Ala. Admin. Code r. 335-3-16-.02

Current through Register Vol. 42, No. 11, August 30, 2024
Section 335-3-16-.02 - General Provisions
(1) Any Major Source operating without an Air Permit, an Operating Permit or a Synthetic Minor Operating Permit (as defined in Chapters 14, 15 and 16 of this Administrative Code) may continue to operate (or may restart) only if its owner or operator obtains an Operating Permit or a Synthetic Minor Operating Permit prior to a date to be set by the Director (or prior to restarting).
(2)Display of Operating Permit. A person who has been granted an Operating Permit for any article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance shall keep such permit under file or on display at all times at the site where the article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance is located and will make such a permit readily available for inspection by any and all persons who may request to see it.
(3) The Director shall have the authority to decide cases where an article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance is not clearly subject to nor exempt from the application of this Rule. The operator or builder of such an article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance may appeal the Director's classification to the Commission, which shall overrule the Director only if it is shown that he acted arbitrarily and contrary to the purposes of the Act.
(4) The Director may issue an Operating Permit subject to conditions which will bring the operation of any article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance within the standards of subparagraph (8)(a) of this Rule in which case the conditions shall be specified in writing. Commencing construction or operation under such an Operating Permit shall be deemed acceptance of all the conditions specified. The Director may issue an Operating Permit with revised conditions upon receipt of a new application, if the applicant demonstrates that the article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance can operate within the standards of subparagraph (8)(a) of this Rule under the revised conditions.
(5)Provision of Sampling and Testing Facilities. A person operating or using any article, machine, equipment or other contrivance for which this Administrative Code require a permit shall provide and maintain such sampling and testing facilities as specified in the Operating Permit.
(6)Transfer. An Operating Permit shall not be transferable whether by operation of law or otherwise, either from one location to another, from one piece of equipment to another, or from one person to another, except as provided in Rule 335-3-16-.13(1)(a)5.
(7)Delegation of Operating Permit Requirements to Local Air Pollution Control Programs.
(a) Local air pollution control programs may receive delegation of authority from the Director to administer the requirements of Chapter 335-3-16 of the ADEM Administrative Code within their jurisdiction provided the local air pollution control program:
1. adopts regulations insuring applicants are required to satisfy the same requirements as contained in the Department's regulations; and
2. adopts regulations which require the Director to be provided with an opportunity to review the permit application, the analysis of the permit, and proposed permit conditions at least 30 days prior to issuance of an Operating Permit.
(b) If the Director of the Department determines that local program procedures for implementing all the portions of Chapter 335-3-16 are inadequate, or are not being effectively carried out, any authority delegated to the local programs to administer Chapter 335-3-16 may be revoked in whole or in part. Any such revocation shall be effective as of the date specified in a Notice of Revocation to the local air pollution control program.
(c) The Director reserves the authority contained in subparagraph (8)(e) of this Rule, to revoke any Operating Permit issued pursuant to this Chapter.
(d) Any Operating Permit issued by a local air pollution control program, including all conditions contained therein, is enforceable by the Department.
(8)General Standards for Granting Operating Permits.
(a) The Director shall deny an Operating Permit if the applicant does not show that every article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance, the use of which may cause the issuance of air contaminants, is so designed, controlled, or equipped with such air pollution control equipment, that it is expected to operate without emitting or without causing to be emitted air contaminants in violation of this Administrative Code.
(b) The Director shall deny an Operating Permit if the applicant does not present, in writing, a plan whereby the emission of air contaminants by every article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance described in the permit application, will be reduced during periods of an Air Pollution Alert, Air Pollution Warning, and Air Pollution Emergency in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 335-3-2, where such plan is required.
(c) Before an Operating Permit is granted, the Director may require the applicant to provide and maintain such facilities as are necessary for sampling and testing purposes in order to secure information that will disclose the nature, extent, quantity or degree of air contaminants discharged into the atmosphere from the article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance described in the Operating Permit. In the event of such a requirement, the Director shall notify the applicant in writing of the required size, number, and location of the sampling platform; the access to the sampling platform; and the utilities for operating and sampling and testing equipment. The Director may also require the applicant to install, use, and maintain such monitoring equipment or methods, including enhanced monitoring methods prescribed under Section 504(b) or Section 114(a)(3); sample such emissions in accordance with such methods, at such locations, intervals, and procedures as may be specified; and provide such information as the Director may require.
(d) Before acting on an application for an Operating Permit, the Director may require the applicant to furnish further information or further plans or specifications.
