Effluent Limitations Guidelines and Standards for the Steam Electric Power Generating Point Source Category, 67837-67903 [2015-25663]
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Vol. 80
Tuesday,
No. 212
November 3, 2015
Part II
Environmental Protection Agency
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40 CFR Part 423
Effluent Limitations Guidelines and Standards for the Steam Electric Power
Generating Point Source Category; Final Rule
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 212 / Tuesday, November 3, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 423
[EPA–HQ–OW–2009–0819; FRL–9930–48–
OW]
RIN 2040–AF14
Effluent Limitations Guidelines and
Standards for the Steam Electric
Power Generating Point Source
Category
Environmental Protection
Agency.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule, promulgated
under the Clean Water Act (CWA),
protects public health and the
environment from toxic metals and
other harmful pollutants, including
nutrients, by strengthening the
technology-based effluent limitations
guidelines and standards (ELGs) for the
steam electric power generating
industry. Steam electric power plants
contribute the greatest amount of all
toxic pollutants discharged to surface
waters by industrial categories regulated
under the CWA. The pollutants
discharged by this industry can cause
severe health and environmental
problems in the form of cancer and noncancer risks in humans, lowered IQ
among children, and deformities and
reproductive harm in fish and wildlife.
Many of these pollutants, once in the
environment, remain there for years.
Due to their close proximity to these
discharges and relatively high
consumption of fish, some minority and
low-income communities have greater
exposure to, and are therefore at greater
risk from, pollutants in steam electric
power plant discharges. The final rule
establishes the first nationally
applicable limits on the amount of toxic
metals and other harmful pollutants that
steam electric power plants are allowed
to discharge in several of their largest
sources of wastewater. On an annual
basis, the rule reduces the amount of
toxic metals, nutrients, and other
pollutants that steam electric power
plants are allowed to discharge by 1.4
billion pounds; it reduces water
withdrawal by 57 billion gallons; and, it
has social costs of $480 million and
monetized benefits of $451 to $566
million.
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SUMMARY:
The final rule is effective on
January 4, 2016. In accordance with 40
CFR part 23, this regulation shall be
considered issued for purposes of
judicial review at 1 p.m. Eastern time on
November 17, 2015. Under section
509(b)(1) of the CWA, judicial review of
DATES:
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this regulation can be had only by filing
a petition for review in the U.S. Court
of Appeals within 120 days after the
regulation is considered issued for
purposes of judicial review. Under
section 509(b)(2), the requirements in
this regulation may not be challenged
later in civil or criminal proceedings
brought by EPA to enforce these
requirements.
ADDRESSES: Docket: All documents in
the docket are listed in the https://
www.regulations.gov index. A detailed
record index, organized by subject, is
available on EPA’s Web site at https://
www2.epa.gov/eg/steam-electric-powergenerating-effluent-guidelines-2015final-rule. Although listed in the index,
some information is not publicly
available, e.g., Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, will be publicly
available only in hard copy. Publicly
available docket materials are available
either electronically in https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the Water Docket in the EPA Docket
Center, 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 Water Docket is 202–566–2426.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
technical information, contact Ronald
Jordan, Engineering and Analysis
Division, Telephone: 202–566–1003;
Email: jordan.ronald@epa.gov. For
economic information, contact James
Covington, Engineering and Analysis
Division, Telephone: 202–566–1034;
Email: covington.james@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Organization of This Preamble
Table of Contents
I. Regulated Entities and Supporting
Documentation
A. Regulated Entities
B. Supporting Documentation
II. Legal Authority for This Action
III. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of the Rule
B. Summary of Final Rule
C. Summary of Costs and Benefits
IV. Background
A. Clean Water Act
B. Effluent Guidelines Program
1. Best Practicable Control Technology
Currently Available
2. Best Conventional Pollutant Control
Technology
3. Best Available Technology Economically
Achievable
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4. Best Available Demonstrated Control
Technology/New Source Performance
Standards
5. Pretreatment Standards for Existing
Sources
6. Pretreatment Standards for New Sources
C. Steam Electric Effluent Guidelines
Rulemaking History
V. Key Updates Since Proposal
A. Industry Profile Changes Due to
Retirements and Conversions
B. EPA Consideration of Other Federal
Rules
C. Advancements in Technologies
D. Engineering Costs
E. Economic Impact Analysis
F. Pollutant Data
G. Environmental Assessment Models
VI. Industry Description
A. General Description of Industry
B. Steam Electric Process Wastewater and
Control Technologies
1. FGD Wastewater
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
4. FGMC Wastewater
5. Combustion Residual Leachate From
Landfills and Surface Impoundments
6. Gasification Wastewater
VII. Selection of Regulated Pollutants
A. Identifying the Pollutants of Concern
B. Selection of Pollutants for Regulation
Under BAT/NSPS
C. Methodology for the POTW PassThrough Analysis (PSES/PSNS)
VIII. The Final Rule
A. BPT
B. BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS Options
1. FGD Wastewater
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
4. FGMC Wastewater
5. Gasification Wastewater
6. Combustion Residual Leachate
7. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Wastes
C. Best Available Technology
1. FGD Wastewater
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
4. FGMC Wastewater
5. Gasification Wastewater
6. Combustion Residual Leachate
7. Timing
8. Legacy Wastewater
9. Economic Achievability
10. Non-Water Quality Environmental
Impacts, Including Energy Requirements
11. Impacts on Residential Electricity
Prices and Low-Income and Minority
Populations
12. Existing Oil-Fired and Small
Generating Units
13. Voluntary Incentives Program
D. Best Available Demonstrated Control
Technology/NSPS
E. PSES
F. PSNS
G. Anti-Circumvention Provision
H. Other Revisions
1. Correction of Typographical Error for
PSNS
2. Clarification of Applicability
I. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Wastes
J. Best Management Practices
IX. Costs and Economic Impact
A. Plant-Specific and Industry Total Costs
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B. Social Costs
C. Economic Impacts
1. Summary of Economic Impacts for
Existing Sources
2. Summary of Economic Impacts for New
Sources
X. Pollutant Reductions
XI. Development of Effluent Limitations and
Standards
XII. Non-Water Quality Environmental
Impacts
XIII. Environmental Assessment
A. Introduction
B. Summary of Human Health and
Environmental Impacts
C. Environmental Assessment
Methodology
D. Outputs From the Environmental
Assessment
1. Improvements in Surface Water and
Ground Water Quality
2. Reduced Impacts to Wildlife
3. Reduced Human Health Cancer Risk
4. Reduced Threat of Non-Cancer Human
Health Effects
5. Reduced Nutrient Impacts
E. Unquantified Environmental and
Human Health Improvements
F. Other Secondary Improvements
XIV. Benefit Analysis
A. Categories of Benefits Analyzed
B. Quantification and Monetization of
Benefits
1. Human Health Benefits From Surface
Water Quality Improvements
2. Improved Ecological Conditions and
Recreational Use Benefits From Surface
Water Quality Improvements
3. Market and Productivity Benefits
4. Air-Related Benefits (Human Health and
Avoided Climate Change Impacts)
5. Benefits From Reduced Water
Withdrawals (Increased Availability of
Ground Water Resources)
C. Total Monetized Benefits
D. Other Benefits
XV. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
A. Methodology
B. Results
XVI. Regulatory Implementation
A. Implementation of the Limitations and
Standards
1. Timing
2. Applicability of NSPS/PSNS
3. Legacy Wastewater
4. Combined Wastestreams
5. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Wastes
B. Upset and Bypass Provisions
C. Variances and Modifications
1. Fundamentally Different Factors
Variance
2. Economic Variances
3. Water Quality Variances
4. Removal Credits
D. Site-Specific Water Quality-Based
Effluent Limitations
XVII. Related Acts of Congress, Executive
Orders, and Agency Initiatives
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
To Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
Appendix A to the Preamble: Definitions,
Acronyms, and Abbreviations Used in
This Preamble
I. Regulated Entities and Supporting
Documentation
A. Regulated Entities
Entities potentially regulated by this
action include:
North American
Industry Classification System
(NAICS) Code
Category
Example of regulated entity
Industry .....................................................
Electric Power Generation Facilities—Electric Power Generation ............................
Electric Power Generation Facilities—Fossil Fuel Electric Power Generation ..........
Electric Power Generation Facilities—Nuclear Electric Power Generation ...............
• Environmental Assessment for the
Effluent Limitations Guidelines and
Standards for the Steam Electric Power
Generating Point Source Category (EA),
Document No. EPA–821–R–15–006.
• Benefits and Cost Analysis for the
Effluent Limitations Guidelines and
Standards for the Steam Electric Power
Generating Point Source Category
(BCA), Document No. EPA–821–R–15–
005.
• Regulatory Impact Analysis for the
Effluent Limitations Guidelines and
Standards for the Steam Electric Power
Generating Point Source Category (RIA),
Document No. EPA–821–R–15–004.
B. Supporting Documentation
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This section is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
for readers regarding entities likely
regulated by this action. Other types of
entities that do not meet the above
criteria could also be regulated. To
determine whether your facility is
regulated by this action, you should
carefully examine the applicability
criteria listed in 40 CFR 423.10 and the
definitions in 40 CFR 423.11 of the rule.
If you still have questions regarding the
applicability of this action to a
particular entity, consult the person
listed for technical information in the
preceding FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section.
These documents are available in the
public record for this rule and on EPA’s
Web site at https://www2.epa.gov/eg/
steam-electric-power-generatingeffluent-guidelines-2015-final-rule.
This rule is supported, in part, by the
following documents:
• Technical Development Document
for the Effluent Limitations Guidelines
and Standards for the Steam Electric
Power Generating Point Source Category
(TDD), Document No. EPA–821–R–15–
007.
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II. Legal Authority for This Action
EPA promulgates this rule under the
authority of sections 301, 304, 306, 307,
308, 402, and 501 of the CWA, 33 U.S.C.
