Identification of Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That Are Solid Waste, 15456-15551 [2011-4492]
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15456
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 54 / Monday, March 21, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 241
[EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329; FRL–9273–1]
RIN 2050–AG44
Identification of Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials That Are Solid
Waste
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA or the Agency) is
publishing a final rule that identifies
which non-hazardous secondary
materials, when used as fuels or
ingredients in combustion units, are
‘‘solid wastes’’ under the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA).
This RCRA solid waste definition will
determine whether a combustion unit is
required to meet the emissions
SUMMARY:
standards for solid waste incineration
units issued under section 129 of the
Clean Air Act (CAA) or the emissions
standards for commercial, industrial,
and institutional boilers issued under
section 112 of the CAA. In this action,
EPA is also finalizing a definition of
traditional fuels.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
May 20, 2011.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov Web
site. Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., confidential business information
(CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, will be publicly
available only in hard copy. Publicly
available docket materials are available
either electronically in https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
Generators
Major generator category
the RCRA Docket, EPA/DC, EPA West,
Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave.,
NW., Washington, DC. The Public
Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday,
excluding legal holidays. The telephone
number for the Public Reading Room is
(202) 566–1744, and the telephone
number for the RCRA Docket is (202)
566–0270.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
George Faison, Program Implementation
and Information Division, Office of
Resource Conservation and Recovery,
5303P, Environmental Protection
Agency, Ariel Rios Building, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20460–0002; telephone
number: 703–305–7652; fax number:
703–308–0509; e-mail address:
faison.george@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Does this action apply to me?
Categories and entities potentially
affected by this action include:
Users
Major boiler type and primary industry
category
NAICS*
NAICS*
Industrial Boilers:
111
1121
1122
1123
1124
112920
113310
Support Activities for Crop Production ....
11511
Bituminous Coal and Lignite Surface
Mining.
212111
Commercial Boilers:
Bituminous Coal Underground Mining .....
Anthracite Mining .....................................
Fossil Fuel Electric Power Generation ....
Sewage Treatment Facilities ...................
Construction of Buildings .........................
Site Preparation Contractors ...................
Beverage and Tobacco Product Manufacturing.
Sawmills and Wood Preservation ............
Veneer, Plywood, and Engineered Wood
Product Manufacturing.
212112
212113
221112
221320
236
238910
312
Retail .......................................................
Warehouse ..............................................
Education ................................................
Health Care Facilities ..............................
Social Assistance ....................................
Lodging, Restaurant ................................
Office .......................................................
442–454
493
611
621
624
721, 722
813, 541, 921
32111
32121
Other .......................................................
922140, others
Engineered
turing.
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Crop Production .......................................
Cattle Ranching and Farming ..................
Hog and Pig Farming ...............................
Poultry and Egg Production .....................
Sheep and Goat Farming ........................
Horses and Other Equine Production ......
Logging ....................................................
Manufac-
321213
Common Non-Manufacturing Boilers:
Pulp, Paper, and Paperboard Mills ..........
Solvents Made in Petroleum Refineries ..
Solvent Dyes Manufacturing ....................
Plastic Manufacturers ..............................
3221
324110
325132
325211
Agriculture (crop & livestock production)
All Mining ................................................
Construction ............................................
All Other Miscellaneous Chemical Product and Preparation Manufacturing.
325998
Other Boilers:
Packaging ................................................
Other Rubber Product Manufacturing ......
32611
32629
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Food Manufacturing ................................
Pulp and Paper Mills ...............................
Petroleum Refining .................................
Chemical Manufacturing .........................
Primary Metal Manufacturing ..................
Fabricated Metal Manufacturing .............
Other Manufacturing ...............................
Electric Utility Boilers ..............................
Non-Hazardous Waste Burning Cement
Kilns.
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311, 312,
3221
32411
325
331
332
313, 339, 321, 333, 336, 511, 326, 316,
327
111, 112, 115
212
236
2211
327310
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Generators
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Users
Major generator category
Major boiler type and primary industry
category
NAICS*
Glass and Glass Product Manufacturing
Cement Manufacturing .............................
Iron and Steel Mills ..................................
Electrometallurgical Ferroalloy Product
Manufacturing.
Metal-Casting Industry .............................
Recyclable Material Wholesalers .............
Landscaping Services ..............................
Solid Waste Collection and Solid Waste
Landfill.
Automotive Repair and Replacement
Shops.
3272
327310
331111
331112
.................................................................
.................................................................
.................................................................
.................................................................
331522
423930
561730
562111,
562212
811111
NAICS*
.................................................................
.................................................................
.................................................................
.................................................................
.................................................................
* NAICS—North American Industrial Classification System.
This table is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
for readers, including lists of examples
of the types of entities likely to be
impacted by this action. Other types of
entities not listed could also be affected.
To determine whether your facility,
company, business, organization, etc., is
affected by this action, you should
examine the applicability criteria in this
rule. If you have any questions
regarding the applicability of this action
to a particular entity, consult the person
listed in the preceding section: FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
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B. Why is EPA taking this action?
Clean Air Act (CAA) section 129
states that the term ‘‘solid waste’’ shall
have the meaning ‘‘established by the
Administrator pursuant to [RCRA].’’ The
purpose of this final rule is to provide
a definition of ‘‘solid waste’’ in order to
develop emission standards under
sections 112 and 129 of the CAA. In
particular, this rule codifies
requirements and procedures that
identify whether the definition of ‘‘solid
waste’’ applies to non-hazardous
secondary materials burned as fuels or
used as ingredients in combustion units.
In related actions in this Federal
Register, EPA is concurrently finalizing
air emission requirements under section
112 of the CAA for industrial,
commercial, and institutional boilers
and process heaters, as well as air
emission requirements under section
129 of the CAA for commercial and
industrial solid waste incineration
units.
Preamble Outline
I. Statutory Authority
II. List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
III. Introduction—Summary of Regulations
Being Finalized
A. Identifying Which Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials Are or Are Not
Solid Wastes When Used in a
Combustion Unit
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1. Within the Control of the Generator:
Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
That Are Legitimately Used as Fuels
Within the Control of the Generator Are
Not Solid Waste When Used in
Combustion Units
2. Scrap Tires: Scrap Tires That Are
Legitimately Used as a Fuel That Are
Removed From Vehicles and Managed
Under the Oversight of Established Tire
Collection Programs Are Not Solid Waste
When Used in Combustion Units
3. Resinated Wood: Resinated Wood That
Is Legitimately Used as a Fuel Is Not a
Solid Waste When Used in Combustion
Units
4. Ingredients: Non-Hazardous Secondary
Materials That Are Legitimately Used as
Ingredients Are Not Solid Waste When
Used in Combustion Units
5. Discards: Discarded Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials That Have
Undergone Processing To Produce
Legitimate Fuel or Ingredient Products
Are Not Solid Waste When Used in
Combustion Units
6. Non-Waste Determination: NonHazardous Secondary Materials Used as
a Fuel for Which a Non-Waste
Determination Has Been Granted Are Not
Solid Waste When Used in Combustion
Units
B. Codification of the Legitimacy Criteria
IV. Background
A. What is the history of CISWI, CISWI
definitions, and boiler rulemakings?
B. Why is the Court’s decision affecting the
CAA rules relevant to RCRA?
C. What is the history of the definition of
solid waste?
1. Statutory Definition of Solid Waste
2. Solid Waste Program, RCRA Subtitle D
3. Hazardous Waste Program, RCRA
Subtitle C
4. Case Law on the Definition of Solid
Waste Under RCRA Subtitle C
5. Concept of Legitimacy
D. Summary of the ANPRM
E. Summary of the Proposed Rule
F. Use of Secondary Materials
1. Introduction
2. Secondary Materials Use and Benefits
V. Comments on the Proposed Rule
A. Proposed Approach
1. Definition of the Term Discard
2. Processing Requirements
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B. Comments on Specific Materials Used as
Fuel
1. Traditional Fuels
2. Manure
3. Other Biomass
4. Pulp and Paper Sludge
5. Scrap Tires
6. Resinated Wood Residuals
7. Used Oil
8. Coal Refuse
9. Coal Combustion Residuals
10. Sewage Sludge
11. Processed Fats
C. Comments on Specific Materials Used as
Ingredients
1. Cement Kiln Dust
2. Coal Combustion Residuals
3. Foundry Sand
4. Blast Furnace Slag/Steel Slag
D. Comments on Legitimacy Criteria for
Fuels
1. Managed as a Valuable Commodity
2. Meaningful Heating Value and Use as a
Fuel
3. Have Contaminants at Comparable
Levels or Lower Than Traditional Fuels
E. Comments on Legitimacy Criteria for
Ingredients
1. Managed as Valuable Commodities
2. Useful Contribution
3. Quantifying an Ingredient’s Contribution
to Production/Manufacturing Activity
4. Contaminants in Ingredients
5. Comparing Contaminant Levels in
Products
F. Comments on Non-Waste Determination
Petitions
G. Comments on the Other Approaches for
Defining Solid Wastes
VI. Summary of Major Differences Between
the Proposed Rule and Final Rule
VII. Detailed Discussion and Rationale for
Today’s Final Rule
A. Traditional Fuels
B. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
Used as Fuels That Remain Within the
Control of the Generator
1. Scope and Applicability
2. Restrictions and Requirements
C. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
That Have Not Been Discarded: Scrap
Tires Collected Under Established Tire
Collection Programs
1. Scope and Applicability
2. Restrictions and Requirements
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D. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
That Have Not Been Discarded:
Resinated Wood Residuals
1. Scope and Applicability
2. Restrictions and Requirements
E. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
Used as Ingredients
1. Scope and Applicability
2. Restrictions and Requirements
F. Discarded Non-Hazardous Secondary
Materials That Have Undergone
Processing To Produce Legitimate Fuel
or Ingredient Products
1. Scope and Applicability
2. Restrictions and Requirements
G. Non-Waste Determination Petitions
1. Description of the Petition Criteria for
the Non-Waste Determination
2. Non-Waste Determination Petition
Process
3. Petition Decisions Utilizing State
Environmental Agency Program’s Input
H. Legitimacy Criteria
1. Legitimacy Criteria for Fuels
2. Legitimacy Criteria for Ingredients
I. Determining That Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials Meet the Legitimacy
Criteria
VIII. Effect of Today’s Final Rule on Other
Programs
A. Clean Air Act
B. Renewable Energy
C. Subtitle C Hazardous Waste Program
IX. State Authority
A. Applicability of State Solid Waste
Definitions and Beneficial Use
Determinations
B. State Adoption of the Rulemaking
C. Clarifications on the Relationship to
State Programs
X. Cost and Benefits of the Final Rule
XI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Usage
I. National Technology Transfer
Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
To Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act
I. Statutory Authority
The U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA or the Agency) is
promulgating these regulations under
the authority of sections 2002(a)(1) and
1004(27) of the Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act (RCRA), as amended,
42 U.S.C. 6912(a)(1) and 6903(27).
Section 129(a)(1)(D) of the Clean Air Act
(CAA) directs EPA to establish
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standards for Commercial and Industrial
Solid Waste Incinerators (CISWI), which
burn solid waste (section 129(g)(6) of
the CAA, 42 U.S.C. 7429). Section
129(g)(6) provides that the term ‘‘solid
waste’’ is to be established by EPA under
RCRA. Section 2002(a)(1) of RCRA
authorizes the Agency to promulgate
regulations as are necessary to carry out
its functions under the Act. The
statutory definition of ‘‘solid waste’’ is
provided in RCRA section 1004(27).
II. List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
AASHTO American Association of State
Highway and Transportation Officials
ANPRM Advanced Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
ASME American Society of Mechanical
Engineers
ASTM American Society for Testing and
Materials
Btu British Thermal Unit
CAA Clean Air Act
CAFO Concentrated Animal Feeding
Operations
C&D Construction and Demolition
CBO Carbon Burn-Out Unit
CCA Chromated Copper Arsenate
CCR Coal Combustion Residuals
CFB Circulating Fluidized Bed
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CISWI Commercial and Industrial Solid
Waste Incinerator
CKD Cement Kiln Dust
CWA Clean Water Act
DSE Domestic Sewage Exemption
DSW Definition of Solid Waste Rule (2008)
EG Emission Guidelines
EGU Electric Utility Steam Generating Unit
EPA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
GACT Generally Available Control
Technology
GHG Greenhouse Gas
HAP Hazardous Air Pollutant
IWI Institutional Waste Incinerator
LCA Life Cycle Analysis
MACT Maximum Achievable Control
Technology
MEK Methyl Ethyl Ketone
NESHAP National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants
NHSM Non-Hazardous Secondary Material
NSPS New Source Performance Standards
OCC Old Corrugated Cardboard
OSWI Other Solid Waste Incinerator
PC Portland Cement
PIC Product of Incomplete Combustion
POTW Publicly Owned Treatment Works
PVC Polyvinyl Chloride
RCRA Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act
RFS Renewable Fuel Standards
SSI Sewage Sludge Incinerator
SWDA Solid Waste Disposal Act
TCLP Toxicity Characteristic Leaching
Procedure
TDF Tire-Derived Fuel
U.S.C. United States Code
USGS U.S. Geological Survey
VSMWC Very Small Municipal Waste
Combustor
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III. Introduction—Summary of
Regulations Being Finalized
In today’s rule, EPA is finalizing
standards and procedures to be used to
identify whether non-hazardous
secondary materials are solid wastes
when used as fuels or ingredients in
combustion units. ‘‘Secondary material’’
is defined for the purposes of this
rulemaking as any material that is not
the primary product of a manufacturing
or commercial process, and can include
post-consumer material, offspecification commercial chemical
products or manufacturing chemical
intermediates, post-industrial material,
and scrap (codified in § 241.2).1 ‘‘Nonhazardous secondary material’’ is a
secondary material that, when
discarded, would not be identified as a
hazardous waste under 40 CFR part 261
(codified in § 241.2).
The Agency first solicited comments
on how the RCRA definition of solid
waste should apply to non-hazardous
secondary materials used as fuels or
ingredients in combustion units are
solid wastes under RCRA in an
Advanced Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (ANPRM), which was
published in the Federal Register on
January 2, 2009 (74 FR 41). We then
published a proposed rule on June 4,
2010 (75 FR 31844).
Today’s preamble is organized as
follows: This section of the preamble
(Section III) describes the principal
regulatory provisions that are finalized
in this rule; Section IV describes the
background of this final rule, including
a brief history of this rulemaking in
conjunction with the relevant rules
being finalized under sections 112 and
129 of the CAA; Section V contains a
discussion of the major public
comments received on the June 4, 2010
proposal, along with the Agency’s
response to these comments; Section VI
explains the ways in which the June
2010 proposal differs from today’s final
rule; Section VII provides a detailed
explanation of and rationale for the
regulations being promulgated today;
Section VIII describes the effect of
today’s final rule on other programs;
Section IX discusses how today’s rule
affects the states’ authority over solid
waste pursuant to subtitle D of RCRA;
Section X describes the costs and
benefits associated with today’s rule;
and Section XI describes this rule’s
1 For the purpose of this definition, all
commercial products from a manufacturing process
would be considered ‘‘primary products.’’ Processes
that are designed for the production of multiple
products could have more than one primary
product.
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compliance with the appropriate
statutory and executive orders reviews.
Below is a summary of the principal
elements of the regulations being
promulgated today.
A. Identifying Which Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials Are or Are Not
Solid Wastes When Used in a
Combustion Unit
In our determination, most nonhazardous secondary materials burned
in combustion units are defined as solid
wastes under RCRA. However, this rule
provides exceptions to that
determination. The following nonhazardous secondary materials are not
solid waste when used legitimately as a
fuel or an ingredient in a combustion
unit:
(1) Those that remain within the
control of the generator and used as fuel
(discussed further below—codified in
§ 241.3(b)(1));
(2) Scrap tires managed by established
tire collection programs and used as fuel
(discussed further below—codified in
§ 241.3(b)(2)(i));
(3) Resinated wood used as fuel
(discussed further below—codified in
§ 241.3(b)(2)(ii));
(4) Those that are used as ingredients
(discussed further below—codified in
§ 241.3(b)(3));
(5) Discards that have undergone
processing to produce fuel or ingredient
products (discussed further below—
codified in § 241.3(b)(4)); or
(6) Those that are used as fuels for
which a non-waste determination has
been granted (discussed further below—
codified in § 241.3(c)).
Materials are considered legitimate
fuels or ingredients if they conform to
the criteria codified in § 241.3(d), which
this action refers to as ‘‘legitimacy
criteria.’’ These criteria are designed to
ensure that the fuel or ingredient is not
being ‘‘sham’’ recycled for the sole
purpose of avoiding being considered a
waste. The legitimacy criteria for nonhazardous secondary materials used as
fuels and ingredients in combustion
units are discussed below in the
‘‘Codification of the Legitimacy Criteria’’
section.
Materials designated as ‘‘traditional’’
fuels are not wastes when used in
combustion units. We are finalizing a
definition of traditional fuels (codified
in § 241.2) that applies to this subpart.
Traditional fuels means materials that
are produced as fuels and are unused
products that have not been discarded
and therefore, are not solid wastes,
including: (1) Fuels that have been
historically managed as valuable fuel
products rather than being managed as
waste materials, including fossil fuels
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(e.g., coal, oil and natural gas), their
derivatives (e.g., petroleum coke,
bituminous coke, coal tar oil, refinery
gas, synthetic fuel, heavy recycle,
asphalts, blast furnace gas, recovered
gaseous butane, and coke oven gas) and
cellulosic biomass (virgin wood); and
(2) alternative fuels developed from
virgin materials that can now be used as
fuel products, including used oil which
meets the specifications outlined in 40
CFR 279.11, currently mined coal refuse
that previously had not been usable as
coal, and clean cellulosic biomass.
These fuels are not secondary materials
or solid wastes unless discarded before
they are used.
1. Within the Control of the Generator:
Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
That Are Legitimately Used as Fuels
Within the Control of the Generator Are
Not Solid Waste When Used in
Combustion Units
Except as otherwise provided, under
this provision—40 CFR 241.3(b)(1)—
EPA would consider non-hazardous
secondary materials used as fuels in
combustion units which remain within
the control of the generator and that
meet the specified legitimacy criteria (as
codified in § 241.3(d)(1)) as not being a
solid waste. The legitimacy criteria for
non-hazardous secondary materials
used as fuels in combustion units are
discussed below in the ‘‘Codification of
the Legitimacy Criteria’’ section. Nonhazardous secondary materials would
be considered ‘‘within the control of the
generator’’ under the following
circumstances:
(1) They are generated and burned in
combustion units at the generating
facility (as codified in § 241.2); or
(2) They are generated and burned in
combustion units at different facilities,
if the facility combusting the nonhazardous secondary material is
controlled (as codified in § 241.2) by the
generator; or
(3) Both the generating facility and the
facility combusting the material are
under control of the same person (as
codified in § 241.2).
2. Scrap Tires: Scrap Tires That Are
Legitimately Used as a Fuel That Are
Removed From Vehicles and Managed
Under the Oversight of Established Tire
Collection Programs Are Not Solid
Waste When Used in Combustion Units
Under this provision—40 CFR
241.3(b)(2)(i)—EPA would consider
scrap tires used as a fuel in a
combustion unit that are removed from
vehicles and collected and managed
under the oversight of established tire
collection programs as not being a solid
waste, provided these materials satisfy
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the specified legitimacy criteria (as
codified in § 241.3(d)(1)). This provision
would not differentiate between scrap
tires that are used as a fuel within the
control of the generator from those that
are not. For the purposes of this rule,
the term ‘‘vehicle’’ is defined as any
mechanical means of conveyance that
employs the use of tires. ‘‘Established
tire collection program’’ (as codified in
§ 241.2) means a comprehensive
collection system that ensures scrap
tires are not discarded and are handled
as valuable commodities in accordance
with § 241.3(d)(1)(i) from the point of
removal from the vehicle through arrival
at the combustion facility. The
legitimacy criteria for non-hazardous
secondary materials used as fuels in
combustion units are discussed below
in the ‘‘Codification of the Legitimacy
Criteria’’ section.
3. Resinated Wood: Resinated Wood
That Is Legitimately Used as a Fuel Is
Not a Solid Waste When Used in
Combustion Units
Under this provision—40 CFR
241.3(b)(2)(ii)—EPA would consider
resinated wood used as a fuel in a
combustion unit as not being a solid
waste, provided these materials satisfy
the specified legitimacy criteria (as
codified in § 241.3(d)(1)). This provision
would not differentiate between
resinated wood that is used as a fuel
within the control of the generator from
those that are not. Resinated wood (as
codified in § 241.2) means wood
products (containing resin adhesives)
derived from primary and secondary
wood products manufacturing and
comprised of such items as board trim,
sander dust, and panel trim. The
legitimacy criteria for non-hazardous
secondary materials used as fuels in
combustion units is discussed below in
the ‘‘Codification of the Legitimacy
Criteria’’ section.
4. Ingredients: Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials That Are
Legitimately Used as Ingredients Are
Not Solid Waste When Used in
Combustion Units
Under this provision—40 CFR
241.3(b)(3)—EPA would consider nonhazardous secondary materials used as
ingredients in combustion units and
that meet the specified legitimacy
criteria as not being solid waste. This
provision does not differentiate between
ingredients that are used within the
control of the generator from those that
are not. Ingredient (as codified in
§ 241.2) means a non-hazardous
secondary material that is a component
in a compound, process or product. A
discussion of the legitimacy criteria (as
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codified in § 241.3(d)(2)) for nonhazardous secondary materials used as
ingredients in combustion units is
included below in the ‘‘Codification of
the Legitimacy Criteria’’ section.
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5. Discards: Discarded Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials That Have
Undergone Processing To Produce
Legitimate Fuel or Ingredient Products
Are Not Solid Waste When Used in
Combustion Units
Under this provision—40 CFR
241.3(b)(4)—EPA would consider
discarded non-hazardous secondary
materials that have been sufficiently
processed into fuel or ingredient
products and used in a combustion unit
as not being a solid waste, provided
these materials satisfy the specified
legitimacy criteria (as codified in
§ 241.3(d)(1) for fuels and (d)(2) for
ingredients). Processing (as codified in
§ 241.2) means any operations that
transform the discarded non-hazardous
secondary material into a legitimate fuel
or ingredient product, and includes, but
is not limited to, operations that remove
or destroy contaminants; operations that
significantly improve the fuel
characteristics of the material, e.g.,
sizing or drying the material in
combination with other operations;
operations that chemically improve the
as-fired energy content; and operations
that improve the ingredient
characteristics. Minimal operations that
result only in modifying the size of the
material by shredding do not constitute
processing for the purposes of this
definition. Prior to any processing, the
discarded non-hazardous secondary
material would be considered a solid
waste and would be subject to the
appropriate federal, state, and local laws
and regulations.
6. Non-Waste Determination: NonHazardous Secondary Materials Used as
a Fuel for Which a Non-Waste
Determination Has Been Granted Are
Not Solid Waste When Used in
Combustion Units
Under this provision—40 CFR
241.3(c)—EPA would consider nonhazardous secondary materials used as
fuels that have been transferred to a
third party, but have been granted a
non-waste determination from EPA, to
not be a solid waste when used in
combustion units.2 This provision
2 As noted previously, scrap tires and resinated
wood would not be considered a solid waste even
if transferred to a third party provided these
secondary materials meet the legitimacy criteria.
Also, as indicated in Section V.A.1, the Agency will
in the future solicit comment on other nonhazardous secondary materials in addition to scrap
tires and resinated wood that can be used as a non-
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establishes a non-waste determination
case-by-case process that provides
persons with an administrative process
for receiving a formal determination
from EPA that their non-hazardous
secondary material fuel that has not
been managed within the control of the
generator (as codified in § 241.2), has
not been discarded, and is
indistinguishable in all relevant aspects
from a fuel product, is not a solid waste
when used as a fuel in combustion
units. Any petition that is submitted to
EPA requesting a non-waste
determination must demonstrate that
the non-hazardous secondary material
has not been discarded in the first
instance, satisfies the specified
legitimacy criteria for fuels (as codified
in § 241.3(d)(1)), and satisfies the
following five criteria: (1) Whether
market participants treat the nonhazardous secondary material as a fuel
rather than a solid waste; (2) whether
the chemical and physical identity of
the non-hazardous secondary material is
comparable to commercial fuels; (3)
whether the non-hazardous secondary
material will be used in a reasonable
time frame given the state of the market;
(4) whether the constituents in the nonhazardous secondary material are
released to the air, water or land from
the point of generation to the point just
prior to combustion of the nonhazardous secondary material at levels
comparable to what would otherwise be
released from traditional fuels; and (5)
other relevant factors. These criteria are
codified in § 241.3(c)(1).
The process for receiving a non-waste
determination is codified in
§ 241.3(c)(2). In order to obtain a nonwaste determination, a facility that is
interested in using non-hazardous
secondary materials as fuel in
combustion units that would otherwise
be regulated as a solid waste must apply
to the Regional Administrator per the
procedures described in § 241.3(c). The
application must address the relevant
criteria discussed above. The Regional
Administrator will evaluate the
application and issue a draft notice
tentatively granting or denying the
application. Notification of this
tentative decision will also be provided
by newspaper advertisement or radio
broadcast in the locality where the
combustion unit is located. The
Regional Administrator will accept
comments on the tentative decision for
at least 30 days, and may also hold a
public hearing upon request or at his
discretion. The Regional Administrator
will issue a final decision after receipt
waste fuel both by the generator and outside the
control of the generator.
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of comments and after the hearing (if
any).
B. Codification of the Legitimacy
Criteria
This provision—40 CFR 241.3(d)—
codifies the legitimacy criteria for fuels
and ingredients. In order to be
considered a non-waste fuel, nonhazardous secondary materials used as
a fuel in combustion units must meet
the legitimacy criteria codified in
§ 241.3(d)(1). To meet the fuel
legitimacy criteria, the non-hazardous
secondary material must be managed as
a valuable commodity, have a
meaningful heating value and be used as
a fuel in a combustion unit that recovers
energy, and contain contaminants at
levels comparable to or lower than those
in traditional fuels which the
combustion unit is designed to burn.
In order to be considered a non-waste
ingredient, non-hazardous secondary
materials used as an ingredient in
combustion units must meet the
legitimacy criteria codified in
§ 241.3(d)(2). To meet the ingredient
legitimacy criteria, the non-hazardous
secondary material must be managed as
a valuable commodity, provide a useful
contribution to the production or
manufacturing process, be used to
produce a valuable product or
intermediate, and must result in
products that contain contaminants at
levels that are comparable to or lower
than those found in traditional products
that are manufactured without the nonhazardous secondary material.
Non-hazardous secondary materials
that are discarded in the first instance
(abandoned, disposed of, or thrown
away) would still be a solid waste even
if they satisfy the legitimacy criteria,
unless they were processed into
legitimate non-waste fuel or ingredient
products or, in the case of fuels, have
received a non-waste determination
from EPA.
IV. Background
The discussion below is a summary of
what was included in the ANPRM and
in the preamble to the proposed rule.
However, because it continues to be
relevant to several of the key concepts
being finalized today, it is provided here
as background for the benefit of the
reader. (For a more detailed discussion
of what was included in the ANPRM
and the proposed rule, we refer the
reader to the ANPRM (74 FR 41, January
2, 2009) and the proposed rule (75 FR
31843, June 4, 2010).) The records and
documents comprising the ANPRM and
proposed rule are included in the
administrative record for this
rulemaking. To the extent there are any
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inconsistencies or differences between
the ANPRM, the proposed rule, and this
final rule, the statements in this final
rule govern.
A. What is the history of CISWI, CISWI
definitions, and boiler rulemakings?
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES3
CAA section 112 requires EPA to
promulgate regulations to control
emissions of 187 hazardous air
pollutants (HAP) from sources in source
categories listed by EPA under section
112(c), while CAA section 129 CISWI
standards include numeric emission
limitations for the nine pollutants, plus
opacity (as appropriate), that are
specified in CAA section 129(a)(4).3
Pursuant to CAA section 129, EPA
promulgated a final rule setting forth
performance emissions standards for
Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste
Incineration Units (referred to as the
‘‘CISWI Rule’’). 65 FR 75338 (December
1, 2000). Under CAA section 129, the
term ‘‘solid waste incineration unit’’ is
defined, in pertinent part, to mean ‘‘a
distinct operating unit of any facility
which combusts any solid waste
material from commercial or industrial
establishments * * *’’ 42 U.S.C.
§ 7429(g)(1). The CAA also specifically
excludes the following types of units
from the definition of ‘‘solid waste
incineration unit’’: (1) Incinerators or
other units required to have a permit
under section 3005 of RCRA; (2)
material recovery facilities (including
primary and secondary smelters) which
combust waste for the primary purpose
of recovering metals; (3) qualifying
small power production facilities, as
defined in section 3(17)(C) of the
Federal Power Act, or qualifying
cogeneration facilities, as defined in
section 3(18)(B) of the Federal Power
Act, which burn homogeneous waste
(such as units which burn tires or used
oil, but not including refuse-derived
fuel) for the production of electric
energy or in the case of qualifying
cogeneration facilities which burn
homogeneous waste for the production
of electric energy or steam or forms of
useful energy (such as heat) which are
used for industrial, commercial, heating
or cooling purposes, or (4) air curtain
incinerators, provided that such
incinerators only burn wood wastes,
yard wastes and clean lumber and that
such air curtain incinerators comply
3 CAA section 129(a)(4) requires that specific
numeric emission limitations must be established
for the following nine pollutants, plus opacity (as
appropriate): cadmium, carbon monoxide, dioxins/
furans, hydrogen chloride, lead, mercury, NOx,
particulate matter (total and fine), and SO2. Of these
nine pollutants, cadmium, dioxins/furans,
hydrogen chloride, lead, and mercury are also
regulated HAP pursuant to CAA section 112.
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with the opacity limitations to be
established by the Administrator by
rule. Id. CAA section 129 further states
that the term ‘‘solid waste’’ shall have
the meaning ‘‘established by the
Administrator pursuant to the Solid
Waste Disposal Act.’’ Id at 7429(g)(6).4
The CISWI Rule established emission
limitations for new and existing CISWI
units for the following pollutants:
cadmium, carbon monoxide, dioxins/
furans, hydrogen chloride, lead,
mercury, oxides of nitrogen (NOX),
particulate matter (PM), sulfur dioxide
(SO2), and opacity. In addition, the rule
established certain monitoring and
operator training and certification
requirements.
The CISWI Rule was challenged in
Sierra Club v. EPA (No. 01–1048) (DC
Cir.). However, after promulgation of the
CISWI Rule, the DC Circuit issued its
decision in a challenge to EPA’s MACT
standards for the cement kiln industry.
See Cement Kiln Recycling Coalition v.
EPA, 255 F. 3d 855 (DC Cir. 2001)
(‘‘Cement Kiln’’). As a result, EPA
requested, and was granted, a voluntary
remand without vacatur, of the CISWI
rule, in order to address the concerns
related to the issues that were raised by
the court in Cement Kiln. Because the
CISWI rule was not vacated, its
requirements remain in effect. See
Sierra Club v. EPA, 374 F. Supp. 2d 30,
32–33 (D.DC 2005).
On September 22, 2005, EPA issued
revised definitions of ‘‘solid waste,’’
‘‘commercial or industrial solid waste
incineration unit,’’ and ‘‘commercial or
industrial waste’’ (the ‘‘CISWI
Definitions Rule’’). See 70 FR 55568. In
the CISWI Definitions Rule, EPA
defined ‘‘commercial and industrial
solid waste’’ to exclude solid waste that
is combusted at a facility in a
combustion unit whose design provides
for energy recovery or which operates
with energy recovery. Therefore, a unit
combusting solid waste with energy
recovery was not considered a CISWI
unit.
The CISWI Definitions Rule was
vacated by the DC Circuit in NRDC v.
EPA (489 F.3d 1250 (DC Cir. 2007))
(‘‘NRDC’’). The court stated that the
statute unambiguously requires any unit
that combusts ‘‘any solid waste material
at all’’—regardless of whether the
material is being burned for energy
recovery—to be regulated as a ‘‘solid
waste incineration unit.’’ Id. at 1260. In
the same decision, the court also
vacated and remanded EPA’s 2005
emissions standards for commercial,
4 The Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended, is
commonly referred to the Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act or RCRA.
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industrial, and institutional major
source boilers and process heaters (the
Boiler MACT Rule), concluding that
‘‘the universe of boilers subject to its
[section 112] standards will be far
smaller and more homogenous after all
CISWI units, as the statute
unambiguously defines them, are
removed from its coverage.’’ 489 F.3d at
1260.
In response to the D.C. Circuit’s
decision, EPA proposed revised
emissions standards for boilers, process
heaters, and CISWI units. Specifically,
on June 4, 2010, the Agency proposed
new National Emissions Standards for
Area Source Industrial, Commercial,
and Institutional Boilers (75 FR 31896),
National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants for Major
Sources: Industrial, Commercial, and
Institutional Boilers and Process Heaters
(75 FR 32006), and Standards of
Performance for New Stationary Sources
and Emission Guidelines for Existing
Sources: Commercial and Industrial
Solid Waste Incineration Units (75 FR
31938). These proposed emissions
standards were established based on the
criteria proposed in the Identification of
Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
Rule that are Solid Waste proposed rule
(75 FR 31844).
B. Why is the Court’s decision affecting
the CAA rules relevant to RCRA?
In responding to the court’s vacatur
and remand of the CISWI Definitions
Rule and the Boiler MACT Rule, EPA is
establishing, under RCRA, which nonhazardous secondary materials 5 are
‘‘solid waste.’’ This is necessary because,
under the court’s decision, any unit
combusting any ‘‘solid waste’’ at all must
be regulated as a ‘‘solid waste
incineration unit,’’ regardless of the
function of the combustion device. If a
non-hazardous secondary material (also
referred to as a ‘‘secondary material’’ in
this rulemaking) is not a ‘‘solid waste’’
under RCRA, then a unit combusting
that material must be regulated pursuant
to CAA section 112 if it is a source of
HAP. Alternatively, if such secondary
material is classified as a ‘‘solid waste’’
under RCRA, then a unit combusting
that material must be regulated under
5 A secondary material is any material that is not
the primary product of a manufacturing or
commercial process, and can include postconsumer material, post-industrial material, and
scrap. Many types of secondary materials have Btu
or material value, and can be reclaimed or reused
in industrial processes. For purposes of this notice,
the term secondary materials include only nonhazardous secondary materials. See also American
Mining Congress v. EPA, 824 F.2d 1177 (DC Cir.
1987) in which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit discussed secondary
materials.
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CAA section 129, unless it is within the
scope of one of the exclusions from the
definition of ‘‘solid waste incineration
unit’’ in section 129(g)(1) of the CAA.
In addition to this final rule, EPA is
concurrently finalizing air emission
requirements under CAA section 112 for
industrial, commercial, and institutional
boilers and process heaters, as well as
air emission requirements under CAA
section 129 for CISWI units. For a
discussion of what requirements are
being promulgated today pursuant to
the relevant CAA rules, please see the
respective final actions included in
today’s Federal Register. These include:
National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants for Area
Sources: Industrial, Commercial, and
Institutional Boilers (EPA–HQ–OAR–
2006–0790); National Emission
Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
for Major Sources: Industrial,
Commercial, and Institutional Boilers
and Process Heaters (EPA–HQ–OAR–
2002–0058); and Standards of
Performance for New Stationary Sources
and Emission Guidelines for Existing
Sources: Commercial and Industrial
Solid Waste Incineration Units (EPA–
HQ–OAR–2003–0119).
C. What is the history of the definition
of solid waste?
1. Statutory Definition of Solid Waste
RCRA defines ‘‘solid waste’’ as ‘‘* * *
any garbage, refuse, sludge from a waste
treatment plant, water supply treatment
plant, or air pollution control facility
and other discarded material * * *
resulting from industrial, commercial,
mining, and agricultural operations, and
from community activities * * *’’
(RCRA section 1004 (27) (emphasis
added)). The key concept is that of
‘‘discard’’ and, in fact, this definition
turns on the meaning of the phrase,
‘‘other discarded material,’’ since this
term encompasses all other examples
provided in the definition.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES3
2. Solid Waste Program, RCRA Subtitle
D
The regulations that pertain to nonhazardous solid waste (RCRA subtitle D)
contain five definitions of the term
‘‘solid waste.’’ (See 40 CFR 240.101(y);
40 CFR 243.101(y); 40 CFR 246.101(bb);
40 CFR 257.2; and 40 CFR 258.2.) These
regulatory definitions largely mirror the
statutory definition of solid waste with
some clarifications applicable to the
specific regulatory section. The RCRA
statutory definition of solid waste has
also been repeated in the CAA emission
guidelines for other solid waste
incineration units (e.g., see 40 CFR
60.2977 and 60.3078).
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Under RCRA subtitle D, EPA has
promulgated criteria for municipal solid
waste landfills and approves state solid
waste landfill permitting programs;
however, it is the states that fully
implement these programs. EPA does
not have the same role in these
programs as it does in the hazardous
waste programs established under RCRA
subtitle C. As a result, EPA has not
promulgated detailed regulations
defining ‘‘solid waste’’ for purposes of
the subtitle D (non-hazardous)
programs. States have promulgated their
own laws and regulations for what
constitutes solid waste and have
interpreted those laws and regulations
to determine what types of nonhazardous secondary materials
management activities constitute
discard (and therefore involve the
management of a solid waste).
The Agency is now determining at the
national level the requirements and
procedures for identifying nonhazardous secondary materials that are
solid waste under RCRA subtitle D so
that we can establish appropriate
emissions standards under CAA
sections 112 and 129. We emphasize
that we are articulating a narrow
definition in this final rule and are not
making solid waste determinations that
cover other possible secondary material
end uses.
3. Hazardous Waste Program, RCRA
Subtitle C
Under RCRA subtitle C, EPA is
responsible for designing and
implementing a cradle to grave disposal
system for hazardous wastes. The RCRA
subtitle C hazardous waste federal
program has a long regulatory history in
defining ‘‘solid waste’’ for purposes of
the hazardous waste regulations.6
However, the 40 CFR 261.2 regulatory
definition of solid waste explicitly
applies only to wastes that also are
hazardous for purposes of the subtitle C
regulations (see 40 CFR 261.1(b)(1)).
EPA emphasizes that it is not reopening
6 For
example, see 45 FR 33066 (May 19, 1980;
solid waste defined; interim final); 48 FR 14472
(April 4, 1983; Amendments to the Definition of
Solid Waste; proposed rule); 50 FR 614 (January 4,
1985; Amendments to the Definition of Solid Waste;
final rule); 53 FR 519 (January 8, 1988;
Amendments to the Definition of Solid Waste,
excludes in-process recycled secondary materials
from petroleum industry; proposed rule); 59 FR
38536 (July 28, 1994; Amendments to the Definition
of Solid Waste, excludes in-process recycled
secondary materials from petroleum industry; final
rule); 67 FR 11251 (March 13, 2002; Response to
court Vacaturs; final rule); 68 FR 61557 (October 28,
2003; Revisions to the Definition of Solid Waste;
proposed rule); 72 FR 14172 (March 26, 2007;
Revisions to the Definition of Solid Waste;
supplemental proposed rule); 73 FR 64668 (October
30, 2008; Revisions to the Definition of Solid Waste;
final rule).
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any of its subtitle C regulations in
today’s final rule.
Under subtitle C of RCRA, EPA
promulgated a final rule on October 30,
2008, which revised the requirements
regulating hazardous secondary
materials when they are recycled via
reclamation (The 2008 Definition of
Solid Waste (DSW) Final Rule).7 On
January 29, 2009, the Sierra Club filed
a lawsuit challenging the rule in the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit (DC Circuit), Docket
No. 09–1041. In addition, Sierra Club
submitted to the Administrator of EPA
an administrative petition under RCRA
section 7004(a), 42 U.S.C. 6974(a). The
administrative petition requested that
the Agency repeal the October 2008
revisions to the 2008 DSW Final Rule
and stay the implementation of the
rule.8 EPA reviewed the administrative
petition, held a public meeting 9 and
requested written comments on the
petition. As a result of settlement in the
litigation, Sierra Club has withdrawn its
administrative petition, but EPA has
agreed to issue a proposal to consider
the issues raised in the petition. As a
result, EPA plans to develop a proposed
rule asking for comment on potential
revisions to the October 2008 DSW
Final Rule. Under the settlement
agreement with the Sierra Club in the
DC Circuit litigation, EPA has
committed to a proposed rule on or
before June 30, 2011 and to take final
action on the proposed rulemaking on
or before December 31, 2012.10 The DC
Circuit approved the settlement
agreement by order dated January 11,
2011. This subsequent proposed rule
will apply to the regulation of
reclamation of hazardous secondary
materials under subtitle C of RCRA and
is not affecting today’s final rule.
4. Case Law on the Definition of Solid
Waste Under RCRA Subtitle C
Partly because the interpretation of
what constitutes a solid waste is the
7 See ‘‘Revisions to the Definition of Solid Waste,’’
Final Rule, October 30, 2008, at 73 FR 64667.
8 A copy of Sierra Club’s Petition to the U.S. EPA
to Reconsider and Repeal the Definition of Solid
Waste Final Rule (DSW Rule) can be found in the
docket for the 2008 DSW Final Rule. See Docket ID:
EPA–HQ–RCRA–2009–0315; Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–RCRA–2009–0315–0002.
9 The public meeting was announced in a May 27,
2009 Federal Register notice, which also described
possible actions and optional paths forward. See 74
FR 25200. The transcript of the public hearing can
also be found in the docket for the DSW Final Rule.
See Docket ID: EPA–HQ–RCRA–2009–0315,
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–RCRA–2009–0315–
0024.
10 A copy of the settlement agreement, entitled
‘‘EPA’s and Sierra Club’s Lodging of Settlement and
Motion to Sever and Hold Case in Abeyance,’’ can
be found at https://www.epa.gov/osw/hazard/dsw/
sierraclubdsw.pdf.
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foundation of the hazardous waste
regulatory program (i.e., secondary
material must qualify as ‘‘solid waste’’
before it can be classified as ‘‘hazardous
waste’’), there have been a number of
court opinions discussing the meaning
of ‘‘solid waste’’ in litigation challenges
to rules issued under RCRA subtitle C.
From these cases, a few key principles
emerge which guide our thinking on the
definition of solid waste in today’s final
rule.
First, the ordinary plain-English
meaning of the term, ‘‘discard,’’ controls.
See American Mining Congress v. EPA,
824 F.2d 1177 (DC Cir. 1987) (‘‘AMC I’’).
The ordinary plain-English meaning of
the term discarded means ‘‘disposed of,’’
‘‘thrown away,’’ or ‘‘abandoned.’’ The
court specifically rejected a more
expansive meaning for discard that
would encompass any materials ‘‘no
longer useful in their original capacity’’
even if they were not destined for
disposal. 824 F.2d at 1185–87. The
Court further held that the term
‘‘discarded materials’’ could not include
materials ‘‘* * * destined for beneficial
reuse or recycling in a continuous
process by the generating industry
itself’’ (824 F.2d at 1190).
Subsequent to AMC I, the court
discussed the meaning of discard in
particular cases. In American Petroleum
Institute v. EPA, 906 F.2d 729 (DC Cir.
1990) (‘‘API I’’), the court rejected EPA’s
decision not to regulate recycled air
pollution control equipment slag based
on an Agency determination that waste
‘‘ceases to be a ‘solid waste’ when it
arrives at a metals reclamation facility
because at that point it is no longer
‘discarded material.’ ’’ 906 F.2d at 740.
Instead, the court stated that these
materials are part of a mandatory waste
treatment plan for hazardous wastes
prescribed by EPA and continued to be
wastes even if recycled. 906 F.2d at 741.
Further, ‘‘once material qualifies as
‘solid waste,’ [footnote omitted]
something derived from it retains that
designation even if it might be
reclaimed and reused at some future
time.’’ Association of Battery Recyclers
v. EPA, (‘‘ABR’’) 208 F.3d 1047, 1056
(DC Cir. 2000) (referring to API I and the
later decided case, American Mining
Congress v. EPA, (‘‘AMC II’’) 907 F.2d
1179 (DC Cir. 1990)).
One of the more important holdings of
a number of court decisions is that
simply because a hazardous waste has,
or may have, value does not mean the
material loses its status as a solid waste.
See API I, 906 F.2d at 741 n.16; United
States v. ILCO Inc., 996 F.2d 1126,
1131–32 (11th Cir. 1993) (‘‘ILCO’’); Owen
Steel v. Browner, 37 F.3d 146, 150 (4th
Cir. 1994) (‘‘Owen Steel’’). ILCO and
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Owen Steel, however, seem to recognize
that legitimate products made from
wastes are, themselves, products and
not wastes.
The ABR case reiterated the concepts
discussed in the previous cases of AMC
I and II and API I. The Court held that
it had already resolved the issue
presented in ABR in its opinion in AMC
I, where it found that ‘‘* * * Congress
unambiguously expressed its intent that
‘solid waste’ (and therefore EPA’s
regulatory authority) be limited to
materials that are ‘discarded’ by virtue
of being disposed of, abandoned, or
thrown away’’ (208 F.2d at 1051). It
repeated that materials that are reused
within an ongoing industrial process are
neither disposed of nor abandoned (208
F.3d at 1051–52). It explained that the
intervening API I and AMC II decisions
had not narrowed the holding in AMC
I (208 F.3d at 1054–1056).
Notably, the Court did not hold that
storage before reclamation automatically
makes materials ‘‘discarded.’’ Rather, it
held that ‘‘* * * at least some of the
secondary material EPA seeks to
regulate as solid waste (in the mineral
processing rule) is destined for reuse as
part of a continuous industrial process
and thus is not abandoned or thrown
away’’ (208 F.3d at 1056). In this regard,
the court criticized all parties in the
case—industry, as well as EPA—
because they ‘‘presented this aspect of
the case in broad abstraction, providing
little detail about the many processes
throughout the industry that generate
residual material of the sort EPA is
attempting to regulate. * * *’’ (Ibid).
American Petroleum Institute v. EPA,
216 F.3d 50, 55 (DC Cir. 2000) (‘‘API II’’),
decided shortly after ABR and
considered by the court at the same
time, provides further guidance for
defining solid waste, but in the context
of two specific waste streams in the
petroleum refining industry. The court
overturned EPA’s determination that
certain recycled oil-bearing wastewaters
are wastes (216 F.3d at 55–58) and
upheld conditions imposed by the
Agency in excluding petrochemical
recovered oil from the definition of
solid waste (216 F.3d at 58–59). In the
case of oil-bearing wastewaters, EPA
had determined that the first phase of
treatment, primary treatment, results in
a waste being created. 216 F.3d at 55.
The court overturned this decision and
remanded it to EPA for a better
explanation, neither accepting EPA’s
view nor the contrary industry view.
The court noted that the ultimate
determination that had to be made was
whether primary treatment ‘‘is simply a
step in the act of discarding [* * *][o]r
is it the last step in a production process
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before discard?’’ 216 F.3d at 57. In
particular, the court rejected EPA’s
argument that primary treatment was
required by regulation, and instead
stated that EPA needed to ‘‘set forth why
it has concluded that the compliance
motivation predominates over the
reclamation motivation’’ and ‘‘why that
conclusion, even if validly reached,
compels the further conclusion that the
wastewater has been discarded.’’ 216
F.3d at 58.
The court also considered whether
material is discarded in Safe Food and
Fertilizer v. EPA, 350 F.3d 1263 (DC Cir.
2003) (‘‘Safe Food’’). In that case, among
other things, the court rejected the
argument that, as a matter of plain
meaning, recycled material destined for
immediate reuse within an ongoing
industrial process is never considered
‘‘discarded,’’ whereas material that is
transferred to another firm or industry
for subsequent recycling must always be
solid wastes. 350 F.3d at 1268. Instead,
the court evaluated ‘‘whether the
agency’s interpretation of * * *
‘discarded’ * * * is, reasonable and
consistent with the statutory purpose.
* * *’’ Id. Thus, EPA has the discretion
to determine if material is not a solid
waste, even if it is transferred between
industries.
We also note that the Ninth Circuit
has specifically found that nonhazardous secondary materials may,
under certain circumstances, be burned
and not constitute a solid waste under
RCRA. See Safe Air For Everyone v.
Waynemeyer (‘‘Safe Air’’), 373 F.3d 1035
(9th Cir., 2004). In this case, the Court
found that Kentucky bluegrass stubble
may be burned to return nutrients to the
soil and not be a solid waste.
5. Concept of Legitimacy
Under RCRA subtitle C, some
hazardous secondary materials that
would otherwise be subject to regulation
under RCRA’s ‘‘cradle to grave’’
hazardous waste system are not
considered solid wastes if they are
‘‘legitimately recycled’’ or legitimately
reused as an ingredient or substitute for
a commercial product. The principal
reasoning behind this construct is that
use/reuse or recycling of such secondary
materials often closely resembles
normal industrial production, rather
than waste management. Although
today’s final rule does not address the
Agency’s hazardous waste regulations,
EPA finds the concept of legitimacy to
be an important one in determining
when a secondary material (whether
hazardous or non-hazardous) is
genuinely recycled and not discarded
under the guise of recycling.
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However, since there can be
considerable economic incentive to
manage recyclable materials outside of
the RCRA hazardous waste regulatory
system, there is a clear potential for, and
historical evidence of, some handlers
claiming they are recycling, when in
fact they are conducting waste treatment
and/or disposal in the guise of
recycling. EPA considers such ‘‘sham’’
recycling to be, in fact, discard and
these secondary materials being sham
recycled are solid wastes (or hazardous
waste if the material is listed as, or
exhibits a characteristic of, hazardous
waste pursuant to 40 CFR part 261).
To guard against hazardous secondary
materials being discarded in the guise of
recycling, EPA has long articulated the
need to distinguish between ‘‘legitimate’’
(i.e., true) recycling or other use and
‘‘sham’’ (i.e., fake) recycling; see the
preamble to the 1985 hazardous waste
regulations that established the
definition of solid waste under RCRA
subtitle C (50 FR 638; January 4, 1985).
A similar discussion that addressed
legitimacy as it pertains to burning
hazardous secondary materials for
energy recovery (considered a form of
recycling under RCRA subtitle C) was
presented in the January 9, 1988
proposed amendments to the definition
of solid waste (53 FR 522).
Then on April 26, 1989, the Office of
Solid Waste 11 issued a memorandum
that consolidated the various preamble
and other statements concerning
legitimate recycling into a list of
questions to be considered in evaluating
the legitimacy of hazardous secondary
materials recycling (OSWER directive
9441.1989(19)). This memorandum
(known to many as the ‘‘Lowrance
Memo,’’ a copy of which is included in
the Docket to today’s rule) has been a
primary source of information for the
regulated community and for overseeing
agencies in distinguishing between
legitimate and sham recycling.
In the October 30, 2008 DSW Final
Rule, EPA finalized several exclusions
from the definition of solid waste for
hazardous secondary materials being
reclaimed and a non-waste
determination process for persons to
receive a formal determination that their
hazardous secondary materials are not
solid wastes when legitimately
reclaimed. In that action, EPA codified
in 40 CFR 260.43 the requirement that
materials be legitimately recycled as a
condition for the exclusion for
hazardous secondary materials that are
legitimately reclaimed under the control
11 On January 9, 2009, the Office of Solid Waste
was renamed the Office of Resource Conservation
and Recovery.
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of the generator (40 CFR 261.2(a)(2)(ii)
and 40 CFR 261.4(a)(23)) and as a
condition of the exclusion for hazardous
secondary materials that are transferred
for the purpose of legitimate
reclamation (40 CFR 261.4(a)(24) and 40
CFR 261.4(a)(25)). As part of that final
rule, EPA also codified the legitimate
recycling provision specifically as a
requirement for the non-waste
determination process (40 CFR 260.34).
As discussed above, the Agency has
agreed to prepare a notice of proposed
rulemaking, which will solicit comment
regarding potential revisions to the 2008
DSW Final Rule. The definition of
‘‘legitimacy’’ is one of the issues that will
be reconsidered in this subsequent
proposed rule. This subsequent DSW
proposed rule is, by necessity, in a
different proceeding from the rule we
are promulgating today. EPA cannot
presuppose the results of the DSW rule,
but still needs to issue a final rule
dealing with legitimacy criteria in
today’s separate rule affecting nonhazardous secondary materials. The
same concept—legitimacy—applies to
both rules, but, at this point, EPA
cannot reconcile the differences
between the legitimacy criteria in each
rule, if there are indeed any substantive
differences. As a result, each rule will
have its own definition of legitimate
recycling. Although the Agency is
revisiting the definition of legitimacy in
the context of regulations promulgated
pursuant to RCRA subtitle C, EPA
continues to find the principle of
‘‘legitimacy’’ to be an important element
in the recycling of both hazardous and
non-hazardous secondary materials.
That is, the concept of legitimate
recycling is crucial to determining
whether a hazardous or non-hazardous
secondary material being recycled is
truly being recycled or is, in fact, being
discarded through sham recycling and
thus, is a solid waste.
D. Summary of the ANPRM
In the ANPRM, the Agency
considered various guiding principles,
including the concept of discard, and if
discarded, whether the secondary
material has been processed to produce
a non-waste fuel or ingredient product,
and the concept of legitimacy,12 in
12 The Agency discussed various criteria
regarding the concept of legitimacy. Specifically,
with respect to secondary materials used as a fuel,
they should be handled as a valuable commodity,
have a meaningful heating value, and contain
contaminants that are not significantly higher in
concentration than traditional fuel products. For
those secondary materials used as an ingredient,
they should be handled as a valuable commodity,
the secondary material provides a useful
contribution, the recycling results in a valuable
product, and the product does not contain
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determining if secondary materials used
in combustion units are solid wastes.
Based on these guiding principles, the
Agency identified a number of scenarios
in evaluating the usage of secondary
materials (e.g., as fuels or ingredients)
and whether these secondary materials
should be considered solid wastes
under RCRA when used in combustion
devices, such that units burning these
secondary materials would be subject to
regulation under CAA section 129,
rather than subject to CAA section 112.
The ANPRM identified several cases
where such secondary materials are not
solid wastes when combusted, and thus,
subject to CAA section 112. These
scenarios were: (1) Traditional fuels, (2)
non-hazardous secondary materials
used as legitimate ‘‘alternative’’ fuels
that have not been previously discarded,
(3) non-hazardous secondary materials
used as legitimate ‘‘alternative fuels’’
resulting from the processing of
discarded secondary materials, (4) nonhazardous secondary materials used as
legitimate ingredients, and (5)
hazardous secondary materials that may
be excluded from the definition of solid
waste under RCRA subtitle C because
they are more like commodities than
wastes. All other cases where nonhazardous secondary materials are
combusted would be considered ‘‘solid
wastes’’ and subject to CAA section 129.
Specifically:
• Traditional Fuels: EPA identified in
the ANPRM fossil fuels (e.g., coal, oil,
and natural gas) and their derivatives
(e.g., petroleum coke, bituminous coke,
coal tar oil, refinery gas, synthetic fuel,
heavy recycle, asphalts, blast furnace
gas, recovered gaseous butane, and coke
oven gas), as well as cellulosic biomass
(e.g., wood) as traditional fuels. Such
traditional fuels have been used
historically as fuels and have been
managed as valuable products, such that
they are considered unused products
that have not been discarded and
therefore, are not solid wastes. In
addition, EPA also identified as
traditional fuels wood collected from
forest fire clearance activities and tree
and uncontaminated wood found in
hurricane debris if not discarded, if
managed properly, and if burned as a
legitimate fuel.
• Non-Hazardous Secondary
Materials Used as Legitimate
‘‘Alternative Fuels’’ That Have Not Been
Previously Discarded: The ANPRM
indicated that, in addition to traditional
fuels, there may be a category of noncontaminants that are significantly higher in
concentration than traditional products. If these
criteria are not met, then sham recycling may be
indicated and the secondary material may be a solid
waste.
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hazardous secondary materials that are
legitimate alternative non-waste fuels,
even though they may not have been
traditionally used as fuels, because of
changes in technology and in the energy
market. Biomass was discussed as one
large category of these alternatives fuels.
EPA also discussed that scrap tires used
as tire-derived fuel (TDF), which
includes whole or shredded tires, that
have not been previously discarded,
could also be considered legitimate
fuels that meet the legitimacy criteria
(see Materials Characterization Paper on
Scrap Tires in the docket for today’s
rule for a complete discussion on
contaminants in TDF [EPA–HQ–RCRA–
2008–0329]). We noted that in many
cases, scrap tires are collected pursuant
to state tire oversight programs (e.g.,
used tires from tire dealerships that are
sent to used tire processing facilities)
are handled as valuable commodities,
and, therefore, have not been
abandoned, disposed of, or thrown
away. We noted that because states
typically regulate these programs under
their state solid waste authorities, it was
not the Agency’s intent to undercut the
state’s authority in this area. We,
therefore, requested comment on
whether scrap tires collected pursuant
to state tire oversight programs should
be considered a non-waste fuel when
combusted, and whether an EPA
designation specifying that scrap tires,
for example, managed pursuant to state
collection programs would adversely
impact a state’s ability to manage such
a program. Other non-traditional
alternative fuels that EPA identified in
the ANPRM included construction and
demolition materials, scrap plastics,
non-hazardous solvents and lubricants,
and wastewater treatment sludge. The
Agency solicited comment on this
category.
• Non-Hazardous Secondary
Materials Used as Legitimate
‘‘Alternative Fuels’’ Resulting from the
Processing of Discarded Secondary
Materials: The Agency also discussed
the concept of processing of discarded
non-hazardous secondary materials,
such that legitimate fuel products may
be extracted, processed, or reclaimed
from a non-hazardous secondary
material that has been discarded in the
first instance and that such products
would generally not be considered solid
wastes. The principle behind this idea
of processing a solid waste to produce
a product is common to industrial
processes. We noted in the ANPRM that
until a legitimate product has been
extracted, processed, or reclaimed, the
non-hazardous secondary material has
been discarded and is a solid waste. The
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ANPRM identified a number of nonhazardous materials that can be
processed into a legitimate fuel,
including biomass, coal fines, used oil,
tires and landfill ash. Of course, the
degree of processing necessarily will
vary depending on the specific material,
but the objective is the same—that is,
the product from processing must be a
legitimate fuel (i.e., a material with a
meaningful heating value, with
contaminants that are not present at
significantly higher concentrations than
those of traditional fuel products, and
managed as a valuable commodity).
• Non-Hazardous Secondary
Materials Used as Ingredients: In
addition to legitimate fuel products, the
ANPRM also recognized that nonhazardous secondary materials that have
not been discarded can be used as
legitimate ingredients, and identified
cement kiln dust (CKD), bottom ash,
boiler slag, blast furnace slag, foundry
sand, and secondary glass material as
secondary materials that could be
considered as legitimate ingredient
products. If, on the other hand, such
non-hazardous secondary materials
have been discarded, the ANPRM
identified such secondary materials as
solid wastes, unless they are sufficiently
processed into a legitimate product, as
would be the case for discarded
materials that could become products
after being processed.
• Hazardous Secondary Materials
That May Be Excluded From the
Definition of Solid Waste Under RCRA
Subtitle C Because They Are More Like
Commodities Than Wastes: The final
category identified in the ANPRM are
hazardous secondary materials that are
recycled and are specifically identified
in the subtitle C hazardous waste rules
as secondary materials that may be
burned under certain conditions, but are
not considered solid wastes, at least for
purposes of the hazardous waste
regulations. The ANPRM indicated that
EPA was interested in extending this
determination so that these materials
also are not considered solid wastes
under RCRA subtitle D. The Agency
indicated that it believed that it had
sufficient information in the rulemaking
records for the various hazardous
secondary materials—that is, black
liquor and spent sulfuric acid,13 and
comparable fuels 14 to conclude that
13 A determination was made that black liquor
reclaimed in a pulping liquor recovery furnace and
then reused in the pulping process and spent
sulfuric acid used to produce virgin sulfuric acid
were not solid wastes because these hazardous
secondary materials were determined to be an
integral part of the manufacturing process.
14 A determination was made with respect to
comparable fuels that certain hazardous secondary
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these subtitle C exclusions are broadly
applicable to the definition of solid
waste under subtitle D of RCRA when
these secondary materials are used as a
fuel or ingredient.
The ANPRM indicated that in all
other cases where secondary materials
were combusted, they would be
considered ‘‘solid wastes’’ under RCRA
subtitle D and thus, subject to CAA
section 129. However, the Agency
solicited comment on many aspects of
these scenarios. In addition, the ANPRM
also solicited comment on the following
four issues: (1) Whether there are
circumstances where discarded
secondary materials—once recovered
from the environment—that can be
directly used as a legitimate fuel or
ingredient product without processing
should not be considered a solid waste;
(2) whether there are other approaches
for determining that non-hazardous
secondary materials when used as a
legitimate fuel is not a solid waste, and
specifically took comment on an
approach presented to EPA by industry
representatives; 15 (3) whether to
consider non-hazardous secondary
materials that receive a state beneficial
use determination for use as a fuel or
ingredient in a combustion unit as not
being a solid waste; and (4) how to
address biofuels and byproducts from
the production of biofuels—that is,
whether such secondary materials
should be considered a waste or not
when combusted. (For a more detailed
discussion of the ANPRM, see 74 FR 41,
January 2, 2009.)
E. Summary of the Proposed Rule
The proposal maintained many of the
concepts and provisions discussed in
the ANPRM, including the concept of
discard and the legitimacy criteria.
However, the basic framework differed
from the ANPRM based partly on the
materials meet specific requirements to ensure that
the materials toxic constituents and physical
properties are similar to commercial (benchmark)
fuels, and therefore, are products and not solid
wastes.
15 Industry representatives suggested that nonhazardous secondary materials should be evaluated,
on a case-by-case basis, to identify which criteria
have been satisfied and determine whether the
material is legitimately handled as a fuel. Criteria
identified by industry stakeholders include:
Handling and storage of materials to minimize loss,
use of materials within a reasonable period of time,
material value (e.g., whether there is a market for
the material as a fuel, internal or external to the
company), material managed and treated as a
commodity, and processing of material to enhance
fuel value. See 74 FR 60 for the ANPRM’s
description of this approach. A copy of this
industry-recommended approach entitled, ‘‘Outline
of Regulatory Approach to Determine Materials
Considered Fuels—not Solid Wastes—under
RCRA,’’ is also included in the docket for this
rulemaking.
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approach taken in the Definition of
Solid Waste final rule promulgated on
October 30, 2008 (see 73 FR 64668),
based partly on the comments received
on the ANPRM, as well as EPA’s
interpretation of whether these
secondary materials were discarded. For
example, comments received on the
ANPRM from some states suggested that
non-hazardous secondary material fuels
that are transferred to a third party have
entered what is traditionally considered
to be the ‘‘waste stream’’ (and have been
regulated by the states as wastes) and
therefore should appropriately be
considered wastes (e.g., scrap tires,
regardless of whether they were
collected and managed pursuant to state
programs or recovered from legacy
waste piles).
As a result of comments like these
and the Agency’s re-examining our
interpretation of the application of the
discard concept to various nonhazardous secondary materials, the
Agency altered its position in the
proposed rule. Whereas the ANPRM had
indicated that there may be a number of
non-hazardous secondary materials that
would not be considered discarded even
if the original generator sent them to
another entity outside of its control, the
proposed rule assumed that nonhazardous secondary materials that are
used as fuels and are managed outside
the control of the generator are solid
wastes, unless they were processed into
non-waste fuel products or the Agency
grants a non-waste determination
(through a case-by-case petition process)
that such non-hazardous secondary
materials are not solid wastes because
they have not been discarded and are
indistinguishable in all relevant aspects
from a fuel product.
In the proposal, EPA stated that when
non-hazardous secondary material fuels
are transferred to another party, the
Agency generally believed that the
material is discarded, since the
generator has relinquished control of the
secondary material and the entity
receiving such materials may not have
the same incentives to manage them as
a useful product, which results in the
materials being discarded. The Agency
noted that this lack of incentive to
manage as a useful product has been
well-documented in the context of
hazardous secondary material recycling
as evidenced by the results of the
environmental problems study
performed in support of the 2008 DSW
Final Rule and believed that this finding
also held true for non-hazardous
secondary materials that are used as
fuel.
The proposed rule considered nonhazardous secondary materials used as
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ingredients that are used in combustion
units to not be solid waste if they were
not discarded in the first instance and
if they met the legitimacy criteria,
irrespective of whether they have been
transferred to a third party. The Agency
stated that it was not proposing to
differentiate ingredients that are used
within the control of the generator from
those that are not since we believed the
use of non-hazardous secondary
materials as ingredients is considered to
be more integral or akin to use in a
commercial manufacturing process and
thus, these non-hazardous secondary
materials would not be considered
discarded provided they satisfy the
legitimacy criteria.
The proposed rule also included a
petition process for receiving non-waste
determinations, which was an
additional area for comment in the
ANPRM, but not included as an
approach or scenario that was
specifically presented. One of the
differences between the ANPRM and the
proposed rule was the classification of
‘‘clean’’ biomass and on-specification
used oil as traditional fuels. In addition,
the proposed rule did not address
hazardous secondary materials excluded
from the definition of solid waste under
subtitle C of RCRA, concluding that it
does not need to address this exclusion
in this rulemaking since these
secondary materials have already been
excluded from the definition of solid
waste as hazardous secondary materials
and therefore, should not be addressed
in the proposed rule, which deals with
the definition of solid waste for nonhazardous secondary materials used in
combustion units.
Finally, the proposed rule also revised
the contaminant legitimacy criterion,
stating that non-hazardous secondary
materials used as fuels in combustion
units must contain contaminants at
levels ‘‘comparable to or less than’’ those
in traditional fuels which the
combustion unit is designed to burn,
whereas the ANPRM had stated that
non-hazardous secondary materials
used as fuel could not contain
contaminants that were ‘‘significantly
higher’’ than traditional fuel products. In
the proposed rule, EPA explained its
rationale for making this change, stating
that the requirement that non-hazardous
secondary materials have contaminants
at levels comparable to or less than
traditional fuels would ensure that the
burning of any secondary materials in
combustion units will not result in
discard of materials or their
contaminants and thus, will not result
in increased releases to the environment
that could adversely impact the health
and environment of the local
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community. A similar change was made
to the contaminant legitimacy criterion
for ingredients, with the comparison
being made between products
manufactured with and without nonhazardous secondary materials.
Thus, in the proposed rule, the
Agency considered all non-hazardous
secondary materials burned in
combustion units as solid wastes except
for the following circumstances: (1)
Non-hazardous secondary materials
used as a fuel that remains within the
control of the generator (whether at the
site of generation or another site within
the generator’s control) that meets the
legitimacy criteria; (2) non-hazardous
secondary materials used as an
ingredient in a manufacturing process
(whether by the generator or a third
party) that meets the legitimacy criteria;
(3) legitimate fuel or ingredient products
that are produced from the processing of
discarded non-hazardous secondary
materials; 16 and (4) non-hazardous
secondary materials handled outside the
control of the generator, but has been
determined through a case-by-case nonwaste determination petition process to
not have been discarded and to be
indistinguishable in all relevant aspects
from a fuel product.
F. Use of Secondary Materials
1. Introduction
The U.S. is pursuing an approach to
sustainable materials management that
employs the concepts of life cycle
assessment 17 and full cost accounting.18
Within the context of RCRA,19 this final
rule aims to facilitate materials
management to the extent allowed by
the statute, through the establishment of
a regulatory framework that guides the
beneficial use of various secondary
materials, while ensuring that such use
is protective of human health and the
16 As we state throughout the preamble, prior to
the production of the legitimate fuel or ingredient
product, the non-hazardous secondary material is
considered a solid waste and would be subject to
the appropriate federal, state, and local
requirements.
17 The terms ‘‘life cycle analysis’’ and ‘‘life cycle
assessment’’ are commonly used interchangeably.
Life cycle assessment is a system-wide analytical
technique for assessing the environmental (and
sometimes economic) effects of a product, process,
or activity across all life stages.
18 Full cost accounting is an accounting system
that incorporates economic, environmental, health,
and social costs of a product, action, or decision.
19 RCRA section 6901(c)—Materials: The
Congress finds with respect to materials, that—(1)
millions of tons of recoverable material which
could be used are needlessly buried each year; (2)
methods are available to separate usable materials
from solid waste; and (3) the recovery and
conservation of such materials can reduce the
dependence of the United States on foreign
resources and reduce the deficit in its balance of
payments.
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environment. EPA, in conjunction with
the states, seeks to further facilitate this
objective through research, analysis,
incentives, and communication. The
Agency recognizes that secondary
materials are widely used today as fuels
and/or ingredients in industrial
processes. We expect these uses will
continue and expand in future years as
effective materials management
becomes more critical to a sustainable
society. The use of secondary materials
from a variety of non-traditional
sources, including the use of energycontaining secondary materials, is
expected to play an important role in
future resource conservation efforts.
The use of secondary materials as
alternative fuels and/or ingredients in
manufacturing processes using
combustion not only recovers valuable
resources, it is known to contribute to
emission reductions. For example, both
greenhouse gas (GHG) and particulate
matter (PM) emissions have been
reduced as a co-benefit of the use of
secondary materials.20 The use of
secondary materials, such as use as a
fuel in industrial processes may also
result in other benefits, including
reduced fuel imports, reduced negative
environmental impacts caused by
previous dumping (e.g., tires), and
reduced methane gas generation from
landfills.
Secondary materials may, in some
cases, be more appropriately defined as
‘‘by-products,’’ 21 reflecting their
inherent resource recovery value in the
generation and production of heat,
energy, and/or marketable products or
intermediates. Secondary materials can
provide microeconomic (firm level) and
macroeconomic benefits when
legitimately used as effective substitutes
for, or supplement to virgin materials.
Economic efficiencies can be improved
with the use of secondary materials,
when substituted for increasingly scarce
20 For example, the GHG emissions rate
associated with the combustion of scrap tires is
approximately 0.081metric tons of carbon dioxide
equivalents (MTCO2E) per million metric British
thermal units (MMBtu) of scrap tires combusted,
while the GHG emissions rate for coal is
approximately 0.094 MTCO2E per MMBtu.
Combined with the avoided extraction and
processing emissions 0.006 MTCO2E/MMBtu for
coal, the total avoided GHG is 0.019 MTCO2E per
MMBtu. Substituting tire-derived fuel for coal
would also avoid an estimated 0.246 Lbs/MMBtu of
PM associated with the extraction and processing
of the coal. Please see the Materials
Characterization Papers in the docket for further
details on these estimates, and other estimates of
avoided emissions associated with burning tires
and other secondary materials as fuel.
21 For purposes of this action, we define byproduct as a secondary or incidental material
derived from the primary use or production process
that retains value in the marketplace or to an end
user.
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virgin materials, because the use of such
secondary materials often results in an
equivalent level of outputs at lower
overall resource use, or in turn, greater
outputs could be generated using the
same amount of resource inputs. When
this occurs, monetary savings resulting
from reduced resources and
expenditures would, theoretically, be
applied to a higher and better use in the
economy. This helps advance economic
growth as a result of improved
industrial efficiency,22 which, in turn,
helps move the country toward material
sustainability and energy self
sufficiency, while protecting human
health and the environment.
2. Secondary Materials Use and Benefits
A wide and diverse range of
secondary materials are currently used
as fuels and/or ingredients in
manufacturing or service processes.
Based on our research conducted in
support of the January 2, 2009 ANPRM,
we identified eight non-hazardous
secondary material fuels or fuel groups
and six non-hazardous ingredients, or
ingredient groups. The eight fuel source
materials were: The biomass group
(pulp and paper residuals, forest
derived biomass, agricultural residues,
food scraps, animal manure, and
gaseous fuels); construction and
demolition materials (building related,
disaster debris, and land clearing
debris); scrap tires; scrap plastics; spent
solvents; coal refuse; waste water
treatment sludge, and used oil. The six
secondary material ingredients were:
blast furnace slag; CKD; the coal
combustion residuals (fly ash, bottom
ash, and boiler slag); foundry sand;
silica fume; and secondary glass
material. The ANPRM discussed and
described these key secondary
materials. In addition, we developed
Materials Characterization Papers for
each of these fuel and ingredient
materials. These papers were included
in the docket for the ANPRM, as well as
the docket for the proposed rule.
In preparing the proposed rule, we
developed three additional Materials
Characterization Papers for auto
shredder residue, purification process
byproducts, and resinated wood
products. For today’s final rule, we have
updated and revised all of the existing
Materials Characterization Papers for
which we received additional data and
information. We have included these
22 Opportunities for improved economic
efficiency are recognized through the Action
Statement of the U.S. Business Council For
Sustainable Development: ‘‘Promoting Sustainable
Development by Creating Value Through Action
Establishing Networks and Partnerships, and
Providing a Voice for Industry.’’
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updated Materials Characterization
Papers in the docket for this final rule.
We have determined that the nonhazardous secondary fuels and
ingredients discussed in this series of
Materials Characterization Papers
account for the vast majority of all nonhazardous secondary materials used in
combustion processes in the U.S.
V. Comments on the Proposed Rule
Under the approach outlined in the
proposed rule, non-hazardous
secondary materials were defined as a
solid waste unless: (1) The nonhazardous secondary material is used as
a fuel and remains within the control of
the generator that meets the legitimacy
criteria; (2) the non-hazardous
secondary material is used as an
ingredient that meets the legitimacy
criteria; (3) the discarded non-hazardous
secondary material has been sufficiently
processed to produce a non-waste fuel
or ingredient product that meets the
legitimacy criteria; or (4) through a caseby-case non-waste determination
petition process, EPA has determined
that the non-hazardous secondary
material has not been discarded and is
indistinguishable in all relevant aspects
from a fuel product.
The Agency also took comment on
two other approaches regarding the
combustion of non-hazardous secondary
materials. Under the first approach,
identified in the proposal as the
‘‘Alternative Approach,’’ all nonhazardous secondary materials and
ingredients that were used in
combustion facilities that were not
within the control of the generator were
considered a solid waste. Thus, only
those non-hazardous secondary
materials or ingredients that were used
in combustion facilities within control
of the generator that meet the legitimacy
criteria would be considered a nonwaste. However, like the proposed rule,
traditional fuels also would not be
considered a solid waste, regardless of
the generator.
The second alternative that EPA took
comment on was a broader definition of
solid waste, in which only traditional
fuels are not solid wastes and all nonhazardous secondary materials burned
for energy recovery or used as an
ingredient are considered discarded,
and therefore, solid wastes.23 This
23 On August 18, 2009, EPA received a letter
signed by nearly one hundred community groups
and citizens that urged for an expansive definition
of solid waste for the purposes of combustion and
argued against the general approach of the ANPRM.
A copy of this letter has been placed in the docket
to today’s final rule. The letter highlights
stakeholder concerns regarding the differences
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section discusses the comments that
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those comments.
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A. Proposed Approach
1. Definition of the Term Discard
Under the proposed rule, nonhazardous secondary materials that are
discarded are considered to be a solid
waste. On the other hand, secondary
materials that have not been discarded,
for example, secondary materials that
are managed within the control of the
generator and meet the specified
legitimacy criteria would not be
considered a solid waste. Many of the
comments discussed the definition of
the term ‘‘discard’’ and instances in
which the term should or should not
apply.
As discussed below, environmental
groups argue, generally, that any
secondary material burned for energy
recovery is a solid waste. These
commenters object to allowing control
by the generator to be relevant to
rendering material a non-waste, even if
burned under the legitimacy criteria,
claiming that these materials are wastes.
Industry commenters, on the other
hand, assert that the secondary
materials used in their operations
exhibit value as evidenced by their
purchase price, their use as inputs and
products, their role in ongoing recycling
programs, their use as fuels, and/or their
use in ‘‘routine transactions’’ or
processing operations. Based on these
characteristics, industry commenters
maintain that such secondary materials
should not be considered discarded.
Industry commenters also assert that
EPA cannot define something as
‘‘discarded’’ when transferred to a third
party and express concern that the
concept of discard is ambiguous or
incorrectly interpreted by EPA in the
proposed rule.
In addition, while industry
commenters favor allowing the
generator to burn secondary materials as
non-wastes, they also argue that
materials are not wastes so long as they
are combusted legitimately even if the
material has been discarded in the first
instance. They argue that the proposed
rule effectively makes the act of moving
materials from one party to another the
equivalent of ‘‘discard,’’ regardless of
intent. These commenters claim that
EPA’s definition of solid waste is overly
restrictive and yields little
environmental gain. Certain comments
maintain that as long as a nonhazardous secondary material meets the
legitimacy criteria for use as a fuel, and
between CAA sections 112 and 129 and argues
against an overly narrow definition of solid waste.
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it is combusted as a fuel, it is not a
waste. These comments state that
secondary materials cannot be assumed
to be part of the solid waste disposal
problem merely because the original
generator of the materials transfers them
to another entity. In fact, depending on
the nature of the transaction, this
transfer may indicate that the company
values the material.
a. Comments From Environmental
Groups
Comment: Case law prevents EPA
from finding that secondary materials
burned for energy recovery are not solid
wastes. The DC Circuit holding in AMC
I that material ‘‘recycled and reused in
an ongoing manufacturing or industrial
process’’ is not ‘‘discarded’’ does not
apply to secondary materials burned for
energy recovery even if legitimately
recycled and reused. AMC I only
addresses reclamation of secondary
materials. Moreover, EPA incorrectly
relies on case law to give it discretion
to define ‘‘discard.’’ According to the
comment, EPA is wrongly implying
that, under case law, the meaning of
‘‘discard’’ is ambiguous and that the
Agency has discretion to define burning
for energy recovery as either discard or
not.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
this comment. To reply to this
commenter, EPA is relying on its
explanations in the ANPRM and the
proposal, as well as the discussion
reiterated in this preamble. See
especially discussions of the law in the
proposed rule at 75 FR 31850–52
(section titled, ‘‘Case Law on Definition
of Solid Waste’’); 31858–59 (Comment/
Response section titled ‘‘Meaning of
Discard’’); and 31885–87 (section titled
‘‘Alternative Approach’’). That is, EPA
sees nothing in the comment that would
change the legal basis for this rule.
However, the Agency would like to
clarify the more obvious inaccuracies in
the comment.
First, EPA freely admits, as stated in
the proposal, that the secondary
materials at issue in AMC I were not
burned for energy recovery. See, for
example, 75 FR 31887. However, the
plain logic of the court’s opinion and
the plain meaning of the statute are
unmistakable. EPA does not have the
discretion to cover as solid waste
secondary materials recycled in a
continuous industrial process, even if
they are used in a combustion unit.
Indeed, if EPA were to assert
jurisdiction for secondary materials
recycled in a continuous process for
energy recovery, it appears highly likely
that the Agency’s rule would be
invalidated in a litigation challenge.
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In addition, EPA has not at any time
since the ANPRM in this proceeding
stated that the term ‘‘discard’’ is
ambiguous. It is clear that EPA’s
jurisdiction under RCRA applies
unambiguously to materials that are
discarded and the definition is
unambiguous in that it means thrown
away, disposed of or abandoned. It is
the application of the definition to
particular instances that gives rise to
ambiguity. The ABR court plainly stated
that the term may be ambiguous as
applied to some situations, but not as
applied to others. 208 F.3d at 1056, See
also 75 FR 31887. The comment simply
begs the question when it claims EPA is
relying on an ambiguous meaning to
claim discretion. EPA has no discretion
in certain cases. For example, the
Agency may not regulate under RCRA
secondary materials recycled in a
continuous industrial process. On the
other hand, EPA may have to exercise
discretion to determine whether
particular materials are recycled in a
continuous process and whether such
materials recycled in other ways are
solid wastes. Agency discretion applies
to the application of the discard
definition.
