As used in OAR 340 divisions 200 through 268, unless
specifically defined otherwise:
(1)
"Act" or "FCAA" means the Federal Clean Air Act,
42 U.S.C.A.
§
7401 to
7671q.
(2) "Activity" means any process, operation,
action, or reaction (e.g., chemical) at a source that emits a regulated
pollutant.
(3) "Actual emissions"
means the mass emissions of a regulated pollutant from an emissions source
during a specified time period as set forth in OAR 340 divisions 214, 220 and
222.
(4) "Adjacent", as used in the
definitions of major source and source and in OAR
340-216-0070, means
interdependent facilities that are nearby to each other.
(5) "Affected source" means a source that
includes one or more affected units that are subject to emission reduction
requirements or limitations under Title IV of the FCAA.
(6) "Affected states" means all states:
(a) Whose air quality may be affected by a
proposed permit, permit modification, or permit renewal and that are contiguous
to Oregon; or
(b) That are within
50 miles of the permitted source.
(7) "Aggregate insignificant emissions" means
the annual actual emissions of any regulated pollutant from one or more
designated activities at a source that are less than or equal to the lowest
applicable level specified in this section. The total emissions from each
designated activity and the aggregate emissions from all designated activities
must be less than or equal to the lowest applicable level specified:
(a) One ton for total reduced sulfur,
hydrogen sulfide, sulfuric acid mist, any Class I or II substance subject to a
standard promulgated under or established by Title VI of the FCAA, and each
criteria pollutant, except lead;
(b) 120 pounds for lead;
(c) 600 pounds for fluorides;
(d) 500 pounds for PM10 in a PM10
nonattainment area;
(e) 500 pounds
for direct PM2.5 in a PM2.5 nonattainment area;
(f) The lesser of the amount established in
40 C.F.R.
68.130 or 1, 000 pounds;
(g) An aggregate of 5,000 pounds for all
hazardous air pollutants;
(h) 2,756
tons CO2e for greenhouse gases.
(8) "Air contaminant" means a dust, fume,
gas, mist, odor, smoke, vapor, pollen, soot, carbon, acid, particulate matter,
regulated pollutant, or any combination thereof.
(9) "Air Contaminant Discharge Permit" or
"ACDP" means written authorization issued, renewed, amended, or revised by DEQ,
under OAR 340 division 216.
(10)
"Alternative method" means any method of sampling and analyzing for an air
pollutant which is not a reference or equivalent method but which has been
demonstrated to DEQ's satisfaction to, in specific cases, produce results
adequate for determination of compliance. The alternative method must comply
with the intent of the rules, is at least equivalent in objectivity and
reliability to the uniform recognized procedures, and is demonstrated to be
reproducible, selective, sensitive, accurate, and applicable to the program. An
alternative method used to meet an applicable federal requirement for which a
reference method is specified must be approved by EPA unless EPA has delegated
authority for the approval to DEQ.
(11) "Ambient air" means that portion of the
atmosphere, external to buildings, to which the general public has
access.
(12) "Applicable
requirement" means all of the following as they apply to emissions units in an
Oregon Title V Operating Permit program source or ACDP program source,
including requirements that have been promulgated or approved by the EPA
through rule making at the time of issuance but have future-effective
compliance dates:
(a) Any standard or other
requirement provided for in the applicable implementation plan approved or
promulgated by the EPA through rulemaking under Title I of the FCAA that
implements the relevant requirements of the FCAA, including any revisions to
that plan promulgated in 40 C.F.R. part
52 ;
(b) Any standard or other requirement adopted
under OAR
340-200-0040 of the State of Oregon Clean Air Act Implementation Plan
that is more stringent than the federal standard or requirement which has not
yet been approved by the EPA, and other state-only enforceable air pollution
control requirements;
(c) Any term
or condition in an ACDP, OAR 340 division 216, including any term or condition
of any preconstruction permits issued under OAR 340 division 224, New Source
Review, until or unless DEQ revokes or modifies the term or condition by a
permit modification;
(d) Any term
or condition in a Notice of Construction and Approval of Plans, OAR
340-210-0205 through
340-210-0240, until or unless DEQ revokes or modifies the
term or condition by a Notice of Construction and Approval of Plans or a permit
modification;
(e) Any term or
condition in a Notice of Approval, OAR
340-218-0190, issued before July 1,
2001, until or unless DEQ revokes or modifies the term or condition by a Notice
of Approval or a permit modification;
(f) Any term or condition of a PSD permit
issued by the EPA until or unless the EPA revokes or modifies the term or
condition by a permit modification;
(g) Any standard or other requirement under
section 111 of the FCAA, including section 111(d);
(h) Any standard or other requirement under
section 112 of the FCAA, including any requirement concerning accident
prevention under section 112(r)(7) of the FCAA;
(i) Any standard or other requirement of the
acid rain program under Title IV of the FCAA or the regulations promulgated
thereunder;
(j) Any requirements
established under section 504(b) or section 114(a)(3) of the FCAA;
(k) Any standard or other requirement under
section 126(a)(1) and(c) of the FCAA;
(l) Any standard or other requirement
governing solid waste incineration, under section 129 of the FCAA;
(m) Any standard or other requirement for
consumer and commercial products, under section 183(e) of the FCAA;
(n) Any standard or other requirement for
tank vessels, under section 183(f) of the FCAA;
(o) Any standard or other requirement of the
program to control air pollution from outer continental shelf sources, under
section 328 of the FCAA;
(p) Any
standard or other requirement of the regulations promulgated to protect
stratospheric ozone under Title VI of the FCAA, unless the Administrator has
determined that such requirements need not be contained in an Oregon Title V
Operating Permit; and
(q) Any
national ambient air quality standard or increment or visibility requirement
under part C of Title I of the FCAA, but only as it would apply to temporary
sources permitted under section 504(e) of the FCAA.
(13) "Attainment area" or "unclassified area"
means an area that has not otherwise been designated by EPA as nonattainment
with ambient air quality standards for a particular regulated pollutant.
Attainment areas or unclassified areas may also be referred to as sustainment
or maintenance areas as designated in OAR 340 division 204. Any particular
location may be part of an attainment area or unclassified area for one
regulated pollutant while also being in a different type of designated area for
another regulated pollutant.
(14)
"Attainment pollutant" means a pollutant for which an area is designated an
attainment or unclassified area.
(15) "Baseline emission rate" means the
actual emission rate during a baseline period as determined under OAR 340
division 222.
(16) "Baseline
period" means the period used to determine the baseline emission rate for each
regulated pollutant under OAR 340 division 222.
(17) "Best Available Control Technology" or
"BACT" means an emission limitation, including, but not limited to, a visible
emission standard, based on the maximum degree of reduction of each air
contaminant subject to regulation under the FCAA which would be emitted from
any proposed major source or major modification which, on a case-by-case basis,
taking into account energy, environmental, and economic impacts and other
costs, is achievable for such source or modification through application of
production processes or available methods, systems, and techniques, including
fuel cleaning or treatment or innovative fuel combustion techniques for control
of such air contaminant. In no event may the application of BACT result in
emissions of any air contaminant that would exceed the emissions allowed by any
applicable new source performance standard or any standard for hazardous air
pollutant. If an emission limitation is not feasible, a design, equipment, work
practice, or operational standard, or combination thereof, may be required.
Such standard must, to the degree possible, set forth the emission reduction
achievable and provide for compliance by prescribing appropriate permit
conditions.
(18) "Biomass" means
non-fossilized and biodegradable organic material originating from plants,
animals, and microorganisms, including products, byproducts, residues and waste
from agriculture, forestry, and related industries as well as the
non-fossilized and biodegradable organic fractions of industrial and municipal
wastes, including gases and liquids recovered from the decomposition of
non-fossilized and biodegradable organic matter.
(19) "Capacity" means the maximum regulated
pollutant emissions from a stationary source under its physical and operational
design.
(20) "Capture efficiency"
means the amount of regulated pollutant collected and routed to an air
pollution control device divided by the amount of total emissions generated by
the process being controlled.
(21)
"Capture system" means the equipment, including but not limited to hoods,
ducts, fans, and booths, used to contain, capture and transport a regulated
pollutant to a control device.
(22)
"Carbon dioxide equivalent" or "CO2e" means an amount of a greenhouse gas or
gases expressed as the equivalent amount of carbon dioxide, and is be computed
by multiplying the mass of each of the greenhouse gases by the global warming
potential published for each gas at 40 C.F.R. part
98 , subpart A, Table
A-1-Global Warming Potentials, and adding the resulting value for each
greenhouse gas to compute the total equivalent amount of carbon
dioxide.
(23) "Categorically
insignificant activity" means any of the following listed regulated pollutant
emitting activities principally supporting the source or the major industrial
group. Categorically insignificant activities must comply with all applicable
requirements.
