Utah Admin. Code R307-250-4 - WEB Trading Program Applicability
(1) General Applicability. R307-250 applies
to any stationary source or group of stationary sources that are located on one
or more contiguous or adjacent properties and that are under the control of the
same person or persons under common control, belonging to the same industrial
grouping, and that are described in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this subsection.
A stationary source or group of stationary sources shall be considered part of
a single industrial grouping if all of the 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, 1987.
(a) All BART-eligible sources as defined in
40
CFR 51.301 that are BART-eligible due to
sulfur dioxide emissions.
(b) All
stationary sources that have actual sulfur dioxide emissions of 100 tons or
more per year in the program trigger years or any subsequent year. The fugitive
emissions of a stationary source shall not be considered in determining whether
it is subject to R307-250 unless the source belongs to one of the following
categories of stationary source:
(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 250 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;
(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,
which as of August 7, 1980, is being regulated under Section 111 or 112 of the
Clean Air Act.
(b) A new
source that begins operation after the program trigger date and has the
potential to emit 100 tons or more of sulfur dioxide per year.
(2) The director may determine on
a case-by-case basis, with concurrence from the EPA Administrator, that a
stationary source defined in (1)(b) above that has not previously met the
applicability requirements of (1) is not subject to R307-250 if the stationary
source had actual sulfur dioxide emissions of 100 tons or more in a single year
and in each of the previous five years had actual sulfur dioxide emissions of
less than 100 tons per year, and:
(a)
(i) the emissions increase was due to a
temporary emission increase that was caused by a sudden, infrequent failure of
air pollution control equipment, or process equipment, or a failure to operate
in a normal or usual manner, and
(ii) the stationary source has corrected the
failure of air pollution equipment, process equipment, or process by the time
of the director's determination; or
(b) the stationary source had to switch fuels
or feedstocks on a temporary basis and as a result of an emergency situation or
unique and unusual circumstances besides the cost of such fuels or
feedstocks.
(3) Duration
of Applicability. Except as provided for in (4) below, once a stationary source
is subject to R307-250, it will remain subject to the rule every year
thereafter.
(4) Retired Source
Exemption.
(a) Application. Any WEB source
that is permanently retired shall apply for a retired source exemption. The WEB
source may be considered permanently retired only if all sulfur dioxide
emitting units at the source are permanently retired. The application shall
contain the following information:
(i)
identification of the WEB source, including the plant name and an appropriate
identification code in a format specified by the director;
(ii) name of account
representative;
(iii) description
of the status of the WEB source, including the date that the WEB source was
permanently retired;
(iv) signed
certification that the WEB source is permanently retired and will comply with
the requirements of R307-250-4(4); and
(v) verification that the WEB source has a
general account where any unused allowances or future allocations will be
recorded.
(b) Notice.
The retired source exemption becomes effective when the director notifies the
WEB source that the retired source exemption has been granted.
(c) Responsibilities of Retired Sources.
(ii) A retired
source shall not emit any sulfur dioxide after the date the retired source
exemption is issued.
(iii) A WEB
source shall submit sulfur dioxide emissions reports, as required by
R307-250-9,
for any time period the source was operating prior to the effective date of the
retired source exemption. The retired source shall be subject to the compliance
provisions of
R307-250-12, including
the requirement to hold allowances in the source's compliance account to cover
all sulfur dioxide emissions prior to the date the source was permanently
retired.
(iv) A retired source that
is still in existence but no longer emitting sulfur dioxide shall, for a period
of five years from the date the records are created, retain records
demonstrating that the source is permanently retired for purposes of this
rule.
(d) Resumption of
Operations.
(i) Before resuming operation,
the retired source must submit registration materials as follows:
(A) If the source is required to obtain an
approval order under R307-401 or an operating permit under R307-415 prior to
resuming operation, then registration information as described in
R307-250-6(1)
and a copy of the retired source exemption must be submitted with the notice of
intent under R307-401 or the operating permit application required under
R307-415;
(B) If the source does
not meet the criteria of (A), then registration information as described in
R307-250-6(1)
and a copy of the retired source exemption must be submitted to the director at
least ninety days prior to resumption of operation.
(ii) The retired source exemption shall
automatically expire on the day the retired source resumes operation.
(e) Loss of Future Allowances. A
WEB source that is permanently retired and that does not apply to the director
for a retired source exemption within ninety days of the date that the source
is permanently retired shall forfeit any unused and future allowances. The
abandoned allowances shall be retired by the TSA.
Notes
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