Audrey, I thought there may be others out there interested in
seeing the responses that came in regarding my question on "initial
fill". Would you please post this summary to the list serve?
Hello all,
Thank you for your replies to my original query posed below
regarding exclusion of "initial fill" from the total annual consumption and from
the rolling 12-month PERC purchases. FYI, I have provided a
summary/snipets of the responses received.
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The
original question posed to the list serve:
We (Joni and I) are currently assisting a small dry
cleaner. I will be sitting in on an enforcement meeting scheduled for next
Monday August 13, 2007. One of the violations listed in the Notice of
Violation for them is an exceedance in annual PERC purchases which can be
partially explained by the businesses use of initial fill to his "reconfigured"
machine. (He took two machines and used one for parts to make one
machine)
Where I could use your help is in identifying where in the EPA
Rule or Policy it states that the initial fill of PERC is not used in
calculating the total annual consumption of PERC and/or that it is not added to
the 12-month rolling total purchases of PERC. I have heard from Nick M.
that this consideration of initial fill was added as an addendum/amendment to
the MACT, and/or added as an EPA policy about one year after the final rule, I
just need some assistance in locating it. Joni/I have checked in the 1993
MACT and in the new rule and can't find it.
Thanks for your help. Any questions, my phone number is
303-692-2135.
*******************************************************************************
Here
are the replies from the list serve, separated by a line of
asterisks:
*******************************************************************************
The
simplest thing to do is call Warren Johnson at EPA at OAQPS, he is in charge of
the Dry Cleaning Rule. He is usually there until 5:30
EST. (919) 541-5124
Richard G.
Rasmussen
Director, Small Business Assistance Program
Air
Division
Virginia Department of Environmental Quality
(Note New Mailing
Address)
P. O. Box 1105
Richmond, VA 23218-1105
(800) 592-5482
ext. 4394 (in-state only)
(804) 698-4394
Fax: (804) 698-4264
rgrasmussen@deq.virginia.gov
TOOLS
Virginia Small Business Assistance Program
Website
National Small Business Assistance Program Resource
Virginia
Comprehensive Assistance Network - VACan
DEQ Innovative Technology
Website
********************************************************************************
I
think this is what you are looking for.
Determination Detail
Control Number: M020001
Category: MACT
EPA Office:
Region 5
Date: 10/23/2001
Title: Dry Cleaner Major Source Threshold
Recipient: Roger Fritz
Author: Steve Rothblatt
Comments:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subparts:
Part 63, M Perc Dry Cleaning
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
References:
63.320(g) 63.320(h)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstract:
Q1: Will EPA consider a facility that does not have a permit limiting its
potential to emit below the major source threshold before the first compliance
date of the dry cleaner MACT an area source if the facility can demonstrate that
it maintained its consumption of perc below the major source threshold in the
dry cleaner MACT?
A1: Yes. EPA intended that the the dry cleaner MACT provide
the method for identifying major sources under both the MACT program and Title
V. However, the facility must reconcile reported VOC emissions that indicate
perc consumption almost double the threshold.
Q2: For a new facility, does the one-time initial fill count
in determining whether the facility is a major source?
A2: No. The initial fill does not indicate perc emissions,
since perc has been neither consumed nor emitted.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Letter:
October 23, 2001
Roger Fritz, HAP Team Leader
Bureau of Air
Management
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
101 South Webster
Street
P.O. Box 7921
Madison, Wisconsin 53707
Dear Mr. Fritz:
This is a corrected version of the letter I sent you on
October 17, 2001, which inadvertently omitted several lines of text. This letter
responds to your May 23, 2001, letter requesting clarification on the
applicability of the perchloroethylene (perc) dry cleaner standard, 40 CFR part
63, subpart M (dry cleaner MACT), to Leather Rich, Inc. of Oconomowoc,
Wisconsin. Specifically, you requested a United States Environmental Protection
Agency (U.S. EPA) determination on whether this facility is a major or
area
source under the dry cleaner MACT. As explained below, the U.S. EPA believes
that Leather Rich could be an area source, if certain supporting information is
provided.
Leather Rich sent a letter to the Wisconsin Department of
Natural Resources (WDNR) dated October 8, 1993, requesting an annual usage
permit limit of 2,100 gallons of perc in order to maintain its status as a
non-major source under the dry cleaner MACT. The WDNR issued Leather Rich a
construction permit on October 12, 1993, with a potential-to-emit (PTE) limit of
17 tons per year (TPY) for volatile organic compounds (VOC). The permit did not
reflect the request for the perc usage limit and apparently neither the WDNR nor
the source followed up on the request.
Discussion between our offices suggested that, since the
facility did not have a permit limiting its perc PTE below the major source
level of 10 TPY before the first compliance date of the dry cleaner MACT, the
facility could be subject to the MACT in accordance with the "Once In, Always
In" policy set forth in the May 16, 1995, U.S. EPA memorandum entitled
"Potential to Emit for MACT Standards -- Guidance on Timing Issues".
Our conclusion regarding applicability of the "Once In, Always
In" policy is that in this case the dry cleaner MACT provides for a specific
method to determine source status. The applicability section of the dry cleaner
MACT, 40 CFR 63.320(g), states in pertinent part, "In lieu of measuring a
facility's potential to emit perchloroethylene emissions or determining a
facility's potential to emit perchloroethylene emissions, a dry cleaning
facility is a major source if: (1) It includes only dry-to-dry machine(s) and
has a total yearly perchloroethylene consumption greater than 8,000 liters
(2,100 gallons) as determined according to 63.323(d)...."