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22111
221112
221113
1311, 1314, 1316, 1317, 1318, 1342, and
1361.
III. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of the Rule
Steam electric power plants 1
discharge large wastewater volumes,
containing vast quantities of pollutants,
into waters of the United States. The
pollutants include both toxic and
bioaccumulative pollutants such as
arsenic, mercury, selenium, chromium,
and cadmium. Today, these discharges
account for about 30 percent of all toxic
pollutants discharged into surface
1 The steam electric power plants covered by the
ELGs use nuclear or fossil fuels, such as coal, oil,
or natural gas, to heat water in boilers, which
generate steam. This rule does not apply to plants
that use non-fossil fuel or non-nuclear fuel or other
energy sources, such as biomass or solar thermal
energy. The steam is used to drive turbines
connected to electric generators. The plants
generate wastewater composed of chemical
pollutants and thermal pollution (heated water)
from their wastewater treatment, power cycle, ash
handling and air pollution control systems, as well
as from coal piles, yard and floor drainage, and
other plant processes.
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waters by all industrial categories
regulated under the CWA.2 The electric
power industry has made great strides to
reduce air pollutant emissions under
Clean Air Act programs. Yet many of
these pollutants are transferred to the
wastewater as plants employ
technologies to reduce air pollution.
The pollutants in steam electric power
plant wastewater discharges present a
serious public health concern and cause
severe ecological damage, as
demonstrated by numerous documented
impacts, scientific modeling, and other
studies. When toxic metals such as
mercury, arsenic, lead, and selenium
accumulate in fish or contaminate
drinking water, they can cause adverse
effects in people who consume the fish
or water. These effects can include
cancer, cardiovascular disease,
neurological disorders, kidney and liver
damage, and lowered IQs in children.
There are, however, affordable
technologies that are widely available,
and already in place at some plants,
which are capable of reducing or
eliminating steam electric power plant
discharges. In the several decades since
the steam electric ELGs were last
revised, such technologies have
increasingly been used at plants. This
final rule is the first to ensure that
plants in the steam electric industry
employ technologies designed to reduce
discharges of toxic metals and other
harmful pollutants discharged in the
plants’ largest sources of wastewater.
Steam electric power plant discharges
occur in proximity to nearly 100 public
drinking water intakes and more than
1,500 public wells across the nation,
and recent studies indicate that steam
electric power plant discharges can
adversely affect surface waters used as
drinking water supplies. One study
found that arsenic in ash and flue gas
desulfurization (FGD) wastewater
discharges from four steam electric
power plants exceeded Safe Drinking
Water Act (SDWA) Maximum
Contaminant Levels (MCLS) in the
waterbodies into which they discharged,
indicating that these contaminants are
present in surface waters, and at levels
above standards used to protect
drinking water. See DCN SE01984. A
second, more recent study found
increased levels of bromide in rivers
used as drinking water after FGD
systems were installed at upstream
steam electric power plants. The study
2 Although the way electricity is generated in this
country is changing, EPA projects that, without this
final rule, steam electric power plant discharges
would likely continue to account, over the
foreseeable future, for about thirty percent of all
toxic pollutants discharged into surface waters by
all industrial categories regulated under the CWA.
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showed an increase in bromides at four
drinking water utilities’ intakes after
wastewater from these FGD systems
began to be discharged to the rivers,
whereas prior to the FGD wastewater
discharges, bromides were not a
problem in the intake waters of the
utilities. With bromides present in their
drinking water source waters at
increased levels, carcinogenic
disinfection by-products (brominated
DBPs, in particular trihalomethanes
(THMs)) began forming, and at one
drinking water utility, violations of the
THM MCL began occurring. See DCN
SE04503.
Nitrogen discharged by steam electric
power plants can also impact drinking
water sources by contributing to
harmful algal blooms in reservoirs and
lakes that are used as drinking water
sources. Ground water contamination
from surface impoundments (ash ponds)
containing steam electric power plant
wastewater also threatens drinking
water, as evidenced by more than 30
documented cases. See EA Section 3.3.
Steam electric power plant discharges
also adversely affect the quality of fish
that people eat. Water quality modeling
shows that about half of waterbodies
that receive steam electric power plant
discharges exhibit health risks to people
consuming fish from those waters
(primarily from mercury). Nearly half of
waterbodies that receive steam electric
power plant discharges exhibit pollutant
levels for one or more steam electric
power plant pollutants in excess of
human health water quality criteria
(WQC).3 See EA Section 4. People who
eat large amounts of fish from lakes and
rivers contaminated by mercury, lead,
and arsenic are particularly at risk, and
consumption of such fish poses
additional risk to the fetuses of pregnant
women. Compared to the general public,
minority and low-income communities
have greater exposure to, and are
therefore at greater risk from, pollutants
in steam electric power plant
discharges, due to their closer proximity
to the discharges and greater
consumption of fish from contaminated
waters. See Section XVII.J.
Steam electric power plant discharges
adversely affect our nation’s waters and
their ecology. Pollutants in such
discharges, particularly mercury and
selenium, bioaccumulate in fish and
wildlife, and they accumulate in the
sediments of lakes and reservoirs,
remaining there for decades.
Documented adverse impacts include
3 WQCs are established by states to protect
beneficial uses of waterbodies, such as the support
of aquatic life and provision of fishing and
swimming.
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the near eradication of an entire fish
population in the late 1970s in Belews
Lake, North Carolina, due to selenium
discharges from a steam electric power
plant (DCN SE01842); a series of fish
kills in the 1970s in Martin Lake, Texas,
also due to selenium discharges from a
steam electric power plant (elevated
selenium levels and deformities
persisted for at least eight years after the
plant ceased discharging) (DCN
SE01861); reproductive impairment and
deformities in fish and birds from
selenium discharges (DCN SE04519);
and other forms of impacts to surface
waters, as documented by numerous
other damage cases associated with
discharges from surface impoundments
containing steam electric power plant
wastewater. See EA Section 3.3.
Waterbodies receiving steam electric
power plant discharges have routinely
exhibited pollutant levels routinely in
excess of state WQC for pollutants
found in the plant discharges. This
includes pollutants such as selenium,
arsenic, and cadmium. Nutrients in
steam electric power plant discharges
can cause over-enrichment of receiving
waters, resulting in water quality
problems, such as low oxygen levels
and loss of critical submerged aquatic
vegetation, further impairing beneficial
uses such as fishing. EPA’s modeling
corroborates such documented impacts,
revealing that nearly one fifth of
waterbodies receiving steam electric
power plant discharges exceed WQC for
protection of aquatic life and nearly one
third of such receiving waters pose
potential reproductive risks to birds that
prey on fish.
The steam electric ELGs that EPA
promulgated and revised in 1974, 1977,
and 1982 are out of date. They do not
adequately control the pollutants (toxic
metals and other) discharged by this
industry, nor do they reflect relevant
process and technology advances that
have occurred in the last 30-plus years.
The rise of new processes for generating
electric power (e.g. coal gasification)
and the widespread implementation of
air pollution controls (e.g., FGD and flue
gas mercury control (FGMC)) have
altered existing wastestreams and
created new types of wastewater at
many steam electric power plants,
particularly coal-fired plants. The
processes employed and pollutants
discharged by the industry look very
different today than they did in 1982.
Many plants, nonetheless, still treat
their wastewater using only surface
impoundments, which are largely
ineffective at controlling discharges of
toxic pollutants and nutrients. This final
rule addresses an outstanding public
health and environmental problem by
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revising the steam electric ELGs, as they
apply to a subset of power plants that
discharge wastestreams containing toxic
and other pollutants. As the CWA
requires, this rule is economically
achievable (affordable for the industry
as a whole) and is based on available
technologies. On an annual basis, the
rule is projected to reduce the amount
of toxic metals, nutrients, and other
pollutants that steam electric power
plants are allowed to discharge by 1.4
billion pounds; reduce water
withdrawal by 57 billion gallons; and, it
has estimated social costs of $480
million. Finally, of the benefits that
were able to be monetized, EPA projects
$451 to $566 million in benefits
associated with this rule.
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B. Summary of Final Rule
To further its ultimate objective to
‘‘restore and maintain the chemical,
physical, and biological integrity of the
Nation’s waters,’’ the CWA authorizes
EPA to establish national technologybased effluent limitations guidelines
and new source performance standards
for discharges from categories of point
sources that occur directly into waters
of the U.S. The CWA also authorizes
EPA to promulgate nationally applicable
pretreatment standards that control
pollutant discharges from existing and
new sources that discharge wastewater
indirectly to waters of the U.S. through
sewers flowing to publicly owned
treatment works (POTWs). EPA
establishes ELGs based on the
performance of well-designed and welloperated control and treatment
technologies.
EPA completed a study of the steam
electric category in 2009 and proposed
the ELG rule in June 2013. The public
comment period extended for more than
three months. This final rule reflects the
statutory factors outlined in the CWA,
as well as EPA’s full consideration of
the comments received and updated
analytical results.
Existing Sources—Direct Discharges.
For existing sources that discharge
directly to surface water, with the
exception of oil-fired generating units
and small generating units (those with
a nameplate capacity of 50 megawatts
(MW) or less), the final rule establishes
effluent limitations based on Best
Available Technology Economically
Achievable (BAT). BAT is based on
technological availability, economic
achievability, and other statutory factors
and is intended to reflect the highest
performance in the industry (see Section
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IV.B.3). The final rule establishes BAT
limitations as follows: 4
• For fly ash transport water, bottom
ash transport water, and FGMC
wastewater, there are two sets of BAT
limitations. The first set of BAT
limitations is a numeric effluent
limitation on Total Suspended Solids
(TSS) in the discharge of these
wastewaters (these limitations are equal
to the TSS limitations in the previously
established Best Practicable Control
Technology Currently Available (BPT)
regulations). The second set of BAT
limitations is a zero discharge limitation
for all pollutants in these wastewaters.5
• For FGD wastewater, there are two
sets of BAT limitations. The first set of
limitations is a numeric effluent
limitation on TSS in the discharge of
FGD wastewater (these limitations are
equal to the TSS limitations in the
previously established BPT regulations).