Comment: EPA’s proposal
acknowledges that burning a secondary
material for energy recovery is not
‘‘traditional’’ recycling. Thus, EPA may
not consider burning for energy
recovery as recycling because the term,
‘‘recycling,’’ is not given its ordinary
meaning. See 75 FR at 31872.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
the conclusion of the comment, but
needs to correct the record. EPA
received a comment in response to the
ANPRM that requested the Agency to
apply the legitimacy criteria to
situations where the recycling does not
include burning for energy recovery.
The commenter referred to these other
situations as ‘‘traditional’’ recycling.
EPA’s response noted that this
regulation specifically applies to
whether non-hazardous secondary
materials in a combustion unit are
legitimately recycled or not. This is the
general policy in this regulation, since
states may regulate non-hazardous
secondary materials recycled in ways
not involving combustion units, but
EPA is required to determine which
non-hazardous secondary materials are
solid waste when combusted for
purposes of CAA sections 112 and 129.
In its response to the comment
wrongly referring to ‘‘traditional’’
recycling, the Agency used the same
term as the commenter. This was a
mistake, since the Agency makes clear
virtually everywhere else in the
rulemaking record that recycling
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includes legitimate burning for energy
recovery and this is very clearly
understood by almost all of the
commenters. The Agency views the
comment’s distinction as a semantic
matter, not as a practical application of
the term ‘‘traditional.’’ This mistake is
hereby corrected for purposes of the
final rule. ‘‘Traditional’’ recycling may
include burning for energy recovery of
secondary materials.
Comment: EPA effectively concedes
that the ‘‘ordinary everyday’’ meaning of
‘‘discarded material’’ includes
‘‘secondary materials’’ when they are
burned—no matter who burns them and
regardless of whether energy is
recovered from the combustion process.
The comment cites the preamble to the
proposed rule in several places where
EPA notes that combustion of secondary
materials is ‘‘commonly’’ associated with
disposal. See 75 FR at 31859, 31877.
The comment states, further, EPA’s
sense of what constitutes discard is not
the ordinary sense of the term by citing
the Agency’s discussion of the benefits
of burning secondary materials. 75 FR at
31849. In addition, according to the
comment, EPA is unlawfully seeking to
exclude from the definition of solid
waste by its discussion of the benefits of
burning the following materials: Pulp
and paper residuals, agricultural
residues, food scraps, animal manure,
construction and demolition waste,
disaster debris, land clearing debris,
scrap plastics, spent solvents, coal
refuse, waste water treatment sludge
and used oil. 75 FR at 31850.
EPA’s Response: Other responses deal
with the legal arguments made by this
particular comment on how the statute
and case law deal with the definition of
solid waste. However, the Agency
believes it necessary to address some of
the comment’s specific inaccuracies
separately.
First, EPA in no way ‘‘concedes’’ that
all materials burned for energy recovery
are discarded in the ordinary sense of
the term. To the extent that the Agency
notes certain public perceptions, it
plainly states (on the same pages cited
in the comment) that these are
misconceptions because they do not
take into account that a secondary
material may often be used to produce
a safe fuel product that is a valuable
commodity or that a secondary material
that is burned in a combustion unit does
not necessarily have high levels of
contaminants. 75 FR 31859.
In addition, EPA refers to the same
misconceptions when it discusses
whether product fuels may be processed
or extracted from materials once
discarded. EPA notes that fuel
processed or extracted from discarded
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non-hazardous secondary materials
should not necessarily be considered
solid waste, just as recycled
newspapers, recycled aluminum, rerefined oil, to name but a few, are not
considered solid waste. Moreover, the
misperception that contaminant levels
are high in combusted secondary
materials affects the perception that
there needs to be a very high threshold
with respect to the level of processing
that must take place to render a
discarded material into a non-waste
product. 75 FR 31877.
Finally, EPA does not understand the
comment’s citation to 75 FR 31849–50
as containing statements regarding the
Agency’s ‘‘sense’’ of discard or the fact
that the Agency is seeking to exclude
various materials from the definition of
solid waste. These pages only discuss
the benefits of secondary material
combustion without opining on whether
the combusted materials would or
would not be a waste. EPA cannot
understand the comment’s motivation
in making these statements.
Comment: RCRA’s statutory language
shows that Congress did not intend EPA
to exclude secondary materials that are
burned for energy recovery from the
definition of solid waste. In particular,
section 3004(q) directs EPA to issue
regulations both for facilities that
produce fuels from hazardous waste and
for facilities that burn ‘‘for purposes of
energy recovery’’ any fuel that is
produced from hazardous waste or any
fuel that contains any hazardous waste.
Thus, EPA may not declare that
hazardous wastes and hazardous waste
derived fuels are not discarded when
burned for energy recovery. The
comment concedes that section 3004(q)
addresses hazardous waste, but
maintains that the provision is strongly
indicative of Congress’ intent that
burning a material for energy recovery
does not transform that material into a
non-waste.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
this comment. Section 3004(q) only
applies to specific provisions of the
statute and in no way can it be
considered to present a sweeping bar to
the Agency’s ability to interpret the
statute. In fact, since Congress only
addressed these provisions in the
hazardous waste subtitle of RCRA, the
more logical interpretation is that such
provisions would not be applicable to
other parts of the statute. Section
3004(q) very clearly provides that a
material must be a hazardous waste,
first, before its provisions apply. EPA
needs to make the determination that
material is a hazardous waste before
even dealing with the restrictions under
3004(q). Thus, it does not apply to the
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present rule where EPA must first
determine whether the material is a
solid waste and there is no question that
the materials subject to this rule are not
hazardous wastes. EPA accepts the
comment’s concession that 3004(q) only
applies to hazardous waste.
Comment: One comment states that
‘‘exemptions’’ in EPA’s rule from the
definition of solid waste violate the
CAA. EPA interprets this comment to
mean that the commenter sees
violations of the CAA for any nonhazardous secondary material the
Agency has decided is not a solid waste.
The comment states the following:
‘‘Congress was not concerned either
about the ownership of a waste material
that was being burned or about whether
energy was recovered from the
combustion process; it simply wanted to
ensure that all waste combustion units
were subject to the protective control,
monitoring, siting, training, and
reporting requirements that it found
necessary and appropriate for these
units.’’
The comment makes four points to
support its contention:
1. The proposed rule is a transparent
attempt to exempt facilities that recover
energy from the section 129 standards
and would shrink the population of
facilities covered to 175, a number far
less than Congress intended.
2. Section 129(g)(1) makes clear that
Congress viewed refuse-derived fuel as
waste and EPA includes ‘‘refusederived’’ fuel as a non-waste.
3. Section 129(h)(5) shows that
Congress viewed the universe of ‘‘fuel’’
to consist of ‘‘waste’’ on the one hand
and ‘‘fossil fuel’’ on the other. Congress’s
definition of ‘‘municipal waste’’
expresses the intent that facilities that
burn non-fossil fuels and are not
covered by the express exclusions in
section 129(g)(1) must meet the section
129 incinerator standards.
4. Because EPA would allow energy
recovery facilities controlled by the
generator to burn non-hazardous
secondary materials under section 112,
EPA’s regulations would improperly
allow hospital-owned medical waste
incinerators to burn medical and
infectious wastes and would not be
incinerators subject to the section 129
incinerator standards.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees that
these provisions of the CAA are relevant
to this regulation. EPA is not creating
exemptions to section 129 for facilities
that recover energy. Rather, EPA is
establishing a definition of nonhazardous solid waste, which, as
specified by CAA section 129(g)(6),
governs the meaning of ‘‘solid waste’’
under section 129. Because Congress
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specifically directed that ‘‘solid waste’’
have the meaning established by the
Administrator under RCRA, instead of
defining the term under RCRA, the CAA
definition of ‘‘municipal waste’’ is not
relevant to this action.
If any or all of the commenter’s
contentions are correct, section 129
would not provide that the term ‘‘solid
waste’’ shall have the meaning
promulgated by EPA under RCRA.
There would simply be no reason for
EPA to consider the RCRA definition,
since section 129 would take care of the
issue. Section 129(g)(6) would be
meaningless.
The commenter further argues that
EPA should consider the CAA when
defining solid waste under RCRA. The
CAA does not direct the Agency to
consider the language of section 129
when establishing a RCRA definition.
So long as EPA’s rule is consistent with
the RCRA definition of ‘‘solid waste,’’ it
must stand. That is, as long as the
definition of solid waste is consistent
with RCRA, and the Agency issues
emissions standards for all units that
burn commercial and industrial solid
waste in the CISWI rule, the standards
under section 129 are valid. Therefore,
we believe the commenter’s general
argument is without merit.
With respect to each of the supporting
points:
1. Contrary to the commenter’s
assertion, EPA is not ‘‘exempting’’
energy recovery facilities from the
section 129 standards. The Agency is
simply interpreting the term ‘‘solid
waste’’ under RCRA. The number of
facilities that are combusting solid
waste is not relevant to this
interpretation. Moreover, there is no
indication in the CAA of the number of
facilities Congress intended to be
covered under section 129 of the Act.
2. The comment is incorrect that
section 129, by excluding ‘‘refusederived fuel’’ from the exclusion in
129(g)(1)(B) was somehow defining the
term as being included in the term,
‘‘solid waste,’’ under RCRA. Again, if
that were the case, section 129(g)(6)
would be superfluous. Nevertheless,
today’s rule identifying which nonhazardous secondary materials that are
solid wastes when combusted does not
include fuel derived from municipal
waste refuse under 129(g)(5). Some fuels
may be processed from solid waste, but
that determination by the Agency stands
or falls based on the RCRA statute and
case law, not the CAA. EPA is not
defining ‘‘refuse derived fuel’’ in this
RCRA rule. The validity of EPA’s
interpretation on whether commodity
fuels may be processed, or extracted,
from a waste must stand or fall based on
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the RCRA definition, not provisions of
the CAA.
3. EPA disagrees with the statement
that the CAA considers ‘‘the universe of
‘fuel’ to consist of ‘waste’ on the one
hand and ‘fossil fuel’ on the other.’’
Again, the CAA is not defining solid
waste. Solid waste is defined under
RCRA as material that is ‘‘discarded.’’
There is no distinction anywhere in
RCRA that would indicate that anything
other than a fossil fuel must be a waste.
4. This rule does not address whether
or not medical waste is a solid waste
under RCRA. EPA issued regulations
under section 129 of the CAA
establishing emission standards for
hospital and medical waste, and today’s
action does not affect those regulations.
[74 FR 51367].
Comment: EPA’s distinction between
materials burned for energy recovery
and those burned for destruction has
already been rejected as irrelevant in
NRDC. 489 F.3d at 1257–1258.
EPA’s Response: EPA agrees that the
DC Circuit has rejected for purposes of
combusting materials under CAA
section 129 a distinction between
materials burned for energy recovery
and solid wastes. However, EPA is not
making that distinction in this rule. EPA
agrees that units combusting solid waste
are generally subject to the emission
standards issued under section 129 of
the CAA whether those wastes are fuels
or not. Moreover, nothing in the NRDC
case addresses EPA’s discretion to
interpret the term ‘‘solid waste’’ under
the RCRA rulemaking. This issue was
not before the Court in NRDC, and thus
the Court did not speak to it. Therefore,
we disagree with that portion of the
comment.
It is clear that wastes may have fuel
value. EPA, in this rule, is making a
distinction between materials that are
discarded and those that are not. One of
the considerations is whether a
secondary material is really being
burned for destruction and is, therefore,
a waste. If it is not being burned for
destruction, other factors need to be
considered to determine whether the
non-hazardous secondary material is a
waste.
Another way of describing our
evaluation process to determine if a
secondary material is a waste, is that
EPA evaluates, first, whether such
material is discarded in the first
instance. If not, the Agency needs to
consider whether that material is
legitimately burned for energy recovery.
There are different ways of explaining
the legitimacy criteria and the factors
are not necessarily considered in any
particular order and one or more of the
factors may render the material a waste.
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For example, one of the legitimacy
criteria is the consideration of whether
the non-hazardous secondary material
has meaningful fuel value or is simply
being burned for destruction—that is,
incinerated. If there is no meaningful
fuel value, the non-hazardous secondary
material is simply being destroyed.
If there is meaningful fuel value, other
factors must be considered, including
whether the non-hazardous secondary
material is managed as a commodity
and whether contaminants indicate that
incineration (destruction) is the real
reason for burning. A decision as to
whether a non-hazardous secondary
material is a waste, thus, depends on a
number of factors, all of which need to
be considered by the Agency before it
decides whether such secondary
material is a waste or not.
Comment: It is irrelevant whether
non-hazardous secondary materials are
burned at a facility controlled by the
generator. Even EPA does not believe its
argument because it admits that a
secondary material could still be a waste
even if it is recycled on-site or within
the control of the generator and cites the
court’s holding in API II. Instead of
defending its condition as relevant to
whether a non-hazardous secondary
material is or is not discarded, the
Agency merely says that the secondary
material must both be within the control
of the generator and must pass the
legitimacy criteria. By punting to its
legitimacy criteria, EPA effectively
concedes that its ‘‘‘on-site’ problem’’
renders irrelevant the condition that
non-hazardous secondary materials be
burned at a facility within control of the
generator.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
this comment. If the non-hazardous
secondary material remains within the
control of the generator, it is more likely
to be a material that is saved and not
thrown away or abandoned. The Agency
has explained that case law would not
allow it to determine that secondary
materials are wastes if they are recycled
as fuels within a continuous industrial
process. EPA cannot evaluate every nonhazardous secondary material, but
believes this standard would cover all
secondary materials that are recycled as
a fuel within a continuous process. EPA,
however, acknowledges that this may
capture non-hazardous secondary
materials which may be a waste, but this
is unlikely. There may also be nonhazardous secondary materials
transferred to another party that may not
be a waste and EPA is attempting to deal
with those categories of non-hazardous
secondary materials on a case-by-case
basis. However, EPA believes that it is
a reasonable interpretation of the
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statutory definition of discard and the
case law to consider that a nonhazardous secondary material within
the control of its generator that is
legitimately burned as a fuel is not a
solid waste.
EPA is careful to note that
‘‘legitimacy’’ is shorthand for referring to
non-hazardous secondary materials that
are not thrown away, are saved and are
reused by being burned for their value
as a fuel. The legitimacy criteria are the
factors needed to be examined to make
this determination. Thus, for example, it
is relevant how the non-hazardous
secondary materials is managed and the
extent to which contaminants in the
secondary material may indicate that
the real reason for burning the
secondary material is simply its
destruction—referred to as ‘‘sham’’
recycling. The Agency is not simply
‘‘punting’’ to its legitimacy criteria, but
believes they provide a valid basis for
showing that a non-hazardous
secondary material is more commoditylike than waste-like.
b. Comments From Industry Groups
Comment: A number of industry
comments object to EPA’s explanation
for determining the extent to which
transfer of secondary materials between
companies for use as a fuel renders the
non-hazardous secondary materials
discarded. According to the comments,
EPA not only makes the transfer of
secondary materials an indication of
discard, but transfer becomes the
primary and controlling condition for
determining whether secondary
materials will be classified as fuel
commodities or solid waste. One
commenter in this general category
claims that EPA is forbidding economic
reuse of such materials by anyone other
than the generator without prior
government permission.
Moreover, the commenters claim that
EPA cannot make a sweeping and
arbitrary assumption in categorizing
these transferred materials as
‘‘discarded’’ and then place the burden
on the regulated community to
challenge the assumption through
submission of a petition to declare the
material a non-waste. According to the
commenters, it is incumbent upon EPA
to explain why a material is discarded
before the Agency can put the burden
on companies to submit non-waste
petitions if the companies want to claim
the secondary material is not a waste.
The Safe Food case states that firm-tofirm transfers ‘‘are hardly good indicia’’
of discard. If a fuel can meet all of the
legitimacy criteria (managed as a
valuable commodity, have meaningful
heating value, not contain elevated
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levels of contaminants), it cannot
reasonably be said to be discarded just
because it is sold or otherwise
transferred to an entity separate from
the generator. Assuming all relevant
legitimacy criteria are met, the transfer
of secondary materials between
companies is simply not relevant for
determining whether such materials
have been discarded. In fact, depending
on the nature of the transaction, this
transfer may be a good indicator that a
company values the material.
EPA cannot support its position by
referring to over-accumulation of scrap
tires resulting in massive piles of
discarded tires. Those materials did not
meet the legitimacy criteria and should
be treated as discarded. Such a reference
does not rehabilitate EPA’s presumption
that mere transfer of a non-hazardous
secondary material could cause the
mismanagement that resulted in the tire
piles.
Nor can EPA support its position that
state agencies consider materials wastes
when transferred to third parties for use
as fuels. States can make mistakes, as
they did regarding used oil, which they
classified as a waste, but changed
direction after EPA promulgated its
used oil regulations at 40 CFR part 279.
One comment states, on the basis of
case law on abandonment, that to be
abandoned there must be a clear and
unequivocal intent to abandon on the
part of the owner and that the burden
is on whoever alleges abandonment to
establish that intent. Of particular
significance is the principle in the
common law that abandonment does
not occur where a direct transfer of
ownership to another party occurs.
Where a generator conveys title to a
secondary material to a third-party, no
abandonment occurs, whether there is
payment for the material or not. Nor, if
the material is actually recycled (i.e.,
used, reused, or reclaimed), would such
material ordinarily be deemed to be
‘‘disposed of’’ or ‘‘thrown away.’’
Materials legitimately burned for energy
recovery or used as ingredients in
combustion units are neither disposed
of nor abandoned and do not meet the
‘plain-English meaning’ of * * *
‘discard.’
Merely because one party has
relinquished control of a secondary
material does not make it a waste nor
does the fact that a receiving party may
not have the same incentives to manage
them as a useful product. EPA cannot
indict all parties that in fact do manage
these secondary materials as a useful
product. Indeed, a generator’s use of a
secondary material does not guarantee
its proper use, yet EPA allows the
legitimacy criteria to suffice in
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situations in which the generator retains
control of the non-hazardous secondary
material and legitimately recycles it.
Further, EPA seems to contradict
itself because it does not presume
discard of ingredients transferred to
other companies and gives no reason as
to why fuels should be treated
differently. EPA only states, without
giving a reason, that it believes that the
use of non-hazardous secondary
materials as ingredients is considered to
be more integral or akin to use in a
commercial manufacturing process and
thus, these non-hazardous secondary
materials should not be considered
discarded provided they meet the
legitimacy criteria. After all, commercial
manufacturing processes require both
ingredients and energy (e.g., fuels).
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
these comments to the extent they argue
that the Agency has arbitrarily
determined that secondary materials
transferred between companies are
wastes. Instead, EPA has evaluated
whether certain categories of materials
are discarded or not. The Agency has
not adopted the extremes of saying that
all burning of secondary material,
regardless of ultimate use, is waste
treatment or that any secondary material
that is recycled for legitimate fuel value
is a commodity and not a waste. Wastes
may have value, but are still wastes.
Between these broad parameters, EPA
has examined a number of specific
materials, recycled within the control of
the generator and transferred to a third
party for recycling, and determined
whether they would be appropriately
placed within the waste or non-waste
categories. EPA would consider
transferred materials not to be wastes if
it could make the appropriate findings
for those categories. In fact, the Agency
does so with respect to scrap tires
removed from vehicles and managed
under the oversight of established tire
collection programs and resinated wood
residuals.
Consideration of over-accumulation of
scrap tires resulting in massive piles of
discarded tires is not being cited as
support for the proposition that all
transfers of secondary materials result in
waste treatment, but only for the
proposition that the Agency needs to be
careful in examining whether secondary
materials may be transferred as
commodity fuels or as wastes. Further,
EPA is not relying on state
determinations regarding whether
secondary materials are wastes,
specifically tires, but is instead allowing
state tire programs that meet certain
parameters to affect an EPA
determination that transferred scrap
tires are not wastes.
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Any of EPA’s decisions regarding
specific materials, if challenged, must
stand or fall based on its individual
merit. For example, resinated wood
residuals are routinely transferred
between either intra- or inter-company
facilities and used as either ‘‘furnish’’
(i.e., raw materials) or fuel at the
receiving facilities. The material being
transferred off-site is used and handled
in the same manner that resinated wood
residuals are used when generated onsite (such that it is impossible to
distinguish between materials that are
being used as a raw material and those
that are being used as a fuel).
Accordingly, these materials are not
solid wastes whether used within the
same company or transferred to another
company. See below, at sections V.B.6
for discussion of EPA’s response to
comments and the Agency rationale for
how resinated wood should be treated
for purposes of this rule.
Other materials would be wastes
based on the Agency’s analysis of the
industry in general or, based on a lack
of data or knowledge, an effective
presumption that recycling materials for
a fuel is primarily conducted within the
control of the generator. For example,
use of old corrugated cardboard (OCC)
rejects (clay, starches, other filler and
coating materials, as well as fiber) are
not discarded when used within the
control of the generator, since these
secondary materials are part of the
industrial process. OCC rejects can
include, and are usually burned in
conjunction with, other fuels (such as
bark) at pulp and paper mills that
recycle fibers. These materials are not
generally transferred outside the control
of the generator.
Still other non-hazardous secondary
materials may be processed or extracted
from wastes to produce fuel
commodities. Examples include tirederived fuel processed from scrap tires
retrieved from waste tire piles, and coal
refuse retrieved from legacy piles that
have been processed through the use of
grizzlies, screens, and blending to
improve the quality, remove metal
objects, and reduce the concentrations
of various constituents. To the extent
that EPA has indicated that particular
categories of non-hazardous secondary
materials are wastes when transferred
off-site to a third party, the Agency
provides companies with the
opportunity to petition EPA for a nonwaste determination; we believe a
petition process is essential because
many non-hazardous secondary
materials are recycled and managed in
many different ways, and the Agency
may lack the specific details in certain
cases to know whether or not such non-
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hazardous secondary materials are or
are not solid wastes.
Thus, EPA is not making a sweeping
arbitrary assumption in categorizing
transferred secondary materials as
discarded. In addition, EPA is not, in
any sense, forbidding economic reuse of
such materials by anyone other than the
generator without prior government
permission (through the petition
process). The effect of this regulation
would simply be to require the nonhazardous secondary materials
designated as wastes to be combusted
only in facilities regulated under section
129 of the CAA, while non-waste fuels
could be combusted under section 112
of the CAA.
EPA also disagrees with the
comment’s narrow citation to the Safe
Food case. Safe Food does not stand for
the narrow proposition that transferring
material to another industry is not
relevant for determining whether
material is discarded. The court in that
case noted that ‘‘the term ‘discarded’
cannot encompass materials that ‘are
destined for beneficial reuse or
recycling in a continuous process by the
generating industry itself.’ ’’ 35 F.3d at
1268. Further, ‘‘materials destined for
future recycling by another industry
may be considered ‘discarded.’ ’’ Id.
With respect to transferring material, the
court only said ‘‘we have never said that
RCRA compels the conclusion that
material destined for recycling in
another industry is necessarily
‘discarded.’ ’’ Id. Rather, the key to
understanding the importance of Safe
Food is the question ‘‘ ‘whether the
agency’s interpretation of * * *
‘discarded’ [is] permissible, that is,
reasonable and consistent with the
statutory purpose.’ ’’ 35 F.3d at 1269
(citations omitted).
The point of Safe Food is that the
courts are to examine EPA’s
interpretation based on whether it is
reasonable. No one factor will be
determinative.
Thus, the comment is wrong to try to
argue that a quotation in Safe Food
regarding ‘‘vertical integration’’
somehow means that the transfer of a
secondary material to another party is
irrelevant for determining whether a
secondary material is a waste. Aside
from the fact that EPA finds no evidence
of the relevance of ‘‘vertical integration’’
to this regulation and no commenter has
indicated its relevance, it is plain from
any reasonable analysis that transfer to
another party, where a generator of a
secondary material relinquishes all
control of the material is certainly
relevant to any determination whether a
material is a waste.
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EPA is in no way claiming that such
transfer is the definitive criterion for
discard. Instead, EPA has examined the
issue of company-to-company transfers
in the context of specific secondary
materials and to the extent the Agency
has found either discard or no legitimate
recycling, it is requiring companies to
file a non-waste petition in order to
allow the Agency to review the specifics
of their cases. Further, the Agency will
in the future solicit comment on
additional non-hazardous secondary
materials that can be used as a nonwaste fuel both by the generator and
outside the control of the generator.
Under today’s rule, only scrap tires
managed under established tire
collection programs and resinated wood
are non-wastes when used both within
and outside generator control (see
§ 241.3(b)(2). In addition, citations to
case law on abandonment issues
between private parties are not relevant
to this case of government regulation.
The cases do not consider the factors
that are relevant to EPA’s determination
under this rule. In this rule, EPA needs
to decide whether secondary material is
discarded in the first instance, and
whether the transfer represents a
legitimate non-waste activity. To
represent a legitimate non-waste
activity, if the material has not been
discarded in the first instance, it must
be handled as a valuable commodity,
must have meaningful heating value,
and must not have contaminant levels
that show the material is transferred to
destroy unwanted constituents instead
of for its fuel value. A waste owner may
not be ‘‘abandoning’’ a waste when it
sends it to another company, but the
non-hazardous secondary material is
still a solid waste if the receiver is not
burning the secondary material
legitimately as a fuel (construction
debris highly contaminated with lead
paint).
EPA also disagrees with the comment
that the Agency is inconsistent by
allowing the legitimacy criteria to
suffice for generators, but not for the
transferred material. The issue is not
whether legitimacy suffices for materials
under the control of the generator as
opposed to material transferred to
another party. Rather, EPA is using the
legitimacy standard for generators in
order to comply with the holdings in the
case law that secondary material
recycled within a continuous industrial
process is not a waste. As stated in the
preamble to the proposed rule,
secondary materials recycled or reused
legitimately under the control of the
generator will cover all, or almost all,
secondary materials recycled or reused
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in a continuous industrial process. See
75 FR 31886–87. EPA thus, rejects the
environmental groups’ argument that
any combustion of secondary material is
a waste. EPA has only decided that
there is greater likelihood that material
will not be a waste if it is under the
control of the generator. If the generator
keeps the material it would indicate
presumptive non-discard. However, the
legitimacy criteria serve as a check to
make sure discard would not occur. For
material transferred to another party, as
noted above, EPA has greater concern
since different incentives come into
play for the generator as well as the
recipient, as evidenced by past careless
treatment of secondary materials.
Comment: EPA has no authority
under section 129 of the CAA to
regulate the use of non-hazardous
secondary materials as ingredients.
EPA’s section 129 authority is limited to
‘‘solid waste incineration units,’’ which
the statute defines as units that
‘‘combust’’ solid waste. This statutory
definition does not say EPA can regulate
units that ‘‘treat’’ solid waste (as
provided in RCRA subtitle C). Nor does
it say that EPA can regulate units that
‘‘use’’ solid waste. For example, the
feedstock for clinker that is placed into
a Portland Cement kiln is not
‘‘combusted’’—rather, it is incorporated
into the clinker product. Similarly, nonhazardous secondary materials that may
be used as substitutes for mined or
virgin feedstock become incorporated
into the clinker product and are not
‘‘combusted.’’
EPA’s Response: This comment is not
relevant to this regulation, which
determines whether a secondary
material is a solid waste, or not a solid
waste as defined by RCRA. Clearly, EPA
has the authority to interpret RCRA to
decide whether non-hazardous
secondary materials are solid wastes or
not. Whether EPA may cover
ingredients used in combustors under
section 129 of the CAA is a matter for
regulations under that statute.
Comment: EPA asserts in its preamble
that any material that is discarded must
be considered forever discarded (and
therefore remain a solid waste) no
matter what value or use it may have to
another person who may retrieve the
material. This logical leap defies
common sense, and is not in any
manner compelled by the statutory
language or judicial precedent.
It is illogical and nonsensical to hold
that a material must be considered
forever ‘‘discarded’’ if Party B comes
upon the material, removes it from its
‘‘discarded’’ venue, and takes it with him
or her for a bona fide use. Suppose a
woman walks by a town dump and
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spies a chest-of-drawers that has been
thrown away (i.e., abandoned,
discarded). The piece of furniture is old,
but it is perfectly usable for a room in
her house. She takes the chest of
drawers and places it in a guest
bedroom and it now sits there full of
clothes. To say the chest sitting in that
room is now a ‘‘discarded’’ material
simply defies the plain meaning of the
word.
According to the comment, the RCRA
subtitle C case API I, which deals with
hazardous waste under RCRA, in no
way impairs EPA’s ability to craft a
subtitle D rule that could allow for
materials once deemed to have been
discarded to cease to be a solid waste
when reused. The comment
acknowledges that in API I, the court
disapproved of the concept that a
material that may have once been
thrown away could nevertheless ‘‘cease
to be a solid waste’’ if it were being
beneficially reused, as it would no
longer at that point be considered a
‘‘discarded material.’’ The comment goes
on to say, however, that the court only
stated that it believed it would be
‘‘unlikely’’ that EPA could successfully
maintain the position that a discarded
material could cease to be a solid waste
when recycled. The court reasoned that
for EPA to reach such a conclusion, the
Agency would have to reconcile this
position with RCRA’s acknowledged
objective to establish a cradle-to-grave
regulatory structure for the safe
handling of hazardous wastes.
The comment argues that this
language of the opinion is a ‘‘critical’’
element of the decision and only applies
to hazardous wastes. Therefore, it does
not apply to non-hazardous waste. The
comment goes on to say that EPA cites
no case law, and they are aware of none,
in which a court has ruled that a
discarded non-hazardous secondary
material must forever be deemed
discarded no matter what beneficial use
it may subsequently be put to.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
this comment. In the first place, the
Agency is not saying that wastes are
‘‘forever’’ discarded. Wastes may be
processed into materials that are not
wastes. The important point, here, is
that a waste does not automatically lose
its waste designation solely because
some person has found value in the
material. Something has to happen to
that waste to make it a non-waste.
Judicial interpretations of the
statutory definition of discard very
plainly hold that a material that has
become a waste—because it is
discarded—may not lose its waste status
‘‘just because a reclaimer has purchased
or finds value’’ in the waste. ILCO at
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1131; OWEN STEEL at 150.
Furthermore, in ABR, the court stated,
‘‘The point of AMC II, and for that
matter API, is that once material
qualifies as ‘solid waste,’’ something
derived from it retains that designation
even if it might be reclaimed and reused
at some future time.’’ ABR at 1056.
EPA notes in a response to a comment
elsewhere in this preamble that these
cases do not prevent the Agency from
considering that wastes may be
processed in some way into non-waste
products. Nevertheless, the cases
unmistakably hold that secondary
materials do not lose their waste status
simply because they have value.
The commenter’s reference to the API
I case’s mention of the purposes behind
the hazardous waste regulation’s ‘‘cradle
to grave’’ regime is not ‘‘critical’’ to the
court’s holding. The court only was
opining on a hypothetical situation
should EPA return to the court in a
future case. It certainly was not
necessary to the holding in the case and
must only be considered dicta. EPA
believes it has crafted a valid
interpretation of the statute based on
other relevant case law on the subject.
EPA also acknowledges that persons
may find value in materials that have
been thrown away, such as the chest of
drawers to which the comment refers.
However, this regulation deals with
fuels and ingredients that are used in
combustors, and EPA is not evaluating
other materials when beneficially used.
In fact, EPA has specifically indicated
that the Agency is not making a
determination that non-hazardous
secondary materials are, or are not, solid
wastes for other possible beneficial end
uses. Such beneficial use
determinations are generally made by
the states for these other end uses, and
EPA will continue to look to the states
in making such determinations. Thus,
EPA does not need to resolve the
hypothetical situation as to when the
chest of drawers becomes a non-waste.
Comment: In the proposed rule, the
Agency indicated that the 2008 DSW
Final Rule included a third part in the
definition of ‘‘under the control of the
generator.’’ Specifically, the 2008 DSW
Final Rule also applies to hazardous
secondary materials that are generated
pursuant to a written contract between
a tolling contractor and a toll
manufacturer and legitimately
reclaimed by the tolling contractor. For
purposes of that exclusion, a tolling
contractor is a person who arranges for
the production of a product or
intermediate made from specified raw
or virgin materials through a written
contract with a toll manufacturer. The
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Agency requested comment on whether
to include this option in the final rule.
Few comments were received on
tolling contractors. One commenter
stated that to the extent that such
arrangements facilitate the recycling or
use of non-hazardous secondary
materials and benefit the environment
by reusing such secondary materials
that might otherwise be disposed of, it
should be included. A state commented,
however, only that tolling contracts
should not be considered under the
control of the generator.
EPA’s Response: We did not include
tolling arrangements as being ‘‘within
the control of the generator’’ as we
viewed this as a specific type of
arrangement used in the production of
secondary materials that are not being
used as fuels, and were unaware of
these types of contractual arrangements
where both products and secondary
material fuels are sent to what we are
calling tolling contractors, nor has any
comment informed the Agency of such
arrangements for fuels.
Comment: In implementing RCRA,
EPA must balance the statute’s two
primary goals of (1) protecting human
health and the environment and (2)
encouraging reuse and recycling. The
second goal is particularly critical in the
RCRA subtitle D context. EPA’s
proposal, along with the CISWI
proposal, draws many lines that would
impose major impediments on recycle/
reuse. Yet EPA never attempts to justify
these choices dealing with nonhazardous secondary materials on the
grounds of protecting human health and
the environment.
EPA’s failure to take both of these
factors into account produces results
that impede reuse and recycling of nonhazardous secondary materials with no
benefit to health and the environment.
The commenters claim this is arbitrary
and capricious and a failure of reasoned
decision making.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees that
these policy goals provide the legal
basis for the Agency’s determination
whether secondary materials are solid
wastes—discarded within the ordinary
meaning of the term. Broad policy goals
stated in the statute do not substitute for
the substantive statutory requirements
which the Agency must follow. In the
NRDC case, the DC Circuit admitted that
EPA may have legitimate policy reasons
for its decision. However, the Agency
must still follow the statute.
Yes, the Agency should encourage
recycling, but it may not encourage that
use by allowing discarded materials to
be considered non-wastes. The overall
congressional policies are limited by the
substantive statutory requirements. Yes,
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the Agency must protect human health
the environment, but its ability to do
that is limited to its ability to regulate
material that is discarded—material that
is a solid waste. The Agency is
establishing standards for determining if
a secondary material is a solid waste, in
order to clearly identify which
combustion units are subject to CAA
section 129 standards. We do note that
as part of the Agency’s legitimacy
criteria, we consider whether there are
excessive contaminants in the
secondary material that is combusted.
This analysis delves into matters
regarding whether the secondary
material is actually a waste.
Comment: In a similar vein, another
industry comment argues that the
statutory definition of solid waste sets
the outer limits of EPA’s regulatory
authority under RCRA. However, EPA is
neither required nor authorized to go to
the limits of that definition in each of
its regulatory programs. Each such
program, according to this comment, is
aimed at specific dangers that the
wastes it addresses may pose, and each
such program must take account other
statutory purposes, such as encouraging
the beneficial reuse of secondary
materials. EPA, therefore, should
exercise its authority to establish a
definition of waste that is tailored to
address the problems at issue, and that
does not impermissibly infringe on
other statutory goals.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
this comment. First, general
congressional policies that refer to
encouraging recycling have no place in
EPA’s determination as to whether a
secondary material is a waste or not. For
purposes of this rule, EPA is evaluating
which non-hazardous secondary
materials are discarded under the
statute. CAA section 129 requires that
units burning solid waste, as defined by
the Administrator, are subject to
emissions standards under that section.
In deciding which non-hazardous
secondary materials are in fact wastes,
the Agency evaluated a number of
circumstances and exercised discretion
to decide on how the definition of solid
waste applies in various circumstances.
However, EPA cannot decide to develop
a narrower interpretation of what
constitutes a waste simply because it
does not want to have the nonhazardous secondary materials burned
under CAA section129 instead of CAA
section 112. EPA may not say material
is not discarded if, in fact, it is.
In this case, EPA is determining
which non-hazardous secondary
materials are solid wastes. EPA has no
authority to grant waivers simply
because it wishes to encourage recycling
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by making the combustion of secondary
materials less expensive.
With respect to RCRA subtitle C
regulations, as has been noted
throughout this proceeding, EPA is not
reopening any decisions. Any
commenter’s subjective evaluation of
whether a particular hazardous waste
regulation is more stringent than this
regulation has no relevance to whether
a non-hazardous secondary material is
discarded for purposes of this
regulation.
EPA has stated that secondary
materials excluded from the definition
of solid waste under the subtitle C
regulations will remain non-wastes
under this rule. We are not reopening
the RCRA subtitle C rules. EPA also
notes that some comments have argued
that the legitimacy criteria do not apply
to the subtitle C rules and, therefore,
should not apply to this rule. EPA
disagrees with that concept. In fact, the
legitimacy criteria in some form apply
to all recycling, regardless of how it is
formulated, even if there is a specific
exclusion under RCRA subtitle C.
2. Processing Requirements
Under the proposal, fuels or
ingredients that are produced from the
processing of discarded non-hazardous
secondary materials are not a solid
waste provided they meet the specified
legitimacy criteria. Comments from
environmental groups rejected in its
entirety any processing requirement at
all. According to these comments, a
discarded material remains a waste and
cannot be rehabilitated to become a
commodity fuel. Any fuel derived from
a waste must be combusted under
section 129 of the CAA.
On the other hand, industry
commenters in general found the
proposed definitions of ‘‘processing’’
and ‘‘sufficient processing’’ unclear and
the processing requirements generally
too restrictive. Several comments
requested that EPA offer further
explanation as to why processing is
necessary in the first instance. In
particular, they claimed that the degree
of processing required by the proposed
rule is inappropriate and illogical,
arguing that there is no reason to impose
an artificial and arbitrary requirement
that materials first be ‘‘transformed’’ into
something different.
Other commenters argued that
secondary materials suitable for use as
a fuel or ingredient without processing
are not solid wastes when combusted,
even if they have been previously
discarded. In other words, if previously
discarded, non-hazardous secondary
materials can be used as is, as fuels or
as ingredients, then such non-hazardous
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secondary materials are not solid waste.
As long as the fuel or ingredient meets
the legitimacy criteria, affected parties
should not have to process the material,
as doing so would be burdensome and
unnecessary. Other commenters
asserted that minimal processing should
be sufficient for a fuel not to be
considered a solid waste.
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a. Comments From Environmental
Groups
Comment: EPA is incorrect in
defining discarded materials to be
considered non-waste product fuels if
they have been ‘‘sufficiently processed.’’
In the view of this commenter, the DC
Circuit has held plainly and repeatedly
that the term solid waste
unambiguously includes fuels made
from processed secondary materials.
The comment refers to dicta in the DC
Circuit opinions of AMC I and ABR, in
which the court states that EPA may
regulate used oil recyclers that collect
discarded used oils, distill them, and
sell the resulting material for use as fuel
in boilers. In addition, the comment
cites cases in other circuits—ILCO and
Owen Steel—to the effect that wastes
may be recycled and that their recycling
is irrelevant to the determination as to
whether they are wastes. In particular,
the comment cites the facts in ILCO
where the court found used batteries to
be discarded within the everyday use of
the term and that their secondary
character as recyclable material is
irrelevant to that determination. In
addition, the comment cites the Owen
Steel facts where steel slag recycling
activities were considered waste
treatment even though the recycled slag
was used commercially. According to
the comment, a material is discarded
and the fact of discard is not changed
just because a reclaimer has purchased
or finds value in the components of
such secondary materials.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
the comment, and finds that the
commenter reads too much into these
cases. EPA has repeatedly stated in this
rulemaking that it agrees that wastes
may be recycled and that the fact of
discard does not change solely because
the waste may have value. As stated
earlier, EPA has specifically indicated
that the Agency is not making a
determination that non-hazardous
secondary materials are, or are not, solid
wastes for other possible beneficial end
uses. These cases do not, however,
stand for the proposition that any
product resulting from the recycling
must be a waste. Such a view would
make almost every aluminum can from
which we drink our sodas or
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newspapers on which we read the news
‘‘solid wastes.’’
With respect to AMC I and ABR, the
reference to regulating used oil
processing into fuels that are sold is,
first, not necessary to the decisions.
Those cases overturned rules where
EPA was overly broad in its regulation.
The cases were not deciding which
situations constitute proper regulation
by EPA. Nevertheless, the DC Circuit, by
the terms of its dicta, was only referring
to regulating the processing activity for
the used oil. The court was not referring
to regulation of the resulting material
that was sold to boilers as a fuel. In fact,
the court acknowledges that the fuel is
sold to boilers and in no way opines on
whether the resulting fuel is a waste. In
this rule, also, EPA is not saying that the
processing of discarded material is
excluded from regulation as a waste
activity, but only that the resulting fuel
is not a waste if it has been sufficiently
processed and meets the criteria of fuels
that are not wastes—referred to as
meeting the legitimacy criteria.
As for the other recycling cases, EPA
has admitted that the mere fact of
recycling does not change the nature of
a secondary material that has been
discarded. Again, AMC I and ABR cases
are not directly on point for deciding
whether non-waste products can be
extracted from discarded material
because the courts were not called upon
to decide that issue. In both cases,
however, the courts refer to resulting
products that were sold commercially.
In the ILCO case, the issue was
whether reclaimed lead plates from
discarded batteries were recycled wastes
or raw materials used to produce steel
ingots. The court found that the lead
plates were wastes, but only noted that
the lead ingots made from the wastes
were sold commercially and did not
opine as to whether the ingots were
wastes. EPA argues that the ingots were
not wastes, since they were processed
into valuable commodities.
In Owen Steel, the court found that
slag from steel production was a waste
and the area where the slag was
processed was a waste treatment
facility. The cured slag was sold for
various commercial processes,
including roadbed construction. The
court was not asked to opine, nor did it,
on whether the roadbed material was a
waste. Again, EPA argues that the cured
slag could be a product produced from
the waste, even though the processing
activity involved waste treatment.
EPA does admit that the cases are not
directly on point regarding the Agency’s
determination that discarded materials
may be processed into legitimate
product fuels. The cases do seem to
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recognize, however, that products made
from wastes may be products and not
wastes.
More importantly, the cases do not
refute EPA’s essential logic that fuel or
ingredients processed or extracted from
discarded secondary material is
analogous to many products that are
processed or extracted from nonhazardous wastes, such as aluminum
cans or recycled paper made from
recycled secondary materials. The cases
indicate that the same logic could apply
to fuel processed from used oil, lead
ingots made from battery lead plates, or
roadbed construction material made
from steel slag. This applies even
though the processing or extraction
activities involve waste treatment. EPA
believes that, at a minimum, there are
circumstances in which the resulting
materials are not wastes.
EPA’s task in the current rule is to
decide when such processing results in
a product or a waste. To resolve the
issue, EPA has identified conditions on
the extent of processing that has been
conducted. That is, the processed
discarded material may become a nonwaste fuel or ingredient if certain
conditions are met—that is sufficient
processing has occurred. If so, and if the
material meets the legitimacy criteria,
the fuel or ingredient product would be
considered a non-waste material.
b. Comments From Industry Groups
Comment: A number of industry
commenters object to the processing
requirement for discarded nonhazardous secondary materials to
become non-waste fuels or ingredients.
These comments contrast with the
argument of environmental groups that
no processing would transform
discarded non-hazardous secondary
materials into non-waste fuels or
ingredients, a contention to which the
Agency responds to earlier in this
preamble.
Industry commenters argue that the
legitimacy criteria are sufficient and that
there should be no processing
requirement for non-hazardous
secondary materials that were discarded
and could now be used as fuels or
ingredients. The general argument is
that the very act of retrieving a
previously discarded material for use as
a fuel or an ingredient proves that the
material is once again wanted by the
consumer, regardless of the type or
extent of processing which the
secondary material must undergo.
According to these comments, the mere
act of removing the previously
discarded material from the
environment for use ‘‘conclusively’’
demonstrates that the non-hazardous
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secondary material has value as a
product or intermediate—otherwise, no
one would invest the significant costs
associated with the recovery of these
materials.
Various activities were specifically
mentioned—recovery of coal
combustion byproducts from landfills,
extraction of coal refuse from mine sites
and used whole tires retrieved from tire
piles. With respect to these nonhazardous secondary materials,
commenters argue that the excessive
threshold level of processing makes no
sense and that EPA should allow only
a minimal amount of processing to
convert a waste into a product fuel or
ingredient.
In particular, the comments argue that
normal processing of coal refuse
(mining rejects) should be sufficient to
constitute processing needed to convert
previously discarded materials to
legitimate fuels/ingredients. The same
material mined to be used in today’s
combustion technology is processed in
that way and there is no difference
between the mined materials.24 Also,
whole tires retrieved from waste tire
piles may need only minimal processing
for use in cement kilns, such as removal
of excess water and dirt, mud, and
debris. Whole tires from newer stacks or
piles often need no physical processing
whatsoever. In contrast, EPA argues that
scrap tires cannot be considered
sufficiently ‘‘processed’’ unless they are
physically shredded and undergo metals
removal processing.
Establishment of a threshold level of
processing that must take place before a
discarded non-hazardous material is
considered a legitimate fuel or
ingredient would also have the perverse
effect of applying different standards to
identical materials. For example, there
is no difference in the coal refuse or coal
combustion byproducts that are
recovered from landfills for use in a
fluidized bed combustion unit or in the
cement manufacturing process.
Some comments claim that under
EPA’s hazardous waste regulations, only
minimal processing, such as baling or
sorting, is required for scrap metal to be
excluded from the definition of solid
waste. The scrap metal, which would
otherwise be a hazardous waste, may be
sent into high-temperature
environments, such as electric arc
furnaces at steel mills and aluminum
smelters. EPA had stated that this is a
good example of where the level of
24 As discussed later in this preamble, the Agency
has changed its view regarding coal refuse that was
previously abandoned, such that if the discarded
coal refuse is processed in the same way as coal is
today, the Agency would not consider the
processed coal refuse a solid waste.
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processing necessary to convert a waste
material to a non-waste material is
dependent on the material itself. The
comments claim that this is inconsistent
with requiring used tires that have been
discarded to not to be considered
sufficiently ‘‘processed,’’ unless they are
physically shredded and undergo metals
removal processing.
EPA’s Response: As discussed in the
case law elsewhere in this preamble,
EPA is constrained by the statutory
definition of solid waste under RCRA
and the fact that case law holds that a
discarded material does not lose its
status as a waste solely because it has
value or may be beneficially reused.
Allowing certain non-hazardous
secondary materials to be combusted as
a fuel under the section 112 standards
of the CAA may have beneficial policy
objectives. However, EPA may not base
its decision on the policy, but must
evaluate whether a secondary material
is a solid waste under RCRA.
Specifically, the DC Circuit in NRDC
would not allow EPA to establish a
policy basis for determining whether
section 112 or 129 applies. Thus, nonhazardous secondary materials that are
wastes and are used as a fuel/ingredient
in a combustion unit must be used in
section 129 units, whereas nonhazardous secondary materials that are
not wastes and are used as a fuel/
ingredient in a combustion unit may be
used in section 112 units. The court
stated that ‘‘the distinction EPA draws
may well be reasonable’’ referring to
EPA’s distinguishing between section
112 combustors designed to recover
energy and section 129 incinerators
meant to destroy materials. NRDC at
1260. The court, however, was very
clear that this is not the line drawn by
Congress, which intends that any waste
material, even if burned for energy
recovery, must be burned in section 129
combustion units.
The Agency, however, believes that
the case law would not prohibit the
processing or extracting of products
from non-hazardous secondary
materials that were once wastes. This
latter view is controversial as evidenced
by the comments from environmental
groups, which claim that no amount of
processing can convert a waste into a
legitimate fuel or ingredient product.
EPA, however, does not believe it may
interpret the statute or the case law to
allow a clearly discarded secondary
material to become a non-waste solely
because it has value.
EPA sympathizes with the
commenters’ concern that the
processing requirement could have the
effect of applying different standards to
identical materials, such as scrap tires.
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The Agency, however, is constrained by
the statute and case law. If the nonhazardous secondary material is not
discarded in the first instance and is
legitimately recycled—that is, meets the
legitimacy criteria, it is not discarded.
Once the material has been discarded—
thrown into waste piles or on stacks—
there is no choice. Something other than
mere recycling must happen to the
material before it may lose its waste
designation. The mere fact that
secondary materials may have value
after being discarded is not sufficient to
rehabilitate it.
Accordingly, EPA is not making any
changes to the processing requirements
for discarded scrap tires, although the
Agency is providing that tires harvested
from vehicles do not need to be
processed if they are harvested off of the
vehicles and are managed under the
oversight of an established tire
collection program and are legitimately
used as a fuel in a combustion unit
(refer to Section V.B.5 Scrap Tires) to be
considered a non-waste fuel.
For coal refuse, however, EPA has
decided that for the final rule, to make
some modifications to its
determinations regarding sufficient
processing. In the proposal, EPA was
still considering that the coal refuse that
was abandoned would require
additional processing, even though they
were the same material as coal refuse
currently generated and used in
fluidized bed combustors as traditional
mined coal. EPA has modified its view
to provide that the discarded coal refuse
that is processed in the same way as
coal is today would not be considered
a waste when combusted. For more
information on the rationale for this
decision, see Section V.B.8 for a
discussion of the comments received on
coal refuse and our response to those
comments.
Finally, in response to the point that
minimal processing is permitted to
exclude scrap metal from the definition
of solid waste in EPA’s hazardous waste
regulation, the Agency first states that it
is not reopening the hazardous waste
regulations, including the reasoning in
those regulations. Besides, the reference
to scrap metal in the hazardous waste
regulation was only used in the
preamble to note the fact that the extent
of processing in general depends on the
nature of the material, as we have noted
elsewhere in the preamble to today’s
rule. Any comparison, other than the
very general one that processing
depends on the material, is not being
considered by EPA. Whatever the
reasoning provided in those regulations,
EPA did not cite the scrap metal
regulation as support for the processing
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that are legitimate alternative fuels that
may not have been historically used as
fuels, but that are nonetheless legitimate
B. Comments on Specific Materials Used
fuels today because of changes in
as Fuel
technology and in the energy market. In
1. Traditional Fuels 25
cases where these legitimate alternative
fuels have not been discarded, EPA said
The following discussion describes
that it would not consider them to be
how EPA has analyzed what is a
solid wastes. This is explained in the
traditional fuel in the ANPRM and the
ANPRM at 74 FR 56.
proposal. Next, the Agency shows how
The ANPRM stated that much of the
it considered various comments on the
biomass currently used as alternative
concept of traditional fuels. Section
fuels are not solid waste since they have
VII.A, based on these analyses and all
not been discarded in the first instance
information in the rulemaking record,
explains the Agency’s decision on what and are legitimate fuel products. It
noted that biomass can include a wide
constitutes a traditional fuel.
range of alternative fuels, and can be
EPA does wish to clarify, however,
broken down into two different
that it is using the term, ‘‘traditional,’’
categories—cellulosic biomass and nonmore in the sense that we have a
cellulosic biomass. Cellulosic biomass
product that is created for its use as a
was described to include forest-derived
fuel. Some traditional fuels have been
biomass (e.g., green wood, forest
used for a long time, while others are
thinnings, clean and unadulterated bark,
‘‘traditional’’ only in the sense that they
sawdust, trim, and tree harvesting
are created in the ‘‘traditional’’ way that
residuals from logging and sawmill
a product is created (or mined), even
materials), food scraps, pulp and paper
though they may be newly developed
mill wood residuals (e.g., hog fuel, such
fuels. For example, coal refuse that was
as clean and unadulterated bark,
formerly not able to be used as a fuel
sawdust, trim screenings; and residuals
may now be used in fluidized bed
from tree harvesting),26 and agricultural
systems. Perhaps, more obvious is the
residues (e.g., straw, corn husks, peanut
fact that petroleum, itself, would not
shells, and bagasse). Non-cellulosic
have been considered a traditional fuel
biomass was described to include
in the early 1800s, nor would uranium.
The ANPRM categorized as traditional manures and gaseous fuels (e.g., from
fuels cellulosic biomass (e.g., wood) and landfills and manures) (74 FR 56).
The ANPRM stated that biomass,
fossil fuels (e.g., coal, oil, natural gas),
especially cellulosic biomass, has a
as well as fossil fuel derivatives (e.g.,
comparable composition to traditional
petroleum coke, bituminous coke, coal
fuel products due to the nature of the
tar oil, refinery gas, synthetic fuel,
plants and animals (i.e., they would not
heavy recycle, asphalts, blast furnace
gas, recovered gaseous butane, and coke be considered to have additional
‘‘contaminants’’). Thus, if they are
oven gas). Traditional fuels are those
managed as valuable commodities and
that have been burned historically as
have meaningful heating value, they
fuels and have been managed as
would not be considered solid wastes.
valuable products. They are unused
The ANPRM distinguished the
products that have not been discarded.
traditional fuels from non-traditional
The ANPRM also stated that
alternative fuels to decide whether they
unadulterated or clean wood collected
are discarded, or whether they are
from forest fire clearance activities and
legitimate alternative fuels. These fuels
trees and such wood found in disaster
are those in use today that the Agency
debris, likewise, constitute traditional
was evaluating, and continues to
fuels. This basic concept of traditional
evaluate, to determine whether they
fuels was discussed at 74 FR 53.
have been discarded and whether they
The ANPRM also discussed other
are legitimate alternative fuels (e.g.,
legitimate ‘‘alternative’’ fuels that have
not been previously discarded generally construction and demolition materials,
noting that what constitutes a new ‘‘fuel’’ scrap plastics, non-hazardous nonhalogenated solvents and lubricants,
reflects the availability of the fuel
and wastewater treatment sludge) (74
materials generally, the demand for the
FR 56).
fuel, and technology developments.
The ANPRM also described secondary
Thus, there is a category of materials
materials EPA considered to be
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definition. The Agency also points out
that the scrap metal is not combusted.
25 Traditional fuels are not considered secondary
materials and therefore, are not considered a solid
waste unless they themselves have been discarded.
However, because the Agency received comments
regarding ‘‘traditional fuels,’’ including whether
certain materials should be considered a traditional
fuel, the Agency is addressing those comments in
this section.
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26 The ANPRM description of cellulosic biomass
inadvertently repeated the same material—‘‘tree
harvesting residuals from logging’’ and ‘‘residuals
from tree harvesting.’’ Descriptions of cellulosic
biomass in the proposed rule and this final rule
deleted the second reference to residuals from tree
harvesting.
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questionable as to whether they are
legitimate fuels because they lack
adequate heating value (wet biomass), or
because they may contain contaminants
that are significantly higher in
concentration than those in traditional
fuel products to the degree that sham
recycling is indicated. The secondary
materials that were described in the
ANPRM that could fall into this
category include polyvinyl chloride
(PVC), halogenated plastics, chromated
copper arsenate (CCA) lumber, creosote
lumber, copper-based treated lumber,
lead-based treated lumber, and
secondary mill residues, such as board,
trim and breakage from the manufacture
of reconstituted wood/panel products.
The proposed rule continued to
recognize that traditional fuels, as noted
above, are not solid wastes, but added
to that group clean cellulosic biomass
and on-specification used oil (75 FR
31856). Specifically, in the proposal,
‘‘clean’’ biomass material was defined as
a non-hazardous secondary material that
has not been altered (either chemically
or through some type of production
process), such that it contains
contaminants at concentrations
normally associated with virgin biomass
materials (the description of ‘‘clean’’ is
being modified slightly for today’s rule,
see discussion below). Clean cellulosic
biomass was described to include forestderived biomass (e.g., green wood, forest
thinnings, clean and unadulterated bark,
sawdust, trim, and tree harvesting
residuals from logging and sawmill
materials), corn stover and other
biomass crops used specifically for
energy production (e.g., energy cane,
other fast growing grasses), bagasse and
other crop residues (e.g., peanut shells),
wood collected from forest fire
clearance activities, trees and clean
wood found in disaster debris, and
clean biomass from land clearing
operations (75 FR 31856). Essentially,
‘‘clean’’ biomass was that biomass
material that was simply picked up from
its environment and burned for fuel.
EPA requested comment on whether
other types of cellulosic biomass should
be designated as clean biomass, and
thus a traditional fuel (75 FR 31856).
EPA also proposed to add onspecification used oil to the list of
‘‘traditional’’ fuels based on the
argument that it meets the Agency’s
view of fuels that have been managed as
valuable fuel products rather than being
managed as waste materials. 75 FR
31864. The Agency stated that under 40
CFR part 279, once used oil is
determined to be on-spec, it is no longer
regulated under the used oil
management standards. This means that
once the marketer complies with the
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requirements for analysis and record
retention, notification, and record
tracking shipment to on-specification
burners, the oil is no longer subject to
other management standards. Moreover,
the on-specification used oil contains
contaminants at levels below the
maximum concentration limits
established in the standards, such that
they are either at the same concentration
or a lower concentration than virgin
refined fuel oil.
EPA acknowledged in the proposal
that changes in technology and in the
energy market over time may result in
additional materials being economically
viable to be used as alternative
‘‘traditional’’ fuels. It also may not
always be clear whether a fuel material
is a traditional fuel. We agreed with
commenters to the ANPRM that this
rulemaking should be flexible to
account for increasing use and changes
in commodities, technologies, markets,
and fuel prices. We, therefore, requested
comment on whether other fuels in use
today should be classified as traditional
fuels, as well as whether to provide a
petition process that would allow a
facility or person to request that EPA
determine whether the fuel that they
burn qualifies as a traditional fuel.
As also discussed in Section VII, the
definition of traditional fuels has been
modified in today’s rule. The new
definition encompasses two categories
of fuels: (1) ‘‘Historically managed’’
fuels, as identified in the proposed rule,
and (2) ‘‘alternative’’ fuels, as discussed
in the ANPRM. Through this revised
definition, EPA is recognizing that
changes in technology and in the energy
market over time have resulted in
additional materials being economically
viable to be used as alternative
‘‘traditional’’ fuels. The definitions of
traditional fuels and clean cellulosic
biomass are codified in today’s rule
(§ 241.2). ‘‘Traditional fuels’’ is defined
in today’s final rule as materials that are
produced as fuels and are unused
products that have not been discarded
and therefore, are not solid waste
including: (1) Fuels that have been
historically managed as valuable fuel
products rather than being managed as
waste materials, including fossil fuels
(e.g., coal, oil and natural gas), their
derivatives (e.g., petroleum coke,
bituminous coke, coal tar oil, refinery
gas, synthetic fuel, heavy recycle,
asphalts, blast furnace gas, recovered
gaseous butane, and coke oven gas) and
cellulosic biomass (virgin wood); and
(2) alternative fuels developed from
virgin materials that can now be used as
fuel products, including used oil which
meets the specifications outlined in
40 CFR 279.11, currently mined coal
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refuse that previously had not been
usable as coal, and clean cellulosic
biomass. Clean cellulosic biomass is
also codified in today’s rule (§ 241.2)
and includes those residuals that are
akin to traditional cellulosic biomass,
such as forest-derived biomass (e.g.,
green wood, forest thinnings, clean and
unadulterated bark), sawdust, trim, and
tree harvesting residuals from logging
and sawmill materials), corn stover and
other biomass crops used specifically
for energy production (e.g., energy cane,
other fast growing grasses), bagasse and
other crop residues (e.g., peanut shells),
wood collected from forest fire
clearance activities, trees and clean
wood found in disaster debris, clean
biomass from land clearing operations,
and clean construction and demolition
wood. ‘‘Clean’’ cellulosic biomass is
cellulosic biomass that does not contain
contaminants at concentrations not
normally associated with virgin biomass
materials. As indicated above, this
description of clean is modified slightly
in today’s rule. The previous
description included non-hazardous
secondary material that has not been
altered (either chemically or through
some type of production process), such
that it contains contaminants at
concentrations normally associated with
virgin biomass materials.
Traditional fuels as described above
are not secondary materials or solid
wastes.
Comment: Several industry
commenters suggested that EPA include
off-spec used oil, scrap tires, resinated
wood products, treated wood, pulp and
paper mill residues, and recycling
process residuals in its definition of
traditional fuels. They claim that these
materials have histories of use as
valuable fuel products. Another
commenter suggested that secondary
materials from new processes to meet
Renewable Fuel Standards (RFS) should
be defined as traditional fuels.
According to the commenter, not
defining those materials as traditional
fuels could lead to reduced beneficial
use, could negatively impact the
economics of these newly developing
processes, and could increase the use of
conventional fossil fuels. This could
significantly harm the prospects of
reaching RFS goals.
EPA’s Response: For a discussion of
comments and EPA responses related to
each of the individual materials listed
above and their use as traditional fuels,
see their respective subsections within
Section V.B. Regarding the RFS
program, the Agency disagrees with the
commenter that materials from
processes to meet the RFS standard
should be defined as traditional fuels.
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Under the RFS program, EPA is
responsible for developing and
implementing regulations to ensure that
transportation fuel sold in the U.S.
contains a minimum volume of
renewable fuel. Today’s rule addresses
only the use of non-hazardous
secondary materials as a fuel or
ingredient in stationary source
combustion units (regulated under CAA
section 112 and 129), and does not
impact other end uses of these
materials, including their use as a
transportation fuel.
Comment: There are many other
materials that might be considered as
secondary materials, but because of
their energy content, have been
identified as viable fuels, particularly as
the cost of fossil fuels have increased
over time. Citing phrases from the
proposed rule, one commenter stated
that ‘‘Changes in * * * the energy
market,’’ as well as systems designed
and installed by cement plants in order
to manage these materials (‘‘changes in
technology’’), would suggest that
materials, such as plastics, paper and
paper residues, and tires should qualify
under this definition of ‘‘traditional
fuels.’’
EPA’s Response: As indicated in the
discussion above, EPA agrees that there
is a category of materials that are
legitimate alternative fuels that have not
been discarded and may not have been
traditionally used as fuels (i.e., a
product that is created for its use as a
fuel), but that are nonetheless legitimate
fuels today because of changes in
technology and in the energy market.
Such alternative fuels would include
clean cellulosic biomass, currently
mined coal refuse, and on-specification
used oil. See the respective subsections
within Section V.B for a further
discussion of each of these materials. As
discussed in the proposed rule, the
Agency believes materials, such as
plastics, paper and paper residues and
tires that have not been removed from
vehicles and managed under an
established tire collection program
typically have been discarded, and thus
would not be considered traditional
fuels or legitimate alternative fuels.
Comment: Another commenter stated
that EPA does not say why it regards
certain fuels as ‘‘traditional’’ and,
indeed, stresses that the term
‘‘traditional’’ ‘‘should be flexible to
account for increasing use and changes
in commodities, technologies, markets,
and fuel prices.’’ Thus, EPA makes clear
that the term ‘‘traditional fuels’’ will
accommodate fuels that are anything,
but ‘‘traditional.’’ EPA provides no basis
at all for assuming that none of the fuels
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it labels ‘‘traditional’’ are not actually
waste.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
the commenter. As described in the
ANPRM and proposed rule, traditional
fuels, such as fossil fuels have been
burned historically as fuels and have
been managed as valuable products.
They are considered unused products
and are not secondary materials and are
not solid wastes unless discarded. We
added ‘‘alternative fuels’’ to the
definition of traditional fuel in today’s
rule to recognize that changes in
technology and in the energy market
have resulted in additional materials
being economically viable to be used as
alternative ‘‘traditional’’ fuels. The
definition is codified in § 241.2 in
response to comments received on the
proposal and to provide clarity in the
application and the meaning of
traditional fuel.
Comment: Other commenters
suggested that, in order to further clarify
the definition of traditional fuel, if a fuel
was on record as being used before a
specific year, e.g., 1980, that it be
categorized as a traditional fuel. Still
other commenters suggested that
additional rule text is needed to clarify
that non-hazardous secondary materials
used traditionally as fuels are not solid
wastes. Finally, to address any
ambiguity about which materials are
traditional fuels, another commenter
stated that EPA should include a
petition process in the rule that would
allow sources to seek a determination
on whether a material may be
considered a traditional fuel.
EPA’s Response: As described in the
ANPRM and proposed rule, traditional
fuels, such as fossil fuels have been
burned historically as fuels and have
been managed as valuable products.
They are considered unused products
and are not secondary materials unless
discarded. We do not agree that a
specific year should be identified to
define historically managed traditional
fuels. First, it is not clear what year
should be selected and why and what
the basis for picking a particular year
would be. In addition, as we noted in
the proposal, the wide variability of
historic use and management of this
category of fuels does not lend itself to
identification of a specific year. As
discussed above, EPA does wish to
clarify that it is using the term,
‘‘traditional,’’ more in the sense that we
have a product that is created for its use
as a fuel. Some traditional fuels have
been used for a long time, while others
are ‘‘traditional’’ only in the sense that
they are created in the ‘‘traditional’’ way
that a product is created (or mined),
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even though they may be newly
developed fuels.
The Agency received only a few
comments that supported a petition
process for traditional fuels. In light of
the time and resource intensive nature
of such a process for the petitioner, the
Agency believes that the revised
codified definition in today’s rule
together with the preamble discussion
should provide the basic guidance
needed for the regulated facility to
determine whether the material
qualifies as a traditional fuel. Therefore,
today’s rule does not include a petition
process for an Agency determination
that a material is, or is not, a traditional
fuel. However, any person can petition
EPA under the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA), section 7004 of
RCRA, and general principles of
administrative law for modifications to
its regulations. Thus, if a person
believes that additional materials
should be included as a traditional fuel
or alternative fuel, they may petition
EPA to request such a change through
rulemaking. In addition to the specific
changes requested, the petition would
also need to include a justification and
rationale for the change.
Comments: ‘‘Hogged fuel’’ should be
added to the list of ‘‘clean’’ biomass
materials. Hogged fuel is bark and other
wood removed from the tree that cannot
be chipped and used in making pulp,
paper, and wood products.
EPA’s Response: We believe that the
materials described by the commenter
as ‘‘hogged fuel’’ are currently covered
by the terms ‘‘clean and unadulterated
bark’’ and ‘‘tree harvesting residuals
from logging and sawmill materials’’
within the definition of traditional fuel.
However, we are aware that there are
varying definitions of ‘‘hogged fuel’’ and
point the readers to the sections
describing traditional fuel and
secondary materials to determine if their
hogged fuel would be considered a type
of traditional fuel or a non-hazardous
secondary material.
2. Manure
The proposed rule explained that the
Agency lacked sufficient data to
evaluate whether manure burned for
energy recovery is a waste. As a result,
we did not take a position one way or
the other, but rather requested
comment, information and data on the
legitimacy criteria, which are designed
to determine whether a non-hazardous
secondary material when combusted is
a waste. Specifically, these criteria deal
with the levels of the various
contaminants in manure, the energy
content of the manure, and on how
manure is handled from its point of
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generation to the point it is used as a
fuel.
The proposal also stated, however,
that if manure is processed into biofuels
(for example, by anaerobic digesters),
such biofuels would be considered a
legitimate non-waste fuel that has been
processed from a non-hazardous
secondary material provided ‘‘the
biofuel’’ meets the legitimacy criteria—
that is, provided it is managed as a
valuable commodity, has a meaningful
heating value and contains
contaminants at levels that are
comparable to or lower than those in
traditional fuels. The proposal again
acknowledged, however, that we had
limited data on biofuels that are
produced from animal manures, and
requested that commenters provide
additional data on the extent to which
manures are currently processed into
biofuels, as well as data to support
whether biofuels produced from manure
meet our legitimacy criteria. See 75 FR
at 31863.
Comment: The Agency received
comments both supporting and
opposing the designation of manure as
a waste. Specifically, two commenters
asserted that poultry litter that is burned
as a fuel poses health hazards (e.g., from
arsenic that is added to poultry feed),
but provided no data to support this
position. Another comment submitted
in response to the ANPRM stated that,
due to the nature of manure, there is the
possibility of widespread environmental
harm due to the release of pathogens
from animal manure, and that
concentrated animal feeding operation
(CAFO) wastes are known to contain
heavy metals, halogens, dioxins, and
other hazardous compounds. They
assert chicken litter has elevated arsenic
levels and that swine waste has high
amounts of ammonia, nitrogen, and
phosphorous. Still another commenter
suggested that poultry litter that is
burned in power plants emit more
pollutants per million Btus when
compared to coal fired power plants.
Another commenter referenced a 2008
report that described the risks
associated with CAFOs.27 This report
stated that CAFOs are sited in rural
communities that bear the brunt of the
harm caused by CAFOs, including the
frequent presence of foul odors and
water contaminated by nitrogen and
pathogens, and that the use of
antibiotics in CAFOs, especially for
non-therapeutic purposes, such as
growth promotion, contributes to the
27 Gurian-Sherman, Doug, CAFOs Uncovered: The
Untold Costs of Confined Animal Feeding
Operations, Union of Concerned Scientists (April
2008).
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 54 / Monday, March 21, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
development of anti-biotic resistant
pathogens that are more difficult to
treat. Finally, one Midwest state
commented that when manure supply
significantly exceeds demand for
manure as a fertilizer, the excess is
treated as a waste and should be
regulated as a waste under this rule.
On the other hand, a commenter
argued that EPA should not classify
poultry litter as a solid waste and
provided some contaminant data on
poultry litter generated in the United
Kingdom.28 Another commenter
described how their company collects
poultry litter from growers for use as a
fuel in dedicated (off-site) biomass
power plants. The commenter asserts
that the poultry litter satisfies all the
legitimacy criteria. Specifically, this
commenter describes operations (and
argues) that the poultry litter is managed
as a valuable product by the poultry
litter generators and transporters, as
well as by the power plants. The
commenter describes poultry litter
generators as collecting the litter on a
continual basis and storing it in
enclosed poultry barns. The poultry
litter is then transported in completely
covered trucks to the power plant where
it is unloaded in a fully enclosed fuel
hall and is tested for fuel quality to
ensure contractual obligations are being
met by the growers. After sampling, the
trucks dump the litter into a concrete
reception pit within the fuel hall. Then,
before being combusted, the commenter
indicates that the biomass fuel is
processed (e.g., processed in a ‘‘delumper’’ followed by a disc screen) to
breakdown the clumps of material and
remove incidental non-combustible
tramp materials. The commenter also
asserts that poultry litter satisfies the
contaminant legitimacy criterion, but
only provided data on sulfur and
chlorine levels, noting the reported
chlorine levels averaged 0.7 percent (on
a dry basis). They also provided data on
the heating values of poultry litter that
ranged from 3–4,000 Btu/lb, explaining
that this material is a self-sustaining fuel
(requiring no supplemental fuel),
although they also note in their
comments that the poultry litter is
mixed with other biomass before being
used as a fuel. The developer of this
plant has indicated that they have
proposals to build similar type plants in
North Carolina, Virginia, and Georgia,
but has not received approval from local
authorities. Another firm has a proposal
for a plant in Connecticut, designed to
28 This
commenter reported poultry litter as
having sulfur, chlorine, and nitrogen levels of
0.35%, 0.16%, and 3.3%, respectively, and a net
heating value of 4,900 Btu/lb.
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run on litter from an egg farm, but
funding for this plant dried up as a
result of the U.S. financial crisis.
Additionally, two power plants (one in
Texas and one in California), each
currently mothballed, but scheduled to
reopen in 2011, would use cattle
manure as feedstock.
Finally, two states commented that
manure is excluded from the definition
of solid waste under their laws and
regulations. One of these states excludes
manure from being defined as a solid
waste when it is returned to the soil as
fertilizer or as a soil conditioner, while
the other exempts it from its statutory
definition of solid waste.
Regarding our request for comment on
the extent to which manures are
currently processed into biofuels, as
well as data to support whether biofuels
meet the legitimacy criteria, one state
referenced a June 2009 Report to
Congress 29 that reviewed the current
commercial use of manure to energy
systems, and found that few exist, and
that it is unlikely in the near term future
for more to be developed due to
technological and economic barriers.
Another state commented that they were
aware of one gasification system that
has been built on a pilot scale that uses
chicken and poultry litter as a feedstock.
Another commenter stated that about
120 dairy farms and 30 hog farms use
manure as a feedstock for anaerobic
digesters which are designed to capture
the methane gas in manure. Most farms
then burn the gas as a feedstock for onfarm electrical generation, which can be
used to off-set the farm’s purchases and
to sell electricity to the power grid. This
commenter also noted that one very
large farm in the Phoenix area further
cleans the methane and sells it to a
natural gas company whose pipeline
runs next to the farm.
A Tribe requested that EPA finalize
legitimacy criteria that does not
discourage the development of biogas
technology since it is a clean carbonneutral fuel needed to help address
climate change. This Tribe explained
that its renewable energy plans focus, in
part, on production of biogas from
animal, cheese, and other organic
material, and requested that EPA either
exempt biogas from the contaminant
legitimacy criterion or require that,
overall, contaminants in gaseous fuels
not be ‘‘significantly higher’’ in
concentration than contaminants found
in traditional fuel products that the
combustion unit is designed to burn.
29 USDA, June 2009. Manure Use for Fertilizer
and for Energy Report to Congress. Economic
Research Service. June 2009, pp. 32–39. https://
www.ers.usda.gov/publications/ap/ap037/
ap037.pdf.
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The Tribe is concerned that a direct
numerical comparison of contaminant
levels of biogas to natural gas that
requires all contaminants in biogas to be
equivalent or below the concentrations
found in natural gas would discourage
the development of biogas technology.
EPA’s Response: First, based on the
information provided to us, we could
not make a blanket determination that
all manure is a traditional fuel or that
it is a solid waste. However, upon
reviewing the few comments and data
received, we conclude that animal
manure that is used as a fuel ‘‘as
generated’’ does not satisfy the
legitimacy criteria, and thus, if
combusted ‘‘as generated,’’ is a solid
waste. However, as we discuss in other
parts of today’s preamble, there are
circumstances where manure would not
be considered a solid waste when
burned as a fuel for energy recovery. We
discuss these circumstances below. In
addition, we recognize that manure can
have other beneficial uses and
emphasize that we are not making a
solid waste determination on those
other uses through this rulemaking.
Specifically, we find that the levels of
certain pollutants, such as nitrogen and
chlorine, in certain types of manure, as
generated, may not be comparable to
those levels found in traditional fuels
that otherwise would be burned. This is
based on limited data found in a North
Carolina State University 30 study that
indicate some types of manure have
higher levels of nitrogen and chlorine
when compared to traditional fuels that
otherwise would be burned in the
energy recovery device.31 Regarding the
commenter’s reference to pathogens,
pathogens are not included as a
contaminant in today’s rule, since that
definition focuses on those constituents
identified in the CAA that EPA will be
evaluating to determine whether to
establish emission standards (see also
the discussion in V.D.3).
We also find that manure, as
generated, that is used as a fuel does not
satisfy our meaningful heating value
criteria, since the limited data we
received shows that manure, as
generated, has heating values lower than
5,000 Btus/lb, as-fired. In fact, one
commenter noted that for manure to be
30 Animal and Poultry Manure Production &
Characterization. North Carolina State University
Cooperative Extension Service. Raleigh, NC.
https://www.bae.ncsu.edu/programs/extension/
manure/awm/program/barker/a&pmp&c/.
31 Some manures were listed as having the
following mean levels for chlorine and nitrogen:
Cl—1% by weight and N—3.5% by weight reported
as total Kjeldahl nitrogen as N. By comparison, coal
contains chlorine levels ranging from as low as
0.01% to as high as 0.74 percent and nitrogen levels
ranging from 0.6% to 1.9%.
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considered to have fuel value, that it
typically should have a moisture
content of less than 25 percent, and
manure, as generated, typically has a
higher moisture content. We also note
that to satisfy the legitimacy criteria,
today’s final rule requires that facilities
that burn non-hazardous secondary
materials with a heating value of less
than 5,000 Btus/lb would need to
demonstrate that such non-hazardous
secondary materials have meaningful
heating values by describing whether
the energy recovery unit can costeffectively recover meaningful energy
from the manure (see Section V.D.2).32
While one commenter provided data to
show that a power plant that is
dedicated to burning poultry litter
would meet the meaningful heating
value criteria, even though the Btu
content of the poultry litter is less than
5,000 Btu/lb, as-fired, we believe that
these limited data can’t be used to
suggest that all or most manure that has
a heating value of less than 5,000 Btu/
lb, as-fired, could meet this
demonstration.
We acknowledge, however, that farms
or other facilities may manage manure
as a valuable fuel commodity and that
this manure could also satisfy EPA’s
contaminant and heating value
legitimacy criteria. Our limited data
suggests that manure that is combusted
has typically been collected, stored, and
processed. Thus, today’s final rule also
says that manure would not be
considered a solid waste when burned
in a combustion unit as a fuel for energy
recovery under the following
circumstances:
• Within the Control of the Generator:
Manure that is burned in a combustion
unit as a fuel for energy recovery would
not be a solid waste if the manure is
burned in a combustion unit that is
within the control of the generator and
the manure meets the legitimacy
criteria.
• Processing of Manure: Manure that
is ‘‘sufficiently processed’’ 33 would not
be considered a solid waste (after
32 As we note elsewhere in today’s preamble, this
demonstration would be self-implementing and
would not require a petition to EPA, but the person
would be required to keep appropriate records as
to the basis for this demonstration.
33 Processing (as it relates to fuels) means any
operations that transform the discarded nonhazardous secondary material into a legitimate fuel
product, and includes, but is not limited to,
operations that remove or destroy contaminants,
operations that significantly improve the fuel
characteristics of the material, e.g., sizing or drying
the material in combination with other operations,
and operations that chemically improve the as-fired
energy content of the material. Minimal operations
that result only in modifying the size of the material
do not constitute processing for the purposes of this
definition.
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processing) when burned in a
combustion unit as a fuel for energy
recovery provided the processed
manure meets the legitimacy criteria.
This is a self-implementing provision,
such that a petition would not need to
be submitted to EPA and is not limited
to ‘‘within the control of the generator.’’
Thus, for example, a farm or third party
could process the manure to remove or
destroy contaminants that are not at
levels comparable to those contained in
traditional fuels or improve the
materials heating value, and after
processing, to the extent the processed
manure meets the legitimacy criteria,
the processed manure would not be a
solid waste when burned as a fuel for
energy recovery.34 Also, as we
discussed in the proposed rule, we
expect that manure can be processed
into a non-waste gaseous fuel (e.g., via
anaerobic digestion or gasification
processes), as suggested by commenters.
This gaseous fuel would also have to
satisfy the legitimacy criteria, and while
we did not receive data on contaminant
levels of gaseous fuels that are, or could
be, produced, we generally expect that
a system could be designed to produce
a clean gaseous fuel that would satisfy
all of our legitimacy criteria.
• Non-Waste Determination Petition
Process: Manure, as generated, that has
been transferred to a third party for
combustion as a fuel for energy
recovery, but has been granted a nonwaste determination from EPA would
not be considered a solid waste. This
provision establishes a case-by-case
process that provides persons an
administrative process for receiving a
formal determination from EPA that, in
this case, manure, as generated, that has
not been discarded in the first instance
and is indistinguishable in all relevant
aspects from a fuel product, is not a
solid waste. Any petition submitted to
EPA requesting a non-waste
determination would need to
demonstrate that the manure has not
been discarded in the first instance,
satisfies the legitimacy criteria for fuels,
and satisfies the following criteria: (1)
Whether market participants treat the
manure as a fuel rather than a solid
34 As noted previously, one commenter described
their operation and noted that ‘‘the mixed biomass
fuel is lightly processed (e.g., processed in a ‘‘delumper’’ followed by a disc screen) to break down
clumps of material and remove incidental noncombustible tramp materials.’’ This comment does
not contain enough information to determine
whether or not this would meet the regulatory
definition of processing in today’s rule. That is,
processing is designed to produce or extract a
product from a waste—not just to chop the waste
up. However, to the extent that this level of
processing is considered sufficient, the processed
manure would not be a solid waste when burned
in a combustion unit as a fuel for energy recovery.