(a) Constituents of a chemical
mixture present at less than 1 percent by weight of any chemical or compound
regulated under divisions 200 through 268 excluding divisions 248 and 262 of
this chapter, or less than 0.1 percent by weight of any carcinogen listed in
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Service's Annual Report on Carcinogens
when usage of the chemical mixture is less than 100,000 pounds/year;
(b) Evaporative and tailpipe emissions from
on-site motor vehicle operation;
(c) Distillate oil, kerosene, gasoline,
natural gas or propane burning equipment, provided the aggregate expected
actual emissions of the equipment identified as categorically insignificant do
not exceed the de minimis level for any regulated pollutant, based on the
expected maximum annual operation of the equipment. If a source's expected
emissions from all such equipment exceed the de minimis levels, then the source
may identify a subgroup of such equipment as categorically insignificant with
the remainder not categorically insignificant. The following equipment may
never be included as categorically insignificant:
(A) Any individual distillate oil, kerosene
or gasoline burning equipment with a rating greater than 0.4 million
Btu/hour;
(B) Any individual
natural gas or propane burning equipment with a rating greater than 2.0 million
Btu/hour.
(d) Distillate
oil, kerosene, gasoline, natural gas or propane burning equipment brought on
site for six months or less for maintenance, construction or similar purposes,
such as but not limited to generators, pumps, hot water pressure washers and
space heaters, provided that any such equipment that performs the same function
as the permanent equipment, must be operated within the source's existing
PSEL;
(e) Office
activities;
(f) Food service
activities;
(g) Janitorial
activities;
(h) Personal care
activities;
(i) Groundskeeping
activities including, but not limited to building painting and road and parking
lot maintenance;
(j) On-site
laundry activities;
(k) On-site
recreation facilities;
(l)
Instrument calibration;
(m)
Maintenance and repair shop;
(n)
Automotive repair shops or storage garages;
(o) Air cooling or ventilating equipment not
designed to remove air contaminants generated by or released from associated
equipment;
(p) Refrigeration
systems with less than 50 pounds of charge of ozone depleting substances
regulated under Title VI, including pressure tanks used in refrigeration
systems but excluding any combustion equipment associated with such
systems;
(q) Bench scale laboratory
equipment and laboratory equipment used exclusively for chemical and physical
analysis, including associated vacuum producing devices but excluding research
and development facilities;
(r)
Temporary construction activities;
(s) Warehouse activities;
(t) Accidental fires;
(u) Air vents from air compressors;
(v) Air purification systems;
(w) Continuous emissions monitoring vent
lines;
(x) Demineralized water
tanks;
(y) Pre-treatment of
municipal water, including use of deionized water purification
systems;
(z) Electrical charging
stations;
(aa) Fire brigade
training;
(bb) Instrument air
dryers and distribution;
(cc)
Process raw water filtration systems;
(dd) Pharmaceutical packaging;
(ee) Fire suppression;
(ff) Blueprint making;
(gg) Routine maintenance, repair, and
replacement such as anticipated activities most often associated with and
performed during regularly scheduled equipment outages to maintain a plant and
its equipment in good operating condition, including but not limited to steam
cleaning, abrasive use, and woodworking;
(hh) Electric motors;
(ii) Storage tanks, reservoirs, transfer and
lubricating equipment used for ASTM grade distillate or residual fuels,
lubricants, and hydraulic fluids;
(jj) On-site storage tanks not subject to any
New Source Performance Standards (NSPS), including underground storage tanks
(UST), storing gasoline or diesel used exclusively for fueling of the
facility's fleet of vehicles;
(kk)
Natural gas, propane, and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) storage tanks and
transfer equipment;
(ll)
Pressurized tanks containing gaseous compounds;
(mm) Vacuum sheet stacker vents;
(nn) Emissions from wastewater discharges to
publicly owned treatment works (POTW) provided the source is authorized to
discharge to the POTW, not including on-site wastewater treatment and/or
holding facilities;
(oo) Log
ponds;
(pp) Stormwater settling
basins;
(qq) Fire suppression and
training;
(rr) Paved roads and
paved parking lots within an urban growth boundary;
(ss) Hazardous air pollutant emissions in
fugitive dust from paved and unpaved roads except for those sources that have
processes or activities that contribute to the deposition and entrainment of
hazardous air pollutants from surface soils;
(tt) Health, safety, and emergency response
activities;
(uu) Emergency
generators and pumps used only during loss of primary equipment or utility
service due to circumstances beyond the reasonable control of the owner or
operator, or to address a power emergency, provided that the aggregate
horsepower rating of all stationary emergency generator and pump engines is not
more than 3,000 horsepower. If the aggregate horsepower rating of all
stationary emergency generator and pump engines is more than 3,000 horsepower,
then no emergency generators and pumps at the source may be considered
categorically insignificant;
(vv)
Non-contact steam vents and leaks and safety and relief valves for boiler steam
distribution systems;
(ww)
Non-contact steam condensate flash tanks;
(xx) Non-contact steam vents on condensate
receivers, deaerators and similar equipment;
(yy) Boiler blowdown tanks;
(zz) Industrial cooling towers that do not
use chromium-based water treatment chemicals;
(aaa) Ash piles maintained in a wetted
condition and associated handling systems and activities;
(bbb) Uncontrolled oil/water separators in
effluent treatment systems, excluding systems with a throughput of more than
400,000 gallons per year of effluent located at the following sources:
(A) Petroleum refineries;
(B) Sources that perform petroleum refining
and re-refining of lubricating oils and greases including asphalt production by
distillation and the reprocessing of oils and/or solvents for fuels;
or
(C) Bulk gasoline plants, bulk
gasoline terminals, and pipeline facilities;
(ccc) Combustion source flame safety purging
on startup;
(ddd) Broke beaters,
pulp and repulping tanks, stock chests and pulp handling equipment, excluding
thickening equipment and repulpers;
(eee) Stock cleaning and pressurized pulp
washing, excluding open stock washing systems; and
(fff) White water storage tanks.
(24) "Certifying individual" means
the responsible person or official authorized by the owner or operator of a
source who certifies the accuracy of the emission statement.
(25) "Class I area" or "PSD Class I area"
means any Federal, State or Indian reservation land which is classified or
reclassified as a Class I area under OAR
340-204-0050 and
340-204-0060.
(26) "Class II area"
or "PSD Class II area' means any land which is classified or reclassified as a
Class II area under OAR
340-204-0050 and
340-204-0060.
(27) "Class III area" or "PSD Class III area'
means any land which is reclassified as a Class III area under OAR
340-204-0060.
(28) "Commence" or
"commencement" means that the owner or operator has obtained all necessary
preconstruction approvals required by the FCAA and either has:
(a) Begun, or caused to begin, a continuous
program of actual on-site construction of the source to be completed in a
reasonable time; or
(b) Entered
into binding agreements or contractual obligations, which cannot be canceled or
modified without substantial loss to the owner or operator, to undertake a
program of construction of the source to be completed in a reasonable
time.
(29) "Commission"
or "EQC" means Environmental Quality Commission.
(30) "Constant process rate" means the
average variation in process rate for the calendar year is not greater than
plus or minus ten percent of the average process rate.
(31) "Construction":
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b)
means any physical change including, but not limited to, fabrication, erection,
installation, demolition, or modification of a source or part of a
source;
(b) As used in OAR 340
division 224 means any physical change including, but not limited to,
fabrication, erection, installation, demolition, or modification of an
emissions unit, or change in the method of operation of a source which would
result in a change in actual emissions.
(32) "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.
(33)
"Continuous monitoring systems" means sampling and analysis, in a timed
sequence, using techniques which will adequately reflect actual emissions or
concentrations on a continuing basis as specified in the DEQ Continuous
Monitoring Manual, found in OAR
340-200-0035, and includes continuous emission
monitoring systems, continuous opacity monitoring system (COMS) and continuous
parameter monitoring systems.
(34)
"Control device" means equipment, other than inherent process equipment that is
used to destroy or remove a regulated pollutant 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 non-catalytic 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, e.g., the destruction of emissions achieved by
venting process emission streams to flares, boilers or process heaters. For
purposes of OAR
340-212-0200 through
340-212-0280, a control device does not
include passive control measures that act to prevent regulated pollutants from
forming, such as the use of seals, lids, or roofs to prevent the release of
regulated 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 regulated pollutant-specific emissions unit, then
that definition will be binding for purposes of OAR
340-212-0200 through
340-212-0280.
(35) "Control
efficiency" means the product of the capture and removal
efficiencies.
(36) "Criteria
pollutant" means any of the following regulated pollutants: nitrogen oxides,
volatile organic compounds, particulate matter, PM10, PM2.5, sulfur dioxide,
carbon monoxide, and lead.
(37)
"Data" means the results of any type of monitoring or method, including the
results of instrumental or non-instrumental 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.
(38) "Day" means a
24-hour period beginning at 12:00 a.m. midnight or a 24-hour period as
specified in a permit.
(39) "De
minimis emission level" means the level for the regulated pollutants listed
below:
(a) Greenhouse Gases (CO2e) = 2,756
tons per year.
(b) CO = 1 ton per
year.
(c) NOx = 1 ton per
year.
(d) SO2 = 1 ton per
year.
(e) VOC = 1 ton per
year.
(f) PM = 1 ton per
year.
(g) PM10 (except Medford
AQMA) = 1 ton per year.
(h) PM10
(Medford AQMA) = 0.5 ton per year and 5.0 pounds/day.
(i) Direct PM2.5 = 1 ton per year.
(j) Lead = 0.1 ton per year.
(k) Fluorides = 0.3 ton per year.