The second set of BAT limitations is
numeric effluent limitations on
mercury, arsenic, selenium, and nitrate/
nitrite as N in the discharge of FGD
wastewater.6
• For gasification wastewater, there
are two sets of BAT limitations. The first
set of limitations is a numeric effluent
limitation on TSS in the discharge of
gasification wastewater (this limitation
is equal to the TSS limitation in the
previously established BPT regulations).
The second set of BAT limitations is
numeric effluent limitations on
mercury, arsenic, selenium, and total
dissolved solids (TDS) in the discharge
of gasification wastewater.
• A numeric effluent limitation on
TSS in the discharge of combustion
residual leachate from landfills and
surface impoundments. This limitation
is equal to the TSS limitation in the
previously established BPT regulations.
For oil-fired generating units and
small generating units (50 MW or
smaller), the final rule establishes BAT
limitations on TSS in the discharge of
fly ash transport water, bottom ash
transport water, FGMC wastewater, FGD
wastewater, and gasification
wastewater. These limitations are equal
to the TSS limitations in the existing
BPT regulations.
New Sources—Direct Discharges. The
CWA mandates that new source
4 For details on when the following BAT
limitations apply, see Section VIII.C.
5 When fly ash transport water or bottom ash
transport water is used in the FGD scrubber, the
applicable limitations are those established for FGD
wastewater on mercury, arsenic, selenium and
nitrate/nitrite as N.
6 For plants that opt into the voluntary incentives
program, the second set of BAT limitations is
numeric effluent limitations on mercury, arsenic,
selenium, and TDS in the discharge of FGD
wastewater.
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performance standards (NSPS) reflect
the greatest degree of effluent reduction
that is achievable, including, where
practicable, a standard permitting no
discharge of pollutants (see Section
IV.B.4). NSPS represent the most
stringent controls attainable, taking into
consideration the cost of achieving the
effluent reduction and any non-water
quality environmental impacts and
energy requirements. For direct
discharges to surface waters from new
sources, including discharges from oilfired generating units and small
generating units, the final rule
establishes NSPS as follows:
• A zero discharge standard for all
pollutants in fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, and FGMC
wastewater.
• Numeric standards on mercury,
arsenic, selenium, and TDS in the
discharge of FGD wastewater.
• Numeric standards on mercury and
arsenic in the discharge of combustion
residual leachate.
Existing Sources—Discharges to
POTWs. Pretreatment Standards for
Existing Sources (PSES) are designed to
prevent the discharge of pollutants that
pass through, interfere with, or are
otherwise incompatible with the
operation of POTWs. PSES are
analogous to BAT effluent limitations
for direct dischargers and are generally
based on the same factors (see Section
IV.B.5). The final rule establishes PSES
as follows: 7
• A zero discharge standard for all
pollutants in fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, and FGMC
wastewater.8
• Numeric standards on mercury,
arsenic, selenium, and nitrate/nitrite as
N in the discharge of FGD wastewater.
• Numeric standards on mercury,
arsenic, selenium and TDS in the
discharge of gasification wastewater.
New Sources—Discharges to POTWs.
Pretreatment standards for new sources
(PSNS) are also designed to prevent the
discharge of any pollutant into a POTW
that interferes with, passes through, or
is otherwise incompatible with the
POTW. PSNS are analogous to NSPS for
direct dischargers, and EPA generally
considers the same factors for both sets
of standards (see Section IV.B.6). The
final rule establishes PSNS that are the
same as the rule’s NSPS.
7 For details on when PSES apply, see Section
VIII.E.
8 When fly ash transport water or bottom ash
transport water is used in the FGD scrubber, the
applicable standards are those established for FGD
wastewater on mercury, arsenic, selenium and
nitrate/nitrite as N.
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C. Summary of Costs and Benefits
Table III–1 summarizes the benefits
and social costs for the final rule, at
three percent and seven percent
discount rates. EPA’s analysis reflects
the Agency’s understanding of the
actions steam electric power plants will
take to meet the limitations and
standards in the final rule. EPA based
its analysis on a baseline that reflects
the expected impacts of other
environmental regulations affecting
steam electric power plants, such as the
Clean Power Plan (CPP) rule that the
Agency finalized in July 2015 (as well
as other relevant rules such as the Coal
Combustion Residuals (CCR) rule that
the Agency promulgated in April 2015).
EPA understands that these modeled
results have uncertainty due to the
possibility of unexpected
implementation approaches and thus
that the actual costs could be somewhat
higher or lower than estimated. The
current estimate reflects the best data
and analysis available at this time. In
this preamble, EPA presents costs and
monetized benefits accounting for these
other rules.9 Under this final rule, EPA
estimates that about 12 percent of steam
electric power plants and 28 percent of
coal-fired or petroleum coke-fired power
plants will incur some costs.10 For
additional information, see Sections V
and IX.
TABLE III–1—TOTAL MONETIZED ANNUALIZED BENEFITS AND COSTS OF THE FINAL RULE
[Millions; 2013$]
Total monetized social benefits
Total social costs
Discount rate
3%
Final Rule .........................................................................................................
The remainder of this preamble is
structured as follows. Section IV
provides additional background on the
CWA and the ELG program. Section V
outlines key updates since the proposal,
including updates to the industry
profile, estimated costs and economic
impacts, and pollutant data. Section VI
gives an overview of the industry, and
Section VII reviews the identification
and selection of the regulated
pollutants. Section VIII describes the
final rule requirements, along with the
bases for EPA’s decisions. Section IX
presents the costs and economic
impacts, while Section X shows the
accompanying pollutant reductions.
Section XI presents the numeric
limitations and standards for existing
and new sources that are established in
this final rule. Sections XII through XIV
explain the non-water quality
environmental impacts (including
energy requirements), the
environmental assessment, and the
resulting benefits analysis. Section XV
presents results of the cost-effectiveness
analysis, and Section XVI provides
information regarding implementation
of the rule.
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IV. Background
A. Clean Water Act
Congress passed the CWA to ‘‘restore
and maintain the chemical, physical,
and biological integrity of the Nation’s
waters.’’ 33 U.S.C. 1251(a). In order to
achieve this objective, the Act has, as a
national goal, the elimination of the
discharge of all pollutants into the
nation’s waters. 33 U.S.C. 1251(a)(1).
The CWA establishes a comprehensive
program for protecting our nation’s
7%
3%
7%
$451 to $566
$387 to $478
$480
$471
waters. Among its core provisions, the
CWA prohibits the discharge of
pollutants from a point source to waters
of the U.S., except as authorized under
the CWA. Under section 402 of the
CWA, 33 U.S.C. 1342, discharges may
be authorized through a National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NPDES) permit. The CWA establishes a
dual approach for these permits,
technology-based controls that establish
a floor of performance for all
dischargers, and water quality-based
effluent limitations, where the
technology-based effluent limitations
are insufficient to meet applicable WQS.
To serve as the basis for the technologybased controls, the CWA authorizes EPA
to establish national technology-based
effluent limitations guidelines and new
source performance standards for
discharges from categories of point
sources (such as industrial, commercial,
and public sources) that occur directly
into waters of the U.S.
The CWA also authorizes EPA to
promulgate nationally applicable
pretreatment standards that control
pollutant discharges from sources that
discharge wastewater indirectly to
waters of the U.S., through sewers
flowing to POTWs, as outlined in
sections 307(b) and (c) of the CWA, 33
U.S.C. 1317(b) and (c). EPA establishes
national pretreatment standards for
those pollutants in wastewater from
indirect dischargers that pass through,
interfere with, or are otherwise
incompatible with POTW operations.
Generally, pretreatment standards are
designed to ensure that wastewaters
from direct and indirect industrial
dischargers are subject to similar levels
of treatment. See CWA section 301(b),
33 U.S.C. 1311(b). In addition, POTWs
are required to implement local
treatment limits applicable to their
industrial indirect dischargers to satisfy
any local requirements. See 40 CFR
403.5.
Direct dischargers (those discharging
directly to surface waters) must comply
with effluent limitations in NPDES
permits. Indirect dischargers, who
discharge through POTWs, must comply
with pretreatment standards.
Technology-based effluent limitations
and standards in NPDES permits are
derived from effluent limitations
guidelines (CWA sections 301 and 304,
33 U.S.C. 1311 and 1314) and new
source performance standards (CWA
section 306, 33 U.S.C. 1316)
promulgated by EPA, or based on best
professional judgment (BPJ) where EPA
has not promulgated an applicable
effluent limitation guideline or new
source performance standard (CWA
section 402(a)(1)(B), 33 U.S.C.
1342(a)(1)(B)). Additional limitations
are also required in the permit where
necessary to meet WQS. CWA section
301(b)(1)(C), 33 U.S.C. 1311(b)(1)(C).
The ELGs are established by EPA
regulation for categories of industrial
dischargers and are based on the degree
of control that can be achieved using
various levels of pollution control
technology, as specified in the Act (e.g.,
BPT, BCT, BAT; see below).
EPA promulgates national ELGs for
major industrial categories for three
classes of pollutants: (1) Conventional
pollutants (TSS, oil and grease,
biochemical oxygen demand (BOD5),
fecal coliform, and pH), as outlined in
10 EPA estimates that the population of steam
electric power plants is about 1080.
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CWA section 304(a)(4) and 40 CFR
401.16; (2) toxic pollutants (e.g., toxic
metals such as arsenic, mercury,
selenium, and chromium; toxic organic
pollutants such as benzene, benzo-apyrene, phenol, and naphthalene), as
outlined in CWA section 307(a), 33
U.S.C. 1317(a); 40 CFR 401.15 and 40
CFR part 423, appendix A; and (3)
nonconventional pollutants, which are
those pollutants that are not categorized
as conventional or toxic (e.g., ammoniaN, phosphorus, and TDS).