(e) If the Director finds that the article, machine, or other contrivance has been constructed not in accordance with the Operating Permit application, and if the changes noted are of a substantial nature in that the amount of air contaminants emitted by the article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance may be increased, or in that the effect is unknown, then he shall revoke the Operating Permit. The Director shall not accept any further application for an Operating Permit until the article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance has been reconstructed in accordance with said Operating Permit or until the applicant has proven to the satisfaction of the Director that the change will not cause an increase in the emission of air contaminants.
(9)Revocation of Operating Permits. Any Operating Permit granted by the Director may be revoked for any of the following causes:
(a) failure to comply with any conditions of the permit;
(b) failure to establish and maintain such records, make such reports, install, use and maintain such monitoring equipment or methods; and sample such emissions in accordance with such methods at such locations, intervals and procedures as the Director may prescribe in accordance with Rule 335-3-1-.04(2);
(c) failure to comply with any provisions of any Departmental administrative order issued concerning the permitted Stationary Source or facility;
(d) failure to allow employees of the Department upon proper identification, to:
1. enter any premises where any article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance described in Rule 335-3-16-.03(1) is located or in which any records are required to be kept under provisions of the permit and/or this Administrative Code;
2. have access to and copy any records required to be kept under provisions of the permit and/or this Administrative Code;
3. inspect any monitoring equipment or practices being maintained pursuant to the permit and/or this Administrative Code; and
4. have access to and sample any discharge of air contaminants resulting directly or indirectly from the operation of any article, machine, equipment, or other contrivance described in Rule 335-3-16-.03(1).
(e) failure to comply with this or any other Administrative Code of the Department.
(f) for any other cause, after a hearing which establishes, in the judgment of the Department, that continuance of the permit is not consistent with the purpose of the Act or this Administrative Code.
(10)Stack Heights.
(a)Definitions. For purposes of this paragraph, the following terms will have the meanings ascribed in this subparagraph.
1. "Emission limitation" and "emission standard" mean a requirement, established by ADEM or the EPA Administrator, which limits the quantity, rate, or concentration of emissions of air pollutants on a continuous basis, including any requirements which limit the level of opacity, prescribe equipment, set fuel specifications, or prescribe operation or maintenance procedures for a source to assure continuous emission reduction.
2. "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.
3. "A stack in existence" means that the owner or operator had (1) begun, or caused to begin, a continuous program of physical on-site construction of the stack or (2) entered into binding agreements or contractual obligations, which could not be canceled or modified without substantial loss to the owner or operator, to undertake a program of construction of the stack to be completed in a reasonable time.
4. "Dispersion technique" means any technique which attempts to affect the concentration of a pollutant in the ambient air by:
(i) Using that portion of a stack which exceeds good engineering practice stack height;
(ii) Varying the rate of emission of a pollutant according to atmospheric conditions or ambient concentrations of that pollutant; or
(iii) Increasing final exhaust gas plume rise by manipulating source-process parameters, exhaust gas parameters, stack parameters, or combining exhaust gases from several existing stacks into one stack; or other selective handling of exhaust gas streams so as to increase the exhaust gas plume rise.
(iv) The preceding sentence does not include:
(I) The reheating of a gas stream, following use of a pollution control system, for the purpose of returning the gas to the temperature at which it was originally discharged from the facility generating the gas stream; or,
(II) The merging of exhaust gas streams where:
I. The source owner or operator demonstrates that the facility was originally designed and constructed with such merged gas streams;
II. After July 8, 1985, such merging is part of a change in operation at the facility that includes the installation of pollution controls and is accompanied by a net reduction in the allowable emissions of a pollutant. This exclusion from the definition of "dispersion techniques" shall apply only to the emission limitation for the pollutant affected by such change in operation; or
III. Before July 8, 1985, such merging was part of a change in operation at the facility that included the installation of emissions control equipment or was carried out for sound economic or engineering reasons. Where there was an increase in the emission limitation or, in the event that no emission limitation was in existence prior to the merging, an increase in the quantity of pollutants actually emitted prior to the merging, the Director shall presume that merging was significantly motivated by an intent to gain emissions credit for greater dispersion. Absent a demonstration by the source owner or operator that merging was not significantly motivated by such intent, the Director shall deny credit for the effects of such merging in calculating the allowable emissions for the source;
(III) Smoke management in agricultural or silvicultural prescribed burning programs;
(IV) Episodic restrictions on residential woodburning and open burning; or
(V) Techniques under subparagraph (a)4.(iii) of this paragraph which increase final exhaust gas plume rise where the resulting allowable emissions of sulfur dioxide from the facility do not exceed 5,000 tons per year.
5. "Good engineering practice" (GEP) stack height means the greater of:
(i) 65 meters measured from the ground-level elevation at the base of the stack:
(ii) For stacks in existence on January 12, 1979, and for which the owner or operator had obtained all applicable permits or approvals required under 40 CFR 51 and 52, provided the owner or operator produces evidence that this equation was actually relied on in establishing an emission limitation;

