Definition of Solid Waste Disposal Facilities for Tax-Exempt Bond Purposes, 51879-51885 [2011-21154]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
51879
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Explanation of Provisions
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Internal Revenue Service
Correction of Publication
26 CFR Parts 1 and 17
1. Introduction
In general, interest on State or local
bonds is excludable from gross income
under section 103(a). Under section
103(b), however, interest on private
activity bonds is excludable from gross
income under section 103 only if the
bond meets the requirements for a
qualified bond under section 141(e) and
other applicable requirements under
section 103. Section 141(e) defines a
qualified bond to include an exempt
facility bond that meets certain
requirements. Section 142(a) defines an
exempt facility bond to mean any bond
that is issued as part of an issue 95
percent or more of the net proceeds of
which are to be used to provide an
exempt facility specified in section
142(a). Section 142(a)(6) includes a
solid waste disposal facility as one
specified type of qualified exempt
facility.
In general, the Proposed Regulations
addressed the requirements for solid
waste disposal facilities under section
142(a)(6) for purposes of eligibility for
tax-exempt private activity bond
financing. The Proposed Regulations
provided that a facility qualifies as a
solid waste disposal facility if it
processes solid waste in a qualified
solid waste disposal process, performs
preliminary functions, or is a
functionally related or subordinate
facility. The Proposed Regulations
focused on eligible processes to dispose
of solid waste, including a final disposal
process, an energy conversion process,
and a recycling process. The Proposed
Regulations also provided a more
developed definition of solid waste
which focused on used materials and
residual materials, with certain specific
exclusions. The Proposed Regulations
eliminated a ‘‘no-value’’ test from the
solid waste definition under § 1.103–
8(f)(2)(ii)(b) of the Existing Regulations,
which provides that material does not
qualify as solid waste unless, on the
issue date of the tax-exempt bonds used
to provide the solid waste disposal
facility, the property is useless, unused,
unwanted, or discarded solid material
‘‘that has no market or other value at the
place where the property is located’’
(No-Value Test). The Proposed
Regulations also proposed various
allocation and accounting rules based
on existing principles for mixed-input
facilities and mixed-use facilities.
Overall, the Proposed Regulations
implement a policy in favor of recycling
through the use of solid waste disposal
facilities.
Commentators generally supported
the approach taken towards solid waste
[TD 9546]
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is
corrected by making the following
correcting amendments:
RIN 1545–BD04
Definition of Solid Waste Disposal
Facilities for Tax-Exempt Bond
Purposes
PART 1—INCOME TAXES
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Final regulations.
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 1 continues to read in part as
follows:
■
AGENCY:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805. * * *
Par. 2. Section 1.1001–4T is amended
by revising paragraphs (a)(1), (b)(1) and
(b)(3) to read as follows:
■
§ 1.1001–4T Modifications of certain
derivative contracts (temporary).
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) Both the party transferring or
assigning its rights and obligations
under the derivative contract and the
party to which the rights and obligations
are transferred or assigned are either a
dealer or a clearinghouse;
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) Dealer. For purposes of this
section, a dealer is a taxpayer who
meets the definition of a dealer in
securities in section 475(c)(1) or is a
dealer in commodities derivative
contracts.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Derivative contract. For purposes
of this section, a derivative contract is
a contract described in—
(i) Section 475(c)(2)(D), 475(c)(2)(E),
or 475(c)(2)(F) without regard to the last
sentence of section 475(c)(2) referencing
section 1256;
(ii) Section 475(e)(2)(B), 475(e)(2)(C),
or 475(e)(2)(D); or
(iii) Section 1.446–3(c)(1).
*
*
*
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*
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LaNita Van Dyke,
Chief, Publications and Regulations Branch,
Legal Processing Division, Associate Chief
Counsel (Procedure and Administration).
[FR Doc. 2011–21180 Filed 8–18–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
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This document contains final
regulations on the definition of solid
waste disposal facilities for purposes of
the rules applicable to tax-exempt bonds
issued by State and local governments.
These regulations provide guidance to
State and local governments that issue
tax-exempt bonds to finance solid waste
disposal facilities and to taxpayers that
use those facilities.
DATES: Effective Date: These regulations
are effective August 19, 2011.
Applicability Date: For dates of
applicability, see § 1.142(a)(6)–1(i).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Timothy Jones, (202) 622–3980 (not a
toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Background
This document amends the Income
Tax Regulations (26 CFR part 1) under
section 142 of the Internal Revenue
Code (Code) to provide final rules for
determining whether a facility is a solid
waste disposal facility under section
142(a)(6). This document also removes
certain existing regulations on this
subject. On September 16, 2009, the IRS
published a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (REG–140492–02) in the
Federal Register (74 FR 47500) (the
Proposed Regulations). The Proposed
Regulations under proposed
§ 1.142(a)(6)–1 would modify existing
regulations under § 1.103–8(f)(2) of the
Income Tax Regulations and § 17.1 of
the temporary Income Tax Regulations
(together, the Existing Regulations) on
this subject. Public comments on the
Proposed Regulations were received and
a public hearing was held on January 5,
2010.
After consideration of the public
comments, the IRS and the Treasury
Department adopt the Proposed
Regulations, with revisions, as final
regulations by this Treasury decision
(the Final Regulations). Significant
aspects of the public comments and the
revisions made in the Final Regulations
are discussed in this preamble.
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
disposal facilities under the Proposed
Regulations. The Final Regulations
retain the overall approach of the
Proposed Regulations and make certain
technical changes in response to public
comments, as discussed further in this
preamble.
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2. Solid Waste Disposal Facility
The Proposed Regulations defined the
term solid waste disposal facility to
mean a facility that processes solid
waste in a qualified solid waste disposal
process, performs a preliminary
function, or is a functionally related and
subordinate facility. The Final
Regulations retain this definition of a
solid waste disposal facility.
3. Definition of Solid Waste
The Proposed Regulations defined the
term solid waste to mean garbage,
refuse, and other solid material derived
from any agricultural, commercial,
consumer, or industrial operation or
activity, based largely on an existing
definition under the Existing
Regulations. The Proposed Regulations
refined the existing definition to require
that solid waste be either used material
or residual material. The Proposed
Regulations also eliminated the NoValue Test. Additionally, the Proposed
Regulations required that the person
who acquires the material must
reasonably expect to introduce it into a
qualified solid waste disposal process
within a reasonable period of time after
acquisition.
The Proposed Regulations defined
used material to mean any material that
has been used previously as an
agricultural, commercial, consumer, or
industrial product or as a component of
any such product. The Proposed
Regulations defined residual material to
mean any residual byproduct or excess
unused raw material that remains from
the production of any agricultural,
commercial, consumer, or industrial
product, provided that material
qualified as residual material only to the
extent that it constituted less than five
percent (5%) of the total material
introduced into the production process
and it had a fair market value that is
reasonably expected to be lower than
that of any product made in that
production process.
The Final Regulations generally retain
the core definition of solid waste from
the Proposed Regulations but modify
that definition in certain technical
respects. The Final Regulations clarify
that material is ‘‘solid’’ only if it is solid
at ambient temperature and pressure.
The Final Regulations also clarify that
solid waste can result from
governmental operations or activities.
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The Final Regulations expand the
definition of solid waste to include
animal waste.
With respect to the definition of
residual material, commentators
generally supported the analytic
standard under the Proposed
Regulations but recommended removing
the five percent (5%) size limitation on
residual material. Commentators
recommended removing this size limit
because it unduly restricts the scope of
residual material in many circumstances
and it arbitrarily treats various
industries and activities differently
because residual amounts vary widely
by industry and activity. The Final
Regulations adopt this comment to
eliminate the five percent (5%) size
limitation on residual material and
otherwise generally retain the analytic
standard for residual material. The Final
Regulations also expand the definition
of residual material to include material
derived from providing a service in
which no product is produced.
Further, for purposes of determining
residual material when multiple
production processes are operated on
the same site, commentators
recommended a separate evaluation of
each process. Based on reasons
associated with scope and
administrability, the IRS and the
Treasury Department intended to cover
only residual material that remains at
the end of integrated processes that are
functionally interconnected or
interdependent, based on all the facts
and circumstances. Accordingly, the
Final Regulations do not adopt this
comment. Instead, the Final Regulations
adopt an integrated process standard to
limit residual material.
4. Specific Exclusions From the
Definition of Solid Waste
In general, the Proposed Regulations
excluded from the definition of solid
waste the following items: (1) Virgin
material; (2) solids within liquids and
liquid waste; (3) precious metals; (4)
hazardous material; and (5) radioactive
material. The Final Regulations retain
these exclusions with certain technical
modifications.
The exclusion for virgin material
aimed to distinguish solid waste
disposal from manufacturing. The
exclusion for certain precious metals
aimed to recognize that recovery of
these metals generally would take place
without regard to a recycling industry.
With respect to the exclusions for
hazardous and radioactive waste, the
statute and legislative history indicate
that Congress intended to exclude
hazardous waste and radioactive waste
from solid waste. The statute treats
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qualified hazardous waste facilities as
eligible exempt facilities under section
142(a)(10) separate and apart from solid
waste disposal facilities under section
142(a)(6). In addition, the legislative
history provides, in relevant part, that
‘‘the conferees wish to clarify that solid
waste does not include most hazardous
waste (including radioactive waste).’’
H.Rep. No. 99–841, at II–704 (1986),
1986–3 (Vol. 4) CB 704.