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B. Effluent Guidelines Program
EPA establishes ELGs based on the
performance of well-designed and welloperated control and treatment
technologies. The legislative history of
CWA section 304(b), which is the heart
of the effluent guidelines program,
describes the need to press toward
higher levels of control through research
and development of new processes,
modifications, replacement of obsolete
plants and processes, and other
improvements in technology, taking into
account the cost of controls. Congress
has also stated that EPA need not
consider water quality impacts on
individual water bodies as the
guidelines are developed; see Statement
of Senator Muskie (principal author)
(October 4, 1972), reprinted in
Legislative History of the Water
Pollution Control Act Amendments of
1972, at 170. (U.S. Senate, Committee
on Public Works, Serial No. 93–1,
January 1973).
There are four types of standards
applicable to direct dischargers, and two
types of standards applicable to indirect
dischargers, described in detail below.
1. Best Practicable Control Technology
Currently Available
Traditionally, EPA establishes
effluent limitations based on BPT by
reference to the average of the best
performances of facilities within the
industry, grouped to reflect various
ages, sizes, processes, or other common
characteristics. EPA can promulgate
BPT effluent limitations for
conventional, toxic, and
nonconventional pollutants. In
specifying BPT, EPA looks at a number
of factors. EPA first considers the cost
of achieving effluent reductions in
relation to the effluent reduction
benefits. The Agency also considers the
age of equipment and facilities, the
processes employed, engineering
aspects of the control technologies, any
required process changes, non-water
quality environmental impacts
(including energy requirements), and
such other factors as the Administrator
deems appropriate. See CWA section
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304(b)(1)(B), 33 U.S.C. 1314(b)(1)(B). If,
however, existing performance is
uniformly inadequate, EPA may
establish limitations based on higher
levels of control than what is currently
in place in an industrial category, when
based on an Agency determination that
the technology is available in another
category or subcategory and can be
practically applied.
2. Best Conventional Pollutant Control
Technology
The 1977 amendments to the CWA
require EPA to identify additional levels
of effluent reduction for conventional
pollutants associated with Best
Conventional Pollutant Control
Technology (BCT) for discharges from
existing industrial point sources. In
addition to other factors specified in
section 304(b)(4)(B), 33 U.S.C.
1314(b)(4)(B), the CWA requires that
EPA establish BCT limitations after
consideration of a two-part ‘‘cost
reasonableness’’ test. EPA explained its
methodology for the development of
BCT limitations on July 9, 1986 (51 FR
24974). Section 304(a)(4) designates the
following as conventional pollutants:
BOD5, TSS, fecal coliform, pH, and any
additional pollutants defined by the
Administrator as conventional. The
Administrator designated oil and grease
as a conventional pollutant on July 30,
1979 (44 FR 44501; 40 CFR 401.16).
3. Best Available Technology
Economically Achievable
BAT represents the second level of
stringency for controlling direct
discharges of toxic and nonconventional
pollutants. As the statutory phrase
intends, EPA considers the
technological availability and the
economic achievability in determining
what level of control represents BAT.
CWA section 301(b)(2)(A), 33 U.S.C.
1311(b)(2)(A). Other statutory factors
that EPA considers in assessing BAT are
the cost of achieving BAT effluent
reductions, the age of equipment and
facilities involved, the process
employed, potential process changes,
non-water quality environmental
impacts (including energy
requirements), and such other factors as
the Administrator deems appropriate.
The Agency retains considerable
discretion in assigning the weight to be
accorded these factors. Weyerhaeuser
Co. v. Costle, 590 F.2d 1011, 1045 (D.C.
Cir. 1978). Generally, EPA determines
economic achievability based on the
effect of the cost of compliance with
BAT limitations on overall industry and
subcategory (if applicable) financial
conditions. BAT is intended to reflect
the highest performance in the industry,
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and it may reflect a higher level of
performance than is currently being
achieved based on technology
transferred from a different subcategory
or category, bench scale or pilot studies,
or foreign plants. Am. Paper Inst. v.
Train, 543 F.2d 328, 353 (D.C. Cir.
1976); Am. Frozen Food Inst. v. Train,
539 F.2d 107, 132 (D.C. Cir. 1976). BAT
may be based upon process changes or
internal controls, even when these
technologies are not common industry
practice. See Am. Frozen Food Inst., 539
F.2d at 132, 140; Reynolds Metals Co. v.
EPA, 760 F.2d 549, 562 (4th Cir. 1985);
Cal. & Hawaiian Sugar Co. v. EPA, 553
F.2d 280, 285–88 (2nd Cir. 1977).
4. Best Available Demonstrated Control
Technology/New Source Performance
Standards
NSPS reflect ‘‘the greatest degree of
effluent reduction’’ that is achievable
based on the ‘‘best available
demonstrated control technology’’
(BADCT), ‘‘including, where
practicable, a standard permitting no
discharge of pollutants.’’ CWA section
306(a)(1), 33 U.S.C. 1316(a)(1). Owners
of new facilities have the opportunity to
install the best and most efficient
production processes and wastewater
treatment technologies. As a result,
NSPS generally represent the most
stringent controls attainable through the
application of BADCT for all pollutants
(that is, conventional, nonconventional,
and toxic pollutants). In establishing
NSPS, EPA is directed to take into
consideration the cost of achieving the
effluent reduction and any non-water
quality environmental impacts and
energy requirements. CWA section
306(b)(1)(B), 33 U.S.C. 1316(b)(1)(B).
5. Pretreatment Standards for Existing
Sources
Section 307(b) of the CWA, 33 U.S.C.
1317(b), authorizes EPA to promulgate
pretreatment standards for discharges of
pollutants to POTWs. PSES are designed
to prevent the discharge of pollutants
that pass through, interfere with, or are
otherwise incompatible with the
operation of POTWs. Categorical
pretreatment standards are technologybased and are analogous to BPT and
BAT effluent limitations guidelines, and
thus the Agency typically considers the
same factors in promulgating PSES as it
considers in promulgating BAT.
Congress intended for the combination
of pretreatment and treatment by the
POTW to achieve the level of treatment
that would be required if the industrial
source were making a direct discharge.
Conf. Rep. No. 95–830, at 87 (1977),
reprinted in U.S. Congress. Senate
Committee on Public Works (1978), A
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Legislative History of the CWA of 1977,
Serial No. 95–14 at 271 (1978). The
General Pretreatment Regulations,
which set forth the framework for the
implementation of categorical
pretreatment standards, are found at 40
CFR part 403. These regulations
establish pretreatment standards that
apply to all non-domestic dischargers.
See 52 FR 1586 (January 14, 1987).
6. Pretreatment Standards for New
Sources
Section 307(c) of the CWA, 33 U.S.C.
1317(c), authorizes EPA to promulgate
PSNS at the same time it promulgates
NSPS. As is the case for PSES, PSNS are
designed to prevent the discharge of any
pollutant into a POTW that interferes
with, passes through, or is otherwise
incompatible with the POTW. In
selecting the PSNS technology basis, the
Agency generally considers the same
factors it considers in establishing
NSPS, along with the results of a passthrough analysis. Like new sources of
direct discharges, new sources of
indirect discharges have the opportunity
to incorporate into their operations the
best available demonstrated
technologies. As a result, EPA typically
promulgates pretreatment standards for
new sources based on best available
demonstrated control technology for
new sources. See Nat’l Ass’n of Metal
Finishers v. EPA, 719 F.2d 624, 634 (3rd
Cir. 1983).
C. Steam Electric Effluent Guidelines
Rulemaking History
EPA provided a detailed history of the
steam electric ELGs in the preamble for
the proposed rule, including an
explanation of why EPA initiated a
steam electric ELG rulemaking
following a detailed study in 2009. EPA
published the proposed rule on June 7,
2013, and took public comments until
September 20, 2013. 78 FR 34432.
During the public comment period, EPA
received over 200,000 comments. EPA
also held a public hearing on July 9,
2013.
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V. Key Updates Since Proposal
This section discusses key updates
since EPA proposed its rule in June
2013, including how these updates are
reflected in the final rule.
A. Industry Profile Changes Due to
Retirements and Conversions
For the final rule, EPA adjusted the
population of steam electric power
plants that will likely incur costs and
the associated benefits as a result of this
final rule based on company
announcements, as of August 2014,
regarding changes in plant operations.
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The steam electric industry is a dynamic
one, influenced by many factors,
including electricity demand, fuel
prices, availability of resources, and
regulation. Since proposal, there have
been some important changes in the
overall industry profile. Some
companies have retired or announced
plans to retire specific steam electric
generating units, as well as converted or
announced plans to convert specific
units to a different fuel source. See DCN
SE05069 for information on the data
sources for these announced retirements
and conversions. In addition to actual or
announced retirements and fuel
conversions, in some cases, plants have
altered, or announced plans to alter,
their wastewater treatment or ash
handling practices. To the extent
possible, EPA adjusted its analyses of
costs, pollutant loadings, non-water
quality environmental impacts, and
benefits for the final rule to account for
these actual and anticipated changes.
The final rule accounts for plant
retirements and fuel conversions, as
well as changes in plants’ ash handling
and wastewater treatment practices,
expected to occur by the
implementation dates in the final rule.
For more details, see TDD Section 4.5 or
‘‘Changes to Industry Profile for Steam
Electric Generating Units for the Steam
Electric Effluent Guidelines Final Rule,’’
DCN SE05059.