(l) Sulfuric Acid Mist = 0.7 ton per
year.
(m) Hydrogen Sulfide = 1 ton
per year.
(n) Total Reduced Sulfur
(including hydrogen sulfide) = 1 ton per year.
(o) Reduced Sulfur = 1 ton per
year.
(p) Municipal waste combustor
organics (dioxin and furans) = 0.0000005 ton per year.
(q) Municipal waste combustor metals = 1 ton
per year.
(r) Municipal waste
combustor acid gases = 1 ton per year.
(s) Municipal solid waste landfill gases
(measured as nonmethane organic compounds) = 1 ton per year
(t) Single HAP = 1 ton per year
(u) Combined HAP (aggregate) = 1 ton per
year
(40) "Department"
or "DEQ":
(a) Means Department of
Environmental Quality; except
(b)
As used in OAR 340 divisions 218 and 220 means Department of Environmental
Quality, or in the case of Lane County, LRAPA.
(41) "DEQ method [#]" means the sampling
method and protocols for measuring a regulated pollutant as described in the
DEQ Source Sampling Manual, found in OAR
340-200-0035.
(42) "Designated area" means an area that has
been designated as an attainment, unclassified, sustainment, nonattainment,
reattainment, or maintenance area under OAR 340 division 204 or applicable
provisions of the FCAA.
(43)
"Destruction efficiency" means removal efficiency.
(44) "Device" means any machine, equipment,
raw material, product, or byproduct at a source that produces or emits a
regulated pollutant.
(45) "Direct
PM2.5" has the meaning provided in the definition of PM2.5.
(46) "Director" means the Director of DEQ or
the Director's designee.
(47)
"Draft permit" means the version of an Oregon Title V Operating Permit for
which DEQ or LRAPA offers public participation under OAR
340-218-0210 or the
EPA and affected State review under 340-218-0230.
(48) "Dry standard cubic foot" means the
amount of gas that would occupy a volume of one cubic foot, if the gas were
free of uncombined water at standard conditions.
(49) "Effective date of the program" means
the date that the EPA approves the Oregon Title V Operating Permit program
submitted by DEQ on a full or interim basis. In case of a partial approval, the
"effective date of the program" for each portion of the program is the date of
the EPA approval of that portion.
(50) "Emergency" means any situation arising
from sudden and reasonably unforeseeable events beyond the control of the owner
or operator, including acts of God, which situation requires immediate
corrective action to restore normal operation, and that causes the source to
exceed a technology-based emission limitation under the permit, due to
unavoidable increases in emissions attributable to the emergency. An emergency
does not include noncompliance to the extent caused by improperly designed
equipment, lack of preventative maintenance, careless or improper operation, or
operator error.
(51) "Emission"
means a release into the atmosphere of any regulated pollutant or any air
contaminant.
(52) "Emission
estimate adjustment factor" or "EEAF" means an adjustment applied to an
emission factor to account for the relative inaccuracy of the emission
factor.
(53) "Emission factor"
means an estimate of the rate at which a regulated pollutant is released into
the atmosphere, as the result of some activity, divided by the rate of that
activity (e.g., production or process rate).
(54) "Emission limitation" or "Emission
standard" or "Emission limitation or standard" means:
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), a
requirement established by a state, local government, or the EPA which limits
the quantity, rate, or concentration of emissions of regulated pollutants on a
continuous basis, including any requirements which limit the level of opacity,
prescribe equipment, set fuel specifications, or prescribe operation or
maintenance procedures for a source to assure continuous emission
reduction.
(b) As used in OAR
340-212-0200 through
340-212-0280, 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, e.g., 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, e.g.,
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 340-212-0200 through 340-212-0280, an emission limitation or
standard does not include general operation requirements that an owner or
operator may be required to meet, such as requirements to obtain a permit,
operate and maintain sources using good air pollution control practices,
develop and maintain a malfunction abatement plan, keep records, submit
reports, or conduct monitoring.
(55) "Emission Reduction credit banking"
means to presently reserve, subject to requirements of OAR 340 division 268,
Emission Reduction Credits, emission reductions for use by the reserver or
assignee for future compliance with air pollution reduction
requirements.
(56) "Emission
reporting form" means a paper or electronic form developed by DEQ that must be
completed by the permittee to report calculated emissions, actual emissions, or
permitted emissions for interim emission fee assessment purposes.
(57) "Emissions unit" means any part or
activity of a source that emits or has the potential to emit any regulated
pollutant.
(a) A part of a source is any
machine, equipment, raw material, product, or byproduct that produces or emits
regulated pollutants. An activity is any process, operation, action, or
reaction, e.g., chemical, at a stationary source that emits regulated
pollutants. Except as described in subsection (d), parts and activities may be
grouped for purposes of defining an emissions unit if the following conditions
are met:
(A) The group used to define the
emissions unit may not include discrete parts or activities to which a distinct
emissions standard applies or for which different compliance demonstration
requirements apply; and
(B) The
emissions from the emissions unit are quantifiable.
(b) Emissions units may be defined on a
regulated pollutant by regulated pollutant basis where applicable.
(c) The term emissions unit is not meant to
alter or affect the definition of the term "unit" under Title IV of the
FCAA.
(d) Parts and activities
cannot be grouped for determining emissions increases from an emissions unit
under OAR 340 divisions 210 and 224, or for determining the applicability of
any New Source Performance Standard.
(58) "EPA" or "Administrator" means the
Administrator of the United States Environmental Protection Agency or the
Administrator's designee.
(59) "EPA
Method 9" means the method for Visual Determination of the Opacity of Emissions
From Stationary Sources described in 40 C.F.R. part
60 , Appendix
A-4.
(60) "Equivalent method" means
any method of sampling and analyzing for a regulated pollutant that has been
demonstrated to DEQ's satisfaction to have a consistent and quantitatively
known relationship to the reference method, under specified conditions. An
equivalent method used to meet an applicable federal requirement for which a
reference method is specified must be approved by EPA unless EPA has delegated
authority for the approval to DEQ.
(61) "Event" means excess emissions that
arise from the same condition and occur during a single calendar day or
continue into subsequent calendar days.
(62) "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.
(63) "Excess emissions"
means emissions in excess of a permit or permit attachment limit, in excess of
a risk limit under OAR chapter 340, division 245, or in violation of any
applicable air quality rule.
(64)
"Excursion" means a departure from an indicator range established for
monitoring under OAR
340-212-0200 through
340-212-0280 and
340-218-0050(3)(a),
consistent with any averaging period specified for averaging the results of the
monitoring.
(65) "Federal Land
Manager" means with respect to any lands in the United States, the Secretary of
the federal department with authority over such lands.
(66) "Federal Major Source" means any source
listed in subsections (a) or (d) below:
(a) A
source with potential to emit:
(A) 100 tons
per year or more of any individual regulated pollutant, excluding greenhouse
gases and hazardous air pollutants listed in OAR 340 division 244 if in a
source category listed in subsection (c), or
(B) 250 tons per year or more of any
individual regulated pollutant, excluding greenhouse gases and hazardous air
pollutants listed in OAR 340 division 244, if not in a source category listed
in subsection (c).
(b)
Calculations for determining a source's potential to emit for purposes of
subsections (a) and (d) must include the following:
(A) Fugitive emissions and insignificant
activity emissions; and
(B)
Increases or decreases due to a new or modified source.
(c) Source categories:
(A) Fossil fuel-fired steam electric plants
of more than 250 million BTU/hour heat input;
(B) Coal cleaning plants with thermal
dryers;
(C) Kraft pulp
mills;
(D) Portland cement
plants;
(E) Primary zinc
smelters;
(F) Iron and steel mill
plants;
(G) Primary aluminum ore
reduction plants;
(H) Primary
copper smelters;
(I) Municipal
incinerators capable of charging more than 50 tons of refuse per day;
(J) Hydrofluoric acid plants;
(K) Sulfuric acid plants;
(L) Nitric acid plants;
(M) Petroleum refineries;
(N) Lime plants;
(O) Phosphate rock processing
plants;
(P) Coke oven
batteries;
(Q) Sulfur recovery
plants;
(R) Carbon black plants,
furnace process;
(S) Primary lead
smelters;
(T) Fuel conversion
plants;
(U) Sintering
plants;
(V) Secondary metal
production plants;
(W) Chemical
process plants, excluding ethanol production facilities that produce ethanol by
natural fermentation included in NAICS codes 325193 or 312140;
(X) Fossil fuel fired boilers, or
combinations thereof, totaling more than 250 million BTU per hour heat
input;
(Y) Petroleum storage and
transfer units with a total storage capacity exceeding 300,000
barrels;
(Z) Taconite ore
processing plants;
(AA) Glass fiber
processing plants;
(BB) Charcoal
production plants.