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15481
waste; (2) whether the chemical and
physical identity of the manure is
comparable to commercial fuels; (3)
whether the manure will be used in a
reasonable time frame given the state of
the market; (4) whether the constituents
in the manure are released to the air,
water or land from the point of
generation to the point just prior to
combustion of the manure are released
at levels that are comparable to what
would otherwise be released from
traditional fuels; and (5) other relevant
factors.
We partially agree with the
commenter that was concerned about
the legitimacy criterion that would
require contaminants in biofuels to
either be equivalent to, or lower than,
levels found in natural gas. While we
believe it is beneficial to promote the
use of clean burning fuels, such as
biofuels, non-waste fuels produced from
secondary materials should have
comparable or lower levels of
contaminants relative to traditional
fuels used today, since gaseous fuels
that are produced from secondary
materials have the potential to have
elevated levels of contaminants (such as
sulfur). As a result, we believe it is
appropriate to require, as proposed, that
contaminants be comparable, or lower
than, those levels found in traditional
fuels. However, as discussed in Section
V.D.3, we are not defining comparable
to mean ‘‘equivalent to or lower than’’ or
‘‘no higher than’’ the level of the
contaminant in the traditional fuel.
Rather, EPA is generally defining
‘‘comparable to or lower than’’ to mean
contaminants can be present in nonhazardous secondary materials within a
small acceptable range, or at lower
levels, relative to the contaminants
found in the traditional fuels. Thus,
biofuels that are produced from nonhazardous secondary materials can have
contaminants that are somewhat higher
than the traditional fuel that otherwise
would be burned and still qualify as
being comparable, and would not be
considered a solid waste.
Comment: Manure used as a fuel that
would otherwise be applied to the land
covered under a nutrient management
plan35 is in no way discarded.
35 A nutrient management plan is defined in the
U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS) Standard (590) as,
‘‘Managing the amount, source, placement, form and
timing of the application of nutrients and soil
amendments.’’ The NRCS nutrient management
standard (590) is the guidance provided to NRCS
field staff and other planners when providing
technical assistance to producers participating in
voluntary programs. The purpose of the 590
standard is to meet the nutrient needs of the crop
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EPA’s Response: We recognize that
manure may also be beneficially used in
other end uses, such as a fertilizer. As
we have noted elsewhere in the
preamble to today’s rule, EPA is not
making any determination whether nonhazardous secondary materials are or
are not solid wastes for other possible
beneficial end uses. Such beneficial use
determinations are generally made by
the states for these other beneficial uses,
and EPA will continue to look to the
states to make such determinations.
Comment: Combustion of manure is
simply one of the ways of realizing the
carbon value of manure (for energy
production/recovery rather than as a
soil amendment) and should not be
considered in any way as a means of
‘‘discard,’’ since the inherent value of
manure as a fertilizer is essentially
preserved in the resultant ash. Further,
since the ash from manure combustion
is still suitable as a fertilizer, the
commenter also believes that manure
does not contain contaminants that are
significantly higher in concentration
than traditional fuels.
EPA’s Response: Both wastes and
non-wastes can be utilized as fuels and
in this rule EPA is determining what is
and is not a solid waste when
combusted. As we have stated, there are
circumstances when manure would not
be considered a solid waste when
combusted. In the commenter’s case, it
does not appear that manure being
burned solely to improve soil would
meet the legitimacy criteria.
Further, whether the resultant ash is
suitable as a fertilizer is not directly
relevant to EPA’s solid waste
determination for non-hazardous
secondary materials used as a fuel since
contaminants that are present in the
manure ‘‘as generated’’ can also be
destroyed (discarded) in the combustion
process or be directly emitted to the
environment, either prior to combustion
(during storage and transportation) or if
they are not sufficiently combusted and/
or controlled by the combustion unit’s
air pollution control system.
Contaminants in manure that may be
used as a fuel must be present at
comparable or lower levels relative to
traditional fuels for the manure to
satisfy the contaminant legitimacy
criterion. As previously discussed, EPA
concludes that manure, as generated,
may not satisfy this criterion for
nitrogen and chlorine.
Comment: Given the biological basis
of agricultural products and by-products
and the unique nature of the transfer of
agricultural commodities among
to be grown, while minimizing the loss of nutrients
to surface and ground water.
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entities, the commenter requests that
EPA presumptively grant a non-waste
determination for manure that is used as
a combustion fuel outside the control of
the generator that would otherwise meet
the legitimacy criteria. The commenter
states that crops grown from a cropping
operation may be sold/provided to an
animal production operation as a feed
input, with the manure from the animal
production operation being sold/
provided to a community based or
regional energy production system as
one of many fuel sources from that area,
with the resultant ash from the energy
production system sent back to the
cropping operation as a fertilizer source.
The commenter then explains that the
cropping and animal production
operator may be the same entity, and
asserts that the transfer among entities
in this instance is to facilitate energy
recovery, not disposal.
EPA’s Response: Unlike scrap tires
and resinated wood residuals,
information and data were not provided
that would allow the Agency to
presumptively grant a non-waste
determination for all manure that is
used as a fuel outside the control of the
generator. As a result, we conclude that
the final rule cannot presumptively
grant a non-waste determination for
manure that is used as a fuel outside the
control of the generator. We note,
however, that sources may petition the
Agency for a non-waste determination
for materials managed outside the
control of the generator (see Section
VII.G), or, as previously discussed,
process (as codified in § 241.2) the
manure into a non-waste fuel that meets
the legitimacy criteria.
Comment: Modern manure
management systems that are designed
and operated in accordance with
applicable Federal, Tribal, State, and/or
local regulations and requirements for
air and water quality should be
considered to meet the ‘‘adequate
containment’’ requirements.
EPA’s Response: EPA does not agree
with the commenter that the statement
‘‘manure management systems that are
designed and operated in accordance
with applicable Federal, Tribal, State,
and/or local regulations and
requirements for air and water quality
should be considered to meet the
‘adequate containment’ requirements’’ in
itself, is sufficient for EPA to conclude
that these systems satisfy the
containment requirements because these
systems may not have been designed for
the use of manure as a fuel. These
Federal, Tribal, State, and/or local
regulations and requirements would
have to be examined on a case-specific
basis to determine whether manure that
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is used as a fuel is managed as a
valuable commodity pursuant to EPA’s
legitimacy criteria. EPA does not believe
that it can conclude that the ‘‘adequate
management’’ criterion is met based on
the descriptions of management
practices that have been provided to
EPA, such as stockpiling manure in
open lots to facilitate drying.
Comment: Manure satisfies EPA’s
meaningful heating value legitimacy
criterion since it typically has energy
contents ranging from 6,000 to 8,000
Btu/lb on a dry basis.
EPA’s Response: The data provided
by the commenter summarize heating
values on a ‘‘dry basis,’’ rather than on
an ‘‘as-fired’’ basis that accounts for the
moisture content of the material, and
thus, these data are not relevant to the
‘‘meaningful heating value’’ legitimacy
criterion. Except as otherwise noted, to
satisfy the meaningful heating value
criterion, the non-hazardous secondary
material must have at least 5,000 Btu/lb,
as fired (accounting for moisture), since
the as-fired energy content is the
relevant parameter that must be
assessed to determine if it is being
discarded rather than used as a fuel for
energy recovery. See Section VII.H.1. As
previously discussed, the data available
to EPA on an ‘‘as fired’’ basis would
suggest that much of the manure, as
generated, would have heating value
levels of less than 5,000 Btu/lb. If the
non-hazardous secondary material has a
[meaningful] heating value of less than
5,000 Btu/lb, ‘‘as fired,’’ the secondary
material may still be considered to have
a ‘‘meaningful heating value,’’ but the
source must demonstrate that a
meaningful heating value is derived
from the manure, and appropriate
records kept.
3. Other Biomass
The proposed rule preamble
discussed many different forms of
biomass, including cellulosic and noncellulosic biomass.36 How the final rule
views clean biomass was addressed
earlier in Section V.B.1, which
addresses traditional fuel. Manure was
discussed in the previous section
(Section V.B.2), while pulp and paper
sludges and resinated wood residuals
will be discussed in more detail in
Sections V.B.4 and V.B.6, respectively,
of this preamble. This section discusses
other biomass materials that may be
burned as a fuel, and whether or not
they would be considered a solid waste
when combusted as a fuel. Specifically,
the proposed rule identified lead-based
painted wood, and wood treated with
pentachlorophenol, copper-based and
36 75
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borate-based compound treatments as
solid wastes due to elevated
contaminant levels relative to
traditional fuels. Moreover, the
proposed rule explained that, to the
extent that any treated wood is
identified as a hazardous waste, it
would not be eligible to be burned in a
non-hazardous waste combustion unit.
We also specifically requested comment
on the levels of contaminants in
creosote-treated lumber due to the
uncertainty associated with the level of
contaminants (e.g., levels of polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbons present in
creosote).37 We received comments on
construction and demolition (C&D)derived wood, treated wood, and OCC
rejects.
Comment: Since creosote is a
derivative of coal, itself a traditional
fuel, the comments argued that creosotetreated wood should also be considered
a traditional fuel. They suggested that
this material is treated as a valuable
commodity and has been used as a fuel
for over a decade. One commenter
provided data that showed that the
mobility of contaminants indicates that
p-cresol leaches at 75 percent of the
hazardous waste toxicity characteristic
leaching procedure (TCLP) levels in
new ties, but that this is reduced to less
than 10 percent in ties that are over 10
years old. Another commenter provided
the average results from 605 TCLP tests
and 605 totals analyses for metals on
creosote-treated wood. These results
were below TCLP limits for all of the
contaminants it contains (i.e., cresol,
m,p-cresol, o-cresol leached an average
of 1.23 mg/L, 0.90 mg/L, 0.35 mg/L,
respectively), although two compounds,
2,4-dinitrotoluene and
hexachlorobenzene, leached at levels
close to the toxicity characteristic (TC)
regulatory level (both leached at 0.09
mg/L with a standard deviation of
0.03).38 Another commenter submitted a
compositional analysis that compared
the levels of constituents in creosote
(not creosote-treated wood) to crude
coke oven tar, a traditional fuel. For
example, creosote contains between
8.00–17.30% of naphthalene and 0.50–
0.80% quinoline, respectively, while
crude coke oven tar contains between
3.00–11.00% naphthalene and 0.18%
quinoline). Besides naphthalene and
quinoline, data was also submitted for
other compounds on the CAA section
112 HAP list, including biphenyl and
dibenzofuran. The data submitted
showed that all contaminants were
present in the creosote at levels greater
37 75
FR 31863.
document EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–
38 See
0875.1.
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than in crude coke oven tar.39 Other
studies compared metal contaminants
(As, Cr, Pb, and Cu) in creosote- and
pentachlorophenol-treated wood (<1.97
ppm As, <4.21 ppm Cr, <64.13 ppm Pb,
and 7.65 ppm Cu) to that of wood chips,
bark, yard waste, and forest residuals
and found that the levels were
comparable (<3.61 ppm As, 0.12–4.77
ppm Cr, <17.5 ppm Pb, and <6.44 ppm
Cu).40
Finally, a study was submitted that
demonstrated that the co-firing of
creosote- and pentachlorophenol-treated
wood (10/90 treated wood/coal mix)
results in a reduction of 79–107 ppm of
oxides of sulfur (SO2), 78–100 ppm of
oxides of nitrogen (NOX), and 0.4–0.5
ppm of total hydrocarbon (expressed as
propane) emissions compared to those
from samples of Upper Freeport coal.
The same study, however, found that
there was an increase of 17–84 ppm in
HCl emissions when co-firing with
treated wood, although the study noted
these levels of HCl emissions could be
within the range from coal found in
other areas of the U.S.41 HCl is listed on
the CAA 112 HAP list. Other data were
submitted that showed that PAH
emissions from a combustion unit are
less when burning treated wood (50/50
mixture of creosote- and
pentachlorophenol-treated wood) than
when combusting untreated wood. Data
were also provided that indicated that
pentachlorophenol and total
chlorophenols were destroyed by
combustion at greater than 99.9%
removal efficiency.42
EPA’s Response: We do not agree with
commenters that creosote-treated wood
should be considered a traditional fuel
(either an historically managed
traditional fuel or an alternative fuel as
codified in § 241.2) solely based on the
fact that it is manufactured using coal
tar and wood, which are considered
traditional fuels. Creosote was not
derived for the purposes of creating a
39 See document EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–
0767.1.
40 Holtzman, M.I. and R.S. Atkins, 1995.
‘‘Emissions from Combustion of Treated Wood Fuel
and Tires in Industrial Boilers,’’ Presented to the Air
and Waste Management Association’s Annual
Meeting, June 18–23, 1995.
41 Freeman, M.C., W.J. O’Dowd, T.D. Brown, R.A.
Hargis, Jr., R.A. James, S.I. Plasynski, G.F. Walbert,
A.F. Lowe, and J.J. Battista, Jr. ‘‘Pilot-Scale Air
Toxics R&D Assessment of Creosote-Treated and
PCP–Treated Wood Co-firing for Pulverized Coal
Utility Boiler Applications.’’ U.S. Department of
Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory.
https://www.netl.doe.gov/technologies/coalpower/
cctc/cctdp/bibliography/misc/pdfs/haps/2002–
710.pdf
42 Smith, S.T., 1996. ‘‘Stack Testing Report,
Koppers Industries, Inc., Grenada Plant, Tie Plant,
MS,’’ Submitted to the Mississippi Department of
Environmental Quality, May 6.
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15483
fuel, or the wood treated with creosote
to produce a fuel, but the creosote was
produced and used as a wood
preservative. It is not made from virgin
materials, but is a secondary material.
Creosote is derived from coal tar
through a distillation process and,
therefore, creosote has different
chemical concentrations than coal tar.
While we recognize that creosote-treated
wood has been utilized as a fuel for over
ten years, few markets are available for
creosote-treated wood due to concerns
about the contaminants. This strongly
suggests that burning this material is a
waste treatment activity.
The TCLP data generally indicates
that the material, on average, is not a
hazardous waste. This does not mean,
however, that the material is not a nonhazardous solid waste. Leaching data is
not relevant to determine whether or not
the treated wood is being discarded. We
do note that the average values and
standard deviations provided for 2,4dinitrotoluene and hexachlorobenzene
suggest that a few samples actually
failed the TCLP test and would be
classified as a hazardous waste.
Creosote-treated wood that is classified
as a hazardous waste must be managed
as a hazardous waste, which is outside
the scope of this rulemaking. Even
though most creosote-treated wood is
non-hazardous, the presence of
hexachlorobenze, a CAA 112 HAP, as
well as the other HAPs, in creosotetreated lumber suggests that creosotetreated wood include contaminants at
levels that are not comparable to those
found in wood or coal, the fuel that
creosote-treated wood would replace.43
In fact, the data provided demonstrates
that combustion of these materials
results in significant destruction, which
is an indication of incineration, a waste
activity. Moreover, we would note that
this concept involving destruction is
also consistent with the legitimacy
criterion for contamination, which is
based on the input into the combustion
unit—that is, the contaminant
concentration in the secondary material
itself and not what may be emitted into
the environment. Accordingly, creosote
treated wood, when burned, seems more
like a waste than a commodity and does
not meet the legitimacy criterion for
contaminants and, therefore, should be
considered a waste when burned as a
fuel.
In regards to wood treated with
pentachlorophenol, no additional
43 See Preliminary Characterization Study
Prepared In Support of the Proposed Rulemaking—
Identification of Nonhazardous Secondary
Materials That Are Solid Waste: Traditional Fuels
and Key Derivatives, EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–
0461.21.
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 54 / Monday, March 21, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
contaminant data was provided that
would reverse our position from the
proposal, which determined that
pentachlorophenol was a solid waste
due to concerns of elevated levels of
contaminants.44 While some
commenters pointed to data that
indicates that pentachlorophenoltreated wood (as well as creosote-treated
wood) would have similar or lower air
emissions to non-treated woods, the
issue to determine whether a material is
burned as a waste or a commodity is
based on input and consequent
destruction of contaminants. This is
consistent with the legitimacy criteria,
under which to be considered a nonwaste fuel, the non-hazardous
secondary material itself must have
contaminant levels that are comparable
to (or less than) those in traditional
fuels. Thus, the final rule will retain the
proposed approach, which considered
wood treated with pentachlorophenol a
solid waste. Of course, this assumes that
the pentachlorophenol treated-wood is
not classified as a hazardous waste.
Hazardous wastes are not covered under
the scope of this rulemaking.
Comments: Comments were
submitted that argued that wood treated
with borate-based compounds or copper
napthenate did not contain any
contaminants, but only contaminant
data was supplied for wood treated with
borate-based compounds. That study
indicated that the most prevalent borate
treatment, disodium octaborate
tetrahydrate, contained 1.5 ppm of As,
<1 ppm of Cd, <2.5 ppm of Cr, <5 ppm
of Co, <0.02 ppm of Hg, <2.5 ppm of Ni,
and 0.67 ppm of Se.45 Since these levels
represent the contaminant concentration
of the borate treatment, the comments
argued that the resulting wood that is
treated with this compound would
contain even lower concentrations of
contaminants.
EPA’s Response: With respect to
borate-treated wood, after reviewing
data from the one commenter, which
shows that the levels of contaminants in
this material are comparable to those
found in unadulterated wood for the
seven contaminants for which data was
presented, we believe that such treatedwood meets the legitimacy criterion on
the level of contaminants and
comparability to traditional fuels.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES3
44 75
FR 31863.
document EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–
Therefore, borate-treated wood could be
classified as a non-waste fuel, provided
they met the other two legitimacy
criteria and provided that the
contaminant levels for any other HAP
that may be present in this material are
also comparable to or less than those in
traditional fuels. We would also note
that such borate-treated wood would
need to be burned as a fuel for energy
recovery within the control of the
generator. Finally, we are aware that
some borate-treated wood is
subsequently treated with other
chemicals, such as creosote, to provide
an insoluble barrier to prevent the
borate compounds from leaching out of
the wood. We did not receive data on
the contaminant levels of the resulting
material, but data presented on creosote
treated lumber indicates that this nonhazardous secondary material would
likely no longer meet the legitimacy
criteria and would be considered a solid
waste when burned as a fuel.
We do not have information generally
about the transfer of borate-treated wood
to other companies to make a broad
determination about its use as a fuel
outside the control of the generator. (See
Section V.A.1 for a general discussion of
the issue concerning use of nonhazardous secondary materials within
and outside the control of the generator
and the EPA’s response.) Thus, under
today’s rule, borate-treated wood would
need to be burned as a fuel for energy
recovery within the control of the
generator. With that said, we encourage
the use of the non-waste determination
petition process to address those
instances where transfer of the nonhazardous secondary material to a
different company meets the relevant
criteria—that the secondary material has
not been discarded in the first instance
and is indistinguishable in all relevant
aspects from a fuel product.
With regard to wood treated with
copper napthenate, no additional
contaminant data was provided that
would reverse our position in the
proposed rule, which considered wood
treated with copper napthenate a solid
waste because of concerns of elevated
levels of contaminants.46 We
acknowledge today, as we did in the
proposed rule, that we do not have
sufficient information on the
contaminant levels in wood treated with
copper napthenate.47 Thus, if a person
can demonstrate that copper napthenate
treated-wood is burned in a combustion
unit as a fuel for energy recovery within
the control of the generator and meets
the legitimacy criteria or, if discarded,
can demonstrate that they have
sufficiently processed the material, that
person can handle its copper napthenate
treated-wood as a non-waste fuel.
Comments: Commenters argued that,
although C&D-derived wood is
discarded by construction and
demolition sites, it is sufficiently
processed into a non-waste fuel. It is
received at a mixed C&D processing
facility as part of loads from
construction and demolition sites.
Potential contaminants are removed as
much as possible before it enters the
plant. Clean C&D wood is then
separated out from the rest of the
incoming stream one of two ways; either
through mechanical means or through
humans sorting along a specially built
picking line. Painted and treated wood
is identified either visually or utilizing
x-ray fluorescence (XRF) analyzers.
After separation, the wood is ground to
a specific size and density per the
specification of the plant using the
biomass product. The creation of natural
wood products follows a similar
processing path, except that C&D wood
is more carefully prepared because of
the chemical analysis the C&D product
undergoes.
Commenters also stated that C&Dderived wood meets the legitimacy
criterion for having a meaningful
heating value. They stated that C&Dderived wood has a heating value of
between 7,000–8,200 Btu/lb, and thus,
should be considered a non-waste fuel.
Data from one plant that combusts C&Dderived wood found that it had a
heating value that ranges from 6,700–
9,000 Btu/lb, with an average value of
8,200 Btu/lb.
One company provided chemical
constituent data on C&D-derived wood
that is utilized at their plant in order to
demonstrate that the material meets the
legitimacy criterion for contaminants.
The results of this analysis found that
the chemical constituents were
comparable to or lower to those found
in coal (of unknown source or type). See
Table 1 below for the results of this
study.
45 See
46 75
1569.
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TABLE 1—COMPARISON OF CONTAMINANT CONCENTRATIONS IN SAMPLES OF COAL AND C&D-DERIVED WOOD48
Coal
(unknown source
or type)
Material
Sample Size .................................................................................................................................................
Median contaminant concentrations:
Cl:
(lb/billion Btu) .................................................................................................................................
(ppm) .............................................................................................................................................
# of non-detects ............................................................................................................................
Hg:
(lb/billion Btu) .................................................................................................................................
(ppm) .............................................................................................................................................
# of non-detects ............................................................................................................................
Pb:
(lb/billion Btu) .................................................................................................................................
(ppm) .............................................................................................................................................
# of non-detects ............................................................................................................................
Cd:
(lb/billion Btu) .................................................................................................................................
(ppm) .............................................................................................................................................
# of non-detects ............................................................................................................................
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES3
Some commenters discussed studies
that concluded that the use of
appropriately processed C&D wood is
similar in its emission profile to that of
virgin wood, although some older
studies indicated an increase in metals
emissions (likely due to the inclusion of
treated wood).49 Another commenter
submitted a life-cycle assessment that
described how the recovery of C&D
wood as a fuel decreased greenhouse gas
emissions. This study found that
combusting all C&D wood generated in
New Hampshire per year (280,000 tons)
will off-set energy from the northeast
48 Source: EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–0774;
Since the legitimacy criterion for contaminants
compares concentrations per mass of the material
(not per the heating value of the material), all
concentrations reported in pounds per billion Btu
(lb/billion Btu) were converted into parts per
million (ppm) with the assumption that C&Dderived wood has a heating value of 8,200 Btu/lb
(as fired) and that sub-bituminous and bituminous
coal (the most common types of coal to be utilized
in combustion units) have a heating value of 8,500–
14,000 Btu/lb (per Preliminary Characterization
Study Prepared In Support of the Proposed
Rulemaking—Identification of Nonhazardous
Secondary Materials That Are Solid Waste:
Traditional Fuels and Key Derivatives, EPA–HQ–
RCRA–2008–0329–0461.21).
49 U.S. EPA, ‘‘Wood Products in the Waste
Stream: Characterization and Combustion
Emissions, Vol. 1,’’ November 1996.
National Council for Air and Stream
Improvement, Inc. Technical Bulletin (TB) 906,
‘‘Alternative Fuels Used in the Forest Products
Industry: Their Composition and Impact on
Emissions.’’ September 2005.
Larsen, F.S., W.H. McClennen, X. Deng, G.D.
Silcox-Person, and K. Allison, 1992. ‘‘Hydrocarbon
and Formaldehyde Emissions from the Combustion
of Pulverized Wood Waste.’’ Combustion Science
and Technology, 85 (1–6) p. 259–269.
50 Jambeck, J., A. Carpenter, K. Gardner, and K.
Wietz, 2007. ‘‘University of New Hampshire LifeCycle Assessment of C&D Derived Biomass/Wood
Waste Management,’’ University of New Hampshire,
Durham, NH, December 5.
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power grid and, therefore, result in
70,000–130,000 tons less of carbon
emissions, 600 tons/year less of
particulate matter, 430 tons/yr less of
NOX, 2,300 tons/yr less of SOX, 890
tons/yr less of CO, and 10 pounds/yr
less of lead. Even when compared
simply to the combustion of virgin
wood, it was found that the combustion
of C&D-derived wood had lower
impacts: 16,700 metric tons of carbon
equivalents were offset, 50 tons/yr less
of particulate matter, 200 tons/yr less of
NOX, 485 tons/yr less of SOX, and 69
tons/yr less of CO.50
EPA’s Response: The proposed rule
included clean construction wood in the
definition of traditional fuels. The final
rule retains this conclusion, although
clarifies the definition of traditional
fuels to include alternative fuels. Clean
cellulosic biomass is an alternative fuel
as they are clean cellulosic materials
that are indistinguishable in
composition from wood that is
commonly burned in combustion units
(See the explanation in Section V.A).
We note that the final definition of
traditional fuels clarifies that this
category includes clean demolition
wood as well.
On the other hand, C&D-derived wood
that is not clean would not be
considered a traditional fuel, but a solid
waste under today’s rule. However,
C&D-derived wood can be classified as
a non-waste fuel if it has been
sufficiently processed and meets the
legitimacy criteria. C&D-derived wood is
typically sorted to remove contaminants
(e.g., lead-painted wood, treated wood,
non-wood materials), and size reduced
prior to burning, producing material
that likely meets the processing and
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C&D-derived
wood
16
14–16
46.0
391–644
0
56.0
459.2
0
0.00622
0.05287–0.08708
0
0.0046
0.03772
0
0.374
3.18–5.24
0
0.488
4.00
0
0.00465
0.03923–0.06510
7
0.0218
0.17876
2
legitimacy criteria for contaminants.
(We would also note that the technology
in use today to remove contaminants
from C&D-derived wood has increased
considerably.) The data provided by one
company demonstrates that C&Dderived wood can be sufficiently
processed to meet the legitimacy
criterion for four contaminants, even
when these contaminants are compared
to untreated wood concentrations
presented in the background document,
Preliminary Characterization Study
Prepared In Support of the Proposed
Rulemaking—Identification of
Nonhazardous Secondary Materials
That Are Solid Waste: Traditional Fuels
and Key Derivatives.51 A complete
determination, however, would also
include the comparison of As and Cr
concentrations. We would also note that
based on the data presented, C&D
derived wood also meets the meaningful
heating value criterion.
With respect to those comments that
argued that C&D derived wood have an
emissions profile similar to that of
virgin wood and that it would decrease
greenhouse gas emissions, as we have
noted previously, the criterion or test for
determining whether a material is
burned as a waste or a commodity fuel
is the level of the contaminant in the
secondary material itself—that is
destruction of contaminants indicates a
waste treatment activity rather than a
commodity fuel. This is also consistent
with the legitimacy criteria that would
require that the non-hazardous
secondary material, itself, must have
contaminant levels that are comparable
to (or lower than) those in traditional
51 EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–0461.21.
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fuels. In any event, because we had no
information from the studies on the
extent that these C&D materials were
sufficiently processed to remove the
contaminants of concern, we do not
know what the emissions results from
the submitted studies represent.
Comment: Some comments argued
that there should be a de minimis
exemption for C&D-derived wood that is
processed to remove painted and treated
materials, because while most of the
contaminants are removed from the C&D
derived wood, there still may be a small
or de minimis amount remaining on it.
Additionally, they also argued that
while most non-wood contaminants are
removed, there might still remain some
small or de minimis amounts of other
materials (e.g., paper, insulation, etc.).
EPA’s Response: C&D-derived wood
can contain de minimis amounts of
contaminants and other materials
provided it meets the legitimacy
criterion for contaminant levels.
Comment: Comments argued that
OCC rejects, also known in the industry
as ‘‘recycling process residuals,’’ are
never discarded, and therefore, should
be considered a traditional fuel because
they do not leave the plant, but are
usually burned on-site as a fuel. In some
cases, however, they do leave the plant
to be burned in municipal or
commercial energy facilities or
employed as a fuel pellet ingredient.
In addition, while some commenters
argued that they did not believe OCC
rejects are ever discarded, they provided
information on how OCC rejects are
sufficiently processed to remove
contaminants if they are determined to
be discarded. For example, strings,
wires, rags, and heavy objects are
removed using manual and centrifugal
force, while plastic and non-recyclable
paper fibers are removed through
screens.
Commenters also stated that OCC
rejects meet the legitimacy criterion for
contaminants as they have lower
contaminants than traditional fuels. One
comment provided data from 10
samples of OCC rejects from one
company and 16 samples of coal (of
unknown type or origin) to substantiate
that claim (see Table 2).
TABLE 2—COMPARISON OF CONTAMINANT CONCENTRATIONS IN SAMPLES OF COAL AND OCC REJECTS 52
Coal
(unknown type or
origin)
Material
Sample Size .................................................................................................................................................
Median contaminant concentrations:
Cl:
(lb/billion Btu) .................................................................................................................................
(ppm, estimated) ...........................................................................................................................
# of non-detects ............................................................................................................................
Hg:
(lb/billion Btu) .................................................................................................................................
(ppm, estimated) ...........................................................................................................................
# of non-detects ............................................................................................................................
Pb:.
(lb/billion Btu) .................................................................................................................................
(ppm, estimated) ...........................................................................................................................
# of non-detects ............................................................................................................................
Cd:
(lb/billion Btu) .................................................................................................................................
(ppm, estimated) ...........................................................................................................................
# of non-detects ............................................................................................................................
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES3
Commenters also claimed that OCC
rejects meet the legitimacy criterion for
being managed as a valuable
commodity, as they are managed in the
same manner as analogous fuels—bark.
Prior to burning, this material is comingled with bark on the bark pile.
52 Source: EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–0774;
Since the legitimacy criterion for contaminants
compares concentrations per mass of the material
(not per the heating value of the material), all
concentrations reported in pounds per billion Btu
(lb/billion Btu) were converted into parts per
million (ppm) with the assumption that OCC rejects
have a heating value of 3,700 Btu/lb (as fired) and
that sub-bituminous and bituminous coal (the most
common types of coal to be utilized in combustion
units) have a heating value of 8,500–14,000 Btu/lb
(per Preliminary Characterization Study Prepared
In Support of the Proposed Rulemaking—
Identification of Nonhazardous Secondary
Materials That Are Solid Waste: Traditional Fuels
and Key Derivatives, EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–
0461.21).
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Furthermore, commenters stated that
OCC rejects pass the legitimacy criterion
for having a meaningful heating value.
For example, a commenter submitted
data that indicated that, on a dry basis,
OCC rejects have a heating value of
9,100 Btu/lb, while, as fired, they have
a heating value of 3,700 Btu/lb.53
Another commenter submitted ten tests
at plants from one company that found
that the heating value of OCC rejects
ranged from 8,700–13,600 Btu/lb on a
dry basis.54
Another commenter submitted a
study by the National Council for Air
and Stream Improvement to
demonstrate that air emissions from
burning OCC rejects are comparable to
burning wood. In this study, emissions
results were provided from three plants
that burned 4.4–30% OCC rejects with
53 Source:
54 Source:
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EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–0774.1.
Frm 00032
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OCC rejects
16
10
46.0
391–644
0
23.5
87.0
0
0.00622
0.05287–0.08708
0
0.00324
0.01199
0
0.374
3.18–5.24
0
0.281
1.04
1
0.00465
0.03923–0.06510
7
0.00558
0.02065
2
70%–95.6% wood and compared it to
emissions from the same three plants
when they only burned wood.
Emissions were tested for total
particulate matter (TPM), SO2, NOX, CO,
and HCl. The results found that burning
OCC rejects did not result in increased
emissions of TPM, SO2, NOX, or CO, but
occasionally resulted in a small increase
in HCl emissions.55
EPA’s Response: We do not agree with
the commenters that OCC rejects should
be considered a traditional fuel or
alternative fuel since this nonhazardous secondary material,
consisting of recycled paper and paper
products, has not historically been
managed as a fuel—that is, the recycling
of OCC and the subsequent use of OCC
55 National Council for Air and Stream
Improvement, Inc. Technical Bulletin (TB) 906,
‘‘Alternative Fuels Used in the Forest Products
Industry: Their Composition and Impact on
Emissions.’’ September 2005.
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rejects is a relatively recent activity, nor
is it made from virgin materials.
However, we believe that these
materials are not discarded when used
within the control of the generator, such
as at pulp and paper mills, since these
non-hazardous secondary materials are
part of the industrial process.
The data submitted during the
comment period would seem to suggest
that it would or could meet the
legitimacy criteria. For example, the
data received indicated that OCC rejects
have contaminant concentrations that
are comparable to, if not less than, coal,
wood, and bark, which are all
traditional fuels used at pulp and paper
mills. While the meaningful heating
value of the OCC rejects is lower than
5,000 Btu/lb, as fired, it can still meet
this criterion if it can be demonstrated
that the unit can cost-effectively recover
energy from a non-hazardous secondary
material. The information submitted
also demonstrates that OCC rejects are
managed as a valuable commodity as
they are managed in the same manner
as the analogous fuel—bark.
With respect to the OCC rejects that
are shipped off-site for use by another
company, the limited information
provided indicates that this material is
burned in municipal or commercial
energy facilities (which appears to be
municipal or commercial incinerators)
and thus, would clearly indicate
discard, or processed to produce a fuel
pellet ingredient, which may be a nonwaste, if and after it is sufficiently
processed. That is, such limited
information would appear to suggest
that when OCC rejects are shipped offsite, which may not happen very often,
it is treated more like a waste than a
non-waste fuel. Therefore, the Agency
finds that OCC rejects shipped off-site
for burning would be considered a solid
waste. However, as already noted, if the
OCC rejects are sufficiently processed to
produce a legitimate fuel product, or if
a person submits and is granted a nonwaste determination for such OCC
rejects, than such non-hazardous
secondary material when combusted as
a fuel for energy recovery would be
considered a non-waste fuel.
4. Pulp and Paper Sludge
In the proposal, EPA determined that
pulp and paper sludge 56 is not a waste
when used as a fuel within the control
of the generator. This was based on
limited contaminant data and
information that these sludges are
56 Pulp and paper sludge includes both primary
and secondary wastewater treatment sludges.
Primary sludges consist of wood fiber and inorganic
materials, while secondary sludges are primarily
microbial biomass.
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generally used on-site by generators to
fuel their boilers and are treated like
valuable commodities. Comments on
the ANPRM had stated that these
residuals are primarily composed of
biomass and that emissions from
burning these non-hazardous secondary
materials are essentially the same as
emissions from burning other biomass
fuels, such as bark or wood. Emissions
data contained in one report indicated
that when sludges were burned at levels
below about 10 to 15 percent of total
heat input, that such burning would not
result in elevated levels of criteria or
criteria-related pollutants, forty-eight
organic compounds, and metals.
However, given the limited data, EPA
requested additional comment on
contaminant levels and the
appropriateness of considering these
sludges to be non-wastes. EPA also
noted, as an alternative, that it could
consider these sludges to be wastes
because of chlorine levels in the
sludge.57
Comment: Pulp and paper sludges
should be considered a traditional fuel
because it has been utilized as a fuel
since the early 1960’s. In 2004, 22% of
the pulp and paper sludge was used as
a fuel.
EPA’s Response: We do not agree that
pulp and paper sludges should be
considered a traditional fuel. While
some portion of the pulp and paper
industry uses these sludges as a fuel, it
is not the industry norm or used as a
fuel by a majority of the industry. For
example, in 2002, 52% of pulp and
paper sludges was landfilled or stored
in lagoons.58 Thus, these materials have
not been historically managed as fuels.
Pulp and paper sludges also would not
be considered an alternative fuel, since
they are not derived from virgin
materials. Pulp and paper mills burn
these secondary materials for energy
recovery, but also for waste
minimization purposes.59 Therefore, the
Agency does not consider pulp and
57 75
FR 31862–63.
W., 2007. ‘‘Recycling Paper Mill Byproducts on Forest Lands: By-product Composition,
Potential Applications, and Industry Case Studies.’’
Presentation to EPA Office of Solid Waste Staff,
Washington, DC, January 23, https://www.epa.gov/
osw/conserve/rrr/imr/irc-meet/03-paper.pdf.
59 Someshwar, A.V. and A.K. Jain, 2006.
‘‘Alternative Fuels Used in the Forest Products
Industry: Their Composition and Impact on
Emissions,’’ Technical Bulletin No. 906, National
Council for Air and Stream Improvement,
Gainesville, Florida.
Vance, E. 2000. ‘‘Recycling Paper Mill Byproducts on Forest Lands: By-product Composition,
Potential Applications, and Industry Case Studies’’
The Forest Alternative: Principles and Practice of
Residuals Use. University of Washington College of
Forest Resources Publication, Seattle, WA, p. 193–
207.
58 Thacker,
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paper sludges a traditional or alternative
fuel.
Comment: The proposed approach
that pulp and paper sludges burned
within the control of the generator as a
fuel would not be considered a solid
waste needs clarification. Specifically,
clarification is needed to determine if
pulp and paper sludges that do not
leave the site and have not been
discarded (1) can be used as a fuel and
(2) must pass the legitimacy criteria.
EPA’s Response: The final rule retains
the proposed approach, which
considered pulp and paper sludges that
remain within the control of the
generator—whether burned at the
generating facility, or burned in
combustion units that the generator
controls—are considered a non-waste
fuel. However, such pulp and paper
sludges must pass the legitimacy criteria
to demonstrate that these non-hazardous
secondary materials are ‘‘legitimate
fuels’’ in order to be considered a nonwaste fuel.
Comment. Commenters argued that
pulp and paper sludges are not
discarded if used off-site as they are
used as a legitimate fuel at other
locations. One commenter, who
identified itself as a power plant,
utilizes pulp and paper sludges
generated less than a mile away and
stated that the material is loaded into
trucks for the short haul to the steam
boilers, dumped into the wood handling
system, conveyed to covered storage
where it is contained and burned in the
boiler all within the span of several
hours. They suggest that this is a
legitimate use of pulp and paper sludges
off-site and is, therefore, not a waste.
EPA’s Response: We agree that the use
of secondary materials off-site (which
we assume the commenter means not
within the control of the generator) is
not always indicative of waste activity
and would generally agree that the case
of the power plant provides an example
of when secondary materials may be
legitimately used as non-waste fuels by
a different company. However,
information was not provided in the
comments which would allow EPA to
generally determine that the transfer of
pulp and paper sludges to other
companies should always be considered
a non-waste fuel, particularly since a
large percentage of these sludges are
actually disposed. (See Section V.A.1
for a general discussion of this issue and
the EPA’s response.) Thus, we will
retain the proposed approach that pulp
and paper sludges that are transferred to
a different company for use as a fuel
will be considered a solid waste. With
that said, we encourage the use of the
non-waste determination petition
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process to address those instances
where transfer of the non-hazardous
secondary material to a different
company meets the relevant criteria—
that the secondary material has not been
discarded in the first instance and is
indistinguishable in all relevant aspects
from a fuel product.
Comment: Commenters stated that
pulp and paper sludges are adequately
processed, such that when discarded
(i.e., sent off-site to another pulp and
paper mill or to a power plant), it is a
non-waste fuel. Processing is primarily
performed by dewatering. In fact, 84%
of all pulp and paper sludges are
dewatered using belt filter presses or
screw presses.60 One state commenter
stated that some mills further process
pulp and paper sludges into dried pellet
products for use as a fuel.
EPA’s Response: We do not agree that
dewatering alone meets our definition of
processing.61 While dewatering does
improve the fuel characteristics of the
material, this action is not sufficient to
make the material sufficiently processed
into a non-waste fuel as it is generally
part of normal waste management
activities (e.g., prior to landfilling, or
prior to burning the sludge for disposal
in an incinerator). In the case of
pelletizing the material for use as a fuel,
we do not have sufficient information to
make a general determination on
whether this would be considered
sufficient processing. However, if the
pelletizing process is used to process
the sludge into a form that improves its
fuel value, we would agree that this is
indicative of fuel activity (similar to
pelletizing sewage sludge, which was
used as an example of sufficient
processing in Section VII.D.4 of the
proposed rule) 62 and we would
consider those activities to meet the
definition of processing. Of course, to be
considered a non-waste fuel, the
processed pulp and paper sludges
would need to meet the legitimacy
criteria.
Comment: To show that pulp and
paper sludges meet the legitimacy
criteria for contaminants, three
commenters submitted a total of 24
characterizations of pulp and paper
sludge cake from 16 pulp and paper
mills. These characterizations show that
contaminants were found at non-detect
levels. For example, As, Cr, Hg, and Pb
were at levels of <0.4 ppm, <21.4 ppm,
<0.44 ppm, and <21.6 ppm,
respectively.63 Elevated levels (6.36–
45.8 ppm) of methyl ethyl ketone (MEK)
were found in five out of eight samples
from one pulp and paper mill, although
we do not know to what extent this data
is reflective of pulp and paper sludges
generally since eight other samples
(three from the same mill and five from
five other mills) had non-detect levels of
MEK at a detection level of <0.013 ppm.
Chlorine levels among an unknown
number of pulp and paper sludge
samples were noted by one commenter
to have an arithmetic mean of 465 ppm,
a median of 318 ppm, a maximum level
among mill means of 2,399 ppm, and a
maximum among individual analyses of
4,800 ppm (all on a dry weight basis).
This is compared to a USGS database on
U.S. coals to have chlorine levels with
an arithmetic mean of 614 ppm and a
maximum among individual analyses of
8,800 ppm (both on an as-is basis,
which has <10% moisture). However,
one sample provided in the comments
had a chlorine concentration of 16,550
ppm (as received), while another had a
chlorine concentration of 23 ppm (as
fired). Other samples had chlorine
concentrations of between 1,050–4,800
ppm (dry basis). Commenters also
argued that combustion of high chlorine
content in some pulp and paper sludge
is not a waste treatment activity.
Sources that produce secondary
materials that have heat value can
increase their energy efficiency by reusing these materials as a fuel. Materials
are chosen for their constituents that are
beneficial to the combustion or
manufacturing process; more often, the
materials are chosen for extracting their
energy value.
In terms of meeting the legitimacy
criteria for a meaningful heating value,
comments were submitted that pulp and
paper sludges have a heating value of
between 3,300–9,500 Btu/lb, on a dry
basis; no information was submitted on
the ‘‘as fired’’ heating value of pulp and
paper sludges. Commenters also argued
that pulp and paper sludges meet the
legitimacy criterion for being managed
as a valuable commodity as they are
dewatered to increase their energy
value, collected on a continual or
frequent basis (as produced), further
processed and consolidated, including
the removal of biosolids. One state
commenter stated that some mills make
a dried pellet product from the sludges
for use as a fuel. One power plant that
utilizes pulp and paper sludge
60 See document EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–
0871.
61 See the discussion on dewatering of sewage
sludge in Section VII.F of the proposed rule, 75 FR
31878.
62 75 FR 31878.
63 Document EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–1395;
National Council for Air and Stream Improvement,
Inc. Technical Bulletin (TB) 906, ‘‘Alternative Fuels
Used in the Forest Products Industry: Their
Composition and Impact on Emissions.’’ September
2005.
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generated less than a mile away stated
that the material is loaded onto trucks
for the short haul to the steam boilers,
dumped into the wood handling system,
conveyed to covered storage where it is
contained and burned in the boiler all
within the span of several hours.
EPA’s Response: The final rule will
retain the proposed approach—pulp and
paper sludges managed within the
control of the generator are a non-waste
fuel as they would seem to meet all of
the legitimacy criteria, as discussed
below.
The proposed rule acknowledged a
general lack of data regarding
contaminant levels in pulp and paper
sludges and specifically requested data
on the issue in order to make a
determination of whether pulp and
paper sludges meets the third criterion
of comparable contaminant levels to
traditional fuels. The information we
received indicates that these nonhazardous secondary materials meet the
contaminant legitimacy criterion. While
commenters compared contaminant
levels in pulp and paper sludges to
those in coal and found lower levels, we
also found it appropriate to compare the
contaminant concentrations to untreated
wood since wood is also burned in pulp
and paper mills. Since levels of chlorine
in untreated wood are as high as 11,890
ppm, even the high end of the range of
chlorine in pulp and paper sludges is
comparable to that in untreated wood.
When comparing to the information that
we have compiled on coal, we find that
chlorine levels in coal are reported to be
as high as 7,400 ppm, and that average
chlorine values for bituminous and subbituminous coal are 1,200 ppm and 140
ppm, respectively. Thus, the average
chlorine levels reported in most pulp
and paper sludge are likely to be
comparable with average chlorine levels
found in bituminous coal.64 We note
that there is one sample in the
submitted data set that has a chlorine
concentration of 16,550 ppm. We do not
consider this to be comparable to the
levels found in coal and, where it is
replacing coal, would consider this
material to be a solid waste. However,
since this was the only sample with
such a high concentration of chlorine,
we do not think that it is representative
of pulp and paper sludges generally.
The levels of metals were also lower
in pulp and paper sludges than
untreated wood and coal. For example,
untreated wood has levels of As, Cr, Hg,
and Pb as high as 6.8 ppm, 130 ppm, 2
64 See the Material Characterization Papers for
Pulp and Paper Sludges and for Traditional Fuels
that are located in the docket for today’s rule (EPA–
HQ–RCRA–2008–0329).
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ppm, and 340 ppm, respectively, while
coal has levels of As, Cr, Hg, and Pb as
high as 80 ppm, 121.3 ppm, 2 ppm, and
80 ppm, respectively.65 These levels are
all greater than those submitted in the
comments for pulp and paper sludges.
We did receive data on some elevated
levels of MEK in five samples from one
mill, but we do not believe that this data
changes are view that these sludges
generally meet the contaminant
legitimacy criterion, especially since
EPA removed MEK from the CAA 112
HAP list in 2005,66 and thus, MEK is no
longer considered a ‘‘contaminant’’ in
evaluating the contaminant legitimacy
criterion.
While pulp and paper sludges can
have a heating value below 5,000 Btu/
lb, even on a dry basis, pulp and paper
mills do try to improve the heating
value through dewatering. Thus, we
believe that pulp and paper sludges
generally meet the meaningful heating
value legitimacy criterion. Also, since
pulp and paper sludges are handled
promptly (i.e., not stored for long
periods of time and are contained in
storage units along with traditional fuels
(such as wood and bark) with minimal
loss (similar to a valuable commodity),
we agree that pulp and paper sludges
are managed as a valuable commodity.
Comment: Emission tests from two
states were said to have shown no
significant change in emissions
associated with the combustion of pulp
and paper mill sludge, although the
specific emission test results were not
provided in these comments. One other
commenter stated that any emissions
from those materials will be accounted
for in the source’s emission limits in its
permit. One other commenter submitted
a study by the National Council for Air
and Stream Improvement (2006), which
summarizes many different studies on
the emissions from the combustion of
pulp and paper sludges. Some studies
show that keeping the amount of pulp
and paper sludges to no more than 10–
15% of the total heat input will result
in no increased emission impacts.
However, two studies stated that dioxin
and furan emissions could result from
the burning of pulp and paper sludges
and that the levels of these compounds
in the emissions are directly relevant to
the amount of chlorine in the sludges.
Thus, chlorine levels should not be
greater than those in found in wood.67
65 Ibid.
66 The Agency removed MEK from the list of HAP
because it concluded that the potential exposures
to MEK emitted from industrial processes may not
reasonably be anticipated to cause human health or
environmental problems.
67 National Council for Air and Stream
Improvement, Inc. Technical Bulletin (TB) 906,
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EPA’s Response: First, we would note
that emissions testing results is not the
criterion or test for determining
legitimacy as combustion systems vary
greatly and this rule aims to determine
what is a solid waste. To be considered
a legitimate non-waste fuel, the nonhazardous secondary material itself
must have contaminants at levels that
are comparable to (or lower than) those
in traditional fuels. From the data
available, it shows that chlorine levels
in pulp and paper sludges, for example,
are typically at levels that are lower
than those found in coal and wood, as
noted above. Nevertheless, we also
recognize that high chlorine levels are
an indicator that the combustion of such
materials may result in increased
emissions of dioxins and furans, such
that if chlorine levels in pulp and paper
sludges are excessively high, it may be
an indication that the burning of those
sludges is more reflective of waste
management. Thus, chlorine levels in
pulp and paper sludges should
particularly be monitored and evaluated
as part of a plants determination that
their pulp and paper sludges meet the
contaminant legitimacy criterion.
5. Scrap Tires
In the proposal, EPA stated that whole
used tires, including those collected
from tire dealerships and automotive
shops and overseen by a state tire
collection oversight program, are
initially abandoned and thus meet the
plain meaning of discard. As a result,
whole used tires that are not processed
into a legitimate fuel or ingredient (e.g.,
shredded/chipped with steel belts
removed) were considered a solid waste.
EPA acknowledged that whole tires can
be legitimately burned as a fuel, but
because they have been discarded, were
considered solid wastes and subject to
the incinerator requirements in section
129 of the CAA, unless processed into
a non-waste fuel product, in which case
it would be subject to the section 112
requirements of the CAA.
However, EPA requested comment in
the proposed rule on the discard
interpretation stated in the ANPRM
regarding scrap tires that are managed
under the oversight of a state tire
collection program, such that these nonhazardous secondary materials collected
and sent for legitimate use as fuels are
not discarded and are not solid wastes.
EPA also solicited comment on the
processing requirements for whole tires,
as well as fuel contaminant data on
whole tires or tire-derived fuel (TDF)
‘‘Alternative Fuels Used in the Forest Products
Industry: Their Composition and Impact on
Emissions.’’ September 2005.
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chips as compared to coal, the
replacement fuel.
In order to clarify the context of the
proposed rule comments, the Agency
describes the background below in
‘‘a. Background; Scrap Tire Approach in
ANPRM and Proposal.’’ The comments
and EPA’s responses are listed in
‘‘b. Scrap Tire Comments.’’
a. Background; Scrap Tire Approach in
ANPRM and Proposal
ANPRM Scrap Tire Approach.68 As
part of its discussion regarding nonhazardous secondary materials used as
legitimate ‘‘alternative’’ fuels that have
not been previously discarded, the
ANPRM noted that scrap tires used as
tire-derived fuel, which include whole
tires or tires that have been processed
and have not been previously discarded,
are legitimate non-waste fuels if they
meet the legitimacy criteria i.e., they are
handled as valuable commodities, have
a meaningful heating value, and do not
contain contaminants that are
significantly higher in concentration
when compared to traditional fuel
products (see Materials Characterization
Paper on Scrap Tires in the docket for
today’s rule for a complete discussion
on contaminants in TDF [EPA–HQ–
RCRA–2008–0329]). We noted that in
many cases, scrap tires that are collected
pursuant to state tire oversight programs
(e.g., scrap tires from tire dealerships
that are sent to used tire processing
facilities) are handled as valuable
commodities, and, therefore, have not
been abandoned, disposed of, or thrown
away (not discarded). We also noted
that because State Agencies typically
regulate these programs under their
state solid waste authorities, it was not
the Agency’s intent to undercut the
states’ authority in this area. We,
therefore, requested comment on
whether scrap tires collected pursuant
to state tire oversight programs have
been discarded, and whether an EPA
designation specifying that scrap tires,
for example, managed pursuant to state
tire collection programs are not solid
wastes, would adversely impact a state’s
ability to manage such a program.
Proposed Rule Scrap Tire
Approach.69 The proposal took a
different approach regarding the use of
scrap tires when used as a fuel, based
on comments received on the ANPRM.
68 The ANPRM was published in the Federal
Register on January 2, 2009 (74 FR 41). This
reference can be found on page 57 of the FR notice.
69 The proposed rule, published on June 4, 2010
in the Federal Register (75 FR 31844) has numerous
references to scrap tires. The statement described
under ‘‘Proposed Rule Scrap Tire Approach’’ can be
found on pages 31874 and 31875 of the proposed
rule.
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Specifically, some states argued that
non-hazardous secondary material fuels
that are transferred to a third party have
entered what is traditionally considered
to be the ‘‘waste stream’’ (and have been
regulated by the states as wastes) and
therefore should appropriately be
considered wastes. Scrap tires,
regardless of whether they were
collected and managed pursuant to state
programs or recovered from legacy
waste piles, would be an example of
such materials. As a result, the Agency
re-examined its position of how the
concept of discard applies to scrap tires.
Whereas the ANPRM had indicated that
there may be some number of secondary
materials that would not be considered
discarded even if the original generator
sent them to another entity outside of its
control, the proposed rule took the
position that non-hazardous secondary
materials that are used as fuels and are
managed outside the control of the
generator are solid wastes unless they
were processed into non-waste fuel
products or a case-by-case non-waste
determination petition was granted by
EPA.
Proposal Kept ANPRM Scrap Tire
Approach as an Option. In the ANPRM,
we considered scrap tires (except from
tire dumps) that were collected under
state tire collection programs as nonwaste as described above. We
reconsidered that position in the
proposed rule as follows: ‘‘* * * tires
collected under these recycling
programs are discarded and are solid
wastes. EPA proposes this formulation
for tires, but is asking for further
comment on the ANPRM formulation
that secondary material collected and
sent for legitimate use as fuels are not
discarded and are not solid
wastes.* * * EPA may issue a final rule
containing either set of provisions
depending on information received in
the comment period and other
information available to the Agency.’’
The Scrap Tire Approach in the Final
Rule. Based on the proposed rule
comments and all other relevant
information in the rulemaking record,
EPA has modified its approach for scrap
tires in this final rule. Under today’s
rule, scrap tires are considered a nonwaste when used as a fuel under the
following scenarios:
(1) Scrap tires that are removed from
vehicles and collected and managed
under the oversight of established tire
collection programs (as codified at
§ 241.2) are non-waste fuels 70 when
70 As described elsewhere, these tires do not need
processing (as described in § 241.3(b)(4)), in order
to be considered non-waste since they were not
‘‘discarded in the first place.’’ Since these tires were
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burned as a fuel in a combustion unit.
See details at § 241.3(b)(2)(i).
(2) Scrap tires that undergo a
sufficient level of processing (as
codified at § 241.2 and detailed in the
scrap tire response to comments) are
considered a non-waste fuel, when used
as fuel in a combustion unit,
independent of whether they have been
previously discarded. See details at
§ 241.3(b)(4).
All other scrap tires are considered a
waste when combusted, unless a nonwaste determination petition is granted
per the requirements in § 241.3(c).
The comments that led to this
approach are further described in the
response to comments below and in
Section VII.C.
b. Scrap Tire Comments
Comment: Many of the commenters
that compared the approach for whole
scrap tires in the ANPRM (described
previously in this section) with the
proposed approach, preferred the
ANPRM approach and believed it was
an accurate assessment of how scrap
tires are managed. Many of those
commenters argued that whole scrap
tires that are handled in this situation
have not been discarded when removed
from vehicles for use as a fuel if there
is a process or network that ensures
their safe handling prior to use as a fuel.
In addition, many commenters listed the
attributes that make it a good fuel, in
particular they noted that the heat value
for TDF is higher than typical solid
fuels, including coal.
Commenters disagreed with the
assumption that we made in the
proposed rule that off-site/third party
use of scrap tires equated to discard.
Other comments on ‘‘transfer to third
parties’’ apply to other non-hazardous
secondary materials in addition to scrap
tires and are addressed in section V.A.1.
In addition, commenters said that the
owner of the car does not abandon,
dispose of, nor throw away the tire
when a tire is changed at a tire shop.
These tires are destined for a beneficial
use and are managed as a valuable
product. Commenters disagreed with
EPA’s statement in the proposal that
scrap tires are ‘‘discarded’’ when
removed from the automobile because
the generator has relinquished control
and the entity receiving the tires may
not have the same incentives to manage
them as a useful product. For example,
‘‘not discarded in the first place,’’ boilers and
cement kilns can use them as non-waste fuel as
whole tires, shredded, or fully processed TDF at
their discretion (provided they meet the legitimacy
criteria). Regardless, most types of combustors
require TDF chips, cement kilns are the notable
exception.
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one scrap tire commenter summarized
the discard issue and suggests that if
transfer to a third party does not equate
to discard for hazardous secondary
materials in specific instances, then
EPA is able to make distinctions for
non-hazardous secondary materials like
scrap tires. Specifically, the commenter
states, with respect to tire derived fuel:
‘‘EPA’s proposed approach stands in
stark contrast to EPA’s approach to
hazardous secondary materials * * *.
In the Subtitle C regulation, EPA was
careful to identify circumstances where
discard would occur based on a record
of damages arising from cases of
hazardous material recycling. EPA then
shaped its transfer-based exclusion from
the definition of solid waste to regulate
only transfers where discard is taking
place. See 73 FR at 64677–78. In
contrast, with respect to non-hazardous
secondary materials, EPA has no record
identifying circumstances where discard
may occur and yet is proposing to
determine that all transferred material is
discarded. Any definition of solid waste
that sweeps so broadly exceeds EPA’s
authority under RCRA. EPA’s proposed
approach also stands in stark contrast to
the approach and guiding principle
outlined in the ANPRM. In the ANPRM,
EPA did not assume that all nonhazardous secondary material that is
transferred outside the control of the
generator is discarded. Instead, as in its
Subtitle C regulations, EPA was guided
by the ‘‘overall principle * * * that
materials treated as a commodity, rather
than as a waste, are not discarded and
are not solid wastes so long as they are
legitimately recycled.’’ 74 FR 53. If such
an approach is appropriate for
hazardous substances, a similar or
perhaps less demanding determination
would be still more appropriate for nonhazardous secondary materials. First,
the dangers of sham recycling are far
less. Second, the fact that industrial
boilers are similar and are regulated in
similar manner from industry to
industry makes distinctions between
industries uniquely hard to justify. EPA
offers no persuasive evidence to
overcome these considerations. As
noted earlier, EPA says only that it
‘‘believes’’ that such materials have been
discarded and that third parties ‘‘may
not’’ have the same incentive to manage
these materials properly as the
generator. EPA offers a few off point
examples but makes no effort to
investigate this issue in any detail.
Furthermore, EPA’s approach ignores
the fact that there is an established
market infrastructure for the sale and
purchase of secondary fuels such as
TDF. As a result, TDF is subject to
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normal business practices, including
contractual arrangements that establish
specifications for TDF. Just as a fuel
supplier needs to provide a specific type
of fuel oil to meet a customer’s
demands, so does the supplier of
secondary fuels. The supplier will
comply with the specification
demanded by the customer or they will
lose the business. As a matter of
company policy, most generators of
secondary material fuels take reasonable
precautions to evaluate where their
materials are going as part of risk
management.’’
Commenters also disagreed with our
assumptions that led to the Agency’s
discard position in the proposal with
regard to third party use of scrap tires
as follows.
• They disagreed that third party
handlers would lack an incentive to
manage them as a useful material 71
because, scrap tire derived materials
have an exceptionally high rate of use
in various markets and are sold as
valuable products.
• Commenters also disagreed that
scrap tires have the same market
incentives for misuse as does hazardous
waste, which EPA referenced in the
proposal,72 because, in part, hazardous
waste are likely to have a relatively
negative monetary value. They said that
those EPA arguments based on
hazardous waste are not relevant to
scrap tire markets and usage and is
inappropriate to use the rationale based
on hazardous waste cases. Scrap tires do
not have the environmental and
economic risks associated with
hazardous waste.
• Furthermore, commenters disagreed
that there was currently a pattern of
discard at third party scrap tire
71 The comments are in regard to this statement
in the proposal: ‘‘When non-hazardous secondary
material fuels are transferred to another party, we
generally believe that the material is discarded
since the generator has relinquished control of the
secondary material and the entity receiving such
materials may not have the same incentives to
manage them as a useful product, which results in
the materials being discarded.’’ See EPA’s statement
in the proposal at 75 FR 31844, page 31875.
72 The comments are in regard to this statement
in the proposal, as well as other references to
hazardous waste: ‘‘This lack of incentive to manage
as a useful product has been well documented in
the context of hazardous secondary material
recycling as evidenced by the results of the
environmental problems study performed in
support of the DSW [hazardous waste] final rule.
(This scenario does not apply to transfers taking
place under the transfer based exclusion for
hazardous secondary materials that are generated
and then transferred to another company for the
purpose of reclamation.) However, this finding also
holds true for non-hazardous secondary materials
that are used as fuel.’’ See EPA’s statement in the
proposal at 75 FR 31844, page 31875.
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reclaimers 73 that can be processed and
generating stockpiles as possible
evidence of the lack of incentive to
perform actual recycling).
• Commenters did acknowledge that
there were problems in the past with
tire dumps, but since tires are now
effectively managed and brought to
markets, the over-accumulation,
disposal, and dumping that occurred in
the past (as mentioned in the
proposal) 74 is less of an issue now. In
justifying this statement, many
commenters discussed the success of
eliminating tire dumps. Specifically,
they argued that fewer than one million
tires remain in stockpiles, compared to
an estimate of one billion tires in 1990.
It is clear the total number of tires
discarded in tire dumps is being
reduced annually, not increasing due to
the improper management which the
proposal postulated regarding the
current management practices at third
party sites. Also, they argued that of the
300 million scrap tires that are
generated each year, scrap tires are
reported to have the second lowest
disposal rate at 10.7% in 2007, with
lead acid batteries having the lowest
disposal rate.
• Commenters, mainly from industry,
also disagreed with our statement in the
proposal that scrap tires that are
transferred to a third party have entered
what is traditionally considered to be
the ‘‘waste stream’’ and therefore should
appropriately be considered solid
wastes. Refer to Section V.A.1 for the
discussion on related comments (not
specific to scrap tires). Some
commenters (including some states),
however, agreed that states tend to
initially regard tires as waste until they
are beneficially used.
EPA’s Response: In the first place, to
the extent these comments refer to
EPA’s general approach to secondary
material transferred to another party, the
Agency refers commenters to Section
V.A.1. As discussed in that section, EPA
73 The comments are in regard to this statement
in the proposal: ‘‘As discussed in the DSW final
rule, this pattern of discard at off-site, third party
reclaimers appears to be a result of inherent
differences between commercial recycling and
normal manufacturing. As opposed to
manufacturing, where the cost of raw materials or
intermediates (or inputs) is greater than zero and
revenue is generated primarily from the sale of the
output, secondary materials recycling, including
when used as a fuel, can involve generating revenue
primarily from receipt of the secondary materials.
Recyclers of secondary materials in this situation
may thus respond differently than traditional
manufacturers to economic forces and incentives,
accumulating more inputs (secondary materials)
than can be processed and generating stockpiles
with sometimes little incentive to perform actual
recycling.’’
74 See EPA’s statement in the proposal at 75 FR
31844, page 31875.
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has evaluated whether certain categories
of materials are discarded or not. The
Agency has not adopted the extremes of
saying that all burning of secondary
material, regardless of ultimate use, is
waste treatment or that any secondary
material that is recycled for legitimate
fuel value is a commodity and not a
waste. Wastes may have value, but are
still wastes.
Between these broad parameters, EPA
has examined a number of specific
materials, recycled on-site and
transferred to third parties for recycling,
and determined whether they would be
appropriately placed within the waste
or non-waste categories. EPA would
consider transferred materials not to be
wastes if it could make the appropriate
findings for those categories. In fact, the
Agency does so with respect to scrap
tires harvested from vehicles and
resinated wood residuals. Any of EPA’s
decisions regarding specific materials, if
challenged, must stand or fall based on
its individual merit.
With respect specifically to how the
Agency is dealing with scrap tires in
this rule, the ANPRM noted that scrap
tires that are collected pursuant to tire
programs (e.g., scrap tires from tire
dealerships that are sent to used tire
processing facilities) are collected and
handled as valuable commodities, and,
therefore, have not been abandoned,
disposed of, or thrown away. The
ANPRM had indicated that there are
instances where non-hazardous
secondary materials would not be
considered discarded even if the
original generator sent them to another
entity outside of its control.
The proposed rule took an approach
that assumed non-hazardous secondary
materials that are used as fuels and are
managed outside the control of the
generator are solid wastes, unless they
were processed into legitimate nonwaste fuel products or a non-waste
determination petition was granted by
EPA. However, in the proposed rule, the
Agency was open to an alternate
interpretation and requested further
comment on the ANPRM formulation
that scrap tires collected and sent for
legitimate use as fuels are not discarded
and are not solid wastes, and
specifically indicated that the Agency
‘‘may issue a final rule containing either
set of provisions depending on
information received in the comment
period and other information available
to the Agency.’’
After careful consideration of the
comments and all the material in the
rulemaking record, including
documents cited in the ANPRM and the
preamble to the proposed rule, the
Agency agrees that a system where scrap
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tires are removed from vehicles 75 and
are collected and managed under the
oversight of established tire collection
programs are not ‘‘discarded in the first
instance.’’ Such tires (including both
whole tires and tires that have been
shredded—with or without metal
removal)76 are non-waste when used as
a fuel in combustion units. These
programs ensure that the tires are not
discarded en route to the combustor for
use as fuel and are handled as a
valuable commodity as required in the
legitimacy criterion in today’s rule at
§ 241.3(d)(1)(i).
Consistent with other non-hazardous
secondary materials that are considered
to be non-wastes, scrap tires also meet
the rest of the legitimacy criteria for
fuel. They meet the requirement for
meaningful heating value, required per
§ 241.3(d)(1)(ii) in that scrap tires have
a higher heating value (12,000 Btu/lb to
16,000 Btu/lb) as compared to coal (the
replacement fuel).
Scrap tires also meet the requirement
specified at § 241.3(d)(1)(iii) for the nonhazardous secondary materials to have
comparable (or lower) levels of
contaminants as compared to the
traditional fuel it is replacing. Refer to
the specific response to comments on
contaminants.
Established tire collection programs
promote the collection of scrap tires and
coordinate with tire dealerships,
haulers, processors, and end users. The
existing tire collection programs form an
established collection infrastructure.
These established tire collection
programs together with state bans on
landfilling in most states 77 effectively
result in the beneficial reuse of tires (as
fuel or used in other scrap tire markets)
as the sole 78 end use option for scrap
tires in those states.
While the Agency recognizes that
there will be differences between the
various established tire collection
programs, at a minimum, the following
components would need to be included
as part of any established tire collection
program: (1) A comprehensive system
75 For purposes of today’s rule, the term ‘‘vehicle’’
is meant to include any mechanical means of
conveyance that employs the use of tires.
76 If scrap tires are not discarded in the first place,
they do not have to be processed per the standards
in today’s rule, but they can be converted to rough
shreds or processed into TDF chips at the discretion
of the combustor and still be a non-waste fuel. If
the scrap tires were discarded, they have to be
processed (with metal removal) per the standards in
today’s rule in order to be a non-waste fuel.
77 A few states allow tires cut up in smaller pieces
to be landfilled, while fewer states still allow whole
tires in landfills.
78 Note, a commenter has indicated that some
states are considering revoking their tire landfill
ban if combustors are no longer choosing to use
tires for fuel based on the outcome of this rule.
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that prevents tires from being
abandoned when the scrap tires are
harvested from vehicles and collected at
the various businesses where they are
removed; these tires are not considered
‘‘discarded in the first instance’’ per this
rule; and (2) standards for the scrap tires
to be managed as a valuable commodity.
These programs should ensure storage
does not exceed reasonable time frames,
the scrap tires are managed in a manner
consistent with the analogous fuel
(coal), and a system is in place to
prevent scrap tires from being discarded
(according to the plain language
definition) en route to the combustor
(and during any processing prior to
combustion).
An example of this type of program is
a tire dealership that has prearranged
agreements where the combustor pays
for the delivery of the tires harvested
from vehicles and can track the delivery
and has contractual obligations for a
safe delivery. Another example is the
Texas system where tires are not seen as
waste, but have specifications for
tracking and safe delivery to the end use
markets.
These programs neither allow an
opportunity for tires intended as a fuel
to be discarded in the first place nor
discarded while in transit. The
definition of an established tire
collection programs is codified in
today’s rule at § 241.2. These tires have
not been ‘‘disposed of, abandoned, or
thrown away’’ through the initial
process of removing them from cars or
collecting them under established tire
collection programs.
It is the combustor’s responsibility to
confirm that the whole tires are not
discarded and were handled
appropriately under the established tire
collection program. Notification and
recordkeeping requirements with regard
to the use of non-hazardous secondary
materials under CAA 112 and 129 rules,
including whole tires managed under
established tire collection programs, are
outlined in Section VII.I.
This approach for scrap tires is
supported by comments from auto
maintenance shops, tire retailers, and
others in the automotive business.
These commenters discussed the
management of tires collected from tire
and auto-related shops under
established tire collection programs.
Typically, the state and private
programs work together to encourage
the processing, reuse, and/or recycling,
which results in a market demand for
scrap tires to be collected, but the use
as fuel is more independently
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sustainable in the free market.79 In the
event the combustor is disposing via
combustion (i.e., not utilizing the energy
from combustion), it is a waste.
With the approach described in
today’s rule, EPA is recognizing that
some specific types of secondary
materials are more like valuable
commodities than solid wastes, and the
act of transferring them to a third party
does not automatically involve discard.
As commenters noted, the mere
relinquishing of ownership does not
make something a waste.
Furthermore, as EPA notes below, the
fact that states may consider tires as
wastes under state programs does not
affect EPA’s determination in this rule
that certain scrap tires are not wastes for
purposes of tire combustion under CAA
sections 112 and 129. States may
regulate tires as wastes while EPA, for
purposes of the federal regulations, may
consider them to be commodities.
We also recognize that the basis for
the final position on scrap tires is
different from the proposal and is more
in line with our original position in the
ANPRM. As we noted many
commenters disagreed with the basis for
the position on scrap tires in the
proposal, in addition to stating a
preference for the ANPRM position on
scrap tires. The overall rationale for the
position in the final rule regarding scrap
tires is included in Section VII, entitled
‘‘Detailed Discussion and Rationale for
Today’s Final Rule.’’
Comment: A number of commenters
stated that the concentration of
contaminants that are found in tirederived fuel TDF chips (or whole tires)
are comparable (or less than) those
found in the traditional fuels that it
would be replacing. In the proposed
rule, we requested data on the TDF
contaminants that are HAP, as listed in
section 112(b) of the CAA and the nine
pollutants, as listed in section 129(a)(4)
of the CAA. Some commenters provided
independent test results that correlated
to those contaminants and the results
showed a trend that the contaminants
were generally comparable to or lower
than coal, the replacement fuel,
(although individual tests and
comparisons vary). In addition to
independent data, some commenters
referenced EPA’s Materials
Characterization Papers (used to support
the proposed rule), and the TDF
79 The recovery and management of tires that are
removed from tire piles are largely supported or
subsidized by State Agencies and these whole tires
are considered discarded and waste when used as
a fuel. This is not the case for the tires we are
calling non-waste that are annually generated and
are collected off the vehicles and sent for use as
fuel.
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American Society for Testing and
Materials (ASTM) 80 data on chemical
constituents and fuel characteristics.
The TDF and coal data were typically
reported as elemental analyses.
Specifically, commenters provided
the following TDF concentrations for
CAA section 112(b) HAP (some are also
CAA 129 pollutants): 81 82
• Cadmium—less than 5 up to 6 ppm
(also on the CAA 129 pollutant list);
• Calcium—3,780 ppm (although
listed as ‘‘calcium cyanamide’’ in the
HAP list);
• Chlorine—non-detect to 1,490 ppm
(also listed in the CAA 129 pollutant list
as ‘‘hydrogen chloride’’);
• Chromium—less than 5 up to 97
ppm; 83
• Lead—51–65 ppm (also on the CAA
129 pollutant list);
• Manganese—less than 100 ppm; 84
and
• Mercury—non-detect up to levels in
low-mercury coals (also on the CAA 129
pollutant list).
These contaminant levels, the
commenters argue, are at or below
documented levels in coals. Although
barium and zinc are not CAA 129
pollutants or HAP, commenters also
mentioned that barium was nondetectable and one commenter
mentioned that data available from the
USGS database showed coal can have
much higher concentrations of zinc 85
than TDF. It was also reported that the
steel wire in tires is 98.5% iron (which
is not a HAP). As noted previously,
many commenters argue that the small
amount of steel wire in typical TDF is
not considered a contaminant that could
result in emissions. Rather, it presents a
handling concern when used as boiler
fuel; specifically, the TDF needs to have
the exposed wire removed so that it is
‘‘flowable’’ like coal. One commenter
80 ASTM (American Society for Testing and
Materials) or ASTM International, is a globally
recognized leader in the development and delivery
of international voluntary consensus standards.
81 This is the available data for the elements or
the compounds (that are among the nine CAA
section 129(a)(4) pollutants or are on the 187 HAP
listed in CAA section 112(b)) that were reported in
comments, as well as data from the scrap tire
Materials Characterization Paper referenced by
commenters. Since TDF is usually co-fired with
coal, the results can include contaminants that
originated from the coal.
82 Refer to the Materials Characterization Papers
for traditional fuels in the docket for today’s rule.
83 If this is present from the steel wire, it is not
expected to be released during typical boiler
combustion.
84 If this is present from the steel wire, it is not
expected to be released during typical boiler
combustion.
85 The commenter said the coal sample was
51,000 ppm zinc, while coal is usually less than 100
ppm. TDF usually has higher concentrations of zinc
than the average in coal.
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went on to say that they can recycle
metals from TDF post-combustion. A
large number of commenters stated that
the metal from tires is a necessary
ingredient in the formation of clinker in
cement kilns and becomes part of the
clinker product, and is in no way
considered a ‘‘contaminant’’ in cement
kilns.86
Many of the commenters also
reiterated that the constituents in TDF
fuel product do not lead to emission
problems as evidence by comparable or
lower emissions for the following CAA
129 pollutants according to their tests:
carbon monoxide (some higher some
lower, but comparable), dioxins/
dibenzofurans (some commenters stated
no significant difference, while others
claimed emission reductions), hydrogen
chloride (specifically mentioned
reduction in cement kilns), oxides of
nitrogen (usually combustors witness
the greatest reductions in this pollutant
when using TDF 87), and sulfur dioxide
(usually reduced when using TDF).
Many commenters thought that we
should also take into consideration the
reduction in greenhouse gases and the
emissions improvements.88 On the other
hand, a number of commenters voiced
concerns about emissions from scrap
tires used as fuel, anticipating that they
increased emissions (including those
pollutants listed in section 129 of the
CAA). A commenter cited that
emissions increases were expected for a
paper mill that was testing a
substitution of TDF for wood.
Although we requested data on fuel
contaminants, some contaminant data
was reported as emission results.
Results of a rather large study were
reported by a commenter: ‘‘In 2008, PCA
member companies completed a study
on the impact of TDF firing on cement
kiln air emissions. The study’s data set
included emission tests from thirty-one
of the cement plants presently firing
TDF. Dioxin-furan emission test results
indicated that kilns firing TDF had
emissions approximately one-third of
those kilns firing conventional fuels—
this difference was statistically
significant. Emissions of particulate
matter (PM) from TDF-firing kilns were
35% less than the levels reported for
kilns firing conventional fuels (not
statistically significant due to the low
PM emissions reported for essentially
86 See the comment on cement kilns for more
information relative to cement kiln usage.
87 Commenters often said this is the biggest
benefit in using TDF. State regulators are said to
suggest the use of TDF if a combustor has a problem
with NOX emissions.
88 Refer to the Materials Characterization Papers
for a detailed summary of the contaminant data for
TDF, including data provided by commenters.
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all cement plants). Nitrogen oxides,
most metals, and sulfur dioxide
emissions from TDF-firing kilns also
exhibited lower levels than those from
conventional fuel kilns. The emission
values for carbon monoxide and total
hydrocarbons were slightly higher in
TDF versus non-TDF firing kilns.
However, none of the differences in the
emission data sets between TDF versus
non-TDF firing kilns for sulfur dioxide,
nitrogen oxides, total hydrocarbons,
carbon monoxide, and metals were
statistically significant. Separate studies
conducted by governmental agencies
and engineering consulting firms have
also indicated that TDF firing either
reduces or does not significantly affect
emissions of various contaminants from
cement kilns.’’
EPA’s Response: The Agency assessed
the contaminants in TDF using the data
submitted and the proposed rule data
(referenced above) and compared it to
the concentrations in coal, the
traditional fuel that scrap tires would be
replacing.89 While the level of
contaminants in TDF or tires vary
slightly 90 between test results for the
scrap tires and for the type of fuel that
was used for comparison purposes (i.e.,
coal, the replacement fuel), this data
supports the commenters’ position that
the level of contaminants in TDF (or
whole tires) are comparable to (if not
less than) those found in the traditional
fuel that it would be replacing.91 Coal
has a number of contaminants that are
not present in TDF. See the Materials
Characterization Papers on Traditional
Fuels and on Scrap Tires in the docket
for today’s rule for a complete
discussion on contaminants in TDF
(EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329).
The metal wire in tires is 98.5 percent
iron, but it is a small component of the
TDF when processed. The Agency has
determined that the concentration of
iron in the processed TDF chips is
comparable to those in coal. However,
iron is not a HAP, nor are the other
components of the wire expected to be
released to the emissions in a typical
boiler. Rather, the wire ends up in the
bottom ash such that, according to one
commenter, the metal can be recovered.
89 The ‘‘contaminants’’ are the nine CAA section
129(a)(4) pollutants and the 187 HAP listed in CAA
section 112(b).
90 The elemental constituents in coal vary
regionally so the test result comparisons to TDF
also vary. For example, the relative percentage of
some elements is sometimes slightly higher in some
tests and lower in others. Overall, we find that TDF
and coal have a comparable level of contaminants.
91 While zinc has been reported to have higher
levels in TDF than in coal, zinc is neither a HAP
or one of the nine pollutants identified in section
129(a)(4) of the CAA and thus, would not be a
contaminant for consideration.
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If the scrap tires were discarded (i.e.,
recovered from a tire dump), they would
need to be processed into TDF chips
with some removal of the metal wire
(per the processing specifications
described in a response to comments
below) in order to be a non-waste fuel.
Based on the comments, we recognize
that this is more important for handling,
than for emissions. We would also note
that the steel wire in the whole tires
used in cement kilns is regarded
differently since it is needed to become
part of the cement. That is, if the noncombustible ingredient in feedstocks
that are necessary (e.g., iron) for clinker
production are no longer used, those
materials must be replaced.
Finally, although we focus on the
contaminants in fuel since that is the
relevant criterion as it relates to the
legitimacy criteria, and for deciding
whether a material is a waste or a
commodity, we do recognize the value
of the greenhouse gas, as well as other
criteria pollutant improvements using
scrap tires as stated in the proposal and
also raised by commenters. Specifically,
the use of secondary materials as
alternative fuels and/or ingredients in
manufacturing processes using
combustion not only recovers valuable
resources, it is known to contribute to
emissions reductions. For example,
GHG has been reduced as a co-benefit of
the use of secondary materials—the
GHG rate associated with the
combustion of scrap tires is
approximately 0.09 MTCO2 E 92 per
million Btu of scrap tires combusted,
while the GHG emissions rate for coal
is approximately 0.094 MTCO2E per
million Btu. Combined with the avoided
extraction and processing emissions
0.006 MTCO2 E/million Btu for coal, the
total avoided greenhouse gas is 0.019
MTCO2 E per million Btu. Also,
substituting TDF for coal would avoid
an estimated 0.246 Lbs/million Btu of
particulate matter associated with the
extraction and processing of the coal.