B. EPA Consideration of Other Federal
Rules
EPA made every effort to
appropriately account for other rules in
its many analyses for this rule. Since
proposal, EPA has promulgated other
rules affecting the steam electric
industry: the Cooling Water Intake
Structures (CWIS) rule for existing
facilities (79 FR 48300; Aug. 15, 2014),
the CCR rule (80 FR 21302; Apr. 17,
2015), the CPP rule (see https://www2.
epa.gov/cleanpowerplan/clean-powerplan-existing-power-plants), and the
Carbon Pollution Standard for New
Power Plants (CPS) rule (see https://
www2.epa.gov/cleanpowerplan/carbonpollution-standards-new-modified-andreconstructed-power-plants). One result
of taking into account these rules is a
change in the population of units and
plants that EPA estimates would incur
incremental costs, as well as additional
estimated benefits, under this final rule.
In some cases, EPA performed two sets
of parallel analyses to demonstrate how
the other rules affected this final rule.
For example, EPA conducted an
assessment of compliance costs and
pollutant loadings for this rule both
with and without accounting for the
CCR rule (this preamble only presents
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results accounting for the CCR rule).
Then, using results from the analyses of
costs and loadings accounting for the
CCR rule, EPA also conducted an
additional set of analyses of compliance
costs and pollutant loadings accounting
for the proposed CPP rule (this
preamble only presents results
accounting for the proposed CPP rule).
At the time EPA conducted its analyses,
the CPP had not yet been finalized, and
thus EPA used the proposed CPP for its
analyses. EPA concluded that the
proposed and final CPP specifications
are similar enough that using the
proposed rather than the final CPP will
not bias the results of the analysis for
this rule. See Section IX for additional
information. Because EPA used the
proposal as a proxy for the final rule,
the rest of the preamble simply refers to
the CPP rule. Given that final CPP state
plans have not yet been determined,
EPA recognizes that the modeled results
have uncertainty due to the possibility
of unexpected implementation
approaches and that actual market
responses may be somewhat more or
less pronounced than estimated. The
current estimate reflects the best data
and analysis available at this time. For
more information on these federal rules,
see TDD Section 1.3.3. For more
information on how EPA accounted for
the effect of these rules on its
compliance cost, pollutant loadings
estimates, and non-water quality
environmental impacts, see TDD
Sections 9, 10, and 12. See Section V.D.
and Section IX, below, and the RIA
regarding how EPA considered other
federal rules in its economic impact
analysis.
C. Advancements in Technologies
There have been advancements in
several technologies since proposal that
reinforce EPA’s decision regarding those
technologies that serve as the
appropriate basis for the final rule. For
proposal, EPA evaluated a variety of
technologies available to control and
treat wastewater generated by the steam
electric industry. The final rule is based
on several treatment technologies
discussed in depth at proposal. As
explained then, and further discussed in
Section VIII, the record demonstrates
that the technologies that form the basis
for the final rule are available.
Moreover, the record indicates that,
based on the emerging market for
treatment technologies, plants will have
many options to choose from when
deciding how to meet the requirements
of the final rule.
The biological treatment technology
that serves as part of the basis for the
final requirements for FGD wastewater
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discharged from existing sources has
been tested at power plants for more
than ten years and demonstrated in fullscale systems for more than seven years.
As this technology has matured, new
vendors have emerged to provide
expertise in applying it to steam electric
power plants. In addition, other
advanced technologies that plants may
use to achieve the effluent limitations
and standards for FGD wastewater in
the final rule are now entering the
marketplace, such as lower-cost
biological treatment systems that utilize
a modular-based bioreactor, which is
prefabricated and can be delivered
directly to the site. Another
advancement related to evaporation and
crystallization technology, operating at
low temperatures to crystallize
dissolved solids, requires no chemical
treatment of the wastewater and
generates no additional sludge for
disposal, resulting in a simpler and
more economical application for
treatment of both FGD wastewater and
gasification wastewater. Another
development concerning the
evaporation system (which is the basis
for the BAT limitations for FGD
wastewater in the voluntary incentives
program, as well as the basis for the
NSPS for FGD wastewater) is a process
that generates a pozzolanic material
instead of crystallized salts as a solid
waste product of the treatment system;
although the pozzolanic material is
expected to require landfill disposal
since it likely would not be a marketable
material, the capital and operating cost
of the overall evaporation treatment
process would be reduced.
Zero valent iron (ZVI) cementation,
sorption media, ion exchange, and
electrocoagulation are also examples of
emerging treatment technologies that are
being developed to treat FGD
wastewater, and they could be used to
achieve the limitations in the final rule.
See TDD Section 7 for a more detailed
discussion.
The technologies used as the basis for
the final requirements for ash transport
water (dry handling and closed-loop
systems) have been in operation at
power plants for more than 20 years and
are amply demonstrated by the record
supporting the final rule. Recent
advancements related to bottom ash
handling technologies have focused on
providing more flexible retrofit
solutions and improving the thermal
efficiency of the boiler operation. These
advancements result in additional
savings related to electricity use,
operation and maintenance, water costs,
and thermal energy recovery.
In sum, the record demonstrates that
there have been significant
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advancements in relevant treatment
technologies since proposal, and EPA
expects that the advancements will
continue as this rule is implemented by
the industry.
D. Engineering Costs
For the final rule, EPA updated its
cost estimates to account for public
comments. The following list
summarizes the main adjustments EPA
made to its cost estimates for the final
rule:
• Adjustment of population of
generating units and changes in
wastewater treatment or ash handling
practices to account for companyannounced generating unit retirements/
repowerings and conversions of ash
handling systems (see Section IV.A);
• Adjustment of population of
generating units and changes in
wastewater treatment or ash handling
practices to account for implementation
of the CCR rule and CPP rule (see
Section IV.B);
• Adjustments to the direct capital
costs factors to better reflect all
associated installation costs;
• Adjustments to the indirect capital
cost factors to account for appropriate
engineering and contingency costs;
• Adjustment to plant population
receiving one-time bottom ash
management costs;
• Addition of costs for denitrification
pretreatment prior to biological
treatment of FGD wastewater (for certain
plants);
• Updates to costing inputs to
account for costs of additional
redundancy for the fly ash dry handling
system;
• Addition of tank rental costs for
surge capacity during certain bottom ash
handling system maintenance;
• Addition of building costs for
certain bottom ash and FGD wastewater
systems; and
• Addition of costs for equipment
that can be used to mitigate high
oxidation-reduction potential (ORP)
levels in FGD wastewater.
See Section 9 of the TDD for
additional information on the plantspecific compliance cost estimates for
the final rule.
E. Economic Impact Analysis
For its analysis of the economic
impact of the final rule, EPA began with
the same financial data sources for
steam electric power plants and their
parent companies that were used and
described in the proposed rule,
primarily collected through the
Questionnaire for the Steam Electric
Power Generating Effluent Guidelines
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(industry survey) 11 and public sources.
Since proposal, EPA updated some of
the analysis input data obtained from
public sources to reflect the most
current information about the
economic/financial conditions in, and
the regulatory environment of, the
electric power industry, as well as data
on electricity prices and electricity
consumption. Thus, EPA updated its
analysis to use the most current publicly
available data from the following
sources: The Department of Energy’s
Energy Information Administration
(EIA) (in particular, the EIA 860, 861,
and 906/920/923 databases),12 the U.S.
Small Business Administration (SBA),
the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), and
the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA).
As was the case for the proposed rule,
EPA performed an analysis using the
Integrated Planning Model (IPM), a
comprehensive electricity market
optimization model that can evaluate
impacts within the context of regional
and national electricity markets. For the
final rule, EPA used an updated IPM
base case (v5.13) that incorporates
improvements and data updates to the
previous version (v.4.10), notably
regarding electricity demand forecast,
generating capacity, market conditions,
and newly promulgated environmental
regulations also affecting this industry
(see Section IX).
F. Pollutant Data
For the final rule, EPA incorporated
data submitted by public commenters in
its effluent limitations and standards
development, pollutants of concern
identification, and pollutant loadings
estimates. Such data include:
• Industry-submitted data
representing the FGD purge, FGD
chemical precipitation effluent, and
FGD biological treatment effluent for the
plants identified as operating BAT
systems;
• Industry-submitted ash transport
water characterization and source water
data; 13
11 For details on the industry survey, see TDD
Section 3 and 78 FR 34432; June 7, 2013).
12 EIA–860: Annual Electric Generator Report;
EIA–861: Annual Electric Power Industry Database;
EIA–923: Utility, Non-Utility, and Combined Heat
& Power Plant Database (monthly). The most
current EIA data at the time of the analysis was for
the year 2012.
13 Industry also submitted bottom ash transport
water data approximately 14 months after the close
of the public comment period. EPA did not
incorporate these late data into its analyses, but it
did perform a sensitivity analysis to determine how
these late data might have impacted EPA’s analyses
and decisions. EPA concluded from the sensitivity
analysis that the late bottom ash transport water
data would not have changed EPA’s ultimate
decisions for this final rule. See DCN SE05581.
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• Industry-submitted ash
impoundment effluent concentrations;
and
• Industry-submitted pilot-test data
related to treatment of FGD wastewater.
EPA subjected the new data to its data
quality acceptance criteria and, as
appropriate, updated its analyses
accordingly. See TDD Section 3 for
additional information on the data
sources used in the development of the
final rule.
G. Environmental Assessment Models
Although not required to do so, EPA
conducted an Environmental
Assessment for the final rule, as it did
for the proposed rule. EPA updated the
environmental assessment in several
ways to respond to public comments,
and improve the characterization of the
environmental and human health
improvements associated with the final
rule. EPA performed dynamic water
quality modeling of selected case-study
locations to supplement the results of
the national-scale Immediate Receiving
Water (IRW) model. EPA supplemented
the wildlife analysis by developing and
using an ecological risk model that
predicts the risk of reproductive impacts
among fish and birds with dietary
exposure to selenium from steam
electric power plant wastewater
discharges. EPA also updated and
improved several input parameters for
the IRW model, including fish
consumption rates for recreational and
subsistence fishers, the bioconcentration
factor for copper, and benchmarks for
assessing the potential for impacts to
benthic communities in receiving
waters. See Section XIII.A for additional
discussion.