(d) A
major stationary source as defined in part D of Title I of the FCAA, including:
(A) For ozone nonattainment areas, sources
with the potential to emit 100 tons per year or more of VOCs or oxides of
nitrogen in areas classified as "marginal" or "moderate," 50 tons per year or
more in areas classified as "serious," 25 tons per year or more in areas
classified as "severe," and 10 tons per year or more in areas classified as
"extreme"; except that the references in this paragraph to 100, 50, 25, and 10
tons per year of nitrogen oxides do not apply with respect to any source for
which the Administrator has made a finding, under section 182(f)(1) or (2) of
the FCAA, that requirements under section 182(f) of the FCAA do not
apply;
(B) For ozone transport
regions established under section 184 of the FCAA, sources with the potential
to emit 50 tons per year or more of VOCs;
(C) For carbon monoxide nonattainment areas
that are classified as "serious" and in which stationary sources contribute
significantly to carbon monoxide levels as determined under rules issued by the
Administrator, sources with the potential to emit 50 tons per year or more of
carbon monoxide.
(D) For PM10
nonattainment areas classified as "serious," sources with the potential to emit
70 tons per year or more of PM10.
(67) "Final permit" means the version of an
Oregon Title V Operating Permit issued by DEQ or LRAPA that has completed all
review procedures required by OAR
340-218-0120 through
340-218-0240.
(68) "Form" means a paper or electronic form
developed by DEQ.
(69) "Fuel
burning equipment" means equipment, other than internal combustion engines, the
principal purpose of which is to produce heat or power by indirect heat
transfer.
(70) "Fugitive
emissions":
(a) Except as used in subsection
(b), means emissions of any air contaminant which escape to the atmosphere from
any point or area that is not identifiable as a stack, vent, duct, or
equivalent opening.
(b) As used to
define a major Oregon Title V Operating Permit program source, means those
emissions which could not reasonably pass through a stack, chimney, vent, or
other functionally equivalent opening.
(71) "General permit":
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b),
means an Oregon Air Contaminant Discharge Permit established under OAR
340-216-0060;
(b) As used in OAR
340 division 218 means an Oregon Title V Operating Permit established under OAR
340-218-0090.
(72)
"Generic PSEL" means the levels for the regulated pollutants listed below:
(a) Greenhouse Gases (CO2e) = 74,000 tons per
year
(b) CO = 99 tons per
year
(c) NOx = 39 tons per
year
(d) SO2 = 39 tons per
year
(e) VOC = 39 tons per
year
(f) PM = 24 tons per
year
(g) PM10 (except Medford AQMA)
= 14 tons per year
(h) PM10
(Medford AQMA) = 4.5 tons per year and 49 pounds per day
(i) PM2.5 = 9 tons per year
(j) Lead = 0.5 tons per year
(k) Fluorides = 2 tons per year
(l) Sulfuric Acid Mist = 6 tons per
year
(m) Hydrogen Sulfide = 9 tons
per year
(n) Total Reduced Sulfur
(including hydrogen sulfide) = 9 tons per year
(o) Reduced Sulfur = 9 tons per
year
(p) Municipal waste combustor
organics (Dioxin and furans) = 0.0000030 tons per year
(q) Municipal waste combustor metals = 14
tons per year
(r) Municipal waste
combustor acid gases = 39 tons per year
(s) Municipal solid waste landfill gases
(measured as nonmethane organic compounds) = 49 tons per year
(t) Single HAP = 9 tons per year
(u) Combined HAPs (aggregate) = 24 tons per
year
(73)
(a) "Greenhouse gases" or "GHGs" means the
aggregate group of the following six gases: carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide,
methane, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, and sulfur hexafluoride. Each
gas is also individually a greenhouse gas.
(b) The definition of greenhouse gases in
subsection (a) of this section does not include, for purposes of division 216,
218, and 224, carbon dioxide emissions from the combustion or decomposition of
biomass except to the extent required by federal law.
(74) "Growth allowance" means an allocation
of some part of an airshed's capacity to accommodate future proposed sources
and modifications of sources.
(75)
"Hardboard" means a flat panel made from wood that has been reduced to basic
wood fibers and bonded by adhesive properties under pressure.
(76) "Hazardous Air Pollutant" or "HAP" means
an air contaminant listed by the EPA under section 112(b) of the FCAA or
determined by the EQC to cause, or reasonably be anticipated to cause, adverse
effects to human health or the environment.
(77) "Immediately" means as soon as possible
but in no case more than one hour after a source knew or should have known of
an excess emission period.
(78)
"Indian governing body" means the governing body of any tribe, band, or group
of Indians subject to the jurisdiction of the United States and recognized by
the United States as possessing power of self-government.
(79) "Indian reservation" means any federally
recognized reservation established by Treaty, Agreement, Executive Order, or
Act of Congress.
(80) "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 OAR
340-212-0200 through
340-212-0280, inherent process equipment is not considered a control
device.
(81) "Insignificant
activity" means an activity or emission that DEQ has designated as
categorically insignificant, or that meets the criteria of aggregate
insignificant emissions.
(82)
"Insignificant change" means an off-permit change defined under OAR
340-218-0140(2)(a) to either a significant or an insignificant activity which:
(a) Does not result in a re-designation from
an insignificant to a significant activity;
(b) Does not invoke an applicable requirement
not included in the permit; and
(c)
Does not result in emission of regulated pollutants not regulated by the
source's permit.
(83)
"Internal combustion engine" means stationary gas turbines and reciprocating
internal combustion engines.
(84)
"Late payment" means a fee payment which is postmarked after the due
date.
(85) "Liquefied petroleum
gas" has the meaning given by the American Society for Testing and Materials in
ASTM D1835-82, "Standard Specification for Liquid Petroleum Gases."
(86) "Lowest Achievable Emission Rate" or
"LAER" means that rate of emissions which reflects: the most stringent emission
limitation which is contained in the implementation plan of any state for such
class or category of source, unless the owner or operator of the proposed
source demonstrates that such limitations are not achievable; or the most
stringent emission limitation which is achieved in practice by such class or
category of source, whichever is more stringent. The application of this term
cannot permit a proposed new or modified source to emit any air contaminant in
excess of the amount allowable under applicable New Source Performance
Standards (NSPS) or standards for hazardous air pollutants.
(87) "Maintenance area" means any area that
was formerly nonattainment for a criteria pollutant but has since met the
ambient air quality standard, and EPA has approved a maintenance plan to comply
with the standards under
40 C.F.R.
51.110. Maintenance areas are designated by
the EQC according to division 204.
(88) "Maintenance pollutant" means a
regulated pollutant for which a maintenance area was formerly designated a
nonattainment area.
(89) "Major
Modification" means any physical change or change in the method of operation of
a source that results in satisfying the requirements of OAR
340-224-0025.
(91) "Major source":
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of
this section, means a source that emits, or has the potential to emit, any
regulated air pollutant at a Significant Emission Rate. The fugitive emissions
and insignificant activity emissions of a stationary source are considered in
determining whether it is a major source. Potential to emit calculations must
include emission increases due to a new or modified source and may include
emission decreases.
(b) As used in
OAR 340 division 210, Stationary Source Notification Requirements, OAR 340
division 218, Oregon Title V Operating Permits, OAR 340 division 220, Oregon
Title V Operating Permit Fees, 340-216-0066, Standard ACDPs, and OAR 340
division 236, Emission Standards for Specific Industries, means any stationary
source or any group of stationary sources that are located on one or more
contiguous or adjacent properties and are under common control of the same
person or persons under common control belonging to a single major industrial
grouping or supporting the major industrial group and that is described in
paragraphs (A), (B), or (C). For the purposes of this subsection, a stationary
source or group of stationary sources is considered part of a single industrial
grouping if all of the regulated pollutant emitting activities at such source
or group of sources on contiguous or adjacent properties belong to the same
major group (i.e., all have the same two-digit code) as described in the
Standard Industrial Classification Manual (U.S. Office of Management and
Budget, 1987) or support the major industrial group.
(A) A major source of hazardous air
pollutants, which means:
(i) For hazardous air
pollutants other than radionuclides, any stationary source or group of
stationary sources located within a contiguous area and under common control
that emits or has the potential to emit, in the aggregate, 10 tons per year or
more of any hazardous air pollutants that has been listed under OAR
340-244-0040; 25 tons per year or more of any combination of such hazardous air
pollutants, or such lesser quantity as the Administrator may establish by rule.
Emissions from any oil or gas exploration or production well, along with its
associated equipment, and emissions from any pipeline compressor or pump
station will not be aggregated with emissions from other similar units, whether
or not such units are in a contiguous area or under common control, to
determine whether such units or stations are major sources; or
(ii) For radionuclides, "major source" will
have the meaning specified by the Administrator by rule.