Some commentators expressed
concern that the introduction of virgin
material or precious metals into a final
disposal process, such as a landfill (as
contrasted with a recycling process),
could disqualify a facility from
treatment as a qualified solid waste
disposal facility. The Final Regulations
address this comment favorably and
modify the definition of solid waste to
allow the introduction of virgin
materials and precious metals into a
final disposal process. The Final
Regulations also add a provision that
allows the IRS to identify other
excluded precious metals in future
public administrative guidance.
Commentators also recommended
treating hazardous waste and
radioactive waste as solid waste. The
Final Regulations generally do not adopt
this comment. The IRS and the Treasury
Department believe that Congress
generally intended to exclude these
materials from the definition of solid
waste. Recognizing that only certain
hazardous waste and radioactive waste
are required to be disposed of at
regulated facilities, however, the Final
Regulations limit the exclusions for
these two types of waste to the extent
that they are required to be disposed of
or contained at a regulated hazardous
waste or radioactive waste disposal
facility.
5. Qualified Solid Waste Disposal
Process
The Proposed Regulations provided
for three eligible types of solid waste
disposal processes: A final disposal
process, an energy conversion process,
and a recycling process. To provide
flexibility for future innovation, the
Proposed Regulations provided that,
absent an express restriction in the
proposed regulations, a solid waste
disposal function may employ any
biological, engineering, industrial, or
technological method.
The Final Regulations generally retain
the eligible types of solid waste disposal
processes from the Proposed
Regulations, with technical
clarifications. The Final Regulations
clarify that a final disposal process
includes the spreading of solid waste in
an environmentally compliant and safe
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manner. The Final Regulations also
clarify that an energy conversion
process ends at the point at which
useful energy is first created or
incorporated into the form of synthesis
gas, heat, hot water, or other useful
energy.
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6. First Useful Product Principle
The Proposed Regulations provided
guidance on the standard for
determining the first useful product for
purposes of establishing the end point
of a solid waste disposal process. The
first useful product principle has
particular application to recycling.
Under the Proposed Regulations, a
useful product generally included a
product useful for consumption, either
as an ultimate end-use product or as an
input to some stage of a manufacturing
or production process, and that could be
sold for such use (taking into account
operational constraints on such sales for
certain integrated processes), whether or
not actually sold.
The Final Regulations generally retain
the first useful product standard from
the Proposed Regulations. Some
commentators recommended that
determinations under the first useful
product rule take into account
geographic location and transportation
costs in certain situations. The Final
Regulations adopt this comment.
7. Mixed-Input Facilities
The Proposed Regulations provided a
mixed-input accounting rule, which
treated a facility as a qualified solid
waste disposal facility if at least 65
percent of all of the material introduced
into such facility in each year consisted
of solid waste. This proposed rule
recognizes that recycling processes may
require supplemental inputs besides
solid waste to operate viably. This
proposed rule is similar to an existing
rule under § 1.103–8(f)(2)(ii)(c) of the
Existing Regulations. This proposed rule
requires annual testing for compliance
with the requisite 65 percent solid waste
threshold. Several commentators
recommended reformulating this 65
percent test to require compliance based
on an aggregate testing period measured
over the life of the tax-exempt bonds
instead of an annual testing period.
These commentators expressed
concerns about compliance with an
annual test during start-up periods and
aberrational years for various reasons.
The Final Regulations retain the
annual 65 percent test for mixed-input
facilities with modifications. In
response to the public comments, the
Final Regulations provide a special rule
that allows a three-year curative period
to address the impact of extraordinary
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events outside the control of the
operator of the solid waste disposal
facility (such as natural disasters,
strikes, major utility disruptions, or
governmental interventions). In
addition, the Final Regulations provide
that the annual testing does not begin
until the facility is placed in service
within the meaning of the special
placed-in-service definition in § 1.150–
2(c), which focuses on the point at
which a facility is operational at
substantially its design level.
8. Certain Other Changes
Several commentators recommended
removal of the proposed concept of
facilities that perform a preliminary
function for a qualified solid waste
disposal process and removal of the
threshold limit on preliminary functions
that requires more than 50 percent of
the materials that result from
preliminary functions to constitute solid
waste. The Final Regulations retain the
concept of a preliminary function, but
remove the 50 percent threshold limit
on preliminary functions. The Final
Regulations also provide for application
of a mixed-use accounting rule to
facilities that perform preliminary
functions.
One commentator expressed concern
that Example 2 in the Proposed
Regulations was confusing, and the
Final Regulations remove that example
with no substantive inference intended
by that removal. The Final Regulations
also expand and clarify certain other
examples.
Commentators recommended various
transition rules for applicability of the
Final Regulations to refunding bonds
issued prior to the date of publication of
the final regulations. The Final
Regulations provide a transition rule for
current refunding bonds the weighted
average maturity of which is no longer
than the remaining weighted average
maturity of the refunded bonds.
Effective/Applicability Dates
The Final Regulations apply to bonds
to which section 142 applies that are
sold on or after October 18, 2011.
Issuers may apply the Final Regulations
to outstanding bonds sold before
October 18, 2011. The Final Regulations
need not be applied to bonds that are
issued in a current refunding to refund
bonds to which the Final Regulations do
not apply if the weighted average
maturity of the refunding bonds is no
longer than the remaining weighted
average maturity of the refunded bonds.
Special Analyses
It has been determined that this
Treasury decision is not a significant
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51881
regulatory action as defined in
Executive Order 12866, as
supplemented by Executive Order
13563. Therefore, a regulatory
assessment is not required. It also has
been determined that section 553(b) of
the Administrative Procedure Act (5
U.S.C. chapter 5) does not apply to these
regulations, and, because the regulations
are interpretative and do not impose a
collection of information on small
entities, the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. chapter 6) does not apply.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code,
the proposed regulations preceding
these final regulations were submitted
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration for
comment on its impact on small
business.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these final
regulations is Timothy L. Jones, Office
of Associate Chief Counsel (Financial
Institutions and Products). However,
other personnel from the IRS and the
Treasury Department participated in
their development.
List of Subjects
26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
26 CFR Part 17
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Adoption of Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, under the authority of
26 U.S.C. 7805, 26 CFR parts 1 and 17
are amended as follows:
PART 1—INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 1 continues to read in part as
follows:
■
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
§ 1.103–8
[Amended]
Par. 2. Section 1.103–8 is amended by
removing paragraph (f)(2)(ii) and
redesignating paragraph (f)(2)(iii) as
(f)(2)(ii).
■ Par. 3. Section 1.142(a)(6)–1 is added
to read as follows:
■
§ 1.142(a)(6)–1 Exempt facility bonds:
solid waste disposal facilities.
(a) In general. This section defines the
term solid waste disposal facility for
purposes of section 142(a)(6).
(b) Solid waste disposal facility. The
term solid waste disposal facility means
a facility to the extent that the facility—
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(1) Processes solid waste (as defined
in paragraph (c) of this section) in a
qualified solid waste disposal process
(as defined in paragraph (d) of this
section);
(2) Performs a preliminary function
(as defined in paragraph (f) of this
section); or
(3) Is functionally related and
subordinate (within the meaning of
§ 1.103–8(a)(3)) to a facility described in
paragraph (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this section.
(c) Solid waste—(1) In general. Except
to the extent excluded under paragraph
(c)(2) of this section, for purposes of
section 142(a)(6), the term solid waste
means garbage, refuse, and other solid
material derived from any agricultural,
commercial, consumer, governmental,
or industrial operation or activity if the
material meets the requirements of both
paragraph (c)(1)(i) and paragraph
(c)(1)(ii) of this section. For purposes of
this section, material is solid if it is solid
at ambient temperature and pressure.
(i) Used material or residual material.
Material meets the requirements of this
paragraph (c)(1)(i) if it is either used
material (as defined in paragraph
(c)(1)(i)(A)) of this section or residual
material (as defined in paragraph
(c)(1)(i)(B) of this section).
(A) Used material. The term used
material means any material that is a
product of any agricultural, commercial,
consumer, governmental, or industrial
operation or activity, or a component of
any such product or activity, and that
has been used previously. Used material
also includes animal waste produced by
animals from a biological process.
(B) Residual material. The term
residual material means material that
meets the requirements of this
paragraph (c)(1)(i)(B). The material must
be a residual byproduct or excess raw
material that results from or remains
after the completion of any agricultural,
commercial, consumer, governmental,
or industrial production process or
activity or from the provision of any
service. In the case of multiple
processes constituting an integrated
manufacturing or industrial process, the
material must result from or remain
after the completion of such integrated
process. As of the issue date of the
bonds used to finance the solid waste
disposal facility, the material must be
reasonably expected to have a fair
market value that is lower than the
value of all of the products made in that
production process or lower than the
value of the service that produces such
residual material.
(ii) Reasonably expected introduction
into a qualified solid waste disposal
process. Material meets the
requirements of this paragraph (c)(1)(ii)
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if it is reasonably expected by the
person who generates, purchases, or
otherwise acquires it to be introduced
within a reasonable time after such
generation, purchase or acquisition into
a qualified solid waste disposal process
described in paragraph (d) of this
section.
(2) Exclusions from solid waste. The
following materials do not constitute
solid waste:
(i) Virgin material. Except to the
extent that virgin material constitutes an
input to a final disposal process or
residual material, solid waste excludes
any virgin material. The term virgin
material means material that has not
been processed into an agricultural,
commercial, consumer, governmental,
or industrial product, or a component of
any such product. Further, for this
purpose, material continues to be virgin
material after it has been grown,
harvested, mined, or otherwise
extracted from its naturally occurring
location and cleaned, divided into
component elements, modified, or
enhanced, as long as further processing
is required before it becomes an
agricultural, commercial, consumer, or
industrial product, or a component of
any such product.
