Regulation of Oil-Bearing Hazardous Secondary Materials From the Petroleum Refining Industry Processed in a Gasification System To Produce Synthesis Gas; Final Determination To Deny Administrative Petition, 22226-22229 [2012-8921]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 72 / Friday, April 13, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
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I. General Information
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[FR Doc. 2012–8854 Filed 4–12–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 260 and 261
[EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0808; FRL 9658–3]
RIN–2050–AE78
Regulation of Oil-Bearing Hazardous
Secondary Materials From the
Petroleum Refining Industry
Processed in a Gasification System To
Produce Synthesis Gas; Final
Determination To Deny Administrative
Petition
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
AGENCY:
Final rule; final determination
to deny administrative petition.
ACTION:
EPA is providing notice of a
final determination to deny an
administrative petition submitted by
Earthjustice on behalf of the Sierra Club
and the Louisiana Environmental
Action Network under the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act. The
petition requested EPA to review the
final rule, ‘‘Regulation of Oil-Bearing
Hazardous Secondary Materials From
the Petroleum Refining Industry
Processed in a Gasification System To
Produce Synthesis Gas,’’ published in
the Federal Register on January 2, 2008.
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SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Alan Carpien, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Office of General
Counsel, Mail Code 2366A, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington,
DC 20460; telephone (202) 564–5507; or
carpien.alan@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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A. How can I get copies of this
document and other related
information?
1. Docket. EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0808.
Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically through
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the RCRA Docket in the EPA Docket
Center, (EPA/DC) EPA West, Room
3334, 1301 Constitution Ave. NW.,
Washington, DC. The EPA Docket
Center Public Reading Room is open
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday, excluding legal
holidays. The telephone number for the
Public Reading Room is (202) 566–1744,
and the telephone number for the RCRA
Docket is (202) 566–0270. A reasonable
fee may be charged for copying docket
materials.
2. Electronic Access. You may access
this Federal Register document
electronically through the EPA Internet
under the Federal Register listings at
https://www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/.
II. Summary of the Action
EPA is providing notice of a final
determination to deny an administrative
petition submitted by Earthjustice on
behalf of the Sierra Club and the
Louisiana Environmental Action
Network under the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act. EPA
issued an earlier notice tentatively
denying this same petition in January
2011 and solicited written comments on
this tentative decision (76 FR 5107, Jan.
28, 2011). The petition requested EPA to
review the final rule, ‘‘Regulation of OilBearing Hazardous Secondary Materials
From the Petroleum Refining Industry
Processed in a Gasification System To
Produce Synthesis Gas,’’ published in
the Federal Register on January 2, 2008
(73 FR 57). The EPA has considered the
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petition, along with information
contained in the rulemaking docket, as
well as the five public comments
received on the tentative denial. After
evaluating all of this information, EPA
has decided to issue a final
determination denying the petition. In a
letter from EPA Assistant Administrator
Mathy Stanislaus dated April 3, 2012,
EPA provided the petitioner with its
final decision to deny the administrative
petition. The letter, which is included
as an Appendix to this Federal Register
document explains EPA’s reasons for
denying the petition, as well as
discussing the other comments received
on the tentative denial.
Appendix: Letter to Earthjustice
Denying Administrative Petition
Ms. Lisa Gollin Evans
Earthjustice
21 Ocean Avenue
Marblehead, MA 01945
Dear Ms. Evans:
This letter is written to inform you of our
final determination to deny the April 1, 2008
administrative petition you submitted to the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA
or the agency) under the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
§ 7004(a), 42 U.S.C. § 6974(a) on behalf of the
Sierra Club and the Louisiana Environmental
Action Network (LEAN) (hereafter referred to
as ‘‘Sierra Club’’). Sierra Club requested that
EPA review the final rule, ‘‘Regulation of OilBearing Hazardous Secondary Materials from
the Petroleum Refining Industry Processed in
a Gasification System to Produce Synthesis
Gas’’ (Gasification Rule). This final rule was
published in the Federal Register on January
2, 2008 (73 FR 57, et seq.). The petition
raised both procedural (notice and comment)
and substantive grounds for seeking the
agency’s review of the Gasification Rule. EPA
has made a final determination to deny the
petition and in accordance with the
regulatory requirements of 40 CFR 260.20,
EPA is providing notice of this determination
to deny the petition in the Federal Register.
A tentative denial was issued on January
19, 2011, and published in the Federal
Register on January 28, 2011 (76 FR 5107).
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Sierra Club filed comments on this tentative
denial (hereafter referred to as ‘‘SC
Comments’’).1 This final denial responds to
the additional points raised in the SC
Comments that were not raised in previous
submittals and incorporates all previous
agency responses to your original petition.2
This final denial to your petition adopts all
of the reasoning stated in our letter of
November 2008 3 and the January 2011
tentative denial, both of which are
incorporated into this reply. We find no new
substantive arguments in your comments that
would cause the agency to grant your
administrative petition.
In general, you argue that EPA has
improperly and arbitrarily removed
hazardous wastes from RCRA’s
comprehensive cradle-to-grave regulatory
system and that EPA’s Gasification Rule is
directly contrary to what you describe as
RCRA’s statutory mandate to regulate the
treatment, storage, and disposal of hazardous
waste derived fuels and the burning of
hazardous wastes. For the first time, in the
proceeding on this rule, you also claim that
it frustrates the Clean Air Act. You argue,
furthermore, that EPA’s ‘‘finding’’ that this
rule will not jeopardize human health and
the environment is unsupported by the
administrative record for this rulemaking.
Finally, you argue that the Gasification Rule
was promulgated in violation of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
EPA disagrees with your comments. The
agency has properly excluded the materials
in question from RCRA Subtitle C regulation
and does not expect adverse effects on
human health or the environment from this
regulation. EPA finds that you have not
presented any new information that would
suggest or otherwise require that we review
the Gasification Rule, nor have you raised
any issues that have not already been raised
by the comments in the rulemaking process.
EPA also finds that the Gasification Rule
meets the notice and comment requirements
of the APA and, therefore, disagrees with
your view that the agency did not provide
adequate notice to the public and an
1 See docket item EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0808–
0017.