(B) A major stationary source of regulated
pollutants, as defined in section 302 of the FCAA, that directly emits or has
the potential to emit 100 tons per year or more of any regulated pollutant,
except greenhouse gases, including any major source of fugitive emissions of
any such regulated pollutant. The fugitive emissions of a stationary source are
not considered in determining whether it is a major stationary source for the
purposes of section 302(j) of the FCAA, unless the source belongs to one of the
following categories of stationary sources:
(i) Coal cleaning plants (with thermal
dryers);
(ii) Kraft pulp
mills;
(iii) Portland cement
plants;
(iv) Primary zinc
smelters;
(v) Iron and steel
mills;
(vi) Primary aluminum ore
reduction plants;
(vii) Primary
copper smelters;
(viii) Municipal
incinerators capable of charging more than 50 tons of refuse per day;
(ix) Hydrofluoric, sulfuric, or nitric acid
plants;
(x) Petroleum
refineries;
(xi) Lime
plants;
(xii) Phosphate rock
processing plants;
(xiii) Coke oven
batteries;
(xiv) Sulfur recovery
plants;
(xv) Carbon black plants
(furnace process);
(xvi) Primary
lead smelters;
(xvii) Fuel
conversion plants;
(xviii)
Sintering plants;
(xix) Secondary
metal production plants;
(xx)
Chemical process plants, excluding ethanol production facilities that produce
ethanol by natural fermentation included in NAICS codes 325193 or
312140;
(xxi) Fossil-fuel boilers,
or combination thereof, totaling more than 250 million British thermal units
per hour heat input;
(xxii)
Petroleum storage and transfer units with a total storage capacity exceeding
300,000 barrels;
(xxiii) Taconite
ore processing plants;
(xxiv) Glass
fiber processing plants;
(xxv)
Charcoal production plants;
(xxvi)
Fossil-fuel-fired steam electric plants of more than 250 million British
thermal units per hour heat input; or
(xxvii) Any other stationary source category,
that as of August 7, 1980 is being regulated under section 111 or 112 of the
FCAA.
(C) From July 1,
2011 through November 6, 2014, a major stationary source of regulated
pollutants, as defined by Section 302 of the FCAA, that directly emits or has
the potential to emit 100 tons per year or more of greenhouse gases and
directly emits or has the potential to emit 100,000 tons per year or more CO2e,
including fugitive emissions.
(92) "Material balance" means a procedure for
determining emissions based on the difference in the amount of material added
to a process and the amount consumed and/or recovered from a process.
(93) "Modification," except as used in the
terms "major modification" "permit modification" and "Title I modification,"
means any physical change to, or change in the method of operation of, a source
or part of a source that results in an increase in the source or part of the
source's potential to emit any regulated pollutant on an hourly basis.
Modifications do not include the following:
(a) Increases in hours of operation or
production rates that do not involve a physical change or change in the method
of operation;
(b) Changes in the
method of operation due to using an alternative fuel or raw material that the
source or part of a source was physically capable of accommodating during the
baseline period; and
(c) Routine
maintenance, repair and like-for-like replacement of components unless they
increase the expected life of the source or part of a source by using component
upgrades that would not otherwise be necessary for the source or part of a
source to function.
(94)
"Monitoring" means any form of collecting data on a routine basis to determine
or otherwise assess compliance with emission limitations or standards.
Monitoring may include record keeping if the 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. Monitoring may include conducting compliance method
tests, such as the procedures in appendix A to 40 C.F.R. part
60 , on a routine
periodic basis. Requirements to conduct such tests on a one-time basis, or at
such times as a regulatory authority may require on a non-regular basis, are
not considered monitoring requirements for purposes of this definition.
Monitoring may include one or more than one of the following data collection
techniques as 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 (e.g., mass balance or stoichiometric calculations).
(d) Maintaining and analyzing records of fuel
or raw materials usage.
(e)
Recording results of a program or protocol to conduct specific operation and
maintenance procedures.
(f)
Verifying emissions, process parameters, capture system parameters, or control
device parameters using portable or in situ measurement devices.
(g) Visible emission observations and
recording.
(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.
(95) "Natural
gas" means a naturally occurring mixture of hydrocarbon and nonhydrocarbon
gases found in geologic formations beneath the earth's surface, of which the
principal component is methane.
(96) "Netting basis" means an emission rate
determined as specified in OAR
340-222-0046.
(97) "Nitrogen oxides" or "NOx" means all
oxides of nitrogen except nitrous oxide.
(98) "Nonattainment area" means a
geographical area of the state, as designated by the EQC or the EPA, that
exceeds any state or federal primary or secondary ambient air quality standard.
Nonattainment areas are designated by the EQC according to division
204.
(99) "Nonattainment pollutant"
means a regulated pollutant for which an area is designated a nonattainment
area. Nonattainment areas are designated by the EQC according to division
204.
(100) "Normal source
operation" means operation that does not include such conditions as forced fuel
substitution, equipment malfunction, or highly abnormal market
conditions.
(101) "Odor" means that
property of an air contaminant that affects the sense of smell.
(102) "Offset" means an equivalent or greater
emission reduction that is required before allowing an emission increase from a
source that is subject to Major NSR or State NSR.
(103) "Opacity" means the degree to which
emissions, excluding uncombined water, reduce the transmission of light and
obscure the view of an object in the background as measured by EPA Method 9 or
other method, as specified in each applicable rule.
(104) "Oregon Title V operating permit" or
"Title V permit" means written authorization issued, renewed, amended, or
revised under OAR 340 division 218.
(105) "Oregon Title V operating permit
program" or "Title V program" means the Oregon program described in OAR 340
division 218 and approved by the Administrator under 40 C.F.R. part
70.
(106) "Oregon Title V operating
permit program source" or "Title V source" means any source subject to the
permitting requirements, OAR 340 division 218.
(107) "Ozone precursor" means nitrogen oxides
and volatile organic compounds.
(108) "Ozone season" means the contiguous 3
month period during which ozone exceedances typically occur, i.e., June, July,
and August.
(109) "Particleboard"
means matformed flat panels consisting of wood particles bonded together with
synthetic resin or other suitable binder.
(110) "Particulate matter" means all finely
divided solid or liquid material, other than uncombined water, emitted to the
ambient air as measured by the test method specified in each applicable rule,
or where not specified by rule, in the permit.
(111) "Permit" means an Air Contaminant
Discharge Permit or an Oregon Title V Operating Permit, permit attachment and
any amendments or modifications thereof.
(112) "Permit modification" means a permit
revision that meets the applicable requirements of OAR 340 division 216, OAR
340 division 224, or OAR
340-218-0160 through
340-218-0180.
(113) "Permit revision" means any permit
modification or administrative permit amendment.
(114) "Permitted emissions" as used in OAR
340 division 220 means each regulated pollutant portion of the PSEL, as
identified in an ACDP, Oregon Title V Operating Permit, review report, or by
DEQ under OAR
340-220-0090.
(115)
"Permittee" means the owner or operator of a source, authorized to emit
regulated pollutants under an ACDP or Oregon Title V Operating
Permit.
(116) "Person" means
individuals, corporations, associations, firms, partnerships, joint stock
companies, public and municipal corporations, political subdivisions, the State
of Oregon and any agencies thereof, and the federal government and any agencies
thereof.
(117) "Plant Site Emission
Limit" or "PSEL" means the total mass emissions per unit time of an individual
regulated pollutant specified in a permit for a source. The PSEL for a major
source may consist of more than one permitted emission for purposes of Oregon
Title V Operating Permit Fees in OAR 340 division 220.
(118) "Plywood" means a flat panel built
generally of an odd number of thin sheets of veneers of wood in which the grain
direction of each ply or layer is at right angles to the one adjacent to
it.
(119) "PM10":
(a) When used in the context of emissions,
means finely divided solid or liquid material, including condensable
particulate, other than uncombined water, with an aerodynamic diameter less
than or equal to a nominal 10 micrometers, emitted to the ambient air as
measured by the test method specified in each applicable rule or, where not
specified by rule, in each individual permit;
(b) When used in the context of ambient
concentration, means airborne finely divided solid or liquid material with an
aerodynamic diameter less than or equal to a nominal 10 micrometers as measured
under 40 C.F.R. part
50 , Appendix J or an equivalent method designated under
40 C.F.R. part
53 .
(120) "PM2.5":
(a) When used in the context of direct PM2.5
emissions, means finely divided solid or liquid material, including condensable
particulate, other than uncombined water, with an aerodynamic diameter less
than or equal to a nominal 2.5 micrometers, emitted to the ambient air as
measured by the test method specified in each applicable rule or, where not
specified by rule, in each individual permit.
(b) When used in the context of PM2.5
precursor emissions, means sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx)
emitted to the ambient air as measured by the test method specified in each
applicable rule or, where not specified by rule, in each individual
permit.
(c) When used in the
context of ambient concentration, means airborne finely divided solid or liquid
material with an aerodynamic diameter less than or equal to a nominal 2.5
micrometers as measured under 40 C.F.R. part
50, Appendix L, or an equivalent
method designated under 40 C.F.R. part
53 .
(121) "PM2.5 fraction" means the fraction of
PM2.5 in relation to PM10 for each emissions unit that is included in the
netting basis and PSEL.
(122)
"Pollutant-specific emissions unit" means an emissions unit considered
separately with respect to each regulated pollutant.
(123) "Portable" means designed and capable
of being carried or moved from one location to another. Indicia of portability
include, but are not limited to, wheels, skids, carrying handles, dolly,
trailer, or platform.
(124)
"Potential to emit" or "PTE" means the lesser of:
(a) The regulated pollutant emissions
capacity of a stationary source; or
(b) The maximum allowable regulated pollutant
emissions taking into consideration any physical or operational limitation,
including use of control devices and restrictions on hours of operation or on
the type or amount of material combusted, stored, or processed, if the
limitation is enforceable by the Administrator.
(c) This definition does not alter or affect
the use of this term for any other purposes under the FCAA or the term
"capacity factor" as used in Title IV of the FCAA and the regulations
promulgated thereunder. Secondary emissions are not considered in determining
the potential to emit.