(ii) Solids within liquids and liquid
waste. Solid waste excludes any solid or
dissolved material in domestic sewage
or other significant pollutant in water
resources, such as silt, dissolved or
suspended solids in industrial waste
water effluents, dissolved materials in
irrigation return flows or other common
water pollutants, and liquid or gaseous
waste.
(iii) Precious metals. Except to the
extent that a precious metal constitutes
an input to a final disposal process and/
or an unrecoverable trace of the
particular precious metal, solid waste
excludes gold, silver, ruthenium,
rhodium, palladium, osmium, iridium,
platinum, gallium, rhenium, and any
other precious metal material as may be
identified by the Internal Revenue
Service in future public administrative
guidance.
(iv) Hazardous material. Solid waste
excludes any hazardous material that
must be disposed of at a facility that is
subject to final permit requirements
under subtitle C of title II of the Solid
Waste Disposal Act as in effect on the
date of the enactment of the Tax Reform
Act of 1986 (which is October 22, 1986).
See section 142(h)(1) of the Internal
Revenue Code for the definition of
qualified hazardous waste facilities.
(v) Radioactive material. Solid waste
excludes any radioactive material
subject to regulation under the Nuclear
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Regulatory Act (10 CFR 1.1 et. seq), as
in effect on the issue date of the bonds.
(d) Qualified solid waste disposal
process. The term qualified solid waste
disposal process means the processing
of solid waste in a final disposal process
(as defined in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section), an energy conversion process
(as defined in paragraph (d)(2) of this
section), or a recycling process (as
defined in paragraph (d)(3) of this
section). Absent an express restriction to
the contrary in this section, a qualified
solid waste disposal process may
employ any biological, engineering,
industrial, or technological method.
(1) Final disposal process. The term
final disposal process means the
placement of solid waste in a landfill
(including, for this purpose, the
spreading of solid waste over land in an
environmentally compliant and safe
manner with no intent to remove such
solid waste), the incineration of solid
waste without capturing any useful
energy, or the containment of solid
waste with a reasonable expectation as
of the date of issue of the bonds that the
containment will continue indefinitely
and that the solid waste has no current
or future beneficial use.
(2) Energy conversion process. The
term energy conversion process means a
thermal, chemical, or other process that
is applied to solid waste to create and
capture synthesis gas, heat, hot water,
steam, or other useful energy. The
energy conversion process begins at the
point of the first application of such
process. The energy conversion process
ends at the point at which the useful
energy is first created, captured, or
incorporated into the form of synthesis
gas, heat, hot water, or other useful
energy and before any transfer or
distribution of such synthesis gas, heat,
hot water or other useful energy,
regardless of whether such synthesis
gas, heat, hot water, or other useful
energy constitutes a first useful product
within the meaning of paragraph (e) of
this section.
(3) Recycling process—(i) In general.
The term recycling process means
reconstituting, transforming, or
otherwise processing solid waste into a
useful product. The recycling process
begins at the point of the first
application of a process to reconstitute
or transform the solid waste into a
useful product, such as
decontamination, melting, re-pulping,
shredding, or other processing of the
solid waste to accomplish this purpose.
The recycling process ends at the point
of completion of production of the first
useful product from the solid waste.
(ii) Refurbishment, repair, or similar
activities. The term recycling process
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does not include refurbishment, repair,
or similar activities. The term
refurbishment means the breakdown
and reassembly of a product if such
activity is done on a product-by-product
basis and if the finished product
contains more than 30 percent of its
original materials or components.
(e) First useful product. The term first
useful product means the first product
produced from the processing of solid
waste in a solid waste disposal process
that is useful for consumption in
agricultural, consumer, commercial,
governmental, or industrial operation or
activity and that could be sold for such
use, whether or not actually sold. A
useful product includes both a product
useful to an individual consumer as an
ultimate end-use consumer product and
a product useful to an industrial user as
a material or input for processing in
some stage of a manufacturing or
production process to produce a
different end-use consumer product.
The determination of whether a useful
product has been produced may take
into account operational constraints that
affect the point in production when a
useful product reasonably can be
extracted or isolated and sold
independently. For this purpose, the
costs of extracting, isolating, storing,
and transporting the product to a market
may only be taken into account as
operational constraints if the product is
not to be used as part of an integrated
manufacturing or industrial process in
the same location as that in which the
product is produced.
(f) Preliminary function. A
preliminary function is a function to
collect, separate, sort, store, treat,
process, disassemble, or handle solid
waste that is preliminary to and directly
related to a qualified solid waste
disposal process.
(g) Mixed-use facilities—(1) In
general. If a facility is used for both a
qualified solid waste disposal function
(including a qualified solid waste
disposal process or a preliminary
function) and a nonqualified function (a
mixed-use facility), then the costs of the
facility allocable to the qualified solid
waste disposal function are determined
using any reasonable method, based on
all the facts and circumstances. See
§ 1.103–8(a)(1) for allocation rules on
amounts properly allocable to an
exempt facility. Facilities qualify as
functionally related and subordinate to
a qualified solid waste disposal function
only to the extent that they are
functionally related and subordinate to
the portion of the mixed-use facility that
is used for one or more qualified solid
waste disposal functions (including a
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qualified solid waste disposal process or
a preliminary function).
(2) Mixed inputs—(i) In general.
Except as otherwise provided in
paragraph (g)(2)(ii) of this section, for
each facility (or a portion of a mixed-use
facility) performing a qualified solid
waste disposal process or a preliminary
function, the percentage of the costs of
the property used for such process that
are allocable to a qualified solid waste
disposal process or a preliminary
function cannot exceed the average
annual percentage of solid waste
processed in that qualified solid waste
disposal process or that preliminary
function while the issue is outstanding.
The annual percentage of solid waste
processed in that qualified solid waste
disposal process or preliminary function
for any year is the percentage, by weight
or volume, of the total materials
processed in that qualified solid waste
disposal process or preliminary function
that constitute solid waste for that year.
(ii) Special rule for mixed-input
processes if at least 65 percent of the
materials processed are solid waste—(A)
In general. Except as otherwise
provided in paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(B) of
this section, for each facility (or a
portion of a mixed-use facility)
performing a qualified solid waste
disposal process or preliminary
function, if the annual percentage of
solid waste processed in that qualified
solid waste disposal process or
preliminary function for each year that
the issue is outstanding (beginning with
the date such facility is placed in
service within the meaning of § 1.150–
2(c)) equals at least 65 percent of the
materials processed in that qualified
solid waste disposal process or
preliminary function, then all of the
costs of the property used for such
process are treated as allocable to a
qualified solid waste disposal process.
The annual percentage of solid waste
processed in such qualified solid waste
disposal process or preliminary function
for any year is the percentage, by weight
or volume, of the total materials
processed in that qualified solid waste
disposal process or preliminary function
that constitute solid waste for that year.
(B) Special rule for extraordinary
events. In the case of an extraordinary
event that is beyond the control of the
operator of a solid waste disposal
facility (such as a natural disaster,
strike, major utility disruption, or
governmental intervention) and that
causes a solid waste disposal facility to
be unable to meet the 65 percent test
under paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(A) of this
section for a particular year, the
percentage of solid waste processed for
that year equals—
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51883
(1) The sum of the amount of solid
waste processed in the solid waste
disposal facility for the year affected by
the extraordinary event and the amount
of solid waste processed in the solid
waste disposal facility during the
following two years in excess of the
amount required to meet the general 65
percent threshold for the facility during
each of such two years; divided by
(2) The total materials processed in
the solid waste disposal facility during
the year affected by the extraordinary
event. If the resulting measure of solid
waste processed for the year affected by
the extraordinary event equals at least
65 percent, then the facility is treated as
meeting the requirements of the 65
percent test under paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(A)
of this section for such year.
(iii) Facilities functionally related and
subordinate to mixed-input facilities.
Except to the extent that facilities are
functionally related and subordinate to
a mixed-input facility that meets the 65
percent test under paragraph (g)(2)(ii) of
this section, facilities qualify as
functionally related and subordinate to
a mixed-input facility only to the extent
that they are functionally related and
subordinate to the qualified portion of
the mixed-input facility that is used for
one or more qualified solid waste
disposal functions (including a qualified
solid waste disposal process or a
preliminary function).
(h) Examples. The following examples
illustrate the application of this section:
Example 1. Nonqualified Unused
Material—Cloth. Company A takes wool and
weaves it into cloth and then sells the cloth
to a manufacturer to manufacture clothing.
The cloth is material that has not been used
previously as a product of or otherwise used
in an agricultural, commercial, consumer,
governmental, or industrial operation or
activity, or as a component of any such
product or activity. Accordingly, the cloth is
not solid waste.
Example 2. Residual Material—Waste Coal.
Company B mines coal. Some of the ore
mined is a low quality byproduct of coal
mining commonly known as waste coal,
which cannot be converted to energy under
a normal energy-production process because
the BTU content is too low. Waste coal has
the lowest fair market value of any product
produced in Company B’s coal mining
process. Waste coal is solid waste because it
is residual material within the meaning of
paragraph (c)(1)(i)(B) of this section and
Company B reasonably expects to introduce
the waste coal into a solid waste disposal
process.
Example 3. Virgin Material—Logs.
Company C cuts down trees and sells the logs
to another company, which further processes
the logs into lumber. In order to facilitate
shipping, Company C cuts the trees into
uniform logs. The trees are not solid waste
because they are virgin material within the
meaning of paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section
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that are not being introduced into a final
disposal process within the meaning of
paragraph (d)(1) of this section. The division
of such trees into uniform logs does not
change the status of the trees as virgin
material.