VI. Industry Description
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A. General Description of Industry
EPA provided a general description of
the steam electric industry in the
proposed rule and provides a complete
discussion of the industry in TDD
Section 4. As described in TDD Section
4.5 (and Section V.A, above), EPA
considered retirements, fuel
conversions, ash handling conversions,
wastewater treatment updates, and other
industry profile changes in the
development of the final rule and
supporting technical analyses; however,
the data presented in the general
industry description represents 2009
conditions, as the industry survey (See
TDD Section 3) remains the best
available source of information for
characterizing operations across the
industry.
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B. Steam Electric Process Wastewater
and Control Technologies
While almost all steam electric power
plants generate certain wastewater, like
cooling water and boiler blowdown, the
presence of other wastestreams depends
on the type of fuel burned. Coal- and
petroleum coke-fired generating units,
and to a lesser degree oil-fired
generating units, generate a flue gas
stream that contains large quantities of
particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, and
nitrogen oxides, which would be
emitted to the atmosphere if they were
not cleaned from the flue gas prior to
emission. Therefore, many of these
generating units are outfitted with air
pollution control systems (e.g.,
particulate removal systems, FGD
systems, nitrogen oxide (NOX)-removal
systems, and mercury control systems).
Gas-fired generating units generate
fewer emissions of particulate matter,
sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxides than
coal- or oil-fired generating units, and
therefore do not typically operate air
pollution control systems to control
emissions from their flue gas. In
addition, coal-, oil-, and petroleum
coke-fired generating units create fly
and/or bottom ash as a result of coal
combustion. The wastewaters associated
with ash transport and air pollution
control systems contain large quantities
of metals (e.g., arsenic, mercury, and
selenium).
See TDD Sections 4, 6, and 7 for
details on these systems, the
wastewaters they generate, the number
of facilities that operate the systems and
generate wastewater, and the control
technologies used for wastewater
treatment prior to discharge.
1. FGD Wastewater
FGD systems are used to remove
sulfur dioxide from the flue gas so that
it is not emitted into the air. Dry FGD
systems spray a sorbent slurry into a
reactor vessel so that the droplets dry as
they contact the hot flue gas. Although
dry FGD scrubbers use water in their
operation, the water in most systems
evaporates and they generally do not
discharge wastewater. Wet FGD systems
contact the sorbent slurry with flue gas
in a reactor vessel producing a
wastewater stream.
Treatment technologies for FGD
wastewater include chemical
precipitation, biological treatment, and
evaporation. At some plants, this
wastewater is handled in surface
impoundments, constructed wetlands,
or through practices achieving zero
discharge. As described above in
Section V.C and TDD section 7, EPA
identified other technologies that have
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been evaluated or are being developed
to treat FGD wastewater, including iron
cementation, ZVI cementation, reverse
osmosis, absorption or adsorption
media, ion exchange, and
electrocoagulation.
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
Plants use particulate removal
systems to collect fly ash and other
particulates from the flue gas in hoppers
located underneath the equipment. Of
the coal-, petroleum coke-, and oil-fired
steam electric power plants that
generate fly ash, most of them transport
fly ash pneumatically from the hoppers
to temporary storage silos, thereby not
generating any transport water. Some
plants, however, use water to transport
(sluice) the fly ash from the hoppers to
a surface impoundment. The water used
to transport the fly ash to the surface
impoundment is usually discharged to
surface water as overflow from the
impoundment after the fly ash has
settled to the bottom.
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
Bottom ash consists of heavier ash
particles that are not entrained in the
flue gas and fall to the bottom of the
furnace. In most furnaces, the hot
bottom ash is quenched in a water-filled
hopper. For purposes of this rule, boiler
slag is considered bottom ash. Boiler
slag is the molten bottom ash collected
at the base of the furnace that is
quenched with water. Most plants use
water to transport (sluice) the bottom
ash from the hopper to an impoundment
or dewatering bins. The ash sent to a
dewatering bin is separated from the
transport water and then disposed. For
both of these systems, the water used to
transport the bottom ash to the
impoundment or dewatering bins is
usually discharged to surface water as
overflow from the systems, after the
bottom ash has settled to the bottom.
Of the coal-, petroleum coke-, and oilfired steam electric power plants that
generate bottom ash, most operate wet
sluicing handling systems. There are
two types of bottom ash handling
technologies that can meet zero
discharge requirements: (1) Dry
handling technologies that do not use
any water, including systems such as
dry vacuum or pressure systems, dry
mechanical conveyor systems, and
vibratory belt systems; and (2) wet
systems that do not generate or
discharge ash transport water, including
mechanical drag systems (MDS), remote
MDS, and complete-recycle systems.
4. FGMC Wastewater
FGMC systems remove mercury from
the flue gas, so that it is not emitted into
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the air. There are two types of systems
used to control flue gas mercury
emissions: (1) Addition of oxidizing
agents to the coal prior to combustion;
and (2) injection of activated carbon into
the flue gas after combustion. Addition
of oxidizing agents to the coal prior to
combustion does not generate a new
wastewater stream; it can, however,
increase the mercury concentration in
the FGD wastewater because the
oxidized mercury is more easily
removed by the FGD system. Injection of
activated carbon into the flue gas does
have the potential to generate a new
wastestream at a plant, depending on
the location of the injection. If the
injection occurs upstream of the
primary particulate removal system,
then the mercury-containing carbon
(FGMC waste) is collected and handled
the same way as, and together with, the
fly ash. Therefore, if the fly ash is wet
sluiced, then the FGMC wastes are also
wet sluiced and likely sent to the same
surface impoundment. In this case,
adding the FGMC waste to the fly ash
can increase the amount of mercury in
the fly ash transport water. If the
injection occurs downstream of the
primary particulate removal system, the
plant will need a secondary particulate
removal system (typically a fabric filter)
to capture the FGMC wastes.
Of the current or planned activated
carbon injection systems, most operate
upstream injection. However, plants
that wish to market their fly ash will
typically inject the activated carbon
downstream of the primary particulate
removal system to prevent
contaminating the fly ash with carbon.
For plants operating downstream
injection, the FGMC wastes, which
would be collected with some carryover fly ash, could be handled
separately from fly ash in either a wet
or dry handling system.
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5. Combustion Residual Leachate From
Landfills and Surface Impoundments
Combustion residuals comprise a
variety of wastes from the combustion
process, which are generally collected
by or generated from air pollution
control technologies. These combustion
residuals can be stored at the plant in
on-site landfills or surface
impoundments. Leachate includes
liquid, including any suspended or
dissolved constituents in the liquid, that
has percolated through or drained from
waste or other materials placed in a
landfill, or that passes through the
containment structure (e.g., bottom,
dikes, berms) of a surface
impoundment. Based on data from the
industry survey, most landfills and
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some impoundments have a system to
collect the leachate.
In a lined landfill or impoundment,
the combustion residual leachate
collected in the liner is typically
transported to an impoundment (e.g.,
collection pond). Some plants discharge
the effluent from these impoundments
containing combustion residual leachate
directly to receiving waters, while other
plants first send the impoundment
effluent to another impoundment
handling the ash transport water or
other treatment system (e.g., constructed
wetlands) prior to discharge. Unlined
impoundments and landfills usually do
not collect leachate, which would allow
the leachate to potentially migrate to
nearby ground waters, drinking water
wells, or surface waters.
Using data from the industry survey
and site visits, surface impoundments
are the most widely used systems to
treat combustion residual leachate. EPA
also identified different management
practices, with approximately one-third
of plants collecting the combustion
residual leachate from impoundments
and recycling it back to the
impoundment from which it was
collected. Some plants use their
collected leachate as water for moisture
conditioning of dry fly ash prior to
disposal or for dust control around dry
unloading areas and landfills.
6. Gasification Wastewater
Integrated Gasification Combined
Cycle (IGCC) plants use a carbon-based
feedstock (e.g., coal or petroleum coke)
and subject it to high temperature and
pressure to produce a synthetic gas
(syngas), which is used as the fuel for
a combined cycle generating unit. After
the syngas is produced, it undergoes
cleaning prior to combustion. The
wastewater generated by these cleaning
processes, along with any condensate
generated in flash tanks, slag handling
water, or wastewater generated from the
production of sulfuric acid, is referred
to as ‘‘grey water’’ or ‘‘sour water,’’ and
is generally treated prior to reuse or
discharge.
EPA is aware of three plants that
operate IGCC units in the U.S. All three
plants currently treat their gasification
wastewater with vapor-compression
evaporation systems. One of these
plants also includes a cyanide
destruction stage as part of the treatment
system.
VII. Selection of Regulated Pollutants
A. Identifying the Pollutants of Concern
In determining which pollutants
warrant regulation in this rule, EPA first
evaluated the wastewater characteristics
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67847
to identify pollutants of concern (POCs).
Constituents present in steam electric
power plant wastewater are primarily
derived from the parent carbon
feedstock (e.g., coal, petroleum coke).
EPA characterized the wastewater
generated by the industry and identified
POCs (those pollutants commonly
found) for each of the regulated
wastestreams. For wastestreams where
the final rule establishes numeric
effluent limitations or standards, the
POCs are those pollutants that have
been quantified in a wastestream at
sufficient frequency at treatable levels
(concentrations). For wastestreams
where EPA is establishing zero
discharge limitations or standards, the
POCs identified for each wastestream
are those pollutants that are confirmed
to be present at sufficient frequency in
untreated wastewater samples of that
wastestream. In both cases, in response
to public comments, where EPA had
available paired source water (intake
water) data for a particular pollutant in
an untreated process wastewater
sample, EPA compared the two to
confirm that the concentration in the
untreated process wastewater sample
exceeded that of the source water. See
TDD Section 6.6 for details on EPA’s
analysis of POCs.
B. Selection of Pollutants for Regulation
Under BAT/NSPS
For wastestreams where the final rule
establishes numeric effluent limitations
or standards, effluent limitations or
standards for all POCs are not necessary
to ensure that the pollutants are
adequately controlled because many of
the pollutants originate from similar
sources, have similar treatability, and
are removed by similar mechanisms.