Relative to criteria pollutants,
historical EPA and test program data
demonstrate that, while emission rates
vary over different TDF levels at
different facilities, criteria pollutant
emissions from combusting TDF have
been found a majority of the time to be
reduced or not significantly different
than those from other conventional
fossil fuels, provided combustion occurs
in a well-designed, well-operated and
well-maintained combustion device. In
fact, results from a dedicated tires-toenergy (100% TDF) facility indicate that
it is possible to have emissions much
92 Metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent
(MTCO2E)
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lower than those produced by existing
solid-fuel-fired boilers (on a heat input
basis) with a specially designed
combustor and add-on controls.93
Typically boilers use a mix of TDF and
coal; they have comparable emissions
with or without TDF with the same air
pollution control device. We are not
aware any small area sources that are
able to use TDF for fuel. (See the
Materials Characterization Papers in the
docket for further details on these GHG
estimates, and other estimates of
avoided emissions associated with
burning tires and other secondary
materials as fuel.)
Finally, we would also note that the
use of secondary materials, such as use
as a fuel in industrial processes may
also result in other benefits, including
reduced fuel imports, reduced mining
impacts, and reduced negative
environmental impacts caused by
previous dumping (e.g., tires).
Comment: Some industry commenters
claimed that the proposed rule would
increase the costs for facilities that use
scrap tires as a fuel due to the imposed
costs for unnecessary processing, and
would negatively affect them and
existing tire recycling programs.
According to the many comments by
tire retailers, tires are a material handled
as a commodity. Under the third party
processing requirements in the
proposed rule, they estimated
substantially increased costs to remove
the tires they handle from their shops.
This would also have the effect of
causing the tires to be seen as ‘‘wastelike’’ since their monetary value would
be reduced.
EPA’s Response: As a result of the
changes made to the final rule
concerning scrap tires that are collected
as part of an established tire collection
program, we anticipate that there will be
no or minimal changes, to the current
system that prevents scrap tires from
being discarded. Thus, the costs for the
tire retailers are not expected to
increase, as anticipated by the
commenters.
Comment: A number of state
environmental agencies recommended
that scrap tires not be considered a solid
waste when combusted, because of
potential impacts on their state
programs. These state environmental
agencies, however, typically preferred
EPA to consider scrap tires a waste at
least until it arrives at the combustion
93 See, for example, Reisman JI (1997) Air
Emissions from Scrap Tire Combustion, Appendix:
Emissions Data from Controlled Tire Burning.
Technical Report prepared for USEPA. Office of
Research and Development, Washington, DC EPA
1997 at https://www.epa.gov/ttn/catc/dir1/
tire_eng.pdf
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unit (or otherwise reasonably processed
into a product according to some State
Agency commenters). Many of these
states noted the beneficial aspects of
using whole scrap tires as a fuel and
were concerned with the negative
impacts and possible interference to the
success of their beneficial use programs
(typically for non-combustion
determinations) and requested
clarification on the scope and impact of
this rule for all non-hazardous
secondary materials, including scrap
tires. For instance, they asked if the rule
would affect or interfere with state solid
waste regulations, laws, and beneficial
use programs. They also requested that
EPA clarify the implications to a state
program if the scrap tires are considered
non-waste when used as fuel for federal
purposes, but are considered waste
according to the state recycling and
waste management programs (until
beneficially used or made into a nonwaste product).
EPA’s Response: As discussed, the
Agency has decided to identify scrap
tires that are removed from vehicles and
collected as part of an established tire
collection program as a non-waste fuel
when combusted. Thus, we believe that
the concerns or impacts on the effective
collection and use as a tire-derived fuel
product should no longer be a concern.
However, this approach would not
address the request from state agencies
that we identify scrap tires as a waste
until combusted. As discussed
previously, existing RCRA case law on
hazardous wastes would not allow EPA
to declare that a discarded material
ceases to be a waste solely by the fact
that it is beneficially used. Wastes may
be used beneficially. Accordingly, once
a non-hazardous secondary material
(such as scrap tires retrieved from waste
tire piles) is identified as a waste, its
arrival at a facility for combustion
would not change its status. EPA has
also expressed the belief that case law
would not prevent wastes from being
processed into materials that are no
longer wastes. However, that would
require changing the material
sufficiently so that a new fuel product
is created.
In response to the states question
concerning conflicting and concurrent
interpretations of state and federal waste
status (when used as fuel), EPA would
like to clarify that non-hazardous
secondary materials may be
simultaneously regulated as a non-waste
fuel or ingredient for use in combustion
units under the federal program, but as
a solid waste by the state’s solid waste
programs. That is, non-hazardous
secondary materials that are designated
as a non-waste by today’s rule, while
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not subject to the section 129 CAA
standards, could be subject to the state
standards that identify the same nonhazardous secondary material as a solid
waste. The federal rule does not affect
the state waste determination in this
case. For more information about state
agency concerns with regulating nonhazardous secondary materials, not just
scrap tires, refer to Section IX.A,
‘‘Applicability of State Solid Waste
Definitions and Beneficial Use
Determinations.’’
Finally, we would note, and as stated
elsewhere in this preamble, this rule
only addresses those non-hazardous
secondary materials that are burned in
combustion units as a fuel or ingredient.
Thus, we are not making any
determination that non-hazardous
secondary materials are or are not solid
wastes for other possible beneficial uses.
Such beneficial use determinations are
generally made by the states for these
other beneficial uses, and EPA will
continue to look to the states in making
such determinations.
Comment: One commenter stated that
‘‘[b]urning in incinerators, kilns, boilers,
etc. is not the highest best use of scrap
tires,’’ and that with proper processing,
they can be used in many value-added
recycling processes. Many other
commenters were opposed to the
combustion of any non-hazardous
secondary materials as a fuel, including
scrap tires in CAA section 112 regulated
units, and support the recycling or reuse
of scrap tires for other uses instead of
combustion.
EPA’s Response: The issue that EPA is
addressing in this rule is whether the
burning of non-hazardous secondary
materials, including scrap tires (whether
whole or as TDF) is considered waste
management. This is critical since the
status of scrap tires—that is, whether
they are a waste or not, determines
which CAA emission standards the nonhazardous secondary material would be
subject to. With that said, EPA supports
the broad use of scrap tires in many
different markets (e.g., recycled rubber
products, use in asphalt, and in civil
engineering projects). The Agency also
believes that the use of scrap tires as a
fuel is a valuable use and should remain
a component in the overall suite of
recycling/management options provided
the combustion units are subject to
appropriate standards. In some cases,
other recycling markets may not be
available if TDF was not used a fuel. For
example, in the standard process of
shredding tires for tire-derived fuel
(TDF), finer pieces are created as a byproduct appropriate for recycled rubber
products. In most cases, it would be too
expensive to process the scrap tires
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solely for the recycling of this rubber
(according to sources in the scrap tire
program). Comments on the ANPRM
and the proposal led us to believe that
the non-combustion markets for scrap
tires could not handle the surplus and
will reverse the trend in cleaning up tire
dumps and will lead to many tires being
disposed of in scrap tire piles.
Specifically, in 2007, 89.3% percent
of the scrap tires generated in the U.S.
by weight were collected and consumed
in end-use markets. The total volume of
scrap tires consumed in these end use
markets reached approximately 4,105.8
thousand tons of tires out of an
estimated 4,595.7 thousand tons of tires
generated in the U.S. By comparison, in
1990, only eleven percent of the scrap
tires were consumed on a per tire
basis.94 Of the scrap tires that are
collected annually and used in
beneficial use end markets, about half
are used for their fuel value, while the
remainder are used in value-added
recycling processes as the commenter
preferred. We recognize that regionally,
there are sometimes scrap tire shortages
in an area that could support more noncombustion uses (as compared to the
market demand for scrap tire usages).
That is, some states are net importers
and have very healthy markets using
scrap tires as commodities, while other
states do not have as much demand for
scrap tires. The EPA supported scrap
tire program is described on our Web
site (https://www.epa.gov/osw/conserve/
materials/tires/index.htm).
Comment: EPA describes coal and
petroleum coke as traditional fuel.
Based on the extensive use developed
over the last 20–30 years in the
industry, many of the alternative fuels,
such as TDF can also be considered
traditional. A number of commenters
cited that scrap tires have been used as
a fuel for a long time (since the late 70’s)
which should qualify as ‘‘historical use’’
and should be regarded as a traditional
fuel. The cement industry’s goals have
emphasized use of alternate fuels and
raw materials based on the industry
increasing its reliance on this type of
material since the 1980s. The use of
TDF is a long-standing and customary
practice now characteristic of cement
manufacturing fuel options. In fact,
commenters have argued that the
number of major industrial boilers and
cement plants utilizing TDF as a
supplemental fuel has risen
dramatically over the last 19 years and
94 These tire figures are compiled by RMA and are
developed jointly with state scrap tire programs and
listed in ‘‘U.S. Scrap Tire Markets 2007.’’ The report
can be found at https://www.rma.org/scrap_tires/.
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decreased the dependence on virgin fuel
sources.
Other commenters mentioned that the
components of tires are derived from
hydrocarbons (like fossil fuels, such as
coal, oil, and natural gas) and natural
‘‘biogenic’’ sources (the rubber), and
therefore, they should be considered a
traditional fuel. Still other commenters
mentioned that TDF should be
considered a traditional fuel since it
should qualify for the same reasons as
on-spec used oil. Finally other
commenters argued that scrap tires
should be considered a traditional fuel
based on the comparable contaminant
content and superior Btu value (at
12,000 Btu/lb to 16,000 Btu/lb), as
compared to coal.
EPA’s Response: We do not agree with
the commenters that scrap tires should
be considered an historically managed
traditional fuel or alternative fuel. In
fact, until this rulemaking, we are not
aware that anyone has considered or
identified scrap tires as a traditional
fuel. While we recognize that scrap tires
may have been used as a fuel since the
1970’s, we would also note that tires are
not produced for their fuel value, even
though the components of tires are
derived from hydrocarbons and natural
biogenic source. Further, scrap tires are
not derived from virgin material fuels
(e.g., as is the case of coal refuse derived
from virgin coal).
Comment: Some commenters
regarded the combustion of nonhazardous secondary materials,
including scrap tires, as waste disposal
and therefore the combustion unit that
burns these secondary materials should
be regulated as an incinerator. Another
commenter was concerned with a
combustor accepting fees to accept nonhazardous secondary materials and
argued that waste-burning boilers can
receive a pass-through portion of
tipping fees and can also collect fees ‘‘to
dispose of’’ the material through
combustion at ‘‘clean energy’’ projects.
The commenter went on to say that the
fuel at these facilities is in no way sold
in the marketplace the way that
traditional fuels are sold for profit. In
fact, the economic model is reversed, so
that the combustion facility is paid to
take the secondary material.
EPA’s Response: The question of
whether or not a non-hazardous
secondary material, including scrap
tires is or is not a solid waste, depends
on whether it has been discarded, and
whether it could legitimately be
considered a fuel-like material, by
meeting the legitimacy criteria. As we
have discussed elsewhere in this
preamble, we have determined that
scrap tires, when collected as part of an
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established tire collection program and
sent to a combustion unit for use as a
fuel, or when sufficiently processed to
produce a tire-derived fuel, have not
been discarded and are not solid wastes.
These secondary materials are more
akin to non-waste fuels in these
instances. Thus, we disagree with the
commenters who argue that the
combustion of non-hazardous secondary
materials, including scrap tires, always
constitutes waste management.
On the other hand, where scrap tires
or any other non-hazardous secondary
materials are disposed of (part of the
plain meaning of discard) via
combustion, they are a waste. For
example, if a combustion unit’s main
purpose is to provide heat to dry a
product, but they consistently have a
surplus of tires received with a tipping
fee and operate the unit without a
product being dried, they are in effect
destroying the scrap tires. In this case,
they would be considered solid wastes,
and the combustion unit would be
subject to the CAA 129 standards. With
respect to the situation where a facility
accepts scrap tires for a tipping fee (as
opposed to paying for the fuel), that can
be an indicator that disposal may be
occurring, but is not determinative to
indicate that such transactions always
constitute waste management. For
example, the tipping fees could
encourage over-accumulation leading to
combustion for disposal versus being
used as a valuable replacement fuel.
Thus, this factor should be considered,
in light of the other circumstances, in
determining whether or not scrap tires
when combusted as a fuel are or are not
a solid waste.
Comment: A commenter described the
associated environmental justice
impacts that would occur at sites that
would receive scrap tires if the
proposed rule went into effect, as
compared to the current environmental
justice impacts associated with cement
kiln sites. The commenter provided an
analysis that they said showed a
decreased chance of impacting
environmental justice communities
based on the demographic analysis at
cement kilns versus the alternative sites.
The commenter claimed that the
processing described in the proposed
rule would effectively prohibit them
from using scrap tires as a fuel and will
result in more scrap tires being disposed
of or unnecessarily processed at sites
that are more likely to be in
environmental justice communities, as
EPA’s environmental justice analysis
indicates.
The commenters’ analyses indicated
that cement kilns tend to be located in
areas with fewer minorities than the
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national average, as well as fewer
minorities as compared to the larger set
of sites that use non-hazardous
secondary materials that may become
CISWI facilities, tire processors, and
RCRA subtitle D facilities (as EPA
assessed in the ‘‘Review of
Environmental Justice Impacts’’ 95). The
commenter stated that ‘‘EPA’s data
shows vividly that there are no
Environmental Justice issues at any of
the cement plants in its CISWI
database.’’ The commenter also argued
that land disposal (or processing) sites
already have environmental justice
issues and that the proposed rule would
make it worse by having more scrap
tires diverted to waste tire piles or
processors. Another commenter
indicated that states are considering
removing landfill bans on whole tires if
this rule goes into effect, and argued
that the proposed rule would cause an
increase in the number of tires going to
landfills or stockpiles and would have
a disparate impact on adjacent
communities and mentioned the risks of
fires and mosquito born vectors at tire
piles.
EPA’s Response: In the evaluation
regarding the use of whole scrap tires
(predominantly used as a fuel in cement
kilns) and whether or not they should
be considered solid wastes if collected
as part of an established tire collection
program, we considered the
environmental justice demographics
and impacts that would result at cement
kilns. Based on our review of the
demographics at cement kilns, on
average, they are located in areas with
fewer minorities and less poverty than
RCRA subtitle D disposal sites,
processing sites, and facilities assessed
to become CISWI CAA section 129
incinerators.
Whole scrap tires can be used as a
non-waste fuel in cement kilns under
today’s rule when they were harvested
from vehicles and managed under the
oversight of an established tire
collection program prior to being
delivered to the combustion unit. Based
on our most recent demographic data,
we agree with the commenter that
sending whole tires to cement kilns as
a non-waste fuel is not expected to have
a negative impact on environmental
justice communities. In fact, it appears
that it would have benefits since RCRA
subtitle D disposal sites, processing
95 EPA’s ‘‘Review of Environmental Justice
Impacts’’ that the commenter referenced, can be
found in the docket for today’s rule (EPA–HQ–
RCRA–2008–0329–0519). Cement kilns and other
combustors that use non-hazardous secondary
materials were included in the CISWI database used
for EPA’s demographics (many of the units in the
CISWI database were not regulated as incinerators).
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sites, and facilities assessed to become
CISWI CAA 129 incinerators (the sites
that would be accepting scrap tires if
not burned as a fuel in cement kilns) are
more likely to be located in
environmental justice communities.
Thus, while this was not the primary
basis on which this decision was made,
the Agency believes it important that its
decision would lessen the impacts on
environmental justice communities.
Comment: EPA never explains why it
believes that, in the context of a
secondary material that does not need
processing or perhaps needs only
minimal processing to serve as a wholly
bona fide fuel, that scrap tires cannot be
considered sufficiently ‘‘processed’’
unless they are physically shredded and
undergo metals removal processing. We
note that whole tires that have long been
buried or stacked in aging piles may
need minimal processing for use in
cement kilns, such as removal of excess
water and dirt, mud, and debris. Whole
tires from newer stacks or piles often
need no physical processing whatever.
EPA never explains why it thinks this
much processing is necessary for tires to
escape the ‘‘discard’’ rubric and serve as
bona fide fuels in portland cement kilns.
The result of this faulty logic is that
beneficial reuse of significant amounts
of non-hazardous secondary materials
will be greatly discouraged, and there
will be no health or environmental
benefits (only detriments). We believe it
is obvious that EPA’s proposal
represents a ‘‘classic case of arbitrary
and capricious rulemaking.’’
The portland cement industry simply
cannot afford to jeopardize its product
by using alternate fuels that affect
cement quality. EPA justifiably had a
concern (reflected in the earlier RCRA
subtitle C rulemaking and policy
documents it cites) that unscrupulous
parties seeking to avoid the expensive
subtitle C cradle-to-grave regime had
incentives to claim that the hazardous
waste they were burning was a bona fide
fuel. At that stage in RCRA subtitle C
development (mid 1980s), burning of
hazardous materials for bona fide energy
recovery purposes was exempt. This
concern simply does not apply to the
situation in which non-hazardous
secondary materials are being burned in
fully regulated industrial furnaces such
as portland cement kilns.
Ironically, EPA has long recognized
that products from portland cement
kilns burning hazardous waste fuel are
not adversely affected in any manner. In
1995, after reviewing exhaustive data
presented in a petition filed under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA),
EPA rejected the petitioners’ request
that products produced from cement
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kilns that burn hazardous waste fuel
carry warning labels because EPA found
there was no difference in contaminant
levels (or risks) in the product. 60 FR
39169 et seq., August 1, 1995. As
recently as 2007, EPA’s Assistant
Administrator for Solid Waste and
Emergency Response (OSWER) stated in
a letter to the Center for Maximum
Potential Building Systems that ‘‘there is
no difference in the cement from kilns
burning hazardous waste compared to
cement produced by kilns not burning
hazardous waste.’’
Moreover, NSF International has
reviewed data from several portland
cement kilns burning hazardous waste
fuel to assess whether the product from
such kilns could be safely used in
concrete water pipes and water storage
tanks. These studies have uniformly
concluded that there is no statistical
difference in contaminants between
clinker or products made from kilns
burning hazardous waste fuel as
compared to kilns using only fossil
fuels.
The commenters representing cement
kilns also noted that a cement kiln is not
a boiler or an incinerator. One of the
commenters went on to say that ‘‘in
enacting CAA section 129, Congress was
focused exclusively on ‘‘incinerators.’’
Incinerators burn waste materials solely
for the purposes of destruction. They do
not use ‘‘ingredients,’’ and they make no
product. Moreover, in all the
rulemaking and litigation that prompted
this proposed rule—culminating in the
NRDC case * * * EPA, the parties, and
the Court were focused exclusively on
incinerators and boilers. Like
incinerators, boilers do not use
‘‘ingredients.’’ Unlike incinerators,
boilers may burn waste materials for
energy recovery purposes. But the only
product they make is steam, and the
steam that they make never comes in
contact with the fuel they burn.
A portland cement kiln is
significantly different from an
incinerator or a boiler in key respects.
First, it is one type of ‘‘industrial
furnace’’ which, unlike boilers and
incinerators, which makes a marketable
product. All materials that are placed in
the kiln—including fuels—come into
mutual contact in the manufacturing
process. The product the kilns produce
must meet strict quality standards.
EPA’s RCRA regulations have long
recognized these key distinctions among
industrial furnaces, boilers, and
incinerators. The commenter referred to
40 CFR 260.10.
Despite the fact that there was
absolutely no issue with portland
cement kilns producing ingredients in
the development of CAA section 129 or
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the rulemaking and litigation leading to
this rulemaking, the commenter stated
that portland cement kilns have been
included in this proposal in a manner
that could have very adverse impacts on
a kilns’ ability to use non-hazardous
materials beneficially; the commenter
went on to argue that a significant flaw
in the proposal is its failure to recognize
the key differences between portland
cement kilns as compared to
incinerators and boilers.
EPA’s Response: These comments
may express legitimate policy concerns.
However, they are essentially irrelevant
to the decisions that EPA is making in
this rulemaking. Tires from tire dumps
are clearly wastes because they have
been disposed for a long time. The tires
were clearly abandoned if they were left
in a tire dump. EPA understands the
commenter’s remarks that cement kilns
are not ‘‘boilers’’ nor were designed to be
‘‘incinerators,’’ but cement kilns are
clearly ‘‘combustors’’ under the CAA
and the Agency needs to decide whether
CAA section 112 or 129 standards
would apply.
With respect to the comments
regarding ‘‘processing,’’ EPA’s intention
is to provide a standard for turning
clearly discarded material into a nonwaste. EPA acknowledges that there is
no direct case on point in which a court
has opined on how a material may lose
its status as a waste.96 The comment
assumes all fuel is not a waste. As EPA
has repeatedly stated in this preamble,
a waste may be used beneficially and
may, indeed, be a bona fide fuel. This
is consistent with the DC Circuit’s
opinion in NRDC v. EPA. A combustor
that burns solid waste, even for energy
recovery, must be regulated under CAA
129. If the kiln is regulated under CAA
129, no processing is needed for a waste
scrap tire to be burned as a bona fide
fuel.
Given the statutory provisions and
case law, EPA is constrained to argue
that discarded materials are solid wastes
and would need to be burned under
CAA section 129 standards. EPA notes
that environmental groups would argue
that all units combusting tires must be
subject to emissions standards issued
under section 129 of the CAA even if
the tires have been processed into a
separate TDF, and the comments
include policy arguments to support
this contention. The point of the
comment is that requiring units to meet
emissions standards issued under
section 129 of the CAA would
96 Although we recognize that some states have
systems in place where materials lose the waste
status if beneficially used according to the state’s
standards.
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discourage burning of tires as an
environmentally beneficial replacement
for non-renewable fuels, yet
environmental groups would argue that
scrap tires should nevertheless be
subject to such standards. EPA’s focus,
however, must be on the definition of
solid waste under RCRA and the
comment gives the Agency no basis to
determine what kind of activity would
make the waste a non-waste. Whether
the material is a bona fide fuel does not
provide the answer to that inquiry.
EPA sees no reason based on these
comments to eliminate the processing
requirement for this final rule.
Comment: The commenters that
addressed the specific level of
processing for whole scrap tires
disagreed with EPA on the amount of
processing required before TDF should
be considered a non-waste fuel. In
addition, many of the commenters had
different interpretations of our proposed
wire removal requirements and on the
term ‘‘relatively wire free’’ (since some
incorrectly believed that the proposed
standard was up to 99% or absolutely
no wire). Furthermore, many of these
same commenters argued that the
proposed processing requirements for
units that use TDF chips were
unrealistic and would dramatically
increase processing costs, while a few
commenters cited that many processors
could not even achieve the specified
level of wire removal. These changes
would significantly deter facilities from
using TDF that they regarded as a
product. In fact, a number of
commenters, including some state
agencies, questioned the value of
requiring unnecessarily costly
processing of whole scrap tires that are
to be used as a fuel in units, such as
cement kilns, since the wire in the scrap
tires can be beneficial due to the
properties of the iron oxide resulting
from the tire combustion in cement
kilns. Other commenters noted that the
presence of steel in the whole scrap tires
or TDF should be irrelevant to their
waste status since the wire removed is
for improvement in handling—that is,
the TDF needs to have the exposed wire
removed so that it is ‘‘flowable’’ like coal
within the combustion unit, as well as
any loose wire removed since it can also
cause handling issues in the units, not
emissions.
A few commenters claimed that TDF
processed to two-inch pieces was seen
as the higher end TDF product and that
this should be our standard. In
particular, one commenter that markets
TDF as a product, ‘‘request that the EPA
use the widely accepted nominal twoinch minus, 90%+ wire free standard
that has been standard in the industry
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for years’’ since this would accurately
define a product. The commenter said
that ‘‘TDF meeting this 90%+ wire free
standard typically has a wire content of
between 2% and 8% by weight.’’ In
addition, some state agencies have been
known to specify two-inch TDF as a
product rather than a waste, while
rough shreds used for fuel in some
combustors (bigger than two inches) are
seen as a waste material (not a product)
by those states. The size restriction is
more prevalent in specification for TDF
than specifying a percentage of metal.
Other commenters argued that a
product is created when tires are
processed at any level that makes it
‘‘TDF’’ and mentioned that the ASTM
describes a process that creates a
‘‘product’’ called TDF. Another
commenter mentioned that a necessary
component in the processing of
shredded tires is to remove the
protruding wire from the shreds and to
sort the rubber pieces from the wire
remnants called ‘‘free wire.’’ The
commenter said that this part of
processing is typically necessary in
order for it to be sold as a TDF product
to boilers. The commenter went on to
say that the completion of this last step
can be tested by spreading out the TDF
chips in a single layer and passing a
very strong magnet over them to see if
any free wire remains. That commenter
reasoned that TDF chips that pass the
magnet test and had the free wire
removed should qualify as a non-waste
TDF product.
EPA’s Response: In the situation
where tires are discarded in the first
place or otherwise do not meet the
legitimacy criteria, processing is needed
before it is considered a non-waste fuel
(i.e., tires that are not collected from
vehicles as part of an established tire
collection program per § 241.3(b)(2)(i)).
We disagree with those commenters
who addressed the level of processing
needed before TDF is considered a nonwaste as these commenters are
answering a different question: How
much processing is necessary before
whole scrap tires can be burned
properly in any particular combustion
unit?
However, the question that EPA needs
to answer is how much processing is
sufficient before whole scrap tires are
considered a non-waste fuel where the
scrap tires are not collected as part of a
scrap tire collection program? Examples
of sufficient processing for other nonhazardous secondary materials include
the processing of used oil to produce
on-specification used oil and the
processing of construction and
demolition (C&D) wood into a fuel by
sorting to remove contaminants (e.g.,
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lead-painted wood, treated wood, nonwood materials), and sizing it. In all
these instances, the non-hazardous
secondary material is being sufficiently
changed, either chemically or physically
to produce a non-waste product.
Thus, while insufficiently processed
discarded tires can be burned in boilers
as a fuel, such TDF would still be
considered a waste-derived product
because the Agency does not believe
that simply shredding or quartering
whole tires, or removing some dirt, is
adequate to produce a non-waste
product for use as fuel according to
today’s rule (refer to the processing
definition in § 241.2 Definitions). While
the extent of processing that may be
required may vary for different types of
non-hazardous secondary materials, the
Agency contends that a sufficient
amount of processing must occur to
produce a non-waste product from
secondary materials.
One commenter mentioned, boiler
operators are able to recycle the metal
from the wire post-combustion
(although minimal). This is after it has
been cleaned of the rubber particles via
the combustion process, so this iron can
be recovered and recycled (not disposed
in emissions). However, whether or not
the metal from the wire (postcombustion) can be recycled does not go
to the question of whether or not the
non-hazardous secondary material has
been ‘‘sufficiently processed’’ to produce
a non-waste product.
With respect to the technical question
of how much wire must be removed
before the amount of processing is
considered sufficient, the specific unit
types that use TDF chips require
different levels of metal removal for
handling concerns as noted by
commenters. The ASTM Standard
D 6700 ‘‘Standard Practice for Use of
Scrap Tire-Derived Fuel’’ 97 describes
the process for ‘‘dewired’’ and has a
helpful guideline on the appropriate
amount of wire removal for different
unit types under the topic titled
‘‘Handling Considerations Conveying,
Grate and Ash.’’ However, the ASTM
standard is concerned with proper
dewiring and not whether the resultant
material is a waste or non-waste fuel.
In the proposed rule, EPA referred to
the level of processing in varied terms
(‘‘relatively wire free,’’ ‘‘processed to the
Standard Practice for Use of Scrap TireDerived Fuel ASTM Standard D 6700–
97 ASTM
Standard D6700–01, 2006, ‘‘Standard
Practice for Use of Scrap Tire-Derived Fuel,’’ ASTM
International, West Conshohocken, PA, 2003, DOI:
10.1520/C0033–03, https://www.astm.org. This
standard can be obtained through the following
Web site: https://www.astm.org/Standards/
D6700.htm.
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01,’’ ‘‘wire removed,’’ ‘‘steel belts
removed,’’ and ‘‘sufficiently processed’’).
While ASTM was not deciding whether
this material would be a waste, or not,
EPA in the proposal was suggesting that
such material would be sufficiently
processed to render the new material a
commodity fuel. Thus, to be considered
sufficiently processed, there has to be
metal removed and, it should be at the
level of wire removal that is specific to
the combustion unit as mentioned
above. EPA agrees with the commenter
who stated that TDF that has been
chipped/shredded, sorted and dewired
(or at least 90%+ wire free) would be
considered sufficiently processed.
However, this may not be the only
standard, to the extent that other unit
types require different levels of metal
removal.
With respect to the commenter that
suggested the removal of free wire as an
indicator of sufficient processing, we
would agree that the removal of free
wire (as described by the commenter) is
a necessary component of processing
scrap tires into a non-waste product for
the purposes of this rule, but that alone,
may not be sufficient to meet our
definition of processing. It could qualify
if, according to product specifications
appropriate for the particular
combustion unit, it is processed into
TDF chips and enough wire is removed
from the TDF and the loose free wire is
removed (to the degree practical)
appropriate to the unit.
However, we would also note, as is
the case for all types of solid fuel,
proper characterization of the size and
composition of TDF are important
factors that combustion unit operators
assess to determine if the TDF is a
suitable fuel for their specific
combustion unit design.98 For example,
ASTM Standard D 6700, describes
standard practices for using TDF as
fuels, and also specifies sampling and
analysis methods and procedures that
apply to TDF that cover composition
and fuel characterization analyses. The
standards also address the size of the
tire pieces and metal content in order to
optimize combustion. The ASTM
Standard D 6700 ‘‘Standard Practice for
Use of Scrap Tire-Derived Fuel’’ also
describes the process for ‘‘dewired’’ TDF
and has a helpful guideline on the
appropriate amount of wire removal for
different unit types under the topic
98 With regard to the legitimacy criteria discussed
in Section V.D., the heating value of scrap tires
(12,000 Btu/lb to 16,000 Btu/lb) is the highest of all
non-hazardous secondary materials, except used oil
(17,800 Btu/lb), and higher than typical coal values.
Contaminants of potential concern have been
measured for both materials: The constituents are
comparable.
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titled ‘‘Handling Considerations
Conveying, Grate and Ash.’’ In
summary, EPA considers that
previously discarded tires that have
been made into TDF (shredded/chipped,
sized, sorted, and with a significant
portion of the metal belts or wire
removed, at a level appropriate for the
unit), meets the definition of ‘‘sufficient
processing.’’
Finally, as discussed above, the final
rule also allows for scrap tires that have
been harvested from vehicles (as part of
an established tire collection program)
to be used as a non-waste fuel. The
question of processing into TDF or the
‘‘extent of processing’’ is only relevant if
they are using scrap tires that have first
been discarded.99 Scrap tire processors
typically enter into contracts with the
end users of these products that specify
that the processed tires meet certain
specifications (i.e., size of chips and
possibly other considerations) to ensure
that the product that is produced
consistently meets the needs of that
particular end use. Boilers, unlike
cement kilns,100 benefit from TDF that
has been processed into small chips that
feed in the combustion unit like coal
and the reduction of metal to improve
its handling and operational qualities in
the combustion unit. For instance, the
removal of the exposed wire around the
perimeter of the tire chips makes it
‘‘flowable’’ like coal in the combustion
unit.
EPA notes that merely harvesting tires
from vehicles does not render the
material a non-waste. If the tires are
used in a combustor for which they are
not suitable, which can be determined
through the analysis of the legitimacy
criteria, they would be wastes.
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6. Resinated Wood Residuals
The proposed rule described resinated
wood products as those generated
during the manufacture of particleboard,
medium density fiberboard, and
hardboard and includes materials, such
as board trim, sander dust, and panel
trim. The proposal indicated that such
resinated wood products were
considered a non-waste fuel when
99 Since scrap tires that are harvested from
vehicles (as part of an established tire collection
program) can be burned as whole tires and still be
considered a non-waste fuel, the Agency does not
believe it appropriate to require such tires to meet
the level of processing (as codified in § 241.2).
However, other scrap tires, e.g., those that are
removed from tire piles would need to be processed
(as codified in § 241.2) in order to be burned as a
non-waste fuel.
100 We note that most cement kilns use whole
tires as fuels, as opposed to TDF chips, because
their process does not require the TDF to be in the
form of small chips to use it as a fuel, and does not
require removal of the metal (since they use the
metal as an ingredient).
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burned in a combustion unit because
this secondary material generally meets
the legitimacy criteria. We
acknowledged, however, that we had
limited data on the level of
contaminants in resinated wood
products, but the data we had did
generally indicate that this nonhazardous secondary material would
meet the legitimacy criterion for
contaminants. In order to gather
additional information on which to base
our decision, we requested comment
and data on the contaminant levels
contained in these secondary materials,
as well as the appropriateness of calling
them a non-waste.
Comment: The American Mining
Congress v. EPA case states that
secondary materials beneficially used
within the generating industry, not
within the generating plant, is part of a
continuous industrial process and thus,
not a solid waste. Therefore, transfer of
materials within the generating industry
would have to be considered a nonwaste fuel.
Some commenters contend, however,
that any secondary material burned for
energy recovery is a solid waste,
regardless of whether it remains within
the control of the generator. These
commenters object to allowing control
by the generator to be relevant to
rendering secondary material a nonwaste, even if burned under the
legitimacy criteria, claiming that these
secondary materials are wastes. The
commenter goes on to note that EPA
itself admits that a secondary material
could still be a waste even if it is
recycled on-site or within the control of
the generator and cites the court’s
holding in API II.
EPA’s Response: EPA needs to correct
some of the industry and environmental
group misrepresentations of the cases on
the definition of solid waste. In AMC I,
the court was only noting that
secondary materials reclaimed within a
continuous process are not wastes and
are not subject to EPA’s jurisdiction as
solid wastes. The case is actually a
narrow discussion of one basic principle
regarding what is not discarded. The
court does not even state whether any
particular material is discarded. For
example, while there is a reference to
used oil that could be discarded, the
court in no sense was saying that all
used oil is discarded. In fact, in API II
the court specifically noted that in AMC
I they ‘‘did not address the discard
status of any of the particular materials
discussed in the briefs.’’ 216 F.3d at 56.
The court freely admitted in API II that
its ‘‘prior cases have not had to draw a
line for deciding when discard has
occurred,’’ but only dealt with the
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extreme cases of materials that were
either wastes or non-wastes. 216 F.3d at
57.
As the various definition of solid
waste cases hold, the ultimate issue for
deciding when most materials are
discarded is whether EPA’s
determination complies with the
arbitrary and capricious standard of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
Sweeping formulations involving
whether a process is within an
‘‘industry’’ is not helpful, nor is it
consistent with the case law. EPA, and
the courts, reject any formulation that
under AMC I the statement that discard
cannot be found in the case of
immediate recycling within a
continuous industrial process means
ipso facto that any material transferred
within an ‘‘industry,’’ even between
companies located in New York and
California, is not a waste. EPA’s
decision on whether resinated wood is
a waste (within the control of the
generator or if transferred) is based on
the circumstances under which the
material is handled and combusted.
Merely keeping material on-site will not
render it a non-waste, nor will mere
transfer make the material a waste.
Comment: Trim, sawdust, shavings,
sander dust and other residual materials
from producing panels and other
engineered wood products containing
resins have been widely used as fuels by
wood product plants since the industry
began in the 1950s and should,
therefore, be classified as a traditional
fuel. In fact, the wood product plants
have been designed so as to specifically
utilize these residuals that the process
creates and would not be able to operate
as designed without this material. The
commenters argue that there are no
significant contaminants in resinated
wood residuals that are used as fuels.
None of the constituents are among the
contaminants controlled under CISWI.
This fact provides sufficient justification
to accept resinated fuels as traditional
fuels from the standpoint of
contaminants.
EPA’s Response: We do not agree with
those commenters who argue that
resinated wood residuals should be
considered a traditional fuel, since it
can have contaminants at levels greater
than traditional fuels (as discussed
below). We recognize, however, that
much of the resinated wood residuals
are used as a product fuel, and that the
plants have been designed to catch and
then burn these residuals to supply
energy and heat to other parts of the
plant. EPA recognizes that some specific
types of non-hazardous secondary
materials, such as resinated wood
residuals, are more like valuable
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commodities than solid wastes.
Resinated wood is a secondary material
that, upon examination, is not discarded
when used on-site or transferred off-site
to a different company. Thus, EPA
would consider resinated wood
residuals used as a fuel in a combustion
unit as not being a solid waste, provided
these materials satisfy the specified
legitimacy criteria for fuels.
Comment: Commenters argued that
resinated wood residuals are often used
off-site in a manner that does not
constitute discard and the secondary
materials should not be classified as
solid waste when transferred between
facilities or companies. As much as 6%
of resinated wood residuals are sold into
the fuel market and are routinely
transferred between either intra- or
inter-company facilities and used as
either ‘‘furnish’’ (i.e., raw materials) or
fuel at the receiving facilities. Intercompany transfers are typically
managed through buy-sell contracts that
likely do not specify how the materials
will be used because the receiving
facility likely mixes the purchased
material with self-generated materials.
Those combined materials are either
used as furnish or fuel in accordance
with the needs of the facility at the time.
Because these resinated materials are
bought and sold and used in a manner—
either as furnish or fuel—similar to how
self-generated resinated materials are
used, this transaction does not
constitute discard and the materials
should not be classified as solid waste
simply due to the transfer between
facilities or between companies.
EPA’s Response: We agree that
transferring secondary materials
between companies or facilities does not
necessarily mean that the material has
been discarded. As resinated wood
residuals transferred off-site are utilized
in the same manner as self-generated
resinated wood residuals (i.e., contained
in the same bins as furnish materials
used in the product, transferred via
conveyors or ducts), which the plants
are specifically designed to burn as a
fuel, we agree that this does not
constitute discard. Thus, we have
determined that resinated wood
residuals are not solid waste when
transferred off-site for use as fuel,
provided the material meets the
legitimacy criteria and has not been
otherwise deemed to be discarded. We
have codified this concept under 40
CFR 241.3(b)(2)(ii).
Comment: Processing should not be
necessary when utilizing the material
on-site or off-site to be considered a
non-waste fuel. However, resinated
wood residuals are generally chipped or
hogged to reduce its size before burning.
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This should be sufficient to meet the
processing requirement.
EPA’s Response: We generally agree
with the commenters that resinated
wood residuals do not need to be
processed, but if processed, such as by
chipping or hogging, this level of
processing would not affect the status of
this material.
Comment: Resinated wood residuals
have contaminants that are comparable
to traditional fuels. The list of resins
and adhesives include constituent
chemicals that are on the hazardous air
pollutant list. Notably, phenol,
formaldehyde, methylene di-isocyanate
and epichlorohydrine are HAP.
However, these individual components
react completely within the resin curing
process, leaving, in the worst case, only
trace amounts of the HAP. With the
exception of formaldehyde,
undetectable or extremely low levels of
these HAP remain behind after the
resin/adhesive cure. As noted in the
comments referenced in the proposal,
miniscule amounts of formaldehyde
remain in some resinated wood
residuals, less than 0.02%, a number
that is expected to fall as the California
Air Resource Board (CARB) Composite
Wood Airborne Toxic Control Measure
(ATCM) is implemented nationwide,
per the new Public Law 111–199 (which
establishes consistent standards for
wood products across the country).
Further, since formaldehyde is found in
natural wood, it should not be
considered a contaminant in resinated
wood.
EPA’s Response: The proposed rule
acknowledged a general lack of data
regarding the levels of formaldehyde in
these non-hazardous secondary
materials and specifically requested
data on this issue. While we received
only limited contaminant information
during the comment period, the data we
do have suggests that the levels of
formaldehyde in these resinated wood
residuals is at non-detect levels. The
existing data we have is that resinated
wood residuals contain ‘‘free’’
formaldehyde at levels less than 0.02
percent (or 200 ppm). In addition, new
rules, as mandated by the CARB
Composite Wood ATCM, per new
Public Law 111–199, will reduce the
formaldehyde levels even further to
levels that are comparable to
unadulterated wood. We also have
limited data on the formaldehyde levels
in traditional fuels. Specifically, we
have limited data that natural wood has
between 0.6 and 8.5 ppm of
formaldehyde,101 but we have no data
101 Weigl, M., R. Wimmer, E. Sykacek, and M.
Steinwender, 2009. ‘‘Wood-borne formaldehyde
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on formaldehyde levels in other
traditional fuels, such as coal, oil, and
natural gas. We do know, however, that
organic materials produce
formaldehyde. For example, studies
have shown that formaldehyde is
generated from coal piles.102
Thus, considering the fact that new
rules will reduce the amount of
formaldehyde to levels comparable to
unadulterated wood, we have
concluded that resinated wood residuals
when burned as a fuel by the generator
or outside the control of the generator
and not discarded should be considered
a non-waste fuel. However, as we have
noted elsewhere, the generator of these
secondary materials would still need to
demonstrate that such residuals meet
the legitimacy criteria. Thus, they
would need to show that the levels of
formaldehyde, as well as other possible
contaminants, in the resinated wood
residuals are at levels comparable to
those found in traditional fuels, which
in this case would be natural wood. We
would note that we would not consider
levels of formaldehyde of 200 ppm or
slightly less to be comparable since the
levels in unadulterated wood are at least
two orders of magnitude lower. The
levels would need to be lower to be
considered comparable to those found
in natural wood.
Comment: The comments indicated
that resinated wood residuals have
about 5 percent moisture content, with
heating values typically between 8,500–
9,000 Btu/lb (as fired). This fuel value
is equal to or better than unadulterated
wood, which has higher moisture
content.
The comments also argue that
resinated wood residuals are managed
as a commodity as they are typically
pneumatically transferred through
ducts, stored temporarily in a fuel silo,
and then utilized in boilers to provide
heat to hot presses and dryers. In fact,
wood product plants have been
designed so as to specifically utilize
varying with species, wood grade, and cambial age,’’
Forest Products Journal 59(1/2) 88–92.
Meyer, B. and C. Boehme, 1997. ‘‘Formaldehyde
Emission from Solid Wood,’’ Forest Products
Journal 47(5) 45–48.
Killiam, B. ‘‘Background Formaldehyde Emissions
for Solid Wood,’’ Temple-Inland Forest Products
Corporation, Diboll, TX.
102 Cohen, H. and U. Green, 2009. ‘‘Oxidative
decomposition of formaldehyde catalyzed by
bituminous coal,’’ Energy Fuels 23(6) 3078–3082.
Nehemia, V., S. Davidi, and H. Cohen, 1999.
‘‘Emission of hydrogen gas from weathered steam
coal piles via formaldehyde as a precursor: I.
Oxidative decomposition of formaldehyde
catalyzed by coal—batch reactor studies,’’ Fuel,
78(7) 775–780.
Nehemia, V., 1997. ‘‘Oxidative decomposition of
formaldehyde catalyzed by coal,’’ Fuel and Energy
Abstracts 38(6) p. 386.
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these residuals that the process creates
and would not be able to operate as
designed without this material.
EPA’s Response: The heating value
range presented (8,500–9,000 Btu/lb)
indicates that resinated wood residuals
meet the meaningful heating value
criterion as it is greater than the heating
value of unadulterated wood. We also
agree with the commenters that
resinated wood residuals meet the
legitimacy criterion for being managed
as a valuable commodity since these
residuals are managed as a primary fuel
for wood products manufacturers. We
acknowledge that wood products
manufacturing plants were specifically
designed to burn these resinated wood
residuals to power the facility. In
addition, wood product manufacturers
have designed their plants to use their
residuals (including placing the material
in silos and transferring the material via
conveyor belts and ducts) that supply
the process both as a raw material and
as a fuel, indicating that the resinated
wood residuals are managed as a
valuable commodity.
Comment: Commenters referred to
studies that show that the combustion of
resinated wood residuals does not
produce adverse air emissions.
Specifically, EPA’s ‘‘Wood Products in
the Waste Stream—Characterization and
Combustion Emissions’’ (1996) describes
studies that were conducted to
determine if various types of wood
produce more non-criteria air pollutants
than typical wood sources. Air
emissions and fuel materials were
sampled at six different processors and
boilers. Fuel materials that were used at
the boilers were a mixture of wood
produced at construction and
demolition sites at the time:
Unadulterated lumber, treated wood
(including CCA-treated wood), resinated
wood residuals, and painted wood
(including lead-based paint). The study
concludes that organic compounds that
are emitted include aldehydes, benzene,
phenol, and polynuclear aromatic
hydrocarbons (PAH). These compounds
are formed as products of incomplete
combustion and did not appear to be a
function of the woods composition or
source. Instead, they appear to be an
indicator of combustion inefficiency.
‘‘Good’’ combustion conditions appear to
minimize organic emissions. Metals
usually found in wood combustor
particulate include As, Cr, Cu, Pb, Zn,
Al, Ti, Fe, and Mg. Metals were found
to be higher in samples taken, although
this could be a result of the inclusion of
treated wood in the samples combusted.
Metals control efficiency appears to be
roughly equivalent to total particulate
control efficiency. Chlorinated organic
compounds, such as dioxins, furans,
polychlorinated biphenyls, chlorinated
phenols, and chlor-benzenes were
measured at extremely low
concentrations or were reported to be
less than minimum detection limits.
One commenter argued that, since
resins contain only carbon, hydrogen,
oxygen, and nitrogen, the wood and its
adhesives will convert to carbon
dioxide, water, and nitrogen oxides
(which would be produced even if
nitrogen is not present in the fuel, since
nitrogen represents approximately 80%
of air) under normal conditions that
normally occur in industrial wood
combustion units. Thus, the products of
combustion from wood are the same
from the adhesives. Adhesives are
expected to be more combustible than
wood, due to their simpler structure and
lower molecular weights. Conditions
which assure the complete combustion
of wood are adequate to assure the
complete combustion of these
adhesives. Although it is possible that
different types of compounds could be
produced from the adhesives than from
wood and that more of certain types of
compounds might be produced from
one fuel or another, there does not
appear to be any scientific basis for a
presumption that emissions from
incompletely combusted adhesives are
more harmful than emissions from
incompletely combusted wood. In fact,
the results of toxicity studies
commissioned by National Forest
Products Association in response to
New York State law which requires
manufacturers to provide data on the
toxicity of smoke from their products
indicate that smoke from glued wood
products is no more toxic than wood
smoke. There are a few halogencontaining synthetic polymers, such as
polytetrafluorethylene, which can
produce more hazardous fumes, but
they are not normally used in wood
products.
The commenter also submitted data
on HCl and NOX emissions from
burning sander dust that was not yet
published. Emissions from five
combustion systems that burned a
combination of sander dust and hog fuel
were sampled. One test was run only
using hog fuel (which consisted
primarily of bark). Results are presented
in Table 3. The commenter argued that
these results prove that HCl and NOX
emissions from the combustion of
resinated wood residuals are
comparable to the combustion of hog
fuel alone. In fact, the three samples that
contained the lowest percentages of
sander dust (0%, 15%, and 25%)
produced the greatest percentages of
chloride in the fuel emitted as HCl and
nitrogen in the fuel that was
subsequently emitted as NOX.
TABLE 3—EMISSIONS DATA FROM SIX COMBUSTORS THAT BURNED HOG FUEL OR A COMBINATION OF HOG FUEL AND
SANDER DUST
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Sample number
1
Fuel mixture, %Hog fuel/Sander dust ......................................................
Hog Fuel content (%, dry basis):
Chloride .............................................................................................
Nitrogen ............................................................................................
Sulfur .................................................................................................
Sander dust content (%, dry basis):
Chloride .............................................................................................
Nitrogen ............................................................................................
Sulfur .................................................................................................
Total Fuel Content (lb/hr):
Chloride .............................................................................................
Nitrogen ............................................................................................
HCl ....................................................................................................
NOX ...................................................................................................
Emissions (lb/MMBtu):
HCl ....................................................................................................
NOX ...................................................................................................
% of Cl in Fuel Emitted as HCl ...............................................................
% of N in Fuel Emitted as NOX ...............................................................
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4
5
6
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0.01
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0.05
0.02
0.56
0.03
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................
................
0.18
3.7
0.05
0.18
3.7
0.05
0.16
3.2
0.06
0.15
3.4
0.04
0.15
3.8
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49
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26
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31
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45
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151
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48
5.6
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53
0.0024
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3.5
15.7
0.0012
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10.1
0.0015
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1.7
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0.75
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EPA’s Response: We recognize that
the studies have shown that there are
decreased HAP emissions from burning
resinated wood residuals. As we have
stated previously, however, the criterion
or test in determining the legitimacy
criterion is based on the level of
contaminants in the secondary material
itself, and not by comparing the
differences in emissions. We believe
that in order for a non-hazardous
secondary material to be considered a
non-waste fuel, it must be similar in
composition, whereas comparing the
emissions profiles between combustion
units that burn traditional fuels and
non-hazardous secondary materials only
tells one how well the combustion unit
is operating, not what the material is
that is being burned. Thus, while the
Agency recognizes that such emissions
data can be useful in determining
whether or not burning such material
presents a risk to human health or the
environment, we believe it says nothing
in terms of whether or not the nonhazardous secondary material is a
legitimate non-waste fuel (see also
Section V.D.3 discussion on legitimacy
criteria).
In response to some of the specific
comments made, we would note that
none of the studies or data provided
information on formaldehyde emissions,
the HAP that we identified that we were
most concerned with in the proposal.103
While the EPA study did state that
organics were not detected above typical
wood fuel, it is not possible to ascertain
what percentage of the material that was
burned was represented by resinated
wood residuals. Thus, we do not know
how much resinated wood materials
were in the samples that were tested
and how it correlates to the emissions
data.
We also acknowledge that resins are
made from H, N, C, and O. However, our
concern rests with the amount of
formaldehyde (which is a HAP and also
is made of H, C, and O) that is generated
in the stack. While formaldehyde may
be generated as a product of incomplete
combustion, it may also be emitted from
the stack if it is present in the fuel
material and is not combusted at all. In
other words, if some of the
formaldehyde escapes combustion
while in the fuel chamber and is emitted
in the stack, more formaldehyde is
likely to escape. A unit combusting 10
tons of formaldehyde is likely to result
in more formaldehyde emissions than a
unit combusting one ton of
formaldehyde simply due to the fact
that there is more formaldehyde in the
fuel. Therefore, none of the information
provided addresses our concern
regarding formaldehyde emissions.
However, given that Public Law 111–
199 will decrease formaldehyde levels
in the resinated wood residuals, the
combustion of resinated wood residuals
should not increase the amount of
formaldehyde that is emitted.
7. Used Oil
In the ANPRM, EPA had stated that
off-specification (or ‘‘off-spec’’) used oil
that is collected from repair shops is
generally thought to be originally
discarded, but that on-specification (or
‘‘on-spec’’) used oil was considered to be
a product fuel, not a waste, because it
meets the fuel specification
requirements of 40 CFR 279.11.104
However, between the ANPRM and the
proposal, EPA modified its view of onspec used oil and identified it as a
traditional fuel because the Agency had
decided that the on-spec used oil is
similar in composition to virgin fuel oil
and has been historically managed as a
valuable fuel product rather than as a
waste.105
While EPA considers on-spec used oil
to be an alternative fuel and thus,
within our definition of traditional fuel
(see Section VII.A), the Agency finds
that the rationale in the ANPRM also
provides a valid reason for considering
on-spec used oil to be a legitimate
product fuel and not a solid waste. The
proposal also referred to the provisions
of 40 CFR Part 279 that allows offspecification used oil to be processed
into on-specification used oil.106 Used
oil may be rendered on-specification,
therefore, either by being generated that
way or by being processed under
existing EPA regulations. These
circumstances are not changed by EPA’s
issuing today’s rule.
On the other hand, based on the
information received and the record
established for this rulemaking, we still
consider off-spec used oil to be a solid
waste, as off-spec used oil contains
contaminants at levels that are not
comparable to those in traditional fuels.
Under the existing used oil regulations
promulgated under RCRA, off-spec used
oil can only be used in limited devices,
as identified in 40 CFR 279.61,
including small oil-fired space heaters
provided the burner meets the
provisions of 40 CFR 279.23.
EPA reiterates that the determination
as to the waste status of used oil does
not reopen the regulations in Part 279.
Those regulations remain in place. This
rule considers the waste status for
104 See
74 FR at 58.
75 FR 31855, 31861, 31864.
106 75 FR 31865, 31877.
105 See
103 75
FR 31862.
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purposes of CAA sections 112 and 129
based on the existing regulations.
Further, EPA is specifically clarifying in
this final rule that used oil combusted
in an oil-fired space heater that meets
the provisions of 40 CFR 279.23 need
not be tested to establish whether or not
such oil is on or off-spec. This includes
used oil generated by small facilities
such as auto repair shops and machine
shops that have such units, and used
oil-generated by homeowners who
change their own oil (referred to as ‘‘doit-yourself’’ or ‘‘DIY’’ oil) that are burned
in such units. This is because the CISWI
regulations promulgated elsewhere in
the Federal Register today do not
establish emissions limits for such
units, and therefore the concerns of the
commenters that such units would have
to comply with CAA Section 129
standards have been addressed for this
population of combustion units.
Comment: Many argued that all used
oil is a traditional fuel and should not
be considered a solid waste regardless of
its chemical composition, as it is treated
as a valuable product no different than
virgin fuel oil. Thus, some commenters
agreed with EPA that on-spec used oil
is a traditional fuel, but disagreed with
the Agency’s determination that off-spec
used oil is a solid waste.
Other commenters believe that that
used oil, both on- and off-spec, falls
within the ‘‘ordinary everyday sense’’ of
discarded materials whether they are
burned or not and that all used oil
should be classified as a solid waste.
Indeed, EPA does not identify any
situation in which these secondary
materials are not wastes, except when
they are burned for energy recovery.
Thus, EPA is essentially claiming that
non-hazardous secondary materials,
including used oil, which would
otherwise indisputably be wastes
become non-wastes solely because they
can be burned with energy recovery.
Neither RCRA nor any of the case law
interpreting RCRA lends the slightest
support to that notion.
EPA’s Response: We disagree that offspec used oil should be considered a
traditional fuel, or even a non-waste
fuel, since as we have discussed
elsewhere in the preamble, such used
oil contains contaminants at levels that
are not comparable to (or lower than) in
traditional virgin refined fuel oil. In fact,
off-spec used oil may contain
contaminants at levels that are
significantly higher than those in
traditional virgin refined fuel oil. On the
other hand, used oil that has been
determined to be on-spec contains
contaminants at levels below the
maximum concentration limits
established in the standards, levels that
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EPA considers to be comparable to (or
less than) those in traditional virgin
refined fuel oil.107 In accordance with
40 CFR part 279, once used oil is
determined to be on-spec, it is no longer
regulated under the used oil
management standards.108
We also disagree that we are defining
the use of used oil as fuel oil as the only
situation where used oil is not a solid
waste. RCRA is silent on the issue of
whether or not used oil is or is not a
solid waste. This rulemaking effort is
the first to determine in which
situations used oil would be considered
a solid waste. Additionally, 40 CFR part
279 puts no restrictions on the use of
on-spec used oil once it has been
determined to be on-spec, which
indicates that the Agency has
historically viewed this material as a
commodity and not a waste. We are also
simply not opining on other situations
where used oil is used beyond its use as
fuel as it does not matter for federal law.
States may make their own decisions on
whether other uses are solid wastes.
Comment: Industry commenters argue
that off-specification used oil should not
be considered a solid waste for a
number of reasons relating to the statute
and EPA regulations, as well as policy
preferences. (We elaborate and respond
to each of the comments separately,
below. The comments also refer to onspecification used oil in much of the
argument, but we have dealt with onspecification used oil above. Thus, the
comments and responses below only
deal with off-specification used oil
issues.)
Comment: Section 3014 of RCRA did
not classify used oil as a waste and
instead established a separate regulatory
program for used oil. This section
provides EPA with authority to regulate
used oil that is recycled, independent of
any determination whether or not used
oil is a waste. Moreover, RCRA section
1004(37) defines used oil to include
‘‘recycled oil’’ that is ‘‘burned.’’
Consistent with this provision, the used
oil regulations in 40 CFR part 279 state
‘‘EPA presumes that used oil is to be
recycled unless a used oil handler
disposes of used oil, or sends used oil
for disposal.’’ 40 CFR 279.10(a). The
commenters claim that these provisions
mean that ‘‘disposal’’ is separate from
107 See Used Oil Final Rule, 50 FR 49181
(November 29, 1985).
108 Once used oil is claimed to be on-spec and the
marketer complies with the requirements for
analysis and record retention, notification, and
record tracking shipment to on-specification
burners, it is no longer subject to other management
standards. We note that today’s rule does not
change any of the regulations in place that regulate
on-spec used oil.
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‘‘burning’’ because ‘‘disposal’’ must be
separate from ‘‘recycling.’’ Thus,
‘‘recycling’’ is separate from ‘‘solid
waste’’ because the two terms are
mutually exclusive.
In addition, the 40 CFR part 279
regulations already define what is
legitimate used oil recycling under
section 3014 of RCRA, which includes
recycling of off-specification used oil
with appropriate environmental
safeguards. EPA cannot now reverse this
determination without a reasoned
analysis.
Another provision of EPA’s hazardous
waste regulations, 40 CFR section
261.33, supports this position with
respect to whether off-specification used
oil is a solid waste. Under this
provision, commercial chemical
products and intermediates and offspecification variants listed as
hazardous wastes in 40 CFR 261.33, as
well as some other materials not
relevant here, are solid wastes when
burned for energy recovery unless the
commercial chemicals are themselves
fuels. Commercial chemicals that are
themselves fuels are not wastes when
burned for energy recovery. According
to the comments, even off-specification
variants of the commercial chemical
products may be burned as fuels and not
be considered solid waste. See 40 CFR
261.33(a) and (b); 40 CFR
261.2(c)(2)(B)(ii). The argument is that
off-specification used oil should also be
treated as a non-waste when burned for
energy recovery. That is, used oil, even
if off-specification, should be
considered a product and not a waste
under the rationale that used oil is a
commercial chemical product. Further,
EPA should not treat off-specification
potentially hazardous wastes different
from off-specification non-hazardous
wastes.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees that
this analysis of the statute and
regulations shows that off-specification
used oil is not a solid waste. The
Agency agrees that section 3014 of
RCRA does not classify used oil as
either a waste or a commodity.
However, section 1004(37), also, does
not define ‘‘recycled oil’’ as either a
waste or a commodity. As EPA has
explained elsewhere in this preamble,
the recycling of secondary materials, per
se, does not mean that such materials
are either wastes or not. Wastes may
have value and may be recycled, but
they are still wastes. Used oil may be
recycled by being ‘‘burned,’’ as provided
under 1004(37), or may be recycled in
any number of other ways. The mere
fact that the secondary material is
recycled is not dispositive for
determining whether it is a waste. Thus,
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15503
under the statute, contrary to the
commenter’s view, ‘‘recycling’’ and
‘‘solid waste’’ are not mutually
exclusive. This means that EPA must
decide whether the secondary material
is a waste based on the definition of
solid waste in RCRA 1004(27) by
deciding whether material is
‘‘discarded’’ in the plain meaning of the
word.
Similarly, part 279 does not provide
that the terms, ‘‘recycling’’ and ‘‘solid
waste,’’ are mutually exclusive. Section
279.10(a) does distinguish between
materials that are clearly ‘‘disposed of’’
by, for example, being thrown into a
landfill, but makes no determination as
to whether recycled secondary material
is ‘‘discarded’’ in any other sense. Both
ILCO and Owen Steel, for example,
provide examples of recycling of wastes.
As EPA continues to emphasize, wastes
may be recycled even by being burned
for energy recovery, but they are still
wastes.
As mentioned above, based on the
information received and the record
established for this rulemaking, we have
concluded that off-spec used oil does
not meet the legitimacy criteria. EPA
has determined that off-specification
used oil is a solid waste when burned
for energy recovery because it has
greater contaminant levels than fuel oils
and its markets are limited due to this
contamination. In particular, 40 CFR
part 279 restricts the burning of offspecification used oil to industrial
furnaces, industrial boilers, utility
boilers, certain used oil-fired space
heaters, and hazardous waste
incinerators and specifically excludes
non-industrial boilers, such as those
located in apartment and office
buildings, schools, and hospitals. For a
more detailed discussion of off-spec
used oil, see 75 FR 31865. Onspecification used oil, on the other
hand, is not a waste because it has
contaminant concentrations similar to
fuel oils. Due to this, 40 CFR part 279
does not restrict where on-specification
used oil can be burned. The definitions
cited by the commenters in the statute
and regulations do not affect these
determinations.
Section 261.33, also, does not affect
EPA’s interpretation of the waste status
of used oil. That provision deals with
hazardous wastes and EPA has
repeatedly stated that it is not reopening
its RCRA subtitle C regulations for
comment. In any event, however,
section 261.33 provides that chemicals
manufactured as a fuel may be burned
for energy recovery. It does not apply to
secondary materials that may later be
used as fuels when their original use
was different.
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Furthermore, EPA is not making any
changes to 40 CFR part 279 by virtue of
this rule. The Agency is not reversing
itself on any part of 40 CFR part 279.
Also, 40 CFR part 279 makes no
determination regarding the nature of
the CAA regulations for any facilities
that burn used oil and EPA is not
amending 40 CFR part 279 to state
whether any used oil is a waste or not.
Based on the current provisions of
40 CFR part 279, it is entirely reasonable
for the Agency to find that onspecification used oil is not a waste,
while off-specification used oil is a
waste. Also, we would note that off-spec
used oil may still be burned in the same
types of facilities provided in 40 CFR
part 279, but the CAA must determine
how they are to be controlled based on
the fact that the off-spec used oil is a
waste.
Comment: If EPA classifies burning
off-specification used oil as a waste, it
will no longer be covered by the
Part 279 Used Oil Management
Standards. As EPA noted when it
promulgated the Part 279 Used Oil
Management Standards, section 3014
only authorizes the regulation of oil that
is destined for recycling, not oil that is
‘‘discarded.’’
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
this comment. As noted above, EPA is
not changing the used oil regulations
and off-spec used oil burned as a waste
would still be subject to 40 CFR part
279. The commenter is conflating the
clear disposal of used oil—throwing it
in a landfill, for example—with the
concept of ‘‘discard.’’ ‘‘Discard’’ is not
used in 40 CFR part 279 and ‘‘disposal’’
is not a congruent term to ‘‘discard.’’
That is, the regulations at 40 CFR part
279 do not discuss or address whether
used oil has been discarded; rather the
requirements ensure that used oil that is
recycled is done so in a manner that
protects human health and the
environment.
Also, as noted repeatedly in the
rulemaking record, wastes may be
recycled as a fuel, but they would still
be wastes and would be discarded. The
determination in this rule that off-spec
used oil is a waste only means that the
facilities that burn it are burning it as a
waste and they will be subject to the
appropriate CAA authorities. EPA has
not previously opined as to the
consequences under the CAA of the
various facilities that burn used oil.
Comment: If EPA fails to classify offspecification used oil as a product, it
will be in violation of the Congressional
mandate to promulgate regulations that
‘‘do not discourage the recovery or
recycling of used oil, consistent with the
protection of human health and the
environment.’’ 42 U.S.C. 6935(a).
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
this comment. The Agency is
constrained by the provisions of RCRA
that define solid waste as material that
is discarded. Furthermore, we feel the
definitions established in this
rulemaking in fact do not discourage the
recovery or recycling of used oil. For
example, EPA is specifically clarifying
in this final rule that used oil
combusted in an oil-fired space heater
that meets the provisions of 40 CFR
279.23 need not be tested to establish
whether or not such oil is on or off-spec.
This includes used oil generated by
small facilities such as auto repair shops
and machine shops that have such
units, and used oil-generated by
homeowners who change their own oil
(referred to as ‘‘do-it-yourself’’ or ‘‘DIY’’
oil) that are burned in such units. This
is because the CISWI regulations
promulgated elsewhere in the Federal
Register today do not establish
emissions limits for such units, and
therefore the concerns of the
commenters that such units would have
to comply with CAA Section 129
standards have been addressed for this
population of combustion units.
Comment: Commenters argued that
contaminant concentrations found in
‘‘off-spec used oil’’ is comparable to
traditional fuels. While commenters
submitted studies that looked at both
on-spec and off-spec used oil to support
this assertion, Table 4 only summarizes
data presented in the comments on the
contaminant levels in off-spec used oil
as compared to fuel oil and coal. In
U.S. Study 1, 55 samples were collected
‘‘throughout the USA’’ from facilities
that combust used oil in space heaters
and/or small boilers. Two of the 55
samples were off-spec; one was off-spec
for total halogens and the other was offspec for cadmium. The researchers
identified the off-spec used oil for total
halogens was an industrial oil that
contains non-hazardous chlorinated
paraffin and the other was from a
military operation. Table 4 presents the
data on the two samples that were offspec. In the U.S. Study 2, researchers
looked at a database of used oil samples
maintained by a national commercial
laboratory. The database contained over
3,500 used oil samples from the U.S.
and other countries on which over
17,000 analyses were performed from
2008 to present. Between 24 and 53
samples in this dataset exceed the
specification for one of the
contaminants—specifically for total
halogens and chromium. The
researchers speculated that the high
levels of halogens were due to nonhazardous chlorinated paraffin which is
used (added to the oil by lubricant
manufacturers) in industrial oils
designed to encounter high pressure.
The researchers did not speculate on the
reasons for the high levels of chromium.
Table 4 presents the data on the off-spec
samples, only. In the Canadian study,
230 samples of used oil were collected
from various businesses in Ontario,
Canada between 2003 and 2010. Of
those samples, four were off-spec for
arsenic, but not by significant amounts.
The commenters did not speculate on
the reasons for the high levels of
arsenic. Table 4 presents the results of
the analysis of the four off-spec samples.
TABLE 4—CONTAMINANT CONCENTRATIONS IN OFF-SPEC USED OIL AND TRADITIONAL FUELS
U.S.
study 2 110
# Samples ......................................................................................................
Year ................................................................................................................
Containment Concentrations:
Total Halogens (ppm):
2
2010
24–53
2010
4
2003–2010
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown.
Unknown.
Minimum ..........................................................................................
Maximum .........................................................................................
Median .............................................................................................
Average ...........................................................................................
2,700
6,170
4,435
4,435
NR
NR
6,642
9,409
42.2
151.0
80.5
88.6
<500
13,140
As (ppm):
Minimum ..........................................................................................
<1.0
NR
5.1
<2.3
1.0—120
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Canadian
study 111
Fuel oil
No.
1,2,4,6 112
U.S.
study 1 109
Material
21MRR3
Coal 113
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TABLE 4—CONTAMINANT CONCENTRATIONS IN OFF-SPEC USED OIL AND TRADITIONAL FUELS—Continued
Canadian
study 111
Fuel oil
No.
1,2,4,6 112
U.S.
study 1 109
U.S.
study 2 110
Maximum .........................................................................................
Median .............................................................................................
Average ...........................................................................................
<1.0
<1.0
<1.0
NR
<1.0
1.95
6.7
6.1
6.0
Cd (ppm):
Minimum ..........................................................................................
Maximum .........................................................................................
Median .............................................................................................
Average ...........................................................................................
0.30
2.60
1.45
1.45
NR
NR
0.13
0.69
<0.92
<1
0.97
0.97
<1.2
0.2—5.0
CR (ppm):
Minimum ..........................................................................................
Maximum .........................................................................................
Median .............................................................................................
Average ...........................................................................................
<4.0
<4.0
<4.0
<4.0
NR
NR
16.0
20.9
<1.2
2.2
2.0
2.0
<2.3
1.0—90
Pb (ppm):
Minimum ..........................................................................................
Maximum .........................................................................................
Median .............................................................................................
Average ...........................................................................................
14
15
15
15
NR
NR
11.0
35.2
<4.6
17.0
5.6
8.2
7–57
0.5–0.9
Material
Coal 113
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NR = Not Reported.
EPA’s Response: While data was
submitted regarding higher levels of
contaminants in coal than in off-spec
used oil, coal is not an appropriate
comparison for used oil since some
combustion units that burn used oil can
alternatively only burn fuel oil and not
coal (such as space heaters). Thus, used
oil should be compared to fuel oil. The
specifications promulgated under 40
CFR 279.11 were developed by looking
at contaminants in fuel oil and the risks
posed by those contaminants. The data
submitted states that the average total
halogen content of off-spec used oil
from one study is 9,409 ppm (with the
on-spec concentration of 4,000 ppm
maximum). Also, off-spec used oil
contains as much as 21 ppm of Cr, on
average, (with the on-spec concentration
of 10 ppm maximum). Thus, off-spec
used oil does not meet the legitimacy
criterion for contaminants.
When EPA created the specification
levels set in 40 CFR 279.11, it identified
those levels as being comparable to fuel
oils. EPA maintains that these levels are
appropriate standards to measure what
should and should not be burned in
CAA section 112 and 129 units. Thus,
off-spec used oil (those oils that do not
meet the specification levels set in 40
CFR 279.11) is deemed to have more
contaminants than fuel oils produced
109 Source:
EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–0799.2
EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–1273.1
Attachment B
111 Source: EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–0799.4
112 Source: EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–0799.2,
EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–1273.1, Attachment B
113 Ibid.
110 Source:
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for burning and, therefore, are a solid
waste.
Comment: EPA is ignoring the fact
that the level of contaminants in a
secondary material is not dispositive of
whether or not a secondary material is
a waste. It is merely an indicator of
whether or not EPA should look more
closely at the recycling activity when
making the waste determination. Levels
of contaminants only insignificantly
higher than those found in traditional
fuels hardly imply a purpose of
disposal, assuming the secondary
material being combusted is otherwise a
valuable fuel. Only when a material
contains contaminants at significantly
elevated levels does it begin to become
reasonable to presume that there may be
an intention to discard.
EPA’s Response: We agree that
contaminant levels are an indicator of
waste activity and we have investigated
the case of off-spec used oil to fully
assess if its use in a combustion unit is
truly a waste activity. As a result of our
investigation, it is clear from the data in
Table 4 that off-spec used oil does not
contain comparable levels of
contaminants to fuel oils.
Comment: In the context of
determining whether a hazardous
secondary material is a solid waste, EPA
recognizes that legitimate recycling can
occur even if the material has higher
levels of toxics than virgin materials. To
show this, the comment cites a
discussion by the Agency in an earlier
rule in which foundry sands are reused
for mold making in a facility’s sand
loop. The comment argues that it is
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relevant that the sands used to make the
molds may have significantly higher
concentrations of hazardous
constituents than virgin sand. However,
because the sand is part of an industrial
process where there is little chance of
the hazardous constituents being
released into the environment or
causing damage to human health and
the environment, these levels would not
affect the legitimacy of the recycling
process.
EPA’s Response: EPA disagrees with
this comment. In the first place, the
Agency is not reopening its hazardous
waste regulation. EPA’s identification of
the legitimacy criteria is based on the
record for today’s action, and does not
address hazardous waste. In any event,
the discussion of foundry sand
contamination, even though it would be
a hazardous waste without application
of the legitimacy criteria for that rule,
presents what appears to be a vastly
different recycling situation. In this rule,
combustion will result in releases to the
air. This is why the rule calls for
restrictions on burning. The foundry
sand example is a closed loop system
and is not implicated by contamination
problems that releases lead to the
atmosphere. We would also note that in
a March 28, 2001 letter from Elizabeth
Cotsworth, then Director of the Office of
Solid Waste and Eric Schaeffer, then
Director of the Office of Regulatory
Enforcement to Amy Blankenbiller of
the American Foundry Society, we also
discussed the use of foundry sand as
part of the sand loop for mold-making
being part of a continuous industrial
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process.114 However, the letter also
made clear that the letter did not
address the thermal processing of sand,
which would be a combustion unit, and
would be more equivalent to a scenario
that is addressed in today’s final rule.
Comment: Commenters argued that
processing of off-spec used oil is
contrary to the goals of energy efficiency
and wise resource utilization. They
argued that the rule should continue to
allow/follow the rules set forth in 40
CFR 279.11 as it pertains to used oil as
a viable and not discarded fuel. That is,
if off-spec used oil is blended with
virgin oil or on-spec used oil to meet the
40 CFR part 279 used oil specs, the
resulting oil should be considered a
legitimate fuel product.
Other commenters argued, however,
that when these materials are distilled
into fuel, they are still wastes, regardless
if they have been blended or processed
to obtain an on-spec material. Wastes
are always wastes and their status
cannot be changed through simple
processing.
EPA’s Response: Whether or not
processing of used oil is contrary to the
goals of energy efficiency, off-spec used
oil contains more contaminants than
traditional fuels, and thus, is not a
traditional fuel. In addition, as we have
stated previously, the regulations at 40
CFR part 279 do not discuss or address
whether used oil has been discarded, as
commenters have claimed, but rather
ensure that used oil that is recycled is
conducted in a manner that protects
human health and the environment. To
that end, we encourage, and the RCRA
used oil regulations currently allow, the
processing of off-spec oil to create onspec used oil as per 40 CFR 279.50,
which states that processing ‘‘includes,
but is not limited to: blending used oil
with virgin petroleum products,
blending used oils to meet the fuel
specification, filtration, simple
distillation, chemical or physical
separation and re-refining.’’ There is
nothing in today’s rule that would
change this requirement.
We also disagree with commenters
that processing of off-spec used oil into
on-spec used oil still renders it a waste.
EPA’s regulations at 40 CFR 279.11 state
that, once oil is determined to be onspecification in accordance with the
regulations in Part 279, the used oil
regulations do not apply to the material.
On-specification used oil is for all
intents and purposes the same as oil
refined as a product fuel in the first
instance and the Agency is not
114 A
copy of this letter can be found in the
docket to today’s rule.
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reopening its 40 CFR part 279
regulations.
Comment: Commenters argued that
used oil, particularly from automobiles,
is on-specification and facilities that
burn automobile oil should be allowed
to burn them under CAA section 112,
along with other on-spec used oil.
Comments base this determination on
the elimination of leaded gasoline.
Commenters also supplied studies to
support this assertion.115
EPA’s Response: The data provided in
the comments indicates that a very
small portion of used oil is off-spec.
Assuming the data is representative of
used oil, most used oil will be an
alternative fuel (within the definition of
a traditional fuel). This does not allow
us to make a broad classification that,
because only a small portion of used oil
is off-spec, used oil can be generally
classified as on-spec. On the other hand,
the data in the studies submitted by
commenters indicate that used oil
obtained from small, private
automobiles serviced by DIYers and
auto repair shops will be on-spec, which
would not be a solid waste. In addition,
as we describe elsewhere in today’s
preamble, persons can submit a nonwaste determination petition if they
believe that their used oil is not a waste.
Comment: Many commenters stated
that there are numerous auto repair
shops that use used oil to fuel their
space heaters, which do not (or would
not likely) meet the air pollution
controls required by the CAA section
129 standards. The commenters argue
that such auto repair shops will no
longer be able to use off-spec used oil
in their space heaters if off-spec used oil
is determined to be a solid waste.
Moreover, commenters assert that
auto repair shops will likely not want to
take on the additional burden of testing
the used oil to determine if it is on-spec
in order to use some portion of the
material in their space heaters without
having to comply with the CAA section
129 standards. They further assert that
these shops may illegally dispose of
used oil if they cannot burn it in their
space heaters and they are not located
near a processor. Commenters expressed
concerns that they may also stop
collecting used oil from individuals
who remove their own used oil (do-ityourselfers, or DIYers) as they have no
incentive to take the DIYers oil, which
may lead to DIYers illegally disposing of
their used oil.
EPA’s Response: In this rule, EPA
determined whether off-specification
115 See documents EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–
0799; EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–1273.1; EPA–
HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–1686.
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used oil is a solid waste. However,
EPA’s regulations promulgated today
under CAA 129 do not apply to space
heaters. Thus, today’s rule would not in
any way change the current regulatory
scheme or operations for burning of
used oil in space heaters since the
Agency is not promulgating emission
standards for such units.
In particular, EPA is specifically
clarifying in this final rule that used oil
combusted in an oil-fired space heater
that meets the provisions of 40 CFR
279.23 need not be tested to establish
whether or not such oil is on or off-spec.
This includes used oil generated by
small facilities such as auto repair shops
and machine shops that have such
units, and used oil-generated by
homeowners who change their own oil
(referred to as ‘‘do-it-yourself’’ or ‘‘DIY’’
oil) that are burned in such units. This
is because the CISWI regulations
promulgated elsewhere in the Federal
Register today do not establish
emissions limits for such units, and
therefore the concerns of the
commenters that such units would have
to comply with CAA Section 129
standards have been addressed for this
population of combustion units.
EPA also points out that anyone
wishing to show that the material is onspec does not have to test the used oil,
but can use other information besides
analyses. Specifically, the existing
regulation under 40 CFR 279.72 states
that used oil fuel can be determined to
be on-spec by ‘‘performing analyses or
obtaining copies of analyses or other
information documenting that the used
oil fuel meets specifications.’’
8. Coal Refuse 116
Coal refuse refers to any by-product of
coal mining or coal cleaning operations.
Coal refuse is generally defined by a
minimum ash content combined with a
maximum heating value, measured on a
dry basis. Coal refuse consists primarily
of non-combustible rock with attached
coal that could not be effectively
separated in the era in which it was
mined. Due to advances in coal
preparation technology over the past
century, the processing of coal has
evolved such that materials that are now
generated in the coal mining process,
which would have been considered coal
mining rejects in the past and discarded
in waste piles, are now handled and
116 The proposed rule differentiated between coal
refuse and mined landfill ash. For a discussion
regarding the use of mined landfilled ash as a fuel,
see the coal combustion residuals section for fuels
(Section V.B.9); for a discussion regarding the use
of these non-hazardous secondary materials as
ingredients, see the coal combustion residuals
section for ingredients (Section V.C.2).
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processed as coal. In the early twentieth
century, coal preparation involved
simple size segregation into lump coal
for domestic use and intermediate-sized
coal for industrial use. Coal fines were
considered unfit for use and were
disposed of as mine rejects in discarded
coal refuse piles. Today, however, coal
preparation plants are much more
capable of separating coal from mineral
matter through processes, such as
density separation and froth flotation.117
Thus, the proposed rule differentiated
between coal refuse that is currently
generated and coal refuse that was
generated in the past and placed into
‘‘legacy’’ piles. The proposed rule
considered coal refuse that is currently
generated and used as a fuel as not
being abandoned or disposed of and,
therefore, is not considered a solid
waste. On the other hand, the proposed
rule stated that coal refuse placed in
legacy piles has clearly been discarded,
thus meeting the definition of a solid
waste material. With regard to coal
refuse from legacy piles, the proposed
rule described the processing of this
non-hazardous secondary material as
involving separation through the use of
screens or grizzlies, blending, crushing,
or drying. Although we understand that
virgin coal is similarly processed, the
proposal stated that the Agency believes
that such operations would constitute
‘‘minimal processing’’ and would not
meet the processing definition, as
proposed. Thus, under the proposed
rule, coal refuse abandoned in legacy
piles would be considered solid waste,
as would the coal refuse that has been
processed and used as a fuel in what
was considered to be a minimal set of
sizing activities.