It was the intent of the U.S. EPA Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards (OAQPS) to create a mechanism for smaller facilities to
determine their applicability with ease, while granting a measure of regulatory
certainty. The January 30, 1997, OAQPS memorandum entitled "Major Source
Determinations for Dry Cleaners" states, "Those sources
limiting their perc
usage to less than ... 2100 gallons (dry-to-dry machines) are considered area
sources as indicated in section 63.320(h)." Therefore, if a facility using
dry-to-dry machines can successfully demonstrate that it has always consumed
less than 2,100 gallons of perc per year, the facility qualifies for status
under the rule as an area
source. The memorandum further states that OAQPS
intended that the dry cleaner MACT provide the method for identifying major
sources under both the MACT program and Title V. Therefore, the MACT consumption
applicability threshold applies for Title V purposes as well.
Leather Rich uses dry-to-dry machines. The facility states in
its December 14, 1993, letter to the WDNR that the annual usage of perc solvent
should not exceed 1,700 gallons in 1994. In addition, Leather Rich has submitted
documentation that, since 1994, its 12-month rolling total consumption has
always been less than 2,100 gallons per year. A fact that has yet to be
reconciled with Leather Rich's stated intention to use less than 1,700 gallons
of perc in 1994, is that the source reported to the WDNR that its
1994 VOC
emissions were 19.2 tons. In developing the dry cleaner MACT, U.S. EPA
determined that some of the total perc used is disposed of as waste and that
staying under the threshold value of 2,100 gallons consumed per year ensures
that perc emissions are less than 10 tons per year. To emit 19.2 tons of perc in
1994, the facility would have had to consume about 1.92 times the 2,100 gallon
threshold, or over 4,000 gallons of perc that year. If this fact is found to be
in error, the facility may yet successfully claim it has remained an area
source.
The facility did have a one-time purchase of 2,255 gallons of
perc for initial start-up in 1993. Region 5 discussed this matter with OAQPS
staff, who indicated that the consumption thresholds are intended to be
surrogates for annual perc emissions which determine source status. The initial
fill does not indicate perc emissions, since perc has been neither consumed nor
emitted. Only perc added to the machine after the initial fill reflects perc
consumption and perc emissions. Therefore, the initial fill does not count in
establishing the MACT and Title V applicability status.
If the facility demonstrates that VOC emissions reported in
1994 were in error or that these emissions were not indicative of perc
emissions, and that perc usage was below the 2,100 gallon threshold, the U.S.
EPA would conclude, based on the accuracy of other facts already presented, that
Leather Rich is an area source, not a major source, under both the dry cleaner
MACT and Title V.
If the source truly emitted 19.2 tons of perc in 1994, then it
violated its 1993 permit limit of 17 tons, has not represented its perc
purchases accurately in this matter, and has been, and continues to be, in
violation of major source requirements of the dry cleaner MACT and Title V.
If you have any questions on this matter, please contact John
Kelly of my staff at (312) 886-4882.
Sincerely,
/s/ Pamela Blakley for Steve Rothblatt
Steve Rothblatt, Chief
Air Programs Branch
cc: Hai Shen J. Chou (via electronic copy)
Wisconsin
Department of Natural Resources
Southeast District
Fred Porter, OAQPS (via electronic copy)
Lucy Thompson, CHMM
Air Pollution Control
Program
573-526-2414 or 1-800-361-4827
www.dnr.mo.gov
*****************************************************************************
If
you are still trying to locate information on EPA's policy regarding initial
fill, the EPA's Applicability Determination Index may help. You
can
search it by going to the following website: http://cfpub.epa.gov/adi/
Add the
search criteria for Subpart (Part 63, M - Perc Dry Cleaning)
Click
"Display/Submit Query"
Click "Submit Query"
Click on the selection for
Control Number "M020001" (Dry Cleaner Major
Source Threshold, October 23,
2001)
There is a copy of a letter from US EPA Region V to Roger
Fritz of the Wisconsin DNR that addresses the following
question/answer:
Mike Nelson, MN attached the same letter as above from Lucy
Thompson.
****************************************************************************
I
was able to find the attached EPA Air Docket which talks about exceedences of
the perc consumption limits found in the NESHAP. On page 3, the last 3
paragraphs define what an episodic exceedance is and how, if it is determined to
be episodic, it will not affect the regulatory status of the
source.
I don't know how much this will help you with regards to the
enforcement action and meeting, but it looks to me like if the owner can prove
this is a one time "episodic" exceedance of the limit and does not happen on a
regular basis that it can be done.
Please see the attached document.
*****************************************************************************
I've
attached the guidance you are looking for. It's actually a memo from the U.S.
EPA, which allows exceedances of the perc consumption levels in specific
instances that are considered to be "episodic" (i.e., not likely to be repeated
on a frequent basis). I know I got it off the web but I can't remember where
exactly. If you need to know I'm sure I could find it.
James A. Ostrowski
Environmental Assistance
Program
Michigan Department of Environmental Quality
phone: (517)
241-8057
fax: (517) 335-4729
ostrowsj@michigan.gov
Jim had also included the attached
letter.