Because of this, it is sufficient to
establish effluent limitations or
standards for one or more indicator
pollutants, which will ensure the
removal of other POCs. For
wastestreams where the final rule
establishes zero discharge limitations or
standards, all POCs are directly
regulated.
For wastestreams where the final rule
establishes numeric effluent limitations
or standards, EPA selected a subset of
pollutants as indicators for all regulated
pollutants upon consideration of the
following factors:
• EPA did not set limitations or
standards for pollutants associated with
treatment system additives because
regulating these pollutants could
interfere with efforts to optimize
treatment system operation.
• EPA did not set limitations or
standards for pollutants for which the
treatment technology was ineffective
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(e.g., pollutant concentrations remained
approximately unchanged or increased
across the treatment system).
• EPA did not set limitations or
standards for pollutants that are
adequately controlled through the
regulation of another indicator pollutant
because they have similar properties
and are treated by similar mechanisms
as a regulated pollutant.
See TDD Section 11 for additional
detail on EPA’s analysis and rationale
for selecting the regulated pollutants.
C. Methodology for the POTW PassThrough Analysis (PSES/PSNS)
Before establishing PSES/PSNS for a
pollutant, EPA examines whether the
pollutant ‘‘passes through’’ a POTW to
waters of the U.S. or interferes with the
POTW operation or sludge disposal
practices. In determining whether a
pollutant passes through POTWs for
these purposes, EPA generally compares
the percentage of a pollutant removed
by well-operated POTWs performing
secondary treatment to the percentage
removed by the BAT/NSPS technology
basis. A pollutant is determined to pass
through POTWs when the median
percentage removed nationwide by
well-operated POTWs is less than the
median percentage removed by the
BAT/NSPS technology basis.
Pretreatment standards are established
for those pollutants regulated under
BAT/NSPS that pass through POTWs.
Under this rule, for those
wastestreams regulated with a zero
discharge limitation or standard, EPA
set the percentage removed by the
technology basis at 100 percent. Because
a POTW would not be able to achieve
100 percent removal of wastewater
pollutants, it is appropriate to set PSES
at zero discharge, otherwise pollutants
would pass through the POTW.
For wastestreams for which the final
rule establishes numeric limitations and
standards, EPA determined the
pollutant percentage removed by the
rule’s technology basis using the same
data sources used to determine the long-
term averages for each set of limitations
and standards (see TDD Section 13). As
it has done for other rulemakings, EPA
determined the nationwide percentage
removed by well-operated POTWs
performing secondary treatment using
one of two data sources:
• Fate of Priority Pollutants in
Publicly Owned Treatment Works,
September 1982, EPA 440/1–82/303 (50
POTW Study); or
• National Risk Management
Research Laboratory Treatability
Database, Version 5.0, February 2004
(formerly called the Risk Reduction
Engineering Laboratory database).
With a few exceptions, EPA performs
a POTW pass-through analysis for
pollutants selected for regulation for
BAT/NSPS for each wastestream of
concern. The exception is for
conventional pollutants such as BOD5,
TSS, and oil and grease. POTWs are
designed to treat these conventional
pollutants; therefore, they are not
considered to pass through.
Section VIII, below, summarizes the
results of the pass-through analysis.
EPA found that all of the pollutants
considered for regulation under BAT/
NSPS pass through and, therefore, also
selected them for regulation under
PSES/PSNS. For a more detailed
discussion of how EPA performed its
pass-through analysis, see TDD Section
11.
these four wastestreams are no longer
considered low volume waste sources.
Given these new and revised
definitions, the final rule modifies the
structure of the previously established
BPT regulations so that they specifically
identify these four wastestreams, but
without changing their applicable BPT
limitations, which are equal to those for
low volume waste sources.
B. BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS Options
VIII. The Final Rule
A. BPT
The final rule does not revise the
previously established BPT effluent
limitations because the rule regulates
the same wastestreams at the more
stringent BAT/NSPS level of control.
The rule does, however, make certain
structural modifications to the BPT
regulations in light of new and revised
definitions. In particular, the final rule
establishes separate definitions for FGD
wastewater, FGMC wastewater,
gasification wastewater, and combustion
residual leachate, making clear that
EPA analyzed many regulatory
options at proposal, the details of which
were discussed fully in the document
published on June 7, 2013 (78 FR
34432). EPA proposed to regulate
pollutants found in seven wastestreams
found at steam electric power plants,
each based on particular control
technologies. Depending on the interests
represented, public commenters
supported virtually all of the regulatory
options that EPA proposed—from the
least stringent to the most stringent, and
many options in between. For this final
rule, based on public comments, EPA
also considered a few additional
regulatory options. None of these
additional regulatory options involve
regulation of different pollutants or
wastestreams, or the application of
different control technologies, than
those explicitly considered and
presented at proposal. Rather, they
involve slight variations on the overall
packaging of the key options presented
at proposal. Thus, in developing this
final rule, EPA named six main
regulatory options, Options A, B, C, D,
E, and F.14 Table VIII–1 summarizes
these six regulatory options. In general,
as one moves from Option A to Option
F, there is a greater estimated reduction
in pollutant discharges from steam
electric power plants and a higher
associated cost.
The following paragraphs describe the
six options (Options A through F), by
wastestream, including the technology
bases for the requirements associated
with each.
TABLE VIII–1—FINAL RULE: STEAM ELECTRIC MAIN REGULATORY OPTIONS
Technology basis for the main BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS regulatory options
Wastestreams
B
C
D
E
F
FGD Wastewater ...........
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A
Chemical Precipitation
Dry handling
Chemical Precipitation + Biological Treatment
Dry handling
Chemical Precipitation + Biological Treatment
Dry handling
Chemical Precipitation + Biological Treatment
Dry handling
Evaporation.
Fly Ash Transport Water
Chemical Precipitation + Biological Treatment
Dry handling
14 Option B is equivalent to Proposed Option 3,
Option C is equivalent to Proposed Option 4a,
Option E is equivalent to Proposed Option 4, and
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Option F is equivalent to Proposed Option 5.
Option A is a slight variant of Proposed Options 1
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Dry handling.
and 3 and Option D is a slight variant of Proposed
Option 4.
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TABLE VIII–1—FINAL RULE: STEAM ELECTRIC MAIN REGULATORY OPTIONS—Continued
Technology basis for the main BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS regulatory options
Wastestreams
A
Bottom Ash Transport
Water.
FGMC Wastewater ........
Gasification Wastewater
Combustion Residual
Leachate.
Nonchemical Metal
Cleaning Wastes.
B
Impoundment
(Equal to BPT)
Impoundment
(Equal to BPT)
Dry handling ......
Evaporation ........
Impoundment
(Equal to BPT).
[Reserved] .........
Dry handling ......
Evaporation ........
Impoundment
(Equal to BPT).
[Reserved] .........
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Consistent with the proposal, under
all Options A through F, for oil-fired
generating units and small generating
units (50 MW or smaller) that are
existing sources, the rule would
establish BAT/PSES effluent limitations
and standards on TSS in fly ash
transport water, bottom ash transport
water, FGD wastewater, FGMC
wastewater, combustion residual
leachate, and gasification wastewater
equal to the previously promulgated
BPT effluent limitations on TSS 15 in fly
ash transport water, bottom ash
transport water, and low volume waste
sources, where applicable. Under
Options A through E, EPA would
establish a voluntary incentives program
for plants that choose to meet BAT
limitations for FGD wastewater based on
evaporation technology, as described in
Section VIII.C.13. Moreover, as EPA
proposed, under all Options A through
F, the rule would establish an anticircumvention provision designed to
ensure that the purpose of the rule is
achieved, as further described below, in
Section VIII.G. Finally, as EPA
proposed, under all Options A through
F, the rule would correct a
typographical error in the previously
promulgated regulations, as well as
make certain clarifying revisions to the
applicability provision of the
regulations, as further described below,
in Section VIII.H.
1. FGD Wastewater
Under Option A, EPA would establish
effluent limitations and standards for
mercury and arsenic in FGD wastewater
based on treatment using chemical
precipitation. Under Options B through
E, EPA would establish effluent
15 Although TSS is a conventional pollutant,
whenever EPA would be regulating TSS in this final
rule, it would be regulating it as an indicator
pollutant for the particulate form of toxic metals.
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D
E
F
Dry handling/
Closed loop
(for units >400
MW); Impoundment
(Equal to
BPT)(for units
≤400 MW)
Dry handling ......
Evaporation ........
Impoundment
(Equal to BPT).
[Reserved] .........
Dry handling/
Closed loop
Dry handling/
Closed loop
Dry handling/
Closed loop.
Dry handling ......
Evaporation ........
Impoundment
(Equal to BPT).
[Reserved] .........
Dry handling ......
Evaporation ........
Chemical Precipitation.
[Reserved] .........
Dry handling.
Evaporation.
Chemical Precipitation.
[Reserved].
limitations and standards for mercury,
arsenic, selenium, and nitrate/nitrite as
N in FGD wastewater based on
treatment using chemical precipitation
(as under Option A) followed by
biological treatment. Under Option F,
EPA would establish effluent limitations
and standards for mercury, arsenic,
selenium, and TDS in FGD wastewater
based on treatment using an evaporation
system. Under all options, to facilitate
implementation of the new BAT/NSPS/
PSES/PSNS requirements, EPA would
also promulgate a definition for FGD
wastewater, making clear it would no
longer be considered a low volume
waste source.
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
Under all Options A through F, EPA
would establish (or in the case of NSPS/
PSNS, maintain) zero discharge effluent
limitations and standards for pollutants
in fly ash transport water based on use
of a dry handling system.
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
Under Options A and B, EPA would
establish effluent limitations and
standards for bottom ash transport water
equal to the previously promulgated
BPT limitation on TSS, which is based
on the use of a surface impoundment.
