualified operator is accessible.
Yes, you must submit notifications as provided by §60.7.
Yes, if you are subject to an applicable EPA-approved and effective Clean Air Act section 111(d)/129 State or Tribal plan or an applicable and effective Federal plan, you are required to apply for and obtain a title V operating permit unless you meet the relevant requirements for an exemption specified in §60.2993.
(b) Conduct an initial test for opacity as specified in §60.8 within 180 days after the final compliance date in table 1 of this subpart.
Yes, if your air curtain incinerator is subject to this subpart, you are required to apply for and obtain a title V operating permit as specified in §§60.3059 and 60.3060.
Cadj = pollutant concentration adjusted to 7 percent oxygen
Cmeas = pollutant concentration measured on a dry basis
(20.9-7) = 20.9 percent oxygen-7 percent oxygen (defined oxygen correction basis)
As stated in §60.3000, you must comply with the following:
By this datea
Final complianceb (Dates to be specified in State plan)c.
aSite-specific schedules can be used at the discretion of the State.
bFinal compliance means that you complete all process changes and retrofit of control devices so that, when the incineration unit is brought on line, all process changes and air pollution control devices necessary to meet the emission limitations operate as designed.
cThe date can be no later than 3 years after the effective date of State plan approval or December 16, 2010, whichever is earlier.
As stated in §60.3022, you must comply with the following:
2. Carbon monoxide 40 parts per million by dry volume 3-run average (1 hour minimum sample time per run during performance test), and 12-hour rolling averages measured using CEMSb Method 10, 10A, or 10B of appendix A of this part and CEMS.
8. Oxides of nitrogen 103 parts per million by dry volume 3-run average (1 hour minimum sample time per run) Method 7, 7A, 7C, 7D, or 7E of appendix A of this part, or ANSI/ASME PTC 19.10-1981 (IBR, see §60.17(h)) in lieu of Methods 7 and 7C only.
10. Sulfur dioxide 3.1 parts per million by dry volume 3-run average (1 hour minimum sample time per run) Method 6 or 6C of appendix A of this part, or ANSI/ASME PTC 19.10-1981 (IBR, see §60.17(h)) in lieu of Method 6 only.
aAll emission limitations (except for opacity) are measured at 7 percent oxygen, dry basis at standard conditions.
bCalculated each hour as the average of the previous 12 operating hours.
As stated in §60.3023, you must comply with the following:
1. Charge rate Maximum charge rate Continuous Every hour Daily for batch units. 3-hour rolling for continuous and intermittent units.a
2. Pressure drop across the wet scrubber or amperage to wet scrubber Minimum pressure drop or amperage Continuous Every 15 minutes 3-hour rolling.a
3. Scrubber liquor flow rate Minimum flow rate Continuous Every 15 minutes 3-hour rolling.a
4. Scrubber liquor pH Minimum pH Continuous Every 15 minutes 3-hour rolling.a
aCalculated each hour as the average of the previous 3 operating hours.
As stated in §60.3039, you must comply with the following:
2. Oxygen 25 percent oxygen P.S.3 Method 3A or 3B, or ANSI/ASME PTC 19.10-1981 (IBR, see §60.17(h)) in lieu of Method 3B only.
As stated in §60.3048, you must comply with the following:
1. Initial test report a. No later than 60 days following the initial performance test i. Complete test report for the initial performance test; and §60.3049.
ii. The values for the site-specific operating limits §60.3049.
2. Waste management plan a. No later than 60 days following the initial performance test i. Reduction or separation of recyclable materials; and §§60.3010 through 60.3012.
ii. Identification of additional waste management measures and how they will be implemented §§60.3010 through 60.3012.
3. Annual Report a. No later than 12 months following the submission of the initial test report. Subsequent reports are to be submitted no more than 12 months following the previous report i. Company Name and address; §§60.3050 and 60.3051.
ii. Statement and signature by the owner or operator; §§60.3050 and 60.3051.
iii. Date of report; §§60.3050 and 60.3051.
iv. Values for the operation limits; §§60.3050 and 60.3051.
v. If no deviations or malfunctions were reported, a statement that no deviations occurred during the reporting period; §§60.3050 and 60.3051.
vi. Highest and lowest recorded 12-hour averages, as applicable, for carbon monoxide emissions and highest and lowest recorded 3-hour averages, as applicable, for each operating parameter recorded for the calendar year being reported; §§60.3050 and 60.3051.
vii. Information for deviations or malfunctions recorded under §60.2949(b)(6) and (c) through (e); §§60.3050 and 60.3051.
viii. If a performance test was conducted during the reporting period, the results of the test; §§60.3050 and 60.3051.
ix. If a performance test was not conducted during the reporting period, a statement that the requirements of §60.2934(a) or (b) were met; and §§60.3050 and 60.3051.
x. Documentation of periods when all qualified OSWI unit operators were unavailable for more than 12 hours but less than 2 weeks §§60.3050 and 60.3051.
4. Emission limitation or operating limit deviation report a. By August 1 of that year for data collected during the first half of the calendar year. By February 1 of the following year for data collected during the second half of the calendar year i. Dates and times of deviation; §§60.3052 and 60.3053.
ii. Averaged and recorded data for those dates; §§60.3052 and 60.3053.
iii. Duration and causes of each deviation and the corrective actions taken. §§60.3052 and 60.3053.
iv. Copy of operating limit monitoring data and any test reports; §§60.3052 and 60.3053.
v. Dates, times, and causes for monitor downtime incidents; §§60.3052 and 60.3053.
vi. Whether each deviation occurred during a period of startup, shutdown, or malfunction; and §§60.3052 and 60.3053.
vii. Dates, times, and duration of any bypass of the control device §§60.3052 and 60.3053.
5. Qualified operator deviation notification a. Within 10 days of deviation i. Statement of cause of deviation; §60.3054(a)(1).
ii. Description of efforts to have an accessible qualified operator; and §60.3054(a)(1).
iii. The date a qualified operator will be accessible §60.3054(a)(1).
6. Qualified operation deviation status report a. Every 4 weeks following deviation i. Description of efforts to have an accessible qualified operator; §60.3054(a)(2).
ii. The date a qualified operator will be accessible; and §60.3054(a)(2).
iii. Request to continue operation §60.3054(a)(2).
7. Qualified operator deviation notification of resumed operation a. Prior to resuming operation i. Notification that you are resuming operation §60.3054(b).