(125) "ppm" means parts per million by volume
unless otherwise specified in the applicable rule or an individual permit. It
is a dimensionless unit of measurement for gases that expresses the ratio of
the volume of one component gas to the volume of the entire sample mixture of
gases.
(126) "Predictive emission
monitoring system" or "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.
(127) "Press/cooling
vent" means any opening through which particulate and gaseous emissions from
plywood, particleboard, or hardboard manufacturing are exhausted, either by
natural draft or powered fan, from the building housing the process. Such
openings are generally located immediately above the board press, board
unloader, or board cooling area.
(128) "Process upset" means a failure or
malfunction of a production process or system to operate in a normal and usual
manner.
(129) "Proposed permit"
means the version of an Oregon Title V Operating Permit that DEQ or LRAPA
proposes to issue and forwards to the Administrator for review in compliance
with OAR
340-218-0230.
(130)
"Reattainment area" means an area that is designated as nonattainment and has
three consecutive years of monitoring data that shows the area is meeting the
ambient air quality standard for the regulated pollutant for which the area was
designated a nonattainment area, but a formal redesignation by EPA has not yet
been approved. Reattainment areas are designated by the EQC according to
division 204.
(131) "Reattainment
pollutant" means a regulated pollutant for which an area is designated a
reattainment area.
(132) "Reference
method" means any method of sampling and analyzing for a regulated pollutant as
specified in 40 C.F.R. part
52,
60,
61 or
63.
(133) "Regional agency" means Lane Regional
Air Protection Agency.
(134)
"Regulated air pollutant" or "Regulated pollutant":
(a) Except as provided in subsections (b),
(c) and (d), means:
(A) Nitrogen oxides or
any VOCs;
(B) Any pollutant for
which an ambient air quality standard has been promulgated, including any
precursors to such pollutants;
(C)
Any pollutant that is subject to any standard promulgated under section 111 of
the FCAA;
(D) Any Class I or II
substance subject to a standard promulgated under or established by Title VI of
the FCAA;
(F) Greenhouse gases; and
(G) Toxic Air Contaminants.
(b) As used in OAR 340 division
220, Oregon Title V Operating Permit Fees, regulated pollutant means
particulate matter, volatile organic compounds, oxides of nitrogen and sulfur
dioxide.
(c) As used in OAR 340
division 222, Plant Site Emission Limits and division 224, New Source Review,
regulated pollutant does not include any pollutant listed in OAR 340 divisions
244 and 246.
(d) As used in OAR
340 division 202 Ambient Air Quality Standards And PSD Increments through
division 208 Visible Emissions and Nuisance Requirements; division 215
Greenhouse Reporting Requirements; division 222 Stationary Source Plant Site
Emission Limits through division 244 Oregon Federal Hazardous Air Pollutant
Program; and division 248 Asbestos Requirements through division 268 Emission
Reduction Credits; regulated pollutant means only the air contaminants listed
under paragraphs (a)(A) through (F).
(135) "Removal efficiency" means the
performance of an air pollution control device in terms of the ratio of the
amount of the regulated pollutant removed from the airstream to the total
amount of regulated pollutant that enters the air pollution control
device.
(136) "Renewal" means the
process by which a permit is reissued at the end of its term.
(137) "Responsible official" means one of the
following:
(a) For a corporation: a president,
secretary, treasurer, or vice-president of the corporation in charge of a
principal business function, or any other person who performs similar policy or
decision-making functions for the corporation, or a duly authorized
representative of such person if the representative is responsible for the
overall operation of one or more manufacturing, production, or operating
facilities applying for or subject to a permit and either:
(A) The facilities employ more than 250
persons or have gross annual sales or expenditures exceeding $25 million (in
second quarter 1980 dollars); or
(B) The delegation of authority to such
representative is approved in advance by DEQ or LRAPA.
(b) For a partnership or sole proprietorship:
a general partner or the proprietor, respectively;
(c) For a municipality, State, Federal, or
other public agency: either a principal executive officer or ranking elected
official. For the purposes of this division, a principal executive officer of a
Federal agency includes the chief executive officer having responsibility for
the overall operations of a principal geographic unit of EPA (e.g., a Regional
Administrator of the EPA); or
(d)
For affected sources:
(A) The designated
representative in so far as actions, standards, requirements, or prohibitions
under Title IV of the FCAA or the regulations promulgated there under are
concerned; and
(B) The designated
representative for any other purposes under the Oregon Title V Operating Permit
program.
(138) "Secondary emissions" means emissions
that are a result of the construction and/or operation of a source or
modification, but that do not come from the source itself. Secondary emissions
must be specific, well defined, quantifiable, and impact the same general area
as the source associated with the secondary emissions. Secondary emissions may
include, but are not limited to:
(a) Emissions
from ships and trains coming to or from a facility;
(b) Emissions from off-site support
facilities that would be constructed or would otherwise increase emissions as a
result of the construction or modification of a source.
(139) "Section 111" means section 111 of the
FCAA,
42 U.S.C.
§
7411, which includes Standards of
Performance for New Stationary Sources (NSPS).
(140) "Section 111(d)" means subsection
111(d) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C.
§
7411(d), which
requires states to submit to the EPA plans that establish standards of
performance for existing sources and provides for implementing and enforcing
such standards.
(141) "Section 112"
means section 112 of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7412, which contains regulations for
Hazardous Air Pollutants.
(142)
"Section 112(b)" means subsection 112(b) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7412(b), which includes the
list of hazardous air pollutants to be regulated.
(143) "Section 112(d)" means subsection
112(d) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7412(d), which directs the
EPA to establish emission standards for sources of hazardous air pollutants.
This section also defines the criteria to be used by the EPA when establishing
the emission standards.
(144)
"Section 112(e)" means subsection 112(e) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7412(e), which directs the
EPA to establish and promulgate emissions standards for categories and
subcategories of sources that emit hazardous air pollutants.
(145) "Section 112(r)(7)" means subsection
112(r)(7) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7412(r)(7), which requires
the EPA to promulgate regulations for the prevention of accidental releases and
requires owners or operators to prepare risk management plans.
(146) "Section 114(a)(3)" means subsection
114(a)(3) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7414(a)(3), which requires
enhanced monitoring and submission of compliance certifications for major
sources.
(147) "Section 129" means
section 129 of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7429, which requires the EPA to establish
emission standards and other requirements for solid waste incineration
units.
(148) "Section 129(e)" means
subsection 129(e) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7429(e), which requires
solid waste incineration units to obtain Oregon Title V Operating
Permits.
(149) "Section 182(f)"
means subsection 182(f) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7511a(f), which requires
states to include plan provisions in the SIP for NOx in ozone nonattainment
areas.
(150) "Section 182(f)(1)"
means subsection 182(f)(1) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7511a(f)(1), which requires
states to apply those plan provisions developed for major VOC sources and major
NOx sources in ozone nonattainment areas.
(151) "Section 183(e)" means subsection
183(e) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7511b(e), which requires the
EPA to study and develop regulations for the control of certain VOC sources
under federal ozone measures.
(152)
"Section 183(f)" means subsection 183(f) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7511b(f), which requires the
EPA to develop regulations pertaining to tank vessels under federal ozone
measures.
(153) "Section 184" means
section 184 of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7511c, which contains regulations for the
control of interstate ozone air pollution.
(154) "Section 302" means section 302 of the
FCAA,
42
U.S.C. §
7602, which contains
definitions for general and administrative purposes in the FCAA.
(155) "Section 302(j)" means subsection
302(j) of the FCAA,
42
U.S.C. §
7602(j), which
contains definitions of "major stationary source" and "major emitting
facility."
(156) "Section 328"
means section 328 of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C.
§
7627, which contains regulations for
air pollution from outer continental shelf activities.
(157) "Section 408(a)" means subsection
408(a) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7651g(a), which contains
regulations for the Title IV permit program.
(158) "Section 502(b)(10) change" means a
change which contravenes an express permit term but is not a change that:
(a) Would violate applicable
requirements;
(b) Would contravene
federally enforceable permit terms and conditions that are monitoring,
recordkeeping, reporting, or compliance certification requirements;
or
(c) Is a FCAA Title I
modification.
(159)
"Section 504(b)" means subsection 504(b) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. §
7661c(b), which states that
the EPA can prescribe by rule procedures and methods for determining compliance
and for monitoring.
(160) "Section
504(e)" means subsection 504(e) of the FCAA,
42 U.S.C. § 761c(e), which
contains regulations for permit requirements for temporary sources.
(161) "Significant emission rate" or "SER,"
except as provided in subsections (v) and (w), means an emission rate equal to
or greater than the rates specified for the regulated pollutants below:
(a) Greenhouse gases (CO2e) = 75,000 tons per
year
(b) Carbon monoxide = 100 tons
per year except in a serious nonattainment area = 50 tons per year, provided
DEQ has determined that stationary sources contribute significantly to carbon
monoxide levels in that area.
(c)
Nitrogen oxides (NOX) = 40 tons per year.
(d) Particulate matter = 25 tons per
year.
(e) PM10 = 15 tons per
year.
(f) Direct PM2.5 = 10 tons
per year.
(g) PM2.5 precursors (SO2
or NOx) = 40 tons per year.
(h)
Sulfur dioxide (SO2) = 40 tons per year.