The proposal also noted one
commenter who contended that coal
refuse contained elevated levels of
mercury, chromium, and lead when
compared to other coals. Because the
proposal already determined coal refuse
in legacy piles to be a solid waste
(discarded and insufficiently
processed), we did not believe it was
necessary to determine whether coal
refuse from legacy piles would satisfy
the contaminant legitimacy criterion.
However, the proposed rule noted that
although coal refuse can contain metals
concentrations that are higher than
found in virgin coal, data also show that
emissions levels from some facilities
burning coal refuse (namely those
117 See National Research Council of the National
Academies (NRC), ‘‘Coal Research and
Development,’’ 2007, accessed on May 14, 2008 at:
https://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11977.
See generally ‘‘Materials Characterization Paper on
Coal Refuse,’’ a copy of which is included in the
docket for today’s rulemaking.
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equipped with circulating fluidized
beds (CFBs)) are lower than most
existing pulverized coal utility boilers.
For the proposed rule’s characterization
of coal refuse, see 75 FR 31865–6.
Accordingly, the Agency seems to
have faced a dilemma in deciding how
to treat the ‘‘legacy’’ piles. This dilemma
was reflected in the comments,
described below, which shows an
inherent illogic in treating coal refuse
generated from mining operations today
and used as fuel differently from coal
refuse mined from the ‘‘legacy’’ piles,
which seem to be no different.
Comment: Responding to EPA’s
request for comment regarding whether
other fuels in use today should also be
classified as traditional fuels, several
commenters argued that coal refuse
should be considered a traditional fuel,
regardless of when generated, as it has
been used as a fuel for approximately 30
years. Citing the preamble to the
proposed rule, commenters stated that
EPA recognized that ‘‘changes in
technology and in the energy market
over time may result in additional
secondary materials being economically
viable to be used as ‘traditional’ fuels,’’
and that the advancement of technology,
specifically the advent of circulating
fluidized beds (CFBs), has allowed coal
refuse to be used as fuels for decades.118
Thus, these commenters reason, it is
most appropriate to consider coal refuse
to be a traditional fuel.
EPA’s Response: We begin by
recognizing that we have several
difficulties in dealing with coal refuse.
We are faced with a statute that places
limits on the Agency’s ability to cover
‘‘discarded’’ material. Case law indicates
that a material may not lose its waste
status merely because it has value. As
technology advances, material that has
been a waste may be no different from
material that may today be used as a
product. EPA, in fact, has no
jurisdiction to consider as wastes
currently mined coal that was formerly
‘‘refuse.’’
Coal refuse is unique, however, from
other non-hazardous secondary
materials addressed in this rulemaking,
as it is generated in the process of
producing fuels (i.e., the mining of coal
for use as fuel) and its subsequent use
and value as a secondary material is also
as a fuel. Since the primary product of
a coal mining operation is itself fuel, we
consider coal refuse to be more akin to
a raw material that is subsequently
processed and utilized to produce a
fuel. In other words, coal refuse is
different from other non-hazardous
118 Referenced citation can be found at 75 FR
31856.
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secondary materials, such as used tires
or resinated wood residuals, in that it is
generated in the production of fuel and
can be used itself as a fuel (and in fact
has never been used for anything else).
The two materials that are used in
major quantities today as valuable fuels,
but have formerly been discarded are
coal refuse and tires. A major difference
between these two materials that EPA
finds relevant is that the coal refuse in
the legacy piles has never been used for
anything else and is mined as fuel in the
first place. Tires, on the other hand, are
originally produced for a use that is
fundamentally different from its current
use as a fuel. Cement kiln users do not
ask tire manufacturers to produce tires
for burning in the kilns. Coal, however,
was never used for any other activity. It
was mined years ago to produce a fuel,
but may now be used itself as fuel.
Therefore, coal refuse is fundamentally
different from tires, as well as the other
non-hazardous secondary materials that
are discussed in the preamble to this
final rule.
Responding to commenters that also
noted that coal refuse has been used as
a fuel for thirty years due to advances
in technology, we find this information
useful, but not determinative in our
analysis of whether or not coal refuse
meets our definition of a traditional
fuel. However, the fact that coal refuse
has been used and managed as a fuel for
thirty years when coupled with the fact
that coal refuse is unique from other
non-hazardous secondary materials in
that it is a byproduct of fuel production
processes and is itself a raw material
that can be used as a fuel leads us to
determine that coal refuse that is
currently generated and used as a fuel
should be considered a traditional
‘‘alternative fuel.’’ However, coal refuse
that has been abandoned long ago in
legacy coal refuse piles would not be
considered a traditional fuel that is not
subject to coverage and assessment in
this rule, since it is clearly a material
that has been discarded in the first
instance.
We note that other non-hazardous
secondary materials have also been used
as fuels for similar lengths of time or
even longer, but would not be
considered traditional fuels. We again
emphasize that our decision to classify
coal refuse as an alternative fuel is
based both on the fact that it has been
used and managed as a fuel for thirty
years combined with the fact that we
find coal refuse to be distinctive among
the other non-hazardous secondary
materials at issue in today’s rule; i.e.,
coal refuse is in fact raw material coal
that is generated as a result of coal
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mining operations whose primary
product is fuel.
We also note that our characterization
of coal refuse that is currently generated
as an alternative fuel is not inconsistent
with the proposed rule’s
characterization of this material. The
proposed rule stated that currently
generated coal refuse would not be
abandoned or disposed of and,
therefore, not a solid waste. The
proposed rule did not, however,
specifically state that coal refuse that is
currently generated is a traditional fuel.
For clarity, it is appropriate to do so
today, and will amend our definition of
traditional fuels to also include
alternative fuels that reflect this
determination.
As previously discussed, coal refuse
that has been placed in legacy piles
would not meet the definition of
traditional fuels, as they clearly have
not been historically used and managed
as a fuel. It is clear that coal refuse
abandoned in legacy piles has been
discarded and managed as a waste. Our
rationale for this distinction between
coal refuse that is currently generated
and coal refuse that was placed in
legacy piles is further discussed in the
comment response below. Thus, coal
refuse that has been placed in legacy
piles would be considered solid waste
unless it is processed into a legitimate
fuel product. We respond to comments
received regarding the processing of
coal refuse later in this section.
Comment: Many commenters stated
that all coal refuse should be considered
a ‘‘fuel,’’ regardless of when the coal
refuse is generated and urged EPA to
eliminate the ‘‘false distinction’’ based
on when the coal was mined (i.e., coal
refuse that is mined from legacy piles
shares the same characteristics as coal
refuse that is generated today).
At least one commenter cited 40 CFR
60.41 as defining ‘‘fossil fuel’’ as ‘‘natural
gas, petroleum, coal, and any form of
solid, liquid, or gaseous fuel derived
from such materials for the purpose of
creating useful heat.’’ The commenter
went on to cite 40 CFR 60.41b, which
states that ‘‘Coal means * * * coal
refuse * * *’’ 119 and argues that this
definition in the regulation has nothing
to do with when the coal refuse was
generated and should always be
considered a fuel.
EPA’s Response: We disagree with the
comments contending that coal refuse
placed in legacy piles should be
119 ‘‘Coal means all solid fuels classified as
anthracite, bituminous, sub-bituminous, or lignite
by the American Society of Testing and Materials
in ASTM D388 (incorporated by reference, see Sec.
60.17), coal refuse, and petroleum coke * * *’’ See
40 CFR 60.41b.
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characterized and regulated the same as
coal refuse that is generated currently,
as this fails to acknowledge that such
coal refuse has been discarded. As has
been discussed, the statutory definition
of solid waste turns on whether or not
a material has been discarded in the first
instance. Courts have consistently held
that the term ‘‘discard,’’ is to have the
ordinary, plain-English meaning (i.e.,
‘‘disposed of,’’ ‘‘thrown away,’’ or
‘‘abandoned’’). As coal refuse placed in
legacy piles have clearly been
abandoned, we cannot ignore the fact
that these materials have been discarded
in the first instance and, therefore, do
not agree with the contention that this
construct represents a ‘‘false
distinction.’’ The resulting distinction
may lead to results that some may find
illogical, but we are faced with the
definition of ‘‘discard’’ and the fact that
the mere fact that discarded material
may have value does not allow the
material to lose its waste status.
Although we recognize that all coal
refuse is (and was) generated during the
fuel production process and are more
akin to raw materials, coal refuse that
has been abandoned in legacy piles have
not been historically used and managed
as a fuel and therefore cannot be
considered a traditional fuel. Because
the technology did not exist that could
effectively make use of the fuel value of
these materials at the time of their
generation, they were managed as
wastes and abandoned in legacy piles.
While we find that currently generated
coal refuse should now be considered
alternative fuels for the reasons stated
above, we cannot ignore that coal refuse
that has been placed in legacy piles
have clearly been discarded and, thus,
unless these materials are ‘‘sufficiently
processed’’ and satisfy all legitimacy
criteria for fuels, these secondary
materials would be considered solid
wastes when burned as fuels in
combustion units.
Regarding the comments that argue
that EPA has previously defined coal to
include coal refuse, we note that this
information was helpful, but disagree
the cited regulatory definitions control
in this rulemaking. The cited
definitions, which are included in the
standards of performance for new
stationary source regulations, were
developed pursuant to the CAA and do
not address the issue of discard. Today’s
rulemaking is being promulgated under
RCRA, which, as mentioned above,
hinges on the whether or not the nonhazardous secondary material at issue
has been discarded. EPA also
reemphasizes that the distinction is not
between ‘‘fuel’’ and ‘‘waste,’’ but between
fuel that is a commodity (not a waste
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because it has not been discarded) and
waste fuel that has value, but is still a
waste.
In the same CFR sections cited by
commenters which define coal as
including coal refuse, we note that coal
refuse is defined as meaning ‘‘wasteproducts of coal mining, cleaning, and
coal preparation operations (e.g., culm,
gob, etc.) containing coal, matrix
material, clay, and other organic and
inorganic material’’ 120 and ‘‘any
byproduct of coal mining or coal mining
operations with an ash content greater
than 50 percent, by weight, and a
heating value less than 13,900 kJ/kg
(6,000 Btu/lb) on a dry basis.’’ 121 These
definitions highlight the uniqueness of
coal refuse and in fact support the
distinction we are making between coal
refuse that is currently generated and
coal refuse that has been placed in
legacy piles. That is, it may be
appropriate to consider coal refuse to be
within the definition of coal because it
may now be used as coal, while at the
same time, it may also be appropriate to
consider coal refuse to be a ‘‘wasteproduct’’ or ‘‘byproduct’’ of coal mining
operations. EPA’s evaluation that coal
refuse that is currently generated and
used as a fuel has never been discarded
and should be considered an alternative
fuel, while discarded coal refuse should
be considered a solid waste, is
consistent with these regulatory
definitions.
Comment: Most commenters
addressing the issue of processing coal
refuse stated that coal refuse from legacy
piles is processed the same way as is
virgin coal; that is, the processing of
these materials includes the use of
grizzlies, screens, and blending to
improve the quality, remove metal
objects, reduce the ash content, reduce
the sulfur content, and reduce
concentrations of various constituents.
These comments maintained that this
level of processing should satisfy EPA’s
definition of ‘‘processing’’ because the
processing that occurs is designed
specifically to improve the fuel quality
and remove contaminants in the process
(for example, metals that are removed
with ash that is screened out).
One commenter stated that it is
illogical and problematic for EPA to
propose a minimal level of processing
that requires additional activities than
are used to prepare virgin materials for
use. This commenter provides the
example of a company that recovers coal
refuse from previously discarded piles,
screen the refuse to remove large pieces
of slate and rock, conducts a chemical
120 See
121 See
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destroy contaminants; significantly
improve the fuel characteristics of the
material, e.g., sizing or drying the
material in combination with other
operations; chemically improve the asfired energy content; or improve the
ingredient characteristics. Minimal
operations that result only in modifying
the size of the material by shredding, do
not constitute processing for purposes of
this definition.’’ We have determined
that this definition encompasses an
appropriate level of processing
necessary to render a discarded material
into a non-waste product.
As several commenters noted, the
processes that are employed to recover
coal refuse that has been placed in
legacy piles in order to be used as fuels
are the same as the processes that virgin
coal is subject to. As discussed above,
coal refuse is unique from other nonhazardous secondary materials in that it
is a byproduct of fuel production
processes and is itself a raw material
that can be used as a fuel. Because coal
refuse is essentially raw material coal,
which is generated in the production of
fuel and can be used itself as fuel, we
agree with the commenter who stated
that it would be illogical to require a
different level of processing for
discarded coal refuse than is used for
virgin coal. Therefore, coal refuse that is
recovered from legacy piles and used as
fuel that is subjected to the types of
analysis to identify Btu, ash, and sulfur
characteristics, hauls the coal refuse to
its preparation plant where it is cleaned
just like mined coal, and then sold as is
or blended with mined coal to meet
contractual orders. This commenter
argues that EPA did not provide
adequate justification in the proposed
rule for why this process would be
insufficient to turn a once discarded
non-hazardous secondary material into
a non-waste fuel product.
Additionally, commenters noted that
in the case of facilities burning coal
refuse, regardless of whether it is
generated currently or was placed in
legacy piles, the engineering design of a
CFB is based on the quality of the coal
refuse available to be burned in the
boiler. In other words, considerations
for use of the coal refuse as a fuel
precede facility construction and
directly impact boiler design and
application. Therefore, coal refuse from
legacy piles that is processed in this
manner (i.e., in the same manner as
currently generated coal refuse) should
not be considered a solid waste.
EPA’s Response: As finalized in
§ 241.2, the term ‘‘processing’’ is defined
as meaning ‘‘any operations that
transform discarded non-hazardous
secondary material into a non-waste fuel
or non-waste ingredient product.
Processing includes, but is not limited
to, operations necessary to: remove or
operations that are used to process
virgin coal, which serve to both increase
energy values as well as reduce
contaminants, would meet our
definition of processing and would not
be considered solid waste, provided
these materials satisfy our legitimacy
criteria, which they do since currently
mined coal is certainly a legitimate fuel
and is the same as those from the legacy
piles.
Comment: EPA received comments
providing new contaminant data for
coal refuse. However, some commenters
acknowledged that coal refuse can have
higher levels of some metals, but agreed
with EPA that coal refuse is typically
used as a fuel in newer boilers equipped
with CFBs, which have emissions levels
lower than most existing coal utility
boilers.122 One commenter stated that
notwithstanding the higher metals
content of coal refuse, CFBs typically
capture between 90–99 percent of
mercury and other metals. While most
commenters noted that emissions levels
associated with burning coal refuse are
similar to those found when burning
virgin coal, one commenter did provide
a comparison in concentration levels of
various contaminants between coal
refuse and regional coal samples. A
selection of the specific data provided
by the commenter is replicated in Table
5 below:
TABLE 5—COMPARISON OF TRACE METAL CONTENTS (PPM) OF REGIONAL COAL SAMPLES AND COAL REFUSE FROM
LEGACY PILES, AS PROVIDED IN COMMENTS ON THE NHSM PROPOSED RULE
Sample description
Sample ID
Sb
As
Be
Cd
Cr
Co
Pb
Mn
Hg
Ni
P
Se
Coal samples from
USGS database—
Cambria, Indiana,
and Somerset
Counties, PA 123.
No. Samples .............
244
244
244
244
244
244
244
244
244
244
244
244
Minimum ...................
Maximum ..................
0.11
7.80
0
200
0.6
9.5
0.01
1.00
2
65
1.5
34.0
0.8
44.0
2
390
0.00
2.90
3.4
86.0
22
3400
0.68
20.00
Sample 1 ...................
Sample 2 ...................
Sample 3 ...................
Average .....................
1.5
1.7
1.5
1.6
50.7
53.4
47.3
50.5
2.1
2.1
2.1
2.1
0.3
0.3
0.3
0.3
80.2
84.5
84.7
83.1
22.7
23.8
22.8
23.1
33.1
35.2
33.1
33.8
134
139
144
139
0.644
0.748
0.613
0.668
44.7
50.5
47.1
47.4
718
719
745
727
7.8
8.6
8.6
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Samples of coal
refuse from legacy
piles located in
Cambria, Indiana,
and Somerset
Counties, PA.
This data indicates that the
concentration of the various
contaminants in the coal refuse samples
were lower for almost all constituents
(including mercury and lead) when
compared to regional coal samples.
According to this data set, only
chromium was consistently higher in
the coal refuse samples than the
regional virgin coal, which also
indicates that the difference in
concentration may be much closer than
previously indicated in the preamble to
the proposal.124 Therefore, provided
122 CFBs ability to achieve lower emissions levels
is due to several factors: (1) CFB boilers are often
newer than many existing pulverized coal utility
boilers and may be equipped with better particulate
matter (PM) controls; (2) CFBs utilize lower
operating temperatures, which result in lower metal
and NOX emissions; and (3) CFB boilers often add
limestone to their feed to control SO2 emissions,
which results in greater fixation to the ash.
123 Coal sample data found in the U.S. Geological
Survey—National Coal Resources Data System. For
more information, see https://energy.er.usgs.gov/
coalqual.htm).
124 Data provided by the commenter indicated
that the average chromium levels of coal refuse was
83.1 ppm, whereas the range of chromium levels for
the regional virgin coal samples was between 2–65
Continued
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that coal refuse from legacy piles are
sufficiently processed, this commenter
asserts that coal refuse would pass the
contaminant legitimacy criterion and
should therefore not be classified as a
solid waste.
EPA’s Response: Regarding the
contaminant levels in coal refuse in
legacy piles, we agree with those
commenters who acknowledged that
coal refuse can have higher
concentrations of some metals than is
found in virgin coal. As noted in the
proposed rule, at least one commenter
on the ANPRM contended that coal
refuse could have up to four times more
mercury and chromium, and three times
more lead than virgin coal.125 We note
that this commenter did not provide
primary sources for this data, a point
which was raised by at least one
commenter. We generally recognize,
however, that available data show that
coal refuse placed in legacy piles often
has higher metals concentrations than
non-refuse coal concentrations, but we
would presume that the levels of
contaminants are the same as in
currently mined coal that would have
been placed into these piles in the past.
We also recognize that contaminant
levels will vary significantly depending
upon the region and type of coal at
issue.126
As discussed above, we now
determine that coal refuse that is
currently generated should be
considered an alternative fuel. On the
other hand, coal refuse that is recovered
and processed from the discard
environment would need to pass the
legitimacy criteria in order to be
considered a non-waste fuel. As coal
refuse is recovered from legacy piles are
subject to the same processes as
currently-generated coal refuse in order
to meet the same fuel specifications,
they would contain any potential
contaminants at levels that are
comparable to or lower than coal refuse
that is currently generated.
We would further note that the
contaminant data provided by the one
commenter demonstrates that there are
also examples of coal refuse taken from
legacy piles satisfying the contaminant
legitimacy criterion when directly
compared to contaminant levels in coal.
Given the regional variations in coal
compositions, the analysis is on point
given the fact that the commenter
compared similar regional coal refuse
ppm. The proposed rule noted that chromium
levels of coal refuse can be up to four times higher
than virgin coal.
125 See 75 FR 31865.
126 See our Materials Characterization Paper on
Coal Refuse, located in the docket for today’s final
rule.
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and virgin coal samples. Therefore, we
agree with the commenter that there are
instances when coal refuse would also
satisfy the contaminant legitimacy
criterion when compared to virgin coal
as well.
Finally, we would note that although
emissions comparisons are not a direct
indicator of whether these materials
satisfy the contaminant legitimacy
criterion, the emissions from CFBs that
use coal refuse as fuel typically have
lower levels of emissions than typical
pulverized coal burners.
Comment: Several commenters
contended that the management of coal
refuse at mining sites is already
regulated under the Surface Mining
Control and Reclamation Act of 1997
(SMCRA) and that defining coal refuse
as a solid waste would be inconsistent
with SMCRA. Specifically, some
commenters point out that although the
term ‘‘solid waste’’ under RCRA includes
mining waste in the definition, EPA
determined, in accordance with section
1006(c) of RCRA that provides for the
integration of RCRA with SMCRA, that
materials and products associated with
coal mining activities should not be
regulated as hazardous wastes.
EPA’s Response: RCRA section
1006(c) pertains to hazardous wastes
under RCRA subtitle C. As such, it is
inapplicable for today’s rulemaking,
which is solely concerned with nonhazardous secondary materials. Thus,
we disagree with those commenters who
cited section 1006(c) of RCRA and
argued that regulation of coal refuse
found in legacy piles should be deferred
to SMCRA. In addition, SMCRA is
concerned with the management and
removal of coal refuse piles at mining
sites. It does not address the issue of
‘‘discard,’’ which is critical to the
definition of solid waste under RCRA,
and as such, which emission standards
coal refuse that is in legacy piles and
burned in a combustion unit is subject
to under the CAA.
9. Coal Combustion Residuals 127 128
Coal combustion residuals (CCRs) are
formed during coal-burning processes in
127 In a separate rulemaking effort, EPA has
proposed regulations that will provide for the safe
disposal and management of coal combustion
residuals from utility coal-fired power plants (the
‘‘Coal Combustion Residuals Proposed Rule’’). The
proposed rule was published in the Federal
Register on June 21, 2010. See 75 FR 35127.
Today’s final rule does not affect that rulemaking
effort, as our rule considers the use of coal
combustion residuals in combustion units as fuels
or ingredients, while the coal combustion residual
proposed rule is concerned with the safe disposal
and management of these residuals in landfills and
surface impoundments. For more information on
the coal combustion residual proposed rule, see
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–RCRA–2009–0640.
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power plants and industrial boilers, and
are produced in various forms that are
categorized by the process in which
they are generated. The proposed rule
differentiated between CCRs (which
include such secondary materials as fly
ash, bottom ash, and boiler slag), that
are currently generated from those CCRs
that have been previously disposed of
(such as, mined landfill ash) and are
used as fuels in combustion units.
Under the proposed rule, currently
generated CCRs that have not been
discarded in the first instance and
satisfy the legitimacy criteria would not
be considered a solid waste when used
as a fuel in combustion units provided
the CCRs were burned in units within
the control of the generator. For
example, the proposal described a
situation where currently generated,
high-carbon fly and bottom ash that is
taken directly from existing boilers is
burned within the control of the
generator at power generating stations.
On the other hand, CCRs recovered from
landfills or other disposal units would
clearly have been discarded in the first
instance and would therefore have to be
sufficiently processed into a non-waste
fuel product and meet the legitimacy
criteria in order not to be considered a
solid waste when used as a fuel.
The proposed rule also noted
comments received on the ANPRM
describing patented processes that
separate the carbon from the fly ash in
order to produce a new fuel product.
Although this level of processing
appeared likely to meet the proposed
definition of processing, the proposed
rule solicited comment on how CCRs
are processed. The proposed rule also
requested comment regarding the extent
to which CCRs are recovered from the
discard environment (e.g., landfills) and
used as fuels. For the proposed rule’s
discussion of CCRs used as fuels, see 75
FR 31865–6.
Comment: Most commenters argued
that CCRs, when used in combustion
units, should be classified as ingredients
rather than as fuels. The commenters
often contended that classifying all
CCRs as ingredients would simplify
waste determinations for these
secondary materials by clearly
establishing the appropriate legitimacy
criteria that apply (i.e., facilities would
not need to determine whether the fuel
or ingredient legitimacy criteria apply
based on the primary purpose of the
secondary materials). Some commenters
acknowledged, however, that CCRs can
be combusted (e.g., by electric utilities)
for energy recovery of its carbon content
128 For a discussion of CCRs used as ingredients,
see Section V.C.2 of this final rule.
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or combustion in carbon burn-out (CBO)
units for processing marketable fly ash
products.
One commenter described CBO units,
which they explained burn ‘‘unwanted
carbon’’ from fly ash to produce a lowcarbon fly ash that is more suitable for
use as an ingredient in Portland cement,
as being typically integrated with power
plants. The CBO unit combusts fly ash
from the power plant in a fluidized bed,
extracts the residual energy content of
the fly ash to fuel the CBO, and returns
useful heat to the power plant. The
commenter stated that the major
equipment that comprises the CBO unit
includes a fluidized bed combustor and
heat exchanger to recover heat from the
fly ash combustion. This same
commenter described the heat generated
from the combustion of the carbon in
the fly ash as ‘‘valuable’’ and is typically
recovered from the CBO and used to
heat the host plant’s condensate stream,
which reduces the amount of extraction
steam required. In reasoning that this
high-carbon fly ash should be
considered an ingredient, however, the
commenter notes that energy generated
from burning the secondary material is
of secondary importance to the
production of the valuable low-carbon
fly ash to be sold to cement kilns.
EPA’s Response: We do not agree with
commenters that all CCRs, when used in
combustion units, should categorically
be defined as ingredients. As some
commenters acknowledged, some CCRs
are indeed used for their fuel value as
opposed to their ingredient value,
especially when re-burned, as in the
case of their use in combustion units by
electric utilities. Therefore, we cannot
categorically classify CCRs as
ingredients when it is clear that, in
some cases, these secondary materials
are being burned for their fuel value
and/or to produce a new secondary
material (i.e., low-carbon fly ash). In
cases where the primary purpose of
using CCRs is for their fuel value and
not for the ingredient value (e.g., by
electric utilities in utility boilers), the
secondary materials must meet the
requirements for fuels, including the
legitimacy criteria, in order to not be
considered a solid waste. In other
words, to the extent that CCRs are used
as fuels, these secondary materials must
remain within the control of the
generator and meet the legitimacy
criteria for fuels or be sufficiently
processed into a new fuel product in
order not to be considered a solid waste.
We note, however, that sources may
petition the Agency for a non-waste
determination for secondary materials
managed outside the control of the
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generator, including CCRs. See Section
VII.G.
Regarding CBO units that burn highcarbon fly ash, creating both energy, as
well as a new marketable ingredient
(i.e., low carbon fly ash), this activity
would not constitute use of these
secondary materials as ingredients.
When the fly ash goes into a CBO unit,
it is clearly not being used as an
ingredient, but is used to produce an
ingredient. It is less clear, however,
whether this activity represents a
legitimate use of these secondary
materials as fuels or should be
considered a type of waste management.
The commenter states that burning of
this fly ash in CBO units provides
‘‘valuable heat’’ and indicates that the
energy is used in turn to power the CBO
or returned to the power plant, which
indicates that the burning of the fly ash
could constitute a legitimate use as a
fuel. On the other hand, the same
commenter also noted that the fuel
value is ‘‘secondary’’ to its value as an
ingredient and the CBO process as
removing ‘‘unwanted carbon’’ from the
fly ash, which may suggest that the fly
ash is being burned as a waste activity
(i.e., the destruction of the unwanted
carbon in order to generate a marketable
product).
Unfortunately, from the comments
received, we are not able to make a
categorical determination whether or
not the burning of fly ash in these units
would constitute ‘‘discard,’’ as it is
unclear whether the carbon is being
destroyed or whether it is actually used
for its fuel value. In other words, the
CBO unit is either ‘‘destroying’’ the
carbon, which would make these
materials a solid waste, or the carbon is
being recovered and used as a fuel, in
which case these materials would not be
considered a solid waste provided they
meet the legitimacy criteria.
While the CBO units are burning the
ash to create a marketable product, in so
doing they may also be utilizing the
separated carbon for its fuel value. The
commenter indicates that use of high
carbon-fly ash in these CBOs may have
more than marginal energy value and
can even be a source of additional
power to an adjoining power plant.
While we do not have sufficient
information to make a categorical
determination regarding the use of fly
ash as a fuel in these CBO units, it is
appropriate for these units to consider
the legitimacy criteria in order to
determine whether or not the fly ash is
being burned for discard or burned
legitimately for its fuel value.
As discussed in Section VII.H,
legitimacy criteria are critical to
ensuring that non-hazardous secondary
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materials are being legitimately used. To
the extent that a CBO unit can
determine that it meets the legitimacy
criteria for fuels (including whether the
fly ash has meaningful heating value
and is used as a fuel in a combustion
unit that recovers energy), we would
consider such a use to be legitimate. We
emphasize, however, that mere
destruction of the unwanted carbon
would clearly represent discard and
would by definition fail the meaningful
heating value legitimacy criterion. We
also note that it is not clear from the
comments how the CBO unit recovers
energy and whether it would meet our
definition of a legitimate energy
recovery device. For a discussion of
legitimate energy recovery devices, see
the Response to Comments on Sewage
Sludge (Section V.B.10). If these units
do not legitimately recover energy, they
would not meet the meaningful heating
value criterion. See also Section VII.I,
which discusses the types of
notification and recordkeeping
requirements, including documentation
as to how the non-hazardous secondary
material meets the legitimacy criteria,
that a facility using these secondary
materials as fuels that remain within the
control of the generator are subject to.
Finally, we note that the resulting
low-carbon fly ash would be considered
a new secondary material, which would
be considered an ingredient if it is later
used in the production of cement.
Comment: One commenter, a utility,
stated that the proposed rule’s setting of
minimum energy content values for a
secondary material to be used as a fuel
and not be considered a solid waste (i.e.,
the meaningful heating value legitimacy
criterion) is inappropriate for the reburning of fly ash when producing
concrete quality fly ash, as the coal ash
used for re-burn is selected based on its
mineral content, combined with the
mineralogy of the coal currently being
used as a fuel. The fuel value of the fly
ash is only one technical consideration
when introducing coal ash in
combustion systems for creating
concrete quality fly ash and requiring a
minimum heating value may restrict the
use of high quality fly ash for use in
concrete and other applications.
EPA’s Response: We appreciate that
the fuel value is only one of several
considerations made when selecting fly
ash for re-burn; however, in order for fly
ash that is re-burned to not be a solid
waste under today’s final rule, it would
need to either remain within the control
of the generator and meet the legitimacy
criteria for fuels, including the
meaningful heating value criterion, or, if
discarded, be processed into a new,
legitimate fuel product. Some
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commenters stated that the energy
content of fly ash when burned is
returned as useful heat. Based on the
comments received, however, it is
unclear whether the fly ash in that
instance would meet the meaningful
heating value criterion, as these
comments do not include enough
information about how much energy is
being recovered from the use of these
secondary materials as fuels. In order to
not be considered a solid waste, the
facility must determine whether the fly
ash meets the legitimacy criteria,
including whether the fly ash has
meaningful heating value and is used as
a fuel in a combustion unit that recovers
energy.
We also note that we are not
establishing a bright line test for
satisfying the meaningful heating value
test. Rather, for purposes of meeting the
legitimacy criteria for fuels, we would
consider non-hazardous secondary
materials with an energy value greater
than 5,000 Btu/lb, as-fired, to have a
meaningful heating value, and satisfy
this legitimacy criterion. However, for
facilities with energy recovery units that
use non-hazardous secondary materials
as fuels with an energy content lower
than 5,000 Btu/lb, as fired, we believe
it is also appropriate to allow a person
to demonstrate that a meaningful
heating value is derived from the nonhazardous secondary material if the
energy recovery unit can cost-effectively
recover meaningful energy from the
non-hazardous secondary materials
used as fuels. See Section VII.H.1 for a
discussion of how non-hazardous
secondary materials can satisfy the
meaningful heating value criterion for
fuels.
Comment: Some commenters argued
generally that EPA should not restrict
the source of coal ash that is re-burned
and should allow coal ash that is used
as a fuel to be transferred between
facilities and retrieved from landfills
because it is being beneficially used.
One of these commenters described how
one of its power plants re-burns coal ash
that it receives from two other power
plants that it also owns. This same
commenter also noted that it re-burns
coal ash in one of its power plants that
it has retrieved from an off-site landfill.
EPA’s Response: As discussed in
Section V.A.1, EPA is not making a
sweeping arbitrary assumption in
categorizing transferred secondary
materials as discarded. Instead, EPA has
evaluated whether certain categories of
materials are discarded or not. The
Agency has not adopted the extremes of
saying that all burning of secondary
material, regardless of ultimate use, is
waste treatment or that any secondary
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material that is recycled for legitimate
fuel value is a commodity and not a
waste. Wastes may have value, but are
still wastes.
Between these broad parameters, EPA
has examined a number of specific
materials, recycled on-site and
transferred for recycling, and
determined whether they would be
appropriately placed within the waste
or non-waste categories. EPA would
consider transferred non-hazardous
secondary materials not to be wastes if
it could make the appropriate findings
for those categories. In fact, the Agency
does so with respect to scrap tires
harvested from vehicles and resinated
wood residuals.
Commenters discussing scrap tires
and resinated wood residuals, however,
provided specific information regarding
how these secondary materials were
managed when they no longer remained
within the control of the generator and
the frequency with which these
materials were collected and transferred
off-site. For example, resinated wood
residuals are routinely transferred
between either intra- or inter- company
facilities and used as either ‘‘furnish’’
(i.e., raw materials) or fuel at the
receiving facilities. The material being
transferred off-site is used and handled
in the same manner that resinated wood
residuals are used when generated onsite (such that it is impossible to
distinguish between materials that are
being used as a raw material and those
that are being used as a fuel).
On the other hand, commenters
discussing the use of CCRs as fuels
outside the control of the generator did
so only in general terms. Commenters
provided legal arguments that case law
holds that transfer of such materials
between companies were irrelevant for
determining whether a recycled material
was properly viewed as a solid waste.
See Section V.A.1 for our response to
these legal arguments on the issue of
‘‘transfer’’ as it relates to the concept of
discard. However, these commenters
did not specify how the proposed rule’s
presumption that non-hazardous
secondary materials that are used as
fuels and are managed outside the
control of the generator are solid wastes
was inappropriate for CCRs. In general,
the DC Circuit has not accepted such
presentations in ‘‘broad abstraction.’’ See
ABR at 1056.
Because commenters did not provide
sufficient information detailing how
CCRs are managed when transferred
outside the control of the generator, we
are unable to determine whether such
movement of CCRs outside the control
of the generator is or is not indicative
of discard. Thus, such a determination
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is best left to the non-waste petition
process, as finalized in today’s rule. As
we’ve discussed, we believe this
petition process is essential because
many non-hazardous secondary
materials are recycled and managed in
many different ways, and the Agency
may lack the specific details in certain
cases to know whether such nonhazardous secondary materials are or
are not solid wastes. For a discussion of
non-waste determination petitions, see
Section VII.G of today’s rule.
Regarding the commenter who
described how one of its power plants
re-burns coal ash that it receives from
two other power plants it also owns, we
would expect that such a situation
would fall within the definition of
‘‘within the control of the generator,’’ as
codified in § 241.2. For the purposes of
today’s final rule, ‘‘within the control of
the generator’’ means that the nonhazardous secondary material is
generated and burned in combustion
units at the generating facility; or that
such material is generated and burned
in combustion units at different
facilities, provided the facility
combusting the non-hazardous
secondary material is controlled by the
generator; or both the generating facility
and the facility combusting the nonhazardous secondary material are under
the control of the same person. We have
also codified the definition of ‘‘control’’
as meaning the power to direct the
policies of the facility, whether by the
ownership of stock, voting rights, or
otherwise, except that contractors who
operate facilities on behalf of a different
person as defined in this section shall
not be deemed to ‘‘control’’ such
facilities. See § 241.2. As the commenter
states that it owns the other two plants,
such intra-company movement would
ensure that the materials would remain
within the control of the generator and,
therefore, such CCRs would not be
considered a solid waste when used as
a fuel provided they meet the legitimacy
criteria. In the instance where a facility
is re-burning coal ash that is recovered
from landfills, such coal ash is a solid
waste, as this material has clearly been
discarded. Coal ash that is recovered
from landfills must be sufficiently
processed in order to no longer be
considered a solid waste.
Comment: We received a few
comments regarding the extent to which
CCRs are mined from landfills (i.e.,
recovered from the discard
environment). One commenter asserted
that it was unaware of any recovery of
CCR from disposal sites, while one
another commenter acknowledged that
while it could utilize recovered landfill
fly ash, it was not currently doing so.
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Still another commenter stated it
removes CCRs from landfills and that
such removal for either energy recovery
or beneficial reuse was facilitated by a
regulatory innovation program
sponsored by the state and endorsed by
EPA. Consequently, this commenter
commonly re-burns coal ash that is
recovered from landfills. This
commenter notes that it has developed
and uses patented processes to use this
fly ash, but does not provide specific
details regarding how these secondary
materials are processed.
EPA’s Response: It does not appear
that it is a widespread practice for CCRs
to be recovered from the discard
environment (e.g., landfills) and
beneficially used. However, from
comments received both on the ANPRM
and the proposed rule, it appears that at
least some CCRs are being recovered
from the discard environment or could
be recovered from the discard
environment—for example by the one
commenter citing its participation in a
state regulatory innovation program.
Although we recognize the benefits
associated with recovering CCRs from
landfills, these non-hazardous
secondary materials have clearly been
discarded in the first instance and
would have to be sufficiently processed
into a new fuel product (or ingredient
product) to not be considered a solid
waste when used in combustion units.
As we’ve stated elsewhere in the
preamble, today’s final rule is limited to
CCRs used as fuels or ingredients in
combustion units. In other words,
today’s rulemaking should not impact
other potential beneficial uses of CCRs,
such as using these secondary materials
as a base material to replace stone or
gravel under roads, parking lots and
buildings.
Comment: EPA received comments on
the ANPRM stating that there are at least
four patented processes for removing
unwanted carbon from fly and bottom
ash that allow the processed ash to
produce both technically compliant ash
for use in concrete and a separate
carbon stream that can be re-introduced
into the boiler for its fuel value. One
electric utility, commenting on the
proposed rule, also mentioned patented
processes for using CCRs recovered from
landfills. However, neither of these
commenters provided specific details
regarding how the CCRs are actually
processed.
EPA’s Response: Unfortunately, EPA
did not receive sufficient information
during the comment period describing
the types of processes that CCRs
undergo to be able to make a categorical
determination whether the patented
processes referenced in the proposed
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rule would meet the definition of
processing being promulgated in today’s
final rule. Although we did receive
some information regarding how CCRs
are processed, we have determined, as
we stated in the proposed rule, that
certain operations are currently being
utilized to recover CCRs from the
discard environment that would likely
meet our definition of ‘‘processing.’’ For
example, we are aware of at least one
electric utility that recovers ash from
ponds or landfills and then separates
this secondary material into its
fundamental components: carbon,
silicates, and high-density, iron-rich
materials. A coarse carbon-fuel product
is then recovered by density separation
using concentrating spirals. A fine
carbon-fuel product is also recovered
with flotation cells.129 We believe that
this type of processing operation is
likely to meet our definition of
processing, as it appears that these
operations in fact remove contaminants
and improve the fuel characteristics of
recovered CCRs. Thus, a determination
would need to be made as to whether
such processes meet the definition of
processing, as codified in § 241.2.130
10. Sewage Sludge
The proposed rule classified sewage
sludge (or wastewater treatment sludge)
generated from publicly owned
treatment works (POTWs) as solid waste
when burned as fuels in combustion
units. However, the proposed rule also
specifically solicited comment on
whether it is within the Agency’s
discretion to provide a regulatory solid
waste exclusion for sewage sludge when
burned in incinerators in order to
preserve the current framework for
regulating sewage sludge managed
under section 405 of the Clean Water
Act (CWA) and to avoid redundancy.
When making the determination that
sewage sludge is a solid waste when
burned as a fuel in a combustion unit,
the proposed rule stated that the
Domestic Sewage Exclusion (DSE)
under RCRA (see 261.4(a)) does not
apply to the sludge generated from the
treatment process and thus, sewage
sludge is a solid waste if discarded. The
proposed rule also noted that burning
sewage sludge without energy recovery
(i.e., burned for destruction) would
129 See ‘‘Materials Characterization Paper on Coal
Combustion Residuals-Coal Fly Ash, Bottom Ash,
and Boiler Slag.’’ A copy of this document has been
placed in the docket for today’s rule.
130 We note, however, that burning any secondary
material, including CCRs, in a combustion unit
would not constitute ‘‘processing,’’ as determining
whether or not a material is a solid waste must
occur prior to its placement in the combustion unit.
To consider the burning of such materials as
‘‘processing’’ would be circular.
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constitute discard. Responding to
commenters describing POTWs that
recover heat in the form of usable heat
via waste heat boilers, the proposed rule
stated that the Agency does not consider
waste heat boilers to be legitimate
energy recovery devices, but rather
these combustion units are burning the
sewage sludge primarily for disposal
purposes. Finally, the proposed rule
stated that sewage sludge would likely
not satisfy the contaminant legitimacy
criterion, as data indicates that sewage
sludge often contains metals at levels
that are significantly higher in
concentration when compared to
traditional fuels. For the proposed rule’s
discussion of sewage sludge, see 75 FR
31866–7.
Comment: Several commenters argued
that EPA has the discretion to exclude
or exempt sewage sludge from this
rulemaking and should exercise that
discretion in order to preserve the
current framework for regulating the
burning of sewage sludge pursuant to 40
CFR 503 (Part 503), which codifies
regulations developed under the
authority of section 405 of the CWA.
These commenters also note that EPA
has a non-discretionary duty to consider
all environmental laws to prevent
duplication when promulgating
regulations under section 1006(b) of
RCRA and that deeming sewage sludge
a solid waste to be regulated under
section 129 of the CAA violates EPA’s
non-discretionary duty to harmonize
environmental laws because emissions
from sewage sludge incinerators (SSIs)
are already comprehensively regulated
under other statutes.
EPA’s Response: We agree with the
commenters that section 1006(b)
requires EPA to integrate the RCRA
requirements with the requirements of
the CWA and the CAA, as well as other
laws. Section 1006(b) also states that
such integration shall be effected only to
the extent that it can be done in a
manner consistent with the goals and
policies expressed in RCRA and in the
other acts referred to in section 1006(b).
Thus, while we recognize that emissions
from SSIs have been regulated under
other statutes, the purpose of today’s
final rule is not to regulate emissions
from SSIs, but rather to determine
whether sewage sludge is or is not a
solid waste to allow the Agency to
decide whether the material must be
combusted under emissions standards
developed under section 112 or 129 of
the CAA. Sewage sludge is one of many
non-hazardous secondary materials that
are discussed and analyzed in this final
rule.
We also note that section 405(d)(5) of
the CWA states that nothing in section
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405 is intended to waive more stringent
requirements established by the CWA or
by any other law. This provision clearly
states that section 405 of the CWA does
not preempt other regulation. Therefore,
we believe today’s final rule is
consistent with the goals and policies of
RCRA, the CWA, and the CAA and thus,
satisfies the requirements of section
1006(b).
Comment: Commenters asserted that
Congress wrote section 112 of the CAA
to regulate sewage sludge emissions,
stating that section 112(e)(5) 131 of the
CAA directs EPA to issue emissions
standards under section 112(d) for
POTWs, including SSIs. These
commenters also argued that sewage
sludge quality and incineration is
strictly regulated under the CWA and
that the current regulatory structure
under both the CWA and section 112 of
the CAA is effective and should not be
altered.
EPA’s Response: Today’s final action
is defining solid waste under RCRA and
as such we are not addressing the
definition of POTW under the CWA or
the requirements of the CAA.
Comment: Several commenters
reiterated the position that the DSE
applies to sewage sludge generated by
POTWs and, therefore, stated that
sewage sludge is exempted from the
definition of solid waste under RCRA.
Citing the preamble to the 1980 RCRA
subtitle C regulations, at least one
commenter stated that the Agency
indicated that once the to-be-developed
regulation under section 405 of the
CWA is promulgated, sewage sludge
would be exempt from coverage under
other sets of regulations.132 The same
commenter also cites the 1990
Petroleum Refinery Primary and
Secondary Oil/Water/Solids Separation
Sludge Listings Rule (1990 Listings
Rule), which states ‘‘It should be noted
that if wastewaters generated at
petroleum refineries are discharged to a
POTW and such wastewaters are mixed
with domestic sewage from
nonindustrial sources, the sludges
generated in the POTW are covered
under the domestic sewage exclusion
and are not included in today’s
listings.’’ 133
EPA’s Response: For the same reasons
stated in the proposed rule, we do not
131 CAA
section 112(e)(5) states, ‘‘The
Administrator shall promulgate standards pursuant
to subsection (d) of this section applicable to
publicly owned treatments works (as defined in
Title II of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act
[33 U.S.C.A. § 1281 et seq.] not later than 5 years
after November 15, 1990.’’
132 See 45 FR 33102 (May 19, 1980).
133 See 55 FR 46364 (November 2, 1990) (Footnote
14).
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agree with the comments suggesting that
the DSE applies to the sludge generated
from the treatment process. EPA has
long viewed sewage sludge generated
from POTWs as a solid waste, beginning
with the 1980 Identification and Listing
of Hazardous Waste rulemaking. In that
final rule, EPA stated that the DSE is
‘‘only applicable to non-domestic wastes
that mix with sanitary waste in a sewer
system leading to a POTW.’’ 134 In that
same rule, EPA further said it decided
not to exclude sewage sludge from
regulation under RCRA, since the
statutory expressions regarding the
definitions of ‘‘solid waste’’ and ‘‘sludge’’
was clear.135
We agree that the 1980 Identification
and Listing of Hazardous Waste
rulemaking referenced by the
commenter states that once the
regulations are promulgated under
section 405(d) of the CWA, sewage
sludge will be exempted from coverage
from ‘‘other sets of regulations.’’ The
preamble continues, however, to state:
‘‘In particular sewage sludge that
qualifies as a hazardous waste will be
exempted from this Part [261] and Parts
262 through 265’’ once this program is
promulgated under CWA section 405.
However, this exclusion is specifically
limited to RCRA subtitle C (i.e.,
hazardous waste),136 and does not apply
to the subtitle D program under RCRA.
Regarding the citation from the 1990
Listings Rule, this footnote is in error
and is inconsistent with our historic
interpretation of the scope of the DSE,
as discussed both in the proposed rule
and today’s final rule. Thus, the DSE
does not apply to the sludge generated
from the treatment process.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that sewage sludge has meaningful
heating value and that EPA should reevaluate its description of this criterion.
134 Id
at 45 FR 33097.
at 45 FR 33101. ‘‘Under Section 1004(27) of
RCRA, the definition of ‘‘solid waste’’ specifically
includes ‘‘sludge from a waste treatment plant.’’ In
defining ‘‘sludge,’’ Section 1004(26A) includes
wastes from a ‘‘municipal wastewater treatment
plan.’’ Because of these very clear statutory
expressions, EPA must regulate sewage sludge
under RCRA. * * *’’
136 We would note that even though the CWA
section 405(d) regulations have been promulgated,
EPA never exempted sewage sludge from the
subtitle C hazardous waste regulations, and thus,
sewage sludge that exhibits any of the
characteristics of hazardous waste must be managed
as a hazardous waste. See 45 FR 33102, May 19,
1980 where it states, ‘‘The Agency’s strategy for the
development of a comprehensive sewage sludge
management regulation will eventually result in the
establishment of a separate regulation. Once such
a regulation is in place, sewage sludge will be
exempted from coverage under other sets of
regulations. * * * Pending promulgation of this
comprehensive sewage sludge regulation, sewage
sludge will not be specifically excluded from
Subtitle C.’’
135 Id
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Commenters argued that EPA’s
determination that waste heat boilers do
not qualify as combustion units that
recover energy is arbitrary and does not
recognize the significant value of waste
heat boilers and their role in energy
generation. One commenter, a regional
sewer district that estimated roughly 93
percent of its sewage sludge was
‘‘incinerated,’’ stated that four of its
boilers had produced a total of 2.5
billion pounds of high pressure steam
over a twenty-five year span by
converting the heat generated from
burning sewage sludge in multiple
hearth incinerators to high pressure
steam.
EPA Response: We find that most
sewage sludge is burned not for energy
recovery, but for destruction. Sewage
sludge burned in an incinerator for the
purposes of destruction would clearly
meet the meaning of discard, and thus
be a solid waste. While we recognize
that waste heat boilers are useful
devices for providing energy in the form
of steam for secondary processes, the
presence of a waste heat boiler does not,
by itself, change the fact that the unit
combusting the non-hazardous
secondary material is primarily an
incineration unit burning waste for
disposal purposes.
Further, the Agency does not regard
waste heat boilers as legitimate energy
recovery devices because they receive
their energy input from the combustion
of off-gases via a separate combustion
chamber. Under the RCRA program, a
legitimate energy recovery device is one
that meets the definition of a boiler or
an industrial furnace.137 Among other
criteria, a boiler’s combustion chamber
and primary energy recovery section(s)
must be of integral design, unless it falls
under the process heater or fluidized
bed combustion exemption. Thus, a
combustion chamber that is connected
by a duct to a waste heat boiler (or
recuperator/heat exchanger) does not
qualify as a legitimate energy recovery
device.
Unlike boilers, which are specifically
designed to recover the maximum
amount of heat from a material’s
combustion, waste heat recovery units
are designed to cool the exhaust gas
stream, and/or to recover, indirectly, the
useful heat remaining in the exhaust gas
137 See February 28, 1984 Memorandum from
John H. Skinner, Director, Office of Solid Waste, to
Thomas W. Devine, Director, Air and Waste
Management Division, EPA Region IV, entitled,
‘‘Guidance on Determining When a Hazardous
Waste Is a Legitimate Fuel That May Be Burned for
Energy Recovery in Boiler or Industrial Furnace.’’ A
copy of this memorandum is included in the docket
for today’s rule. For definitions of ‘‘boiler’’ and
‘‘industrial furnace’’ under RCRA, see 40 CFR
260.10.
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from a combustion unit that has some
other primary purpose (such as an
institutional waste incinerator). Thus,
we continue to consider that sewage
sludge is primarily burned for
destruction and the presence of a waste
heat recovery unit would not, by itself,
satisfy the meaningful heating value
legitimacy criterion.
Comment: Regarding the contaminant
levels in sewage sludge, a number of
commenters noted that the pretreatment
standards have reduced contaminants
(particularly metals) in sewage sludge,
with a few commenters providing more
recent contaminant data for sewage
sludge than was available in the
proposed rule and stated that this new
data demonstrates that currently
15515
generated sewage sludge would meet
the contaminant legitimacy criterion.138
The National Association of Clean
Water Agencies (NACWA) amended the
data set included in the proposed rule
by providing data from a 2006–2007
Targeted National Sewage Sludge
Survey (TNSSS). See column four of
Table 6 below:
TABLE 6—COMPARISON OF TOXICS OF MUNICIPAL WASTEWATER TREATMENT SLUDGES TO TRADITIONAL FUELS
40 City study
(1982)
Element
National sewage sludge
survey
(1988)
Targeted national sewage
sludge survey
(TNSSS)
6.7
6.9
119
134.4
5.2
42.7
5.2
6.9
2.6
80
76
1.2
48
7
Coal
Mg/dry kg
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Arsenic .............................................................................................................
Cadmium ..........................................................................................................
Chromium ........................................................................................................
Lead .................................................................................................................
Mercury ............................................................................................................
Nickel ...............................................................................................................
Selenium ..........................................................................................................
9.9
69
429
369
2.8
135.1
7.3
10
0.5
20
40
0.1
20
1
Other commenters, however, agreeing
that sewage sludge should be
considered a solid waste, noted that
sewage sludge tended to have higher
contaminant levels than traditional fuels
and should be regulated as solid waste
when used as a fuel. Although not a part
of the proposed definition of
‘‘contaminants,’’ some commenters
noted the presence of pathogens in
sewage sludge.
EPA’s Response: The Agency
appreciates the more recent and sitespecific data provided by several
commenters. We agree that in most
cases, the specific data provided by
commenters indicates that contaminant
levels for most contaminants is not as
high as previously reported in the
earlier studies. However, we note that
the TNSSS data provided by
commenters still indicates higher levels,
and those that EPA would not consider
to be ‘‘comparable’’ for most of the
contaminants found in sewage sludge
when compared to coal. Thus, under
today’s final rule, sewage sludge would
not satisfy the contaminant legitimacy
criterion because of the presence of noncomparable levels of metals when
compared to traditional fuels. Regarding
the commenter’s reference to pathogens,
pathogens are not included as a
contaminant in today’s rule since that
definition focuses on those constituents
identified in the CAA that EPA will be
evaluating to determine whether to
establish emission standards (see also
discussion in V.D.3).
Comment: Finally, several
commenters urged EPA to explicitly
limit the scope of the final rule, making
it clear that this rulemaking would have
no regulatory effects or impacts for
sewage sludge that is not incinerated
(e.g., land application). On the other
hand, one commenter requested that the
Agency designate sewage sludge as a
solid waste regardless of the manner
that it is managed for disposal (land
application, surface disposal, codisposal in a municipal solid waste
landfill, or incineration).
EPA’s Response: We disagree with the
one commenter who requested that this
rulemaking define sewage sludge as a
solid waste regardless of its end use (i.e.,
land application, surface disposal, etc.).
In this final rule, EPA is articulating a
framework for determining whether a
non-hazardous secondary material is or
is not a solid waste when burned as a
fuel or ingredient in a combustion unit;
we are not making solid waste
determinations that cover other possible
end uses (e.g., land application of
sewage sludge). It is the Agency’s view
that these regulations should not dictate
to state programs how to characterize
and/or regulate this material (as well as
any other non-hazardous secondary
material), particularly since EPA does
not have authority to regulate the
beneficial use of non-hazardous
secondary materials under subtitle D of
RCRA. Therefore, EPA agrees with those
commenters who suggested the limited
scope of this final rule and explicitly
recognize the narrow focus of this
rulemaking.
138 The proposed rule included a table comparing
sewage sludge data taken from a 1982 40-city study
and a 1988 National Sewage Sludge Survey, cited
in the National Biosolids Partnership’s 2005
‘‘National Manual of Good Practices for Biosolids,’’
and coal data taken from a 1998 U.S. EPA report
entitled, ‘‘Development of Comparable Fuels
Specifications.’’ May 1998.
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11. Processed Fats
Processed fats, including both animal
fats and vegetable oils, can be turned
into biofuels for use in industrial
boilers. The proposal did not discuss
the use of this non-hazardous secondary
material or discuss its status as a fuel or
waste under this rule. We did receive
comments pertaining to its status,
however.
Comment: Commenters have argued
that processed fats are a traditional fuel
as they are not discarded and are
legitimate fuel products. Specifically,
they argue that the use of processed fats
as fuel has been used in industrial
boilers for more than a decade, as
evidenced by approval of the use of
such fats as fuels in air permits for
industrial boilers. The commenters also
note that processed fats are a primary
product of the rendering process and
not secondary materials or by-products,
are derived from inedible animal
products, which are the primary
products of value and sale of the meat
industry and not a secondary material or
by-products, and are therefore not a
solid waste since it or its primary
feedstock have never been a waste or
discarded.
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 54 / Monday, March 21, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Processed fats also are managed as
valuable commodities and have
meaningful heating value. They are
managed similar to traditional oils,
utilizing the same tanks, hoses, nozzles,
and tanker trucks, and have a heating
value of around 17,000 Btu/lb.139
Processed fats, the commenters argue,
also have a comparable composition to
traditional fuel products. In fact,
processed fats contain considerably less
contaminants (e.g., <0.010% sulfur by
weight, 0.022% ash by weight) and burn
cleaner than many traditional fuels and
derivatives (e.g., coal, oil, coal tar oil,
asphalts, etc). The limited contaminant
data that was submitted showed that
processed fats had less than 1 ppm of
vanadium. Commenters also stated that
processed fats have fewer contaminants
than No. 6 residual oil (2% sulfur
content), which will result in lower
emissions of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen
oxides, particulate matter, and carbon
monoxide. Furthermore, they stated that
processed fats also have lower
emissions of sulfur dioxide, particulate
matter and carbon monoxide, as
compared to No. 2 distillate oil (0.5%
sulfur content). However, no data was
submitted to validate these statements.
The commenters also note that the
federal government has encouraged the
development and use of materials, such
as processed fats as a clean, renewable
fuel that reduces dependency on
petroleum oils. Since 2006, the use of
processed fats as fuel has been
encouraged through the Alternative Fuel
Mixture Credit (26 U.S.C. 6426(e)).
Although the proposed rule is intended
to facilitate the use of certain materials
that would otherwise be treated as waste
by allowing them to be designated as
non-hazardous secondary materials and
burned as fuels, the net effect, with
respect to processed fats, is the
opposite. Rather than facilitate the use
of processed fats as fuel, the rule will
effectively end the development of this
market. This is because the end result
under the rule as it currently is
proposed is a requirement that each
potential customer must petition and
obtain EPA approval for each facility in
which they wish to burn processed fats.
The burden and delay of submitting to
such a process will have a chilling effect
on the development of new customers
and markets for processed fats as fuel.
As a practical matter, this outcome is
contrary to longstanding federal policy
encouraging the development and use of
139 See document EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–
0706.1. Adams, T.T., J. Walsh, M. Brown,
J. Goodrum, J. Sellers, and K. Das, 2002. ‘‘A
Demonstration of Fat and Grease as an Industrial
Boiler Fuel,’’ University of Georgia, Athens, GA.
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clean, renewable fuels in place of
petroleum and other fossil fuels.
EPA’s Response: We disagree that
process fats are a traditional fuel.
Process fats are secondary materials as
they are produced from inedible parts of
animals that were primarily butchered
for meat, not for use as a fuel. We
recognize, however, that these nonhazardous secondary materials contain
lower concentrations of contaminants
than traditional fuels 140 and, as such,
are being encouraged for use instead of
fossil fuels.141 In addition, since the fats
are managed the same way that
traditional oil is, it is evident that the
material is handled as a valuable
commodity, meeting that legitimacy
criterion. Additionally, the material
meets the legitimacy criterion for a
meaningful heating value. Since these
materials are sometimes not managed
within the control of the generator (i.e.,
the butcher, the restaurant, etc.),
questions could be raised as to whether
they are discarded if not burned in a
combustion unit within the control of
the generator. However, we would note
that the rendering process ‘‘sufficiently
processes’’ the material into a non-waste
fuel that meets the legitimacy criteria, as
we note above. Thus, the commenters
concern that non-waste determination
petitions would need to be submitted on
a case-by-case basis, and would have a
chilling effect on the development of
new customers and markets for
processed fats, is not the case. Thus, the
final rule establishes these nonhazardous secondary materials, after
being processed, as a non-waste fuel.
C. Comments on Specific Materials
Used as Ingredients
The ANPRM identified a number of
non-hazardous secondary materials that
the Agency believes are currently being
used as legitimate non-waste ingredients
in combustion processes. The proposed
rule then identified the four material
groups for which we received the
majority of the comments on the
ANPRM. The four material groups are
CKD, CCRs, foundry sand, and blast
furnace slag/steel slag. The proposed
rule did not assume that ingredients
used in combustion units that are not
managed within the control of the
generator are discarded materials (as is
the case for most non-hazardous
140 See the Preliminary Characterization Study
Prepared In Support of the Proposed Rulemaking—
Identification of Nonhazardous Secondary Materials
That Are Solid Waste: Traditional Fuels and Key
Derivatives, EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–0461.21.
141 See Adams, T.T., J. Walsh, M, Brown,
J. Goodrum, J. Sellers, and K. Das, 2002. ‘‘A
demonstration of Fat and Grease as an Industrial
Boiler Fuel,’’ University of Georgia, Athens, GA.
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secondary material fuels), since we
believe that non-hazardous secondary
materials used as ingredients are more
akin to commodities managed within
continuous commerce and are used as
an integral part of the manufacturing
process. That is, non-hazardous
secondary materials that are directly
used (or in the case of previously used
materials, reused), function as effective
substitutes (i.e., as raw materials) in
normal manufacturing operations or as
products in normal commercial
applications, and thus, EPA has
interpreted the definition of solid waste
as excluding non-hazardous secondary
materials recycled in ways that most
closely resemble normal production
processes, provided they meet the
legitimacy criteria.
Besides the comments on specific
non-hazardous secondary materials
used as ingredients described below, we
again note the overarching comment
that was raised by some commenters
that the Agency has no authority under
section 129 of the CAA to regulate the
use of secondary materials as
ingredients, as EPA’s section 129
authority is limited to ‘‘solid waste
incineration units,’’ which the statute
defines as units that ‘‘combust’’ solid
waste. As discussed in Section V.A of
today’s final rule, we believe that this
comment is not relevant to this
regulation, which determines whether
non-hazardous secondary material is a
solid waste, or not under RCRA. EPA
has clear authority to interpret RCRA to
decide whether non-hazardous
secondary materials are solid wastes or
not.
1. Cement Kiln Dust
CKD is a fine-grained, solid, highly
alkaline material removed from the
cement kiln exhaust gas by scrubbers.
Much of the material comprising CKD is
incompletely reacted raw material,
including a raw mix at various stages of
burning, and particles of clinker.
Generation of CKD is directly connected
to the production of cement clinker. The
proposed rule indicated that CKD used
in a cement kiln would not be
considered a solid waste when used as
an ingredient in a combustion unit, so
long as it was not discarded in the first
instance and satisfies the legitimacy
criteria for ingredients. Whether CKD
remains within the control of the
generator or is transferred to another
person is not in and of itself indicative
of discard, as discussed above. If CKD
has been discarded, however, its use as
an ingredient in cement kilns would be
considered combustion of a solid waste,
unless it has been processed to produce
a non-waste ingredient.
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Comment: We received limited
comments on CKD. One commenter
urged EPA to state that CKD that is
removed from on-site storage piles or
monofills should be considered a
legitimate non-hazardous secondary
material and should not be considered
a solid waste. The commenter explains
that while CKD may have been
previously placed in storage piles or
even permitted solid waste management
units (SWMUs), the technology did not
exist previously to reuse the material.
However, newer kiln systems can now
use the CKD that has previously been
disposed of, and thus, these nonhazardous secondary materials (which
are ingredients in the manufacture of
cement) should not be subject to the
CAA section 129 standards.
EPA’s Response: The commenter
acknowledges that even though the CKD
has remained on-site, the intent or
purpose of placing CKD in storage piles
or SWMUs was to dispose of them (i.e.,
discard). Additionally, CKD that has
been placed in storage piles in this
manner would likely not meet the
legitimacy criterion of ‘‘managed as a
valuable commodity.’’ Thus, it would
appear in this instance that CKD that
has been placed in storage piles for the
purpose of disposal, even if on-site, has
been discarded and would be
considered a solid waste if burned in a
combustion unit, unless the discarded
CKD is processed into a non-waste
ingredient product. (See discussion
elsewhere in today’s preamble regarding
the reason why non-hazardous
secondary materials that have been
discarded in the first instance are solid
waste if burned in a combustion unit,
unless the non-hazardous secondary
material is processed into a non-waste
ingredient product.) CKD that has not
been discarded in the first instance,
however, and satisfies the legitimacy
criteria would not be considered a solid
waste when used as an ingredient.
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2. Coal Combustion Residuals 142
CCRs are formed during the coalburning processes in power plants and
industrial boilers, and are produced in
142 In a separate rulemaking effort, EPA has
proposed regulations that will provide for the safe
disposal and management of coal combustion
residuals from utility coal-fired power plants (the
‘‘Coal Combustion Residuals Proposed Rule’’). The
proposed rule was published in the Federal
Register on June 21, 2010. See 75 FR 35127.
Today’s final rule does not affect that rulemaking
effort, as our rule considers the use of coal
combustion residuals in combustion units as fuels
or ingredients, while the coal combustion residual
proposed rule is concerned with the safe disposal
and management of these residuals in landfills and
surface impoundments. For more information on
the coal combustion residual proposed rule, see
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–RCRA–2009–0640.
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various forms (i.e., fly ash, bottom ash,
and boiler slag) that are categorized by
the process in which they are generated.
The proposed rule indicated that CCRs
used as ingredients in combustion units
would not be considered solid wastes,
provided they were not discarded in the
first instance and satisfy the legitimacy
criteria.143 We also noted that CCRs can
be used both as an ingredient and as a
fuel supplement and proposed that the
decision to treat them as a fuel or
ingredient should be based on the
primary purpose of their use in a
combustion unit. We took comment on
this approach, especially our
characterization that the primary use of
CCRs in cement kilns is generally for
their ingredient value, as opposed to
their fuel value.
The proposal also indicated that when
CCRs are used for their ingredient value,
the transferring of these materials to
another person would not in and of
itself be indicative of discard. However,
to the extent that CCRs have been
discarded in the first instance, they
would have to be processed into a nonwaste ingredient product and satisfy the
legitimacy criteria in order not to be
considered a solid waste. We also noted
that comments were submitted on the
ANPRM, which described patented
processes that remove unwanted carbon
from coal fly ash in order for these nonhazardous secondary materials to be
used as an ingredient. While these
processes—that is, those that separate
carbon from fly ash to produce
technically compliant fly ash for use in
concrete appear to satisfy our processing
requirement, we requested that
commenters provide additional
information explaining how this
processing is conducted, and whether
this type of fly ash is used as an
ingredient in the clinker production
process. The proposed rule also
requested comment on the extent to
which CCRs are recovered from the
discard environment (e.g., landfills) and
used as ingredients in cement kilns, as
well as more information on the extent
to which these CCRs are processed.
In addressing the commenter who
submitted comments on the ANPRM
and argued that CCRs are solid wastes
due to their high concentration of
contaminants, the proposal noted that
the chemical properties of CCRs are
influenced to a great extent by the coal
burned, the type of combustion unit,
and the air pollution controls
143 For a discussion of CCRs used as fuels in
combustion units, see Section V.B.9 of this final
rule.
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applied.144 Acknowledging that fly ash
may contain various levels of metals,
such as vanadium, zinc, copper,
chromium, nickel, lead, arsenic, and
mercury,145 the proposed rule noted
that in a 2008 Report to Congress
addressing the use of these secondary
materials as ingredients in cement and
concrete applications, the overall
conclusion reached with respect to the
perceived safety health risk barriers was
a positive one, in that the risk analyses
did not identify significant risks to
human health and the environment
associated with these uses.146
The proposed rule also noted that the
Agency is studying the possible effects
of new air emission control technologies
and configurations on the composition
of CCRs and requested comment on
whether advanced emission control
technologies, such as carbon control
technologies for mercury and NOX, are
resulting or will result in increased
levels of contaminants in coal ash to the
extent that coal ash would not satisfy
our legitimacy criteria.
Comment: Almost all commenters
agreed that the primary purpose when
using CCRs in cement kilns was to
utilize these secondary materials as
ingredients. Most commenters further
asserted that all CCRs, when used in
combustion units, should always be
classified as ingredients rather than as
fuels. (See Section V.B.9 for a further
discussion on this comment and the
Agency’s response.) These commenters
claimed that any energy value that is
recovered is secondary to its value as an
ingredient, and argued that classifying
CCRs always as ingredients would
simplify the waste determinations for
these non-hazardous secondary
144 For more information on the different types,
or ranks, of coal, please refer to the Materials
Characterization Paper on Traditional Fuels and
Key Derivatives, which is located in the docket of
today’s final rule.
145 See ‘‘Technical Background Document for the
Report to Congress on Removing Wastes from Fossil
Fuel Combustion: Waste Characterization.’’ U.S.
EPA. March 15, 1999.
146 ‘‘Study on Increasing the Usage of Recovered
Mineral Components in Federally Funded Projects
Involving Procurement of Cement or Concrete to
Address the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users.
Report to Congress.’’ June, 3, 2008. EPA530–R–08–
007. When analyzing perceived safety and health
risk barriers associated with the beneficial use of
recovered mineral components (including CCRs et
al.), this study concluded that ‘‘Findings from
[several cited] analyses did not identify significant
risks to human health and the environment
associated with the beneficial uses of concern. In
addition, [EPA] identified no documents providing
evidence of damage to human health and the
environment from these beneficial uses. Our overall
conclusions from these efforts, therefore, are that
encapsulated applications, including cement and
concrete uses, appear to present minimal risk.’’ Id.
at 4–11.
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materials by clearly establishing the
appropriate legitimacy criteria that
apply (i.e., facilities would not need to
determine whether the fuel or
ingredient legitimacy criteria apply
based on the primary purpose of the
secondary materials).
Some commenters were also
concerned that if cement kilns burned
high-carbon content fly ash (which has
more pronounced fuel content), the
provisions of this rule applying to fuels
would be triggered, even though these
secondary materials have nearly
identical characteristics, is managed in
an identical manner, and is combusted
in the same unit as the material used
primarily as an ingredient (i.e., lowcarbon content fly ash).
EPA’s Response: EPA agrees with the
commenters that the primary purpose
when using CCRs in cement kilns is to
utilize it as an ingredient. However, we
disagree with those commenters that
argued that all CCRs, when used in
combustion units, should be
categorically defined as ingredients. As
some commenters acknowledged (and
as we also discussed in Section V.B.9
above), some CCRs are indeed used for
their fuel value as opposed to their
ingredient value, especially when reburned, as in the case of their use in
combustion units by electric utilities.
Therefore, we cannot categorically
classify CCRs as ingredients when it is
clear that, in some cases, these nonhazardous secondary materials are being
burned for their fuel value and/or to
produce a new secondary material (i.e.,
low-carbon fly ash). In cases where the
primary purpose of using CCRs is for
their fuel value and not for their
ingredient value (e.g., by electric
utilities), the secondary materials must
meet the requirements for fuels,
including the legitimacy criteria, in
order not to be considered a solid waste.
With respect to the issue of highcarbon fly ash burned in cement kilns,
it is not clear the extent to which
cement kilns burn high-carbon fly ash or
rather if commenters were providing a
hypothetical situation in order to
highlight potential issues that could
arise for secondary materials that could
have value as both a fuel and ingredient.
It is also unclear whether low-carbon fly
ash is required as a substitute ingredient
in Portland cement or if cement kilns
can also use high-carbon fly ash for its
ingredient value. To the extent that
these kilns are burning these secondary
materials for their fuel value as opposed
to their value as an ingredient, these
secondary materials would be subject to
the requirements for non-hazardous
secondary materials used as fuels
promulgated in today’s final rule.
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We note other commenters who
describe processes for removing
unwanted carbon from fly ash in order
to produce concrete quality fly ash
(lower carbon content), which could
suggest that cement kilns that burn
high-carbon fly ash may be using these
secondary materials for their fuel value,
as well as their ingredient value. These
commenters, however, discussed
instances where fly ash was used as a
fuel only in regards to its use in utility
boilers and CBO units—where there is
clearly not an ingredient value, as is the
case with burning fly ash in cement
kilns.
Comment: EPA received comments on
the ANPRM stating that there are at least
four patented processes for removing
unwanted carbon from fly and bottom
ash that allow the processed ash to
produce both technically compliant ash
for use in concrete and a separate
carbon stream that can be re-introduced
into the boiler for its fuel value. One
electric utility, commenting on the
proposed rule, also mentioned patented
processes for using CCRs recovered from
landfills. However, neither of these
commenters provided specific details
regarding how CCRs that are recovered
from the discard environment are
actually ‘‘processed.’’ One other
commenter discussed a two-stage
process to maintain low carbon content,
but was not aware whether the material
was used for concrete or clinker
production. Another commenter argued
that the same processes used for
currently generated fly ash to separate
high-carbon ash from mineral ash could
be applied to reclaimed fly ash and
produce similar secondary ingredients.
This commenter argued that the
processes produce two materials that are
chemically distinct from the reclaimed
fly ash and should therefore satisfy our
proposed processing requirement.
EPA’s Response: Unfortunately, EPA
did not receive information during the
comment period describing the types of
processing that discarded CCRs undergo
prior to being used as an ingredient in
a combustion unit and are, thus, unable
to make a categorical determination
whether the patented processes
referenced in the proposed rule would
meet the definition of processing being
promulgated in today’s final rule.
Although we did not receive new
information regarding how CCRs are
processed, as we stated in the proposed
rule, certain processes are currently
being utilized to recover CCRs from the
discard environment that would likely
meet our definition of ‘‘processing.’’ For
example, we are aware of at least one
electric utility that recovers ash from
ponds or landfills and then separates
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this secondary material into its
fundamental components: Carbon,
silicates, and high-density, iron-rich
materials. A coarse carbon-fuel product
is then recovered by density separation
using concentrating spirals. A fine
carbon-fuel product is also recovered
with flotation cells.147 We believe that
this type of processing is likely to meet
our definition of processing, as it
appears that these processes in fact
remove contaminants and improve the
ingredient characteristics of these
recovered CCRs. Thus, a determination
would need to be made as to whether
such processes meet the definition of
processing, as codified in § 241.2.
Comment: As noted above, we
solicited comments in the proposed rule
regarding the extent to which CCRs are
recovered from the discard environment
and used as ingredients in cement kilns.
We received a few comments regarding
the extent to which CCRs are mined
from landfills (i.e., recovered from the
discard environment). Most of these
comments did not specify, however,
whether these recovered CCRs were
subsequently used for their fuel or
ingredient value.
EPA’s Response: Based on the
comments, it does not appear that it is
a common practice for CCRs to be
recovered from the discard environment
(e.g., landfills) and beneficially used.
We respond to these comments in
Section V.B.9 (Comments on Specific
Materials Used as Fuel-Coal Combustion
Residuals).
Comment: Regarding the question of
whether advanced emission control
technologies are resulting or will result
in increased levels of contaminants in
CCRs, one commenter stated that there
was no credible way to know or
anticipate this information. Another
commenter agreed, stating that there is
no data and no way to predict the result
of new or future technology on the
character of fly ash because of the use
of advanced pollution control
technology. This commenter also notes
that there is no current information
available that has proven that advanced
emission control technologies directly
result in increased contaminant levels.
One state commenter, however, stated
that it expects the mercury content of
coal fly ash to increase significantly in
upcoming years. Consequently, this
state commenter described its current
efforts to remove a generic, predetermined beneficial use determination
for coal fly ash as an ingredient in
147 See ‘‘Materials Characterization Paper on Coal
Combustion Residuals—Coal Fly Ash, Bottom Ash,
and Boiler Slag.’’ A copy of this document has been
placed in the docket for today’s rule.
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cement manufacturing. Additionally,
another commenter stated that when
using the CBO process to combust fly
ash, essentially 100 percent of the
mercury entering the CBO unit as feed
ash leaves with the product ash.
EPA’s Response: EPA recognizes that
it is difficult to anticipate what
contaminant levels in coal fly ash will
result from implementation of future
technologies. We also believe, however,
that it is important to be studying and
anticipating the possible effects of new
air pollution control (APC) technologies
and configurations on the composition
of CCRs to the greatest extent possible.
As noted in the proposed rulemaking,
EPA has begun publishing a series of
reports to analyze this issue further.148
Based on these reports, EPA believes
that changes to APCs at coal-fired power
plants (e.g., addition of flue-gas
desulfurization (FGD) systems, selective
catalytic reduction, and activated
carbon injection to capture mercury and
other pollutants) are shifting mercury
and other pollutants (e.g., metals) from
the flue gas to fly ash, FGD gypsum, and
other APC residues. The Agency will
continue to research the possible effects
of APCs on contaminant levels in fly
ash. We note that under today’s final
rule, fly ash used as an ingredient
would need to pass the contaminant
legitimacy criterion for ingredients in
order to not be considered a solid
waste.149
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3. Foundry Sand
Foundry sand is an industrial material
generated by the metal-casting industry,
which uses the sand to form a physical
mold used in the production of metal
products. After multiple uses in
castings, the sand becomes unsuitable
for castings and is either disposed of in
landfills or beneficially used in other
applications, including use as an
148 A series of reports have been and are being
developed by U.S. EPA’s Office of Research
Development. To date, three documents have been
finalized, including: (1) ‘‘Characterization of
Mercury-Enriched Coal Combustion Residuals from
Electric Utilities Using Enhanced Sorbents for
Mercury Control.’’ EPA–600/R–06/008. Feb. 2006;
(2) ‘‘Characterization of Coal Combustion Residuals
from Electric Utilities Using Wet Scrubbers for
Multi-Pollutant Control.’’ EPA–600/R–08/077. July
2008; and (3) ‘‘Characterization of Coal Combustion
Residuals from Electric Utilities Using MultiPollutant Control Technology—Leaching and
Characterization Data.’’ EPA–600/R–09/151.
December 2009. Ongoing work to complete this
research includes: (1) Probabilistic assessment of
the leaching source term for plausible CCR
management scenarios, (2) Leach-XS Lite which is
free software providing electronic access to data
from this research, and (3) test methods for the
Leaching Environmental Assessment Framework
(LEAF).
149 We also note that CCRs used as fuels must also
meet the contaminant legitimacy criterion in order
not to be considered a solid waste.
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ingredient in the manufacture of
Portland cement. The proposed rule
classified foundry sand as not being a
solid waste when used as an ingredient
in a combustion unit, so long as it was
not discarded in the first instance and
satisfies the legitimacy criteria for
ingredients. Whether foundry sand
remains within the control of the
generator or is transferred to another
person is not in and of itself indicative
of discard, as discussed previously. If
foundry sand has been discarded,
however, it would be considered a solid
waste, unless it has been processed to
produce a non-waste ingredient.
Comment: We received a few
comments regarding the
characterization of foundry sand in the
proposed rule. One commenter
discussed how foundry sand is reused
in the metal casting process as part of
its argument that foundry sand should
not be considered a solid waste, citing
a 2001 letter from EPA which indicated
that foundry sand reused on-site within
the sand loop for mold making is part
of a continuous industrial process and,
therefore, not a solid waste.150 The same
commenter also discussed how this
sand can also be processed on-site in a
thermal reclamation unit so that the
sand can be returned to the mold- and
core-making process. Commenters also
discussed a variety of other beneficial
uses for foundry sand.
EPA’s Response: The foundry sand
uses evaluated as part of this
rulemaking only include their use as an
ingredient in combustion, such as
cement kilns. We do not consider the
reuse of foundry sand in the metal
casting operations to constitute the use
of a non-hazardous secondary material
either as a fuel or ingredient in a
combustion system, but rather as a type
of beneficial use that is routinely
employed by foundries in the
production of metal products. As we
stated in the referenced 2001 letter,
foundry sands that are re-used on-site in
the primary production process on a
continuous basis in the sand loop are
not solid wastes.151
We note, however, that the 2001 letter
cited by one commenter explicitly states
that the Agency is not addressing the
status of any thermal processing of sand
in the letter. It appears that the purpose
of ‘‘processing’’ foundry sand in a
150 March 28, 2001 letter from Elizabeth
Cotsworth, Director, EPA’s Office of Solid Waste to
Ms. Amy J. Blankenbiller, American Foundry
Society. A copy of this letter can be found in the
docket to today’s rule.
151 For more information on the reuse of foundry
sands as molds, see ‘‘Revisions to the Definition of
Solid Waste’’ Final Rule at 73 FR 64705. October 30,
2010.
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thermal reclamation unit is to destroy or
dispose of the contaminants so that the
foundry sand can be re-used. As such,
the burning of foundry sand in a
thermal reclamation unit is burning for
discard and, thus, would be considered
a solid waste if combusted in such a
unit, which would be subject to the
section 129 CAA standards. Regarding
comments that discussed other
beneficial uses of foundry sand, we
again note that this rule is limited to
situations where the non-hazardous
secondary material is used as a fuel or
ingredient in a combustion unit and, as
such, other examples of using foundry
sand in other applications is beyond the
scope of this rulemaking.
4. Blast Furnace Slag/Steel Slag
Blast furnace slag and steel furnace
slag (steel slag) are by-products of iron
and steel manufacturing in both iron
and steel mills. Slags are used as
ingredients in cement clinker
manufacturing, bituminous concrete,
road building and construction, among
other beneficial uses. The proposed rule
indicated that blast furnace and steel
slag used as ingredients in combustion
units that are not discarded in the first
instance would not be considered a
solid waste provided they satisfy the
legitimacy criteria for ingredients.
Whether blast furnace and steel slag
remains within the control of the
generator or is transferred to another
person is not in and of itself indicative
of discard, as previously discussed.