Hg = 2.5H

(I) For all other stacks,

Hg = H + 1.5 L,

where

Hg = good engineering practice stack height measured from the ground-level elevation at the base of the stack,

H = height of nearby structure(s) measured from the ground-level elevation at the base of the stack,

L = lesser dimension, height or projected width of nearby structure(s), provided that the Director may require the use of a field study or fluid model to verify GEP stack height for the source; or

(iii) The height demonstrated by a fluid model or a field study approved by the Director, which ensures that the emissions from a stack do not result in excessive concentrations of any air pollutant as a result of atmospheric downwash, wakes, or eddy effects created by the source itself, nearby structures, or nearby terrain features.
6. "Nearby" as used in subparagraph (a)5. of this paragraph is defined for a specific structure or terrain feature and
(i) for purposes of applying the formulas provided in subparagraph (a)5.(ii) of this paragraph means that distance up to five times the lesser of the height or the width dimension of a structure, but not greater than 0.8 km (1/2 mile), and
(ii) for conducting demonstrations under subparagraph (a)5.(iii) of this paragraph means not greater than 0.8 km (1/2 mile), except that the portion of a terrain feature may be considered to be nearby which falls within a distance of up to 10 times the maximum height (ht) of the feature, not to exceed 2 miles if such feature achieves a height (ht) 0.8 km from the stack that is at least 40 percent of the GEP stack height determined by the formula provided in subparagraph (a)5.(ii)(I) of this paragraph or 26 meters, whichever is greater, as measured from the ground-level elevation at the base of the stack. The height of the structure or terrain feature is measured from the ground-level elevation at the base of the stack.
7. "Excessive concentration" is defined for the purpose of determining GEP stack height under subparagraph (a)(5)(iii) of this paragraph and means:
(i) for sources seeking credit for stack height exceeding that established under subparagraph (a)5.(ii) of this paragraph, a maximum ground-level concentration due to emissions from a stack due in whole or part to downwash, wakes, and eddy effects produced by nearby structures or nearby terrain features which individually is at least 40 percent in excess of the maximum concentration experienced in the absence of such downwash, wakes, or eddy effects and which contributes to a total concentration due to emissions from all sources that is greater than a NAAQS. For sources subject to the PSD program (Rule 335-3-14-.04), an excessive concentration alternatively means a maximum ground-level concentration due to emissions from a stack due in whole or part to downwash, wakes, or eddy effects produced by nearby structures or nearby terrain features which individually is at least 40 percent in excess of the maximum concentration experienced in the absence of such downwash, wakes, or eddy effects and greater than a prevention of significant deterioration increment. The allowable emissions rate to be used in making demonstrations under this Rule shall be prescribed by the new source performance standard that is applicable to the source category unless the owner or operator demonstrates that this emission rate is infeasible. Where such demonstrations are approved by the Director, an alternative emission rate shall be established in consultation with the source owner or operator;
(ii) for sources seeking credit after October 11, 1983, for increases in existing stack heights up to the heights established under subparagraph (a)5.(ii) of this paragraph, either:
(I) a maximum ground-level concentration due in whole or part to downwash, wakes, or eddy effects as provided in subparagraph (a)7.(i) of this paragraph, except that the emission rate specified elsewhere in this Administrative Code (or, in the absence of such a limit, the actual emission rate) shall be used, or
(II) the actual presence of a local nuisance caused by the existing stack, as determined by the Director; and
(iii) for sources seeking credit after January 12, 1979, for a stack height determined under subparagraph (a)5.(ii) of this paragraph where the Director requires that use of a field study or fluid model to verify GEP stack height, for sources seeking stack height credit after November 9, 1984, based on the aerodynamic influence of cooling towers, and for sources seeking stack height credit after December 31, 1970, based on the aerodynamic influence of structures not adequately represented by the equations in subparagraph (a)5.(ii) of this paragraph, a maximum ground-level concentration due in whole or part to downwash, wakes, or eddy effects that is at least 40 percent in excess of the maximum concentration experienced in the absence of such downwash, wakes, or eddy effects.
(b) Before acting on any Major Source Operating Permit, the Director shall require that the degree of emission limitation required of any source for control of any air pollutants shall not be affected by so much of any source's stack height that exceeds GEP or by any other dispersion technique, except as provided in subparagraph (c) of this paragraph.
(c) The provisions of subparagraph (b) of this paragraph shall not apply to stack heights in existence, or dispersion techniques implemented, prior to December 31, 1970, except where pollutants are being emitted from such stacks or using such dispersion techniques by sources, as defined in Section 111(a)(3) of the Clean Air Act, which were constructed, or reconstructed or for which major modifications, as defined pursuant to Rules 335-3-14-.05(2)(d) and 335-3-14-.04(2)(b), were carried out after December 31, 1970.
(d) If any existing source, after appropriate application of the preceding limitations and provisions, is found to exceed or potentially exceed a NAAQS or PSD increment, when operating within previously established emission limitations, the emissions limitations applicable to that source shall be modified so as to eliminate and prevent the exceedance.
(e) If any new source or source modification, after appropriate application of the preceding limitations and provisions, is predicted to exceed a NAAQS or PSD increment when evaluated under emission limitations consistent with other applicable rules and regulations, the emission limitations considered shall be deemed inadequate and different emission limits, based on air quality considerations, shall be made applicable.
(f) If any source provides a field study or fluid modeling demonstration proposing a GEP stack height greater than that allowed by subparagraphs (a)5.(i) and (a)5.(ii) of this paragraph, then the public will be notified of the availability of the study and provided the opportunity for a public hearing before any new or revised emission limitation or permit is approved.
(g) The actual stack height used or proposed by a source shall not be restricted in any manner by requirements of this paragraph.

Author: Richard E. Grusnick

Ala. Admin. Code r. 335-3-16-.02

New Rule: Filed November 23, 1993; Effective Date: December 28, 1993. Amended: Filed October 17, 1996; effective November 21, 1996. Amended: Filed December 9, 1999; effective January 13, 2000. Amended: Filed August 3, 2000; effective September 7, 2000.

Statutory Authority:Code of Ala. 1975, §§ 22-22A-4, 22-22A-5, 22-22A-6, 22-22A-8.