(i) Ozone precursors (VOC or NOx) = 40 tons
per year except:
(I) In a serious or severe
ozone nonattainment area = 25 tons per year.
(II) In an extreme ozone nonattainment area =
any emissions increase.
(j) Lead = 0.6 tons per year.
(k) Fluorides = 3 tons per year.
(l) Sulfuric acid mist = 7 tons per
year.
(m) Hydrogen sulfide = 10
tons per year.
(n) Total reduced
sulfur (including hydrogen sulfide) = 10 tons per year.
(o) Reduced sulfur compounds (including
hydrogen sulfide) = 10 tons per year.
(p) Municipal waste combustor organics
(measured as total tetra- through octa- chlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and
dibenzofurans) = 0.0000035 tons per year.
(q) Municipal waste combustor metals
(measured as particulate matter) = 15 tons per year.
(r) Municipal waste combustor acid gases
(measured as sulfur dioxide and hydrogen chloride) = 40 tons per
year.
(s) Municipal solid waste
landfill emissions (measured as nonmethane organic compounds) = 50 tons per
year.
(t) Ozone depleting
substances in aggregate = 100 tons per year.
(u) For the Medford-Ashland Air Quality
Maintenance Area, the SER for PM10 is defined as 5 tons per year on an annual
basis and 50.0 pounds per day on a daily basis.
(v) For regulated pollutants not listed in
subsections (a) through (u), the SER is zero unless DEQ determines the rate
that constitutes a SER.
(w) Any new
source or modification with an emissions increase less than the rates specified
above and that is located within 10 kilometers of a Class I area, and would
have an impact on such area equal to or greater than 1 ug/m3 (24 hour average)
is emitting at a SER. This subsection does not apply to greenhouse gas
emissions.
(162)
"Significant impact" means an additional ambient air quality concentration
equal to or greater than the significant impact level. For sources of VOC or
NOx, a source has a significant impact if it is located within the ozone impact
distance defined in OAR 340 division 224.
(163) "Significant impact level" or "SIL"
means the ambient air quality concentrations listed below. The threshold
concentrations listed below are used for comparison against the ambient air
quality standards and PSD increments established under OAR 340 division 202,
but do not apply for protecting air quality related values, including
visibility.
(a) For Class I areas:
(A) PM2.5:
(i) Annual = 0.06 g/m3.
(ii) 24-hour = 0.07 g/m3.
(B) PM10:
(i) Annual = 0.20 g/m3.
(ii) 24-hour = 0.30 g/m3.
(C) Sulfur dioxide:
(i) Annual = 0.10 g/m3.
(ii) 24-hour = 0.20 g/m3.
(iii) 3-hour = 1.0 g/m3.
(D) Nitrogen dioxide: annual = 0.10
g/m3.
(b) For Class II
areas:
(A) PM2.5:
(i) Annual = 0.3 g/m3.
(ii) 24-hour = 1.2 g/m3.
(B) PM10:
(i) Annual = 0.20 g/m3.
(ii) 24-hour = 1.0 g/m3.
(C) Sulfur dioxide:
(i) Annual = 1.0 g/m3.
(ii) 24-hour = 5.0 g/m3.
(iii) 3-hour =25.0 g/m3.
(iv) 1-hour = 8.0 g/m3.
(D) Nitrogen dioxide:
(i) Annual =1.0 g/m3.
(ii) 1-hour = 8.0 g/m3.
(E) Carbon monoxide:
(i) 8-hour = 0.5 mg/m3.
(ii) 1-hour = 2.0 mg/m3.
(c) For Class III areas:
(A) PM2.5:
(i) Annual = 0.3 g/m3.
(ii) 24-hour = 1.2 g/m3.
(B) PM10:
(i) Annual = 0.20 g/m3.
(ii) 24-hour = 1.0 g/m3.
(C) Sulfur dioxide:
(i) Annual = 1.0 g/m3.
(ii) 24-hour = 5.0 g/m3.
(iii) 3-hour = 25.0 g/m3.
(D) Nitrogen dioxide: annual = 1.0
g/m3
(E) Carbon monoxide:
(i) 8-hour = 0.5 mg/m3.
(ii) 1-hour = 2.0 mg/m3.
(164) "Significant
impairment" occurs when DEQ determines that visibility impairment interferes
with the management, protection, preservation, or enjoyment of the visual
experience within a Class I area. DEQ will make this determination on a
case-by-case basis after considering the recommendations of the Federal Land
Manager and the geographic extent, intensity, duration, frequency, and time of
visibility impairment. These factors will be considered along with visitor use
of the Class I areas, and the frequency and occurrence of natural conditions
that reduce visibility.
(165)
"Small scale local energy project" means:
(a)
A system, mechanism or series of mechanisms located primarily in Oregon that
directly or indirectly uses or enables the use of, by the owner or operator,
renewable resources including, but not limited to, solar, wind, geothermal,
biomass, waste heat or water resources to produce energy, including heat,
electricity and substitute fuels, to meet a local community or regional energy
need in this state;
(b) A system,
mechanism or series of mechanisms located primarily in Oregon or providing
substantial benefits to Oregon that directly or indirectly conserves energy or
enables the conservation of energy by the owner or operator, including energy
used in transportation;
(c) A
recycling project;
(d) An
alternative fuel project;
(e) An
improvement that increases the production or efficiency, or extends the
operating life, of a system, mechanism, series of mechanisms or project
otherwise described in this section of this rule, including but not limited to
restarting a dormant project;
(f) A
system, mechanism or series of mechanisms installed in a facility or portions
of a facility that directly or indirectly reduces the amount of energy needed
for the construction and operation of the facility and that meets the
sustainable building practices standard established by the State Department of
Energy by rule; or
(g) A project
described in subsections (a) to (f), whether or not the existing project was
originally financed under ORS 470, together with any refinancing necessary to
remove prior liens or encumbrances against the existing project.
(h) A project described in subsections (a) to
(g) that conserves energy or produces energy by generation or by processing or
collection of a renewable resource.
(166) "Source" means any building, structure,
facility, installation or combination thereof that emits or is capable of
emitting air contaminants to the atmosphere, is located on one or more
contiguous or adjacent properties and is owned or operated by the same person
or by persons under common control. The term includes all air contaminant
emitting activities that belong to a single major industrial group, i.e., that
have the same two-digit code, as described in the Standard Industrial
Classification Manual, U.S. Office of Management and Budget, 1987, or that
support the major industrial group.
(167) "Source category":
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b),
means all the regulated pollutant emitting activities that belong to the same
industrial grouping, i.e., that have the same two-digit code, as described in
the Standard Industrial Classification Manual, U.S. Office of Management and
Budget, 1987.
(b) As used in OAR
340 division 220, Oregon Title V Operating Permit Fees, means a group of major
sources that DEQ determines are using similar raw materials and have equivalent
process controls and pollution control device.
(168) "Source test" means the average of at
least three test runs conducted under the DEQ Source Sampling Manual found in
340-200-0035.
(169) "Standard
conditions" means a temperature of 68° Fahrenheit (20° Celsius) and a
pressure of 14.7 pounds per square inch absolute (1.03 Kilograms per square
centimeter).
(170) "Startup" and
"shutdown" means that time during which a source or control device is brought
into normal operation or normal operation is terminated,
respectively.
(171) "State
Implementation Plan" or "SIP" means the State of Oregon Clean Air Act
Implementation Plan as adopted by the EQC under OAR
340-200-0040 and approved
by EPA.
(173)
"Stationary source" means any building, structure, facility, or installation at
a source that emits or may emit any regulated pollutant. Stationary source
includes portable sources that are required to have permits under OAR 340
division 216.
(174) "Substantial
underpayment" means the lesser of 10 percent of the total interim emission fee
for the major source or five hundred dollars.
(175) "Sustainment area" means a geographical
area of the state for which DEQ has ambient air quality monitoring data that
shows an attainment or unclassified area could become a nonattainment area but
a formal redesignation by EPA has not yet been approved. The presumptive
geographic boundary of a sustainment area is the applicable urban growth
boundary in effect on the date this rule was last approved by the EQC, unless
superseded by rule. Sustainment areas are designated by the EQC according to
division 204.
(176) "Sustainment
pollutant" means a regulated pollutant for which an area is designated a
sustainment area.
(177) "Synthetic
minor source" means a source that would be classified as a major source under
OAR
340-200-0020, but for limits on its potential to emit regulated pollutants
contained in an ACDP or Oregon Title V permit issued by DEQ.
(178) "Title I modification" means one of the
following modifications under Title I of the FCAA:
(a) A major modification subject to OAR
340-224-0050, Requirements for Sources in Nonattainment Areas or OAR
340-224-0055, Requirements for Sources in Reattainment Areas;
(b) A major modification subject to OAR
340-224-0060, Requirements for Sources in Maintenance Areas;
(c) A major modification subject to OAR
340-224-0070, Prevention of Significant Deterioration Requirements for Sources
in Attainment or Unclassified Areas or 340-224-0045 Requirements for Sources in
Sustainment Areas;
(d) A
modification that is subject to a New Source Performance Standard under Section
111 of the FCAA; or,
(e) A
modification under Section 112 of the FCAA.