2 We note that § 7004(a) of RCRA, 42 U.S.C.
§ 6974, provides that any person may petition the
Administrator for the promulgation, amendment or
repeal of any regulation under the Act. While your
original petition failed to state whether you were
requesting that EPA amend or repeal the
Gasification Rule, the SC Comments request the
agency ‘‘revoke the Rule in its entirety.’’ SC
Comments at p. 2. EPA also received another
comment from a number of environmental
organizations and persons (EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–
0808–0018) requesting that the agency revoke the
rule. This comment is regarded by the agency as
general support for the SC comments, in that it
mirrored the concerns raised in the comments
submitted by Earthjustice. (See comment EPA–HQ–
RCRA–2008–0808–0018 for a complete list of the
environmental organizations and persons that
submitted this comment.)
3 Letters to Lisa Gollin Evans and James S. Pew,
Earthjustice, from Susan Parker Bodine, EPA
Assistant Administrator, dated November 14, 2008.
This letter is available in the docket (docket item
EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0808–0004 and EPA–HQ–
RCRA–2008–0808–0006).
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opportunity to comment on the provisions of
the final rule.4
Legal Arguments
EPA has discussed in earlier responses that
it disagrees with Sierra Club’s legal argument
that the final rule does not comport with
RCRA § 3004(q), 42 U.S.C. § 6924(q). Because
EPA is providing an exclusion from the
definition of solid waste for oil-bearing
hazardous secondary materials fed to
gasifiers subject to this rule, EPA does not
implicate the provisions of section 3004(q),
which requires that the hazardous secondary
material first be a solid waste. Nothing cited
in your legal argument refutes this point.
Discussion in SC Comments at pp. 6–7
merely provides a cumulative argument that
burning of hazardous wastes must be
regulated. Since the oil-bearing hazardous
secondary materials are not considered solid
wastes, they cannot be hazardous wastes.
Further, Sierra Club raises a legal argument
that has already been considered and rejected
by the D.C. Circuit. In American Mining
Congress (AMC) v. EPA, 824 F2d. 1177,
1187–89, the agency relied upon section
3004(q) to defend a broad definition of solid
waste. The court specifically considered
whether the exemption in section
3004(q)(2)(A) for ‘‘petroleum refinery wastes
containing oil which are converted into
petroleum coke at the same facility at which
such wastes were generated’’ implies that the
term ‘‘solid waste’’ may include materials
that have not been disposed of, but that are
destined for reuse in another process. The
court concluded that the exemption does not
carry that implication, and section 3004(q)
only applies to materials that have already
become hazardous. See AMC at 1188 & n.16.
Plainly, section 3004(q) directs EPA to
regulate all facilities that ‘‘produce a fuel
from hazardous wastes’’ or ‘‘burn, for
purposes of energy recovery’’ any such fuel.
42 U.S.C. § 3004. Moreover, EPA agrees with
the thrust of your comment that a recycled
material does not become a non-waste simply
because it is burned or processed to produce
a fuel. Rather, the issue is whether the
recycled material is discarded.
The SC Comments (pp. 8–10) seem to
imply that case law says that burning of
recycled secondary materials is a waste
activity, regardless. However, none of the
cases cited deal with burning of material. In
4 The American Petroleum Institute (API) (docket
item EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0808–0010) and the
Metals Industries Recycling Coalition (MIRC)
(docket item EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0808–0013)
also filed comments supporting the Gasification
Rule. EPA accepts the reasoning in the comments
in support of the decision with the exception that
the agency does not agree that the residuals inserted
into the gasification process ‘‘may not be
considered solid or hazardous wastes under
controlling case law.’’ API comments at p. 9. Rather,
EPA has determined that it has the discretion to
exclude the residuals from the definition of solid
waste. A comment submitted by Industry
Professionals for Clean Air and Air Alliance
Houston (docket item EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0808–
0012) expresses concern regarding monitoring and
regulation of gasification processes. This is simply
a general comment that EPA acknowledges
regarding the appropriate monitoring and regulation
under both RCRA and the Clean Air Act for these
facilities.
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fact, the only case in the United States Court
of Appeals that deals with whether certain
burning of material is a waste found that the
burning was not a waste activity. See Safe Air
For Everyone v. Waynemeyer (‘‘Safe Air’’),
373 F.3d 1035 (9th Cir. 2004) (Kentucky
bluegrass stubble burned to return nutrients
to the soil is not a solid waste).
Your argument, including your discussions
of the Clean Air Act, is ultimately based on
your ‘‘assertion’’ that, in turn, EPA believes
material inserted into a gasifier is not
discarded. EPA disagrees. The agency,
however, stands on the record developed in
the rule for its determination that the
recycled oil-bearing hazardous secondary
material excluded from the definition of solid
waste in this rule is not discarded.
For the first time in the SC Comments, you
claim that the gasification rule is ‘‘contrary
to and frustrates the purposes’’ of the Clean
Air Act. EPA does not understand the
relevance of the Clean Air Act to this
proceeding, although coverage under the
Clean Air Act may be an issue in other
proceedings. As noted above, the issue in this
case is simply whether the recycled oilbearing hazardous secondary material
inserted into the gasifier is discarded. As a
result of the Gasification Rule, the gasifiers
would be subject to Clean Air Act § 112 (42
U.S.C. § 7412) because EPA has determined
that the material has not been discarded.
At least one of the arguments on the Clean
Air Act is taken out of context. See SC
Comments at pp. 10–12. As one aspect of its
determination that gasification is not discard,
EPA responded to public comments, which
argued that ‘‘gasification * * * is more a
waste management process involving
incineration than a petroleum refining
process’’ by comparing gasification to true
waste management incineration. See 73 FR at
61. The SC Comments, however, discuss
whether gasification involves combustion—a
matter not relevant to the Gasification Rule.
See SC Comments at pp. 11–12. Even if
combustion occurs, the issue is whether this
is a waste management activity or, as EPA
found, a ‘‘component of fuel manufacturing
operations at a petroleum refinery.’’ Id. The
occurrence of combustion, by itself, does not
render material a solid waste, if the Agency
determines that this aspect is part of the
manufacturing process and does not involve
discard of the material.