However, if blast furnace and steel slag
are in fact discarded in the first
instance, then they would have to be
sufficiently processed into a non-waste
ingredient that satisfies the legitimacy
criteria in order to be classified as a
non-waste ingredient. However, we
solicited comments on the level of
processing that these materials undergo
before determining whether such
operations would meet our definition of
processing.
Comment: We received few comments
specifically on blast furnace and steel
slag. One commenter discussed the use
of blast furnace slag as a raw material
substitute in the glass manufacturing
process. Another commenter discussed
how blast furnace and steel slag are
typically returned to the iron and steel
making processes and are not discarded
in the first instance. The same
commenter also discussed slag piles that
were previously discarded and the
processing that these non-hazardous
secondary materials go through.
Specifically, such processing includes
extraction, passing the slag through
grizzlies, removal of iron bearing scrap
using magnets, and then screening to
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size the aggregate. Some commenters
also asserted that because these slags are
reused as part of a continuous process,
the application of the legitimacy criteria
are inappropriate.
EPA’s Response: We agree with the
commenters that blast furnace and steel
slag that are reused as an ingredient,
either in the iron and steel making
processes or in the manufacturing of
glass, are not solid wastes provided they
have not been discarded in the first
instance and meet the legitimacy
criteria. However, we disagree with the
commenters, who argued that because
they are reusing these slags in a
‘‘continuous process,’’ the application of
the legitimacy criteria do not apply.
EPA has a long-standing policy that the
recycling of secondary materials, both
hazardous and non-hazardous,
including as part of a continuous
industrial process, must be legitimate.
The legitimacy provisions in today’s
rule are designed to distinguish between
real recycling activities and ‘‘sham’’
recycling, an activity undertaken by an
entity to avoid certain requirements,
which in this case would be to avoid
triggering the section 129 CAA
requirements for solid waste
incinerators. Because of the economic
advantages in managing the nonhazardous secondary material as a nonwaste ingredient as opposed to a solid
waste ingredient, there is an incentive
for some handlers to claim they are
recycling, when, in fact, they are
conducting waste disposal. Therefore,
blast furnace and steel slag used as an
ingredient in a combustion unit,
including as part of a continuous
industrial process, must satisfy all of the
legitimacy criteria in order to not be
considered a solid waste.
Regarding the description provided by
the commenter on the extent of
processing conducted on slags that have
been previously discarded, it appears
that this level of processing would meet
our definition of processing, as the
processing includes not only rigorous
operations to extract the slag from the
discard environment, but also the
concerted removal of constituents
through magnetic separation. Assuming
the processed slag meets the legitimacy
criteria for ingredients, the slag resulting
from the processing operation would
constitute a non-waste ingredient and
would not be considered a solid waste.
D. Comments on Legitimacy Criteria for
Fuels
Non-hazardous secondary materials
used as fuels in combustion units must
meet the legitimacy criteria specified in
§ 241.3(d)(1) in order to be considered a
non-waste fuel. To meet the fuel
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legitimacy criteria, the non-hazardous
secondary material must be managed as
a valuable commodity, have a
meaningful heating value and be used as
a fuel in a combustion unit that recovers
energy, and contain contaminants at
levels comparable to or lower than those
in traditional fuels which the
combustion unit is designed to burn.
Details on each criterion as outlined in
the proposed rule and the comments
received are discussed below.
1. Managed as a Valuable Commodity
Under the proposed rule, nonhazardous secondary materials used as
fuels must be managed as valuable
commodities, including being stored for
a reasonable time frame. Where there is
an analogous fuel, the non-hazardous
secondary material used as a fuel must
be managed in a manner consistent with
the management of the analogous fuel or
otherwise be adequately contained so as
to prevent releases to the environment.
Where there is no analogous fuel, the
non-hazardous secondary material must
be adequately contained so as to prevent
releases to the environment. An
‘‘analogous fuel’’ is a traditional fuel for
which the non-hazardous secondary
material substitutes, and which serves
the same function and has similar
physical and chemical properties as the
non-hazardous secondary material. In
addition to requesting comment on this
criterion, the Agency solicited comment
on whether it should define a specific
‘‘reasonable’’ time frame or range of time
frames for storage as part of this
criterion and on the time period or
range of time periods that traditional
fuels are typically held before they are
used as a fuel. Comment was also
solicited as to whether the ‘‘contained’’
standard, which is a general
performance standard, provides
sufficient direction to the regulated
community or whether the Agency
should include specific technical
standards or limit the types of units in
which such non-hazardous secondary
materials may be managed, in order for
them to be considered to be ‘‘managed
as a valuable commodity.’’
Comment: Recommendations on a
reasonable time frame to determine if a
non-hazardous secondary material is
managed as a valuable commodity
brought a range of responses. Many
commented that a one-rule-fits-all
policy for the reasonable time frame of
storage of non-hazardous secondary
materials is impractical and arbitrary,
since the definition of what is
‘‘reasonable’’ will vary by secondary
material, industry, and facility. Instead,
they argued that facilities should be
allowed to determine what constitutes
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the most reasonable time frame, based
on what is most economical. The most
appropriate time frame will vary
depending upon the non-hazardous
secondary material and the industry and
may reflect the rate at which the nonhazardous secondary material at issue is
generated. If a non-hazardous secondary
material is generated continuously, then
use and storage is predictable and can
be kept consistent. However, some nonhazardous secondary materials are
stored for long periods and may be
removed only once or twice per year.
While many commenters rejected the
idea of a specific storage time limit, a
limited number were supportive of such
an approach. For example, one
commenter recommended that no more
than 180 days of inventory using the
design process rate be stored at any
given time and no more than 49 percent
of the inventory be in storage for more
than 2 years. These time frames allow
the energy/material recovery facility a
reasonable amount of time to make
arrangements to establish, buy, and sell
the non-hazardous secondary material.
Other commenters recommended a time
frame of one year, consistent with the
hazardous waste requirements for
speculative accumulation.
EPA’s Response: After further
evaluation, EPA agrees with the
majority of commenters that ‘‘reasonable
time frame’’ should not be specifically
defined as such time frames vary
according to the non-hazardous
secondary material and industry
involved. The ‘‘reasonable time frame’’ is
an appropriate standard considering the
large number of non-hazardous
materials that may be subject to this
rule, and is flexible enough to allow
accumulation of these materials to be
cost-effective. In addition, persons will
need to document in their records the
‘‘reasonable time frame’’ selected and the
basis for such time frames. (See Section
VII.I for further discussion on
documentation of legitimacy decisions.)
The Agency did not receive information
that such flexibility would lead to nonhazardous secondary materials being
over-accumulated.
Comment: The Agency solicited
comment on this aspect of this criterion,
including whether a ‘‘contained’’
standard, which is a general
performance standard, provides
sufficient direction to the regulated
community. Other approaches that EPA
considered were: (1) Providing a more
specific definition of ‘‘contained’’ in the
rules, or (2) including specific technical
standards or (3) limiting the types of
units in which such non-hazardous
secondary materials may be managed, in
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order for them to be considered to be
‘‘managed as a valuable commodity.’’
Several commenters recommended
that the definition of ‘‘contained’’ be
clarified and to include the concept of
maintaining the recyclability of the nonhazardous secondary material. In
contrast, other commenters stated that
the proposed ‘‘contained’’ standard
provides sufficient direction to the
regulated community and that the
definition of ‘‘contained’’ in the
proposed rule adequately describes how
and when a non-hazardous secondary
material will be considered ‘‘contained.’’
They asserted that industry will use this
definition as a general guideline for the
safe handling and storage of nonhazardous secondary materials and that
further ‘‘specific’’ definitions or other
approaches would not be beneficial
since the current guidance provides
clear and sensible direction.
Others commented that the
‘‘contained’’ standard is inadequate to
determine whether a material is
‘‘valuable’’ or discarded. They argue that
the standard does not explain what
adequately contained means nor does it
account for differences in the necessary
level of containment for different
materials.
EPA’s Response: The Agency
recognizes that the ‘‘contained’’ concept
can be somewhat difficult to grasp, but
also notes that the ‘‘contained’’ standard
is to be used only in those situations
where there is not an analogous fuel
product. That is, if there is an analogous
fuel product to the non-hazardous
secondary material, then the nonhazardous secondary material must be
stored in a similar manner and, since it
is indeed a valuable material, EPA could
reasonably expect it to be contained so
as not to be lost to the environment. In
EPA’s view, a recycler will value nonhazardous secondary materials that are
contributing fuel value to its process or
product and, therefore, will manage
those non-hazardous secondary
materials in a manner consistent with
how it manages a valuable fuel. If, on
the other hand, the recycler does not
manage the non-hazardous secondary
materials as it would a valuable fuel,
that behavior may indicate that the nonhazardous secondary materials may not
be burned as fuel, but rather released
into the environment and discarded.
This criterion’s primary focus is on
storage in a manner consistent with the
analogous valuable raw material.
However, EPA realizes that in some
processes, there is not a raw material
that can be called ‘‘analogous’’ and, in
order to allow facilities with those
processes to evaluate the legitimacy of
their recycling, EPA added the
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requirement that the materials be
‘‘contained’’ if there is no analogous
product to achieve the same relative
standard of secondary materials being
managed as valuable commodities.
Furthermore, EPA has explained what it
means to be contained in today’s
preamble and includes that definition in
the regulatory text. Specifically, a nonhazardous secondary material is
‘‘adequately contained’’ if it is stored in
a manner that adequately prevents
releases or other hazards to human
health and the environment,
considering the nature and toxicity of
the secondary material. Thus, we are
finalizing the contained standard, as
proposed.
Nevertheless, the Agency recognizes
that providing greater clarity to this
definition may be useful to the regulated
community and the public. To this end,
EPA has agreed to issue a proposed rule
by June 2011 on the definition of solid
waste under the hazardous waste
provisions of RCRA (see Section VIII.C
for additional details). One of the issues
that EPA will be evaluating as part of
that proposal is the ‘‘contained’’
standard, as promulgated in that rule.152
Comment: Several commenters
expressed uncertainty about the
meaning of ‘‘valuable commodity,’’
noting that the definition of valuable
commodity should be clarified, or
requested that EPA specify clear criteria
for determining whether a nonhazardous secondary material is
managed as a valuable commodity.
EPA’s Response: Given the nature of
this legitimacy criterion and the need to
apply it to a variety of non-hazardous
secondary materials that are managed in
various ways, we have determined that
it is not appropriate or practicable for
EPA to develop specific technical
standards. The Agency is using this
criterion: Materials must be managed as
analogous raw materials or, if there are
no analogous raw materials, the
materials must be adequately contained;
contained is defined to mean ‘‘the nonhazardous secondary material is stored
in a manner that adequately prevents
releases or other hazards to human
health and the environment considering
the nature and toxicity of the non152 In a Federal Register notice where EPA
announced a public meeting on the Definition of
Solid Waste under the hazardous waste provisions
of RCRA, we specifically identified the definition
of ‘‘contained’’ as one of the provisions that EPA
was further evaluating. (74 FR 25202, May 27,
2009.) Among other things, the Agency noted that
it could ‘‘address this issue by setting specific
performance or storage standards as a condition of
the transfer-based exclusion. Finally, EPA could
address this concern by developing more detailed
guidance on what might constitute ‘‘contained,’’ for
different types of units or management practices.’’
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hazardous secondary material.’’ This
definition provides ample direction and
guidance, as a number of commenters
argued, while at the same time provides
the flexibility needed since this
criterion will apply to a large number of
non-hazardous secondary materials and
industries. As an example, resinated
wood residuals are adequately
contained since they are pneumatically
transferred through enclosed ducts,
stored temporarily in a fuel silo, and
then utilized in boilers to provide heat
to hot presses and dryers (see Section
V.B.6).
Regarding the term ‘‘valuable
commodity,’’ EPA’s intent with this
criterion is that non-hazardous
secondary materials are managed in the
same manner as materials that have
been purchased or obtained at some
cost, just as fuels or raw materials are.
We expect non-hazardous secondary
materials that are used as fuels or
ingredients to be managed effectively
and efficiently in order that their full
value to the combustion process is
realized. The standard for management
of the non-hazardous secondary
materials is reasonable for helping
assess whether disposal in the guise of
normal manufacturing is occurring. As
an example, scrap tires collected under
the oversight of established tire
collection programs (see Section VII.C)
would generally be considered managed
as a valuable commodity. These
programs promote the beneficial use of
scrap tires and form established
collection infrastructures through
coordination with tire dealerships,
haulers, processors and end users. On
the other hand, scrap tires that are
managed in waste tire piles would not
be considered to be managed as a
valuable commodity because they are
stored for long periods of time without
any safeguards.
Comments: One commenter suggested
that the tests to determine if a material
is managed as a valuable commodity
(determining if it is managed consistent
with the management of an analogous
ingredient and used within a reasonable
time frame) are irrelevant because solid
wastes are managed in ways similar to
commodities (i.e., solid wastes and solid
commodities are stored in piles on the
ground, liquid wastes and commodities
are stored in tanks and barrels). Another
commenter asked that EPA provide
clarity on managing a non-hazardous
secondary material as a valuable
commodity and the kinds of practices a
facility must implement to demonstrate
that it is managing the non-hazardous
secondary material as a valuable
commodity.
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EPA’s Response: We disagree with the
commenter that this criterion is
irrelevant because we cannot determine
(nor does our experience suggest) that
solid wastes and commodities are
always managed in a similar manner.
Commodities, on the one hand, are
handled specifically to prevent the loss
of material because of its value. Solid
wastes, on the other hand, when they
are not highly regarded for a beneficial
reuse, are often not managed in a way
that minimizes the release of the
material itself, but more in a way that
protects the surrounding environment
from the material. However, we also
know that solid wastes, if not properly
managed, have created damages to the
environment. For example, the overaccumulation of scrap tires is well
known and has resulted in massive piles
of discarded tires that have contributed
to the overall solid waste management
problem due to the threat of fires, such
as the Rhinehart Tire Fire Dump,153 and
because they provide an ideal breeding
ground for mosquitoes and rodents.
As discussed previously, given the
nature of this legitimacy criterion and
the need to apply it to a variety of nonhazardous secondary materials that are
managed in various ways, we are not
identifying specific standards or
practices for managing a material as a
valuable commodity beyond those
examples for resinated wood and scrap
tires outlined above. If any material,
whether a non-hazardous secondary
material or a raw material commodity,
is mis-managed in a manner that
releases significant material to the
environment, a waste problem may
result. Although the raw material
commodity is not subject to the RCRA
definition of solid waste, the released
material may be. In this rule, where the
Agency is dealing with secondary
materials that could either be wastes or
commodities, if non-hazardous
secondary material is being released to
the environment, it would not be
considered a commodity material. All
site-specific practices designed to meet
the legitimacy criteria must be
documented as outlined in Section VII.I.
Thus, the final rule will retain the
proposed approach that non-hazardous
secondary materials used as a fuel must
be managed in a manner consistent with
the management of an analogous fuel
(where there is an analogous fuel), or
otherwise be adequately contained so as
to prevent releases to the environment.
153 See
51 FR 21054, June 10, 1986.
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2. Meaningful Heating Value and Use as
a Fuel
Under the proposed rule, the nonhazardous secondary material must
have a meaningful heating value and be
used as a fuel in a combustion unit that
recovers energy. In addition to
requesting comment on this criterion,
the Agency also requested comment on
whether it should promulgate a brightline test for determining what is
considered a meaningful heating value
in an effort to provide greater certainty
to both the regulated community and
regulatory officials. For example, the
Agency could establish 5,000 Btu/lb or
some other value as the bright-line test.
In addition, EPA requested comment on
whether we should identify a Btu/lb
cutoff below which the Agency would
declare that the non-hazardous
secondary material is being burned for
destruction as opposed to energy
recovery. Under this approach, nonhazardous secondary materials between
this lower level and 5,000 Btu/lb
(assuming there is a difference) could
pass this criterion provided the facility
demonstrates the energy recovery unit
can cost-effectively recover meaningful
energy from the non-hazardous
secondary materials used as fuels; below
this lower level, all non-hazardous
secondary materials that are burned in
a combustion unit would be considered
to be burned for destruction and thus a
solid waste if combusted.
Comment: Many comments related to
the establishment of a Btu threshold
claimed that any heating value is
‘‘meaningful.’’ Other commenters
expressed opposition to the imposition
of a bright-line test, with one
commenter arguing that inflexible Btu/
lb cutoffs, as well as ‘‘benchmark’’ values
could prevent utilities and other
industries from using alternative fuels to
recover energy. Another commenter
echoed opposition to a bright-line test
since the use of a non-hazardous
secondary material with any heating
value reduces the use of fossil fuels,
indicating that any value for the bright
line test would be arbitrary and would
result in costly impacts to current
production systems and would stifle
technological advancements in
combustion unit designs.
Other commenters stated that a
minimum heating value, below which
the non-hazardous secondary material
would not be considered to have a
meaningful heating value will restrict
the marketplace, hamper advances and
innovation in energy recovery, and add
costs where they are not justified from
an environmental standpoint. If EPA
insists on a minimum heating value,
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they recommend including a cost
effectiveness provision in the rule that
would enable facilities to demonstrate
the value of using a material below this
threshold.
Commenters from state agencies
differed somewhat in their positions
regarding the 5,000 Btu/lb threshold.
Two state agencies requested that EPA
lower the minimum Btu threshold from
5,000 Btu/lb to 4,000 Btu/lb, but another
State agency supports the 5,000 Btu/lb
threshold. Still another state commenter
recommends that if EPA establishes a
lower threshold, below which the nonhazardous secondary material would
not be considered to have a meaningful
heating value, that this value be based
on innovation in energy recovery
technologies from secondary materials
with lower heating values. Due to the
continuing evolution of energy recovery
technologies, this commenter argues
that EPA should include a ‘‘safe harbor’’
cut-off level in the rule with a provision
for case-by-case approvals based on the
most current proven technology.
Another commenter recommends that if
such a lower threshold is established,
that it be based on the high moisture
content of wood products that prevent
these materials from reaching the
minimum 5,000 Btu/lb threshold.
EPA’s Response: After further
evaluation, the Agency agrees with
commenters that imposition of a strict
bright-line test for minimum heating
value could hamper advances and
innovation in energy recovery, and add
costs where they are not justified. The
Agency also did not receive persuasive
information that a lower than 5,000 Btu/
lb threshold, or entirely eliminating the
threshold, would be an appropriate
measure in establishing this legitimacy
criterion.
As discussed in the proposed rule, the
concept of a 5,000 Btu/lb benchmark
was addressed in the ‘‘comparable fuels’’
rule (63 FR 33781) for hazardous
secondary materials. EPA had
previously stated that industrial
furnaces (i.e., cement kilns and
industrial boilers) burning hazardous
wastes with an energy value greater than
5,000 Btu/lb may generally be said to be
burning for energy recovery; however,
hazardous wastes with a lower Btu
content could conceivably be burned for
energy recovery due to the devices’
general efficiency of combustion. At the
same time, EPA is trying to avoid sham
situations where non-hazardous
secondary materials with low Btu value
are burned for destruction in lieu of
proper disposal.
Thus, the 5,000 Btu/lb limit is a
general guideline, which is being
adopted in this final rule, but allows
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some flexibility. To allow such
flexibility for facilities with energy
recovery units that use non-hazardous
secondary materials as fuels with an
energy content lower than 5,000 Btu/lb,
as fired, a person may demonstrate (see
Section VII.I Determining That NonHazardous Secondary Material Meets
the Legitimacy Criteria) that a
meaningful heating value is derived
from the non-hazardous secondary
material if the energy recovery unit can
cost-effectively recover meaningful
energy from the non-hazardous
secondary materials used as fuels.
Factors that may be appropriate in
determining whether an energy recovery
unit can cost-effectively recover energy
from the non-hazardous secondary
material include, but are not limited to,
whether the facility encounters a cost
savings due to not having to purchase
significant amounts of traditional fuels
they otherwise would need, whether
they are purchasing the non-hazardous
secondary material to use as a fuel,
whether the non-hazardous secondary
material they are burning can selfsustain combustion, and whether their
operation produces energy that is sold
for a profit (e.g., a utility boiler that is
dedicated to burning a specific type of
non-hazardous secondary material that
is below 5,000 Btu/lb could show that
their operation produces electricity that
is sold for a profit).
3. Have Contaminants at Comparable
Levels or Lower Than Traditional Fuels
Under the proposed rule, nonhazardous secondary materials must
contain contaminants at levels
comparable to or lower than those in
traditional fuels which the combustion
unit is designed to burn. Such
comparison is to be based on a direct
comparison of the contaminant levels in
the non-hazardous secondary material
to the traditional fuel itself.
Contaminants were defined under the
proposal as any constituent in nonhazardous secondary materials that will
result in emissions of the air pollutants
identified in CAA section 112(b), and
the nine pollutants listed under CAA
section 129(a)(4) when such secondary
materials are burned as a fuel or used
as an ingredient, including those
constituents that could generate
products of incomplete combustion.
The Agency specifically solicited
comments on how EPA should interpret
the ‘‘comparable to or lower than’’
standard. For example, should
comparable mean the same as or lower,
taking into consideration natural
variations in sampling events? Also,
instead of requiring that contaminant
levels in non-hazardous secondary
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materials be comparable to traditional
fuels, the Agency also requested
comment as to whether to adopt a ‘‘not
significantly higher’’ standard—that is,
contaminants in non-hazardous
secondary material used as a fuel in
combustion units could not be
significantly higher in concentration
than contaminants in traditional fuel
products.
The Agency also solicited comment
on whether the comparison should be
based upon the total level of
contaminants, or on the level of
contaminants per Btu of heat value,
whether the list of contaminants should
be narrower or broader, or whether the
Agency should look at other possible
lists. For example, since the Agency is
determining which non-hazardous
secondary materials are considered
solid waste under RCRA, the Agency
could consider the list of hazardous
constituents promulgated in Appendix
VIII of 40 CFR part 261, which is a list
of hazardous constituents that have
been shown in scientific studies to have
toxic, carcinogenic, mutagenic or
teratogenic effects on humans and other
life forms. Finally, comment was
solicited as to whether the comparison
should be based on an established
‘‘bright line’’ level of contaminants to
those contained in traditional fuels.
Comment: Several commenters
addressed the ‘‘comparable’’ standard
and the ‘‘not significantly higher’’
standard. Many of these comments
stated that ‘‘comparable’’ should be
understood to mean ‘‘similar, higher or
lower,’’ not ‘‘equal’’ or the ‘‘same.’’
Commenters also requested that EPA
clarify the definition of ‘‘comparable’’
and specifically requested that EPA
explain the concept in greater detail. Of
the comments that expressed a
preference for either the ‘‘comparable’’
or ‘‘not significantly higher’’ standard,
most preferred the latter, stating that it
is more consistent with the approach
used by EPA for hazardous waste in the
2008 DSW Final Rule and would not
discourage beneficial use as much as the
‘‘comparable’’ standard. Two other
commenters argued that instead of using
a ‘‘not significantly higher’’ standard, the
total environmental impact of using a
non-hazardous material should be
considered. For example, a nonhazardous secondary material may be
lower in all contaminants, except one
that may be considered higher than
‘‘comparable,’’ but the overall impact is
beneficial in terms of less total
contaminants and improved emissions.
Other commenters offered suggestions
on how to interpret ‘‘comparable,’’ but
also on how to implement the
‘‘comparable’’ standard. For example,
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‘‘comparable’’ should refer to the
traditional fuel that would be used if the
non-hazardous secondary material was
not being burned or allowed to be
burned. Another commenter believed
that the ‘‘comparable’’ standard should
only be used as an initial step to
determine if the material is a legitimate
fuel. For example, where a material has
high levels of a low-impact contaminant
or a contaminant is controlled by the
emission control device in the
incineration unit, there should be a
process to see whether the material can
still be considered a fuel. Similarly,
another commenter also recommended
using the ‘‘comparable’’ standard as an
initial determination step, with the ‘‘not
significantly higher’’ standard being
used as a secondary determination step
in some situations. These situations
would primarily be when there is a lowimpact contaminant without
environmental, health, or product
quality impacts present in
concentrations above those found in
traditional raw materials.
EPA’s Response: EPA has retained the
legitimacy criterion that non-hazardous
secondary materials used as a fuel must
contain contaminants at levels that are
comparable to or lower than the
concentrations found in traditional fuels
which the combustion unit is designed
to burn. The ‘‘comparable to or lower
than’’ standard means any contaminants
present in non-hazardous secondary
materials that are within a small
acceptable range, or lower than, the
contaminant in the traditional fuel. We
have decided to select this standard
since we have determined it more
closely reflects EPA’s intent with
respect to this legitimacy criterion than
the phrase ‘‘not significantly higher,’’
which suggests that contaminants can
be present in non-hazardous secondary
materials at levels that could reflect
discard, especially since we are
addressing non-hazardous secondary
materials that are being combusted.
EPA recognizes that combustion is an
inherently destructive process, even
when energy is recovered. If a nonhazardous secondary material contains
contaminants that are not comparable to
those found in traditional fuels, and
those contaminants are related to
pollutants that are of concern at solid
waste combustion units, then it follows
that discard is occurring. The
contaminants in these cases could not
be considered a normal part of a
legitimate fuel and are being discarded,
either through destruction in the
combustion unit or through releases into
the air. Units that burn such materials
are therefore most appropriately
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regulated under the CAA section 129
standards for solid waste incinerators.
In response to those commenters
requesting further guidance on how to
interpret the ‘‘comparable to or lower
than’’ standard, the following examples
are provided.
• A non-hazardous secondary
material contains 500 parts per million
(ppm) of lead, while the traditional fuel
that would or could be burned in the
combustion unit contains 475 ppm of
lead. These levels would be considered
comparable (since it falls within a small
acceptable range) and thus, would meet
this factor. If, on the other hand, the
level of lead in the non-hazardous
secondary material was 1,000 ppm,
these levels would not be comparable
and it may indicate that the nonhazardous secondary material was being
burned to dispose of the material and
that the activity is sham recycling.
• A traditional fuel contains no
detectable amounts of barium, while the
non-hazardous secondary material
contains a minimal amount of barium
(e.g., 1 ppm). In this situation, the levels
would be considered comparable since
it falls within a small acceptable range.
If, however, the barium were at much
higher levels in the non-hazardous
secondary material (such as 50 ppm),
the levels would not be comparable and
it may indicate discard of the barium
and sham recycling.
EPA does not agree with those
commenters who suggest that in
evaluating the constituent
concentrations in non-hazardous
secondary materials, that the total
environmental impact should be
considered, rather than comparing each
constituent to levels found in traditional
fuels. Under such an approach, a nonhazardous secondary material may be
judged not to present an environmental
problem when assessing all
contaminants together, although
significantly higher levels for one or
more contaminants may be present such
that they are destroyed or discarded by
means of combustion. This, we have
determined, is inconsistent with the
concept of discard under the statute,
since it would allow a solid waste to be
subject to the CAA section 112
standards, even though the nonhazardous secondary material has been
discarded.
We also disagree with commenters
who believe that the comparable
standard should only be used as an
initial step to determine if the material
is a legitimate fuel, particularly in those
situations involving low-impact
contaminants. Today’s rule does not
differentiate low-impact contaminants
from other contaminants, since such an
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assessment would require a risk analysis
of each chemical. We believe that
‘‘comparable’’ is protective because it
ensures that no more contaminants than
those found in traditional fuels are
released into the environment. EPA has
already determined that these
contaminants pose a threat to human
health and the environment. Therefore,
the Agency will finalize the proposed
approach of evaluating all of the
contaminants to ensure that they are
present in the non-hazardous secondary
material at levels that are comparable to
(or lower than) the concentrations found
in traditional fuels that the combustion
unit is designed to burn.
Comments: Many comments
discussed whether contaminants, and
their concentrations in the nonhazardous secondary material, should
have any bearing on the legitimacy
determination for a given nonhazardous secondary material. Many of
these commenters expressed opposition
to using contaminants, and their
concentrations in the non-hazardous
secondary material, as a basis for
legitimacy decisions. Some of these
commenters argued that comparing
contaminant levels would impose an
unnecessary burden on emissions
sources that are already stringently
controlled under the CAA regulations.
Other comments indicated that it would
be more appropriate to compare
emissions profiles from the combustion
units rather than contaminant levels in
the non-hazardous secondary materials
themselves using the CAA section 129
pollutant list and the 112 HAP list.
Referring to existing stack testing data
and the risk assessment performed by
the cement industry, the commenter
states that ‘‘it is accepted that organics
in fuels do not survive intact to exit a
cement kiln or cause harm to human
health and the environment. In
addition, stack testing comparing
different fuels (tires, waste-derived fuel,
coal, coke, etc.) on a single kiln system
under normal operating conditions
supports the same conclusion.’’
States offered a range of comments on
this issue. One state contends that using
the list of contaminants in CAA section
129(a)(4) is inadequate because it does
not address all heavy metals or organic
hazardous air pollutants. Another
commenter argued that while section
112 of the CAA and Appendix VIII of 40
CFR part 261 would be impractical if
parameter testing was required, the
Appendix VIII list of constituents in 40
CFR part 261 would serve as a useful
starting point for evaluating different
issues related to those contaminants.
Other commenters suggested that EPA
narrow the list of contaminants
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considered in the legitimacy criteria.
One commenter recommends that those
constituents that contribute to the
secondary material’s value as a fuel be
excluded from the contaminant list.
Another commenter states that the list
of contaminants should be limited to
only the subset of HAP and pollutants
listed in CAA section 129 that have the
potential of being present in the
emissions from burning the nonhazardous secondary materials.
Broadening the list and requiring the
evaluation and analysis of more
constituents would be unnecessary and
a waste of resources. The commenter,
therefore, recommends that the list of
contaminants be limited to only those
pollutants found in section 112 of the
CAA. Furthermore, this commenter
argued that organic HAP do not need to
be included in the legitimacy criteria
because the rule is intended to define
which non-hazardous secondary
materials are non-wastes, as opposed to
which HAP emission standards should
be developed. The commenter further
notes that the Boiler and Process Heater
MACT will ensure that the organic HAP
are properly controlled. Finally,
although not specifically commenting
on the legitimacy criterion for
contaminants in the contaminant
definition, the Agency received several
comments that pathogens are present in
both manure and sewage sludge, and
received specific monitoring data
confirming the presence of pathogens in
certain varieties of chicken litter.
EPA’s Response: EPA is defining the
term ‘‘contaminant,’’ as constituents that
will result in emissions of the air
pollutants identified in CAA section
112(b) and the nine pollutants listed
under CAA section 129(a)(4) when such
non-hazardous secondary materials are
burned as a fuel or used as ingredients,
including those constituents that could
generate products of incomplete
combustion. EPA has decided that these
constituents are appropriate for the
comparisons required by this criterion
because these are the contaminants
identified in the CAA that are to be
considered by EPA in evaluating which
contaminants to establish emission
standards. Thus, we disagree with those
commenters who believe that the list
should be narrowed, including the
commenter who argued that those
contaminants that contribute to the
material’s value as a fuel be excluded
from the list of contaminants, as well as
all organic HAP since they will be
burned during the combustion process.
Because EPA is to consider these
contaminants as part of the CAA
regulations, they should also be
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considered in determining whether nonhazardous secondary materials that
contain these contaminants are being
discarded, and thus, subject to the
section 129 CAA standards.
We also disagree with the commenters
who argue that the list is not broad
enough because it does not address all
heavy metals, organic hazardous
pollutants or pathogens for the same
reasons described above—that is, we
should be focusing, in general, on those
contaminants identified in the CAA that
EPA will be evaluating to determine
whether to establish emission standards.
The Agency also disagrees that
Appendix VIII to 40 CFR part 261 is an
appropriate list for determining which
contaminants to consider for the
purposes of defining non-hazardous
solid waste, since the purpose of
Appendix VIII is to be used by the
Agency to make hazardous waste listing
determinations (see 40 CFR 261.11(a)(3))
and the chemicals in Appendix VIII
would not apply to non-hazardous
wastes.
Finally, we disagree with those
commenters who argue that we should
not be considering the contaminants in
the non-hazardous secondary materials
themselves as part of the legitimacy
criteria, but, if considered necessary,
compare the emissions profiles from the
combustion units. In order for a nonhazardous secondary material to be
considered a non-waste fuel, it must be
similar in composition, whereas
comparing the emissions profiles
between combustion units that burn
traditional fuels and non-hazardous
secondary materials only tells one how
well the combustion unit is operating,
not what the secondary material is that
is being burned. Thus, while the Agency
recognizes that such data can be useful
in determining whether or not burning
such secondary materials present a risk
to human health or the environment,
such a concept says nothing in terms of
whether or not the non-hazardous
secondary material is a legitimate nonwaste commodity fuel.
Moreover, when contaminants have
no fuel value, and are being destroyed,
they do not have an energy recovery
intention. Burning is an inherently
destructive process, even if there is a
beneficial use. Therefore, the Agency
needs to be cautious in evaluating
whether burning a non-hazardous
material for energy recovery, also has a
waste destroying intention.
Comment: Some commenters believe
the approach of measuring
contaminants per Btu was more
scientifically sound, while one
commenter argued that comparisons of
contaminants should focus on the
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loading of contaminants to the process
rather than concentrations, which they
believe is similar to measuring
contaminants per Btu in ingredients. For
example, the commenter indicates that
coal fly ash is utilized in place of
bauxite in cement manufacturing.
Because coal fly ash may contain only
20 percent of the alumina found in
bauxite, the process requires five times
more coal fly ash than alumina for a
given quantity of cement product.
Under this scenario, even if coal fly ash
contains a mercury concentration
comparable to bauxite, the loading of
mercury to the combustion unit would
be five times higher than that if
traditional feedstock was used. The
commenter maintains that the rule
should be changed to require a
comparison of loading rates rather than
concentrations.
Another commenter argues that any
comparison between contaminant levels
in the non-hazardous secondary
material and contaminant levels in
traditional fuels should consider the
entire characteristics of the material.
Some non-hazardous secondary
materials may have high concentrations
of some constituents and low
concentrations of others, relative to
traditional fuels. Thus, decisions
regarding legitimacy will not always be
clear cut and the overall characteristics
need to be considered qualitatively. In
addition, given the variability of
constituent concentrations in traditional
fuels and non-hazardous secondary
materials, solid waste determinations
which requires a comparison, should
allow for such variability in a
reasonable manner. The commenter
supports the method that looks at
constituent concentrations (e.g., percent
by weight or ppm by weight) as a
reasonable approach that limits the
impact of variability, whereas using
lb/MMBtu compounds the impacts of
variability. Since either the Boiler/
Process Heater MACT or CISWI rule
will adequately limit emissions from
combustion of non-hazardous secondary
materials, there is no justification for
evaluating contaminant comparisons on
a heating value basis.
EPA’s Response: The Agency agrees
with commenters that a lb/MMBtu
approach can serve to normalize
contaminant concentration comparisons
across a range of material loading
scenarios. At this time, however, the
Agency lacks sufficient lb/MMBtu
information for all non-hazardous
secondary materials under
consideration. Accordingly, this
approach is not being adopted for
today’s final rule. As guidance is
developed for implementation, a
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lb/MMBtu approach may be further
considered. Thus, in today’s final rule,
the assessment of whether the nonhazardous secondary material has
contaminants comparable to traditional
fuel products is to be made by directly
comparing the numerical contaminant
levels in the non-hazardous secondary
material to the contaminant levels in
traditional fuels based on the total level
of contaminants, and not on
contaminants per Btu of heat value. This
approach is most appropriate because
contaminant information is readily
available to the respondent.
The Agency recognizes that variability
in constituent levels exist in nonhazardous secondary materials and
traditional fuels, generally based on the
source and geographic region that the
material came from. Thus, we agree that
such considerations can be taken into
account in a reasonable manner when
comparing constituent levels in the nonhazardous secondary material and the
traditional fuel.
We disagree with the commenters that
comparison between contaminant levels
in the non-hazardous secondary
material and contaminant levels in
traditional fuels should consider the
entire characteristics of the material.
Such an approach would suggest that
contaminants can be present in the nonhazardous secondary material at levels
that are not comparable in concentration
to those contained in traditional fuel
products, which could result in
contaminants being combusted as a
means of discarding them.
Comment: Commenters disagreed
about whether to implement a brightline test for contaminants. One
commenter supports the delineation of
bright-line contaminant levels that
would apply regardless of the type of
traditional fuel burned, while another
commenter maintains that it would not
be appropriate to compare contaminant
concentrations between non-hazardous
secondary materials and traditional
fuels based on a bright line approach.
Another commenter states that the need
to classify non-hazardous secondary
materials as waste or non-waste may
dictate the need for a bright line test
rather than emissions testing from
combustion units, given that emissions
controls and limits are established in
permits. Other commenters also
disagreed with the establishment of a
bright-line level comparison, with one
commenter objecting to the
establishment of any other contaminant
level comparison, arguing that such a
comparison would provide no benefit to
the regulated community and arbitrarily
assigns levels of contaminants without
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accounting for differences in materials
and/or facilities.
EPA’s Response: EPA recognizes that
the ‘‘bright line’’ approach may provide
greater clarity and predictability to the
regulated community, but that in both
cases, the Agency would have to
establish a line for what is acceptable
and the line may either be somewhat
arbitrary or it may exclude materials
that, if carefully considered, should be
considered legitimate. Based on the
comments received on those
approaches, we are convinced that they
would not be workable. On the other
hand, case-by-case comparisons by each
person evaluating this legitimacy
criterion can take into account the wide
variety of non-hazardous secondary
materials, as well as the appropriate
traditional fuel to which it is being
compared. Because this factor must
apply to various different recycling
activities and industries, the case-bycase approach is most appropriate.
E. Comments on Legitimacy Criteria for
Ingredients
In the proposed rule, non-hazardous
secondary materials used as an
ingredient in combustion units must
meet the legitimacy criteria specified in
241.3(d)(2) in order to be considered a
non-waste ingredient. To meet the
ingredient legitimacy criteria, the nonhazardous secondary material must be
handled as a valuable commodity, must
provide a useful contribution to the
production or manufacturing process,
must be used to produce a valuable
product or intermediate, and must result
in products that contain contaminants at
levels that are comparable in
concentration to or lower than those
found in traditional products that are
manufactured without non-hazardous
secondary materials.
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1. Managed as Valuable Commodities
Because the criterion ‘‘managing as a
valuable commodity’’ for non-hazardous
secondary materials used as an
ingredient (storage not exceeding
reasonable time frames, manage it
consistent with an analogous ingredient
or adequately contain to prevent release)
are the same as those for non-hazardous
secondary materials used as a fuel, EPA
indicated that if changes are made to the
criteria with respect to those nonhazardous secondary materials that are
used as fuels, we would likewise make
the same changes with respect to those
non-hazardous secondary materials
used as ingredients. We did solicit
comments, however, on whether using
these criteria for managing as valuable
commodities (similar to the type of
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criteria for fuels) are appropriate for
ingredients.
Comment: As discussed in the section
on legitimacy criteria for fuels, one
commenter suggested that the criterion
that a non-hazardous secondary material
be managed as a valuable commodity
(determining if it is managed consistent
with the management of an analogous
ingredient and used within a reasonable
time frame) is irrelevant because solid
wastes are managed in ways similar to
commodities (i.e., solid wastes and solid
commodities are stored in piles on the
ground, liquid wastes and commodities
are stored in tanks and barrels). Another
commenter requested that EPA provide
clarity on managing a non-hazardous
secondary material as a valuable
commodity and the kinds of practices a
facility must implement to demonstrate
that it is managing the material as a
valuable commodity.
EPA’s Response: The final rule will
retain the proposed approach that this
legitimacy criterion for non-hazardous
secondary material used as ingredients
(i.e., that they must be managed as
valuable commodities) will be
consistent with that of fuels. As we
noted previously, we disagree with the
commenter that solid wastes and
commodities are always managed in a
similar manner. That is, commodities,
on the one hand, are handled
specifically to prevent the loss of the
material because of its value. Solid
wastes, on the other hand, when they
are not highly regarded for a beneficial
reuse, are often not managed in a way
that minimizes the release of the
material itself, but more in a way that
protects the surrounding environment
from the material. However, we also
know that solid wastes, if not properly
managed have created damages to the
environment. Thus, non-hazardous
secondary materials used as an
ingredient must be managed in a
manner consistent with the management
of an analogous ingredient (where there
is an analogous ingredient), or otherwise
be adequately contained so as to prevent
releases to the environment. For
example, non-hazardous secondary
materials that are used as ingredients in
cement kilns must be managed in a
manner consistent with the analogous
ingredients that these secondary
materials are replacing. An ‘‘analogous
ingredient’’ is defined as a
manufacturing process ingredient for
which the secondary material
substitutes and which serves the same
function and has similar physical and
chemical properties as the nonhazardous secondary material. Where
there is no analogous ingredient, the
non-hazardous secondary material must
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be adequately contained so as to prevent
releases to the environment. However,
the Agency may provide further
guidance on what we consider to be
managed as a valuable commodity.
2. Useful Contribution
EPA received comments on the five
ways the proposed rule states that a
non-hazardous secondary material can
add value and usefully contribute to a
recycling process (based on criteria
initially developed for hazardous
secondary materials): (i) The nonhazardous secondary material
contributes valuable ingredients to a
product or intermediate; or (ii) replaces
a catalyst or carrier in the recycling
process; or (iii) is the source of a
valuable constituent recovered in the
recycling process; or (iv) is recovered or
regenerated by the recycling process; or
(v) is used as an effective substitute for
a commercial product. The proposed
rule stated that we believe that only
items (i) and (v) are specifically relevant
to our assessment of whether these nonhazardous secondary materials provide
a useful contribution in combustion
scenarios. We requested comment,
however, on whether the non-hazardous
secondary materials we are assessing as
ingredients can provide useful
contributions in other ways.
Comment: A commenter requested
that the EPA remain flexible and
acknowledge that there may be other
ways to demonstrate a secondary
materials’ useful contribution.
EPA’s Response: The Agency was
unable to identify, and commenters did
not identify any other way a nonhazardous secondary material could
contribute to the recycling process, so
the language in the final rule was not
changed. The two ways to determine if
the material provides a useful
contribution are sufficiently flexible and
will provide for accurate assessments.
Thus, the final rule will continue to
maintain that non-hazardous secondary
materials contribute valuable
ingredients to a product or intermediate
and that non-hazardous secondary
materials are used as an effective
substitute for a commercial product will
be used to determine if a material
provides a useful contribution as an
ingredient.
3. Quantifying an Ingredient’s
Contribution to Production/
Manufacturing Activity
Not all of the constituents or
components of the non-hazardous
secondary material have to make a
contribution to the production/
manufacturing activity. EPA solicited
comments on whether the Agency
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should quantitatively define how much
of the non-hazardous secondary
material must provide a useful
contribution, or alternatively, the
quantity of constituents or components
in a non-hazardous secondary material
there would need to be before the nonhazardous secondary material would
not be considered to provide a useful
contribution.
Comment: Generally, commenters
disagreed with the establishment of a
quantitative definition as to how much
of a material must provide a useful
contribution. One state agency is
opposed to a quantitative definition
because the numbers will vary by nonhazardous secondary material.
Similarly, another state commenter also
opposed a nationwide definition or
percentage stipulating what constitutes
a ‘‘useful contribution’’ because of the
different possible reuse processes that
may vary in terms of the amount of
material that is deemed useful. One
other commenter also objected to the
establishment of any limits, but
specifically commented on the
establishment of a quantitative
definition. They explain that a given
non-hazardous secondary material can
have several useful components, but the
ability to use those components is
dependent on the available
manufacturing process or technology
type. This variation would make it
difficult and inefficient to apply a
general quantitative rule of useful
contribution.
EPA’s Response: We agree with the
commenters that quantifying the
amount that all non-hazardous
secondary materials must contribute to
a production/manufacturing activity
would be a challenge, if at all possible,
given the breadth and depth of ways
that non-hazardous secondary materials
may be used as ingredients in
combustion processes. As the nonhazardous secondary materials vary
significantly in their character,
composition and uses, trying to define
useful contribution quantitatively
would not, in our view, be practical.
The complexities of defining ‘‘useful
contribution’’ so that it can be
determined through a bright-line test,
and remain appropriate across
industries, different recycling processes,
and a variety of recycled non-hazardous
secondary materials are too great for the
Agency to design in a simple and
straightforward manner so as to be used
in making such determinations. In
addition, legitimacy determinations are
best made on a case-by-case basis, with
the facts of a specific situation in hand.
Thus, we have not defined a
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quantitative amount that non-hazardous
secondary materials must contribute.
In general, the regulated community
should look to typical industry recovery
rates in similar manufacturing processes
to determine if the recycling recovery
rates are reasonably efficient in terms of
the ingredient making a useful
contribution to the recycling process or
product. In addition, it should be noted
that EPA would generally look at the
quantity required, the duration, and the
extent of processing, and/or the rate of
recovery of the overall process, not the
recovery rate of a single step in the
process, when analyzing this criterion
for legitimacy. For example, if one step
in the process recovers a small
percentage of the constituent, but the
overall process recovers a much larger
percentage, the Agency would consider
the overall efficiency of the recycling
process in determining whether the
non-hazardous secondary materials are
providing a useful contribution. This
assumes that there is enough of the
target constituent or component present
in the non-hazardous secondary
materials to contribute meaningfully as
an ingredient to the recycling process.
In addition, the Agency is reiterating
its longstanding position that not every
constituent or component in a nonhazardous secondary material would
have to contribute to a recycled product
or intermediate or to the recycling
process in order for there to be an
overall contribution. Thus, we agree
with commenters who raised questions
about this and have restated our
position in this preamble to the final
rule.
4. Contaminants in Ingredients
The Agency requested comments on
whether we should have a different
definition of contaminants that applies
specifically to ingredients. That is, since
contaminant comparisons for the
contaminant legitimacy criterion apply
to a comparison of products rather than
to the non-hazardous secondary
material, we requested comment on
whether a different list of contaminants
should apply or whether we should
generically define contaminants to be
constituents that may be a concern with
respect to the product that is produced.
Comment: Commenters suggested that
when comparing the products derived
from non-hazardous secondary
materials and traditional raw materials,
the Agency be mindful of the fact that
the concentrations of contaminants can
vary geographically. In terms of cement
production, a few commenters said that
the current stringent product standards
effectively keep cement kilns from using
contaminated ingredients. One state
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supports the use of the same
contaminant list for non-hazardous
secondary material fuels and
ingredients, but notes that EPA should
recognize that constituent
concentrations for a given virgin fuel or
feedstock can vary dependent on the
geographic region of where it is
produced. Another commenter said that
since all processes differ, the states
should be allowed to establish a petition
process for ingredients where industry
can demonstrate that the higher
contamination in a given non-hazardous
secondary material will not result in
harm to human health or the
environment (i.e., through either risk
assessment or handling restrictions).
Another commenter argued that using
the list of contaminants in CAA section
129(a)(4) is inadequate because it does
not address all heavy metals or organic
hazardous air pollutants. Still, another
commenter suggested that although the
CAA section 112 HAP list and the list
of constituents in Appendix VIII of 40
CFR part 261 would be impractical if
parameter testing was required,
Appendix VIII of 40 CFR part 261 would
be a good starting point for evaluating
different issues related to those
contaminants. Finally, one state agency
recommends the Agency develop a list
of currently acceptable non-hazardous
secondary materials used as ingredients
for quick reference and develop
guidance to assess materials not on the
list.
EPA’s Response: EPA is defining the
term ‘‘contaminant’’ to include
constituents that may result in
emissions of air pollutants identified in
CAA section 112(b) and the nine
pollutants listed under CAA section
129(a)(4)) when such non-hazardous
secondary materials are burned as a fuel
or used as an ingredient, including
those constituents that could generate
products of incomplete combustion.
These constituents are appropriate for
the comparisons required by this
criterion because these are the
contaminants identified in the CAA that
are to be considered by EPA in
evaluating which contaminants to
establish emission standards. That is,
the contaminants to be considered in
the legitimacy criteria should generally
be the same that EPA is to consider in
establishing emission standards. Thus,
we disagree with the commenter who
argues that this list is not broad enough
because it does not address all heavy
metals or organic hazardous pollutants.
Appendix VIII to 40 CFR Part 261 is also
not an appropriate list for determining
which contaminants to consider for the
purposes of defining non-hazardous
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solid waste, since the purpose of
Appendix VIII is to be used by the
Agency to make hazardous waste listing
determinations (see 40 CFR 261.11(a)(3))
and the chemicals in Appendix VIII
would not apply to non-hazardous
wastes. Please see the related response
on usage of the Appendix VIII list with
regard to fuels (Section V.D.3).
With that said, the Agency recognizes
and agrees with the commenters that
variability in constituents exist between
non-hazardous secondary materials
based on the source and geographic
region that it may come from. Thus,
such considerations can be taken into
account in determining which
contaminants to evaluate. Regarding the
comments dealing with state program
involvement, EPA’s response to these
comments is described in Section IX.
‘‘State Authority.’’ Finally, with respect
to the commenter who requested that
EPA develop a list of acceptable nonhazardous secondary materials that are
used as ingredients for quick reference
and develop guidance to assess nonhazardous secondary materials on this
list, we have made some general
conclusions throughout the preamble on
which non-hazardous secondary
materials when used as an ingredient in
a combustion process would generally
meet the legitimacy criteria. Persons
may also refer to the various Materials
Characterization Papers that are in the
docket to today’s rule. However, each
person will need to confirm that such
non-hazardous secondary material
ingredients meet the legitimacy criteria
and provide documentation, as required
in the CAA rules.
5. Comparing Contaminant Levels in
Products
EPA requested comment on whether,
instead of requiring that contaminant
levels in products manufactured from
non-hazardous secondary material
ingredients be comparable in
concentration than those found in
traditional products, that the Agency
adopt a criterion under which
contaminants in the product could not
be significantly higher than found in the
traditional products that are
manufactured without the nonhazardous secondary material.
Comment: A number of commenters
disagree with the contaminant
comparison criteria for non-hazardous
secondary material ingredients to the
final product. One commenter asserts
that EPA should not use the term
‘‘contaminant’’ in connection with the
legitimacy criteria for ingredients.
Instead, the Agency should refer to
constituents that may actually be a
concern with respect to the product that
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is produced. The same commenter also
recommends that the ‘‘toxics along for
the ride’’ criterion only should be
considered and not required, and that
the Agency should adopt a ‘‘not
significantly higher’’ standard. Also,
while the Agency should retain the
focus of the ‘‘toxics along for the ride’’
criterion upon products, that criterion
should refer to constituents that may
actually be a concern with respect to the
products that are produced and should
not use the defined term ‘‘contaminant.’’
Other commenters oppose any limits
on contaminants in ingredients. It was
argued that portland cement is
manufactured to meet strict chemical
and performance specifications under
such organizations as ASTM and the
American Association of State Highway
and Transportation Officials (AASHTO).
These specifications dictate, to a large
degree, the ingredients that can be used
in cement manufacturing. There are a
wide range of raw materials and fuels
that can be used to meet cement
manufacturing quality objectives. The
levels of contaminants in these
traditional raw materials and fuels can
vary significantly. These variations
occur within materials taken from the
same source (e.g., single quarry) and
also between different sources. For the
purpose of comparing levels of
contaminants found in non-hazardous
secondary materials with levels found
in traditional products, the nonhazardous secondary material
contaminant should be allowed to be
compared to multiple sources of the
traditional raw materials that are
available across the market to the
facility. Such a comparison should be
allowed regardless of whether or not the
traditional material is being used by the
facility at the time of the comparison.
Doing so would allow for the variability
of constituent levels to be properly
accounted for when going through the
comparison process. Variability needs to
be considered because multiple sources
of a single traditional material are
typically available to a facility
EPA’s Response: In today’s action,
EPA is finalizing this criterion as a part
of the legitimacy requirement because it
is essential in determining whether a
non-hazardous secondary material that
is combusted is in fact being
legitimately used or is essentially being
discarded—that is destroyed, in the
name of legitimate recycling. EPA is
also retaining the requirement that the
recycling process must result in
products that contain contaminants at
levels that are comparable to (or lower
than) concentrations found in
traditional products that are
manufactured without the non-
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hazardous secondary material.
Establishing ‘‘comparable to or lower
than’’ contaminant levels more closely
reflects its intent that non-hazardous
secondary materials that are legitimately
used must have levels of contaminants
within a small acceptable range of those
found in traditional products than the
phrase ‘‘not significantly higher.’’ (See
Section V.D.3 for further discussion of
this issue and EPA’s response.) With
that said, we agree with those
commenters who argue that there are a
wide range of raw materials and fuels
that can be used and that the level of
contaminants in these secondary
materials can also vary. Thus, for
purposes of comparing levels of
contaminants found in non-hazardous
secondary materials to traditional
products, a person can make that
comparison with traditional raw
materials and fuels that come from
multiple sources, provided such sources
can be used in the combustion unit.
Such a comparison, as the commenters
argue, would account for the natural
variability that needs to be considered
in making such a comparison.
With respect to the comment
requesting that EPA change the word
‘‘contaminant’’ to ‘‘constituent’’ when
referring to the legitimacy criteria, EPA
is retaining the use of the word
‘‘contaminant’’ in this criterion as it has
been defined in this rule and accurately
describes which individual constituents
EPA is seeking to control in this
criterion. The selection of that term was
originally discussed in the ANPRM and
was chosen since it refers to the
constituents in secondary materials that
may be of a concern when burned as a
fuel or used as an ingredient.
Finally, EPA notes that industry
specifications can be very useful in
making a legitimacy determination and,
in particular, in evaluating compliance
with this criterion. However, EPA
cannot rely solely on product
specifications to cover all possible
situations and is including the
contaminant comparison between
products as a critical part of the
legitimacy requirement.
F. Comments on Non-Waste
Determination Petitions
The proposed rule established a nonwaste determination process that would
provide persons with an administrative
process for receiving a formal
determination from the EPA Regional
Administrator that non-hazardous
secondary materials that are burned as
a fuel in a combustion unit and have not
been managed within the control of the
generator, have not been discarded in
the first instance, and are
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indistinguishable in all relevant aspects
from a fuel product are not solid wastes.
This assumes all the criteria for the nonwaste determination at § 241.3(c) are
met.
Industry and state agencies both
submitted a number of comments on the
non-waste determination process
included in the proposed rule. While
many of these comments supported the
idea of a non-waste determination
process in order to include appropriate
fuels, many commenters suggested that
the process would be difficult to
implement since the requirements are
vague, and too resource intensive. Many
commenters did not want the process at
all for opposing reasons; some said it
was too lenient in that the process could
allow the inappropriate use of nonhazardous secondary materials, while
others said it was unnecessary in that
CAA section 112 third-party combustors
should be able to use appropriate
comparable fuels without the
inconvenience of a petition process. The
specific comments are detailed below.
The overview of the petition process is
described in Section VII.G. The petition
requirements in today’s rule are found
at § 241.3(c).
Comment: A large number of
commenters (including many from state
agencies) argued that state agencies
should be provided the authority to
make non-waste determinations as part
of the petition process. Some
commenters suggested that States be
allowed to grant such petitions under
their existing beneficial use programs
and encouraged EPA to allow the States’
existing regulatory structures to remain
in place. Many commenters expressed a
preference for the approach currently
used by States to determine the
acceptability of used materials for
beneficial use whereby specific classes
of non-hazardous secondary materials
considered wastes (in that State) are
assessed and, if determined acceptable,
are considered non-waste or exempt
from the State waste licensing,
permitting and other requirements. State
procedures for beneficial use
determinations vary, some requiring
more extensive characterization of
materials and uses than others, and
some requiring a degree of processing
and others not. Some beneficial use
designations are more stringent than
others since they are material-specific.
Many commenters, including state
agencies were still concerned that this
rule could jeopardize or interfere with
the State beneficial use designations and
procedures and requested that EPA
clearly indicate that today’s rule applies
only for purposes of determining CAA
129 applicability to non-hazardous
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secondary materials that are burned for
energy recovery. They do not want
today’s rule to set a precedent or
interfere with their ongoing programs to
allow and encourage the beneficial use
of secondary materials which otherwise
would be waste.
EPA’s Response: CAA section 129
states that the term ‘‘solid waste’’ shall
have the meaning ‘‘established by the
Administrator pursuant to the Solid
Waste Disposal Act’’ Id. at 7429(g)(6).
Accordingly, the Administrator (or
Regional Administrator) must establish
the meaning and make the
determinations, and the states’
definition of solid waste would not be
applicable for purposes of the definition
of solid waste under RCRA for
establishing emissions standards under
the CAA. No federal approval
procedures for state adoption of today’s
rule are included in this rule under
RCRA subtitle D. Although EPA does
promulgate criteria for solid waste
landfills and approves state municipal
solid waste landfill permitting
programs, RCRA does not provide EPA
with authority to approve state
programs beyond municipal solid waste
landfill permitting programs.
With that said, EPA would like to
utilize the expertise and interest
residing in the state beneficial use
programs to bolster Agency decisions on
non-waste determination petitions. The
Agency may request the assistance of
states or may utilize the information and
contaminant data from state beneficial
use determinations if it is applicable to
the non-hazardous secondary material
when used as a fuel or an ingredient in
combustion units. These state beneficial
use programs have been developed to
encourage recycling and reuse, provided
that the uses maintain the specified
state’s acceptable level of risk, protect
human health and the environment, and
are managed in accordance with the
conditions of the determination.
Generally, when a state beneficial use
determination has been granted (thus no
longer a solid waste within that state),
it may have chemical and physical
properties that are comparable to the
raw material it is replacing or, when
incorporated into a product, its use is
beneficial to the final product.
Assuming the data to support the
beneficial use determination remains
available, it could help support EPA’s
investigation of the contaminant
concentrations for the purpose of
making the legitimacy criteria
determination.
State beneficial use determinations
and procedures will continue intact for
purposes of State laws, regulations, and
programs. Thus, we do not expect that
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this rule will set a precedent or interfere
with the States’ solid waste programs
and the States will continue to employ
their procedures to assess and regulate
the management and use of nonhazardous secondary materials for
purposes of State laws and regulations.
In addition, as we have stated elsewhere
in today’s preamble, this rule is limited
for purposes of determining CAA 129
applicability for non-hazardous
secondary materials that are burned for
energy recovery or as an ingredient in a
combustion unit. Thus, EPA will not be
making any determination that nonhazardous secondary materials are or
are not solid wastes for other possible
beneficial uses. Such beneficial use
determinations are generally made by
the state for these other beneficial uses
and EPA will continue to look to the
states to make such determinations (e.g.,
land application, reuse as non-waste,
etc.).
Comment: Commenters indicated that
the petition process does not consider
potential scheduling issues regarding
compliance with the section 112 Boiler
MACT or the 129 CISWI standards.
Therefore, the non-waste determination
petition process should include
deadlines for both petition submissions
and rulings from regulators so that the
applicant would know which emission
standards requirements they would be
subject to—that is, the CAA section 112
standards or the CAA section 129
standards. Some commenters (including
many state agencies) also expressed
concern that EPA would not have the
resources necessary to address such
non-waste determination petitions
within a schedule consistent with State
deadlines for their air permits (e.g., 90
days). In addition, a few commenters
questioned the environmental benefits
of shifting the burden of determination
to EPA instead of the generators in
question.
EPA’s Response: EPA is not imposing
deadlines for the petition decisions,
either for the submission of such
petitions or on EPA making decisions
on petitions that are submitted, since
the Agency believes that before a final
decision is made, that the necessary
information be submitted, and the
public afforded an opportunity to
comment on such draft decisions.
Setting a time limit may make it
difficult to make such informed
decisions. Nevertheless, EPA commits
to work with the State (where the
combustor is located) in an effort to not
hold up, to the extent practicable, the
State air permitting process. We
recognize that the non-waste
determination decision should be
finalized prior to any related State air
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permit. We would also note that EPA’s
responsibility for the petition decisions
in the final rule should maintain
national consistency, while recognizing
the state’s interest and expertise in this
area.
Comment: If EPA maintains authority
for non-waste determinations,
commenters request that EPA Regional
offices notify States when requests and
determinations are made. In addition,
several environmental groups requested
that the public notification be required
for any petitions for non-waste
classification.
EPA’s Response: Today’s rule outlines
the petition process for the Regional
Administrator to follow. As part of that
process, the draft decision will be
published in local media and will be
available on EPA’s Web site, and thus,
all draft decisions will be available to
the public for comment. In addition,
although not in the regulations, EPA
will inform the State Agency of a
petition request in their states, and work
with them, to the extent practicable.
Comment: State Agencies
recommended that EPA maintain a state
or publicly available database of nonwaste determination decisions if the
Agency maintains decision-making
authority under the petition process.
EPA’s Response: EPA agrees that it
would be appropriate for EPA to
maintain a database that is a
compilation of decisions made on nonhazardous secondary material nonwaste determinations. This would allow
decisions made in one EPA Region,
including the basis for the decision, to
be available to other EPA Regions
pertaining to the same or similar nonhazardous secondary materials and
would support national consistency and
minimize redundant efforts. Thus, the
Agency expects to put together such a
database and will make it available not
only to its Regions, but will also make
such a database publicly available.
Comment: Some commenters said
States (or non-State Agencies) should be
able to submit a non-waste
determination on behalf of the
petitioner.
EPA’s Response: As stated in the
proposal and in the final rule, states, or
private entities, can submit non-waste
determination petitions to the EPA
Regional Administrator on behalf of
petitioners. They can petition for a
single combustor or a class of
combustors (e.g., a specific usage of a
non-hazardous secondary material in a
particular state).
Comment: Many commenters did not
want the petition process included in
the rule. Some commenters said it was
too lenient in that the process could
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allow the inappropriate use of nonhazardous secondary materials.
EPA’s Response: We disagree with the
commenters since the petition process
provides a vehicle to accommodate
those instances where it is not apparent
that the non-hazardous secondary
material is not discarded and that it
complies with the legitimacy criteria
and thus, is not a solid waste under
RCRA. Those requirements would be
documented in addition to the other
petition requirements. This would
provide the needed assurance that it is
an appropriate non-waste fuel. In
addition, all draft decisions will be
made available to the public (local
newspaper advertisement or radio
broadcast and on EPA’s Web site) and
the Regional Administrator may hold
public hearings, such that the public
will be informed and has the
opportunity to comment and be
involved in the process.
Comment: Commenters mentioned
that the process will be difficult to
implement since the requirements in
proposed § 241.3(c) are too vague. A few
commenters mentioned that they
preferred the clarity in state
determinations where they have criteria
specific to each secondary material they
regulate or make specific beneficial use
determinations, as opposed to this
petition process where all nonhazardous secondary materials have to
comply with the same guidelines.
Commenters requested that we create
clear guidance on the petition process
and on related implementation.
EPA’s Response: We disagree with the
commenters who argue that the petition
process is vague and will be difficult to
implement. All petitions that are
submitted must clearly explain how the
non-hazardous secondary material has
not been discarded and meets the other
relevant criteria, including the
legitimacy criteria. All draft decisions
will also be subject to notice and
comment, so any particular issues or
concerns can be raised for the Agency’s
consideration. With that said, the
Agency expects to develop additional
guidance to assist petitioners in the
implementation of the petition process.
G. Comments on the Other Approaches
for Defining Solid Wastes
In addition to the proposed approach,
EPA also identified and solicited
comment on two other approaches for
defining which non-hazardous
secondary materials are solid wastes
when combusted. One approach, which
was called the ‘‘alternative approach,’’
was intended to be broader than the
proposed approach, but still consistent,
in the Agency’s judgment, with RCRA
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and relevant case law. Under the
alternative approach, non-hazardous
secondary materials that are burned in
a combustion unit would be considered
solid wastes, unless such non-hazardous
secondary materials would remain
within the control of the generator and
meet the legitimacy criteria; in this
limited instance, the non-hazardous
secondary materials would not be
considered solid wastes. Thus, under
the alternative approach, fuels and
ingredients that are generated from the
processing of discarded non-hazardous
secondary materials would be
considered a solid waste, as well as nonhazardous secondary materials used as
ingredients that are combusted at
facilities that are not within the control
of the generator. In addition, the
alternative approach did not provide for
a non-waste determination petition
process, as described elsewhere in this
preamble. The proposed rule noted that
this approach could be adopted in a
final rule if warranted by information
presented during the public comment
period and solicited comment on all
aspects of the alternative approach.
The other approach on which we
requested comment was to identify all
non-hazardous secondary materials that
are burned in combustion units for
energy recovery or as an ingredient as
solid wastes and thus, all nonhazardous secondary materials would
be subject to the section 129 CAA
requirements. The proposal noted that
while the Agency believes there are
legal constraints to taking such a broad
approach in defining solid waste under
RCRA, we solicited comment on this
approach and specifically requested that
commenters provide the basis for their
position, in light of the existing case law
on the issue of ‘‘discard.’’
Comment: All commenters addressing
the alternative approach were opposed
to the Agency adopting such an
approach in the final rule. Several
commenters argued generally against
any approach that would allow any nonhazardous secondary material to ever be
burned as non-waste fuels or
ingredients, regardless of whether or not
the secondary materials remained
within the control of the generator.
These commenters strongly urged the
Agency to adopt a final rule that
considers all non-hazardous secondary
materials burned in a combustion unit
for energy recovery or used as an
ingredient to be included within the
definition of solid waste and therefore,
subject to the CAA section 129
requirements. These commenters argue
that non-hazardous secondary materials
that are burned in combustion units fall
within the unambiguous meaning of the
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term ‘‘discarded material,’’ and
therefore, both EPA’s proposed and
alternative approach are unlawful, as
well as arbitrary and capricious.
On the other hand, industry
commenters generally contended that
the alternative approach was
unacceptable as a matter of law and
policy, but for different reasons. These
commenters, who also disagreed with
the proposed approach’s classification
that non-hazardous secondary materials
used as fuels which did not remain
within the control of the generator are
solid waste unless granted a non-waste
determination, strongly opposed the
alternative approach for many of the
same reasons. Of particular concern of
the commenters was their disagreement
with EPA that one may not look to a
material’s transfer between entities to
determine whether the non-hazardous
secondary material has been discarded
and constitutes a solid waste under
RCRA, a concept which would apply
equally to non-hazardous secondary
materials being used as ingredients, as
well as to non-hazardous secondary
materials used as fuels. In addition,
these same commenters also strongly
disagreed with the other approach on
which the Agency solicited comment—
that is, the approach that would
characterize all non-hazardous
secondary materials as solid waste when
burned in a combustion unit for energy
recovery or as an ingredient. These
commenters argued that this would
exceed the Agency’s authority to
regulate secondary materials that have
not been discarded.
EPA’s Response: Although some
commenters supported a broader
definition of solid waste than described
in the alternative approach, the Agency
did not receive any support for the
alternative approach, and has therefore
decided not to adopt it in this final rule.
Regarding comments that advocated for
all non-hazardous secondary materials
burned in a combustion unit for energy
recovery or as an ingredient to be
discarded and, thus, solid waste, EPA
has replied to this comment above in
Section V.A. The Agency presumes that
these commenters would like neither
our proposed approach nor any
alternative that allows any nonhazardous secondary material to be
burned as other than a waste.
Regarding industry comments which
opposed the alternative approach
because its characterization that all nonhazardous secondary materials that do
not remain within the control of the
generator are solid waste, we respond to
the issue of transferring non-hazardous
secondary materials off-site in Section
V.A.
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EPA continues to believe that today’s
final rule is a reasonable interpretation
of the statutory definition of discard to
consider that non-hazardous secondary
materials under the control of its
generator that are legitimately burned as
fuels are not solid waste, that certain
non-hazardous secondary materials (i.e.,
scrap tires under the oversight of
established tire collection programs and
resinated wood) that are not discarded
and are legitimately used as fuels or
ingredients are not solid waste, that
non-hazardous secondary materials that
are legitimately burned as ingredients
are not solid wastes, and that fuels and
ingredients that are produced from the
processing of discarded non-hazardous
secondary materials are not solid
wastes.
VI. Summary of Major Differences
Between the Proposed Rule and Final
Rule
The basic framework outlined in the
proposed rule is being adopted in
today’s final rule. However, as indicated
in the discussions in Section VII, the
Agency has made several significant
changes to the proposal regarding: (1)
The status of scrap tires when they are
combusted and used as a fuel; (2) the
status of resinated wood residuals when
they are combusted and used as a fuel;
(3) the status of coal refuse that has been
previously discarded, but has been
processed in the same way as coal is
today; and (4) the definition of
traditional fuel and several other terms
to clarify their meaning in the final rule.
Specifically,
• Under the proposed rule, scrap tires
were considered to be solid waste when
combusted and used as a fuel unless
they were sufficiently processed into a
non-waste fuel product. Today’s rule
continues to include this concept of
processing of scrap tires that have been
discarded, particularly for tires in waste
tire piles. However, after reviewing the
comments, as well as reviewing the
approach that was discussed in the
ANPRM for scrap tires, the Agency has
concluded that scrap tires used as fuel
in a combustion unit that are removed
from vehicles and managed and
collected under the oversight of an
established tire collection program
would not be considered a solid waste
In this situation, the scrap tires have not
been discarded and therefore, should
not be considered a solid waste. See
Section VII.C for a full discussion of the
rationale and changes to the approach
for scrap tires.
• Under the proposed rule, resinated
wood residuals that were burned in a
combustion unit within the control of
the generator and which met the
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15531
legitimacy criteria was considered a
non-waste fuel. However, if such
resinated wood residuals were
transferred off-site to a different
company, there were considered a solid
waste when burned in a combustion
unit, unless they were ‘‘sufficiently
processed to produce a non-waste fuel.
However, after reviewing the comments,
the Agency has concluded that resinated
wood residuals when burned in a
combustion unit (whether within the
control of the generator or outside the
control of the generator) would not be
a solid waste, provided the resinated
wood residuals met the legitimacy
criteria. In this situation, the Agency
finds that the resinated wood residuals
have not been discarded and therefore,
should not be considered a solid waste.
See Section VII.D for a full discussion
of the rational and changes to the
approach for resinated wood residuals.
• Under the proposed rule, coal
refuse that has been previously
abandoned and was processed, even if
such processing was the same as coal is
processed today, was considered a solid
waste and, if combusted, would be
subject to the CAA section 129 emission
standards. However, after reviewing the
comments and after further evaluation,
we have decided that coal refuse that is
processed the same as coal is today,
which serves to both increase its energy
value, as well as reduce the level of
contaminants in coal refuse, should not
be considered a solid waste. (Of course,
prior to such processing, the coal refuse
that has been abandoned is a solid waste
and would be subject to appropriate
federal, state and local laws and
regulations.) This change is based on the
fact that coal refuse is distinctive from
other non-hazardous secondary
materials at issue in today’s rule in that
it is in fact raw material coal (even if it
has been previously abandoned) that is
generated as a result of coal mining
operations whose primary product is a
fuel.
• In response to comments received
on the proposal, under today’s rule, we
have added an ‘‘alternative fuels’’
category to the definition of traditional
fuels, so the definition now includes
‘‘alternative traditional fuels’’ and
‘‘historically managed’’ traditional fuels.
EPA is recognizing that changes in
technology and in the energy market
over time have resulted in additional
materials being economically viable to
be used as alternative ‘‘traditional’’ fuels.
In addition, to provide clarity in the
application and the meaning of
traditional fuel and clean cellulosic
biomass, we have codified these
definitions in § 241.2. The new
definition of traditional fuel also
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clarifies that traditional fuels are not
secondary materials and are not solid
wastes unless discarded.
VII. Detailed Discussion and Rationale
for Today’s Final Rule
As indicated previously, today’s final
rule identifies those non-hazardous
secondary materials that, when burned
in a combustion unit, are solid wastes.
In general, EPA defines non-hazardous
secondary materials that are used as
fuels or ingredients in combustion units
as solid waste unless: 154
• The non-hazardous secondary
material is used as a fuel and remains
within the control of the generator
(whether at the site of generation or
another site the generator has control
over) and it meets the legitimacy
criteria;
• They are the following materials
that meet the legitimacy criteria when
used as a fuel (by the generator or
outside the control of the generator):
Æ Scrap tires removed from vehicles
under the oversight of established tire
collection programs;
Æ Resinated wood;
• The non-hazardous secondary
material is used as an ingredient
(whether by the generator or outside the
control of the generator) and it meets the
legitimacy criteria;
• The discarded non-hazardous
secondary material is sufficiently
processed to produce legitimate fuel or
ingredient products and it meets the
legitimacy criteria;
• The non-hazardous secondary
material is used as a fuel and is handled
outside the control of the generator
where it is determined through a caseby-case non-waste determination
petition process that the material has
not been discarded and is
indistinguishable in all relevant aspects
from a fuel product.
The following sections discuss in detail
the rationale and regulations being
promulgated today in 40 CFR part 241
for the identification of non-hazardous
secondary materials that are solid waste
when used in combustion units. We use
this rationale to support the final rule
based on information the Agency has
received and public comments. To the
extent we have decided not to alter our
supporting reasoning or have rejected
comments received on the proposed
rule, we also discuss these matters in
Section V. Reasoning, information and
arguments provided in the ANPRM and
proposed rule that support these
decisions are also incorporated into the
reasoning for the final decisions.
154 Traditional fuels are not secondary materials
or solid waste, unless discarded.
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A. Traditional Fuels 155
As discussed in Section V, the
definition of traditional fuels has been
modified in today’s final rule. The new
definition encompasses two categories
of fuels: (1) ‘‘Historically managed’’
fuels, as identified in the proposed rule,
and (2) ‘‘alternative’’ fuels, as described
in the ANPRM. Through this revised
definition, EPA is recognizing that
changes in technology and in the energy
market over time have resulted in
additional materials being economically
viable, or for policy reasons, to be used
as alternative ‘‘traditional’’ fuels. Thus,
‘‘traditional fuels’’ is defined in today’s
final rule as materials that are produced
as fuels and are unused products that
have not been discarded and therefore,
are not solid waste including: (1) Fuels
that have been historically managed as
valuable fuel products rather than being
managed as waste materials, including
fossil fuels (e.g., coal, oil and natural
gas), their derivatives (e.g., petroleum
coke, bituminous coke, coal tar oil,
refinery gas, synthetic fuel, heavy
recycle, asphalts, blast furnace gas,
recovered gaseous butane, and coke
oven gas) and cellulosic biomass (virgin
wood); and (2) alternative fuels
developed from virgin materials that can
now be used as valuable fuel products
rather than waste materials. Alternative
fuels include used oil which meets the
specifications outlined in 40 CFR
279.11; currently mined coal refuse that
previously had not been usable coal;
and clean cellulosic biomass. Clean
cellulosic biomass is defined as those
residuals that are akin to traditional
cellulosic biomass, such as forestderived biomass (e.g., green wood, forest
thinnings, clean and unadulterated bark,
sawdust, trim, and tree harvesting
residuals from logging and sawmill
materials), corn stover and other
biomass crops used specifically for
energy production (e.g., energy cane,
other fast growing grasses), bagasse and
other crop residues (e.g., peanut shells),
wood collected from forest fire
clearance activities, trees and clean
wood found in disaster debris, clean
biomass from land clearing operations,
and clean construction and demolition
wood. Clean biomass is defined as
biomass that does not contain
contaminants at concentrations not
normally associated with virgin biomass
materials. Such historically managed
traditional fuels and alternative fuels are
not secondary materials or solid wastes
unless discarded. The revised definition
155 While the Agency believes that traditional
fuels are not secondary materials, we believe it
appropriate to provide a general definition and
description of what is considered a traditional fuel.
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also clarifies that clean wood includes,
similar to clean disaster debris, clean
construction and demolition material.
Both clean cellulosic biomass and onspecification used oil were identified in
the proposed rule definition as
historically managed traditional fuels.
However, as the viability of these
materials as fuels reflects relatively
recent changes in market conditions and
technology, they are more appropriately
characterized as alternative traditional
fuels.
The new definition also adds
currently generated coal refuse as an
alternative traditional fuel. As discussed
in Section V.B.8., this material is
distinctive among the other nonhazardous secondary materials. Coal
refuse is in fact raw material coal that
is generated as a result of coal mining
operations whose primary product is
fuel. We consider currently generated
coal refuse to be more akin to a raw
material that, due to technological
developments, can now be processed
and utilized to produce a marketable
fuel. Coal refuse is different from other
non-hazardous secondary materials,
such as scrap tires or resinated wood
residuals, in that it is generated in the
production of a traditional fuel and can
be used, itself, as fuel.
The definition goes on to clarify that
traditional fuels are not secondary
materials and are not solid wastes
unless discarded. In response to
comments received on the proposal and
to provide clarity in the application and
the meaning of traditional fuel, both the
new definition of traditional fuels and
the definition of clean cellulosic
biomass are codified in § 241.2
Recommendations from commenters
to the proposed rule on specific
materials that should be considered
traditional fuels are discussed in
Section V.B. That section also includes
responses to the Agency’s request for
comment regarding a possible petition
process to make determinations on
traditional fuels.
B. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
Used as Fuel That Remain Within the
Control of the Generator
1. Scope and Applicability
Non-hazardous secondary materials
used as a fuel in combustion units that
remain within the control of the
generator and that meet the legitimacy
criteria specified in § 241.3(d)(1) would
not be solid waste. Such non-hazardous
secondary materials are referred to as
legitimate (non-waste) fuel products.
As discussed previously in Section
V.A, if the non-hazardous secondary
material remains within the control of
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the generator, it is more likely to be
material that is saved and not thrown
away. The Agency has explained that
case law would not allow it to
determine that secondary material is a
waste if it is recycled as a fuel within
a continuous industrial process. EPA
cannot evaluate every non-hazardous
secondary material, but considers that
this standard would cover all such nonhazardous secondary materials that are
recycled as a fuel within a continuous
process. EPA, however, acknowledges
that this may capture certain nonhazardous secondary materials which
may be a waste, but is unlikely. Thus,
this is a reasonable interpretation of the
statutory definition of discard to
consider non-hazardous secondary
materials that are managed within the
control of its generator and legitimately
burned as fuels to not be solid waste.
The Agency also recognizes that there
may also be non-hazardous secondary
materials transferred to another party
that are not discarded in the first
instance, and thus may not be a solid
waste. EPA is dealing with those
categories of non-hazardous secondary
materials on a case-by-case basis by
specifically identifying such nonhazardous secondary materials in the
regulations (see discussions in Section
VII.C on scrap tires managed under an
established tire collection program and
Section VII.D for resinated wood or
through the non-waste determination
process (Section VII.G).
Non-hazardous secondary materials
used as fuels remain within the control
of the generator under two scenarios
(See § 241.2). As such, the regulation
consists of two parts in determining
whether these non-hazardous secondary
materials qualify for being ‘‘within the
control of the generator.’’ The first part
applies to non-hazardous secondary
materials generated and used as fuels at
the generating facility. For purposes of
this criteria, ‘‘generating facility’’ means
all contiguous property owned, leased,
or otherwise controlled by the
secondary material generator;
‘‘secondary material generator’’ means
any person whose act or process
produces non-hazardous secondary
materials at the generating facility.
If a generator hires or contracts with
a different company to use the nonhazardous secondary materials at the
generator’s facility as fuel, either
temporarily or permanently, these
materials remain within the control of
the generator. However, generators
sometimes contract with a second
company to collect non-hazardous
secondary materials at the generating
facility and such materials are
subsequently used as fuels in a
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combustion unit at another facility. In
that situation, if the facility that burns
the non-hazardous secondary material is
not ‘‘within the control of the generator’’
as defined below in the second part of
the definition, then the non-hazardous
secondary material fuel would be
considered a solid waste unless a nonwaste determination has been granted
pursuant to the petition process.
