The following definitions apply to this Article:
1. "Adverse impact on visibility" means
visibility impairment that interferes with the management, protection,
preservation, or enjoyment of the visitor's visual experience of a federal
Class I area, as determined according to
R18-2-410 . This determination
must be made on a case-by-case basis taking into account the geographic extent,
intensity, duration, frequency and time of visibility impairments, and how
these factors correlate with times of visitor use of the federal Class I area
and the frequency and timing of natural conditions that reduce visibility. This
term does not include effects on integral vistas.
2. "Baseline actual emissions" means the rate
of emissions, in tons per year, of a regulated NSR pollutant, as determined in
accordance with subsections (2)(a) through (d).
a. For any existing electric utility steam
generating unit, baseline actual emissions means the average rate, in tons per
year, at which the unit actually emitted the pollutant during any consecutive
24-month period selected by the owner or operator within the five-year period
immediately preceding when the owner or operator begins actual construction of
the project. The Director shall allow the use of a different time period upon a
determination that it is more representative of normal source operation.
i. The average rate shall include fugitive
emissions to the extent quantifiable, and emissions associated with startups,
shutdowns, and malfunctions.
ii.
The average rate shall be adjusted downward to exclude any non-compliant
emissions that occurred while the source was operating above any emission
limitation that was legally enforceable during the consecutive 24-month
period.
iii. For a regulated NSR
pollutant, when a project involves multiple emissions units, only one
consecutive 24-month period must be used to determine the baseline actual
emissions for the emissions units being changed. A different consecutive
24-month period can be used for each regulated NSR pollutant.
iv. The average rate shall not be based on
any consecutive 24-month period for which there is inadequate information for
determining annual emissions, in tons per year, and for adjusting this amount
if required by subsection (2)(a)(ii).
b. For any existing emissions unit (other
than an electric utility steam generating unit), baseline actual emissions
means the average rate, in tons per year, at which the unit actually emitted
the pollutant during any consecutive 24-month period selected by the owner or
operator within the 10-year period immediately preceding either the date the
owner or operator begins actual construction of the project, or the date a
complete permit application is received by the Administrator for a permit
required under
40 CFR
52.21 or by the Director for a permit
required under the state implementation plan, whichever is earlier, except that
the 10-year period shall not include any period earlier than November 15, 1990.
i. The average rate shall include fugitive
emissions to the extent quantifiable, and emissions associated with startups,
shutdowns, and malfunctions.
ii.
The average rate shall be adjusted downward to exclude any non-compliant
emissions that occurred while the source was operating above any emission
limitation that was legally enforceable during the consecutive 24-month period.
This provision applies to excess emissions associated with a
malfunction.
iii. The average rate
shall be adjusted downward to exclude any emissions that would have exceeded an
emission limitation with which the major source must currently comply, had such
major source been required to comply with such limitations during the
consecutive 24-month period. However, if an emission limitation is part of a
maximum achievable control technology standard that the Administrator proposed
or promulgated under 40 CFR
63, the baseline actual emissions need only be
adjusted if the state of Arizona has taken credit for such emissions reductions
in an attainment demonstration or maintenance plan consistent with the
requirements of
40 CFR
51.165(a)(3)(ii)(G).
iv. For a regulated NSR pollutant, when a
project involves multiple emissions units, only one consecutive 24-month period
must be used to determine the baseline actual emissions for all existing
emissions units affected by the project. A different consecutive 24-month
period may be used for each regulated NSR pollutant.
v. The average rate shall not be based on any
consecutive 24-month period for which there is inadequate information for
determining annual emissions, in tons per year, and for adjusting this amount
if required by subsection (2)(b)(ii) or (iii).
c. For a new emissions unit, the baseline
actual emissions for purposes of determining the emissions increase that will
result from the initial construction and operation of such unit shall equal
zero; and thereafter, for all other purposes, shall equal the unit's potential
to emit.
d. For a PAL for a
stationary source, the baseline actual emissions shall be calculated for
existing electric utility steam generating units in accordance with the
procedures in subsection (2)(a), for other existing emissions units in
accordance with the procedures contained in subsection (2)(b), and for new
emissions units in accordance with the procedures contained in subsection
(2)(c).