Example 4. Qualified Solid Waste Disposal
Process—Landfill. Company D plans to
construct a landfill. The landfill will not be
subject to the final permit requirements
under subtitle C of title II of the Solid Waste
Disposal Act (as in effect on the date of
enactment of the Tax Reform Act of 1986). As
of the issue date, Company D expects that the
landfill will be filled entirely with material
that will qualify as solid waste within the
meaning of paragraph (c) of this section.
Placing solid waste into a landfill is a
qualified solid waste disposal process. The
landfill is a qualified solid waste disposal
facility.
Example 5. Qualified Solid Waste Disposal
Process—Recycling Tires. Company E owns a
facility that converts used tires into roadbed
material. The used tires are used material
within the meaning of paragraph (c)(1)(i)(A)
of this section that qualifies as solid waste.
Between the introduction of the old tires into
the roadbed manufacturing process and the
completion of the roadbed material, the
facility does not create any interim useful
products. The process for the manufacturing
of the roadbed material from the old tires is
a qualified solid waste disposal process as a
recycling process and the facility that
converts the tires into roadbed material is a
qualified solid waste disposal facility. This
conclusion would be the same if the
recycling process took place at more than one
plant.
Example 6. Qualified Solid Waste Disposal
Process—Energy Conversion Process.
Company F receives solid waste from a
municipal garbage collector. Company F
burns that solid waste in an incinerator to
remove exhaust gas and to produce heat.
Company F further processes the heat in a
heat exchanger to produce steam. Company
F further processes the steam to generate
electricity. The energy conversion process
ends with the production of steam. The
facilities used to burn the solid waste and to
capture the steam as useful energy are
qualified solid waste disposal facilities
because they process solid waste in an energy
conversion process. The generating facilities
used to process the steam further to generate
electricity are not engaged in the energy
conversion process and are not qualified
solid waste disposal facilities.
Example 7. Nonqualified Refurbishment.
Company G purchases used cars and restores
them. This restoration process includes
disassembly, cleaning, and repairing of the
cars. Parts that cannot be repaired are
replaced. The restored cars contain at least 30
percent of the original parts. While the cars
are used material, the refurbishing process is
not a qualified solid waste disposal process.
Accordingly, Company G’s facility is not a
qualified solid waste disposal facility.
Example 8. Qualified Solid Waste Disposal
Facility—First Useful Product Rule—Paper
Recycling. (i) Company H employs an
integrated process to re-pulp discarded
magazines, clean the pulp, and produce retail
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paper towel products. Operational
constraints on Company H’s process do not
allow for reasonable extraction, isolation, and
sale of the cleaned paper pulp independently
without degradation of the pulp. Company H
further processes the paper pulp into large
industrial-sized rolls of paper which are
approximately 12 feet in diameter. At this
point in the process, Company H could either
sell such industrial-sized rolls of paper to
another company for further processing to
produce retail paper products or it could
produce those retail products itself. In
general, paper pulp is a useful product that
is bought and sold on the market as a
material for input into manufacturing or
production processes. The discarded
magazines are used material within the
meaning of paragraph (c)(1)(i)(A) of this
section. Company H’s facility is engaged in
a recycling process within the meaning of
paragraph (d)(3) of this section to the extent
that it repulps and cleans the discarded
magazines generally and further to the extent
that it produces industrial-sized rolls of
paper under the particular circumstances
here. Specifically, taking into account the
operational constraints on Company H’s
facility that limit its ability reasonably to
extract, isolate, and sell the paper pulp
independently, the first useful products
within the meaning of paragraph (e) of this
section from Company H’s recycling process
are the industrial-sized rolls of paper. The
portion of Company H’s facility that
processes the discarded magazines and
produces industrial-sized rolls of paper is a
qualified solid waste disposal facility, and
the portion of Company H’s facility that
further processes the industrial-sized rolls of
paper into retail paper towels is not a
qualified solid waste facility.
(ii) The facts are the same as in paragraph
(i) of this Example 8, except that Company
H is able reasonably to extract the cleaned
paper pulp from the process without
degradation of the pulp and to sell the
cleaned paper pulp at its dock for a price that
exceeds its costs of extracting the pulp from
the process. Therefore, the paper pulp is the
first useful product within the meaning of
paragraph (e) of this section. As a result, the
portion of Company H’s facility that
processes the discarded magazines is a
qualified solid waste disposal facility, and
the portion of Company H’s facility that
produces industrial-sized rolls of paper is not
a qualified solid waste disposal facility. If,
however, the only reasonable way Company
H could sell the pulp was to transport the
pulp to a distant market, then the costs of
storing and transporting the pulp to the
market may be taken into account in
determining whether the pulp is the first
useful product.
Example 9. Preliminary Function—Energy
Conversion Process. (i) Company I owns a
paper mill. At the mill, logs from nearby
timber operations are processed through a
machine that removes bark. The stripped logs
are used to manufacture paper. The stripped
bark has the lowest fair market value of any
product produced from the paper mill. The
stripped bark falls onto a conveyor belt that
transports the bark to a storage bin that is
used to store the bark briefly until Company
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
I feeds the bark into a boiler. The conveyor
belt and storage bin are used only for these
purposes. The boiler is used only to create
steam by burning the bark, and the steam is
used to generate electricity. The stripped
bark is solid waste because it is residual
material within the meaning of paragraph
(c)(1)(i)(B) of this section and Company I
expects to introduce the bark into an energy
conversion process within a reasonable
period of time. The creation of steam from
the stripped bark is an energy conversion
process that starts with the incineration of
the stripped bark. The energy conversion
process is a qualified solid waste disposal
process. The conveyor belt performs a
collection activity that is preliminary and
that is directly related to the solid waste
disposal function. The storage bin performs
a storage function that is preliminary and
that is directly related to the solid waste
disposal function. Thus, the conveyor belt
and storage bin are solid waste disposal
facilities. The bark removal process is not a
preliminary function because it is not
directly related to the energy conversion
process and it does not become so related
merely because it results in material that is
solid waste.
(ii) The facts are the same as in paragraph
(a) of this Example 9, except that the stripped
bark represents only 55 percent by weight
and volume of the materials that are
transported by the conveyor belt. The
remaining 45 percent of the materials
transported by the conveyor belt are not solid
waste and these other materials are sorted
from the conveyor belt by a sorting machine
immediately before the stripped bark arrives
at the storage bin. Fifty-five percent of the
costs of the conveyor belt and the sorting
machine are allocable to solid waste disposal
functions.
Example 10. Preliminary Function—Final
Disposal Process. Company J owns a waste
transfer station and uses it to collect, sort,
and process solid waste. Company J uses its
trucks to haul the solid waste to the nearest
landfill. At least 65 percent by weight and
volume of the material brought to the transfer
station is solid waste. The waste transfer
station and the trucks perform functions that
are preliminary and directly related to the
solid waste disposal function of the landfill.
Thus, the waste transfer station and the
trucks qualify as solid waste disposal
facilities.
Example 11. Mixed-Input Facility.
Company K owns an incinerator financed by
an issue and uses the incinerator exclusively
to burn coal and other solid material to create
steam. Each year while the issue is
outstanding, 40 percent by volume and 45
percent by weight of the solid material that
Company K processes in the conversion
process is coal. The remainder of the solid
material is either used material or residual
material within the meaning of paragraph
(c)(1)(i) of this section. Sixty percent of the
costs of the property used to perform the
energy conversion process are allocable to a
solid waste disposal function.
(i) Effective/Applicability Dates—(1)
In general. Except as otherwise
provided in this paragraph (i), this
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
section applies to bonds to which
section 142 applies that are sold on or
after October 18, 2011.
(2) Elective retroactive application.
Issuers may apply this section, in
whole, but not in part, to outstanding
bonds to which section 142 applies and
which were sold before October 18,
2011.
(3) Certain refunding bonds. An issuer
need not apply this section to bonds
that are issued in a current refunding to
refund bonds to which this section does
not apply if the weighted average
maturity of the refunding bonds is no
longer than the remaining weighted
average maturity of the refunded bonds.
PART 17—[REMOVED]
■
Par. 4. Part 17 is removed.
Steven T. Miller,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
Approved by: August 9, 2011.
Emily S. McMahon,
(Acting) Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
(Tax Policy).
[FR Doc. 2011–21154 Filed 8–18–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 117
[Docket No. USCG–2011–0696]
Drawbridge Operation Regulation;
Grassy Sound Channel, Middle
Township, NJ
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of temporary deviation
from regulations.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Commander, Fifth Coast
Guard District, has issued a temporary
deviation from the regulation governing
the operation of the Grassy Sound/
Ocean Drive Bascule Bridge across the
Grassy Sound Channel, mile 1.0, at
Middle Township, NJ. The deviation is
necessary to accommodate racers in
‘‘The Wild Half’’ half marathon. This
deviation allows the bridge to remain in
the closed position to ensure safe
passage for the half marathon racers.
DATES: This deviation is effective from
7:45 a.m. through 11 a.m. on August 28,
2011.
ADDRESSES: Documents mentioned in
this preamble as being available in the
docket are part of docket USCG–2011–
0696 and are available online by going
to https://www.regulations.gov, inserting
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SUMMARY:
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51885
USCG–2011–0696 in the ‘‘Keyword’’
box and then clicking ‘‘Search’’. They
are also available for inspection or
copying at the Docket Management
Facility (M–30), U.S. Department of
Transportation, West Building Ground
Floor, Room W12–140, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590,
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Dated: August 2, 2011.