Notice and Comment Issues
Your petition states that the rule violates
the notice and comment requirements of the
APA. Your basis for this assertion is that EPA
‘‘relied on’’ a proposal suggested in a 1998
Federal Register notice 5 and ‘‘not on the
2002 proposed rule’’ 6 to formulate the
Gasification Rule. You suggest that, as a
result, the final rule ‘‘is not a ‘logical
outgrowth’ of the agency’s proposed rule’’
(Petition at p. 7) and, therefore, ‘‘the public
5 Notice of Data Availability (NODA), 63 FR
38139 (July 15, 1998).
6 ‘‘Regulation of Hazardous Oil-Bearing
Secondary Materials From the Petroleum Refining
Industry and Other Hazardous Secondary Materials
Processed in a Gasification System To Produce
Synthesis Gas; Proposed Rule,’’ 67 FR 13684 (March
25, 2002).
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was denied the opportunity for notice and
comment in several critical areas.’’ (Petition
at p. 8)
The ‘‘critical areas’’ to which you refer in
the petition are noted below.
(1) You assert that the Gasification Rule
does not contain ‘‘chemical and physical
specifications of the synthesis gas fuel
product that is produced by gasifying the oilbearing hazardous secondary materials’’
(Petition at pp. 8–10). In support of this
assertion, you refer to statements in the
preamble to the March 2002 proposal for the
Gasification Rule (67 FR 13684, et seq.) and
one statement in the January 2, 2008, final
rule. The statements in the March 2002
proposal discuss various reasons why EPA
thought, at the time, there should be
chemical and physical specifications for
synthesis gas produced and also express
concerns as to what concentrations of metals
actually exist in synthesis gas. The SC
Comments reiterate this issue at pp. 14–15.
(2) You assert that the Gasification Rule
‘‘fundamentally alters the definition of
gasification and entirely removes proposed
conditions pertaining to operation of the
gasifier,’’ particularly requirements for
slagging inorganic feed at temperatures above
2,000 degrees C. (Petition at p. 10). These
comments were reiterated in the SC
Comments at pp. 15–17.
(3) You assert that the Gasification Rule is
insufficiently protective of human health and
the environment because it did not ‘‘require
that co-products and residues generated by
the gasification system meet the Universal
Treatment Standards if these materials are
applied to the land,’’ even though the agency
had proposed such conditions in March
2002. (Petition at pp. 10–12). The SC
Comments discuss these issues at pp. 17–18.
The SC Comments (at p. 18) acknowledge
that the original petition ‘‘enumerated’’ these
APA violations. EPA responded to these
arguments in both the November 2008 letter
and the January 2011 tentative denial, and
believes it is not necessary to repeat those
responses in this final denial, and simply
incorporates by reference those responses in
this denial. In summary, in the Gasification
Rule, EPA scaled back on its plans for a more
‘‘ambitious’’ exclusion than proposed in
March 2002 and returned largely to its
original views regarding an exclusion for oilbearing hazardous secondary materials
returned to the petroleum refining system.
See 73 FR 58–59. The final Gasification Rule
retained some conditions and removed others
as a result of the agency’s deliberations on
each condition that took into account all of
the comments received. EPA had received
comments ranging from demands for full
hazardous waste regulation to those arguing
that the agency should not be regulating
gasification at all since it was an integral part
of the petroleum refining process and did not
constitute waste management. See 73 FR at
59. The variety and nature of comments
submitted demonstrates that EPA had a
record upon which to make a decision that
was based on a wide range of opinions and
information.
EPA’s November 2008 and January 2011
documents stated that the March 2002
Gasification Proposal specifically provided
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notice that the provisions of the 1998 NODA
were still being considered and noted that it
is significant that your original
administrative petition ignores this
discussion in the March 2002 proposal. The
SC Comments (at p. 18), for the first time,
respond to this notice argument. EPA
continues to defend its position that this
discussion in the March 2002 Gasification
Proposal is supportive of the agency’s
position that adequate notice and comment
was provided.7
Arbitrary and Capricious Issues
The SC Comments (at pp. 19–28) provide
a longer discussion than the original petition
on your argument that the Gasification Rule
is arbitrary and capricious. However, the
arguments for the most part are simply those
reiterated in comments on the rule and fail
to cite information not provided in the
rulemaking record which EPA has already
considered. EPA understands that you may
disagree with the agency’s conclusions, but
we believe that the regulatory choices made
by the agency are reasonable based on the
rulemaking record.
In the absence of any new relevant
information, it would not be useful for the
agency to revisit evidence and arguments it
has already carefully considered. Moreover,
in our view, the notice and comment issues
you have raised are actually discussions of
the merits of the agency’s decision with
which you disagree. See 73 FR 61–67. In fact,
the SC Comments do not point to any
information which EPA lacks to make its
decision.
Additional Issues
The SC Comments do cite two reports
issued after the Gasification Rule was
published.8 However, the information in
these studies are cumulative at best and deal
with the management of municipal solid
waste and the role that incinerators,
gasification and pyrolytic processes have on
potentially affecting the use of waste
reduction and recycling activities. Neither
report specifically explores the subject of
recycling of oil-bearing hazardous secondary
materials at a petroleum refinery through
gasification. Furthermore, the Gasification
Rule applies only to gasification operations
occurring at petroleum refineries for the
recycling of oil-bearing hazardous materials
and does not apply to other secondary
materials, including municipal solid waste.
In addition, Sierra Club alleges that EPA
predicted that ‘‘over 150 refineries * * *
could potentially exploit’’ the Gasification
Rule and thereby burn over 320,000 tons of
hazardous waste without adequate
protections. As discussed in the final rule,
7 For example, see footnote 2 of the preamble
found at 67 FR 13685, footnote 9 of the preamble
found at 67 FR 13688, and the discussion in Section
VI of the preamble found at 67 FR 13689.