3. "Basic design
parameter" means:
a. Except as provided in
subsection (3)(c), for a process unit at a steam electric generating facility,
the owner or operator may select as its basic design parameters either maximum
hourly heat input and maximum hourly fuel consumption rate or maximum hourly
electric output rate and maximum steam flow rate. When establishing fuel
consumption specifications in terms of weight or volume, the minimum fuel
quality based on Btu content shall be used for determining the basic design
parameters for a coal-fired electric utility steam generating unit.
b. Except as provided in subsection (3)(c),
the basic design parameters for any process unit that is not at a steam
electric generating facility are maximum rate of fuel or heat input, maximum
rate of material input, or maximum rate of product output. Combustion process
units will typically use maximum rate of fuel input. For sources having
multiple end products and raw materials, the owner or operator should consider
the primary product or primary raw material when selecting a basic design
parameter.
c. If the owner or
operator believes the basic design parameters in subsections (3)(a) and (b) are
not appropriate for a specific industry or type of process unit, the owner or
operator may propose to the Director an alternative basic design parameters for
the source's process unit. If the Director approves of the use of an
alternative basic design parameters, the Director shall issue a permit that is
legally enforceable that records such basic design parameters and requires the
owner or operator to comply with such parameters.
d. The owner or operator shall use credible
information, such as results of historic maximum capability tests, design
information from the manufacturer, or engineering calculations, in establishing
the magnitude of the basic design parameters specified in subsections (3)(a)
and (b).
e. If design information
is not available for a process unit, then the owner or operator shall determine
the process unit's basic design parameters using the maximum value achieved by
the process unit in the five-year period immediately preceding the planned
activity.
f. Efficiency of a
process unit is not a basic design parameter.
g. The replacement activity shall not cause
the process unit to exceed any emission limitation, or operational limitation
that has the effect of constraining emissions, that applies to the process unit
and that is legally enforceable.
4. "Complete" means, in reference to an
application for a permit or permit revision, that the application contains all
the information necessary for processing the application. Designating an
application complete for purposes of permit processing does not preclude the
Department from requesting or accepting any additional information.
5. "Dispersion technique" means any technique
that attempts to affect the concentration of a pollutant in the ambient air by
any of the following:
a. Using that portion of
a stack that exceeds good engineering practice stack height;
b. Varying the rate of emission of a
pollutant according to atmospheric conditions or ambient concentrations of that
pollutant; or
c. 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 that
increases the exhaust gas plume rise. This shall not include any of the
following:
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.
ii. The
merging of exhaust gas streams under any of the following conditions:
(1) The source owner or operator demonstrates
that the facility was originally designed and constructed with the merged gas
streams;
(2) After July 8, 1985,
the 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, applying only to the emission limitation
for that pollutant; or
(3) Before
July 8, 1985, the 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 Department 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 Department shall
deny credit for the effects of the 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.
v.
Techniques that increase final exhaust gas plume rise if the resulting
allowable emissions of sulfur dioxide from the facility do not exceed 5,000
tons per year.
6. "Existing emissions unit" is any emissions
unit that is currently in existence and that is not a new emissions unit. A
replacement unit is an existing emissions unit.
7. "Federal Class I area" means an area
designated as Class I under
R18-2-217.
7
8.
"High terrain" means any area having an elevation of 900 feet or more above the
base of the stack of a source.
8
9. "Innovative control
technology" means any system of air pollution control that has not been
adequately demonstrated in practice but would have a substantial likelihood of
achieving greater continuous emissions reduction than any control system in
current practice, or of achieving at least comparable reductions at lower cost
in terms of energy, economics, or nonair quality environmental
impacts.
9
10. "Low terrain" means any area other than high
terrain.
1011. "Lowest achievable
emission rate" (LAER) means, for any source, the more stringent rate of
emissions based on one of the following:
a.
The most stringent emissions limitation that is contained in any implementation
plan approved or promulgated under sections 110 or 172 of the Act for the class
or category of stationary source, unless the owner or operator of the proposed
stationary source demonstrates that the limitation is not achievable;
or
b. The most stringent emissions
limitation that is achieved in practice by the class or category of stationary
source. This limitation, when applied to a modification, means the lowest
achievable emissions rate for the new or modified emissions units within the
stationary source. The application of this term shall not permit a proposed new
or modified stationary source to emit any pollutant in excess of the amount
allowable under the applicable new source performance standards.