Waverly W. Gregory, Jr.,
Bridge Program Manager By direction of the
Commander Fifth Coast Guard District.
If
you have questions on this rule, call or
e-mail Lindsey Middleton, Coast Guard;
telephone 757–398–6629, e-mail
Lindsey.R.Middleton@uscg.mil. If you
have questions on viewing the docket,
call Renee V. Wright, Program Manager,
Docket Operations, telephone 202–366–
9826.
Coast Guard
Cape May
County Department of Public Works has
requested a temporary deviation from
the current operating regulations of the
Grassy Sound/Ocean Drive Bascule
Bridge across the Grassy Sound
Channel, mile 1.0, at Middle Township,
NJ. The route of ‘‘The Wild Half’’ half
marathon crosses the bridge twice and
the requested deviation is to
accommodate the race participants. To
facilitate this event, the draw of the
bridge will be maintained in the closedto-navigation position from 7:45 a.m.
until 11 a.m. on Sunday August 28,
2011.
The vertical clearance for this bridge
in the closed position is 15 feet at Mean
High Water and unlimited in the open
position. The operating regulations are
set forth in 33 CFR 117.721 which states
that during this time of year the bridge
shall open on signal from 6 a.m. to 8
p.m.
Vessels that can pass through the
bridge in the closed position may do so
at any time. The Coast Guard will
inform the waterway users of the
closure through our Local and Broadcast
Notices to Mariners to minimize any
impact caused by the temporary
deviation. The bridge will be able to
open for emergencies. In the past 6 years
there have been minimal openings for
this bridge during the morning hours in
August. Most vessel traffic consists of a
few tugs and tows and recreational
boaters. Vessels can use the Stone
Harbor Bridge across the Great Channel
as an alternate route to Hereford Inlet
and the Atlantic Ocean.
In accordance with 33 CFR 117.35(e),
the drawbridge must return to its regular
operating schedule immediately at the
end of the designated time period. This
deviation from the operating regulations
is authorized under 33 CFR 117.35.
AGENCY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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[FR Doc. 2011–21187 Filed 8–18–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
33 CFR Part 165
[Docket No. USCG–2011–0718]
RIN 1625–AA00
Safety Zone; Thunder on Niagara,
Niagara River, North Tonawanda, NY
ACTION:
Coast Guard, DHS.
Temporary final rule.
The Coast Guard is
establishing a temporary safety zone on
Niagara River, North Tonawanda, NY.
This temporary safety zone is intended
to restrict vessels from a portion of the
Niagara River during the Thunder on
Niagara powerboat races. This
temporary safety zone is necessary to
protect spectators and vessels from the
hazards associated with powerboat
races.
DATES: This rule is effective from
10 a.m. on August 20, 2011 until 6 p.m.
on August 21, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Documents mentioned in
this preamble as being available in the
docket, are part of docket USCG–2011–
0718 and are available online by going
to https://www.regulations.gov, inserting
USCG–2011–0718 in the ‘‘Keyword’’
box, and then clicking ‘‘Search.’’ This
material is also available for inspection
or copying at the Docket Management
Facility (M–30), U.S. Department of
Transportation, West Building Ground
Floor, Room W12–140, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590,
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions on this temporary
rule, call or e-mail Lieutenant Chris
Mercurio, Waterways Management
Division Chief, U.S. Coast Guard Sector
Buffalo; telephone 716–843–9573, email Chris.F.Mercurio@uscg.mil. If you
have questions on viewing the docket,
call Renee V. Wright, Program Manager,
Docket Operations, telephone 202–366–
9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Regulatory Information
The Coast Guard is issuing this
temporary final rule without prior
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 161 (Friday, August 19, 2011)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 51879-51885]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-21154]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Parts 1 and 17
[TD 9546]
RIN 1545-BD04
Definition of Solid Waste Disposal Facilities for Tax-Exempt Bond
Purposes
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Final regulations.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains final regulations on the definition of
solid waste disposal facilities for purposes of the rules applicable to
tax-exempt bonds issued by State and local governments. These
regulations provide guidance to State and local governments that issue
tax-exempt bonds to finance solid waste disposal facilities and to
taxpayers that use those facilities.
DATES: Effective Date: These regulations are effective August 19, 2011.
Applicability Date: For dates of applicability, see Sec.
1.142(a)(6)-1(i).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Timothy Jones, (202) 622-3980 (not a
toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This document amends the Income Tax Regulations (26 CFR part 1)
under section 142 of the Internal Revenue Code (Code) to provide final
rules for determining whether a facility is a solid waste disposal
facility under section 142(a)(6). This document also removes certain
existing regulations on this subject. On September 16, 2009, the IRS
published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (REG-140492-02) in the
Federal Register (74 FR 47500) (the Proposed Regulations). The Proposed
Regulations under proposed Sec. 1.142(a)(6)-1 would modify existing
regulations under Sec. 1.103-8(f)(2) of the Income Tax Regulations and
Sec. 17.1 of the temporary Income Tax Regulations (together, the
Existing Regulations) on this subject. Public comments on the Proposed
Regulations were received and a public hearing was held on January 5,
2010.
After consideration of the public comments, the IRS and the
Treasury Department adopt the Proposed Regulations, with revisions, as
final regulations by this Treasury decision (the Final Regulations).
Significant aspects of the public comments and the revisions made in
the Final Regulations are discussed in this preamble.
Explanation of Provisions
1. Introduction
In general, interest on State or local bonds is excludable from
gross income under section 103(a). Under section 103(b), however,
interest on private activity bonds is excludable from gross income
under section 103 only if the bond meets the requirements for a
qualified bond under section 141(e) and other applicable requirements
under section 103. Section 141(e) defines a qualified bond to include
an exempt facility bond that meets certain requirements. Section 142(a)
defines an exempt facility bond to mean any bond that is issued as part
of an issue 95 percent or more of the net proceeds of which are to be
used to provide an exempt facility specified in section 142(a). Section
142(a)(6) includes a solid waste disposal facility as one specified
type of qualified exempt facility.
In general, the Proposed Regulations addressed the requirements for
solid waste disposal facilities under section 142(a)(6) for purposes of
eligibility for tax-exempt private activity bond financing. The
Proposed Regulations provided that a facility qualifies as a solid
waste disposal facility if it processes solid waste in a qualified
solid waste disposal process, performs preliminary functions, or is a
functionally related or subordinate facility. The Proposed Regulations
focused on eligible processes to dispose of solid waste, including a
final disposal process, an energy conversion process, and a recycling
process. The Proposed Regulations also provided a more developed
definition of solid waste which focused on used materials and residual
materials, with certain specific exclusions. The Proposed Regulations
eliminated a ``no-value'' test from the solid waste definition under
Sec. 1.103-8(f)(2)(ii)(b) of the Existing Regulations, which provides
that material does not qualify as solid waste unless, on the issue date
of the tax-exempt bonds used to provide the solid waste disposal
facility, the property is useless, unused, unwanted, or discarded solid
material ``that has no market or other value at the place where the
property is located'' (No-Value Test). The Proposed Regulations also
proposed various allocation and accounting rules based on existing
principles for mixed-input facilities and mixed-use facilities.
Overall, the Proposed Regulations implement a policy in favor of
recycling through the use of solid waste disposal facilities.
Commentators generally supported the approach taken towards solid
waste
[[Page 51880]]
disposal facilities under the Proposed Regulations. The Final
Regulations retain the overall approach of the Proposed Regulations and
make certain technical changes in response to public comments, as
discussed further in this preamble.
2. Solid Waste Disposal Facility
The Proposed Regulations defined the term solid waste disposal
facility to mean a facility that processes solid waste in a qualified
solid waste disposal process, performs a preliminary function, or is a
functionally related and subordinate facility. The Final Regulations
retain this definition of a solid waste disposal facility.
3. Definition of Solid Waste
The Proposed Regulations defined the term solid waste to mean
garbage, refuse, and other solid material derived from any
agricultural, commercial, consumer, or industrial operation or
activity, based largely on an existing definition under the Existing
Regulations. The Proposed Regulations refined the existing definition
to require that solid waste be either used material or residual
material. The Proposed Regulations also eliminated the No-Value Test.
Additionally, the Proposed Regulations required that the person who
acquires the material must reasonably expect to introduce it into a
qualified solid waste disposal process within a reasonable period of
time after acquisition.
The Proposed Regulations defined used material to mean any material
that has been used previously as an agricultural, commercial, consumer,
or industrial product or as a component of any such product. The
Proposed Regulations defined residual material to mean any residual
byproduct or excess unused raw material that remains from the
production of any agricultural, commercial, consumer, or industrial
product, provided that material qualified as residual material only to
the extent that it constituted less than five percent (5%) of the total
material introduced into the production process and it had a fair
market value that is reasonably expected to be lower than that of any
product made in that production process.
The Final Regulations generally retain the core definition of solid
waste from the Proposed Regulations but modify that definition in
certain technical respects. The Final Regulations clarify that material
is ``solid'' only if it is solid at ambient temperature and pressure.
The Final Regulations also clarify that solid waste can result from
governmental operations or activities. The Final Regulations expand the
definition of solid waste to include animal waste.
