Ill. Admin. Code tit. 35, § 721.102 - Definition of Solid Waste
a) Solid
Waste
1) A solid waste is any discarded
material that is not excluded pursuant to Section
721.104(a)
or that is not excluded pursuant to 35 Ill. Adm. Code
720.130
and
720.131
or 35 Ill. Adm. Code
720.130
and
720.134.
2) Discarded Material
A) A discarded material is any material that
is described as follows:
i) It is abandoned,
as described in subsection (b);
ii)
It is recycled, as described in subsection (c);
iii) It is considered inherently waste-like,
as described in subsection (d); or
iv) It is a military munition identified as a
solid waste in 35 Ill. Adm. Code
726.302.
B) This subsection (a)(2)(B)
corresponds with
40 CFR
261.2(a)(2)(ii), which USEPA
has removed and marked "reserved". This statement maintains structural
consistency with the corresponding federal regulations.
b) A material is a solid waste if
it is abandoned in one of the following ways:
1) It is disposed of;
2) It is burned or incinerated;
3) It is accumulated, stored, or treated (but
not recycled) before or in lieu of being abandoned by being disposed of,
burned, or incinerated; or
4) Sham
recycled, as explained in subsection (g).
c) A material is a solid waste if it is
recycled - or accumulated, stored, or treated before recycling - as specified
in subsections (c)(1) through (c)(4), if one of the following occurs with
regard to the material:
1) The material is
used in a manner constituting disposal.
A) A
material that is noted with a "yes" in column 1 of the table in Appendix Z is a
solid waste when one of the following occurs :
i) The material is applied to or placed on
the land in a manner that constitutes disposal; or
ii) The material is used to produce products
that are applied to or placed on the land or are otherwise contained in
products that are applied to or placed on the land (in which cases the product
itself remains a solid waste).
B) However, a commercial chemical product
that is listed in Section
721.133
is not a solid waste if it is applied to the land and that is its ordinary
manner of use.
2) The
material is burned for energy recovery.
A) A
material that is noted with a "yes" in column 2 of the table in Appendix Z is a
solid waste when one of the following occurs:
i) It is burned to recover energy;
ii) It is used to produce a fuel or is
otherwise contained in fuels (in which case the fuel itself remains a solid
waste);
iii) It is contained in
fuels (in which case the fuel itself remains a solid waste).
B) However, a commercial chemical
product that is listed in Section
721.133
is not a solid waste if it is itself a fuel.
3) Reclaimed. A material noted with a "No" in
column 3 of the table in Appendix Z is not a solid waste when reclaimed (except
as provided under Section
721.104(a)(17)
). A material noted with a "Yes" in column 3 of Appendix Z is a solid waste
when reclaimed, unless it meets the requirements of Section
721.104(a)(17), (a)(23),
(a)(24), or (a)(27).
4) Accumulated Speculatively. A material
noted with "yes" in column 4 of the table in Appendix Z is a solid waste when
accumulated speculatively.
d) Inherently Waste-Like Materials. The
following materials are solid wastes when they are recycled in any manner:
1) USEPA hazardous waste numbers F020, F021
(unless used as an ingredient to make a product at the site of generation),
F022, F023, F026, and F028.
2) A
secondary material fed to a halogen acid furnace that exhibits a characteristic
of a hazardous waste or which is listed as a hazardous waste, as defined in
Subpart C or D, except for brominated material that meets the following
criteria:
A) The material must contain a
bromine concentration of at least 45 percent;
B) The material must contain less than a
total of one percent of toxic organic compounds listed in Appendix H;
and
C) The material is processed
continually on-site in the halogen acid furnace via direct conveyance (hard
piping).
3) The
following criteria are used to add wastes to the list:
A) Disposal Method or Toxicity
i) The material is ordinarily disposed of,
burned, or incinerated; or
ii) The
material contains toxic constituents listed in Appendix H and these
constituents are not ordinarily found in raw materials or products for which
the material substitutes (or are found in raw materials or products in smaller
concentrations) and is not used or reused during the recycling process;
and
B) The material may
pose a substantial hazard to human health and the environment when
recycled.
e)
Materials That Are Not Solid Waste When Recycled
1) A material is not a solid waste when it
can be shown to be recycled by fulfilling one of the following conditions:
A) It is used or reused as an ingredient in
an industrial process to make a product, provided the material is not being
reclaimed; or
B) It is used or
reused as effective substitutes for commercial products; or
C) It is returned to the original process
from which it is generated, without first being reclaimed or land disposed. The
material must be returned as a substitute for feedstock materials. In cases
where the original process to which the material is returned is a secondary
process, the material must be managed in such a manner that there is no
placement on the land. In cases where the material is generated and reclaimed
within the primary mineral processing industry, the conditions of the exclusion
found at Section
721.104(a)(17)
apply rather than this provision.
2) The following materials are solid wastes,
even if the recycling involves use, reuse, or return to the original process
(described in subsections (e)(1)(A) through (e)(1)(C)):
A) A material used in a manner constituting
disposal or used to produce a product that is applied to the land; or
B) A material burned for energy recovery,
used to produce a fuel, or contained in fuels; or
C) A material accumulated speculatively;
or
D) A material listed in
subsections (d)(1) and (d)(2).
f) Documentation of Claims That a material is
Not a Solid Waste or is Conditionally Exempt from Regulation. A respondent in
an action to enforce regulations implementing Subtitle C of RCRA or Section 21
of the Environmental Protection Act that raises a claim that a certain material
is not a solid waste or that the material is conditionally exempt from
regulation must demonstrate that there is a known market or disposition for the
material and that the material meets the terms of the exclusion or exemption.
In doing so, the person must provide appropriate documentation (such as
contracts showing that a second person uses the material as an ingredient in a
production process) to demonstrate that the material is not a waste or that the
material is exempt from regulation. In addition, an owner or operator of a
facility claiming that it actually is recycling a material must show that it
has the necessary equipment to recycle that material.
g) Sham Recycling. A hazardous secondary
material found to be sham recycled is considered discarded and a solid waste.
Sham recycling is recycling that is not legitimate recycling, as defined in 35
Ill. Adm. Code
720.143.
Notes
Amended at 34 Ill. Reg. 18611, effective November 12, 2010
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