12. "Major emissions unit" means:
a. Any emissions unit that emits or has the
potential to emit 100 tons per year or more of the PAL pollutant in an
attainment area; or
b. Any
emissions unit that emits or has the potential to emit the PAL pollutant in an
amount that is equal to or greater than the major source threshold for the PAL
pollutant for nonattainment areas. For example, in accordance with the
definition of major stationary source in section 182(c) of the Act, an
emissions unit would be a major emissions unit for VOC if the emissions unit is
located in a serious ozone nonattainment area and it emits or has the potential
to emit 50 or more tons of VOC per year.
1113. "Major source" is
defined as follows:
a. For purposes of
determining the applicability of
R18-2-403 through
R18-2-405 or
R18-2-411, major source means any
stationary source that emits, or has the potential to emit, 100 tons per year
or more of any regulated NSR pollutant, except that the following thresholds
shall apply in areas subject to subpart 2, subpart 3 or subpart 4 of part D,
Title I of the Act:
|
Pollutant Emitted
|
Nonattainment Pollutant and Classification
|
Quantity Threshold tons/year or more
|
|
Carbon Monoxide (CO)
|
CO, Serious, if stationary sources contribute
significantly to CO levels in the area as determined under rules issued by the
Administrator
|
50
|
|
VOC
|
Ozone, Serious
|
50
|
|
VOC
|
Ozone, Severe
|
25
|
|
PM10
|
PM10, Serious
|
70
|
|
PM2.5
|
PM2.5 Serious
|
70
|
|
PM2.5 precursors idenfied in
R18-2-101(124)(a)
|
PM2.5 Serious
|
70
|
|
NOx
|
Ozone, Serious
|
50
|
|
NOx
|
Ozone, Severe
|
25
|
b.
For purposes of determining the applicability of
R18-2-406 through
R18-2-408 or
R18-2-410, major source means any
stationary source that emits, or has the potential to emit, 100 tons per year
or more of any regulated NSR pollutant if the source is classified as a
categorical source, or 250 tons per year or more of any regulated NSR pollutant
if the source is not classified as a categorical source;
c.
Any stationary source that emits, or has the
potential to emit, five or more tons of lead per year;
c. A major source includes a
physical change that would occur at a stationary source, not otherwise
qualifying under subsection (13)(a) or (b) as a major source, if the change
would constitute a major source by itself.
d. A major source that is major for VOC or
nitrogen oxides shall be considered major for ozone.
e. The fugitive emissions of a stationary
source shall not be included in determining for any of the purposes of this
Article whether it is a major source, unless the source belongs to a section
302(j) category.
14.
"Mandatory federal Class I area" means an area identified in
R18-2-217(B).
12
15.
"New emissions unit" means any emissions unit which is (or will be) newly
constructed and which has existed for less than two years from the date such
emissions unit first operated.
1316. "Plantwide
applicability limitation" or "PAL" means an emission limitation that is based
on the baseline actual emissions of all emissions units at the stationary
source that emit or have the potential to emit the PAL pollutant, expressed in
tons per year, for a pollutant at a major source, that is enforceable as a
practical matter and established source-wide in accordance with this
Section.
1417. "PAL allowable
emissions" means "allowable emissions" as defined in
R18-2-101, except that the
allowable emissions for any emissions unit shall be calculated considering any
emission limitations that are enforceable as a practical matter on the
emissions unit's potential to emit.
1518. PAL
effective date generally means the date of issuance of the PAL permit. However,
the PAL effective date for an increased PAL is the date any emissions unit that
is part of the PAL major modification becomes operational and begins to emit
the PAL pollutant.
1619. "PAL effective
period" means the period beginning with the PAL effective date and ending 10
years later.
1720. "PAL major
modification" means any physical change in or change in the method of operation
of the PAL source that causes it to emit the PAL pollutant at a level equal to
or greater than the PAL.
1821. "PAL permit" means
the permit issued by the Director that establishes a PAL for a major source
under Article 3 or 4 of this Chapter.
1922. "PAL
pollutant" means the pollutant for which a PAL is established at a major
source.