8 Waste Gasification—Impact on the Environment
and Public Health. The Blue Ridge Environmental
Defense League. February 2009. An Industry
Blowing Smoke. 10 Reasons Why Gasification,
Pyrolysis and Plasma Incineration are Not Green
Solutions. Global Alliance for Incinerator
Alternatives Global Anti-Incinerator Alliance. June
2009.
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the agency’s cost-benefits analysis was based
on two scenarios drawn from
U.S. Department of Energy projections on the
future of gasification operations at petroleum
refineries: A low capacity analysis (three
gasifiers employed at three different
refineries) and a high capacity analysis (five
gasifiers at five refineries). This is far
different than the 150 refineries Sierra Club
argues would ‘‘exploit’’ the exclusion.9 As for
the 320,000 tons of hazardous waste being
burned, this number represents the total
amount of hazardous waste generated by
petroleum refineries in 2003 as reported to
the RCRA Biennial Reporting System (BRS)
and in no way represents the amount of oilbearing hazardous secondary material which
would be fed into a gasifier at a petroleum
refinery.10
Finally, Sierra Club introduces yet another
new issue, not raised in the original
administrative petition, regarding EPA’s
failure to adequately assess environmental
justice as part of its cost assessment and the
agency’s lack of effort to ascertain the full
range of threats the Gasification Rule would
present to disadvantaged, low-income and
minority communities living nearby the
exempted refineries. The agency concluded,
based on its technical analysis supporting the
rule, that the gasification of hazardous
secondary materials at petroleum refineries
does not represent a greater risk to the public
9 This number is based on data from the 2003
RCRA Biennial Reporting System (BRS) using the
following waste codes K048–K052, K169–K172,
F037 and F038. This is hazardous waste that was
reported to EPA that was generated and managed
in 2003. The BRS reported 324,371 tons of
hazardous waste generated by 153 sites (Standard
Industrial Classification 2911). The average
generation rate was calculated at 2,314 tons per
year, with a maximum generation rate of 76,582
tons per year and a minimum of less than 1 ton per
year. Information from the report, Refinery
Technology Profiles: Gasification and Supporting
Technologies. U.S. Department of Energy, National
Energy Technology Laboratory, June 2003, suggests
that growth in petroleum refinery gasification will
most likely be driven by future supply and demand
of petroleum coke with approximately 40 refineries
within the U.S. producing sufficient quantities of
petroleum coke to be considered candidates for the
addition of gasification to their production process.
The report suggests a market penetration rate of one
plant every two years. EPA’s analysis shows that
both waste characterization data and waste
generation rates indicate that industry would
probably not build a gasification unit dedicated to
gasifying oil-bearing hazardous secondary materials
and the most probable gasification scenario would
be a petroleum refinery building a gasification unit
for petroleum coke gasification with oil-bearing
hazardous secondary materials possibly used as a
supplemental feed (accounting for between 0.1 and
10 percent of the total feed rate) (docket item EPA–
HQ–RCRA–2002–0002–0110). Given these
assumptions, EPA would estimate that with an
average generation rate of 10,000 tons per year of
oil-bearing hazardous secondary material, a total of
no more than 50,000 tons per year of oil-bearing
hazardous secondary material would be placed into
a gasification unit as part of the petroleum refining
process.
10 See: Assessment of the Potential Costs,
Benefits, and Other Impacts of the Exclusion for
Gasification of Petroleum Oil-bearing Secondary
Materials—Final Rule (docket item EPA–HQ–
RCRA–2002–0002–0089).
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than the baseline used to develop the
analysis.11
As previously stated, a document will be
published in the Federal Register
announcing the agency’s final decision to
deny your administrative petition. If you
should have any questions, please contact
Alan Carpien, EPA’s Office of General
Counsel at (202) 564–5507.
Sincerely,
Mathy Stanislaus,
Assistant Administrator, Office of Solid
Waste and Emergency Response.
Dated: April 3, 2012.
Mathy Stanislaus,
Assistant Administrator, Office of Solid
Waste and Emergency Response.
[FR Doc. 2012–8921 Filed 4–12–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 261 and 266
[EPA–RCRA–2008–0678; FRL–9659–7]
RIN 2050–AG52
Hazardous Waste Technical
Corrections and Clarifications Rule
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA or the Agency) is taking
final action on two of six technical
amendments that were withdrawn in a
June 4, 2010, Federal Register partial
withdrawal notice. The two
amendments that are the subject of
today’s final rule are: A correction of the
typographical error in the entry ‘‘K107’’
in a table listing hazardous wastes from
specific sources; and a conforming
change to alert certain recycling
facilities that they have existing
certification and notification
requirements under the Land Disposal
Restrictions regulations. The other four
amendments that were withdrawn in
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SUMMARY:
11 The rule is projected to result in benefit-cost
savings for petroleum refineries using the
exclusion. Petroleum refineries choosing not to take
advantage of the exclusion would experience no
direct impact from the rule. The benefit-cost
analysis showed between $5.2 million and $48.7
million in net social benefits per year with avoided
waste management costs constituting the most
significant share of the benefits, followed by the
energy savings from increased fuel production. The
analysis further showed that the areas potentially
affected by the rule showed disproportionately high
minority/low income populations, but that
gasification of oil-bearing hazardous secondary
materials does not represent a greater risk to the
public than baseline management, and that as less
material is received by hazardous waste
management facilities, low income and minority
populations would likely experience a potential
reduction in risk under the rule.
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the June 2010 partial withdrawal notice
will remain withdrawn unless and until
EPA determines action is warranted in
the future.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
May 14, 2012.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–RCRA–2008–0678. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the www.regulations.gov Web site.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., Confidential Business Information
(CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, will be publicly
available only in hard copy. Publicly
available docket materials are available
either electronically at
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the OSWER Docket, EPA/DC, EPA West,
Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave.
NW., Washington, DC. The Public
Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday,
excluding legal holidays. The telephone
number for the Public Reading Room is
(202) 566–1744, and the telephone
number for the RCRA Docket is (202)
566–0270.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jim
O’Leary, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Office of Resource
Conservation and Recovery, MC 5304P,
1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20460, Phone: (703)
308–8827; or email: oleary.jim@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Why is EPA publishing this final
rule?
