Mont. Admin. r. 17.8.1501 - DEFINITIONS
As used in this subchapter, unless indicated otherwise, the following definitions apply:
(1) The terms
"air quality operating permit " or "permit", "air quality permit revision" or "permit
revision", "applicable requirement", "emissions unit ", "major source ", and
"regulated air pollutant " have the same meaning as provided under ARM
17.8.1201.
(2) "Air quality operating permit application " or
"permit application " mean an application (including any supplement to a previously
submitted application) that is submitted by the owner or operator to obtain an
operating permit pursuant to ARM Title 17, chapter 8, subchapter 12.
(3) "Capture system " means the equipment
(including but not limited to hoods, ducts, fans, and booths) used to contain,
capture and transport a pollutant to a control device .
(4) "Continuous compliance determination method "
means a method, specified by the applicable standard or an applicable permit
condition, which:
(a) is used to determine
compliance with an emission limitation or standard on a continuous basis, consistent
with the averaging period established for the emission limitation or standard;
and
(b) provides data either in units of
the standard or correlated directly with the compliance limit.
(5) "Control device " means equipment, other than
inherent process equipment , that is used to destroy or remove air pollutant(s) prior
to discharge to the atmosphere. The types of equipment that may commonly be used as
control devices include, but are not limited to, fabric filters, mechanical
collectors, electrostatic precipitators, inertial separators, afterburners, thermal
or catalytic incinerators, adsorption devices (such as carbon beds), condensers,
scrubbers (such as wet collection and gas absorption devices), selective catalytic
or noncatalytic reduction systems, flue gas recirculation systems, spray dryers,
spray towers, mist eliminators, acid plants, sulfur recovery plants, injection
systems (such as water, steam, ammonia, sorbent or limestone injection), and
combustion devices independent of the particular process being conducted at an
emissions unit (for example, the destruction of emissions achieved by venting
process emission streams to flares, boilers or process heaters).
(a) For purposes of this subchapter, a control
device does not include passive control measures that act to prevent pollutants from
forming, such as the use of seals, lids, or roofs to prevent the release of
pollutants, use of low-polluting fuel or feedstocks, or the use of combustion or
other process design features or characteristics. If an applicable requirement
establishes that particular equipment which otherwise meets this definition of a
control device does not constitute a control device as applied to a particular
pollutant-specific emissions unit , then that definition shall be binding for
purposes of this subchapter.
(6) "Data " means the results of any type of
monitoring or method, including the results of instrumental or noninstrumental
monitoring , emission calculations, manual sampling procedures, recordkeeping
procedures, or any other form of information collection procedure used in connection
with any type of monitoring or method.
(7) "Emission limitation or standard" means any
applicable requirement that constitutes an emission limitation, emission standard ,
standard of performance or means of emission limitation as defined under the FCAA .
An emission limitation or standard may be expressed in terms of the pollutant,
expressed either as a specific quantity, rate or concentration of emissions (for
example, pounds of SO2 per hour, pounds of
SO2 per million British thermal units of fuel input,
kilograms of VOC per liter of applied coating solids, or parts per million by volume
of SO2) or as the relationship of uncontrolled to controlled
emissions (for example, percentage capture and destruction efficiency of VOC or
percentage reduction of SO2). An emission limitation or
standard may also be expressed either as a work practice, process or control device
parameter, or other form of specific design, equipment, operational, or operation
and maintenance requirement. For purposes of this subchapter, an emission limitation
or standard shall not include general operation requirements that an owner or
operator may be required to meet, such as requirements to obtain a permit, to
operate and maintain sources in accordance with good air pollution control
practices, to develop and maintain a malfunction abatement plan, to keep records,
submit reports, or conduct monitoring .
(8) "Exceedance " means a condition that is
detected by monitoring that provides data in terms of an emission limitation or
standard and that indicates that emissions (or opacity ) are greater than the
applicable emission limitation or standard (or less than the applicable standard in
the case of a percent reduction requirement) consistent with any averaging period
specified for averaging the results of the monitoring .
(9) "Excursion " means a departure from an
indicator range established for monitoring under this subchapter, consistent with
any averaging period specified for averaging the results of the
monitoring .
(10) "FCAA " means the
Federal Clean Air Act , as amended.
(11)
"Inherent process equipment " means equipment that is necessary for the proper or
safe functioning of the process, or material recovery equipment that the owner or
operator documents is installed and operated primarily for purposes other than
compliance with air pollution regulations. Equipment that must be operated at an
efficiency higher than that achieved during normal process operations in order to
comply with the applicable emission limitation or standard is not inherent process
equipment . For the purposes of this subchapter, inherent process equipment is not
considered a control device .
(12)
"Monitoring " means any form of collecting data on a routine basis to determine or
otherwise assess compliance with emission limitations or standards. Recordkeeping
may be considered monitoring where such records are used to determine or assess
compliance with an emission limitation or standard (such as records of raw material
content and usage, or records documenting compliance with work practice
requirements). The conduct of compliance method tests, such as the procedures in
appendix A to 40 CFR part 60, on a routine periodic basis may be considered
monitoring (or as a supplement to other monitoring ), provided that requirements to
conduct such tests on a one-time basis or at such times as a regulatory authority
may require on a nonregular basis are not considered monitoring requirements for
purposes of this paragraph. Monitoring may include one or more than one of the
following data collection techniques, where appropriate for a particular
circumstance:
(a) continuous emission or opacity
monitoring systems.
(b) continuous
process, capture system , control device or other relevant parameter monitoring
systems or procedures, including a predictive emission monitoring system.
(c) emission estimation and calculation procedures
(for example, mass balance or stoichiometric calculations).
(d) maintenance and analysis of records of fuel or
raw materials usage.
(e) recording
results of a program or protocol to conduct specific operation and maintenance
procedures.
(f) verification of
emissions, process parameters, capture system parameters, or control device
parameters using portable or in situ measurement devices.
(g) visible emission observations.
(h) any other form of measuring, recording, or
verifying on a routine basis emissions, process parameters, capture system
parameters, control device parameters or other factors relevant to assessing
compliance with emission limitations or standards.
(13) "Monitoring malfunction " means any sudden,
infrequent, not reasonably preventable failure of the monitoring to provide valid
data . Monitoring failures that are caused entirely or in part by poor maintenance or
careless operation are not malfunctions.
(14) "Owner or operator " means any person who
owns, leases, operates, controls or supervises a stationary source subject to this
subchapter.
(15) "Pollutant-specific
emissions unit " means an emissions unit considered separately with respect to each
regulated air pollutant .
(16) "Potential
to emit " shall have the same meaning as provided under ARM
17.8.1201(26),
provided that it shall be applied with respect to an "emissions unit " as defined in
ARM 17.8.1201(15) in
addition to a "stationary source " as defined in ARM
17.8.1201(33).
(17) "Predictive emission monitoring system (PEMS)
" means a system that uses process and other parameters as inputs to a computer
program or other data reduction system to produce values in terms of the applicable
emission limitation or standard.
Notes
75-2-217, 75-2-218, MCA; IMP, 75-2-217, 75-2-218, MCA;
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