2023. "Projected actual
emissions" means:
a. The maximum annual rate,
in tons per year, at which an existing emissions unit is projected to emit a
regulated NSR pollutant during any 12-month period in the 60 calendar months
following the date the unit resumes regular operation after the project, or in
any 12-month period in the 120 calendar months following that date if the
project involves increasing the design capacity or potential to emit of any
emissions unit for that regulated NSR pollutant and full utilization of the
unit would result in a significant emissions increase or a significant net
emissions increase at the major source.
b. In determining the projected actual
emissions before beginning actual construction, the owner or operator of the
major source:
i. Shall consider all relevant
information, including but not limited to, historical operational data, the
company's own representations, the company's expected business activity and the
company's highest projections of business activity, the company's filings with
the county, state or federal regulatory authorities, and compliance plans under
these regulations; and
ii. Shall
include fugitive emissions to the extent quantifiable;
iii. Shall include emissions associated with
startups, shutdowns, and malfunctions ; and
iv. Shall exclude, only for calculating any
increase in emissions that results from the particular project, that portion of
the unit's emissions following the project that an existing unit could have
accommodated during the consecutive 24-month period used to establish the
baseline actual emissions and that are also unrelated to the particular
project, including any increased utilization due to product demand growth;
or
c. In lieu of using
the method set out subsections 23(b)(i) through (iv), the owner or operator may
elect to use the emissions unit's potential to emit, in tons per year.
21. "Reconstruction" of sources
located in nonattainment areas shall be presumed to have taken place if the
fixed capital cost of the new components exceeds 50% of the fixed capital cost
of a comparable entirely new stationary source, as determined in accordance
with the provisions of 40 CFR 60.15(f)(1) through
(3).
2224. "Replacement unit"
means an emissions unit for which all the criteria listed in subsections
(24)(a) through (d) are met. No creditable emission reductions shall be
generated from shutting down the existing emissions unit that is replaced.
a. The emissions unit is a reconstructed unit
within the meaning of
40 CFR
60.15(b)(1), or the
emissions unit completely takes the place of an existing emissions
unit.
b. The emissions unit is
identical to or functionally equivalent to the replaced emissions
unit.
c. The replacement does not
alter the basic design parameters of the process unit.
d. The replaced emissions unit is permanently
removed from the major source, otherwise permanently disabled, or permanently
barred from operation by a permit that is enforceable as a practical matter. If
the replaced emissions unit is brought back into operation, it shall constitute
a new emissions unit.
2325. "Resource recovery
project" means any facility at which solid waste is processed for the purpose
of extracting, converting to energy, or otherwise separating and preparing
solid waste for reuse. Only energy conversion facilities that utilize solid
waste that provides more than 50% of the heat input shall be considered a
resource recovery project under this Article.
2426. "Significant
emissions unit" means an emissions unit that emits or has the potential to emit
a PAL pollutant in an amount that is equal to or greater than the significant
level for that PAL pollutant, but less than the amount that would qualify the
unit as a major emissions unit.
2527. "Significance
levels" means the following ambient concentrations for the enumerated
pollutants:
|
Averaging Time
|
|
Pollutant
|
Annual
|
24-Hour
|
8-Hour
|
3-Hour
|
1-Hour
|
|
SO2
|
1 µg/m3
|
5 µg/m3
|
25 µg/m3
|
|
NO2
|
1 µg/m3
|
|
CO
|
0.5 mg/m3
|
2 mg/m3
|
|
PM10
|
1 µg/m3
|
5 µg/m3
|
|
PM2.5
federal Class I area
|
0.06 µg/m3
|
0.07 µg/m3
|
|
PM2.5
federal Class II area
|
0.3 µg/m3
|
1.2 µg/m3
|
|
PM2.5
federal Class III area
|
0.3 µg/m3
|
1.2 µg/m3
|
|
Except for the annual pollutant concentrations, the
Department shall deem that exceedance of significance levels has occurred when
the ambient concentration of the above pollutant is exceeded more than once per
year at any one location. If the concentration occurs at a specific location
and at a time when the national ambient air quality standards for the pollutant
are not violated, the significance level does not apply.
|
2628. "Small emissions
unit" means an emissions unit that emits or has the potential to emit the PAL
pollutant in an amount less than the significant level for that PAL
pollutant.