On March 18, 2010, EPA published in
the Federal Register a Direct Final rule
entitled, Hazardous Waste Technical
Corrections and Clarifications Rule (75
FR 12989) (hereafter the Direct Final
rule). This Direct Final rule included
approximately 90 specific technical
amendments to correct or clarify parts of
the Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act (RCRA) hazardous waste
regulations. At the same time, EPA also
published a parallel proposed rule (75
FR 13006) that requested comment on
the same changes.
We stated in that Direct Final rule that
if we received adverse comment on any
of the amendments by May 3, 2010, the
affected amendments would not take
effect and we would publish a timely
withdrawal in the Federal Register of
those specific amendments. We received
some adverse comments and as a result
withdrew six amendments on June 4,
2010 (75 FR 31716). The remaining
amendments for which we did not
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
22229
receive adverse comment became
effective on June 16, 2010.
The six amendments that were
withdrawn are:
• 40 CFR 262.34(a)—related to the
hazardous waste accumulation time for
large quantity generators;
• 40 CFR 262.34(a)(2)—related to the
date upon which each period of
accumulation begins and which must be
clearly marked and visible for
inspection on each container and tank;
• 40 CFR 262.34(a)(5)—related to the
closure requirements for tanks,
containers, drip pads and containment
buildings;
• 40 CFR 262.34(a)(1)(iv)(B)—also
related to the closure requirements for
tanks, containers, drip pads and
containment buildings;
• 40 CFR 266.20(b)—related to
recyclable materials used in a manner
constituting disposal; and
• 40 CFR 261.32(a)—related to the
entry for hazardous waste number K107
in a table.
EPA is publishing today’s final rule to
address the adverse comments received
on the last two amendments listed
above and to finalize these amendments.
The amendments we are finalizing are:
(1) Making the conforming change to 40
CFR 266.20(b); and (2) correcting the
entry ‘‘K107’’ in the table at 40 CFR
261.32(a). The other four amendments
that were withdrawn will remain
withdrawn unless and until EPA
decides to take action on them in the
future.1
II. Does this action apply to me?
Entities potentially affected by this
action include facilities subject to the
RCRA hazardous waste regulations and
states implementing the RCRA
hazardous waste regulations.
III. Acronyms
Acronym
Definition
CFR .............
United States Code of Federal
Regulations.
United States Environmental
Protection Agency.
Hazardous and Solid Waste
Amendments.
Office of Management and
Budget.
Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act.
United States Code.
EPA .............
HSWA ..........
OMB ............
RCRA ..........
U.S.C ...........
1 See the public docket for this rule regarding the
specific comments that were submitted on the four
amendments that are not being finalized today.
E:\FR\FM\13APR1.SGM
13APR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 72 (Friday, April 13, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 22226-22229]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-8921]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 260 and 261
[EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0808; FRL 9658-3]
RIN-2050-AE78
Regulation of Oil-Bearing Hazardous Secondary Materials From the
Petroleum Refining Industry Processed in a Gasification System To
Produce Synthesis Gas; Final Determination To Deny Administrative
Petition
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule; final determination to deny administrative
petition.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is providing notice of a final determination to deny an
administrative petition submitted by Earthjustice on behalf of the
Sierra Club and the Louisiana Environmental Action Network under the
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. The petition requested EPA to
review the final rule, ``Regulation of Oil-Bearing Hazardous Secondary
Materials From the Petroleum Refining Industry Processed in a
Gasification System To Produce Synthesis Gas,'' published in the
Federal Register on January 2, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Alan Carpien, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Office of General Counsel, Mail Code 2366A, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460; telephone (202) 564-5507;
or carpien.alan@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. How can I get copies of this document and other related information?
1. Docket. EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0808. Publicly available docket
materials are available either electronically through
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at the RCRA Docket in the EPA
Docket Center, (EPA/DC) EPA West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave.
NW., Washington, DC. The EPA Docket Center Public Reading Room is open
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal
holidays. The telephone number for the Public Reading Room is (202)
566-1744, and the telephone number for the RCRA Docket is (202) 566-
0270. A reasonable fee may be charged for copying docket materials.
2. Electronic Access. You may access this Federal Register document
electronically through the EPA Internet under the Federal Register
listings at https://www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/.
II. Summary of the Action
EPA is providing notice of a final determination to deny an
administrative petition submitted by Earthjustice on behalf of the
Sierra Club and the Louisiana Environmental Action Network under the
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. EPA issued an earlier notice
tentatively denying this same petition in January 2011 and solicited
written comments on this tentative decision (76 FR 5107, Jan. 28,
2011). The petition requested EPA to review the final rule,
``Regulation of Oil-Bearing Hazardous Secondary Materials From the
Petroleum Refining Industry Processed in a Gasification System To
Produce Synthesis Gas,'' published in the Federal Register on January
2, 2008 (73 FR 57). The EPA has considered the petition, along with
information contained in the rulemaking docket, as well as the five
public comments received on the tentative denial. After evaluating all
of this information, EPA has decided to issue a final determination
denying the petition. In a letter from EPA Assistant Administrator
Mathy Stanislaus dated April 3, 2012, EPA provided the petitioner with
its final decision to deny the administrative petition. The letter,
which is included as an Appendix to this Federal Register document
explains EPA's reasons for denying the petition, as well as discussing
the other comments received on the tentative denial.
Appendix: Letter to Earthjustice Denying Administrative Petition
Ms. Lisa Gollin Evans
Earthjustice
21 Ocean Avenue
Marblehead, MA 01945
Dear Ms. Evans:
This letter is written to inform you of our final determination
to deny the April 1, 2008 administrative petition you submitted to
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or the agency) under
the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) Sec. 7004(a), 42
U.S.C. Sec. 6974(a) on behalf of the Sierra Club and the Louisiana
Environmental Action Network (LEAN) (hereafter referred to as
``Sierra Club''). Sierra Club requested that EPA review the final
rule, ``Regulation of Oil-Bearing Hazardous Secondary Materials from
the Petroleum Refining Industry Processed in a Gasification System
to Produce Synthesis Gas'' (Gasification Rule). This final rule was
published in the Federal Register on January 2, 2008 (73 FR 57, et
seq.). The petition raised both procedural (notice and comment) and
substantive grounds for seeking the agency's review of the
Gasification Rule. EPA has made a final determination to deny the
petition and in accordance with the regulatory requirements of 40
CFR 260.20, EPA is providing notice of this determination to deny
the petition in the Federal Register.
