(1) General Provisions. The following
provisions apply to the consideration of intake pollutants in determining
reasonable potential under section (2) of this rule and the consideration of
intake pollutants in establishing water quality based effluent limits under
section (3) of this rule.
These provisions do not alter the permitting authority's
obligation under
40
C.F.R. §
122.44(d)(vii)(B) to develop
effluent limitations consistent with the assumptions and requirements of any
available waste load allocations for the discharge, that is part of a TMDL
prepared by DEQ and approved by the U.S. EPA under
40
C.F.R. §
130.7, or prepared by the EPA
under
40
C.F.R. §
130.7(d).
(a) An "intake pollutant" is the amount of a
pollutant that is present in public waters, including groundwater as provided
in subsection (d), below, at the time it is withdrawn from such waters by the
discharger or other facility supplying the discharger with intake water.
(b) An intake pollutant is
considered to be from the "same body of water" as the discharge if DEQ finds
that the intake pollutant would have reached the vicinity of the outfall point
in the receiving water within a reasonable period had it not been removed by
the permittee. This finding may be deemed established if:
(A) The background concentration of the
pollutant in the receiving water (excluding any amount of the pollutant in the
facility's discharge) is similar to that in the intake water;
(B) There is a direct hydrological connection
between the intake and discharge points; and
(C) Water quality characteristics (e.g.,
temperature, pH, hardness) are similar in the intake and receiving waters.
(c) DEQ may also
consider other site-specific factors relevant to the transport and fate of the
pollutant to make the finding in a particular case that a pollutant would or
would not have reached the vicinity of the outfall point in the receiving water
within a reasonable period had the permittee not removed it.
(d) An intake pollutant from groundwater may
be considered to be from the "same body of water" if DEQ determines that the
pollutant would have reached the vicinity of the outfall point in the receiving
water within a reasonable period had the permittee not removed it, except that
such a pollutant is not from the same body of water if the groundwater contains
the pollutant partially or entirely due to human activity, such as industrial,
commercial, or municipal operations, disposal actions, or treatment processes.
(e) The determinations made under
Sections (2) and (3), below, will be made on a pollutant-by-pollutant and
outfall-by-outfall basis.
(2) Consideration of Intake Pollutants in
Determining Reasonable Potential:
(a) DEQ may
determine that there is "no reasonable potential" for the discharge of an
identified intake pollutant to cause or contribute to an excursion above a
narrative or numeric water quality criterion contained in Oregon's water
quality standards where a discharger demonstrates to DEQ's satisfaction, based
on information provided in the permit application or other information, that:
(A) The facility withdraws 100 percent of the
intake water containing the pollutant from the same body of water into which
the discharge is made;
(B) The
facility does not contribute any additional mass of the identified intake
pollutant to its wastewater;
(C)
The facility does not alter the identified intake pollutant chemically or
physically in a manner that would cause adverse water quality impacts to occur
that would not occur if the pollutants were left in-stream;
(D) The facility does not increase the
identified intake pollutant concentration at the edge of the mixing zone, or at
the point of discharge if a mixing zone is not allowed, as compared to the
pollutant concentration in the intake water, unless the increased concentration
does not cause or contribute to an excursion above an applicable water quality
standard; and
(E) The timing and
location of the discharge would not cause adverse water quality impacts to
occur that would not occur if the identified intake pollutant were left
in-stream.
(b) Upon a
finding under subsection (a) of this section that an intake pollutant in the
discharge does not cause, have the reasonable potential to cause, or contribute
to an excursion above an applicable water quality standard, DEQ is not required
to include a water quality-based effluent limit for the identified intake
pollutant in the facility's permit, provided:
(A) The NPDES permit evaluation report
includes a determination that there is no reasonable potential for the
discharge of an identified intake pollutant to cause or contribute to an
excursion above an applicable numeric water quality criterion and references
appropriate supporting documentation included in the administrative record;
(B) The permit requires all
influent, effluent, and ambient monitoring necessary to demonstrate that the
conditions above in subsection (a) of this section are maintained during the
permit term; and
(C) The permit
contains a re-opener clause authorizing modifying or revoking and re-issuing
the permit if new information shows the discharger no longer meets the
conditions in subsection (a)(A) through (E) of this section.
(3) Consideration of
Intake Pollutants in Establishing Water Quality Based Effluent Limits (WQBELs):
(a) DEQ may consider pollutants in intake
water as provided in section (3) when establishing water quality-based effluent
limitations based on narrative or numeric criteria, provided that the
discharger has demonstrated that the following conditions are met:
(A) The facility withdraws 100 percent of the
intake water containing the pollutant from the same body of water into which
the discharge is made;
(B) The
observed maximum ambient background concentration and the intake water
concentration of the pollutant exceed the most stringent applicable water
quality criterion for that pollutant;
(C) The facility does not alter the
identified intake pollutant chemically or physically in a manner that would
cause adverse water quality impacts to occur that would not occur if the
pollutants were left in-stream;
(D)
The facility does not increase the identified intake pollutant concentration,
as defined by DEQ, at the point of discharge as compared to the pollutant
concentration in the intake water; and
(E) The timing and location of the discharge
would not cause adverse water quality impacts to occur that would not occur if
the identified intake pollutant were left in-stream.
(b) Where the conditions in subsection (a) of
this section are met, DEQ may establish a water quality-based effluent
limitation allowing the facility to discharge a mass and concentration of the
intake pollutant that are no greater than the mass and concentration found in
the facility's intake water. A discharger may add mass of the pollutant to its
waste stream if an equal or greater mass is removed prior to discharge, so
there is no net addition of the pollutant in the discharge compared to the
intake water.
(c) Where proper
operation and maintenance of a facility's treatment system results in the
removal of an intake water pollutant, DEQ may establish limitations that
reflect the lower mass and concentration of the pollutant achieved by such
treatment.
(d) Where a municipal
water supply system provides intake water for a facility and the supplier
provides treatment of the raw water that removes an intake water pollutant, the
concentration of the intake water pollutant will be determined at the point
where the water enters the water supplier's distribution system.
(e) Where a facility discharges intake
pollutants from multiple sources that originate from the receiving water body
and from other water bodies, DEQ may derive an effluent limitation reflecting
the flow-weighted amount of each source of the pollutant provided that adequate
monitoring to determine compliance can be established and is included in the
permit.
(f) The permit will specify
how compliance with mass and concentration-based limitations for the intake
water pollutant will be assessed. This may be done by basing the effluent
limitation on background concentration data. Alternatively, DEQ may determine
compliance by monitoring the pollutant concentrations in the intake water and
in the effluent. This monitoring may be supplemented by monitoring internal
waste streams or by a department evaluation of the use of best management
practices.
(g) In addition to the
above, DEQ must establish effluent limitations to comply with all other
applicable State and Federal laws and regulations including technology-based
requirements and anti-degradation policies.
(h) When determining whether WQBELs are
necessary, information from chemical-specific, DEQ will consider whole effluent
toxicity and biological assessments independently.
(i) Permits limits must be consistent with
the assumptions and requirements of waste load allocations or other provisions
in a TMDL that has been approved by the EPA.