The second part of the definition
applies to non-hazardous secondary
materials generated and used as fuels at
a different facility that is controlled by
the generator (or if a person as codified
in § 241.2 controls both the generator
and the facility using the fuel in a
combustion unit). For purposes of this
criterion, ‘‘control’’ means the power to
direct the policies of the facility,
whether by ownership of stock, voting
rights, or otherwise, except that
contractors who operate facilities on
behalf of a different person as codified
in § 241.2 shall not be deemed to
‘‘control’’ such facilities. Thus, when a
contractor operates two facilities, each
of which is owned by a different
company, the non-hazardous secondary
materials generated at the first facility
and used as a fuel at the second facility
is not considered ‘‘within the control of
the generator.’’
In the proposed rule, the Agency also
indicated that the 2008 DSW Final Rule
included a third part in the definition of
‘‘within the control of the generator;’’
specifically, hazardous secondary
materials that are generated pursuant to
a written contract between a tolling
contractor and a toll manufacturer and
legitimately reclaimed by the tolling
contractor. For purposes of that
exclusion, a tolling contractor is a
person who arranges for the production
of a product or intermediate made from
specified raw or virgin materials
through a written contract with a toll
manufacturer. We did not propose to
include this arrangement as being
‘‘within the control of the generator’’ as
we viewed this as a specific type of
arrangement used in the production of
materials, and were unaware of these
types of contractual arrangements where
both products and secondary material
fuel are sent to what we are calling
tolling contractors. Nevertheless, the
Agency requested comment on whether
to include this option in the final rule.
We have decided not to include this
option in the final rule. See Section
V.A.1.
2. Restrictions and Requirements
a. Legitimate Use
Under this rule, non-hazardous
secondary materials used as fuels in
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15533
combustion units that remain within the
control of the generator must meet the
legitimacy criteria in § 241.3(d)(1) to be
considered a non-waste fuel. To satisfy
the legitimacy criteria, the nonhazardous secondary material (nonwaste) fuel must be handled as a
valuable commodity, have a meaningful
heating value and be used as a fuel in
a combustion unit that recovers energy,
and contain contaminants at levels
comparable to (or lower than) those in
traditional fuels which the combustion
unit is designed to burn as discussed in
Section VII.H.
b. Notification
We are not requiring facilities that use
non-hazardous secondary material fuels
within the control of the generator and
that meet the legitimacy criteria to
notify EPA under this rule. This notice
would be duplicative of the notification
and recordkeeping requirements being
promulgated for boilers and process
heaters at major sources of air toxics.
That is, the CAA section 112 rule
requires notifications and
recordkeeping, including
documentation as to how the nonhazardous secondary material meets the
legitimacy criteria, and satisfies the
definition of processing and/or the
requirements for the petition process.
(40 CFR 63.7530 and 63.7555). Specific
recordkeeping requirements for area
source boilers combusting nonhazardous secondary materials are also
found at 40 CFR 63.11225(c)(2)(ii) under
the CAA section 112 rule for area source
boilers.
Additionally, regulations at 40 CFR
60.2175(v) promulgated for commercial
and industrial solid waste incinerators
under CAA section 129 requires basic
recordkeeping to establish whether
materials combusted in a commercial or
industrial unit meet the standards and
procedures for identification of nonhazardous secondary materials that are
not solid wastes. Owners or operators of
commercial or industrial facilities that
combust non-hazardous secondary
materials that are not traditional fuels
are directed to the CAA section 112
regulations for boilers, and the CAA
section 129 regulations for commercial
and industrial incinerators, to determine
the recordkeeping provisions related to
the definition of solid waste that may
apply to them. These records and
notifications under the CAA regulations
provide assurance that facilities will
apply the legitimacy criteria, and that
requiring notification under this rule is
not necessary.
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C. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
That Have Not Been Discarded: Scrap
Tires Collected Under Established Tire
Collection Programs
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1. Scope and Applicability
EPA has determined that scrap tires
removed from vehicles and managed
under the oversight of state and other
established tire collection programs are
not ‘‘discarded in the first instance.’’
Such tires (including both whole tires
and tires that have been shredded—with
or without metal removal 156) are nonwaste when legitimately used as a fuel
in combustion units. These collection
programs (codified in § 241.2) ensure
that the scrap tires are not discarded en
route to the combustor for use as a fuel
and are handled as a valuable
commodity (§ 241.3(d)(1)(i)).
State programs and other established
tire collection programs promote the
collection of scrap tires in coordination
with tire dealerships, haulers,
processors, and end users, forming an
established collection infrastructure.
These established tire collection
programs together with state bans on
landfilling in most states 157 effectively
result in the beneficial reuse of tires (as
fuel or used in other scrap tire markets)
as the sole 158 end use option for scrap
tires in those states.
While the Agency recognizes that
there will be differences between the
various established tire collection
programs, at a minimum, the following
components would need to be included
as part of any established tire collection
program: (1) A comprehensive system
that prevents tires from being
abandoned when the scrap tires are
harvested from vehicles and collected at
the various businesses where they are
removed; these tires are not considered
‘‘discarded in the first instance’’ per this
rule; and (2) standards for the scrap tires
to be managed as a valuable commodity.
These programs would ensure storage
does not exceed reasonable time frames,
the scrap tires are managed in a manner
consistent with the analogous fuel
(coal), and a system is in place to
prevent scrap tires from being discarded
156 If scrap tires are not discarded in the first
place, they do not have to be processed per the
standards in today’s rule, but can be converted to
rough shreds or processed into TDF chips at the
discretion of the combustor and still be non-waste
fuel. If the scrap tires were discarded, they have to
be processed (with metal removal, see Section
V.B.5) per the standards in today’s rule in order to
be a non-waste fuel.
157 A few states allow tires cut up in smaller
pieces to be landfilled, while fewer still allow
whole tires in landfills.
158 Note, a commenter has indicated that some
states are considering revoking their tire landfill
ban if combustors are no longer choosing to use
tires for fuel based on the outcome of this rule.
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(according to the plain language
definition) en route to the combustor
(and during any processing prior to
combustion).
An example of this type of program is
a tire dealership that has pre-arranged
agreements where the combustor pays
for the delivery of the tires harvested
from automobiles and can track the
delivery and has contractual obligations
for a safe delivery. Another example is
the Texas system where tires are not
seen as waste, but have specifications
for tracking and safe delivery to the end
use markets.
In essence, these programs are ones
that neither allow for an opportunity for
scrap tires intended as a fuel to be
discarded in the first place nor
discarded in transit. A definition of
established tire collection programs is
codified in today’s rule at § 241.2.
According to the plain English meaning
of discard, these tires would not have
been ‘‘disposed of, abandoned, or
thrown away’’ through the initial
process of removing them from cars or
collecting them under established tire
collection programs.
In reaching this position, the Agency
considered several factors:
a. Some Specific Types of Secondary
Materials Are More Like Valuable
Commodities Than Solid Wastes
As noted above, when non-hazardous
secondary material fuels are transferred
to another party, the secondary material
is generally discarded since the
generator has relinquished control of the
secondary material and the entity
receiving such materials may not have
the same incentives to manage them as
a useful product, which results in the
materials being discarded. At the same
time, EPA acknowledges that some
specific types of secondary materials are
more like valuable commodities than
solid wastes, and the mere act of
transferring them to a third-party does
not automatically involve discard.
After reviewing the comments on the
proposal and all other information in
the rulemaking record, EPA has
determined that, unlike the historic
management of scrap tires that resulted
in many waste tire piles, the annually
generated scrap tires that are removed
from vehicles under established tire
collection programs shows that they are
not being discarded, as evidenced by the
dramatic decrease in the number of tires
in waste tire dumps. Fewer than one
million tires remain in tire piles, as
compared to an estimate of one billion
tires in 1990. In addition, scrap tires
have nearly the highest percentage of
reuse, recycling, or otherwise being
beneficially used in the markets. That is,
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of the 300 million scrap tires being
generated every year, nearly 90% of
those tires go to beneficial use markets.
The change in market conditions since
the historic management of scrap tires
in piles have helped ensure that scrap
tires collected as part of established tire
collection programs are not discarded.
Under the scrap tire program,
oversight starts at the point the tires are
removed from the vehicle and continues
until they are used as a fuel at
combustion units (or used in other scrap
tire markets), ensuring that discard does
not occur. Although we mentioned in
the proposed rule that there was a
pattern of discard at third party-off site
reclaimers, based on the information in
the record, we understand that it is no
longer the case for scrap tires, while
acknowledging that there was a problem
in the past.
In regard to the proposed rule
statement that state environmental
agencies often consider tires to have
entered the ‘‘waste stream’’ and were
concerned about conflicting
interpretations, we recognize that
states 159 typically call tires a waste
until beneficially used. As described
above, discard is not occurring
(according to the plain language
definition since they have not been
abandoned, disposed of, or thrown
away) for tires collected from vehicles
under established tire collection
programs (as defined). Secondly, this
rule is specifically for use of nonhazardous secondary materials as fuels
and ingredients (including scrap tires)
in combustion units and this rule has
different criteria than State Agency
definitions for general use of scrap tires.
These issues are discussed further in
Sections IX (State Authority) and in
Section V.B.5 (Response to Comments
on Scrap Tires).
Typically, the state and private
programs work together to encourage
processing, reuse, and/or recycling, that
would result in a market demand for
scrap tires to be collected; however, the
market for fuel use is more
independently sustainable in the free
market, while other markets for scrap
tire reuse and recycling often need to
function with state subsidies to support
them.160
159 There are many variations on how scrap tires
are regarded in State Environmental Agencies, of
note, Texas considers that tires are non-waste, but
that the shipments have to be documented. For
details, please refer to comments by the Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ),
commenter ID EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–1306.
160 The recovery and management of scrap tires
that are recovered from tire piles are largely
supported or subsidized by State Agencies and
these whole tires are considered discarded and
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b. Beneficial Use of Whole Scrap Tires
2. Restrictions and Requirements
Since most combustion units will
continue to use tires that have been
processed into TDF chips, the biggest
change in the final rule (with regard to
the use of scrap tires) is that cement
kilns will be able to use whole tires as
non-waste fuels if those tires are
removed from vehicles under
established tire collection programs. In
particular, cement kilns operate at much
higher temperatures and need, not only
the fuel from the tires, but also the noncombustible portions in order to
produce cement clinker, creating a
strong market for this type of beneficial
use. Whole tires removed from vehicles
under established tire collection
programs still meet the legitimacy
criteria and using whole tires for their
fuel value would lead to an overall
decrease in the emissions of HAP or the
section 129 pollutants in the CAA when
replacing traditional fuel sources (e.g.,
coal) in cement kilns due to the
contaminant levels and combustion
properties. Many state environmental
agencies and cement kilns supplied data
and support for use of whole tires in
cement kilns.
Since cement kilns’ use of whole tires
as a non-waste would be a change from
the proposal, EPA considered potential
environmental justice impacts. The
assessment of the demographic analysis
at the cement kilns using scrap tires
showed a decreased chance of
impacting environmental justice
communities based on the demographic
analysis at cement kilns versus the
alternative sites. The demographics at
cement kilns showed that they were
sited in areas that were lower in
minority and had less poverty that the
alternative CISWI combustors, tire
processors, or disposal sites. In
addition, scrap tires are prevented from
being disposed of in states that ban
whole tires from landfills 161 and that
have an established collection
infrastructure. Not all states have
programs that prevent landfilling and
tires recovered from tire dumps are not
always suitable for market use.
However, as we have noted previously,
scrap tires have nearly the highest
percentage of reuse, recycling, or are
otherwise being beneficially used in the
markets to ensure that scrap tires
collected as part of established tire
collection programs are not discarded.
a. Legitimate Use
Consistent with other non-hazardous
secondary materials used as a non-waste
fuel, scrap tires collected pursuant to
established tire collection programs
must meet the legitimacy criteria in
§ 241.3(d)(1) to be considered a nonwaste fuel under this rule. Specifically:
• Scrap tires are considered to be
handled as a valuable commodity when
they are collected from vehicles under
established scrap tire collection
programs. If at any point these tires or
tires that otherwise qualify to be nonwaste (processed or petitioned) are not
managed as a valuable commodity, they
would become a solid waste. See
§ 241.3(d)(1)(i).
• Scrap tires (whole or TDF chips)
have an exceptionally high heating
value; they are considered to meet the
legitimacy criteria for meaningful
heating value established in today’s rule
at § 241.3(d)(1)(ii). In fact, the heating
value of scrap tires (12,000 Btu/lb to
16,000 Btu/lb) is higher than typical
coal values and other solid fuels.
• EPA’s analysis of the contaminant
concentrations in scrap tires shows that
it is comparable to the traditional fuel
it replaces (i.e., coal); therefore, it is
considered to meet the legitimacy
criteria for comparable contaminants
established in today’s rule at
§ 241.3(d)(1)(iii). The comparison to the
contaminant concentrations is given in
the scrap tire response to comments. See
Section V.B.5.
waste when used as fuel, unless they are
sufficiently processed.
161 A few states allow tires cut up in smaller
pieces to be landfilled, while fewer states still allow
whole tires in landfills.
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b. Notification
We are not requiring facilities that use
scrap tires collected under established
tire collection programs and that meet
the legitimacy criteria to notify EPA
under this rule. This notice would be
duplicative of the notifications and
recordkeeping requirements being
promulgated for boilers and process
heaters at major sources of air toxics.
That is, the CAA section 112 rule
requires notifications and
recordkeeping, including
documentation as to how the nonhazardous secondary material meets the
legitimacy criteria, and satisfies the
definition of processing and/or the
requirements for the petition process.
(40 CFR 63.7530 and 63.7555). Specific
recordkeeping requirements for area
source boilers combusting nonhazardous secondary materials are also
found at 40 CFR 63.11225(c)(2)(ii) under
the CAA section 112 rule for area source
boilers.
Additionally, regulations at 40 CFR
60.2175(v) promulgated for commercial
and industrial solid waste incinerators
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15535
under CAA section 129 requires basic
recordkeeping to establish whether
materials combusted in a commercial or
industrial unit meet the standards and
procedures for identification of nonhazardous secondary materials that are
not solid wastes. Under the provisions
of § 60.2175(w), for combustors burning
scrap tires, a certification must be
maintained stating that the scrap tires
combusted under § 241.3(b)(2)(i) were
obtained through an established tire
collection program.
Owners or operators of commercial or
industrial facilities that combust
materials that are not traditional fuels
are directed to the CAA section 112
regulations for boilers, and the CAA
section 129 regulations for commercial
and industrial incinerators, to determine
the recordkeeping provisions related to
the definition of solid waste that may
apply to them. These records and
notifications under the CAA regulations
provide assurance that facilities will
apply the legitimacy criteria, and that
requiring notification under this rule is
not necessary.
D. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
That Have Not Been Discarded:
Resinated Wood Residuals
1. Scope and Applicability
Resinated wood (also referred to as
resinated wood residuals) is another
secondary material that, upon
examination, is not discarded when
used on-site or transferred off-site. EPA
would consider resinated wood used as
a fuel in a combustion unit as not being
a solid waste, provided these materials
satisfy the specified legitimacy criteria
for fuels (§ 241.3(d)(1)).
The definition of ‘‘resinated wood’’
has been codified in § 241.2 and means
wood products (containing resin
adhesives) derived from primary and
secondary wood products
manufacturing and comprised of such
items as board trim, sander dust, and
panel trim. Wood products
manufacturers in many cases have
constructed their facilities to utilize
resinated wood residuals as fuels.
Specialized burners specifically to fire
sander dust and replace oil and natural
gas were developed and were integral to
the growth of the industry. This
secondary material is routinely
transferred between either intra- or
inter-company facilities and used as
either ‘‘furnish’’ (i.e., raw materials) or
fuel at the receiving facilities. This
material when transferred off-site is
used and handled in the same manner
that resinated wood residuals are used
when generated on-site, such that it is
impossible to distinguish between
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materials that are being used as a raw
material and those that are being used
as a fuel.
Consistent with the approach taken
for scrap tires, EPA recognizes that some
specific types of non-hazardous
secondary materials, such as resinated
wood residuals, are more like valuable
commodities than solid wastes, and per
the holding of the Safe Food case, the
act of transferring them to a third-party
does not automatically involve discard.
Consistent with Safe Food, EPA’s
determination that resinated wood is
not a solid waste, even if it is transferred
between industries or ownership of the
material is relinquished, ‘‘is reasonable
and consistent with the statutory
purpose.’’ 35 F.3d at 1269.
2. Restrictions and Requirements
a. Legitimate Use
As we have noted above, the
combustor of these secondary materials
would still need to demonstrate that
such residuals meet the legitimacy
criteria. Thus, they would need to show
the material is handled as a valuable
commodity, has meaningful heating
value and is used as a fuel in a
combustion unit that recovers energy,
and contains contaminants at levels
comparable to (or lower than) those in
traditional fuels for which the
combustion unit is designed to burn.
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b. Notification
We are not requiring facilities that use
resinated wood residuals and that meet
the legitimacy criteria to notify EPA
under this rule. This notice would be
duplicative of the notifications and
recordkeeping requirements being
promulgated for boilers and process
heaters at major sources of air toxics.
That is, the CAA section 112 rule
requires notifications and
recordkeeping, including
documentation as to how the nonhazardous secondary material meets the
legitimacy criteria, and satisfies the
definition of processing and/or the
requirements for the petition process.
(40 CFR 63.7530 and 63.7555). Specific
recordkeeping requirements for area
source boilers combusting nonhazardous secondary materials are also
found at 40 CFR 63.11225(c)(2)(ii) under
the CAA section 112 rule for area source
boilers.
Additionally, regulations at 40 CFR
60.2175(v) promulgated for commercial
and industrial solid waste incinerators
under CAA section 129 requires basic
recordkeeping to establish whether
materials combusted in a commercial or
industrial unit meet the standards and
procedures for identification of non-
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hazardous secondary materials that are
not solid wastes. Owners or operators of
commercial or industrial facilities that
combust materials that are not
traditional fuels are directed to the CAA
section 112 regulations for boilers, and
the CAA section 129 regulations for
commercial and industrial incinerators,
to determine the recordkeeping
provisions related to the definition of
solid waste that may apply to them.
These records and notifications under
the CAA regulations provide assurance
that facilities will apply the legitimacy
criteria, and that requiring notification
under this rule is not necessary.
E. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
Used as Ingredients
1. Scope and Applicability
Non-hazardous secondary materials
used as ingredients in combustion units
would not be solid wastes provided they
satisfy the legitimacy criteria discussed
in § 241.3(d)(2). We are not
differentiating between ingredients that
are used within the control of the
generator from those that are not since
the use of non-hazardous secondary
materials as ingredients is more integral
or akin to use in a commercial
manufacturing process and thus, these
non-hazardous secondary materials
should not be considered discarded
provided they satisfy the legitimacy
criteria. However, non-hazardous
secondary materials that are used as
ingredients, but have been discarded in
the first instance (e.g., landfilled) would
be considered a solid waste unless
processed into a new ingredient
product.
The Agency received comments on
the proposed rule that ingredients
should not be included in this rule since
ingredients are not ‘‘combusted,’’ but
rather, are incorporated into the
product. As explained in the response to
comments in Section V.A, this issue is
not relevant to this regulation, which
determines whether non-hazardous
secondary materials are a solid waste, or
not under RCRA. EPA has clear
authority to interpret RCRA to decide
whether non-hazardous secondary
materials are solid wastes or not.
Whether EPA may cover ingredients
used in combustors under section 129 of
the CAA is a matter for regulations
under that statute.
The proposal identified a number of
non-hazardous secondary materials that
are currently being used as ingredients
in combustion processes that would not
be considered solid waste, provided
they meet the legitimacy criteria for
ingredients and were not discarded in
the first instance (e.g., blast furnace slag;
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CKD; the coal combustion residual
group (fly ash, bottom ash, and boiler
slag); and foundry sand). For example,
coal fly ash can be added to the raw
material feed in clinker manufacturing
to contribute specific required elements,
such as silica, alumina, and calcium, in
the final composition of cement, with
such levels of key metals needing to be
carefully calibrated with other
ingredients to ensure that the final
cement product has the correct mineral
and metal content. There is every
incentive for the company to ensure that
the metals content are within
specifications to ensure that the clinker
product meets specifications. In clinker
manufacture, coal fly ash partially
offsets the need for raw materials, such
as silica, iron, and alumina sources.
This reduction of raw feedstock
materials can result in reduced
emissions of certain pollutants.162
Another non-hazardous secondary
material used as an ingredient, CKD, can
be directly reused in a closed-loop
process back into the cement kiln for
clinker manufacture. In fact, the cement
industry is estimated to recycle more
than 75 percent of its CKD each year.
Significant increases in U.S. clinker
capacity are expected over the 2008 to
2012 period resulting in an anticipated
increase in CKD production and usage.
In clinker manufacture, CKD partially
offsets the need for raw material feed,
such as limestone and natural
constituents (rock), thus avoiding the
energy usage and emissions related to
their extraction and processing.
2. Restrictions and Requirements
a. Legitimate Use
Under this rule, non-hazardous
secondary materials used as ingredients
in combustion units cannot be
discarded in the first instance and must
meet the legitimacy criteria in
§ 241.3(d)(2) to be considered a nonwaste ingredient. To satisfy the
legitimacy criteria, the non-hazardous
secondary material (non-waste)
ingredient must: be managed as a
valuable commodity, provide a useful
contribution to the production or
manufacturing process, used to produce
a valuable product, and result in
products that contain contaminants at
concentrations comparable to or lower
than those found in traditional products
162 For more detailed information on the benefits
of using coal fly ash and other recovered mineral
components in manufacturing processes, please see:
‘‘Study on Increasing the Usage of Recovered
Mineral Components in Federally Funded Projects
Involving Procurement of Cement or Concrete to
Address the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users.’’
June 23, 2008. (EPA530–R–08–007)
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manufactured without the nonhazardous secondary material.
b. Notification
We are not requiring facilities that use
non-hazardous secondary materials as
ingredients to notify EPA under this
rule. This notice would be duplicative
of the notification and recordkeeping
requirements being promulgated for
boilers and process heaters at major
sources of air toxics. That is, the CAA
section 112 rule requires notifications
and recordkeeping, including
documentation as to how the nonhazardous secondary material meets the
legitimacy criteria, and satisfies the
definition of processing and/or the
requirements for the petition process.
(40 CFR 63.7530 and 63.7555). Specific
recordkeeping requirements for area
source boilers using non-hazardous
secondary materials as ingredients are
also found at 40 CFR 63.11225(c)(2)(ii)
under the CAA section 112 rule for area
source boilers.
Additionally, regulations at 40 CFR
60.2175(v) promulgated for commercial
and industrial solid waste incinerators
under CAA section 129 requires basic
recordkeeping to establish whether
materials combusted in a commercial or
industrial unit meet the standards and
procedures for identification of nonhazardous secondary materials that are
not solid wastes. Owners or operators of
commercial or industrial facilities that
combust non-hazardous secondary
materials that are not traditional fuels
are directed to the CAA section 112
regulations for boilers, and the CAA
section 129 regulations for commercial
and industrial incinerators, to determine
the recordkeeping provisions related to
the definition of solid waste that may
apply to them. These records and
notifications under the CAA regulations
provide assurance that facilities will
apply the legitimacy criteria, and that
requiring notification under this rule is
not necessary.
F. Discarded Non-Hazardous Secondary
Materials That Have Undergone
Processing To Produce Legitimate Fuel
or Ingredient Products
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1. Scope and Applicability
Fuel or ingredient products that result
from the processing of discarded nonhazardous secondary materials and that
meet the legitimacy criteria as discussed
below are not solid wastes. Because the
resulting fuel/ingredient products are,
in effect, reclaimed or extracted
products from a recycling process, EPA
considers such materials to be ‘‘new’’
products that have not been discarded
and therefore are not solid wastes. Until
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the non-hazardous secondary materials
have been processed into a non-waste
fuel or ingredient product meeting the
legitimacy criteria, the discarded nonhazardous secondary material are
generally assumed to be solid wastes.
As discussed in the proposed rule, the
basic principle that must be satisfied is
that the discarded non-hazardous
secondary material must undergo a
sufficient level of processing that
produces either a new fuel or ingredient
product (the definition of processing is
codified in § 241.2). Specifically,
processing includes, but is not limited
to, operations that: remove or destroy
contaminants; significantly improves
the fuel characteristics of the material,
e.g., sizing or drying the material in
combination with other operations,
chemically improve the as-fired energy
content, or improve the ingredient
characteristics. On the other hand,
processing operations that are minimal,
such as operations that result only in
modifying the size of the non-hazardous
secondary material, would not
constitute processing for purposes of
today’s rule. In addition, the new
product must have properties that
provide the end user the assurance that
the fuel or ingredient product
consistently satisfies the legitimacy
criteria based on the type of combustion
unit the non-hazardous secondary
material is used in (e.g., as a fuel in a
boiler or as an ingredient in a cement
kiln).
• The principle that products can be
produced from a waste is common to
industrial processes and commercial
recycling markets. Newspaper and
aluminum cans discarded by consumers
are then collected, sorted and processed
into new recycled paper and aluminum
products that are not considered solid
waste. Collected plastic is generally sent
to a reclaimer, who will sort, grind, and
clean the plastic. The cleaned and
sorted plastic is sent to a manufacturer
who will use it as feedstock. These are
clear examples where discarded
materials are processed into legitimate
non-waste products.
Recycled fuel products are no
different from recycled paper and
aluminum cans with respect to discard.
If non-hazardous secondary materials
that are discarded by being abandoned,
disposed of or thrown away, but are
later collected, segregated, and
processed into a homogenous fuel
product that is marketed and sold as a
valuable commodity and is no different
from traditional fuels used today, then
they should no longer be considered
solid waste, just as recycled paper is not
a solid waste.
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There are other examples beyond
consumer recycled materials where
discarded secondary materials are
processed into new products. These
examples include specific exclusions
from the hazardous waste regulations,
which provide insight into how
secondary materials can be processed
into valuable products. For instance,
discarded spent solvents are commonly
recycled via distillation into legitimate,
newly usable solvents. These
regenerated solvents are clearly
considered to be products, not wastes.
See 50 FR 634, January 4, 1985.
Another example is scrap tires
retrieved from waste tire piles that have
been shredded/chipped into TDF with
the wire removed. In this instance, the
scrap tires have been sufficiently
processed and thus, the TDF would not
be considered a solid waste when
burned as a fuel. On the other hand,
scrap tires from waste tire piles that
have been shredded/chipped without
the metal wire removed, would not be
considered to have been sufficiently
processed, and any TDF that is
generated in such a fashion would be
considered a waste-derived fuel. For a
full discussion of processing of scrap
tires, see Section V.B.5, which discusses
the comments received on this issue, as
well as EPA’s responses.
Coal refuse generated from legacy
piles is another example of a discarded
material that has been processed into a
fuel product, although, as discussed in
Section V.B.8, the nature of the material
results in a somewhat different
processing scenario. Specifically, coal
refuse that has been discarded in waste
piles is unique since it was a material
generated during the fuel production
process and then thrown away
(discarded). Over time, combustion
technology changes allowed this raw
material to be ‘‘re-mined’’ as raw
material coal. The level of processing
that occurs for this ’’re-mined’’ coal
refuse is no different than the level of
processing that occurs for raw material
coal today. In fact, this same material is
generated in current-day coal mining
operations and processed into a fuel
product today.
In that sense, we do not consider coal
refuse to fit within what we would
normally consider to be a ‘‘secondary
material’’ (i.e., material that is not the
primary product of a manufacturing or
commercial process), since the primary
product of coal mining operations is in
fact fuel As a result, raw materials that
are generated in the fuel production
process that have been discarded, but
that are then subsequently processed no
differently from raw materials processed
into fuels today, would be considered to
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undergo an adequate level of processing
to render it a non-waste. This would not
apply to other discarded materials, such
as scrap tires, since they are truly
secondary materials whose ultimate use
as a fuel is in fact ‘‘secondary in nature.’’
Off-spec used oil is another example of
a secondary material which we believe
is discarded, but can be processed into
a non-waste product (see Section V.B.7).
Once the used oil is determined to be
on-spec, we do not view it to be a solid
waste since it is no longer regulated
under the used oil management
standards of 40 CFR part 279 and can
be managed as an alternative fuel.
Synthesis gas (or syngas as it is
commonly referred) produced from the
gasification of solid waste is another
material that can also meet the
requirements of a fuel product produced
from the processing of discarded nonhazardous secondary materials,
provided the syngas has been
adequately processed to remove
contaminants. Gasification is a chemical
production process that converts
carbonaceous material into a synthesis
gas that can be used for energy
production (or as a building block for
other chemical manufacturing
processes). In general, gasification
systems are designed to react carboncontaining materials and steam at high
temperatures to produce a synthesis gas
composed mainly of carbon monoxide
and hydrogen.
Gasification systems include two
basic components. The first is the
reactor or gasifier and the second is a
gas cleanup or polishing system used to
remove various contaminants from the
raw (un-polished) synthesis gas. At a
minimum, syngas cleanup generally
includes removal of sulfur and metals.
These two components work together
producing a synthesis gas that can be
used as a fuel in a combustion turbine.
Coal fines, biomass, and other
materials can be mixed and processed
into pellets (or other forms) that have
the consistency and handling
characteristics of coal. For example, the
K–Fuel process employs heat and
pressure to transform coal into a
cleaner, more efficient fuel by removing
water and polluting impurities, thus
increasing combustion efficiency. When
applied to different lower-rank subbituminous and lignite coals, the
K–Fuel process removes, on average,
almost 70 percent of the coal’s
elemental mercury.163 As discussed in
Section V.B.2, manure that has been
sufficiently processed (for example, by
anaerobic digesters) would also be
163 Evergreen Energy Company Web site. https://
www.evgenergy.com/k_fuel.php.
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considered a legitimate non-waste fuel
that has been processed from a nonhazardous secondary material provided
processed material meets the legitimacy
criteria.
2. Restrictions and Requirements
a. Legitimate Use
Discarded non-hazardous secondary
materials that are sufficiently processed
to produce legitimate fuel or ingredient
products must still pass the applicable
legitimacy criteria to be considered a
non-waste fuel or ingredient product. To
be considered a legitimate fuel, the fuel
product must meet the criteria
identified in § 241.3(d)(1), while to be
considered a legitimate ingredient, the
ingredient product must meet the
criteria in § 241.3(d)(2).
b. Notification
We are not requiring facilities that use
discarded non-hazardous secondary
materials that are sufficiently processed
to produce legitimate fuel or ingredient
products to notify EPA under this rule.
This notice would be duplicative of the
notifications and recordkeeping
requirements being promulgated for
boilers and process heaters at major
sources of air toxics. That is, the CAA
section 112 rule requires notifications
and recordkeeping, including
documentation as to how the nonhazardous secondary material meets the
legitimacy criteria, and satisfies the
definition of processing and/or the
requirements for the petition process.
(40 CFR 63.7530 and 63.7555). Specific
recordkeeping requirements for area
source boilers using non-hazardous
secondary materials as ingredients are
also found at 40 CFR 63.11225(c)(2)(ii)
under the CAA section 112 rule for area
source boilers.
Additionally, regulations at 40 CFR
60.2175(v) promulgated for commercial
and industrial solid waste incinerators
under CAA section 129 require basic
recordkeeping to establish whether
materials combusted in a commercial or
industrial unit meet the standards and
procedures for identification of nonhazardous secondary materials that are
not solid wastes. Owners or operators of
commercial or industrial facilities that
combust materials that are not
traditional fuels are directed to the CAA
section 112 regulations for boilers, and
the CAA section 129 regulations for
commercial and industrial incinerators,
to determine the recordkeeping
provisions related to the definition of
solid waste that may apply to them. The
Agency believes that these records and
notifications under the CAA regulations
provide assurance that facilities will
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apply the legitimacy criteria, and that
requiring notification under this rule is
not necessary.
G. Non-Waste Determination Petitions
1. Description of the Petition Criteria for
the Non-Waste Determination
The final rule establishes a non-waste
determination petition process that
provides persons with an administrative
process for receiving a formal
determination from the EPA Regional
Administrator that non-hazardous
secondary materials that are burned as
a fuel and have not been managed
within the control of the generator, have
not been discarded, and is
indistinguishable in all relevant aspects
from a fuel product is not a solid waste
when used as a legitimate fuel in a
combustion unit. For example, a facility
combusting non-hazardous secondary
materials that is not affiliated or within
the control of the generator of the nonhazardous secondary material (and thus
is ‘‘outside the control of the generator’’)
can petition EPA that such nonhazardous secondary materials they
burn as fuel is not a solid waste
pursuant to the various criteria.
This petition process is voluntary.
That is, facilities may choose to petition
EPA to receive a case-specific non-waste
determination. However, any petition
that is submitted to EPA that requests a
non-waste determination must
demonstrate that the non-hazardous
secondary material has not been
previously discarded and that it satisfies
the five criteria outlined in today’s rule
at § 241.3(c). In addition, the petitioner
must also demonstrate that the nonhazardous secondary material meets the
legitimacy criteria in 241.3(d)(1).
To demonstrate that the nonhazardous secondary material that is to
be burned as a fuel has not been
discarded in the first instance, the
petitioner would need to demonstrate
that it was not initially abandoned or
thrown away by the generator of the
non-hazardous secondary material.
After demonstrating that the nonhazardous secondary material has not
been discarded in the first instance, the
petitioner must then demonstrate that
the material is indistinguishable in all
relevant aspects from a fuel product by
showing that it satisfies all of the
following five criteria: (1) Whether
market participants handle the nonhazardous secondary material as a fuel
rather than a waste; (2) whether the
chemical and physical identify of the
non-hazardous secondary material is
comparable to a commercial fuel; (3)
whether the capacity of the market
would use the non-hazardous secondary
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material in a reasonable time frame; (4)
whether the constituents in the nonhazardous secondary material are
released to the air, water or land from
the point of generation to the point just
prior to combustion of the nonhazardous secondary material at levels
comparable to what would otherwise be
released from traditional fuels; and (5)
other relevant factors. These five criteria
are listed in today’s rule at § 241.3(c)(1).
Specifically, the first criterion for a
non-waste determination is whether
market participants treat the nonhazardous secondary material as a fuel
rather than a solid waste. This would
include consideration of likely markets
for the non-hazardous secondary
material (e.g., based on the current
positive value of the secondary material,
stability of demand, and any contractual
arrangements). This evaluation of
market participation is a key element for
determining whether companies view
these non-hazardous secondary
materials like fuels rather than as
negatively-valued wastes.
The second criterion for a non-waste
determination is the chemical and
physical identity of the non-hazardous
secondary material and whether it is
comparable to commercial fuels. This
‘‘identity principle’’ is a key factor that
the Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit
cited in Safe Food in determining
whether a non-hazardous secondary
material is indistinguishable from a
product. It is important to note that the
identity of a material can be comparable
to a fuel product without being
identical. However, to qualify for a nonwaste determination, any differences
between the non-hazardous secondary
material in question and the commercial
fuel contaminants should be within a
small acceptable range. In addition, the
comparison must be of the secondary
material itself to the commercial fuels
and not of the emissions from the
combustion unit. The Agency also
recognizes, however, that emissions
data may be used to augment data from
the material in cases where such
emissions data is useful in making
legitimacy determinations and
demonstrating that constituents in the
material are being used in energy
recovery and not disposed of through
sham recycling.
The third criterion for making a nonwaste determination is the capacity of
the market to use the non-hazardous
secondary material as a fuel in
combustion units in a reasonable time
frame and ensure that it will not be
abandoned. For the non-waste
determination, a person must provide
sufficient information about the nonhazardous secondary material and the
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market demand for it to demonstrate
that such non-hazardous secondary
materials will in fact be used as a fuel
in combustion units in a reasonable
time frame. EPA is not explicitly
defining ‘‘reasonable time frame’’
because such time frames could vary
according to the non-hazardous
secondary material and the industry
involved, and therefore determining this
time frame should be made on a casespecific basis.
The fourth criterion for a non-waste
determination is whether the
constituents in the non-hazardous
secondary material fuels that could be
considered contaminants are at
concentrations comparable to what
would otherwise be released from
traditional fuels from the point of
generation of the non-hazardous
secondary material, its management and
storage prior to combustion. The Agency
believes that the release to the
environment of contaminants contained
in the non-hazardous secondary
material is a possible indicator of risk
and discard. The Agency recognizes that
combustion using traditional fuels also
result in a certain level of release and,
in evaluating this criterion, would not
deny a non-waste determination if such
release is comparable to those
traditional fuel releases. However, when
relatively high levels of the
contaminants are released to the
environment from the point of
generation to the point just prior to
combustion then that may be an
indication that the non-hazardous
secondary material is not being handled
as a commercial fuel.
The fifth and final criterion for a nonwaste determination includes any other
relevant factors that demonstrate that
the non-hazardous secondary material is
not discarded and thus is not a solid
waste. This catch-all criterion is
intended to allow the petitioner to
provide any case-specific information
considered important and relevant in
making the case that its non-hazardous
secondary material used as a fuel in a
combustion unit is not a solid waste.
Any non-hazardous secondary
material used as a fuel must also satisfy
the legitimacy criteria (§ 241.3(d)(1)) in
order to be considered a non-waste fuel.
We note that there may be some overlap
between the legitimacy criteria and the
five petition criteria discussed above.
Thus, the same rationale used to
demonstrate that the non-hazardous
secondary material contains
contaminants at levels comparable to (or
lower than) traditional fuels in
combination with the argument that
such non-hazardous secondary material
contains meaningful heating value can
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15539
be used to satisfy the petition criterion
number two above.
2. Non-Waste Determination Petition
Process
In order to obtain a non-waste
determination, a facility must apply to
the Regional Administrator for the EPA
Region where the facility combusting
the non-hazardous secondary material is
located per the procedures described in
today’s rule at § 241.3(c). The
application must address the relevant
criteria discussed above. The Regional
Administrator will evaluate the
application and issue a draft notice
tentatively granting or denying the
application. Notification of this
tentative decision will be provided by
newspaper advertisement or radio
broadcast in the locality where the
combustion unit is located. The
Regional Administrator will accept
public comment on the tentative
decision for at least 30 days, and may
also hold a public hearing upon request
or at his discretion. The Regional
Administrator will issue a final decision
after consideration of comments and
after the hearing (if any). The Regional
Administrator may draw upon the states
expertise as discussed below.
After a formal non-waste
determination has been granted, if a
change occurs that affects how the nonhazardous secondary material meets the
relevant criteria contained in today’s
rule at § 241.3(c)(1), or affects its
meeting the legitimacy criteria in
§ 241.3(d)(1), persons must re-apply to
the Regional Administrator for another
formal determination that the nonhazardous secondary material continues
to meet the relevant criteria and is not
discarded and therefore, not a solid
waste. The same criteria and procedures
described above would be used for any
re-application of the non-hazardous
secondary material.
As petition decisions are made by the
Agency, they will be made available on
an Agency Web site so the petition can
be referenced when similar requests are
submitted. This will support national
consistency and minimize redundant
efforts.
3. Petition Decisions Utilizing State
Environmental Agency Program’s Input
When analyzing a non-waste
determination petition request, the EPA
Regional Administrator may request or
rely on information generated through a
state’s beneficial use program that
certain non-hazardous secondary
materials are or are not solid waste. The
state beneficial use programs have been
developed to encourage a variety of uses
for many non-hazardous secondary
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materials. The process ensures that nonhazardous secondary materials do not
endanger human health and the
environment, and that they are managed
in accordance with the conditions of the
determination. Generally, when a
beneficial use determination has been
granted (thus, no longer considered a
solid waste under a state’s laws or
regulations), it would document that the
chemical and physical properties are
similar to the raw material it is
replacing or, when incorporated into
another product, would be beneficial to
the final product.
State Agencies may also submit a nonwaste determination request on behalf
of the regulated applicant for EPA to
evaluate under the non-waste
determination criteria in today’s rule at
§ 241.3(c)(1). States may petition for a
whole category of non-hazardous
secondary materials in their state for a
particular type of combustor, or for
specific individual combustors.
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H. Legitimacy Criteria
1. Legitimacy Criteria for Fuels
Non-hazardous secondary materials
used as non-waste fuels in combustion
units must meet the legitimacy criteria
specified in § 241.3(d)(1). To meet the
legitimacy criteria, the non-hazardous
secondary material must be managed as
a valuable commodity, have a
meaningful heating value and be used as
a fuel in a combustion unit that recovers
energy, and contain contaminants at
concentrations comparable to (or lower
than) those in traditional fuels which
the combustion unit is designed to burn.
In applying the legitimacy criteria, we
would note that there are two overall
questions that the Agency needs to
answer: (1) Whether or not the nonhazardous secondary material is a fuel
product or ingredient product, or
whether the material has been discarded
and is therefore a solid waste, which
includes waste-derived fuels or
ingredients; and (2) whether the nonhazardous secondary material is being
legitimately and beneficially used or
recycled.
With respect to the legitimacy
question, EPA believes it important and
crucial to apply a set of legitimacy
criteria to make sure that the fuel
product is being legitimately and
beneficially used and not simply being
discarded via sham recycling. The
definition of legitimate recycling
developed for the subtitle C hazardous
secondary materials carefully
considered the history surrounding the
uses of these secondary materials, as
well as the applicable case law with
respect to the meaning of discard.
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Likewise, those same principles are
pertinent to how a non-hazardous
secondary material is determined not to
be a solid waste. Therefore, we are
codifying general legitimacy criteria that
use the same basic framework that has
been established for the subtitle C
hazardous waste regulations, but that
are also tailored specifically for
application to non-hazardous secondary
materials that are used as fuels in
combustion units. See 40 CFR 241.3(d)
for the proposed regulatory text of the
legitimacy criteria and, for comparison,
see 40 CFR 260.43 in final regulations
for the DSW hazardous waste legitimacy
provisions.
Specific legitimacy criteria for fuels
are discussed below:
a. Manage as a Valuable Commodity
Non-hazardous secondary materials
used as fuels must be managed as
valuable commodities, including being
stored for a reasonable time frame. See
§ 241.3(d)(1)(i). Where there is an
analogous fuel, the non-hazardous
secondary material must be managed in
a manner consistent with the
management of the analogous fuel or
otherwise be adequately contained so as
to prevent releases to the environment.
Where there is no analogous fuel, the
non-hazardous secondary material must
be adequately contained so as to prevent
releases to the environment. An
‘‘analogous fuel’’ is a traditional fuel for
which the non-hazardous secondary
material substitutes and which serves
the same function and has similar
physical and chemical properties as the
non-hazardous secondary material.
With respect to how long a nonhazardous secondary material can be
stored before the material is not
considered to be ‘‘managed as a valuable
commodity,’’ we are requiring that the
non-hazardous secondary material be
stored for a reasonable time frame.
While EPA took comment on whether it
should provide a specific time-frame
(e.g., one-year) as opposed to the general
standard of ‘‘reasonable time frame,’’
based on comments submitted, the
Agency has decided not to specifically
define ‘‘reasonable time frame,’’
primarily because such time frames
could and will vary according to the
non-hazardous secondary material and
industry involved. (See Section V. D.1
for a discussion of the comments
received and EPA’s response.)
This legitimacy factor applies to the
non-hazardous secondary materials
burned under the generator-controlled
exclusion, to legitimate fuel products
that have been produced from discarded
non-hazardous secondary materials that
have been sufficiently processed to
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produce a non-waste fuel, and to the
non-hazardous secondary materials
used as fuel that have not been
discarded when used outside control of
the generator (i.e., scrap tires under tire
collection programs and resinated wood
residuals). For the generator-controlled
provision and for those non-hazardous
secondary materials that are used as a
fuel that have not been discarded when
used outside the control of the generator
(i.e., scrap tires under tire collection
programs and resinated wood residuals),
the non-hazardous secondary material
must be managed as a valuable
commodity upon generation through its
end use as a fuel—that is, from the
initial point of generation of the nonhazardous secondary material to the
time it is actually burned as a fuel. For
discarded non-hazardous secondary
materials that are processed to produce
a non-waste fuel, the fuel must be
managed as a valuable product from the
point that it is first produced as a nonwaste fuel through the time that it is
actually burned. As noted previously,
before the non-waste fuel product is
produced from discarded nonhazardous secondary materials, the nonhazardous secondary material is a solid
waste, and must comply with any
federal, state, or local requirements.
This criterion requires that the nonhazardous secondary material be
managed appropriately before its end
use as a fuel. In EPA’s view, a company
will value non-hazardous secondary
materials used as non-waste fuels that
provide an important contribution and,
therefore, will manage those secondary
materials in a manner consistent with
how it manages traditional fuels. If, on
the other hand, a company does not
manage the non-hazardous secondary
material as it would a traditional fuel,
that behavior may indicate that the nonhazardous secondary material is being
discarded.
This factor addresses the management
of non-hazardous secondary materials
used as fuels in two distinct situations.
The first situation is when the nonhazardous secondary material is
analogous to a traditional fuel that
otherwise could be burned. In this case,
the non-hazardous secondary material
must be managed prior to use as a fuel
in a similar manner to how traditional
fuels are managed or otherwise must be
‘‘contained’’ so as to prevent releases to
the environment. For example, for
liquid non-hazardous secondary
materials that are used as a non-waste
fuel that are similar to liquid fossil
fuels, the Agency would expect that
such non-hazardous secondary
materials would be managed in tanks or
similar type devices that are structurally
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sound to control the release of the nonhazardous secondary materials. The
Agency would also expect that the types
of controls that would typically be part
of a tank or similar type device for
liquid fossil fuels would also be part of
any tank system that is used to manage
the non-hazardous secondary material.
For example, if liquid fossil fuels are
stored in tanks with covers or they
provide for secondary containment, the
Agency would expect that the nonhazardous secondary material would
also be stored in tanks with covers, with
secondary containment so as to prevent
releases to the environment.
The second situation addresses the
case where there is no analogous
traditional fuel that otherwise could be
burned. This could be either because the
process is designed around a particular
non-hazardous secondary material fuel,
such as resinated wood residuals, or
because physical or chemical
differences between the non-hazardous
secondary material and the traditional
fuel are too significant for them to be
considered ‘‘analogous.’’ Non-hazardous
secondary materials that have
significantly different physical or
chemical properties when compared to
traditional fuels would not be
considered analogous even if they serve
the same function because it may not be
appropriate to manage them in the same
way. In this situation, the nonhazardous secondary material would
have to be ‘‘contained’’ so as to prevent
releases to the environment for this
criterion to be met. A non-hazardous
secondary material is ‘‘contained’’ if it is
stored in a manner that both adequately
prevents releases or other hazards to
human health and the environment,
considering the nature and toxicity of
the non-hazardous secondary
material.164
b. Meaningful Heating Value and Use as
a Fuel
Non-hazardous secondary materials
must have a meaningful heating value
and be used as a fuel in a combustion
unit that recovers energy. See
§ 241.3(d)(1)(ii). That is, since this
legitimacy criterion is intended to apply
only to non-hazardous secondary
materials that have a specific end use
(in this case, use as a fuel in an energy
recovery device), we believe it
appropriate to highlight that point by
adding that restriction directly to the
legitimacy criterion. Thus, nonhazardous secondary materials having a
meaningful heating value must also be
164 Examples of materials that are adequately
contained would include liquid fuels stored in a
tank.
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burned in a combustion device
specifically to recover energy; otherwise
the unit that combusts such secondary
materials are considered incinerators
and thus, are solid wastes.165 We
recognize that incinerators and similar
type units may accept non-hazardous
secondary materials with a meaningful
heating value and use that fuel value to
limit the other types of fuels it needs to
burn. However, the intent of an
incinerator, and similar type units, is to
destroy wastes, and thus, non-hazardous
secondary materials that are burned in
such units are considered discarded,
and thus, solid waste.
With respect to the requirement that
the non-hazardous secondary material
have a meaningful heating value, in the
context of the RCRA subtitle C
hazardous waste regulations, EPA
addressed this concept—that is, whether
a hazardous secondary material has a
meaningful heating value, in the
‘‘comparable fuels’’ rule (63 FR 33781)
by defining it with a benchmark Btu
content of 5,000 Btu/lb. EPA has also
previously stated that industrial
furnaces (e.g., cement kilns and
industrial boilers) burning hazardous
wastes with an energy value greater than
5,000 Btu/lb may generally be
considered to be burning for energy
recovery; however, we have also
indicated that hazardous wastes with a
lower Btu content could conceivably be
burned for energy recovery due to the
devices’ general efficiency of
combustion. ‘‘Thus, the 5,000 Btu level
is not an absolute bright line measure of
burning for energy recovery * * *’’ (see
62 FR 24251, May 2, 1997).
These same concepts are also
appropriate in determining whether a
non-hazardous secondary material has a
meaningful heating value since
traditional fuels in general have a range
of heating values from 4,000 to 23,000
Btu/lb. However, we also recognize that
new technologies may be developed in
the future that can cost-effectively
produce energy from such nonhazardous secondary materials with
lower energy content. As a result, for
purposes of meeting this legitimacy
criterion, we would consider nonhazardous secondary materials with an
energy value greater than 5,000 Btu/lb,
as-fired, to have a meaningful heating
value. In addition, for facilities with
energy recovery units that use a nonhazardous secondary material as a fuel
with an energy content lower than 5,000
Btu/lb, as-fired, a person may
165 We note that incinerators that burn waste for
purposes of destruction that have a waste heat
recovery boiler would not be considered a
combustion unit that satisfies this legitimacy
criterion.
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demonstrate 166 that a meaningful
heating value is derived from the nonhazardous secondary material if the
energy recovery unit can cost-effectively
recover meaningful energy from the
non-hazardous secondary material used
as a fuel. Factors that are important in
determining whether an energy recovery
unit can cost-effectively recover energy
from the non-hazardous secondary
material include, but are not limited to,
whether the facility encounters a cost
savings due to not having to purchase
significant amounts of traditional fuels
they otherwise would need, whether
they are purchasing the non-hazardous
secondary material to use as a fuel,
whether the non-hazardous secondary
material they are burning can selfsustain combustion, and whether their
operation produces energy that is sold
for a profit (e.g., a utility boiler that is
dedicated to burning a specific type of
non-hazardous secondary material that
is below 5,000 Btu/lb, but can show that
their operation produces electricity that
is sold for a profit).
While not specifically included in
§ 241.3(d)(1), EPA views this legitimacy
criterion to encompass the concept of
the ‘‘useful contribution and valuable
product’’ legitimacy factors used to
evaluate hazardous secondary materials
in the 2008 DSW final rule. In that rule,
with respect to useful contribution, EPA
said that legitimate recycling must
involve a hazardous secondary material
that provides a useful contribution to
the recycling process or to a product of
the recycling process. See § 260.43(b)(1).
In today’s final rule, this criterion
expresses the principle that nonhazardous secondary materials should
contribute value to the manufacturing
process—legitimate use is not occurring
if the secondary materials being used do
not add anything to the process. This
criterion is intended to prevent the
practice of using non-hazardous
secondary materials in a manufacturing
operation simply as a means of
disposing or discarding them.
With respect to the legitimacy
criterion of producing a valuable
product or intermediate, the product or
intermediate is valuable if it is (i) sold
to a third party or (ii) used by the
recycler or the generator as an effective
substitute for a commercial product or
as an ingredient or intermediate in an
industrial process. See § 260.43(b)(2). In
today’s final rule, this criterion
166 Such demonstration would be included in the
recordkeeping and reporting requirements for boiler
units combusting materials considered to be nonwastes in accordance with 40 CFR 241.3 as
specified in 40 CFR 63.7530(a) and 63.7555. See
Section VII.I in today’s rule for a further discussion
of these reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
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expresses the principle that the nonhazardous secondary material should be
a material of value, as demonstrated by
someone purchasing the material, or
using it as an effective substitute for a
commercial product that it would
otherwise have to buy or obtain for its
industrial process. We believe nonhazardous secondary materials that have
meaningful heating value that are used
as non-waste fuels in combustion units
provide a useful contribution and are
valuable products since they are
replacing traditional fuels that
otherwise would have to be burned.
c. Contaminant Levels
Today’s rule includes a legitimacy
criterion under which non-hazardous
secondary materials used as non-waste
fuels in combustion units must contain
contaminants at levels that are
comparable to (or lower than) those in
traditional fuel products which the
combustion unit is designed to burn
(e.g., cellulosic biomass, fossil fuels and
their derivatives, as identified elsewhere
in this preamble). See § 241.3(d)(1)(iii).
This criterion is important to ensure
that a non-hazardous secondary material
being used as a fuel is not being
combusted or otherwise released to the
environment wholly or in part for the
purpose of disposing of or discarding of
unwanted materials. The combustion of
non-hazardous secondary materials with
elevated levels of contaminants results
in the contaminants being discarded
either through incineration, or by being
released to the environment. We also
believe that requiring that the nonhazardous secondary material have
contaminants at concentrations that are
comparable to or lower than traditional
fuels would ensure that the burning of
any non-hazardous secondary material
in combustion units will not result in
increased releases to the environment
that could impact the health and
environment of the local community.
Thus, ensuring that the level of
contaminants in the non-hazardous
secondary material is comparable to (or
lower than) those in traditional fuels
which the combustion unit is designed
to burn would be at least as protective
of human health and the environment as
burning traditional fuels.
The Agency took comment on a
criterion where such contaminants
could not be significantly higher in
concentration than contaminants in
traditional fuels, as this is the standard
that is in the 2008 DSW Final Rule
regarding the reclamation of hazardous
secondary materials. However, we have
decided not to adopt that standard in
this rule because we are concerned that
contaminants that are ‘‘not significantly
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higher’’ in non-hazardous secondary
materials could be seen as ‘‘discarding’’
such contaminants, even if the nonhazardous secondary material, when
combusted, did not present a risk to
human health and the environment.
(See Section V.D.3 for a discussion of
the comments received and EPA’s
response regarding the level at which
contaminants should be present in such
non-hazardous secondary materials.)
The term ‘‘contaminants,’’ as
proposed, was defined to mean the HAP
listed under section 112(b) of the CAA,
as well as the nine pollutants required
to be regulated under section 129(a)(4)
of the CAA. We believe that this was
reasonable because this legitimacy
criterion is intended to ensure that such
non-hazardous secondary materials are
not being combusted as a means of
disposing of them, so the health and
environmental impacts of concern will
be those resulting from the air emissions
of concern identified in the CAA,
including the listed HAP, as well as the
section 129 pollutants. (See Section
V.D.3 for a discussion of the comments
received and EPA’s response regarding
the meaning of ‘‘contaminants.’’)
In determining which traditional
fuel(s) the owner or operator of the
boiler unit would make a comparison to
with respect to contaminant levels, the
Agency will allow any traditional fuel(s)
that can be or is burned in the particular
type of boiler. For example, if the boiler
burns fuel oil, the level of contaminants
to be compared would be the level of
contaminants in fuel oil or other liquid
traditional fuels that is or can be burned
in such unit. For gas-fired boilers, the
level of contaminants in the nonhazardous secondary material fuels
would be compared to natural gas or
other gaseous traditional fuels. The
Agency believes that this approach is
most appropriate since the nonhazardous secondary material would be
replacing the use of a particular type(s)
of fuel. In addition, as discussed in the
preamble to the boiler MACT, boilers
designed to combust different types of
fuels (e.g., coal vs. oil) cannot easily be
modified to burn another fuel. Therefore
we have determined that any
comparison of the contaminants in a
non-hazardous secondary material
should be to the type(s) of fuel that are
(or can be) used in the boiler.
EPA is not establishing specific
numerical maximum contaminant levels
that a non-hazardous secondary material
would have to meet, but rather the rule
allows the owner or operator to make
the comparison based on information he
has or can acquire regarding the level of
contaminants found in the traditional
fuels he burns or could burn. The
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assessment of whether the nonhazardous secondary material has
contaminants comparable to (or lower
than) traditional fuel products is to be
made by directly comparing the
numerical contaminant levels in the
non-hazardous secondary material to
the contaminant levels in traditional
fuels.
The legitimacy criterion is tailored
specifically to the use of these nonhazardous secondary materials as fuels
in combustion units. As a result, we
believe that contaminant levels in nonhazardous secondary materials must be
comparable in concentration to (or
lower than) those levels in traditional
fuels to be legitimately used as a nonwaste fuel product. While the Agency
did solicit comment on whether or not
it should establish a bright line level or
establish a set of levels in the final rule
in defining comparable, the Agency has
concluded that establishing such levels
would be difficult since the level of any
contaminant in a particular type of
fossil fuel or other traditional fuels can
vary quite a bit. Thus, the Agency is
defining ‘‘comparable to or lower than’’
to mean any contaminants present in
the non-hazardous secondary materials
that are within a small acceptable range
of the concentrations found in
traditional fuels. See Section V.D.3 for
a discussion of the comments received
and EPA’s response regarding
establishing specific levels in defining a
comparable fuel.
2. Legitimacy Criteria for Ingredients
Non-hazardous secondary materials
used as ingredients in combustion units
must meet the legitimacy criteria
specified in 40 CFR 241.3(d)(2). As
discussed for the legitimate fuels
criteria, EPA believes it important and
crucial to apply a set of legitimacy
criteria to make sure that the ingredient
products are being legitimately and
beneficially used and not simply being
discarded via sham recycling.
Specifically, a non-hazardous secondary
material used as an ingredient in a
combustion unit must be managed as a
valuable commodity, provide a useful
contribution, be used to produce a
valuable product or intermediate, and
must result in products that contain
contaminants at levels that are
comparable in concentration to (or
lower than) those found in traditional
products that are manufactured without
the non-hazardous secondary material.
Our reasoning for establishing the
particular criteria is discussed below.
a. Managed as Valuable Commodities
Non-hazardous secondary materials
used as ingredients must be managed as
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valuable commodities, including being
stored for a reasonable time frame. See
§ 241.3(d)(2)(i). Where there is an
analogous ingredient, the nonhazardous secondary material must be
managed in a manner consistent with
the management of the analogous
ingredient or otherwise be adequately
contained so as to prevent releases to
the environment. Where there is no
analogous ingredient, the nonhazardous secondary material must be
adequately contained so as to prevent
releases to the environment. An
‘‘analogous ingredient’’ is an ingredient
for which the non-hazardous secondary
material substitutes and which serves
the same function and has similar
physical and chemical properties as the
non-hazardous secondary material.
With respect to how long a nonhazardous secondary material can be
stored before the material is not
considered to be ‘‘managed as a valuable
commodity,’’ we are requiring that the
non-hazardous secondary material be
stored for a reasonable time frame.
While EPA took comment on whether it
should provide a specific time frame
(e.g., one-year) as opposed to the general
standard of ‘‘reasonable time frame,’’
based on comments submitted, the
Agency has decided not to specifically
define ‘‘reasonable time frame,’’
primarily because such time frames
could and will vary according to the
non-hazardous secondary material and
industry involved. (See Section V.D.1
for a discussion of the comments
received and EPA’s response.)
For discarded non-hazardous
secondary materials that are processed
to produce a non-waste ingredient, the
ingredient product must be managed as
a valuable product from the point that
it is first produced as a non-waste
through its use in the combustion unit.
As noted previously, before the nonwaste product is produced, the nonhazardous secondary material is a solid
waste, and must comply with any
federal, state, or local requirements.
This criterion requires that the nonhazardous secondary material be
managed appropriately before its end
use as an ingredient. In EPA’s view, a
company will value non-hazardous
secondary materials used as ingredients
that provide an important contribution
and, therefore, will manage those nonhazardous secondary materials in a
manner consistent with how it manages
traditional ingredients. If, on the other
hand, a company does not manage the
non-hazardous secondary material as it
would traditional ingredients, that
behavior may indicate that the nonhazardous secondary material is being
discarded.
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This factor addresses the management
of non-hazardous secondary materials
used as ingredients in two distinct
situations. The first situation is when
the non-hazardous secondary material is
analogous to a traditional ingredient
that otherwise could be burned. In this
case, the non-hazardous secondary
material must be managed prior to use
as an ingredient in a similar manner to
how traditional ingredients are managed
or otherwise must be ‘‘contained’’ so as
to prevent releases to the environment.
For example, for liquid non-hazardous
secondary materials that are used as a
non-waste ingredient that are similar to
traditional ingredients, the Agency
would expect that such non-hazardous
secondary materials would be managed
in tanks or similar type devices that are
structurally sound to control the release
of the non-hazardous secondary
materials. The Agency would also
expect that the types of controls that
would typically be part of a tank or
similar type device for traditional
ingredients would also be part of any
tank system that is used to manage the
non-hazardous secondary material. For
example, if traditional ingredients are
stored in tanks with covers or they
provide for secondary containment, the
Agency would expect that the nonhazardous secondary material would
also be stored in tanks with covers, with
secondary containment so as to prevent
releases to the environment.
The second situation addresses the
case where there is no analogous
traditional ingredient that otherwise
could be burned. This could be either
because the process is designed around
a particular non-hazardous secondary
material ingredient, or because physical
or chemical differences between the
non-hazardous secondary material and
the traditional ingredient are too
significant for them to be considered
‘‘analogous.’’ Non-hazardous secondary
materials that have significantly
different physical or chemical
properties when compared to traditional
ingredients would not be considered
analogous even if they serve the same
function because it may not be
appropriate to manage them in the same
way. In this situation, the nonhazardous secondary material would
have to be ‘‘contained’’ so as to prevent
releases to the environment for this
criterion to be met. A non-hazardous
secondary material is ‘‘contained’’ if it is
stored in a manner that both adequately
prevents releases or other hazards to
human health and the environment,
considering the nature and toxicity of
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the non-hazardous secondary
material.167
b. Useful Contribution
We are requiring that non-hazardous
secondary materials used as ingredients
in combustion units provide a useful
contribution to the production/
manufacturing process. See
§ 241.3(d)(2)(ii). A non-hazardous
secondary material used as an
ingredient in combustion systems
provides a useful contribution if it
contributes valuable ingredients to the
production/manufacturing process or to
the product or intermediate of the
production/manufacturing process. This
criterion is an essential component in
the determination of legitimacy because
legitimate use is not occurring if the
non-hazardous secondary material
doesn’t add anything to the process,
such that the non-hazardous secondary
material is basically being disposed of
or discarded. This criterion is intended
to prevent the practice of ‘‘sham’’
recycling by adding non-hazardous
secondary materials to a manufacturing
operation simply as a means of
disposing of them.
For purposes of satisfying this
criterion, not every constituent or
component of the non-hazardous
secondary material has to make a
contribution to the production/
manufacturing activity. For example,
non-hazardous secondary materials
used as ingredients may contain some
constituents that are needed in the
manufacturing process, such as, for
example, zinc in non-hazardous
secondary materials that are used to
produce zinc-containing micronutrient
fertilizers, while other constituents in
the non-hazardous secondary material,
such as lead, do not provide a useful
contribution. Provided the zinc is at
levels that provides a useful
contribution, we believe the nonhazardous secondary material would
satisfy this criterion, although we would
note that the constituents not directly
contributing to the manufacturing
process could still result in the nonhazardous secondary material not
meeting the contaminant part of the
legitimacy criteria. The Agency is not
quantitatively defining how much of the
non-hazardous secondary material
needs to provide a useful contribution
for this criterion to be met, since we
believe that defining such a level would
be difficult and is likely to be different,
depending on the non-hazardous
secondary material. The Agency
recognizes that this could be an issue if
167 Examples of materials that are adequately
contained would include liquids stored in a tank.
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persons argue that a non-hazardous
secondary material is being legitimately
used as an ingredient, but in fact, only
a small amount or percentage of the
non-hazardous secondary material is
used. Because of the differences in the
emissions standards that the nonhazardous secondary material would be
subject to—between CAA sections 112
and 129, persons may argue that such
non-hazardous secondary materials are
not wastes, when in fact, the operation
is really discard, and therefore, sham
recycling. Thus, as part of the
recordkeeping requirements under the
CAA, persons need to provide the basis
or rationale on why the particular nonhazardous secondary material meets the
legitimacy criteria, including how the
secondary material provides a useful
contribution.
c. Valuable Product
We are requiring that non-hazardous
secondary materials used as ingredients
in combustion units must be used to
produce a valuable product or
intermediate. See § 241.3(d)(2)(iii). The
product or intermediate is valuable if it
is (i) sold to a third party or (ii) used as
an effective substitute for a commercial
product or as an ingredient or
intermediate in an industrial process.
This criterion expresses the principle
that the product or intermediate of the
manufacturing/production process
should be a material of value, either to
a third party who buys it from the
manufacturer, or to the same
manufacturer that subsequently uses it
as a substitute for another material that
it would otherwise have to buy or obtain
for its industrial process. This criterion
is an essential component of the concept
of legitimacy because legitimate use
cannot be occurring if the product or
intermediate is not of use to anyone
and, therefore, has no real value. This
criterion is intended to prevent the
practice of introducing a non-hazardous
secondary material through an
industrial process to make something
just for the purpose of avoiding the costs
of disposal. Such a practice would be
sham recycling.
One way that the use of the nonhazardous secondary material as an
ingredient in the production/
manufacturing process can be shown to
produce a valuable product would be to
have documentation on the sale of the
product to a third party. Such
documentation could be in the form of
receipts or contracts and agreements
that establish the terms of the sale or
transaction. This transaction could
include money changing hands or, in
other circumstances, may involve trade
or barter. A manufacturer that has not
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yet arranged for the sale of its product
to a third party could also establish
value by demonstrating that it can
replace another product or intermediate
that is available in the marketplace.
Production/manufacturing processes
that use non-hazardous secondary
materials as ingredients may produce
outputs that are not sold to another
party, but are instead used by the same
manufacturer. These products or
intermediates may be used as a
feedstock in a manufacturing process,
but have no established monetary value
in the marketplace. Such products or
intermediates would be considered to
have intrinsic value, though
demonstrating intrinsic value may be
less straightforward than demonstrating
value for products that are sold in the
marketplace. Demonstrations of
intrinsic value could involve showing
that the product or intermediate of the
production/manufacturing process
replaces another material that would
otherwise have to be purchased or could
involve a showing that the nonhazardous secondary material meets
specific product specifications or
specific industry standards. Another
approach could be to compare the nonhazardous secondary material’s physical
and chemical properties or efficacy for
certain uses with those of comparable
products or intermediates made from
raw materials.
Some production/manufacturing
processes that use non-hazardous
secondary materials as ingredients may
consist of multiple steps that may occur
at separate facilities. In some cases, each
processing step will yield a valuable
product or intermediate. When each
step in the process yields a valuable
product or intermediate that is salable
or usable in that form, the activity
would conform to this criterion.
d. Contaminant Levels
We are requiring that non-hazardous
secondary materials used as an
ingredient must result in products that
contain contaminants at levels that are
comparable in concentration to (or
lower than) those found in traditional
products that are manufactured without
the non-hazardous secondary material.
See § 241.3(d)(2)(iv). The term
‘‘contaminants’’ refers to constituents in
non-hazardous secondary materials that
will result in emissions of the air
pollutants identified as HAP listed
under CAA section 112(b), the nine
pollutants listed under CAA section
129(a)(4).
The assessment of whether the
products produced from the use of nonhazardous secondary materials that have
contaminants that are comparable to (or
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lower) in concentration can be made by
a comparison of contaminant levels in
the ingredients themselves to the
traditional ingredients they are
replacing, or by comparing the
contaminant levels in the product itself
with and without the use of the nonhazardous secondary material. In
determining which traditional
ingredient(s) the owner or operator of
the unit would make a comparison to
with respect to contaminant levels, the
Agency believes that any traditional
ingredient that can be or is used in the
particular type of unit is appropriate.
For example, for cement kilns, if the
ingredient is CKD, the level of
contaminants to be compared would be
the level of contaminants in limestone
or other ingredients that can be used in
such unit. Alternatively, a product
comparison can be made. See Section
V.E for a further discussion of the
comments received regarding the
legitimacy criteria for ingredients, as
well as our responses to those
comments.
I. Determining That Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials Meet the
Legitimacy Criteria
Owners and operators of affected
facilities combusting non-hazardous
secondary materials that are not
considered solid wastes must ensure
that the non-hazardous secondary
materials meet the legitimacy criteria in
§ 241.3(d) (and continue to meet those
criteria) when combusted. Nonhazardous secondary materials that no
longer meet these legitimacy criteria
would be considered solid wastes and
the units combusting those nonhazardous secondary materials would
be considered a commercial or
industrial solid waste incineration
(CISWI) unit (see 40 CFR 60.2875).
The CAA section 112 rule requires
notifications and recordkeeping,
including documentation as to how the
non-hazardous secondary material
meets the legitimacy criteria, and
satisfies the definition of processing
and/or the requirements for the petition
process. (40 CFR 63.7530 and 63.7555).
Specific recordkeeping requirements for
area source boilers combusting nonhazardous secondary materials are
found at 40 CFR 63.11225(c)(2)(ii) under
the CAA section 112 rule for area source
boilers. Additionally, regulations at 40
CFR 60.2175(v) promulgated for
commercial and industrial solid waste
incinerators under CAA section 129
require basic recordkeeping to establish
whether materials combusted in a
commercial or industrial unit meet the
standards and procedures for
identification of non-hazardous
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secondary materials that are not solid
wastes. Owners or operators of
commercial or industrial facilities that
combust materials that are not
traditional fuels are directed to the CAA
section 112 regulations for boilers and
process heaters, and the CAA section
129 regulations for commercial and
industrial incinerators, to determine the
recordkeeping provisions related to the
definition of solid waste that may apply
to them. The Agency believes that these
records and notifications under the CAA
regulations provide assurance that
facilities will apply the legitimacy
criteria.
VIII. Effect of Today’s Final Rule on
Other Programs
The construct of this rule is to
determine which non-hazardous
secondary materials are solid wastes
when combusted either as a fuel or
ingredient in order to determine CAA
section 129 applicability. Thus, this
rules applicability is to the universe of
combustion facilities using nonhazardous secondary materials as fuels
or ingredients.
A. Clean Air Act
The definition of solid waste
incineration unit in CAA section
129(g)(6) states that the term ‘‘solid
waste’’ will have the meaning
established by the Administrator of EPA
under RCRA. Today’s rule would
establish under RCRA which nonhazardous secondary materials
constitute ‘‘solid waste’’ when used as a
fuel or an ingredient. This definition of
‘‘solid waste’’ is being used by EPA to
establish CAA emissions standards for
CISWI units (under CAA section 129)
and boilers and process heaters (under
CAA section 112). Any unit combusting
‘‘solid waste’’ is subject to the emission
standards for ‘‘solid waste incineration
units’’ under CAA section 129. The
waste determinations in this rule do not
subject combustion units to the CAA
section 129 standards if the units are
exempt under CAA section 129(g)(1).168
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168 CAA
129 (g)(1).
‘‘(1) * * * The term ‘‘solid waste incineration
unit’’ does not include
(A) materials recovery facilities (including
primary or secondary smelters) which combust
waste for the primary purpose of recovering metals,
(B) qualifying small power production facilities,
as defined in section 796 (17)(C) of title 16, or
qualifying cogeneration facilities, as defined in
section 796 (18)(B) of title 16, which burn
homogeneous waste (such as units which burn tires
or used oil, but not including refuse-derived fuel)
for the production of electric energy or in the case
of qualifying cogeneration facilities which burn
homogeneous waste for the production of electric
energy and steam or forms of useful energy (such
as heat) which are used for industrial, commercial,
heating or cooling purposes, or
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B. Renewable Energy
This rule may impact how some nonhazardous secondary materials could be
used to help supply renewable energy to
the U.S. and through state programs.
Congress has passed several laws, such
as the Energy Independence and
Security Act of 2007 (Pub. L. 110–140),
that supports the development and use
of renewable sources of energy, both for
power generation and for the production
of transportation fuels. Qualified
sources would include wind, solar, and
geothermal power, but could also
include power generated by the
combustion of biogenic materials, which
may include some non-hazardous
secondary materials burned for energy
recovery. Biogenic materials are
materials that result from the activity of
living organisms. A number of nonhazardous secondary materials are
partially or completely biogenic. For
example, woody biomass contains
recoverable energy and would be
considered biogenic in origin. Energy
from biogenic sources is generally
preferable to fossil fuels.
In addition to these federal programs
that may be impacted, Renewable
Portfolio Standards (RPS) currently
provide states with a mechanism to
increase renewable energy generation
using renewable energy sources
(including biofuels) and a cost-effective,
market-based approach. An RPS
requires electric utilities and other retail
electric providers to supply a specified
minimum amount of customer load with
electricity from eligible renewable
energy sources. The goal of an RPS is to
stimulate market and technology
development so that, ultimately,
renewable energy will be economically
competitive with conventional forms of
electric power. States create RPS
programs because of the energy,
environmental, and economic benefits
of renewable energy and sometimes
other clean energy approaches, such as
energy efficiency and combined heat
and power.
If these renewable energy sources or
biogenic fuels qualify as clean cellulosic
biomass, they are an alternative fuel (see
the full definition in today’s rule at
§ 241.2) and are not subject to the
section 129 CAA standards, but rather,
would be subject to the section 112 CAA
standards.
(C) air curtain incinerators provided that such
incinerators only burn wood wastes, yard wastes
and clean lumber and that such air curtain
incinerators comply with opacity limitations to be
established by the Administrator by rule. * * *’’
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C. Subtitle C Hazardous Waste Program
The result of this rule will have no
effect on the RCRA subtitle C hazardous
waste program because it does not
address hazardous waste. The RCRA
subtitle C hazardous waste federal
program has a long regulatory history in
defining ‘‘solid waste’’ for purposes of
the hazardous waste regulations.
However, the 40 CFR 261.2 definition of
solid waste explicitly applies only to
wastes that also are hazardous for
purposes of the subtitle C regulations
(see 40 CFR 261.1(b)(1)). CAA section
129 also specifically excludes subtitle C
combustion units from coverage under
that section.
RCRA section 7003 gives EPA the
authority to compel actions to abate
conditions that may present an
‘‘imminent and substantial
endangerment’’ involving both solid and
hazardous wastes. EPA uses this
authority on a case-by-case basis. The
Agency can determine in a specific
factual context whether a nonhazardous secondary material which
causes an endangerment is discarded.
RCRA sections 3007 and 3008 establish
EPA’s inspection and Federal
enforcement authority to address
violations of the subtitle C hazardous
waste regulations. Nothing in this rule
shall impact EPA’s ability to act
pursuant to RCRA sections 3007, 3008
and 7003. The rule also does not limit
or otherwise affect EPA’s ability to
pursue potentially responsible persons
under section 107 of CERCLA for
releases or threatened releases of
hazardous substances.
Finally, we would note that on
October 30, 2008, EPA issued a final
rule excluding certain hazardous
secondary materials from the definition
of solid waste issued under the
hazardous waste provisions found in
RCRA subtitle C (73 FR 64688). EPA is
currently re-examining these exclusions,
and as part of a settlement agreement
with Sierra Club, EPA will issue a
proposed rule by June 2011. This
proposal will address, at minimum,
issues raised in an administrative
petition filed by the Sierra Club,
including the four issues discussed in a
public meeting, which was announced
in a Federal Register notice (74 FR
25200, May 27, 2009). The four issues
are (1) the definition of ‘‘contained,’’ (2)
notification before operating under the
exclusion (3) the definition of
‘‘legitimacy’’ and (4) the transfer-based
exclusion. Many of the issues to be
addressed in the upcoming subtitle C
definition of solid waste proposal are
similar to the issues addressed in
today’s final rule. However, there are
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significant differences between today’s
final rule and the scope of the planned
June 2011 subtitle C definition of solid
waste proposal. The planned proposal
will only address the regulation of
hazardous secondary materials (not nonhazardous secondary materials) going to
reclamation (not burning for energy
recovery) under RCRA subtitle C (not
subtitle D). In developing the planned
subtitle C proposal, EPA will carefully
consider the difference in scope
between the two rulemakings and
address it as appropriate.
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IX. State Authority
Subtitle D of RCRA establishes a
framework for state, federal, and local
government cooperation in controlling
the management of non-hazardous solid
waste. The federal role in this
arrangement is to establish the overall
regulatory direction, by providing
minimum nationwide standards for
protecting human health and the
environment, and to provide technical
assistance to states for planning and
developing their own solid waste
management practices. The actual
planning and direct implementation of
solid waste programs under RCRA
subtitle D, however, remains largely a
state and local function, and states have
authority to devise programs to deal
with state specific conditions and
needs.
EPA has not promulgated detailed
regulations of what is included in the
definition of solid waste for the RCRA
subtitle D (non-hazardous waste)
programs. State environmental agencies
have promulgated their own laws and
regulations as to what constitutes a solid
waste and have interpreted those laws
and regulations to determine what types
of non-hazardous secondary material
activities involve the management of a
solid waste for the purposes of their
authorities. Many states have a process
or promulgated regulations to determine
when these materials are wastes, and
when they can be used beneficially and
safely in products in commerce.
Through this rulemaking, EPA is
articulating a definition of which nonhazardous secondary materials are or
are not solid waste when used as a fuel
for energy recovery in combustion units
or as an ingredient in combustion units.
We are not imposing solid waste
requirements for determining other
possible secondary material end uses
nor does this rulemaking apply to
general materials management in state
programs.
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A. Applicability of State Solid Waste
Definitions and Beneficial Use
Determinations
CAA section 129 states that the term
‘‘solid waste’’ shall have the meaning
‘‘established by the Administrator
pursuant to the Solid Waste Disposal
Act’’ Id. at 7429(g)(6). Accordingly, the
states’ definition of solid waste would
not be applicable in determining
whether the CAA section 129 standards
apply. Specifically, state determinations
regarding a material’s beneficial use that
may exempt a non-hazardous secondary
material from the state solid waste
standards would not necessarily impact
the status of such non-hazardous
secondary materials under EPA’s solid
waste definition as it relates to which
combustion units are subject to the CAA
section 129 standards. Likewise,
combustion units that use nonhazardous secondary materials as fuels
or ingredients that are not solid waste
under today’s rule would not be subject
to the solid waste incineration standards
under CAA section 129, even though the
state standards may define the same
material as solid wastes for their
recycling and waste management
programs.
If a non-waste determination is sought
by petition at a combustion unit, the
Agency (EPA Regional Administrator or
delegate) will make the decision to grant
or deny the petition. The Agency can,
however, utilize the information and
contaminant data from state beneficial
use determinations if it is applicable to
the non-hazardous secondary material
when used as a fuel or as an ingredient.
These state beneficial use programs
have been developed to encourage
recycling and reuse, provided that such
use maintains the specified state’s
acceptable level of risk and are managed
in accordance with the conditions of the
determination. Generally, when a
beneficial use determination has been
granted, it would have chemical and
physical properties that are comparable
to the raw material it is replacing or,
when incorporated into another
product, its use would be beneficial to
the final product. If the data to support
the beneficial use determination was
available, it could help support the
research on contaminant concentrations
for the legitimacy criteria in order to
make the petition decision.
A discussion on state program
involvement in the petition process and
on states submitting petitions in lieu of
a regulated applicant is described in
Section V.F. Implementation and
enforcement issues related to state
programs are covered in Section VII.I.
