18 AAC 70.240 - Mixing zones
(a) Upon
application, the department may authorize in a discharge permit or
certification, a mixing zone or multiple mixing zones in which the water
quality criteria and any limit set under this chapter may be exceeded. The
applicant shall provide to the department all available evidence reasonably
necessary to demonstrate that a mixing zone will comply with this section. The
department will approve, approve with conditions, or deny a mixing zone
application.
(b) In determining
whether to authorize a mixing zone under this section, the department will
consider
(1) the characteristics of the
receiving water, including biological, chemical, and physical characteristics
such as volume, flow rate, and flushing and mixing characteristics;
(2) the characteristics of the effluent,
including volume, flow rate, dispersion, and quality after treatment;
(3) the effects, if any, including cumulative
effects of multiple discharges and diffuse, nonpoint source inputs, that the
discharge will have on the uses of the receiving water;
(4) any additional measures that would
mitigate potential adverse effects to the aquatic resources present;
and
(5) any other factors the
department finds must be considered to determine whether a mixing zone will
comply with this section.
(c) The department will approve a mixing
zone, as proposed or with conditions, only if the department finds that
available evidence reasonably demonstrates that
(1) an effluent or substance will be treated
to remove, reduce, and disperse pollutants, using methods that the department
finds to be the most effective, technologically and economically feasible, and
at a minimum consistent with statutory and regulatory treatment requirements
including
(A) any federal technology-based
effluent limitation identified in
40 C.F.R.
122.29 and
40 C.F.R.
125.3, as revised as of July 1, 2005 and
adopted by reference;
(B) minimum
treatment standards in
18 AAC 72.050; and
(C) any treatment requirement imposed under
another state statute or regulation that is more stringent than a requirement
of this chapter;
(2)
designated and existing uses of the waterbody as a whole will be maintained and
protected;
(3) the overall
biological integrity of the waterbody will not be impaired; and
(4) the mixing zone will not
(A) result in an acute or chronic toxic
effect in the water column, sediments, or biota outside the boundaries of the
mixing zone;
(B) create a public
health hazard that would preclude or limit existing uses of the waterbody for
water supply or contact recreation;
(C) preclude or limit established processing
activities or established commercial, sport, personal-use, or subsistence fish
and shellfish harvesting;
(D)
result in a reduction in fish or shellfish population levels;
(E) result in permanent or irreparable
displacement of indigenous organisms;
(F) adversely affect threatened or endangered
species except as authorized under
16
U.S.C. 1531-
1544
(Endangered Species Act); or
(G)
form a barrier to migratory species or fish passage.
(d) The department will approve a
mixing zone, as proposed or with conditions, only if the department finds that
available evidence reasonably demonstrates that within the mixing zone the
pollutants discharged will not
(1)
bioaccumulate, bioconcentrate, or persist above natural levels in sediments,
water, or biota to significantly adverse levels, based on consideration of
bioaccumulation and bioconcentration factors, toxicity, and exposure;
(2) present an unacceptable risk to human
health from carcinogenic, mutagenic, teratogenic, or other effects as
determined using risk assessment methods approved by the department and
consistent with
18 AAC 70.025;
(3) settle to form objectionable deposits,
except as authorized under
18 AAC 70.210;
(4) produce floating debris, oil, scum and
other material in concentrations that form nuisances;
(5) result in undesirable or nuisance aquatic
life;
(6) produce objectionable
color, taste, or odor in aquatic resources harvested from the area for human
consumption;
(7) cause lethality to
passing organisms; or
(8) exceed
acute aquatic life criteria at and beyond the boundaries of a smaller initial
mixing zone surrounding the outfall, the size of which shall be determined
using methods approved by the department.
(e) In lakes, streams, rivers, or other
flowing fresh waters, a mixing zone will not be
(1) authorized in a spawning area of any of
the five species of anadromous Pacific salmon found in the state; or
(2) allowed to adversely affect the present
and future capability of an area to support spawning, incubation, or rearing of
any of the five species of anadromous Pacific salmon found in the
state.
(f) In lakes,
streams, rivers, or other flowing fresh waters, except as provided in (g) of
this section, a mixing zone will not be authorized in a spawning area for
(1) Arctic grayling;
(2) northern pike;
(3) lake trout;
(4) brook trout;
(5) sheefish;
(6) burbot;
(7) landlocked coho salmon, chinook salmon,
or sockeye salmon; or
(8)
anadromous or resident rainbow trout, Arctic char, Dolly Varden, whitefish, or
cutthroat trout.
