(1)
A site-specific NMP shall be submitted to the Department with the permit
application for an agricultural site. For sites enrolled and participating in a
Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) Best Management
Practices (BMP) program, a conservation plan or NMP prepared for the purposes
of the BMP can be submitted as the site-specific NMP if the plan meets the NMP
requirements given in subsections (4) through (7), below.
(2) USDA-NRCS-Florida Field Office Technical
Guide - Nutrient Management, Code 590, November 2012, listed in paragraph
62-640.210(1)(l),
F.A.C., provides technical guidance in the preparation of NMPs.
(3) The NMP shall be prepared and signed by a
person certified by the NRCS for nutrient management planning or prepared,
signed and sealed by a professional engineer licensed in the State of
Florida.
(4) The NMP shall identify
each
application zone to be used at the site as identified in the
Biosolids
Site Permit Application, Form
62-640.210(2)(d),
incorporated in subsection
62-640.210(2),
F.A.C., effective June 21, 2021. Application zones shall be sized to facilitate
accurate accounting of nutrient and pollutant loadings and shall be in
accordance with Rule
62-640.700, F.A.C., as
applicable for the class(es) of
biosolids that will be applied to the
site.
(5) The NMP shall meet the
requirements of this chapter and shall:
(a)
Include aerial site photograph(s)/imagery or site map(s), and a soil survey map
of the site;
(b) Include guidance
for NMP implementation, site operation, maintenance, and
recordkeeping;
(c) Include a
description of how the NMP complies with any applicable basin management action
plans (BMAPs) adopted under Section
403.067(7),
F.S., and with any applicable reasonable assurance plans (RAPs) adopted under
Section 403.067(4),
F.S.
(d) Include results of soil,
water, plant tissue, and biosolids analyses, as applicable. The soil fertility
testing used to develop the NMP shall be less than one year old;
(e) Specify the frequency interval for soil
fertility testing. The interval shall be at least once annually;
(f) Establish specific rates of application
of
biosolids based on nitrogen and phosphorus as well as procedures to land
apply
biosolids and all other nutrient sources to each
application zone. The
NMP shall address application rates for the period covered by the effective and
expiration dates of the
biosolids site permit, at a minimum. The final rate of
biosolids to be applied to an
application zone shall be not exceed the
nitrogen-based rate and the phosphorus-based rate (the application rate shall
not exceed the more restrictive of the two nutrient-based rates). The applicant
may exceed the phosphorus-based rate if the applicant demonstrates the zone is
comprised of native phosphatic soils and that applying at a higher rate is
protective of water quality. As part of establishing the nitrogen and
phosphorus-based application rates, the NMP shall include the following items.
1. The NMP shall identify the recommended
crop nutrient needs for nitrogen and phosphorus (i.e. crop nutrient demand) for
the crops to be grown on each
application zone based on University of Florida
Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS) recommendations or using the
following values as a guide,
Crop
|
Nitrogen: lbs/acre/growing season
|
Phophorus
(P2O5): lbs/acre/growing
season
|
Improved perennial grasses (i.e. maintenance
fertilization of established pastures) - Grazed
|
160
|
40
|
Improved perennial grasses (i.e. maintenance
fertilization of established hayfields) - Hay or silage (assuming 4
harvests)
|
320
|
80
|
Cool season annual grasses (e.g. grazed small grains,
ryegrass, fescue)
|
160
|
80
|
Warm season annual grasses (e.g. sorghum-sudan hydrid
or pearl millet) - Grazed
|
160
|
40
|
Warm season annual grasses (e.g. sorghum-sudan hydrid
or pearl millet) - Hay or silage (4 harvests)
|
320
|
80
|
2.
The NMP shall identify the current and planned plant production sequence or
crop rotation for each application zone for the period of the biosolids site
permit, at a minimum.
3. The NMP
shall include realistic annual yield goals for each crop identified for each
application zone, if applicable.
4.
The NMP shall include the soil phosphorus storage "capacity index" (CI) and
soil phosphorus results from the most recent soil fertility testing for each
application zone. The CI and soil phosphorus results shall be based on
Mehlich-3 extraction results for phosphorus, iron, and aluminum.
5. The NMP shall include a listing and
quantification of all nutrient sources for each application zone.