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B. State Adoption of the Rulemaking
No federal approval procedures for
state adoption of today’s rule are
included in this rule under RCRA
subtitle D. Although EPA does
promulgate criteria for solid waste
landfills and approves state municipal
solid waste landfill permitting
programs, RCRA does not provide EPA
with authority to approve state
programs beyond municipal solid waste
landfill permitting programs. While
states are not required to adopt today’s
rule, some states incorporate federal
regulations by reference or have specific
state statutory requirements that their
state program can be no more stringent
than the federal regulations. In those
cases, EPA anticipates that, if required
by state law, the changes in today’s rule
will be incorporated (or possibly
adopted by authorized state air
programs) consistent with the state’s
laws and administrative procedures.
C. Clarifications on the Relationship to
State Programs
State Agencies that responded to the
proposal requested further clarification
in the final rule. Specifically, the
Federal rule applies only to the RCRA
subtitle D definition of solid waste for
determining use as a fuel or ingredient
in combustion units (as regulated by the
CAA). Today’s rule does not preempt a
State’s statutory or regulatory definition
of solid waste, and only applies for
purposes of determining which facilities
must comply with the CAA section 129
standards.
Non-hazardous secondary materials
may be simultaneously regulated as a
non-waste fuel or ingredient for use in
combustion units under § 241.3, but as
a solid waste by the State’s solid waste
programs for management purposes.
Also, see the discussion in the
beginning of this Section (IX. State
Authority). Combustors using nonhazardous secondary materials that are
designated as a non-waste when used as
a fuel or ingredient, would not be
subject to the CAA section 129
standards, even though the state
standards may define the non-hazardous
secondary material as a solid waste.
Finally, owners and operators of
affected facilities combusting nonhazardous secondary materials
considered to be non-wastes based on
the non-waste determination petition
process, and the application of the
criteria outlined in § 241.3(c) must
ensure that the non-hazardous
secondary materials continue to meet
those provisions when combusted. Nonhazardous secondary materials that no
longer meet those criteria, even though
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they may be in compliance with state
recycling and management
requirements, would require the
combustor to re-apply for the non-waste
determination (per § 241.3(c)(2)(iv))
through the EPA Regional Administrator
(otherwise they would be considered
solid wastes and the units combusting
those non-hazardous secondary
materials would be subject to the
commercial or industrial solid waste
incineration (CISWI) regulations (see 40
CFR 60.2875)).
this action is a ‘‘significant regulatory
action.’’ Pursuant to the terms of the
Orders, the Agency, in conjunction with
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB), has determined that this rule is
a significant regulatory action because it
contains novel policy issues, as defined
under part 3(f)(4) of EO 12866.
Accordingly, EPA submitted this action
to OMB for review. Any changes made
in response to OMB recommendations
have been documented in the docket for
this action.
X. Cost and Benefits of the Final Rule
The value of any regulatory action is
traditionally measured by the net
change in social welfare that it
generates. This final rule alone does not
directly invoke any costs 169 or benefits.
This rule is published as part of a fourrule package that includes the Boiler
MACT and CISWI rules.170 Costs to the
regulated community and
corresponding benefits to human health
and the environment are captured under
those rules. As such, the Agency has not
prepared a separate economic
assessment in support of this final rule.
The costs and benefits indirectly
associated with this action are the
corresponding impacts assessed in the
regulatory impact analyses prepared in
support of the Boiler MACT and CISWI
rules. These independent regulatory
impact analyses measure, among other
factors, the estimated net change in
social welfare associated with these
actions. In the development of these
analyses, EPA worked to ensure that the
methodologies and data applied in these
assessments captured appropriate RCRA
related costs (e.g., secondary material
diversions). These assessments were
designed to adhere to EPA and Office of
Management and Budget guidelines and
procedures. These documents are
available in the docket established for
this action.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection
requirements in this rule have been
submitted for approval to OMB under
the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq. The information collection
requirements are not enforceable until
OMB approves them.
This rule establishes a voluntary nonwaste determination petition process for
non-hazardous secondary materials
identified as solid wastes. Facilities
claiming this solid waste exclusion are
required to seek approval from the
Agency through the submission of a
petition prior to operating under this
exclusion. Sufficient information about
the non-hazardous secondary material
and the market demand for this material
will be necessary to demonstrate that
the non-hazardous secondary material
in fact has not been discarded and is a
legitimate non-waste fuel or ingredient
in the combustion process. Specifically,
the petition will need to contain
information to assess the following
criteria: (1) Whether market participants
handle the non-hazardous secondary
material as a fuel rather than a waste;
(2) whether the chemical and physical
identities of the non-hazardous
secondary material is comparable to a
commercial fuel; (3) whether the
capacity of the market would use the
non-hazardous secondary material in a
reasonable time frame; (4) whether the
constituents in the non-hazardous
secondary material are not discarded to
the air, water or land from the point of
generation to the point just prior to
combustion of the non-hazardous
secondary material at levels comparable
to what would otherwise be released
from traditional fuels; and (5) other
relevant factors.
The facility-level burden associated
with this voluntary petition option is
estimated to have an average total
burden of each non-waste determination
petition of approximately 149 hours per
facility, with a total cost per facility of
approximately $10,100. The total
number of facilities likely to take
advantage of this option is
undetermined, but we would expect
XI. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
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A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563:
Improving Regulatory Planning and
Review
Under Executive Order (EO) 12866
(58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), and EO
13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011),
169 Excluding minor administrative burden/cost
(e.g., rule familiarization) and costs related to
submitting a voluntary petition.
170 National Emission Standards for Hazardous
Air Pollutants for Area Sources: Industrial,
Commercial, and Institutional Boilers; National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
for Industrial/Commercial/Institutional Boilers and
Process Heaters; and Standards of Performance for
New Stationary Sources and Emission Guidelines
for Existing Sources: Commercial and Industrial
Solid Waste Incineration (CISWI) Units.
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15547
that only a limited number of facilities
may submit such a petition. Burden is
defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number. The OMB control
numbers for EPA’s regulations are listed
in 40 CFR part 9. EPA is amending the
table in 40 CFR part 9 of currently
approved OMB control numbers for
various regulations to list the regulatory
citations for the information
requirements contained in this final
rule.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency to prepare
a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule subject to notice and comment
rulemaking requirements under the
Administrative Procedure Act or any
other statute unless the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Small entities
include small businesses, small
organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions.
For purposes of assessing the impacts
of today’s rule on small entities, small
entity is defined as: (1) A small
business, as defined by the Small
Business Administration’s (SBA)
regulations at 13 CFR 121.201; (2) a
small governmental jurisdiction that is a
government of a city, county, town,
school district or special district with a
population of less than 50,000; and
(3) a small organization that is any notfor-profit enterprise which is
independently owned and operated, and
is not dominant in its field.
After considering the economic
impacts of today’s final rule on small
entities, I certify that this action will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
No small entities are directly regulated
by this final rule (see discussion above
under costs and benefits). Any potential
impacts to small entities in these or any
other potentially affected sectors are
addressed in the regulatory flexibility
analyses prepared in support of the
CAA rules that are linked to this
action.171
Although this final rule will not have
a significant economic impact on a
171 National Emission Standards for Hazardous
Air Pollutants for Area Sources: Industrial,
Commercial, and Institutional Boilers; National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
for Industrial/Commercial/Institutional Boilers and
Process Heaters; and Standards of Performance for
New Stationary Sources and Emission Guidelines
for Existing Sources: Commercial and Industrial
Solid Waste Incineration (CISWI) Units.
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substantial number of small entities,
EPA, nonetheless, has tried to reduce
the impact of this rule on small entities
through the careful and targeted
identification of which non-hazardous
secondary materials are solid wastes. In
addition, we have established a
voluntary petition process that allows
for material-specific non-waste
determinations.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This final rule does not contain a
Federal mandate that may result in
expenditures of $100 million or more
for State, local, and tribal governments,
in the aggregate, or the private sector in
any one year. Because this action is
linked to the CAA rules, this rule alone
will not result in significant economic
impacts on States, local and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or the
private sector in any one year. Thus,
this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 or 205 of
UMRA.
This rule is also not subject to the
requirements of section 203 of UMRA
because it contains no regulatory
requirements that might significantly or
uniquely affect small governments. As
described above, this action alone does
not result in unique effects, or
significant economic impacts.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with RULES3
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in
Executive Order 13132. This final rule,
independent of the CAA rules, will not
result in substantial direct effects on the
states. Furthermore, this rule will not
preempt state laws related to the
affected non-hazardous secondary
materials. States will remain free to
manage these non-hazardous secondary
materials, as appropriate under their
existing regulatory programs, including
their solid waste programs. Thus,
Executive Order 13132 does not apply
to this action.
In the spirit of Executive Order 13132,
and consistent with EPA policy to
promote communications between EPA
and State and local governments, EPA
specifically solicited comment on the
proposed action from State and local
officials.
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F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
Subject to the Executive Order 13175
(65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000), EPA
may not issue a regulation that has tribal
implications, that imposes substantial
direct compliance costs, and that is not
required by statute, unless the Federal
government provides the funds
necessary to pay the direct compliance
costs incurred by tribal governments, or
EPA consults with tribal officials early
in the process of developing the
proposed regulation and develops a
tribal summary impact statement.
EPA has concluded that this action
may have tribal implications. However,
it will neither impose substantial direct
compliance costs on tribal governments,
nor preempt Tribal law. The rule may
have minor indirect tribal implications
to the extent that entities generating or
burning solid wastes on tribal lands
could be affected in response to the
corresponding CAA rules.172 EPA
consulted with tribal officials early in
the process of developing this regulation
to permit them to have meaningful and
timely input into its development.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23,
1997) because it is not economically
significant as defined in Executive
Order 12866, and because the Agency
does not believe the environmental
health or safety risks addressed by this
action present a disproportionate risk to
children. This action’s health and risk
assessments are contained in support
documents prepared for the CAA
section 129 CISWI and section 112
Boiler MACT rules.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions that
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Usage
This action is not a ‘‘significant energy
action’’ as defined in Executive Order
13211 (66 FR 28355 (May 22, 2001)),
because it is not likely to have a
significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy. This
action, independent of the CAA
rules,173 is not expected to directly
172 National Emission Standards for Hazardous
Air Pollutants for Area Sources: Industrial,
Commercial, and Institutional Boilers; National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
for Industrial/Commercial/Institutional Boilers and
Process Heaters; and Standards of Performance for
New Stationary Sources and Emission Guidelines
for Existing Sources: Commercial and Industrial
Solid Waste Incineration (CISWI) Units.
173 National Emission Standards for Hazardous
Air Pollutants for Area Sources: Industrial,
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affect energy use or use patterns. The
purpose of this rule is to determine
which non-hazardous secondary
materials are solid waste when
combusted. On its own, this rule will
not lead to direct changes in the ability
of facilities to use non-hazardous
secondary materials as a source of
energy. However, the Agency
acknowledges that interactions between
this rule and the section 112 and section
129 CAA emission standards rules being
promulgated today may affect the use of
non-hazardous secondary materials as a
source of energy. We refer persons to the
dockets for those rules for information
on these energy impacts.
I. National Technology Transfer
Advancement Act
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (‘‘NTTAA’’), Public Law
104–113, 12(d) (15 U.S.C. 272 note)
directs EPA to use voluntary consensus
standards in its regulatory activities
unless to do so would be inconsistent
with applicable law or otherwise
impractical. Voluntary consensus
standards are technical standards (e.g.,
materials specifications, test methods,
sampling procedures, and business
practices) that are developed or adopted
by voluntary consensus standards
bodies. NTTAA directs EPA to provide
Congress, through OMB, explanations
when the Agency decides not to use
available and applicable voluntary
consensus standards.
This action does not involve technical
standards. Therefore, EPA did not
consider the use of any voluntary
consensus standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
Executive Order (EO) 12898 (59 FR
7629 (Feb. 16, 1994)) establishes federal
executive policy on environmental
justice. Its main provision directs
federal agencies, to the greatest extent
practicable and permitted by law, to
make environmental justice part of their
mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations and low-income
populations in the United States.
Commercial, and Institutional Boilers; National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
for Industrial/Commercial/Institutional Boilers and
Process Heaters; and Standards of Performance for
New Stationary Sources and Emission Guidelines
for Existing Sources: Commercial and Industrial
Solid Waste Incineration (CISWI) Units.
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EPA has determined that this final
rule will not have disproportionately
high and adverse human health or
environmental effects on minority or
low-income populations. The four-rule
package that consists of this rule plus
the three CAA rules 174 will generally
result in an improved level of
environmental protection. No
disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects
on any population, including any
minority or low-income population is
expected.
Because the four rules are fully
interdependent, isolating the
environmental justice impacts of each of
the four rules individually may result in
a distorted assessment. For example, the
emissions standards established in the
three air rules depend on which nonhazardous secondary materials are
considered solid wastes. As a result, any
changes in the way that combustion
units manage non hazardous secondary
materials (i.e. switching to an
alternative fuel) will depend upon the
costs of implementing the various
emissions standards. Furthermore, the
demographic characteristics of areas
experiencing changes in environmental
effects will determine whether the rules
result in adverse and disproportionate
impacts to low-income and minority
populations.
We have developed a broad
environmental justice assessment,
looking at the four rules together, that
accounts for the combined impacts on
minority and low income communities.
Any environmental justice impacts that
may result from these four
interdependent rules are likely to
include one or more of the following:
(1) Changes in emissions from regulated
combustion units, (2) changes in
emissions from the potential diversion
of non hazardous secondary materials
away from combustion units to
alternative recycling or landfills, and,
(3) other impacts related to material
diversion (e.g., noise, aesthetics, water
pollution, etc.). Based on our
assessment of the emissions changes
and other environmental impacts of the
rules, and the demographics of
populations near affected combustion
units and waste management facilities,
our main conclusions with respect to
174 National Emission Standards for Hazardous
Air Pollutants for Area Sources: Industrial,
Commercial, and Institutional Boilers; National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
for Industrial/Commercial/Institutional Boilers and
Process Heaters; and, Standards of Performance for
New Stationary Sources and Emission Guidelines
for Existing Sources: Commercial and Industrial
Solid Waste Incineration (CISWI) Units
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the environmental justice impacts of the
four rules indicate the following:
1. Emissions changes from affected
combustion units are unlikely to lead to
adverse and disproportionate impacts
on low-income and minority
populations. Following implementation
of the CISWI, Boiler MACT, and Area
Source rules, emissions from affected
facilities are likely to decline. As a
result, populations near these facilities,
overall, are likely to experience positive
impacts (e.g., reduced incidence of
adverse health effects). The
demographic data for the Census blocks
near the Boiler MACT and CISWI
facilities 175 suggest that the percentages
of low-income and minority populations
are generally higher than the national
average in these areas.
2. Low-income and minority
populations located near non
combustion waste management facilities
(e.g., recyclers, landfills) are higher,
proportionally, than the national
average. Our analysis of the
demographic characteristics of
populations living within three miles of
these facilities suggests that they are
located in areas with high low-income
and minority populations. Therefore, to
the extent that non hazardous secondary
materials diverted to alternative
recycling or landfills may lead to
adverse environmental impacts, lowincome and minority populations could
be adversely affected. However, we
believe that any such increases would
be negligible relative to the reductions
achieved due to the Boiler MACT and
CISWI controls. Furthermore,
considering the low quantity of
materials potentially diverted,176 the
extent of any negative impacts is
expected to be minimal, and will likely
vary significantly by material and
facility type.
A comprehensive discussion of these
findings is presented in the document:
‘‘Summary of Environmental Justice
Impacts for the Non-Hazardous
175 The CISWI facility list contains combustors
projected to combust waste after the rules are
finalized (some were not regulated as CISWIs prior
to these rules). The demographic assessment does
not include area source facilities.
176 Review of Costs, Benefits, Economic Impacts,
Environmental Justice, and Other Impacts for the
Following Interrelated Proposed Rules: Standards of
Performance for New Stationary Sources and
Emission Guidelines for Existing Sources:
Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste Incineration
Units; RIN 2060–AO12, National Emission
Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants for Area
Sources: Industrial, Commercial, and Institutional
Boilers; RIN 2060–AM44, National Emission
Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants for Major
Sources: Industrial, Commercial and Institutional
Boilers and Process Heaters; RIN 2060–AG69,
Identification of Non-hazardous Secondary
Materials That Are Solid Waste RIN 2050–AG44.
April 29, 2010. (See Exhibit 14).
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Secondary Material (NHSM) Rule, the
2010 Commercial and Industrial Solid
Waste Incinerator (CISWI) Standards,
the 2010 Major Source Boiler NESHAP,
and the 2010 Area Source Boiler
NESHAP.’’ This document is available
in the Docket established for today’s
action.
K. Congressional Review Act
The Congressional Review Act,
5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. EPA will submit a
report containing this rule and other
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A Major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2). This rule
will be effective on May 20, 2011.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 241
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Waste treatment and
disposal.
Dated: February 21, 2011.
Lisa P. Jackson,
Administrator.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, title 40, chapter I of the Code
of Federal Regulations, is amended by
adding part 241 to read as follows:
PART 241—SOLID WASTES USED AS
FUELS OR INGREDIENTS IN
COMBUSTION UNITS
Subpart A—General
Sec.
241.1 Purpose.
241.2 Definitions.
Subpart B—Identification of Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials That Are Solid Wastes
When Used as Fuels or Ingredients In
Combustion Units
Sec.
241.3 Standards and procedures for
identification of non-hazardous
secondary materials that are solid wastes
when used as fuels or ingredients in
combustion units.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6903, 6912, 7429.
Subpart A—General
§ 241.1
Purpose.
This part identifies the requirements
and procedures for the identification of
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solid wastes used as fuels or ingredients
in combustion units under section 1004
of the Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act and section 129 of the
Clean Air Act.
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§ 241.2
Definitions.
For the purposes of this subpart:
Clean cellulosic biomass means those
residuals that are akin to traditional
cellulosic biomass such as forestderived biomass (e.g., green wood, forest
thinnings, clean and unadulterated bark,
sawdust, trim, and tree harvesting
residuals from logging and sawmill
materials), corn stover and other
biomass crops used specifically for
energy production (e.g., energy cane,
other fast growing grasses), bagasse and
other crop residues (e.g., peanut shells),
wood collected from forest fire
clearance activities, trees and clean
wood found in disaster debris, clean
biomass from land clearing operations,
and clean construction and demolition
wood. These fuels are not secondary
materials or solid wastes unless
discarded. Clean biomass is biomass
that does not contain contaminants at
concentrations not normally associated
with virgin biomass materials.
Contaminants means any constituent
in non-hazardous secondary materials
that will result in emissions of the air
pollutants identified in Clean Air Act
section 112(b) or the nine pollutants
listed under Clean Air Act section
129(a)(4)) when such non-hazardous
secondary materials are burned as a fuel
or used as an ingredient, including
those constituents that could generate
products of incomplete combustion.
Contained means the non-hazardous
secondary material is stored in a manner
that adequately prevents releases or
other hazards to human health and the
environment considering the nature and
toxicity of the non-hazardous secondary
material.
Control means the power to direct the
policies of the facility, whether by the
ownership of stock, voting rights, or
otherwise, except that contractors who
operate facilities on behalf of a different
person as defined in this section shall
not be deemed to ‘‘control’’ such
facilities.
Established tire collection program
means a comprehensive collection
system that ensures scrap tires are not
discarded and are handled as valuable
commodities in accordance with section
241.3(b)(2)(i) from the point of removal
from the vehicle through arrival at the
combustion facility.
Generating facility means all
contiguous property owned, leased, or
otherwise controlled by the nonhazardous secondary material generator.
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Ingredient means a non-hazardous
secondary material that is a component
in a compound, process or product.
Non-hazardous secondary material
means a secondary material that, when
discarded, would not be identified as a
hazardous waste under Part 261 of this
chapter.
Person is defined as an individual,
trust, firm, joint stock company, Federal
agency, corporation (including
government corporation), partnership,
association, State, municipality,
commission, political subdivision of a
state, or any interstate body.
Processing means any operations that
transform discarded non-hazardous
secondary material into a non-waste fuel
or non-waste ingredient product.
Processing includes, but is not limited
to, operations necessary to: Remove or
destroy contaminants; significantly
improve the fuel characteristics of the
material, e.g., sizing or drying the
material in combination with other
operations; chemically improve the asfired energy content; or improve the
ingredient characteristics. Minimal
operations that result only in modifying
the size of the material by shredding do
not constitute processing for purposes of
this definition.
Resinated wood means wood products
(containing resin adhesives) derived
from primary and secondary wood
products manufacturing and comprised
of such items as board trim, sander dust,
and panel trim.
Secondary material means any
material that is not the primary product
of a manufacturing or commercial
process, and can include post-consumer
material, off-specification commercial
chemical products or manufacturing
chemical intermediates, post-industrial
material, and scrap.
Solid waste means the term solid
waste as defined in 40 CFR 258.2.
Traditional fuels means materials that
are produced as fuels and are unused
products that have not been discarded
and therefore, are not solid wastes,
including: (1) Fuels that have been
historically managed as valuable fuel
products rather than being managed as
waste materials, including fossil fuels
(e.g., coal, oil and natural gas), their
derivatives (e.g., petroleum coke,
bituminous coke, coal tar oil, refinery
gas, synthetic fuel, heavy recycle,
asphalts, blast furnace gas, recovered
gaseous butane, and coke oven gas) and
cellulosic biomass (virgin wood); and
(2) alternative fuels developed from
virgin materials that can now be used as
fuel products, including used oil which
meets the specifications outlined in 40
CFR 279.11, currently mined coal refuse
that previously had not been usable as
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coal, and clean cellulosic biomass.
These fuels are not secondary materials
or solid wastes unless discarded.
Within control of the generator means
that the non-hazardous secondary
material is generated and burned in
combustion units at the generating
facility; or that such material is
generated and burned in combustion
units at different facilities, provided the
facility combusting the non-hazardous
secondary material is controlled by the
generator; or both the generating facility
and the facility combusting the nonhazardous secondary material are under
the control of the same person as
defined in this section.
Subpart B—Identification of NonHazardous Secondary Materials That
Are Solid Wastes When Used as Fuels
or Ingredients in Combustion Units
§ 241.3 Standards and procedures for
identification of non-hazardous secondary
materials that are solid wastes when used
as fuels or ingredients in combustion units.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, non-hazardous
secondary materials that are combusted
are solid wastes, unless a petition is
submitted to, and a determination
granted by, the Regional Administrator
pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section.
The criteria to be addressed in the
petition, as well as the process for
making the non-waste determination,
are specified in paragraph (c) of this
section.
(b) The following non-hazardous
secondary materials are not solid wastes
when combusted:
(1) Non-hazardous secondary
materials used as a fuel in a combustion
unit that remain within the control of
the generator and that meet the
legitimacy criteria specified in
paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
(2) The following non-hazardous
secondary materials that have not been
discarded and meet the legitimacy
criteria specified in paragraph (d)(1) of
this section when used in a combustion
unit (by the generator or outside the
control of the generator):
(i) Scrap tires used in a combustion
unit that are removed from vehicles and
managed under the oversight of
established tire collection programs.
(ii) Resinated wood used in a
combustion unit.
(3) Non-hazardous secondary
materials used as an ingredient in a
combustion unit that meet the
legitimacy criteria specified in
paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
(4) Fuel or ingredient products that
are used in a combustion unit, and are
produced from the processing of
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discarded non-hazardous secondary
materials and that meet the legitimacy
criteria specified in paragraph (d)(1) of
this section, with respect to fuels, and
paragraph (d)(2) of this section, with
respect to ingredients. The legitimacy
criteria apply after the non-hazardous
secondary material is processed to
produce a fuel or ingredient product.
Until the discarded non-hazardous
secondary material is processed to
produce a non-waste fuel or ingredient,
the discarded non-hazardous secondary
material is considered a solid waste and
would be subject to all appropriate
federal, state, and local requirements.
(c) The Regional Administrator may
grant a non-waste determination that a
non-hazardous secondary material that
is used as a fuel, which is not managed
within the control of the generator, is
not discarded and is not a solid waste
when combusted. The criteria and
process for making such non-waste
determinations includes the following:
(1) Submittal of an application to the
Regional Administrator for the EPA
Region where the facility combusting
the non-hazardous secondary material is
located for a determination that the nonhazardous secondary material, even
though it has been transferred to a third
party, has not been discarded and is
indistinguishable in all relevant aspects
from a product fuel. The determination
will be based on whether the nonhazardous secondary material that has
been discarded, is a legitimate fuel as
specified in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section and on the following criteria:
(i) Whether market participants treat
the non-hazardous secondary material
as a product rather than as a solid waste;
(ii) Whether the chemical and
physical identity of the non-hazardous
secondary material is comparable to
commercial fuels;
(iii) Whether the non-hazardous
secondary material will be used in a
reasonable time frame given the state of
the market;
(iv) Whether the constituents in the
non-hazardous secondary material are
released to the air, water or land from
the point of generation to the point just
prior to combustion of the secondary
material at levels comparable to what
would otherwise be released from
traditional fuels; and
(v) Other relevant factors.
(2) The Regional Administrator will
evaluate the application pursuant to the
following procedures:
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(i) The applicant must submit an
application for the non-waste
determination addressing the legitimacy
criteria in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section and the relevant criteria in
paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (v) of this
section. In addition, the applicant must
also show that the non-hazardous
secondary material has not been
discarded in the first instance.
(ii) The Regional Administrator will
evaluate the application and issue a
draft notice tentatively granting or
denying the application. Notification of
this tentative decision will be published
in a newspaper advertisement or radio
broadcast in the locality where the
facility combusting the non-hazardous
secondary material is located, and be
made available on EPA’s Web site.
(iii) The Regional Administrator will
accept public comments on the tentative
decision for at least 30 days, and may
also hold a public hearing upon request
or at his discretion. The Regional
Administrator will issue a final decision
after receipt of comments and after the
hearing (if any).
(iv) If a change occurs that affects how
a non-hazardous secondary material
meets the relevant criteria contained in
this paragraph after a formal non-waste
determination has been granted, the
applicant must re-apply to the Regional
Administrator for a formal
determination that the non-hazardous
secondary material continues to meet
the relevant criteria and, thus is not a
solid waste.
(d) Legitimacy criteria for nonhazardous secondary materials.
(1) Legitimacy criteria for nonhazardous secondary materials used as
a fuel in combustion units include the
following:
(i) The non-hazardous secondary
material must be managed as a valuable
commodity based on the following
factors:
(A) The storage of the non-hazardous
secondary material prior to use must not
exceed reasonable time frames;
(B) Where there is an analogous fuel,
the non-hazardous secondary material
must be managed in a manner
consistent with the analogous fuel or
otherwise be adequately contained to
prevent releases to the environment;
(C) If there is no analogous fuel, the
non-hazardous secondary material must
be adequately contained so as to prevent
releases to the environment;
(ii) The non-hazardous secondary
material must have a meaningful
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15551
heating value and be used as a fuel in
a combustion unit that recovers energy.
(iii) The non-hazardous secondary
material must contain contaminants at
levels comparable in concentration to or
lower than those in traditional fuels
which the combustion unit is designed
to burn. Such comparison is to be based
on a direct comparison of the
contaminant levels in the nonhazardous secondary material to the
traditional fuel itself.
(2) Legitimacy criteria for nonhazardous secondary materials used as
an ingredient in combustion units
include the following:
(i) The non-hazardous secondary
material must be managed as a valuable
commodity based on the following
factors:
(A) The storage of the non-hazardous
secondary material prior to use must not
exceed reasonable time frames;
(B) Where there is an analogous
ingredient, the non-hazardous
secondary material must be managed in
a manner consistent with the analogous
ingredient or otherwise be adequately
contained to prevent releases to the
environment;
(C) If there is no analogous ingredient,
the non-hazardous secondary material
must be adequately contained to prevent
releases to the environment;
(ii) The non-hazardous secondary
material must provide a useful
contribution to the production or
manufacturing process. The nonhazardous secondary material provides
a useful contribution if it contributes a
valuable ingredient to the product or
intermediate or is an effective substitute
for a commercial product.
(iii) The non-hazardous secondary
material must be used to produce a
valuable product or intermediate. The
product or intermediate is valuable if:
(A) The non-hazardous secondary
material is sold to a third party, or
(B) The non-hazardous secondary
material is used as an effective
substitute for a commercial product or
as an ingredient or intermediate in an
industrial process.
(iv) The non-hazardous secondary
material must result in products that
contain contaminants at levels that are
comparable in concentration to or lower
than those found in traditional products
that are manufactured without the nonhazardous secondary material.
[FR Doc. 2011–4492 Filed 3–18–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 54 (Monday, March 21, 2011)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 15456-15551]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-4492]
[[Page 15455]]
Vol. 76
Monday,
No. 54
March 21, 2011
Part III
Environmental Protection Agency
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40 CFR Part 241
Identification of Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That Are Solid
Waste; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 76 , No. 54 / Monday, March 21, 2011 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 15456]]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 241
[EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0329; FRL-9273-1]
RIN 2050-AG44
Identification of Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That Are
Solid Waste
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or the Agency) is
publishing a final rule that identifies which non-hazardous secondary
materials, when used as fuels or ingredients in combustion units, are
``solid wastes'' under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
(RCRA). This RCRA solid waste definition will determine whether a
combustion unit is required to meet the emissions standards for solid
waste incineration units issued under section 129 of the Clean Air Act
(CAA) or the emissions standards for commercial, industrial, and
institutional boilers issued under section 112 of the CAA. In this
action, EPA is also finalizing a definition of traditional fuels.
DATES: This final rule is effective on May 20, 2011.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0329. All documents in the docket are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov Web site. Although listed in the index,
some information is not publicly available, e.g., confidential business
information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is restricted
by statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted material, will
be publicly available only in hard copy. Publicly available docket
materials are available either electronically in https://www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at the RCRA Docket, EPA/DC, EPA
West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave., NW., Washington, DC. The
Public Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday, excluding legal holidays. The telephone number for the Public
Reading Room is (202) 566-1744, and the telephone number for the RCRA
Docket is (202) 566-0270.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: George Faison, Program Implementation
and Information Division, Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery,
5303P, Environmental Protection Agency, Ariel Rios Building, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460-0002; telephone number:
703-305-7652; fax number: 703-308-0509; e-mail address:
faison.george@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Does this action apply to me?
Categories and entities potentially affected by this action
include:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Generators Users
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Major boiler type and
Major generator category NAICS* primary industry category NAICS*
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
............... Industrial Boilers:
-------------------------------------------------------
Crop Production........................ 111 Food Manufacturing........ 311, 312,
Cattle Ranching and Farming............ 1121 Pulp and Paper Mills...... 3221
Hog and Pig Farming.................... 1122 Petroleum Refining........ 32411
Poultry and Egg Production............. 1123 Chemical Manufacturing.... 325
Sheep and Goat Farming................. 1124 Primary Metal 331
Manufacturing.
Horses and Other Equine Production..... 112920 Fabricated Metal 332
Manufacturing.
Logging................................ 113310 Other Manufacturing....... 313, 339, 321, 333, 336,
511, 326, 316, 327
Support Activities for Crop Production. 11511
-------------------------------------------------------
Bituminous Coal and Lignite Surface 212111 Commercial Boilers:
Mining.
-------------------------------------------------------
Bituminous Coal Underground Mining..... 212112 Retail.................... 442-454
Anthracite Mining...................... 212113 Warehouse................. 493
Fossil Fuel Electric Power Generation.. 221112 Education................. 611
Sewage Treatment Facilities............ 221320 Health Care Facilities.... 621
Construction of Buildings.............. 236 Social Assistance......... 624
Site Preparation Contractors........... 238910 Lodging, Restaurant....... 721, 722
Beverage and Tobacco Product 312 Office.................... 813, 541, 921
Manufacturing.
Sawmills and Wood Preservation......... 32111 Other..................... 922140, others
Veneer, Plywood, and Engineered Wood 32121
Product Manufacturing.
-------------------------------------------------------
Engineered Wood Member Manufacturing... 321213 Common Non-Manufacturing Boilers:
-------------------------------------------------------
Pulp, Paper, and Paperboard Mills...... 3221 Agriculture (crop & 111, 112, 115
livestock production).
Solvents Made in Petroleum Refineries.. 324110 All Mining................ 212
Solvent Dyes Manufacturing............. 325132 Construction.............. 236
Plastic Manufacturers.................. 325211
-------------------------------------------------------
All Other Miscellaneous Chemical 325998 Other Boilers:
Product and Preparation Manufacturing.
-------------------------------------------------------
Packaging.............................. 32611 Electric Utility Boilers.. 2211
Other Rubber Product Manufacturing..... 32629 Non-Hazardous Waste 327310
Burning Cement Kilns.
[[Page 15457]]
Glass and Glass Product Manufacturing.. 3272 .......................... ..........................
Cement Manufacturing................... 327310 .......................... ..........................
Iron and Steel Mills................... 331111 .......................... ..........................
Electrometallurgical Ferroalloy Product 331112 .......................... ..........................
Manufacturing.
Metal-Casting Industry................. 331522 .......................... ..........................
Recyclable Material Wholesalers........ 423930 .......................... ..........................
Landscaping Services................... 561730 .......................... ..........................
Solid Waste Collection and Solid Waste 562111, 562212 .......................... ..........................
Landfill.
Automotive Repair and Replacement Shops 811111 .......................... ..........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* NAICS--North American Industrial Classification System.
This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a
guide for readers, including lists of examples of the types of entities
likely to be impacted by this action. Other types of entities not
listed could also be affected. To determine whether your facility,
company, business, organization, etc., is affected by this action, you
should examine the applicability criteria in this rule. If you have any
questions regarding the applicability of this action to a particular
entity, consult the person listed in the preceding section: FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT.
B. Why is EPA taking this action?
Clean Air Act (CAA) section 129 states that the term ``solid
waste'' shall have the meaning ``established by the Administrator
pursuant to [RCRA].'' The purpose of this final rule is to provide a
definition of ``solid waste'' in order to develop emission standards
under sections 112 and 129 of the CAA. In particular, this rule
codifies requirements and procedures that identify whether the
definition of ``solid waste'' applies to non-hazardous secondary
materials burned as fuels or used as ingredients in combustion units.
In related actions in this Federal Register, EPA is concurrently
finalizing air emission requirements under section 112 of the CAA for
industrial, commercial, and institutional boilers and process heaters,
as well as air emission requirements under section 129 of the CAA for
commercial and industrial solid waste incineration units.
Preamble Outline
I. Statutory Authority
II. List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
III. Introduction--Summary of Regulations Being Finalized
A. Identifying Which Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials Are or
Are Not Solid Wastes When Used in a Combustion Unit
1. Within the Control of the Generator: Non-Hazardous Secondary
Materials That Are Legitimately Used as Fuels Within the Control of
the Generator Are Not Solid Waste When Used in Combustion Units
2. Scrap Tires: Scrap Tires That Are Legitimately Used as a Fuel
That Are Removed From Vehicles and Managed Under the Oversight of
Established Tire Collection Programs Are Not Solid Waste When Used
in Combustion Units
3. Resinated Wood: Resinated Wood That Is Legitimately Used as a
Fuel Is Not a Solid Waste When Used in Combustion Units
4. Ingredients: Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That Are
Legitimately Used as Ingredients Are Not Solid Waste When Used in
Combustion Units
5. Discards: Discarded Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That
Have Undergone Processing To Produce Legitimate Fuel or Ingredient
Products Are Not Solid Waste When Used in Combustion Units
6. Non-Waste Determination: Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
Used as a Fuel for Which a Non-Waste Determination Has Been Granted
Are Not Solid Waste When Used in Combustion Units
B. Codification of the Legitimacy Criteria
IV. Background
A. What is the history of CISWI, CISWI definitions, and boiler
rulemakings?
B. Why is the Court's decision affecting the CAA rules relevant
to RCRA?
C. What is the history of the definition of solid waste?
1. Statutory Definition of Solid Waste
2. Solid Waste Program, RCRA Subtitle D
3. Hazardous Waste Program, RCRA Subtitle C
4. Case Law on the Definition of Solid Waste Under RCRA Subtitle
C
5. Concept of Legitimacy
D. Summary of the ANPRM
E. Summary of the Proposed Rule
F. Use of Secondary Materials
1. Introduction
2. Secondary Materials Use and Benefits
V. Comments on the Proposed Rule
A. Proposed Approach
1. Definition of the Term Discard
2. Processing Requirements
B. Comments on Specific Materials Used as Fuel
1. Traditional Fuels
2. Manure
3. Other Biomass
4. Pulp and Paper Sludge
5. Scrap Tires
6. Resinated Wood Residuals
7. Used Oil
8. Coal Refuse
9. Coal Combustion Residuals
10. Sewage Sludge
11. Processed Fats
C. Comments on Specific Materials Used as Ingredients
1. Cement Kiln Dust
2. Coal Combustion Residuals
3. Foundry Sand
4. Blast Furnace Slag/Steel Slag
D. Comments on Legitimacy Criteria for Fuels
1. Managed as a Valuable Commodity
2. Meaningful Heating Value and Use as a Fuel
3. Have Contaminants at Comparable Levels or Lower Than
Traditional Fuels
E. Comments on Legitimacy Criteria for Ingredients
1. Managed as Valuable Commodities
2. Useful Contribution
3. Quantifying an Ingredient's Contribution to Production/
Manufacturing Activity
4. Contaminants in Ingredients
5. Comparing Contaminant Levels in Products
F. Comments on Non-Waste Determination Petitions
G. Comments on the Other Approaches for Defining Solid Wastes
VI. Summary of Major Differences Between the Proposed Rule and Final
Rule
VII. Detailed Discussion and Rationale for Today's Final Rule
A. Traditional Fuels
B. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials Used as Fuels That Remain
Within the Control of the Generator
1. Scope and Applicability
2. Restrictions and Requirements
C. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That Have Not Been
Discarded: Scrap Tires Collected Under Established Tire Collection
Programs
1. Scope and Applicability
2. Restrictions and Requirements
[[Page 15458]]
D. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That Have Not Been
Discarded: Resinated Wood Residuals
1. Scope and Applicability
2. Restrictions and Requirements
E. Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials Used as Ingredients
1. Scope and Applicability
2. Restrictions and Requirements
F. Discarded Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That Have
Undergone Processing To Produce Legitimate Fuel or Ingredient
Products
1. Scope and Applicability
2. Restrictions and Requirements
G. Non-Waste Determination Petitions
1. Description of the Petition Criteria for the Non-Waste
Determination
2. Non-Waste Determination Petition Process
3. Petition Decisions Utilizing State Environmental Agency
Program's Input
H. Legitimacy Criteria
1. Legitimacy Criteria for Fuels
2. Legitimacy Criteria for Ingredients
I. Determining That Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials Meet the
Legitimacy Criteria
VIII. Effect of Today's Final Rule on Other Programs
A. Clean Air Act
B. Renewable Energy
C. Subtitle C Hazardous Waste Program
IX. State Authority
A. Applicability of State Solid Waste Definitions and Beneficial
Use Determinations
B. State Adoption of the Rulemaking
C. Clarifications on the Relationship to State Programs
X. Cost and Benefits of the Final Rule
XI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution or Usage
I. National Technology Transfer Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act
I. Statutory Authority
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or the Agency) is
promulgating these regulations under the authority of sections
2002(a)(1) and 1004(27) of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
(RCRA), as amended, 42 U.S.C. 6912(a)(1) and 6903(27). Section
129(a)(1)(D) of the Clean Air Act (CAA) directs EPA to establish
standards for Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste Incinerators
(CISWI), which burn solid waste (section 129(g)(6) of the CAA, 42
U.S.C. 7429). Section 129(g)(6) provides that the term ``solid waste''
is to be established by EPA under RCRA. Section 2002(a)(1) of RCRA
authorizes the Agency to promulgate regulations as are necessary to
carry out its functions under the Act. The statutory definition of
``solid waste'' is provided in RCRA section 1004(27).
II. List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
AASHTO American Association of State Highway and Transportation
Officials
ANPRM Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
ASME American Society of Mechanical Engineers
ASTM American Society for Testing and Materials
Btu British Thermal Unit
CAA Clean Air Act
CAFO Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations
C&D Construction and Demolition
CBO Carbon Burn-Out Unit
CCA Chromated Copper Arsenate
CCR Coal Combustion Residuals
CFB Circulating Fluidized Bed
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CISWI Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste Incinerator
CKD Cement Kiln Dust
CWA Clean Water Act
DSE Domestic Sewage Exemption
DSW Definition of Solid Waste Rule (2008)
EG Emission Guidelines
EGU Electric Utility Steam Generating Unit
EPA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
GACT Generally Available Control Technology
GHG Greenhouse Gas
HAP Hazardous Air Pollutant
IWI Institutional Waste Incinerator
LCA Life Cycle Analysis
MACT Maximum Achievable Control Technology
MEK Methyl Ethyl Ketone
NESHAP National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
NHSM Non-Hazardous Secondary Material
NSPS New Source Performance Standards
OCC Old Corrugated Cardboard
OSWI Other Solid Waste Incinerator
PC Portland Cement
PIC Product of Incomplete Combustion
POTW Publicly Owned Treatment Works
PVC Polyvinyl Chloride
RCRA Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
RFS Renewable Fuel Standards
SSI Sewage Sludge Incinerator
SWDA Solid Waste Disposal Act
TCLP Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure
TDF Tire-Derived Fuel
U.S.C. United States Code
USGS U.S. Geological Survey
VSMWC Very Small Municipal Waste Combustor
III. Introduction--Summary of Regulations Being Finalized
In today's rule, EPA is finalizing standards and procedures to be
used to identify whether non-hazardous secondary materials are solid
wastes when used as fuels or ingredients in combustion units.
``Secondary material'' is defined for the purposes of this rulemaking
as any material that is not the primary product of a manufacturing or
commercial process, and can include post-consumer material, off-
specification commercial chemical products or manufacturing chemical
intermediates, post-industrial material, and scrap (codified in Sec.
241.2).\1\ ``Non-hazardous secondary material'' is a secondary material
that, when discarded, would not be identified as a hazardous waste
under 40 CFR part 261 (codified in Sec. 241.2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ For the purpose of this definition, all commercial products
from a manufacturing process would be considered ``primary
products.'' Processes that are designed for the production of
multiple products could have more than one primary product.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Agency first solicited comments on how the RCRA definition of
solid waste should apply to non-hazardous secondary materials used as
fuels or ingredients in combustion units are solid wastes under RCRA in
an Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM), which was published
in the Federal Register on January 2, 2009 (74 FR 41). We then
published a proposed rule on June 4, 2010 (75 FR 31844).
Today's preamble is organized as follows: This section of the
preamble (Section III) describes the principal regulatory provisions
that are finalized in this rule; Section IV describes the background of
this final rule, including a brief history of this rulemaking in
conjunction with the relevant rules being finalized under sections 112
and 129 of the CAA; Section V contains a discussion of the major public
comments received on the June 4, 2010 proposal, along with the Agency's
response to these comments; Section VI explains the ways in which the
June 2010 proposal differs from today's final rule; Section VII
provides a detailed explanation of and rationale for the regulations
being promulgated today; Section VIII describes the effect of today's
final rule on other programs; Section IX discusses how today's rule
affects the states' authority over solid waste pursuant to subtitle D
of RCRA; Section X describes the costs and benefits associated with
today's rule; and Section XI describes this rule's
[[Page 15459]]
compliance with the appropriate statutory and executive orders reviews.
Below is a summary of the principal elements of the regulations
being promulgated today.
A. Identifying Which Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials Are or Are Not
Solid Wastes When Used in a Combustion Unit
In our determination, most non-hazardous secondary materials burned
in combustion units are defined as solid wastes under RCRA. However,
this rule provides exceptions to that determination. The following non-
hazardous secondary materials are not solid waste when used
legitimately as a fuel or an ingredient in a combustion unit:
(1) Those that remain within the control of the generator and used
as fuel (discussed further below--codified in Sec. 241.3(b)(1));
(2) Scrap tires managed by established tire collection programs and
used as fuel (discussed further below--codified in Sec.
241.3(b)(2)(i));
(3) Resinated wood used as fuel (discussed further below--codified
in Sec. 241.3(b)(2)(ii));
(4) Those that are used as ingredients (discussed further below--
codified in Sec. 241.3(b)(3));
(5) Discards that have undergone processing to produce fuel or
ingredient products (discussed further below--codified in Sec.
241.3(b)(4)); or
(6) Those that are used as fuels for which a non-waste
determination has been granted (discussed further below--codified in
Sec. 241.3(c)).
Materials are considered legitimate fuels or ingredients if they
conform to the criteria codified in Sec. 241.3(d), which this action
refers to as ``legitimacy criteria.'' These criteria are designed to
ensure that the fuel or ingredient is not being ``sham'' recycled for
the sole purpose of avoiding being considered a waste. The legitimacy
criteria for non-hazardous secondary materials used as fuels and
ingredients in combustion units are discussed below in the
``Codification of the Legitimacy Criteria'' section.
Materials designated as ``traditional'' fuels are not wastes when
used in combustion units. We are finalizing a definition of traditional
fuels (codified in Sec. 241.2) that applies to this subpart.
Traditional fuels means materials that are produced as fuels and are
unused products that have not been discarded and therefore, are not
solid wastes, including: (1) Fuels that have been historically managed
as valuable fuel products rather than being managed as waste materials,
including fossil fuels (e.g., coal, oil and natural gas), their
derivatives (e.g., petroleum coke, bituminous coke, coal tar oil,
refinery gas, synthetic fuel, heavy recycle, asphalts, blast furnace
gas, recovered gaseous butane, and coke oven gas) and cellulosic
biomass (virgin wood); and (2) alternative fuels developed from virgin
materials that can now be used as fuel products, including used oil
which meets the specifications outlined in 40 CFR 279.11, currently
mined coal refuse that previously had not been usable as coal, and
clean cellulosic biomass. These fuels are not secondary materials or
solid wastes unless discarded before they are used.
1. Within the Control of the Generator: Non-Hazardous Secondary
Materials That Are Legitimately Used as Fuels Within the Control of the
Generator Are Not Solid Waste When Used in Combustion Units
Except as otherwise provided, under this provision--40 CFR
241.3(b)(1)--EPA would consider non-hazardous secondary materials used
as fuels in combustion units which remain within the control of the
generator and that meet the specified legitimacy criteria (as codified
in Sec. 241.3(d)(1)) as not being a solid waste. The legitimacy
criteria for non-hazardous secondary materials used as fuels in
combustion units are discussed below in the ``Codification of the
Legitimacy Criteria'' section. Non-hazardous secondary materials would
be considered ``within the control of the generator'' under the
following circumstances:
(1) They are generated and burned in combustion units at the
generating facility (as codified in Sec. 241.2); or
(2) They are generated and burned in combustion units at different
facilities, if the facility combusting the non-hazardous secondary
material is controlled (as codified in Sec. 241.2) by the generator;
or
(3) Both the generating facility and the facility combusting the
material are under control of the same person (as codified in Sec.
241.2).
2. Scrap Tires: Scrap Tires That Are Legitimately Used as a Fuel That
Are Removed From Vehicles and Managed Under the Oversight of
Established Tire Collection Programs Are Not Solid Waste When Used in
Combustion Units
Under this provision--40 CFR 241.3(b)(2)(i)--EPA would consider
scrap tires used as a fuel in a combustion unit that are removed from
vehicles and collected and managed under the oversight of established
tire collection programs as not being a solid waste, provided these
materials satisfy the specified legitimacy criteria (as codified in
Sec. 241.3(d)(1)). This provision would not differentiate between
scrap tires that are used as a fuel within the control of the generator
from those that are not. For the purposes of this rule, the term
``vehicle'' is defined as any mechanical means of conveyance that
employs the use of tires. ``Established tire collection program'' (as
codified in Sec. 241.2) means a comprehensive collection system that
ensures scrap tires are not discarded and are handled as valuable
commodities in accordance with Sec. 241.3(d)(1)(i) from the point of
removal from the vehicle through arrival at the combustion facility.
The legitimacy criteria for non-hazardous secondary materials used as
fuels in combustion units are discussed below in the ``Codification of
the Legitimacy Criteria'' section.
3. Resinated Wood: Resinated Wood That Is Legitimately Used as a Fuel
Is Not a Solid Waste When Used in Combustion Units
Under this provision--40 CFR 241.3(b)(2)(ii)--EPA would consider
resinated wood used as a fuel in a combustion unit as not being a solid
waste, provided these materials satisfy the specified legitimacy
criteria (as codified in Sec. 241.3(d)(1)). This provision would not
differentiate between resinated wood that is used as a fuel within the
control of the generator from those that are not. Resinated wood (as
codified in Sec. 241.2) means wood products (containing resin
adhesives) derived from primary and secondary wood products
manufacturing and comprised of such items as board trim, sander dust,
and panel trim. The legitimacy criteria for non-hazardous secondary
materials used as fuels in combustion units is discussed below in the
``Codification of the Legitimacy Criteria'' section.
4. Ingredients: Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That Are Legitimately
Used as Ingredients Are Not Solid Waste When Used in Combustion Units
Under this provision--40 CFR 241.3(b)(3)--EPA would consider non-
hazardous secondary materials used as ingredients in combustion units
and that meet the specified legitimacy criteria as not being solid
waste. This provision does not differentiate between ingredients that
are used within the control of the generator from those that are not.
Ingredient (as codified in Sec. 241.2) means a non-hazardous secondary
material that is a component in a compound, process or product. A
discussion of the legitimacy criteria (as
[[Page 15460]]
codified in Sec. 241.3(d)(2)) for non-hazardous secondary materials
used as ingredients in combustion units is included below in the
``Codification of the Legitimacy Criteria'' section.
5. Discards: Discarded Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That Have
Undergone Processing To Produce Legitimate Fuel or Ingredient Products
Are Not Solid Waste When Used in Combustion Units
Under this provision--40 CFR 241.3(b)(4)--EPA would consider
discarded non-hazardous secondary materials that have been sufficiently
processed into fuel or ingredient products and used in a combustion
unit as not being a solid waste, provided these materials satisfy the
specified legitimacy criteria (as codified in Sec. 241.3(d)(1) for
fuels and (d)(2) for ingredients). Processing (as codified in Sec.
241.2) means any operations that transform the discarded non-hazardous
secondary material into a legitimate fuel or ingredient product, and
includes, but is not limited to, operations that remove or destroy
contaminants; operations that significantly improve the fuel
characteristics of the material, e.g., sizing or drying the material in
combination with other operations; operations that chemically improve
the as-fired energy content; and operations that improve the ingredient
characteristics. Minimal operations that result only in modifying the
size of the material by shredding do not constitute processing for the
purposes of this definition. Prior to any processing, the discarded
non-hazardous secondary material would be considered a solid waste and
would be subject to the appropriate federal, state, and local laws and
regulations.
6. Non-Waste Determination: Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials Used as a
Fuel for Which a Non-Waste Determination Has Been Granted Are Not Solid
Waste When Used in Combustion Units
Under this provision--40 CFR 241.3(c)--EPA would consider non-
hazardous secondary materials used as fuels that have been transferred
to a third party, but have been granted a non-waste determination from
EPA, to not be a solid waste when used in combustion units.\2\ This
provision establishes a non-waste determination case-by-case process
that provides persons with an administrative process for receiving a
formal determination from EPA that their non-hazardous secondary
material fuel that has not been managed within the control of the
generator (as codified in Sec. 241.2), has not been discarded, and is
indistinguishable in all relevant aspects from a fuel product, is not a
solid waste when used as a fuel in combustion units. Any petition that
is submitted to EPA requesting a non-waste determination must
demonstrate that the non-hazardous secondary material has not been
discarded in the first instance, satisfies the specified legitimacy
criteria for fuels (as codified in Sec. 241.3(d)(1)), and satisfies
the following five criteria: (1) Whether market participants treat the
non-hazardous secondary material as a fuel rather than a solid waste;
(2) whether the chemical and physical identity of the non-hazardous
secondary material is comparable to commercial fuels; (3) whether the
non-hazardous secondary material will be used in a reasonable time
frame given the state of the market; (4) whether the constituents in
the non-hazardous secondary material are released to the air, water or
land from the point of generation to the point just prior to combustion
of the non-hazardous secondary material at levels comparable to what
would otherwise be released from traditional fuels; and (5) other
relevant factors. These criteria are codified in Sec. 241.3(c)(1).
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\2\ As noted previously, scrap tires and resinated wood would
not be considered a solid waste even if transferred to a third party
provided these secondary materials meet the legitimacy criteria.
Also, as indicated in Section V.A.1, the Agency will in the future
solicit comment on other non-hazardous secondary materials in
addition to scrap tires and resinated wood that can be used as a
non-waste fuel both by the generator and outside the control of the
generator.
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The process for receiving a non-waste determination is codified in
Sec. 241.3(c)(2). In order to obtain a non-waste determination, a
facility that is interested in using non-hazardous secondary materials
as fuel in combustion units that would otherwise be regulated as a
solid waste must apply to the Regional Administrator per the procedures
described in Sec. 241.3(c). The application must address the relevant
criteria discussed above. The Regional Administrator will evaluate the
application and issue a draft notice tentatively granting or denying
the application. Notification of this tentative decision will also be
provided by newspaper advertisement or radio broadcast in the locality
where the combustion unit is located. The Regional Administrator will
accept comments on the tentative decision for at least 30 days, and may
also hold a public hearing upon request or at his discretion. The
Regional Administrator will issue a final decision after receipt of
comments and after the hearing (if any).
B. Codification of the Legitimacy Criteria
This provision--40 CFR 241.3(d)--codifies the legitimacy criteria
for fuels and ingredients. In order to be considered a non-waste fuel,
non-hazardous secondary materials used as a fuel in combustion units
must meet the legitimacy criteria codified in Sec. 241.3(d)(1). To
meet the fuel legitimacy criteria, the non-hazardous secondary material
must be managed as a valuable commodity, have a meaningful heating
value and be used as a fuel in a combustion unit that recovers energy,
and contain contaminants at levels comparable to or lower than those in
traditional fuels which the combustion unit is designed to burn.
In order to be considered a non-waste ingredient, non-hazardous
secondary materials used as an ingredient in combustion units must meet
the legitimacy criteria codified in Sec. 241.3(d)(2). To meet the
ingredient legitimacy criteria, the non-hazardous secondary material
must be managed as a valuable commodity, provide a useful contribution
to the production or manufacturing process, be used to produce a
valuable product or intermediate, and must result in products that
contain contaminants at levels that are comparable to or lower than
those found in traditional products that are manufactured without the
non-hazardous secondary material.
Non-hazardous secondary materials that are discarded in the first
instance (abandoned, disposed of, or thrown away) would still be a
solid waste even if they satisfy the legitimacy criteria, unless they
were processed into legitimate non-waste fuel or ingredient products
or, in the case of fuels, have received a non-waste determination from
EPA.
IV. Background
The discussion below is a summary of what was included in the ANPRM
and in the preamble to the proposed rule. However, because it continues
to be relevant to several of the key concepts being finalized today, it
is provided here as background for the benefit of the reader. (For a
more detailed discussion of what was included in the ANPRM and the
proposed rule, we refer the reader to the ANPRM (74 FR 41, January 2,
2009) and the proposed rule (75 FR 31843, June 4, 2010).) The records
and documents comprising the ANPRM and proposed rule are included in
the administrative record for this rulemaking. To the extent there are
any
[[Page 15461]]
inconsistencies or differences between the ANPRM, the proposed rule,
and this final rule, the statements in this final rule govern.
A. What is the history of CISWI, CISWI definitions, and boiler
rulemakings?
CAA section 112 requires EPA to promulgate regulations to control
emissions of 187 hazardous air pollutants (HAP) from sources in source
categories listed by EPA under section 112(c), while CAA section 129
CISWI standards include numeric emission limitations for the nine
pollutants, plus opacity (as appropriate), that are specified in CAA
section 129(a)(4).\3\ Pursuant to CAA section 129, EPA promulgated a
final rule setting forth performance emissions standards for Commercial
and Industrial Solid Waste Incineration Units (referred to as the
``CISWI Rule''). 65 FR 75338 (December 1, 2000). Under CAA section 129,
the term ``solid waste incineration unit'' is defined, in pertinent
part, to mean ``a distinct operating unit of any facility which
combusts any solid waste material from commercial or industrial
establishments * * *'' 42 U.S.C. Sec. 7429(g)(1). The CAA also
specifically excludes the following types of units from the definition
of ``solid waste incineration unit'': (1) Incinerators or other units
required to have a permit under section 3005 of RCRA; (2) material
recovery facilities (including primary and secondary smelters) which
combust waste for the primary purpose of recovering metals; (3)
qualifying small power production facilities, as defined in section
3(17)(C) of the Federal Power Act, or qualifying cogeneration
facilities, as defined in section 3(18)(B) of the Federal Power Act,
which burn homogeneous waste (such as units which burn tires or used
oil, but not including refuse-derived fuel) for the production of
electric energy or in the case of qualifying cogeneration facilities
which burn homogeneous waste for the production of electric energy or
steam or forms of useful energy (such as heat) which are used for
industrial, commercial, heating or cooling purposes, or (4) air curtain
incinerators, provided that such incinerators only burn wood wastes,
yard wastes and clean lumber and that such air curtain incinerators
comply with the opacity limitations to be established by the
Administrator by rule. Id. CAA section 129 further states that the term
``solid waste'' shall have the meaning ``established by the
Administrator pursuant to the Solid Waste Disposal Act.'' Id at
7429(g)(6).\4\
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\3\ CAA section 129(a)(4) requires that specific numeric
emission limitations must be established for the following nine
pollutants, plus opacity (as appropriate): cadmium, carbon monoxide,
dioxins/furans, hydrogen chloride, lead, mercury, NOx, particulate
matter (total and fine), and SO2. Of these nine
pollutants, cadmium, dioxins/furans, hydrogen chloride, lead, and
mercury are also regulated HAP pursuant to CAA section 112.
\4\ The Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended, is commonly
referred to the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act or RCRA.
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The CISWI Rule established emission limitations for new and
existing CISWI units for the following pollutants: cadmium, carbon
monoxide, dioxins/furans, hydrogen chloride, lead, mercury, oxides of
nitrogen (NOX), particulate matter (PM), sulfur dioxide
(SO2), and opacity. In addition, the rule established
certain monitoring and operator training and certification
requirements.
The CISWI Rule was challenged in Sierra Club v. EPA (No. 01-1048)
(DC Cir.). However, after promulgation of the CISWI Rule, the DC
Circuit issued its decision in a challenge to EPA's MACT standards for
the cement kiln industry. See Cement Kiln Recycling Coalition v. EPA,
255 F. 3d 855 (DC Cir. 2001) (``Cement Kiln''). As a result, EPA
requested, and was granted, a voluntary remand without vacatur, of the
CISWI rule, in order to address the concerns related to the issues that
were raised by the court in Cement Kiln. Because the CISWI rule was not
vacated, its requirements remain in effect. See Sierra Club v. EPA, 374
F. Supp. 2d 30, 32-33 (D.DC 2005).
On September 22, 2005, EPA issued revised definitions of ``solid
waste,'' ``commercial or industrial solid waste incineration unit,''
and ``commercial or industrial waste'' (the ``CISWI Definitions
Rule''). See 70 FR 55568. In the CISWI Definitions Rule, EPA defined
``commercial and industrial solid waste'' to exclude solid waste that
is combusted at a facility in a combustion unit whose design provides
for energy recovery or which operates with energy recovery. Therefore,
a unit combusting solid waste with energy recovery was not considered a
CISWI unit.
The CISWI Definitions Rule was vacated by the DC Circuit in NRDC v.
EPA (489 F.3d 1250 (DC Cir. 2007)) (``NRDC''). The court stated that
the statute unambiguously requires any unit that combusts ``any solid
waste material at all''--regardless of whether the material is being
burned for energy recovery--to be regulated as a ``solid waste
incineration unit.'' Id. at 1260. In the same decision, the court also
vacated and remanded EPA's 2005 emissions standards for commercial,
industrial, and institutional major source boilers and process heaters
(the Boiler MACT Rule), concluding that ``the universe of boilers
subject to its [section 112] standards will be far smaller and more
homogenous after all CISWI units, as the statute unambiguously defines
them, are removed from its coverage.'' 489 F.3d at 1260.
In response to the D.C. Circuit's decision, EPA proposed revised
emissions standards for boilers, process heaters, and CISWI units.
Specifically, on June 4, 2010, the Agency proposed new National
Emissions Standards for Area Source Industrial, Commercial, and
Institutional Boilers (75 FR 31896), National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants for Major Sources: Industrial, Commercial, and
Institutional Boilers and Process Heaters (75 FR 32006), and Standards
of Performance for New Stationary Sources and Emission Guidelines for
Existing Sources: Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste Incineration
Units (75 FR 31938). These proposed emissions standards were
established based on the criteria proposed in the Identification of
Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials Rule that are Solid Waste proposed
rule (75 FR 31844).
B. Why is the Court's decision affecting the CAA rules relevant to
RCRA?
In responding to the court's vacatur and remand of the CISWI
Definitions Rule and the Boiler MACT Rule, EPA is establishing, under
RCRA, which non-hazardous secondary materials \5\ are ``solid waste.''
This is necessary because, under the court's decision, any unit
combusting any ``solid waste'' at all must be regulated as a ``solid
waste incineration unit,'' regardless of the function of the combustion
device. If a non-hazardous secondary material (also referred to as a
``secondary material'' in this rulemaking) is not a ``solid waste''
under RCRA, then a unit combusting that material must be regulated
pursuant to CAA section 112 if it is a source of HAP. Alternatively, if
such secondary material is classified as a ``solid waste'' under RCRA,
then a unit combusting that material must be regulated under
[[Page 15462]]
CAA section 129, unless it is within the scope of one of the exclusions
from the definition of ``solid waste incineration unit'' in section
129(g)(1) of the CAA.
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\5\ A secondary material is any material that is not the primary
product of a manufacturing or commercial process, and can include
post-consumer material, post-industrial material, and scrap. Many
types of secondary materials have Btu or material value, and can be
reclaimed or reused in industrial processes. For purposes of this
notice, the term secondary materials include only non-hazardous
secondary materials. See also American Mining Congress v. EPA, 824
F.2d 1177 (DC Cir. 1987) in which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit discussed secondary materials.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to this final rule, EPA is concurrently finalizing air
emission requirements under CAA section 112 for industrial, commercial,
and institutional boilers and process heaters, as well as air emission
requirements under CAA section 129 for CISWI units. For a discussion of
what requirements are being promulgated today pursuant to the relevant
CAA rules, please see the respective final actions included in today's
Federal Register. These include: National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants for Area Sources: Industrial, Commercial, and
Institutional Boilers (EPA-HQ-OAR-2006-0790); National Emission
Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants for Major Sources: Industrial,
Commercial, and Institutional Boilers and Process Heaters (EPA-HQ-OAR-
2002-0058); and Standards of Performance for New Stationary Sources and
Emission Guidelines for Existing Sources: Commercial and Industrial
Solid Waste Incineration Units (EPA-HQ-OAR-2003-0119).
C. What is the history of the definition of solid waste?
1. Statutory Definition of Solid Waste
RCRA defines ``solid waste'' as ``* * * any garbage, refuse, sludge
from a waste treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or air
pollution control facility and other discarded material * * * resulting
from industrial, commercial, mining, and agricultural operations, and
from community activities * * *'' (RCRA section 1004 (27) (emphasis
added)). The key concept is that of ``discard'' and, in fact, this
definition turns on the meaning of the phrase, ``other discarded
material,'' since this term encompasses all other examples provided in
the definition.
2. Solid Waste Program, RCRA Subtitle D
The regulations that pertain to non-hazardous solid waste (RCRA
subtitle D) contain five definitions of the term ``solid waste.'' (See
40 CFR 240.101(y); 40 CFR 243.101(y); 40 CFR 246.101(bb); 40 CFR 257.2;
and 40 CFR 258.2.) These regulatory definitions largely mirror the
statutory definition of solid waste with some clarifications applicable
to the specific regulatory section. The RCRA statutory definition of
solid waste has also been repeated in the CAA emission guidelines for
other solid waste incineration units (e.g., see 40 CFR 60.2977 and
60.3078).
Under RCRA subtitle D, EPA has promulgated criteria for municipal
solid waste landfills and approves state solid waste landfill
permitting programs; however, it is the states that fully implement
these programs. EPA does not have the same role in these programs as it
does in the hazardous waste programs established under RCRA subtitle C.
As a result, EPA has not promulgated detailed regulations defining
``solid waste'' for purposes of the subtitle D (non-hazardous)
programs. States have promulgated their own laws and regulations for
what constitutes solid waste and have interpreted those laws and
regulations to determine what types of non-hazardous secondary
materials management activities constitute discard (and therefore
involve the management of a solid waste).
The Agency is now determining at the national level the
requirements and procedures for identifying non-hazardous secondary
materials that are solid waste under RCRA subtitle D so that we can
establish appropriate emissions standards under CAA sections 112 and
129. We emphasize that we are articulating a narrow definition in this
final rule and are not making solid waste determinations that cover
other possible secondary material end uses.
3. Hazardous Waste Program, RCRA Subtitle C
Under RCRA subtitle C, EPA is responsible for designing and
implementing a cradle to grave disposal system for hazardous wastes.
The RCRA subtitle C hazardous waste federal program has a long
regulatory history in defining ``solid waste'' for purposes of the
hazardous waste regulations.\6\ However, the 40 CFR 261.2 regulatory
definition of solid waste explicitly applies only to wastes that also
are hazardous for purposes of the subtitle C regulations (see 40 CFR
261.1(b)(1)). EPA emphasizes that it is not reopening any of its
subtitle C regulations in today's final rule.
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\6\ For example, see 45 FR 33066 (May 19, 1980; solid waste
defined; interim final); 48 FR 14472 (April 4, 1983; Amendments to
the Definition of Solid Waste; proposed rule); 50 FR 614 (January 4,
1985; Amendments to the Definition of Solid Waste; final rule); 53
FR 519 (January 8, 1988; Amendments to the Definition of Solid
Waste, excludes in-process recycled secondary materials from
petroleum industry; proposed rule); 59 FR 38536 (July 28, 1994;
Amendments to the Definition of Solid Waste, excludes in-process
recycled secondary materials from petroleum industry; final rule);
67 FR 11251 (March 13, 2002; Response to court Vacaturs; final
rule); 68 FR 61557 (October 28, 2003; Revisions to the Definition of
Solid Waste; proposed rule); 72 FR 14172 (March 26, 2007; Revisions
to the Definition of Solid Waste; supplemental proposed rule); 73 FR
64668 (October 30, 2008; Revisions to the Definition of Solid Waste;
final rule).
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Under subtitle C of RCRA, EPA promulgated a final rule on October
30, 2008, which revised the requirements regulating hazardous secondary
materials when they are recycled via reclamation (The 2008 Definition
of Solid Waste (DSW) Final Rule).\7\ On January 29, 2009, the Sierra
Club filed a lawsuit challenging the rule in the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia Circuit (DC Circuit), Docket No. 09-1041.
In addition, Sierra Club submitted to the Administrator of EPA an
administrative petition under RCRA section 7004(a), 42 U.S.C. 6974(a).
The administrative petition requested that the Agency repeal the
October 2008 revisions to the 2008 DSW Final Rule and stay the
implementation of the rule.\8\ EPA reviewed the administrative
petition, held a public meeting \9\ and requested written comments on
the petition. As a result of settlement in the litigation, Sierra Club
has withdrawn its administrative petition, but EPA has agreed to issue
a proposal to consider the issues raised in the petition. As a result,
EPA plans to develop a proposed rule asking for comment on potential
revisions to the October 2008 DSW Final Rule. Under the settlement
agreement with the Sierra Club in the DC Circuit litigation, EPA has
committed to a proposed rule on or before June 30, 2011 and to take
final action on the proposed rulemaking on or before December 31,
2012.\10\ The DC Circuit approved the settlement agreement by order
dated January 11, 2011. This subsequent proposed rule will apply to the
regulation of reclamation of hazardous secondary materials under
subtitle C of RCRA and is not affecting today's final rule.
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\7\ See ``Revisions to the Definition of Solid Waste,'' Final
Rule, October 30, 2008, at 73 FR 64667.
\8\ A copy of Sierra Club's Petition to the U.S. EPA to
Reconsider and Repeal the Definition of Solid Waste Final Rule (DSW
Rule) can be found in the docket for the 2008 DSW Final Rule. See
Docket ID: EPA-HQ-RCRA-2009-0315; Document ID No. EPA-HQ-RCRA-2009-
0315-0002.
\9\ The public meeting was announced in a May 27, 2009 Federal
Register notice, which also described possible actions and optional
paths forward. See 74 FR 25200. The transcript of the public hearing
can also be found in the docket for the DSW Final Rule. See Docket
ID: EPA-HQ-RCRA-2009-0315, Document ID No. EPA-HQ-RCRA-2009-0315-
0024.
\10\ A copy of the settlement agreement, entitled ``EPA's and
Sierra Club's Lodging of Settlement and Motion to Sever and Hold
Case in Abeyance,'' can be found at https://www.epa.gov/osw/hazard/dsw/sierraclubdsw.pdf.
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4. Case Law on the Definition of Solid Waste Under RCRA Subtitle C
Partly because the interpretation of what constitutes a solid waste
is the
[[Page 15463]]
foundation of the hazardous waste regulatory program (i.e., secondary
material must qualify as ``solid waste'' before it can be classified as
``hazardous waste''), there have been a number of court opinions
discussing the meaning of ``solid waste'' in litigation challenges to
rules issued under RCRA subtitle C. From these cases, a few key
principles emerge which guide our thinking on the definition of solid
waste in today's final rule.
First, the ordinary plain-English meaning of the term, ``discard,''
controls. See American Mining Congress v. EPA, 824 F.2d 1177 (DC Cir.
1987) (``AMC I''). The ordinary plain-English meaning of the term
discarded means ``disposed of,'' ``thrown away,'' or ``abandoned.'' The
court specifically rejected a more expansive meaning for discard that
would encompass any materials ``no longer useful in their original
capacity'' even if they were not destined for disposal. 824 F.2d at
1185-87. The Court further held that the term ``discarded materials''
could not include materials ``* * * destined for beneficial reuse or
recycling in a continuous process by the generating industry itself''
(824 F.2d at 1190).
Subsequent to AMC I, the court discussed the meaning of discard in
particular cases. In American Petroleum Institute v. EPA, 906 F.2d 729
(DC Cir. 1990) (``API I''), the court rejected EPA's decision not to
regulate recycled air pollution control equipment slag based on an
Agency determination that waste ``ceases to be a `solid waste' when it
arrives at a metals reclamation facility because at that point it is no
longer `discarded material.' '' 906 F.2d at 740. Instead, the court
stated that these materials are part of a mandatory waste treatment
plan for hazardous wastes prescribed by EPA and continued to be wastes
even if recycled. 906 F.2d at 741. Further, ``once material qualifies
as `solid waste,' [footnote omitted] something derived from it retains
that designation even if it might be reclaimed and reused at some
future time.'' Association of Battery Recyclers v. EPA, (``ABR'') 208
F.3d 1047, 1056 (DC Cir. 2000) (referring to API I and the later
decided case, American Mining Congress v. EPA, (``AMC II'') 907 F.2d
1179 (DC Cir. 1990)).
One of the more important holdings of a number of court decisions
is that simply because a hazardous waste has, or may have, value does
not mean the material loses its status as a solid waste. See API I, 906
F.2d at 741 n.16; United States v. ILCO Inc., 996 F.2d 1126, 1131-32
(11th Cir. 1993) (``ILCO''); Owen Steel v. Browner, 37 F.3d 146, 150
(4th Cir. 1994) (``Owen Steel''). ILCO and Owen Steel, however, seem to
recognize that legitimate products made from wastes are, themselves,
products and not wastes.
The ABR case reiterated the concepts discussed in the previous
cases of AMC I and II and API I. The Court held that it had already
resolved the issue presented in ABR in its opinion in AMC I, where it
found that ``* * * Congress unambiguously expressed its intent that
`solid waste' (and therefore EPA's regulatory authority) be limited to
materials that are `discarded' by virtue of being disposed of,
abandoned, or thrown away'' (208 F.2d at 1051). It repeated that
materials that are reused within an ongoing industrial process are
neither disposed of nor abandoned (208 F.3d at 1051-52). It explained
that the intervening API I and AMC II decisions had not narrowed the
holding in AMC I (208 F.3d at 1054-1056).
Notably, the Court did not hold that storage before reclamation
automatically makes materials ``discarded.'' Rather, it held that ``* *
* at least some of the secondary material EPA seeks to regulate as
solid waste (in the mineral processing rule) is destined for reuse as
part of a continuous industrial process and thus is not abandoned or
thrown away'' (208 F.3d at 1056). In this regard, the court criticized
all parties in the case--industry, as well as EPA--because they
``presented this aspect of the case in broad abstraction, providing
little detail about the many processes throughout the industry that
generate residual material of the sort EPA is attempting to regulate. *
* *'' (Ibid).
American Petroleum Institute v. EPA, 216 F.3d 50, 55 (DC Cir. 2000)
(``API II''), decided shortly after ABR and considered by the court at
the same time, provides further guidance for defining solid waste, but
in the context of two specific waste streams in the petroleum refining
industry. The court overturned EPA's determination that certain
recycled oil-bearing wastewaters are wastes (216 F.3d at 55-58) and
upheld conditions imposed by the Agency in excluding petrochemical
recovered oil from the definition of solid waste (216 F.3d at 58-59).
In the case of oil-bearing wastewaters, EPA had determined that the
first phase of treatment, primary treatment, results in a waste being
created. 216 F.3d at 55. The court overturned this decision and
remanded it to EPA for a better explanation, neither accepting EPA's
view nor the contrary industry view. The court noted that the ultimate
determination that had to be made was whether primary treatment ``is
simply a step in the act of discarding [* * *][o]r is it the last step
in a production process before discard?'' 216 F.3d at 57. In
particular, the court rejected EPA's argument that primary treatment
was required by regulation, and instead stated that EPA needed to ``set
forth why it has concluded that the compliance motivation predominates
over the reclamation motivation'' and ``why that conclusion, even if
validly reached, compels the further conclusion that the wastewater has
been discarded.'' 216 F.3d at 58.
The court also considered whether material is discarded in Safe
Food and Fertilizer v. EPA, 350 F.3d 1263 (DC Cir. 2003) (``Safe
Food''). In that case, among other things, the court rejected the
argument that, as a matter of plain meaning, recycled material destined
for immediate reuse within an ongoing industrial process is never
considered ``discarded,'' whereas material that is transferred to
another firm or industry for subsequent recycling must always be solid
wastes. 350 F.3d at 1268. Instead, the court evaluated ``whether the
agency's interpretation of * * * `discarded' * * * is, reasonable and
consistent with the statutory purpose. * * *'' Id. Thus, EPA has the
discretion to determine if material is not a solid waste, even if it is
transferred between industries.
We also note that the Ninth Circuit has specifically found that
non-hazardous secondary materials may, under certain circumstances, be
burned and not constitute a solid waste under RCRA. See Safe Air For
Everyone v. Waynemeyer (``Safe Air''), 373 F.3d 1035 (9th Cir., 2004).
In this case, the Court found that Kentucky bluegrass stubble may be
burned to return nutrients to the soil and not be a solid waste.
5. Concept of Legitimacy
Under RCRA subtitle C, some hazardous secondary materials that
would otherwise be subject to regulation under RCRA's ``cradle to
grave'' hazardous waste system are not considered solid wastes if they
are ``legitimately recycled'' or legitimately reused as an ingredient
or substitute for a commercial product. The principal reasoning behind
this construct is that use/reuse or recycling of such secondary
materials often closely resembles normal industrial production, rather
than waste management. Although today's final rule does not address the
Agency's hazardous waste regulations, EPA finds the concept of
legitimacy to be an important one in determining when a secondary
material (whether hazardous or non-hazardous) is genuinely recycled and
not discarded under the guise of recycling.
[[Page 15464]]
However, since there can be considerable economic incentive to
manage recyclable materials outside of the RCRA hazardous waste
regulatory system, there is a clear potential for, and historical
evidence of, some handlers claiming they are recycling, when in fact
they are conducting waste treatment and/or disposal in the guise of
recycling. EPA considers such ``sham'' recycling to be, in fact,
discard and these secondary materials being sham recycled are solid
wastes (or hazardous waste if the material is listed as, or exhibits a
characteristic of, hazardous waste pursuant to 40 CFR part 261).
To guard against hazardous secondary materials being discarded in
the guise of recycling, EPA has long articulated the need to
distinguish between ``legitimate'' (i.e., true) recycling or other use
and ``sham'' (i.e., fake) recycling; see the preamble to the 1985
hazardous waste regulations that established the definition of solid
waste under RCRA subtitle C (50 FR 638; January 4, 1985). A similar
discussion that addressed legitimacy as it pertains to burning
hazardous secondary materials for energy recovery (considered a form of
recycling under RCRA subtitle C) was presented in the January 9, 1988
proposed amendments to the definition of solid waste (53 FR 522).
Then on April 26, 1989, the Office of Solid Waste \11\ issued a
memorandum that consolidated the various preamble and other statements
concerning legitimate recycling into a list of questions to be
considered in evaluating the legitimacy of hazardous secondary
materials recycling (OSWER directive 9441.1989(19)). This memorandum
(known to many as the ``Lowrance Memo,'' a copy of which is included in
the Docket to today's rule) has been a primary source of information
for the regulated community and for overseeing agencies in
distinguishing between legitimate and sham recycling.
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\11\ On January 9, 2009, the Office of Solid Waste was renamed
the Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery.
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In the October 30, 2008 DSW Final Rule, EPA finalized several
exclusions from the definition of solid waste for hazardous secondary
materials being reclaimed and a non-waste determination process for
persons to receive a formal determination that their hazardous
secondary materials are not solid wastes when legitimately reclaimed.
In that action, EPA codified in 40 CFR 260.43 the requirement that
materials be legitimately recycled as a condition for the exclusion for
hazardous secondary materials that are legitimately reclaimed under the
control of the generator (40 CFR 261.2(a)(2)(ii) and 40 CFR
261.4(a)(23)) and as a condition of the exclusion for hazardous
secondary materials that are transferred for the purpose of legitimate
reclamation (40 CFR 261.4(a)(24) and 40 CFR 261.4(a)(25)). As part of
that final rule, EPA also codified the legitimate recycling provision
specifically as a requirement for the non-waste determination process
(40 CFR 260.34).
As discussed above, the Agency has agreed to prepare a notice of
proposed rulemaking, which will solicit comment regarding potential
revisions to the 2008 DSW Final Rule. The definition of ``legitimacy''
is one of the issues that will be reconsidered in this subsequent
proposed rule. This subsequent DSW proposed rule is, by necessity, in a
different proceeding from the rule we are promulgating today. EPA
cannot presuppose the results of the DSW rule, but still needs to issue
a final rule dealing with legitimacy criteria in today's separate rule
affecting non-hazardous secondary materials. The same concept--
legitimacy--applies to both rules, but, at this point, EPA cannot
reconcile the differences between the legitimacy criteria in each rule,
if there are indeed any substantive differences. As a result, each rule
will have its own definition of legitimate recycling. Although the
Agency is revisiting the definition of legitimacy in the context of
regulations promulgated pursuant to RCRA subtitle C, EPA continues to
find the principle of ``legitimacy'' to be an important element in the
recycling of both hazardous and non-hazardous secondary materials. That
is, the concept of legitimate recycling is crucial to determining
whether a hazardous or non-hazardous secondary material being recycled
is truly being recycled or is, in fact, being discarded through sham