A tentative denial was issued on January 19, 2011, and published
in the Federal Register on January 28, 2011 (76 FR 5107).
[[Page 22227]]
Sierra Club filed comments on this tentative denial (hereafter
referred to as ``SC Comments'').\1\ This final denial responds to
the additional points raised in the SC Comments that were not raised
in previous submittals and incorporates all previous agency
responses to your original petition.\2\
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\1\ See docket item EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0808-0017.
\2\ We note that Sec. 7004(a) of RCRA, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 6974,
provides that any person may petition the Administrator for the
promulgation, amendment or repeal of any regulation under the Act.
While your original petition failed to state whether you were
requesting that EPA amend or repeal the Gasification Rule, the SC
Comments request the agency ``revoke the Rule in its entirety.'' SC
Comments at p. 2. EPA also received another comment from a number of
environmental organizations and persons (EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0808-0018)
requesting that the agency revoke the rule. This comment is regarded
by the agency as general support for the SC comments, in that it
mirrored the concerns raised in the comments submitted by
Earthjustice. (See comment EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0808-0018 for a complete
list of the environmental organizations and persons that submitted
this comment.)
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This final denial to your petition adopts all of the reasoning
stated in our letter of November 2008 \3\ and the January 2011
tentative denial, both of which are incorporated into this reply. We
find no new substantive arguments in your comments that would cause
the agency to grant your administrative petition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Letters to Lisa Gollin Evans and James S. Pew, Earthjustice,
from Susan Parker Bodine, EPA Assistant Administrator, dated
November 14, 2008. This letter is available in the docket (docket
item EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0808-0004 and EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0808-0006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In general, you argue that EPA has improperly and arbitrarily
removed hazardous wastes from RCRA's comprehensive cradle-to-grave
regulatory system and that EPA's Gasification Rule is directly
contrary to what you describe as RCRA's statutory mandate to
regulate the treatment, storage, and disposal of hazardous waste
derived fuels and the burning of hazardous wastes. For the first
time, in the proceeding on this rule, you also claim that it
frustrates the Clean Air Act. You argue, furthermore, that EPA's
``finding'' that this rule will not jeopardize human health and the
environment is unsupported by the administrative record for this
rulemaking. Finally, you argue that the Gasification Rule was
promulgated in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
EPA disagrees with your comments. The agency has properly
excluded the materials in question from RCRA Subtitle C regulation
and does not expect adverse effects on human health or the
environment from this regulation. EPA finds that you have not
presented any new information that would suggest or otherwise
require that we review the Gasification Rule, nor have you raised
any issues that have not already been raised by the comments in the
rulemaking process. EPA also finds that the Gasification Rule meets
the notice and comment requirements of the APA and, therefore,
disagrees with your view that the agency did not provide adequate
notice to the public and an opportunity to comment on the provisions
of the final rule.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ The American Petroleum Institute (API) (docket item EPA-HQ-
RCRA-2008-0808-0010) and the Metals Industries Recycling Coalition
(MIRC) (docket item EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0808-0013) also filed comments
supporting the Gasification Rule. EPA accepts the reasoning in the
comments in support of the decision with the exception that the
agency does not agree that the residuals inserted into the
gasification process ``may not be considered solid or hazardous
wastes under controlling case law.'' API comments at p. 9. Rather,
EPA has determined that it has the discretion to exclude the
residuals from the definition of solid waste. A comment submitted by
Industry Professionals for Clean Air and Air Alliance Houston
(docket item EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0808-0012) expresses concern regarding
monitoring and regulation of gasification processes. This is simply
a general comment that EPA acknowledges regarding the appropriate
monitoring and regulation under both RCRA and the Clean Air Act for
these facilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Legal Arguments
EPA has discussed in earlier responses that it disagrees with
Sierra Club's legal argument that the final rule does not comport
with RCRA Sec. 3004(q), 42 U.S.C. Sec. 6924(q). Because EPA is
providing an exclusion from the definition of solid waste for oil-
bearing hazardous secondary materials fed to gasifiers subject to
this rule, EPA does not implicate the provisions of section 3004(q),
which requires that the hazardous secondary material first be a
solid waste. Nothing cited in your legal argument refutes this
point. Discussion in SC Comments at pp. 6-7 merely provides a
cumulative argument that burning of hazardous wastes must be
regulated. Since the oil-bearing hazardous secondary materials are
not considered solid wastes, they cannot be hazardous wastes.
Further, Sierra Club raises a legal argument that has already
been considered and rejected by the D.C. Circuit. In American Mining
Congress (AMC) v. EPA, 824 F2d. 1177, 1187-89, the agency relied
upon section 3004(q) to defend a broad definition of solid waste.
The court specifically considered whether the exemption in section
3004(q)(2)(A) for ``petroleum refinery wastes containing oil which
are converted into petroleum coke at the same facility at which such
wastes were generated'' implies that the term ``solid waste'' may
include materials that have not been disposed of, but that are
destined for reuse in another process. The court concluded that the
exemption does not carry that implication, and section 3004(q) only
applies to materials that have already become hazardous. See AMC at
1188 & n.16.
Plainly, section 3004(q) directs EPA to regulate all facilities
that ``produce a fuel from hazardous wastes'' or ``burn, for
purposes of energy recovery'' any such fuel. 42 U.S.C. Sec. 3004.
Moreover, EPA agrees with the thrust of your comment that a recycled
material does not become a non-waste simply because it is burned or
processed to produce a fuel. Rather, the issue is whether the
recycled material is discarded.