6. The NMP shall include the percent water
extractable phosphorus (PWEP) of each anticipated biosolids source (permittees
may use a weighted average or estimated weighted average when biosolids applied
to an application zone will be from multiple sources),
7. The crop nutrient demand phosphorus may be
adjusted as given in a. and b. below, based on the soil phosphorus storage
capacity index and the
biosolids percent water extractable phosphorus (PWEP)
when determining
biosolids application rates. The adjustment to the crop
nutrient demand phosphorus results in the amount of total phosphorus in
lbs/acre that can be applied from
biosolids (e.g., if doubling is allowed, a
crop nutrient demand of 40 lbs
P
2O
5/acre/year results in an
allowed loading of 80 lbs total
P
2O
5/acre/year).
a. When the PWEP of
biosolids is less than
14%, one of the following may be used:
(I)
When the soil phosphorus storage capacity index for an application zone is
greater than 40 mg/kg, the PWEP value for the biosolids being applied may be
used to adjust the crop nutrient demand phosphorus by dividing the crop
nutrient demand phosphorus by the PWEP (in decimal form) to determine the total
amount of phosphorus allowed to be applied.
(II) When the soil phosphorus storage
capacity index is at least 20 mg/kg and up to 40 mg/kg, the amount of crop
nutrient demand phosphorus may be doubled to determine the total amount of
phosphorus allowed to be applied.
(III) When soil phosphorus storage capacity
index is greater than 0 mg/kg but less than 20 mg/kg, the amount of crop
nutrient demand phosphorus may be increased by 50 percent to determine the
total amount of phosphorus allowed to be applied.
(IV) When the soil phosphorus capacity index
is less than 0 mg/kg, the amount of phosphorus shall not be adjusted (i.e. the
crop nutrient demand phosphorus equals the total amount of phosphorus allowed
to be applied).
b. When
the PWEP of biosolids is 14% or greater, the amount of phosphorus shall not be
adjusted unless the the soil phosphorus storage capacity index is greater than
40 mg/kg, in which case the crop nutrient demand phosphorus may be increased by
50 percent to determine the amount of total phosphorus allowed to be
applied.
8. When
considering the availability of nitrogen in biosolids, once the amount of plant
available nitrogen (PAN) to be supplied by biosolids has been determined (i.e.
the crop nitrogen demand has been adjusted to take other sources of nitrogen
into account), this amount may be multiplied by a factor of 1.5 (i.e. a 50
percent increase) to determine the amount of total nitrogen (TN) that may be
supplied by biosolids. For example, if the crop nitrogen demand is 160 lbs PAN
per acre per year and no other sources of nitrogen are applied, 240 lbs TN can
be applied per acre per year by biosolids.
9. The calcium carbonate equivalency of any
alkaline-treated biosolids and recommended lime application rates for each
application zone,
10. Septage
application rates for application zones with a soil capacity greater than 0
mg/kg shall be no more than 30, 000 gallons per acre per year for septage
containing food establishment sludge or no more than 40, 000 gallons per acre
per year for septage not containing food establishment sludge. Septage
application rates for application zones with a soil phosphorus storage capacity
index less than 0 mg/kg shall be no more than 12, 000 gallons per acre per
year. If septage is dewatered, these application rates shall be converted using
the results of total solids monitoring of the dewatered septage.
11. The method of land application for each
application zone; and,
12. The
methodology and calculations used to determine the application rates for each
application zone.
(6) For application sites located in
geographic areas that have been identified by statute or rule of the
Department
as being subject to restrictions on phosphorus loadings (such as the Everglades
Protection Area as set forth in Section
373.4592, F.S., the Lake
Okeechobee watershed as set forth in Section
373.4595, F.S., Lake Apopka as
set forth in Section
373.461, F.S., and the Green
Swamp Area as set forth in Section
380.0551, F.S.), the NMP shall:
(a) Base application rates on the phosphorus
needs of the crop; and,
(b) Address
measures that will be used to minimize or prevent water quality impacts that
could result from biosolids application areas to surface
waters.
(7) The NMP for a
proposed site located within the Lake Okeechobee, St. Lucie River, or
Caloosahatchee River watersheds, shall also include the demonstration required
by subsections
62-640.400(11) and
(12), F.A.C., as applicable. Any permit
issued based on such a demonstration shall require monitoring and record
keeping to ensure that the demonstration continues to be valid for the duration
of the permit. Documentation of compliance with the demonstration shall be
submitted as part of the site annual summary submitted under paragraph
62-640.650(5)(d),
F.A.C.
(8) The NMP site shall be
reviewed annually by the site permittee along with the annual soil fertility
testing results. If the soil
capacity index has changed the allowed phosphorus
adjustment of subparagraph
62-640.500(5)(f)
7., F.A.C., the NMP shall be revised for the upcoming year. Any revisions to
the NMP shall be provided to the
Department. Revisions not requiring a permit
revision in accordance with paragraph
62-640.300(3)(e),
F.A.C., shall be provided to the
Department with the site annual summary
submitted in accordance with paragraph
62-640.650(5)(d),
F.A.C., or earlier. Any revisions requiring a permit modification in accordance
with paragraph
62-640.300(3)(e),
F.A.C., shall be completed by a certified nutrient management planner or by a
professional engineer licensed in the State of Florida.