With respect to the definition of residual material, commentators
generally supported the analytic standard under the Proposed
Regulations but recommended removing the five percent (5%) size
limitation on residual material. Commentators recommended removing this
size limit because it unduly restricts the scope of residual material
in many circumstances and it arbitrarily treats various industries and
activities differently because residual amounts vary widely by industry
and activity. The Final Regulations adopt this comment to eliminate the
five percent (5%) size limitation on residual material and otherwise
generally retain the analytic standard for residual material. The Final
Regulations also expand the definition of residual material to include
material derived from providing a service in which no product is
produced.
Further, for purposes of determining residual material when
multiple production processes are operated on the same site,
commentators recommended a separate evaluation of each process. Based
on reasons associated with scope and administrability, the IRS and the
Treasury Department intended to cover only residual material that
remains at the end of integrated processes that are functionally
interconnected or interdependent, based on all the facts and
circumstances. Accordingly, the Final Regulations do not adopt this
comment. Instead, the Final Regulations adopt an integrated process
standard to limit residual material.
4. Specific Exclusions From the Definition of Solid Waste
In general, the Proposed Regulations excluded from the definition
of solid waste the following items: (1) Virgin material; (2) solids
within liquids and liquid waste; (3) precious metals; (4) hazardous
material; and (5) radioactive material. The Final Regulations retain
these exclusions with certain technical modifications.
The exclusion for virgin material aimed to distinguish solid waste
disposal from manufacturing. The exclusion for certain precious metals
aimed to recognize that recovery of these metals generally would take
place without regard to a recycling industry. With respect to the
exclusions for hazardous and radioactive waste, the statute and
legislative history indicate that Congress intended to exclude
hazardous waste and radioactive waste from solid waste. The statute
treats qualified hazardous waste facilities as eligible exempt
facilities under section 142(a)(10) separate and apart from solid waste
disposal facilities under section 142(a)(6). In addition, the
legislative history provides, in relevant part, that ``the conferees
wish to clarify that solid waste does not include most hazardous waste
(including radioactive waste).'' H.Rep. No. 99-841, at II-704 (1986),
1986-3 (Vol. 4) CB 704.
Some commentators expressed concern that the introduction of virgin
material or precious metals into a final disposal process, such as a
landfill (as contrasted with a recycling process), could disqualify a
facility from treatment as a qualified solid waste disposal facility.
The Final Regulations address this comment favorably and modify the
definition of solid waste to allow the introduction of virgin materials
and precious metals into a final disposal process. The Final
Regulations also add a provision that allows the IRS to identify other
excluded precious metals in future public administrative guidance.
Commentators also recommended treating hazardous waste and
radioactive waste as solid waste. The Final Regulations generally do
not adopt this comment. The IRS and the Treasury Department believe
that Congress generally intended to exclude these materials from the
definition of solid waste. Recognizing that only certain hazardous
waste and radioactive waste are required to be disposed of at regulated
facilities, however, the Final Regulations limit the exclusions for
these two types of waste to the extent that they are required to be
disposed of or contained at a regulated hazardous waste or radioactive
waste disposal facility.
5. Qualified Solid Waste Disposal Process
The Proposed Regulations provided for three eligible types of solid
waste disposal processes: A final disposal process, an energy
conversion process, and a recycling process. To provide flexibility for
future innovation, the Proposed Regulations provided that, absent an
express restriction in the proposed regulations, a solid waste disposal
function may employ any biological, engineering, industrial, or
technological method.
The Final Regulations generally retain the eligible types of solid
waste disposal processes from the Proposed Regulations, with technical
clarifications. The Final Regulations clarify that a final disposal
process includes the spreading of solid waste in an environmentally
compliant and safe
[[Page 51881]]
manner. The Final Regulations also clarify that an energy conversion
process ends at the point at which useful energy is first created or
incorporated into the form of synthesis gas, heat, hot water, or other
useful energy.
6. First Useful Product Principle
The Proposed Regulations provided guidance on the standard for
determining the first useful product for purposes of establishing the
end point of a solid waste disposal process. The first useful product
principle has particular application to recycling. Under the Proposed
Regulations, a useful product generally included a product useful for
consumption, either as an ultimate end-use product or as an input to
some stage of a manufacturing or production process, and that could be
sold for such use (taking into account operational constraints on such
sales for certain integrated processes), whether or not actually sold.
The Final Regulations generally retain the first useful product
standard from the Proposed Regulations. Some commentators recommended
that determinations under the first useful product rule take into
account geographic location and transportation costs in certain
situations. The Final Regulations adopt this comment.
7. Mixed-Input Facilities
The Proposed Regulations provided a mixed-input accounting rule,
which treated a facility as a qualified solid waste disposal facility
if at least 65 percent of all of the material introduced into such
facility in each year consisted of solid waste. This proposed rule
recognizes that recycling processes may require supplemental inputs
besides solid waste to operate viably. This proposed rule is similar to
an existing rule under Sec. 1.103-8(f)(2)(ii)(c) of the Existing
Regulations. This proposed rule requires annual testing for compliance
with the requisite 65 percent solid waste threshold. Several
commentators recommended reformulating this 65 percent test to require
compliance based on an aggregate testing period measured over the life
of the tax-exempt bonds instead of an annual testing period. These
commentators expressed concerns about compliance with an annual test
during start-up periods and aberrational years for various reasons.
The Final Regulations retain the annual 65 percent test for mixed-
input facilities with modifications. In response to the public
comments, the Final Regulations provide a special rule that allows a
three-year curative period to address the impact of extraordinary
events outside the control of the operator of the solid waste disposal
facility (such as natural disasters, strikes, major utility
disruptions, or governmental interventions). In addition, the Final
Regulations provide that the annual testing does not begin until the
facility is placed in service within the meaning of the special placed-
in-service definition in Sec. 1.150-2(c), which focuses on the point
at which a facility is operational at substantially its design level.
8. Certain Other Changes
Several commentators recommended removal of the proposed concept of
facilities that perform a preliminary function for a qualified solid
waste disposal process and removal of the threshold limit on
preliminary functions that requires more than 50 percent of the
materials that result from preliminary functions to constitute solid
waste. The Final Regulations retain the concept of a preliminary
function, but remove the 50 percent threshold limit on preliminary
functions. The Final Regulations also provide for application of a
mixed-use accounting rule to facilities that perform preliminary
functions.
One commentator expressed concern that Example 2 in the Proposed
Regulations was confusing, and the Final Regulations remove that
example with no substantive inference intended by that removal. The
Final Regulations also expand and clarify certain other examples.
Commentators recommended various transition rules for applicability
of the Final Regulations to refunding bonds issued prior to the date of
publication of the final regulations. The Final Regulations provide a
transition rule for current refunding bonds the weighted average
maturity of which is no longer than the remaining weighted average
maturity of the refunded bonds.
Effective/Applicability Dates
The Final Regulations apply to bonds to which section 142 applies
that are sold on or after October 18, 2011. Issuers may apply the Final
Regulations to outstanding bonds sold before October 18, 2011. The
Final Regulations need not be applied to bonds that are issued in a
current refunding to refund bonds to which the Final Regulations do not
apply if the weighted average maturity of the refunding bonds is no
longer than the remaining weighted average maturity of the refunded
bonds.
Special Analyses
It has been determined that this Treasury decision is not a
significant regulatory action as defined in Executive Order 12866, as
supplemented by Executive Order 13563. Therefore, a regulatory
assessment is not required. It also has been determined that section
553(b) of the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 5) does
not apply to these regulations, and, because the regulations are
interpretative and do not impose a collection of information on small
entities, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) does not
apply. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, the proposed
regulations preceding these final regulations were submitted to the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for
comment on its impact on small business.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these final regulations is Timothy L.
Jones, Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions and
Products). However, other personnel from the IRS and the Treasury
Department participated in their development.
List of Subjects
26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
26 CFR Part 17
Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Adoption of Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, under the authority of 26 U.S.C. 7805, 26 CFR parts 1
and 17 are amended as follows:
PART 1--INCOME TAXES
0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read in
part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Sec. 1.103-8 [Amended]
0
Par. 2. Section 1.103-8 is amended by removing paragraph (f)(2)(ii) and
redesignating paragraph (f)(2)(iii) as (f)(2)(ii).
0
Par. 3. Section 1.142(a)(6)-1 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 1.142(a)(6)-1 Exempt facility bonds: solid waste disposal
facilities.
(a) In general. This section defines the term solid waste disposal
facility for purposes of section 142(a)(6).
(b) Solid waste disposal facility. The term solid waste disposal
facility means a facility to the extent that the facility--
[[Page 51882]]
(1) Processes solid waste (as defined in paragraph (c) of this
section) in a qualified solid waste disposal process (as defined in
paragraph (d) of this section);
(2) Performs a preliminary function (as defined in paragraph (f) of
this section); or
(3) Is functionally related and subordinate (within the meaning of
Sec. 1.103-8(a)(3)) to a facility described in paragraph (b)(1) or
(b)(2) of this section.
(c) Solid waste--(1) In general. Except to the extent excluded
under paragraph (c)(2) of this section, for purposes of section
142(a)(6), the term solid waste means garbage, refuse, and other solid
material derived from any agricultural, commercial, consumer,
governmental, or industrial operation or activity if the material meets
the requirements of both paragraph (c)(1)(i) and paragraph (c)(1)(ii)
of this section. For purposes of this section, material is solid if it
is solid at ambient temperature and pressure.
(i) Used material or residual material. Material meets the
requirements of this paragraph (c)(1)(i) if it is either used material
(as defined in paragraph (c)(1)(i)(A)) of this section or residual
material (as defined in paragraph (c)(1)(i)(B) of this section).
(A) Used material. The term used material means any material that
is a product of any agricultural, commercial, consumer, governmental,
or industrial operation or activity, or a component of any such product
or activity, and that has been used previously. Used material also
includes animal waste produced by animals from a biological process.