The SC Comments (pp. 8-10) seem to imply that case law says that
burning of recycled secondary materials is a waste activity,
regardless. However, none of the cases cited deal with burning of
material. In fact, the only case in the United States Court of
Appeals that deals with whether certain burning of material is a
waste found that the burning was not a waste activity. See Safe Air
For Everyone v. Waynemeyer (``Safe Air''), 373 F.3d 1035 (9th Cir.
2004) (Kentucky bluegrass stubble burned to return nutrients to the
soil is not a solid waste).
Your argument, including your discussions of the Clean Air Act,
is ultimately based on your ``assertion'' that, in turn, EPA
believes material inserted into a gasifier is not discarded. EPA
disagrees. The agency, however, stands on the record developed in
the rule for its determination that the recycled oil-bearing
hazardous secondary material excluded from the definition of solid
waste in this rule is not discarded.
For the first time in the SC Comments, you claim that the
gasification rule is ``contrary to and frustrates the purposes'' of
the Clean Air Act. EPA does not understand the relevance of the
Clean Air Act to this proceeding, although coverage under the Clean
Air Act may be an issue in other proceedings. As noted above, the
issue in this case is simply whether the recycled oil-bearing
hazardous secondary material inserted into the gasifier is
discarded. As a result of the Gasification Rule, the gasifiers would
be subject to Clean Air Act Sec. 112 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 7412) because
EPA has determined that the material has not been discarded.
At least one of the arguments on the Clean Air Act is taken out
of context. See SC Comments at pp. 10-12. As one aspect of its
determination that gasification is not discard, EPA responded to
public comments, which argued that ``gasification * * * is more a
waste management process involving incineration than a petroleum
refining process'' by comparing gasification to true waste
management incineration. See 73 FR at 61. The SC Comments, however,
discuss whether gasification involves combustion--a matter not
relevant to the Gasification Rule. See SC Comments at pp. 11-12.
Even if combustion occurs, the issue is whether this is a waste
management activity or, as EPA found, a ``component of fuel
manufacturing operations at a petroleum refinery.'' Id. The
occurrence of combustion, by itself, does not render material a
solid waste, if the Agency determines that this aspect is part of
the manufacturing process and does not involve discard of the
material.
Notice and Comment Issues
Your petition states that the rule violates the notice and
comment requirements of the APA. Your basis for this assertion is
that EPA ``relied on'' a proposal suggested in a 1998 Federal
Register notice \5\ and ``not on the 2002 proposed rule'' \6\ to
formulate the Gasification Rule. You suggest that, as a result, the
final rule ``is not a `logical outgrowth' of the agency's proposed
rule'' (Petition at p. 7) and, therefore, ``the public
[[Page 22228]]
was denied the opportunity for notice and comment in several
critical areas.'' (Petition at p. 8)
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\5\ Notice of Data Availability (NODA), 63 FR 38139 (July 15,
1998).
\6\ ``Regulation of Hazardous Oil-Bearing Secondary Materials
From the Petroleum Refining Industry and Other Hazardous Secondary
Materials Processed in a Gasification System To Produce Synthesis
Gas; Proposed Rule,'' 67 FR 13684 (March 25, 2002).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The ``critical areas'' to which you refer in the petition are
noted below.
(1) You assert that the Gasification Rule does not contain
``chemical and physical specifications of the synthesis gas fuel
product that is produced by gasifying the oil-bearing hazardous
secondary materials'' (Petition at pp. 8-10). In support of this
assertion, you refer to statements in the preamble to the March 2002
proposal for the Gasification Rule (67 FR 13684, et seq.) and one
statement in the January 2, 2008, final rule. The statements in the
March 2002 proposal discuss various reasons why EPA thought, at the
time, there should be chemical and physical specifications for
synthesis gas produced and also express concerns as to what
concentrations of metals actually exist in synthesis gas. The SC
Comments reiterate this issue at pp. 14-15.
(2) You assert that the Gasification Rule ``fundamentally alters
the definition of gasification and entirely removes proposed
conditions pertaining to operation of the gasifier,'' particularly
requirements for slagging inorganic feed at temperatures above 2,000
degrees C. (Petition at p. 10). These comments were reiterated in
the SC Comments at pp. 15-17.
(3) You assert that the Gasification Rule is insufficiently
protective of human health and the environment because it did not
``require that co-products and residues generated by the
gasification system meet the Universal Treatment Standards if these
materials are applied to the land,'' even though the agency had
proposed such conditions in March 2002. (Petition at pp. 10-12). The
SC Comments discuss these issues at pp. 17-18.
The SC Comments (at p. 18) acknowledge that the original
petition ``enumerated'' these APA violations. EPA responded to these
arguments in both the November 2008 letter and the January 2011
tentative denial, and believes it is not necessary to repeat those
responses in this final denial, and simply incorporates by reference
those responses in this denial. In summary, in the Gasification
Rule, EPA scaled back on its plans for a more ``ambitious''
exclusion than proposed in March 2002 and returned largely to its
original views regarding an exclusion for oil-bearing hazardous
secondary materials returned to the petroleum refining system. See
73 FR 58-59. The final Gasification Rule retained some conditions
and removed others as a result of the agency's deliberations on each
condition that took into account all of the comments received. EPA
had received comments ranging from demands for full hazardous waste
regulation to those arguing that the agency should not be regulating
gasification at all since it was an integral part of the petroleum
refining process and did not constitute waste management. See 73 FR
at 59. The variety and nature of comments submitted demonstrates
that EPA had a record upon which to make a decision that was based
on a wide range of opinions and information.
EPA's November 2008 and January 2011 documents stated that the
March 2002 Gasification Proposal specifically provided notice that
the provisions of the 1998 NODA were still being considered and
noted that it is significant that your original administrative
petition ignores this discussion in the March 2002 proposal. The SC
Comments (at p. 18), for the first time, respond to this notice
argument. EPA continues to defend its position that this discussion
in the March 2002 Gasification Proposal is supportive of the
agency's position that adequate notice and comment was provided.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ For example, see footnote 2 of the preamble found at 67 FR
13685, footnote 9 of the preamble found at 67 FR 13688, and the
discussion in Section VI of the preamble found at 67 FR 13689.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arbitrary and Capricious Issues
The SC Comments (at pp. 19-28) provide a longer discussion than
the original petition on your argument that the Gasification Rule is
arbitrary and capricious. However, the arguments for the most part
are simply those reiterated in comments on the rule and fail to cite
information not provided in the rulemaking record which EPA has
already considered. EPA understands that you may disagree with the
agency's conclusions, but we believe that the regulatory choices
made by the agency are reasonable based on the rulemaking record.