(g) The
department may authorize a mixing zone in a spawning area of a lake, stream,
river, or other flowing fresh water for the species listed in (f) of this
section if, after consultation with the Department of Fish and Game, the
department finds that the applicant has demonstrated that the discharge
(1) does not contain pollutants at
concentrations that exceed the criteria for growth and propagation of fish,
shellfish, other aquatic life, and wildlife established in
18 AAC 70.020(b)
(1) - (12); and
(2) will not adversely affect the capability
of the area to support future spawning, incubation, and rearing
activities.
(h) In a
mixing zone authorization under (g) of this section, the department may require
the applicant to monitor effluent, ambient water quality, and biological
conditions to determine whether unanticipated adverse effects on spawning,
incubation, and rearing of species identified in (f) of this section are
occurring.
(i) The provisions of
(e), (f), and (g) of this section do not apply to the renewal of a mixing zone
authorization where spawning was not occurring at the time of the initial
authorization, but successful spawning, incubation, and rearing has occurred
within the mixing zone after the initial authorization of that mixing
zone.
(j) When determining whether
to authorize a mixing zone under (e), (f), or (g) of this section, the
department will make that determination
(1) in
conformance with the determination of the Department of Fish and Game, acting
under AS 16.20, of the location and time of a spawning area within a special
area;
(2) in conformance with the
determination of the Department of Fish and Game, acting under
AS
16.05.871-16.05.901, of the location and
time of a spawning area within waters included in the Catalog of Waters
Important for Spawning, Rearing or Migration of Anadromous Fishes,
adopted by reference in
5
AAC 95.011; or
(3) after consultation with the Department of
Fish and Game, as to what the Department of Fish and Game considers the
location and time of a spawning area not within waters described in (1) or (2)
of this subsection.
(k)
The department will approve a mixing zone, as proposed or with conditions, only
if it finds that the mixing zone is as small as practicable and will comply
with the following size restrictions, unless the department finds that evidence
is sufficient to reasonably demonstrate that these size restrictions can be
safely increased:
(1) for estuarine and marine
waters, measured at mean lower low water,
(A)
the cumulative linear length of all mixing zones intersected on any given cross
section of an estuary, inlet, cove, channel, or other marine water may not
exceed 10 percent of the total length of that cross section; and
(B) the total horizontal area allocated to
all mixing zones at any depth may not exceed 10 percent of the surface
area;
(2) for lakes, the
total horizontal area allocated to all mixing zones at any depth may not exceed
10 percent of the lake's surface area;
(3) for streams, rivers, or other flowing
fresh waters, the length of a mixing zone may not extend beyond the computed
point of complete mixing, as determined using a standard river flow mixing
model or other methods accepted by the department;
(4) for streams, rivers, or other flowing
fresh waters, the length of a mixing zone may not extend downstream beyond the
location where the department determines that a public health hazard reasonably
could be expected to occur.
(l) For streams, rivers, or other flowing
fresh waters, in calculating the maximum pollutant discharge limitation, the
volume of flow available for dilution must be determined using
(1) the actual flow data collected concurrent
with the discharge; or
(2) for
conventional and nontoxic substances, the 10-year, 7-day low flow (7Q10) as the
criteria design flow; for the protection of aquatic life, the 10-year, 7-day
low flow (7Q10) as the chronic criteria design flow and the 10-year, 1-day low
flow (1Q10) as the acute criteria design flow; and for the protection of human
health, the 5-year, 30-day low flow (30Q5) as the noncarcinogenic criteria
design flow and the harmonic mean flow as the carcinogenic criteria design
flow; these low flows must be calculated using methods approved by the
department.
(m) If the
department finds that available evidence reasonably demonstrates that a mixing
zone authorized by the department has had or is having a significant unforeseen
adverse environmental effect, the department will terminate, modify, or deny
renewal of the permit or certification authorizing the mixing zone.
(n) When consulting with an agency under (g)
or (j) of this section, the department will give appropriate weight to any
information received from the agency, considering the agency's
expertise.
(o) For purposes of this
section, the five species of anadromous Pacific salmon found in the state are
chinook salmon, coho salmon, sockeye salmon, pink salmon, and chum
salmon.
(p) In this section,
"special area" means a state game refuge, a state game sanctuary, or a state
fish and game critical habitat area, established under AS 16.20.
Notes
Authority:AS 46.03.010
AS 46.03.020
AS 46.03.050
AS 46.03.070
AS 46.03.080
AS 46.03.100
AS 46.03.110
AS 46.03.710
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