Ill. Admin. Code tit. 35, § 310.230 - Concentration and Mass Limits
a)
Pollutant discharge limits in categorical pretreatment standards will be
expressed either as concentration or mass limits. Limits in categorical
pretreatment standards must apply to the discharge from the process regulated
by the standard or as otherwise specified by the standard.
b) When the limits in a categorical
pretreatment standard are expressed only in terms of mass of pollutant per unit
of production, the Control Authority may convert the limits to equivalent
limitations expressed either as mass of pollutant discharged per day or
effluent concentration for calculating effluent limitations applicable to
individual industrial users.
c) A
Control Authority calculating equivalent mass-per-day limitations under
subsection (b) must calculate such limitations by multiplying the limits in the
standard by the industrial user's average rate of production. This average rate
of production must be based not upon the designed production capacity, but
rather upon a reasonable measure of the industrial user's actual long-term
daily production during a representative year. For new sources, actual
production must be estimated using projected production.
d) A Control Authority calculating equivalent
concentration limitations under subsection (b) must calculate such limitations
by dividing the mass limitations derived under subsection (c) by the average
daily flow rate of the industrial user's regulated process wastewater. This
average daily flow rate must be based upon a reasonable measure of the
industrial user's actual long-term average flow rate, such as the average daily
flow rate during the representative year.
e) When the limits in a categorical
pretreatment standard are expressed only in terms of pollutant concentrations,
an industrial user may request that the Control Authority convert the limits to
equivalent mass limits. The determination to convert concentration limits to
mass limits is within the discretion of the Control Authority. The Control
Authority may establish equivalent mass limits only if the industrial user
meets all the following conditions in subsections (e)(1)(A) through (e)(1)(E).
1) To be eligible for equivalent mass limits,
the industrial user must undertake the following actions:
A) It must employ or demonstrate that it will
employ water conservation methods and technologies that substantially reduce
water use during the term of its control mechanism;
B) It must currently use control and
treatment technologies adequate to achieve compliance with the applicable
categorical pretreatment standard, and it must not have used dilution as a
substitute for treatment;
C) It
must provide sufficient information to establish the facility's actual average
daily flow rate for all wastestreams, based on data from a continuous effluent
flow monitoring device, as well as the facility's long-term average production
rate. Both the actual average daily flow rate and long-term average production
rate must be representative of current operating conditions;
D) It must not have daily flow rates,
production levels, or pollutant levels that vary so significantly that
equivalent mass limits are not appropriate to control the discharge;
and
E) It must have consistently
complied with all applicable categorical pretreatment standards during the
period before the industrial user requested equivalent mass limits.
2) An industrial user subject to
equivalent mass limits must undertake the following actions:
A) It must maintain and effectively operate
control and treatment technologies adequate to achieve compliance with the
equivalent mass limits;
B) It must
continue to record the facility's flow rates through the use of a continuous
effluent flow monitoring device;
C)
It must continue to record the facility's production rates and notify the
Control Authority whenever production rates are expected to vary by more than
20 percent from its baseline production rates determined in subsection
(e)(1)(C). Upon notification of a revised production rate, the Control
Authority must reassess the equivalent mass limit and revise the limit as
necessary to reflect changed conditions at the facility; and
D) It must continue to employ the same or
comparable water conservation methods and technologies as those implemented
pursuant to subsection (e)(1)(A) if it discharges under an equivalent mass
limit.
3) A Control
Authority that chooses to establish equivalent mass limits must undertake the
following actions:
A) It must calculate the
equivalent mass limit by multiplying the actual average daily flow rate of the
regulated processes of the industrial user by the concentration-based daily
maximum and monthly average standard for the applicable categorical
pretreatment standard and the appropriate unit conversion factor;
B) Upon notification of a revised production
rate, it must reassess the equivalent mass limit and recalculate the limit as
necessary to reflect changed conditions at the facility; and
C) It may retain the same equivalent mass
limit in subsequent control mechanism terms if the industrial user's actual
average daily flow rate was reduced solely as a result of the implementation of
water conservation methods and technologies, and the actual average daily flow
rates used in the original calculation of the equivalent mass limit were not
based on the use of dilution as a substitute for treatment pursuant to Section
310.232. The industrial user
must also be in compliance with Subpart J of this Part (regarding the
prohibition of bypass).
4) The Control Authority may not express
limits in terms of mass for pollutants such as pH, temperature, radiation, or
other pollutants that cannot appropriately be expressed as mass.
f) The Control Authority may
convert the mass limits of the categorical pretreatment standards of Subparts
O, T, and CD of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 307 to concentration limits for calculating
limitations applicable to individual industrial users under the following
conditions. When converting such limits to concentration limits, the Control
Authority must use the concentrations listed in the applicable provisions of
Subparts O, T, and CD of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 307 and document that dilution is
not being substituted for treatment as prohibited by Section 310.232.
g) Equivalent limitations calculated in
accordance with subsections (c) through (f) are deemed pretreatment standards.
The Control Authority must document how the equivalent limits were derived and
make this information publicly available. Once incorporated into its control
mechanism, the industrial users must comply with the equivalent limitations
instead of the promulgated categorical standards from which the equivalent
limitations were derived.
h) Many
categorical pretreatment standards specify one limit for calculating maximum
daily discharge limitations and a second limit for calculating maximum monthly
average or four-day average limitations. If such standards are being applied,
the same production or flow figure must be used in calculating both the average
and the maximum equivalent limitation.
i) Any industrial user operating under a
control mechanism incorporating equivalent mass or concentration limits
calculated from a production-based standard must notify the Control Authority
within two business days after the user has a reasonable basis to know that the
production level will significantly change within the next calendar month. Any
user not notifying the Control Authority of such anticipated change will be
required to meet the mass or concentration limits in its control mechanism that
were based on the original estimate of the long-term average production
rate.
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