In the absence of any new relevant information, it would not be
useful for the agency to revisit evidence and arguments it has
already carefully considered. Moreover, in our view, the notice and
comment issues you have raised are actually discussions of the
merits of the agency's decision with which you disagree. See 73 FR
61-67. In fact, the SC Comments do not point to any information
which EPA lacks to make its decision.
Additional Issues
The SC Comments do cite two reports issued after the
Gasification Rule was published.\8\ However, the information in
these studies are cumulative at best and deal with the management of
municipal solid waste and the role that incinerators, gasification
and pyrolytic processes have on potentially affecting the use of
waste reduction and recycling activities. Neither report
specifically explores the subject of recycling of oil-bearing
hazardous secondary materials at a petroleum refinery through
gasification. Furthermore, the Gasification Rule applies only to
gasification operations occurring at petroleum refineries for the
recycling of oil-bearing hazardous materials and does not apply to
other secondary materials, including municipal solid waste.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Waste Gasification--Impact on the Environment and Public
Health. The Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League. February 2009.
An Industry Blowing Smoke. 10 Reasons Why Gasification, Pyrolysis
and Plasma Incineration are Not Green Solutions. Global Alliance for
Incinerator Alternatives Global Anti-Incinerator Alliance. June
2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, Sierra Club alleges that EPA predicted that ``over
150 refineries * * * could potentially exploit'' the Gasification
Rule and thereby burn over 320,000 tons of hazardous waste without
adequate protections. As discussed in the final rule, the agency's
cost-benefits analysis was based on two scenarios drawn from U.S.
Department of Energy projections on the future of gasification
operations at petroleum refineries: A low capacity analysis (three
gasifiers employed at three different refineries) and a high
capacity analysis (five gasifiers at five refineries). This is far
different than the 150 refineries Sierra Club argues would
``exploit'' the exclusion.\9\ As for the 320,000 tons of hazardous
waste being burned, this number represents the total amount of
hazardous waste generated by petroleum refineries in 2003 as
reported to the RCRA Biennial Reporting System (BRS) and in no way
represents the amount of oil-bearing hazardous secondary material
which would be fed into a gasifier at a petroleum refinery.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ This number is based on data from the 2003 RCRA Biennial
Reporting System (BRS) using the following waste codes K048-K052,
K169-K172, F037 and F038. This is hazardous waste that was reported
to EPA that was generated and managed in 2003. The BRS reported
324,371 tons of hazardous waste generated by 153 sites (Standard
Industrial Classification 2911). The average generation rate was
calculated at 2,314 tons per year, with a maximum generation rate of
76,582 tons per year and a minimum of less than 1 ton per year.
Information from the report, Refinery Technology Profiles:
Gasification and Supporting Technologies. U.S. Department of Energy,
National Energy Technology Laboratory, June 2003, suggests that
growth in petroleum refinery gasification will most likely be driven
by future supply and demand of petroleum coke with approximately 40
refineries within the U.S. producing sufficient quantities of
petroleum coke to be considered candidates for the addition of
gasification to their production process. The report suggests a
market penetration rate of one plant every two years. EPA's analysis
shows that both waste characterization data and waste generation
rates indicate that industry would probably not build a gasification
unit dedicated to gasifying oil-bearing hazardous secondary
materials and the most probable gasification scenario would be a
petroleum refinery building a gasification unit for petroleum coke
gasification with oil-bearing hazardous secondary materials possibly
used as a supplemental feed (accounting for between 0.1 and 10
percent of the total feed rate) (docket item EPA-HQ-RCRA-2002-0002-
0110). Given these assumptions, EPA would estimate that with an
average generation rate of 10,000 tons per year of oil-bearing
hazardous secondary material, a total of no more than 50,000 tons
per year of oil-bearing hazardous secondary material would be placed
into a gasification unit as part of the petroleum refining process.
\10\ See: Assessment of the Potential Costs, Benefits, and Other
Impacts of the Exclusion for Gasification of Petroleum Oil-bearing
Secondary Materials--Final Rule (docket item EPA-HQ-RCRA-2002-0002-
0089).
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Finally, Sierra Club introduces yet another new issue, not
raised in the original administrative petition, regarding EPA's
failure to adequately assess environmental justice as part of its
cost assessment and the agency's lack of effort to ascertain the
full range of threats the Gasification Rule would present to
disadvantaged, low-income and minority communities living nearby the
exempted refineries. The agency concluded, based on its technical
analysis supporting the rule, that the gasification of hazardous
secondary materials at petroleum refineries does not represent a
greater risk to the public
[[Page 22229]]
than the baseline used to develop the analysis.\11\
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\11\ The rule is projected to result in benefit-cost savings for
petroleum refineries using the exclusion. Petroleum refineries
choosing not to take advantage of the exclusion would experience no
direct impact from the rule. The benefit-cost analysis showed
between $5.2 million and $48.7 million in net social benefits per
year with avoided waste management costs constituting the most
significant share of the benefits, followed by the energy savings
from increased fuel production. The analysis further showed that the
areas potentially affected by the rule showed disproportionately
high minority/low income populations, but that gasification of oil-
bearing hazardous secondary materials does not represent a greater
risk to the public than baseline management, and that as less
material is received by hazardous waste management facilities, low
income and minority populations would likely experience a potential
reduction in risk under the rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As previously stated, a document will be published in the
Federal Register announcing the agency's final decision to deny your
administrative petition. If you should have any questions, please
contact Alan Carpien, EPA's Office of General Counsel at (202) 564-
5507.
Sincerely,
Mathy Stanislaus,
Assistant Administrator, Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response.
Dated: April 3, 2012.
Mathy Stanislaus,
Assistant Administrator, Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response.
[FR Doc. 2012-8921 Filed 4-12-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P