(179) "Total reduced sulfur" or "TRS" means
the sum of the sulfur compounds hydrogen sulfide, methyl mercaptan, dimethyl
sulfide, dimethyl disulfide, and any other organic sulfides present expressed
as hydrogen sulfide (H2S).
(180)
"Toxic air contaminant" means an air pollutant that has been determined by the
EQC to cause, or reasonably be anticipated to cause, adverse effects to human
health and is listed in OAR
340-247-8010 Table 1.
(181) "Type A State NSR" means State NSR as
specified in OAR
340-224-0010(2)(a).
(182) "Type B State NSR" means State NSR that
is not Type A State NSR.
(183)
"Typically Achievable Control Technology" or "TACT" means the emission limit
established on a case-by-case basis for a criteria pollutant from a particular
emissions unit under OAR
340-226-0130.
(184) "Unassigned emissions" means the amount
of emissions that are in excess of the PSEL but less than the netting
basis.
(185) "Unavoidable" or
"could not be avoided" means events that are not caused entirely or in part by
design, operation, maintenance, or any other preventable condition in either
process or control device.
(186)
"Unclassified area" or "attainment area" means an area that has not otherwise
been designated by EPA as nonattainment with ambient air quality standards for
a particular regulated pollutant. Attainment areas or unclassified areas may
also be referred to as sustainment or maintenance areas as designated in OAR
340 division 204. Any particular location may be part of an attainment area or
unclassified area for one regulated pollutant while also being in a different
type of designated area for another regulated pollutant.
(187) "Upset" or "Breakdown" means any
failure or malfunction of any pollution control device or operating equipment
that may cause excess emissions.
(188) "Veneer" means a single flat panel of
wood not exceeding 1/4 inch in thickness formed by slicing or peeling from a
log.
(189) "Veneer dryer" means
equipment in which veneer is dried.
(190) "Visibility impairment" means any
humanly perceptible change in visual range, contrast or coloration from that
which existed under natural conditions. Natural conditions include fog, clouds,
windblown dust, rain, sand, naturally ignited wildfires, and natural
aerosols.
(191) "Volatile organic
compounds" or "VOC" means any compound of carbon, excluding carbon monoxide,
carbon dioxide, carbonic acid, metallic carbides or carbonates, and ammonium
carbonate, that participates in atmospheric photochemical reactions.
(a) This includes any such organic compound
other than the following, which have been determined to have negligible
photochemical reactivity:
(A)
Methane;
(B) Ethane;
(C) Methylene chloride
(dichloromethane);
(D)
1,1,1-trichloroethane (methyl chloroform);
(E) 1,1,2-trichloro-1,2,2-trifluoroethane
(CFC-113);
(F)
Trichlorofluoromethane (CFC-11);
(G) Dichlorodifluoromethane
(CFC-12);
(H) Chlorodifluoromethane
(HCFC-22);
(I) Trifluoromethane
(HFC-23);
(J) 1,2-dichloro
1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethane (CFC-114);
(K) Chloropentafluoroethane
(CFC-115);
(L) 1,1,1-trifluoro
2,2-dichloroethane (HCFC-123);
(M)
1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane (HFC-134a);
(N) 1,1-dichloro 1-fluoroethane
(HCFC-141b);
(O) 1-chloro
1,1-difluoroethane (HCFC-142b);
(P)
2-chloro-1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane (HCFC-124);
(Q) Pentafluoroethane (HFC-125);
(R) 1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethane
(HFC-134);
(S)
1,1,1-trifluoroethane (HFC-143a);
(T) 1,1-difluoroethane (HFC-152a);
(U) Parachlorobenzotrifluoride
(PCBTF);
(V) Cyclic, branched, or
linear completely methylated siloxanes;
(W) Acetone;
(X) Perchloroethylene
(tetrachloroethylene);
(Y)
3,3-dichloro-1,1,1,2,2-pentafluoropropane (HCFC-225ca);
(Z) 1,3-dichloro-1,1,2,2,3-pentafluoropropane
(HCFC-225cb);
(AA)
1,1,1,2,3,4,4,5,5,5-decafluoropentane (HFC 43-10mee);
(BB) Difluoromethane (HFC-32);
(CC) Ethylfluoride (HFC-161);
(DD) 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoropropane
(HFC-236fa);
(EE)
1,1,2,2,3-pentafluoropropane (HFC-245ca);
(FF) 1,1,2,3,3-pentafluoropropane
(HFC-245ea);
(GG)
1,1,1,2,3-pentafluoropropane (HFC-245eb);
(HH) 1,1,1,3,3-pentafluoropropane
(HFC-245fa);
(II)
1,1,1,2,3,3-hexafluoropropane (HFC-236ea);
(JJ) 1,1,1,3,3-pentafluorobutane
(HFC-365mfc);
(KK)
chlorofluoromethane (HCFC-31);
(LL)
1 chloro-1-fluoroethane (HCFC-151a);
(MM) 1,2-dichloro-1,1,2-trifluoroethane
(HCFC-123a);
(NN)
1,1,1,2,2,3,3,4,4-nonafluoro-4-methoxy-butane (C4 F9 OCH3 or
HFE-7100);
(OO)
2-(difluoromethoxymethyl)-1,1,1,2,3,3,3-heptafluoropropane ((CF3 )2 CFCF2
OCH3);
(PP)
1-ethoxy-1,1,2,2,3,3,4,4,4-nonafluorobutane (C4 F9 OC2 H5 or
HFE-7200);
(QQ)
2-(ethoxydifluoromethyl)-1,1,1,2,3,3,3-heptafluoropropane ((CF3 )2 CFCF2 OC2
H5);
(RR) Methyl acetate;
(SS)
1,1,1,2,2,3,3-heptafluoro-3-methoxy-propane (n-C3F7OCH3, HFE-7000);
(TT) 3-ethoxy-
1,1,1,2,3,4,4,5,5,6,6,6-dodecafluoro-2-(trifluoromethyl) hexane
(HFE-7500);
(UU)
1,1,1,2,3,3,3-heptafluoropropane (HFC 227ea);
(VV) Methyl formate (HCOOCH3);
(WW)
1,1,1,2,2,3,4,5,5,5-decafluoro-3-methoxy-4-trifluoromethyl-pentane
(HFE-7300);
(XX) Propylene
carbonate;
(YY) Dimethyl
carbonate;
(ZZ) Trans
-1,3,3,3-tetrafluoropropene (also known as HFO-1234ze);
(AAA) HCF2 OCF2 H (HFE-134);
(BBB) HCF2 OCF2 OCF2 H
(HFE-236cal2);
(CCC) HCF2 OCF2 CF2
OCF2 H (HFE-338pcc13);
(DDD) HCF2
OCF2 OCF2 CF2 OCF2 H (H-Galden 1040x or H-Galden ZT 130 (or 150 or
180));
(EEE) Trans
1-chloro-3,3,3-trifluoroprop-1-ene (also known as SolsticeTM
1233zd(E));
(FFF)
2,3,3,3-tetrafluoropropene (also known as HFO-1234yf);
(GGG) 2-amino-2-methyl-1-propanol;
and
(HHH) perfluorocarbon compounds
which fall into these classes:
(i) Cyclic,
branched, or linear, completely fluorinated alkanes;
(ii) Cyclic, branched, or linear, completely
fluorinated ethers with no unsaturations;
(iii) Cyclic, branched, or linear, completely
fluorinated tertiary amines with no unsaturations; and
(iv) Sulfur containing perfluorocarbons with
no unsaturations and with sulfur bonds only to carbon and fluorine.
(b) For purposes of
determining compliance with emissions limits, VOC will be measured by an
applicable reference method in the DEQ Source Sampling Manual referenced in OAR
340-200-0035. Where such a method also measures compounds with negligible
photochemical reactivity, these negligibly-reactive compounds may be excluded
as VOC if the amount of such compounds is accurately quantified, and DEQ
approves the exclusion.
(c) DEQ may
require an owner or operator to provide monitoring or testing methods and
results demonstrating, to DEQ's satisfaction, the amount of negligibly-reactive
compounds in the source's emissions.
(d) The following compounds are VOC for
purposes of all recordkeeping, emissions reporting, photochemical dispersion
modeling and inventory requirements which apply to VOC and must be uniquely
identified in emission reports, but are not VOC for purposes of VOC emissions
limitations or VOC content requirements: t-butyl acetate.
(192) "Wood fired veneer dryer" means a
veneer dryer, that is directly heated by the products of combustion of wood
fuel in addition to or exclusive of steam or natural gas or propane
combustion.
(193) "Wood fuel-fired
device" means a device or appliance designed for wood fuel combustion,
including cordwood stoves, woodstoves and fireplace stove inserts, fireplaces,
wood fuel-fired cook stoves, pellet stoves and combination fuel furnaces and
boilers that burn wood fuels.
(194)
"Year" means any consecutive 12 month period of time.
NOTE: This rule is included in the State of Oregon
Clean Air Act Implementation Plan that EQC adopted under OAR 340-200-0040 with
the exception of all references to toxic air contaminants and OAR chapter 340,
division 245.
[NOTE: Referenced publications not linked to below are
available from the agency.]
[NOTE: View a PDF of referenced tables and EPA Methods by
clicking on "Tables" link below.]