(B) Residual material. The term residual material means material
that meets the requirements of this paragraph (c)(1)(i)(B). The
material must be a residual byproduct or excess raw material that
results from or remains after the completion of any agricultural,
commercial, consumer, governmental, or industrial production process or
activity or from the provision of any service. In the case of multiple
processes constituting an integrated manufacturing or industrial
process, the material must result from or remain after the completion
of such integrated process. As of the issue date of the bonds used to
finance the solid waste disposal facility, the material must be
reasonably expected to have a fair market value that is lower than the
value of all of the products made in that production process or lower
than the value of the service that produces such residual material.
(ii) Reasonably expected introduction into a qualified solid waste
disposal process. Material meets the requirements of this paragraph
(c)(1)(ii) if it is reasonably expected by the person who generates,
purchases, or otherwise acquires it to be introduced within a
reasonable time after such generation, purchase or acquisition into a
qualified solid waste disposal process described in paragraph (d) of
this section.
(2) Exclusions from solid waste. The following materials do not
constitute solid waste:
(i) Virgin material. Except to the extent that virgin material
constitutes an input to a final disposal process or residual material,
solid waste excludes any virgin material. The term virgin material
means material that has not been processed into an agricultural,
commercial, consumer, governmental, or industrial product, or a
component of any such product. Further, for this purpose, material
continues to be virgin material after it has been grown, harvested,
mined, or otherwise extracted from its naturally occurring location and
cleaned, divided into component elements, modified, or enhanced, as
long as further processing is required before it becomes an
agricultural, commercial, consumer, or industrial product, or a
component of any such product.
(ii) Solids within liquids and liquid waste. Solid waste excludes
any solid or dissolved material in domestic sewage or other significant
pollutant in water resources, such as silt, dissolved or suspended
solids in industrial waste water effluents, dissolved materials in
irrigation return flows or other common water pollutants, and liquid or
gaseous waste.
(iii) Precious metals. Except to the extent that a precious metal
constitutes an input to a final disposal process and/or an
unrecoverable trace of the particular precious metal, solid waste
excludes gold, silver, ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, osmium, iridium,
platinum, gallium, rhenium, and any other precious metal material as
may be identified by the Internal Revenue Service in future public
administrative guidance.
(iv) Hazardous material. Solid waste excludes any hazardous
material that must be disposed of at a facility that is subject to
final permit requirements under subtitle C of title II of the Solid
Waste Disposal Act as in effect on the date of the enactment of the Tax
Reform Act of 1986 (which is October 22, 1986). See section 142(h)(1)
of the Internal Revenue Code for the definition of qualified hazardous
waste facilities.
(v) Radioactive material. Solid waste excludes any radioactive
material subject to regulation under the Nuclear Regulatory Act (10 CFR
1.1 et. seq), as in effect on the issue date of the bonds.
(d) Qualified solid waste disposal process. The term qualified
solid waste disposal process means the processing of solid waste in a
final disposal process (as defined in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section), an energy conversion process (as defined in paragraph (d)(2)
of this section), or a recycling process (as defined in paragraph
(d)(3) of this section). Absent an express restriction to the contrary
in this section, a qualified solid waste disposal process may employ
any biological, engineering, industrial, or technological method.
(1) Final disposal process. The term final disposal process means
the placement of solid waste in a landfill (including, for this
purpose, the spreading of solid waste over land in an environmentally
compliant and safe manner with no intent to remove such solid waste),
the incineration of solid waste without capturing any useful energy, or
the containment of solid waste with a reasonable expectation as of the
date of issue of the bonds that the containment will continue
indefinitely and that the solid waste has no current or future
beneficial use.
(2) Energy conversion process. The term energy conversion process
means a thermal, chemical, or other process that is applied to solid
waste to create and capture synthesis gas, heat, hot water, steam, or
other useful energy. The energy conversion process begins at the point
of the first application of such process. The energy conversion process
ends at the point at which the useful energy is first created,
captured, or incorporated into the form of synthesis gas, heat, hot
water, or other useful energy and before any transfer or distribution
of such synthesis gas, heat, hot water or other useful energy,
regardless of whether such synthesis gas, heat, hot water, or other
useful energy constitutes a first useful product within the meaning of
paragraph (e) of this section.
(3) Recycling process--(i) In general. The term recycling process
means reconstituting, transforming, or otherwise processing solid waste
into a useful product. The recycling process begins at the point of the
first application of a process to reconstitute or transform the solid
waste into a useful product, such as decontamination, melting, re-
pulping, shredding, or other processing of the solid waste to
accomplish this purpose. The recycling process ends at the point of
completion of production of the first useful product from the solid
waste.
(ii) Refurbishment, repair, or similar activities. The term
recycling process
[[Page 51883]]
does not include refurbishment, repair, or similar activities. The term
refurbishment means the breakdown and reassembly of a product if such
activity is done on a product-by-product basis and if the finished
product contains more than 30 percent of its original materials or
components.
(e) First useful product. The term first useful product means the
first product produced from the processing of solid waste in a solid
waste disposal process that is useful for consumption in agricultural,
consumer, commercial, governmental, or industrial operation or activity
and that could be sold for such use, whether or not actually sold. A
useful product includes both a product useful to an individual consumer
as an ultimate end-use consumer product and a product useful to an
industrial user as a material or input for processing in some stage of
a manufacturing or production process to produce a different end-use
consumer product. The determination of whether a useful product has
been produced may take into account operational constraints that affect
the point in production when a useful product reasonably can be
extracted or isolated and sold independently. For this purpose, the
costs of extracting, isolating, storing, and transporting the product
to a market may only be taken into account as operational constraints
if the product is not to be used as part of an integrated manufacturing
or industrial process in the same location as that in which the product
is produced.
(f) Preliminary function. A preliminary function is a function to
collect, separate, sort, store, treat, process, disassemble, or handle
solid waste that is preliminary to and directly related to a qualified
solid waste disposal process.
(g) Mixed-use facilities--(1) In general. If a facility is used for
both a qualified solid waste disposal function (including a qualified
solid waste disposal process or a preliminary function) and a
nonqualified function (a mixed-use facility), then the costs of the
facility allocable to the qualified solid waste disposal function are
determined using any reasonable method, based on all the facts and
circumstances. See Sec. 1.103-8(a)(1) for allocation rules on amounts
properly allocable to an exempt facility. Facilities qualify as
functionally related and subordinate to a qualified solid waste
disposal function only to the extent that they are functionally related
and subordinate to the portion of the mixed-use facility that is used
for one or more qualified solid waste disposal functions (including a
qualified solid waste disposal process or a preliminary function).
(2) Mixed inputs--(i) In general. Except as otherwise provided in
paragraph (g)(2)(ii) of this section, for each facility (or a portion
of a mixed-use facility) performing a qualified solid waste disposal
process or a preliminary function, the percentage of the costs of the
property used for such process that are allocable to a qualified solid
waste disposal process or a preliminary function cannot exceed the
average annual percentage of solid waste processed in that qualified
solid waste disposal process or that preliminary function while the
issue is outstanding. The annual percentage of solid waste processed in
that qualified solid waste disposal process or preliminary function for
any year is the percentage, by weight or volume, of the total materials
processed in that qualified solid waste disposal process or preliminary
function that constitute solid waste for that year.
(ii) Special rule for mixed-input processes if at least 65 percent
of the materials processed are solid waste--(A) In general. Except as
otherwise provided in paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(B) of this section, for each
facility (or a portion of a mixed-use facility) performing a qualified
solid waste disposal process or preliminary function, if the annual
percentage of solid waste processed in that qualified solid waste
disposal process or preliminary function for each year that the issue
is outstanding (beginning with the date such facility is placed in
service within the meaning of Sec. 1.150-2(c)) equals at least 65
percent of the materials processed in that qualified solid waste
disposal process or preliminary function, then all of the costs of the
property used for such process are treated as allocable to a qualified
solid waste disposal process. The annual percentage of solid waste
processed in such qualified solid waste disposal process or preliminary
function for any year is the percentage, by weight or volume, of the
total materials processed in that qualified solid waste disposal
process or preliminary function that constitute solid waste for that
year.
(B) Special rule for extraordinary events. In the case of an
extraordinary event that is beyond the control of the operator of a
solid waste disposal facility (such as a natural disaster, strike,
major utility disruption, or governmental intervention) and that causes
a solid waste disposal facility to be unable to meet the 65 percent
test under paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(A) of this section for a particular
year, the percentage of solid waste processed for that year equals--
(1) The sum of the amount of solid waste processed in the solid
waste disposal facility for the year affected by the extraordinary
event and the amount of solid waste processed in the solid waste
disposal facility during the following two years in excess of the
amount required to meet the general 65 percent threshold for the
facility during each of such two years; divided by
(2) The total materials processed in the solid waste disposal
facility during the year affected by the extraordinary event. If the
resulting measure of solid waste processed for the year affected by the
extraordinary event equals at least 65 percent, then the facility is
treated as meeting the requirements of the 65 percent test under
paragraph (g)(2)(ii)(A) of this section for such year.
(iii) Facilities functionally related and subordinate to mixed-
input facilities. Except to the extent that facilities are functionally
related and subordinate to a mixed-input facility that meets the 65
percent test under paragraph (g)(2)(ii) of this section, facilities
qualify as functionally related and subordinate to a mixed-input
facility only to the extent that they are functionally related and
subordinate to the qualified portion of the mixed-input facility that
is used for one or more qualified solid waste disposal functions
(including a qualified solid waste disposal process or a preliminary
function).
(h) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of
this section:
Example 1. Nonqualified Unused Material--Cloth. Company A takes
wool and weaves it into cloth and then sells the cloth to a
manufacturer to manufacture clothing. The cloth is material that has
not been used previously as a product of or otherwise used in an
agricultural, commercial, consumer, governmental, or industrial
operation or activity, or as a component of any such product or
activity. Accordingly, the cloth is not solid waste.
Example 2. Residual Material--Waste Coal. Company B mines coal.
Some of the ore mined is a low quality byproduct of coal mining
commonly known as waste coal, which cannot be converted to energy
under a normal energy-production process because the BTU content is
too low. Waste coal has the lowest fair market value of any product
produced in Company B's coal mining process. Waste coal is solid
waste because it is residual material within the meaning of
paragraph (c)(1)(i)(B) of this section and Company B reasonably
expects to introduce the waste coal into a solid waste disposal
process.
Example 3. Virgin Material--Logs. Company C cuts down trees and
sells the logs to another company, which further processes the logs
into lumber. In order to facilitate shipping, Company C cuts the
trees into uniform logs. The trees are not solid waste because they
are virgin material within the meaning of paragraph (c)(2)(i) of
this section
[[Page 51884]]
that are not being introduced into a final disposal process within
the meaning of paragraph (d)(1) of this section. The division of
such trees into uniform logs does not change the status of the trees
as virgin material.
Example 4. Qualified Solid Waste Disposal Process--Landfill.
Company D plans to construct a landfill. The landfill will not be
subject to the final permit requirements under subtitle C of title
II of the Solid Waste Disposal Act (as in effect on the date of
enactment of the Tax Reform Act of 1986). As of the issue date,
Company D expects that the landfill will be filled entirely with
material that will qualify as solid waste within the meaning of
paragraph (c) of this section. Placing solid waste into a landfill
is a qualified solid waste disposal process. The landfill is a
qualified solid waste disposal facility.
Example 5. Qualified Solid Waste Disposal Process--Recycling
Tires. Company E owns a facility that converts used tires into
roadbed material. The used tires are used material within the
meaning of paragraph (c)(1)(i)(A) of this section that qualifies as
solid waste. Between the introduction of the old tires into the
roadbed manufacturing process and the completion of the roadbed
material, the facility does not create any interim useful products.
The process for the manufacturing of the roadbed material from the
old tires is a qualified solid waste disposal process as a recycling
process and the facility that converts the tires into roadbed
material is a qualified solid waste disposal facility. This
conclusion would be the same if the recycling process took place at
more than one plant.
Example 6. Qualified Solid Waste Disposal Process--Energy
Conversion Process. Company F receives solid waste from a municipal
garbage collector. Company F burns that solid waste in an
incinerator to remove exhaust gas and to produce heat. Company F
further processes the heat in a heat exchanger to produce steam.
Company F further processes the steam to generate electricity. The
energy conversion process ends with the production of steam. The
facilities used to burn the solid waste and to capture the steam as
useful energy are qualified solid waste disposal facilities because
they process solid waste in an energy conversion process. The
generating facilities used to process the steam further to generate
electricity are not engaged in the energy conversion process and are
not qualified solid waste disposal facilities.
Example 7. Nonqualified Refurbishment. Company G purchases used
cars and restores them. This restoration process includes
disassembly, cleaning, and repairing of the cars. Parts that cannot
be repaired are replaced. The restored cars contain at least 30
percent of the original parts. While the cars are used material, the
refurbishing process is not a qualified solid waste disposal
process. Accordingly, Company G's facility is not a qualified solid
waste disposal facility.
Example 8. Qualified Solid Waste Disposal Facility--First Useful
Product Rule--Paper Recycling. (i) Company H employs an integrated
process to re-pulp discarded magazines, clean the pulp, and produce
retail paper towel products. Operational constraints on Company H's
process do not allow for reasonable extraction, isolation, and sale
of the cleaned paper pulp independently without degradation of the
pulp. Company H further processes the paper pulp into large
industrial-sized rolls of paper which are approximately 12 feet in
diameter. At this point in the process, Company H could either sell
such industrial-sized rolls of paper to another company for further
processing to produce retail paper products or it could produce
those retail products itself. In general, paper pulp is a useful
product that is bought and sold on the market as a material for
input into manufacturing or production processes. The discarded
magazines are used material within the meaning of paragraph
(c)(1)(i)(A) of this section. Company H's facility is engaged in a
recycling process within the meaning of paragraph (d)(3) of this
section to the extent that it repulps and cleans the discarded
magazines generally and further to the extent that it produces
industrial-sized rolls of paper under the particular circumstances
here. Specifically, taking into account the operational constraints
on Company H's facility that limit its ability reasonably to
extract, isolate, and sell the paper pulp independently, the first
useful products within the meaning of paragraph (e) of this section
from Company H's recycling process are the industrial-sized rolls of
paper. The portion of Company H's facility that processes the
discarded magazines and produces industrial-sized rolls of paper is
a qualified solid waste disposal facility, and the portion of
Company H's facility that further processes the industrial-sized
rolls of paper into retail paper towels is not a qualified solid
waste facility.
(ii) The facts are the same as in paragraph (i) of this Example
8, except that Company H is able reasonably to extract the cleaned
paper pulp from the process without degradation of the pulp and to
sell the cleaned paper pulp at its dock for a price that exceeds its
costs of extracting the pulp from the process. Therefore, the paper
pulp is the first useful product within the meaning of paragraph (e)
of this section. As a result, the portion of Company H's facility
that processes the discarded magazines is a qualified solid waste
disposal facility, and the portion of Company H's facility that
produces industrial-sized rolls of paper is not a qualified solid
waste disposal facility. If, however, the only reasonable way
Company H could sell the pulp was to transport the pulp to a distant
market, then the costs of storing and transporting the pulp to the
market may be taken into account in determining whether the pulp is
the first useful product.
Example 9. Preliminary Function--Energy Conversion Process. (i)
Company I owns a paper mill. At the mill, logs from nearby timber
operations are processed through a machine that removes bark. The
stripped logs are used to manufacture paper. The stripped bark has
the lowest fair market value of any product produced from the paper
mill. The stripped bark falls onto a conveyor belt that transports
the bark to a storage bin that is used to store the bark briefly
until Company I feeds the bark into a boiler. The conveyor belt and
storage bin are used only for these purposes. The boiler is used
only to create steam by burning the bark, and the steam is used to
generate electricity. The stripped bark is solid waste because it is
residual material within the meaning of paragraph (c)(1)(i)(B) of
this section and Company I expects to introduce the bark into an
energy conversion process within a reasonable period of time. The
creation of steam from the stripped bark is an energy conversion
process that starts with the incineration of the stripped bark. The
energy conversion process is a qualified solid waste disposal
process. The conveyor belt performs a collection activity that is
preliminary and that is directly related to the solid waste disposal
function. The storage bin performs a storage function that is
preliminary and that is directly related to the solid waste disposal
function. Thus, the conveyor belt and storage bin are solid waste
disposal facilities. The bark removal process is not a preliminary
function because it is not directly related to the energy conversion
process and it does not become so related merely because it results
in material that is solid waste.
(ii) The facts are the same as in paragraph (a) of this Example
9, except that the stripped bark represents only 55 percent by
weight and volume of the materials that are transported by the
conveyor belt. The remaining 45 percent of the materials transported
by the conveyor belt are not solid waste and these other materials
are sorted from the conveyor belt by a sorting machine immediately
before the stripped bark arrives at the storage bin. Fifty-five
percent of the costs of the conveyor belt and the sorting machine
are allocable to solid waste disposal functions.
Example 10. Preliminary Function--Final Disposal Process.
Company J owns a waste transfer station and uses it to collect,
sort, and process solid waste. Company J uses its trucks to haul the
solid waste to the nearest landfill. At least 65 percent by weight
and volume of the material brought to the transfer station is solid
waste. The waste transfer station and the trucks perform functions
that are preliminary and directly related to the solid waste
disposal function of the landfill. Thus, the waste transfer station
and the trucks qualify as solid waste disposal facilities.
Example 11. Mixed-Input Facility. Company K owns an incinerator
financed by an issue and uses the incinerator exclusively to burn
coal and other solid material to create steam. Each year while the
issue is outstanding, 40 percent by volume and 45 percent by weight
of the solid material that Company K processes in the conversion
process is coal. The remainder of the solid material is either used
material or residual material within the meaning of paragraph
(c)(1)(i) of this section. Sixty percent of the costs of the
property used to perform the energy conversion process are allocable
to a solid waste disposal function.
(i) Effective/Applicability Dates--(1) In general. Except as
otherwise provided in this paragraph (i), this
[[Page 51885]]
section applies to bonds to which section 142 applies that are sold on
or after October 18, 2011.
(2) Elective retroactive application. Issuers may apply this
section, in whole, but not in part, to outstanding bonds to which
section 142 applies and which were sold before October 18, 2011.
(3) Certain refunding bonds. An issuer need not apply this section
to bonds that are issued in a current refunding to refund bonds to
which this section does not apply if the weighted average maturity of
the refunding bonds is no longer than the remaining weighted average
maturity of the refunded bonds.
PART 17--[REMOVED]
0
Par. 4. Part 17 is removed.
Steven T. Miller,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
Approved by: August 9, 2011.
Emily S. McMahon,
(Acting) Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax Policy).
[FR Doc. 2011-21154 Filed 8-18-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P