Under Options D, E, and F, EPA would
establish zero discharge effluent
limitations and standards for pollutants
in bottom ash transport water based on
one of two technologies: A dry handling
system or a closed-loop system. Under
Option C, EPA would establish, for
bottom ash transport water, zero
discharge limitations and standards
based on dry handling or closed-loop
systems only for generating units with a
nameplate capacity of more than 400
MW. Units with a nameplate capacity
equal to or less than 400 MW would
have to meet new effluent limitations
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and standards equal to the previously
established BPT limitation on TSS,
based on surface impoundments.
4. FGMC Wastewater
Under all Options A through F, EPA
would establish zero discharge effluent
limitations and standards for FGMC
wastewater based on use of a dry
handling system. Under all Options A
through F, EPA would establish a
separate definition for FGMC
wastewater, making clear it would no
longer be considered a low volume
waste source.
5. Gasification Wastewater
The technology basis for control of
gasification wastewater under all
Options A through F is an evaporation
system. Under these options, EPA
would establish limitations and
standards on arsenic, mercury,
selenium, and TDS in gasification
wastewater. Under all Options A
through F, EPA would establish a
separate definition for gasification
wastewater, making clear it would no
longer be considered a low volume
waste source.
6. Combustion Residual Leachate
Under Options A through D, EPA
would establish effluent limitations and
standards for combustion residual
leachate equal to the previously
promulgated BPT limitation on TSS for
low volume waste sources. Under
Options E and F, EPA would establish
additional limitations and standards for
arsenic and mercury in combustion
residual leachate based on treatment
using a chemical precipitation system
(the same technology basis for control of
FGD wastewater under Option A).
Under all Options A through F, EPA
would establish a separate definition for
combustion residual leachate, making
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clear it would no longer be considered
a low volume waste source.
7. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Wastes
Under all Options A through F, EPA
would continue to reserve BAT/NSPS/
PSES/PSNS for non-chemical metal
cleaning wastes, as the previously
established regulations do.
C. Best Available Technology
After considering the technologies
described in this preamble and Section
7 of the TDD, as well as public
comments, and in light of the factors
specified in CWA sections 304(b)(2)(B)
and 301(b)(2)(A) (see Section IV.B.3),
EPA decided to establish BAT effluent
limitations based on the technologies
described in Option D. Thus, for BAT,
the final rule establishes: (1) Limitations
on arsenic, mercury, selenium, and
nitrate/nitrite as N in FGD wastewater,
based on chemical precipitation plus
biological treatment; 16 (2) a zero
discharge limitation for pollutants in fly
ash transport water, based on dry
handling; (3) a zero discharge limitation
for pollutants in bottom ash transport
water, based on dry handling or closedloop systems; (4) a zero discharge
limitation on all pollutants in FGMC
wastewater, based on dry handling; (5)
limitations on mercury, arsenic,
selenium, and TDS in gasification
wastewater, based on evaporation; 17
and (6) a limitation on TSS in
combustion residual leachate, based on
surface impoundments.18 The final rule
also establishes new definitions for FGD
wastewater, FGMC wastewater,
gasification wastewater, and combustion
residual leachate.
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1. FGD Wastewater
This rule identifies treatment using
chemical precipitation followed by
biological treatment as the BAT
technology basis for control of
pollutants discharged in FGD
wastewater. More specifically, the
technology basis for BAT is a chemical
precipitation system that employs
hydroxide precipitation, sulfide
precipitation (organosulfide), and iron
coprecipitation, followed by an anoxic/
16 For those plants that choose to participate in
the voluntary incentives program, the applicable
limitations are for arsenic, mercury, selenium, and
TDS in FGD wastewater, based on the use of an
evaporation system (see Section VIII.C.13).
17 For small (50 MW or less) generating units and
oil-fired generating units, the final rule establishes
different BAT limitations for FGD wastewater, fly
ash transport water, bottom ash transport water,
FGMC wastewater, and gasification wastewater (see
Section VIII.C.12).
18 The final rule also establishes BAT limitations
on TSS in discharges of ‘‘legacy wastewater,’’ which
are equal to previously established TSS limitations.
See Section VIII.C.8.
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anaerobic fixed-film biological
treatment system designed to remove
heavy metals, selenium, and nitrates.19
After accounting for industry changes
described in Section V, forty-five
percent of all steam electric power
plants with wet scrubbers have
equipment or processes in place able to
meet the final BAT/PSES effluent
limitations and standards.20 Many of
these plants use FGD wastewater
management approaches that eliminate
the discharge of FGD wastewater.21
Other plants employ wastewater
treatment technologies that reduce the
amount of pollutants in the FGD
wastestream. Both chemical
precipitation and biological treatment
are well-demonstrated technologies that
are available to steam electric power
plants for use in treating FGD
wastewater. Based on industry survey
responses, 39 U.S. steam electric power
plants (44 percent of plants discharging
FGD wastewater) use some form of
chemical precipitation as part of their
FGD wastewater treatment system. More
than half of these plants (30 percent of
plants discharging FGD wastewater) use
both hydroxide and sulfide
precipitation in the process to further
reduce metals concentrations. In
addition, chemical precipitation has
been used at thousands of industrial
facilities nationwide for the last several
decades (see TDD Section 7).
Biological treatment has been tested at
power plants for more than ten years
and full-scale systems have been
operating at a subset of plants for seven
years. It has been widely used in many
industrial applications for decades, in
19 In estimating costs associated with this
technology basis, EPA assumed that in order to
meet the limitations and standards, certain plants
with high FGD discharge flow rates (greater than or
equal to 1,000 gpm) would elect to incorporate flow
minimization into their operating practices (by
reducing the FGD purge rate or recycling a portion
of their FGD wastewater back to the FGD system),
where the FGD system metallurgy can
accommodate an increase in chlorides. See Section
4.5.4 of EPA’s Incremental Costs and Pollutant
Removals for the Final Effluent Limitations
Guidelines and Standards for the Steam Electric
Power Generating Point Source Category (DCNs
SE05831 and SE05832).
20 This value accounts for announced retirements,
conversions, and changes plants are projected to
make to comply with the CPP and CCR rules.
21 A variety of approaches that depend on plant
specific conditions are used to achieve zero
pollutant discharge at these plants, including
evaporation ponds, complete recycle, and processes
that combine the FGD wastewater with other
materials for landfill disposal. Although these
technologies, as well as others currently used for
achieve zero pollutant discharge, may be available
for some plants with FGD wastewater, EPA
determined they are not available nationally. For
example, evaporation ponds are only available in
certain climates. Similarly, complete recycle is only
available at plants with appropriate FGD
metallurgy.
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both the U.S. and abroad, and it has
been employed at coal mines. Currently,
six U.S. steam electric power plants
(approximately ten percent of those
discharging FGD wastewater) use
biological treatment designed to
substantially reduce nitrogen
compounds and selenium in their FGD
wastewater. Other power plants are
considering installing biological
treatment to remove selenium, and at
least one plant is scheduled to begin
operating a biological treatment system
for selenium removal soon. Four of the
six plants using biological systems to
treat their FGD wastewater precede the
biological treatment stage with chemical
precipitation; thus, the entire system is
designed to remove suspended solids,
particulate and dissolved metals (such
as mercury and arsenic), soluble and
insoluble forms of selenium, and nitrate
and nitrite forms of nitrogen. These
plants show that chemical precipitation
followed by biological treatment is
technologically available and
demonstrated. The other two plants
operating anoxic/anaerobic bioreactors
to remove selenium precede the
biological treatment stage with surface
impoundments instead of chemical
precipitation. The treatment systems at
these two plants are likely to be less
effective at removing metals (including
many dissolved metals) and would
likely face more operational problems
than the plants employing chemical
pretreatment, but they nevertheless
show the efficacy and availability of
biological treatment for removing
selenium and nitrate/nitrite in FGD
wastewater.
A few commenters questioned the
feasibility of biological treatment at
some power plants. Specifically, they
claimed, in part, that the efficacy of
biological systems is unpredictable and
is subject to temperature changes, high
chloride concentrations, scaling, and
high oxidation-reduction potential
(ORP) in the absorber, which could kill
the microorganisms in the bioreactor.
EPA’s record does not support these
assertions for a well-designed and welloperated chemical precipitation and
biological treatment system.
EPA’s record demonstrates that
proper pretreatment prior to biological
treatment and proper monitoring with
adjustments to the treatment system as
necessary are key to reducing
operational concerns raised by
commenters. Proper pretreatment
includes chemical precipitation, which
can address wastewater containing high
oxidant loads through addition of a
reducing agent in one of the treatment
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system’s reaction tanks.22 It also
includes pretreatment of FGD
wastewater containing exceptionally
high levels of nitrates (e.g., greater than
100 ppm nitrate/nitrite as N) using
standard denitrification technologies
such as membrane bioreactors or stirredtank bioreactors. Moreover, recent pilot
studies of biological treatment systems
for FGD wastewater treatment, along
with data for full-scale biological
treatment systems, demonstrate that
monitoring ORP, pH, and total oxidant
load is essential for proper operation of
these systems. Monitoring these
parameters enables the plant to adjust
the system as necessary. For example,
plants that monitor ORP in the absorber
or in the FGD purge will have sufficient
advanced warning to respond to
elevated ORP levels by adding a
chemical reductant to the chemical
precipitation system and/or increasing
the feed rate of the nutrient mix in the
biological reactor. EPA’s cost estimates
account for all of these pretreatment and
monitoring steps. EPA’s record,
moreover, shows that the treatment
systems that form the bases for the BAT
limitations for FGD wastewater are able
to effectively remove the regulated
pollutants at varying influent
concentrations. See DCN SE05733.
Finally, as discussed in Section V.C,
vendors continue to make
improvements to these systems and to
develop non-biological systems for
selenium removal. For additional
information on strategies to address
potential operational concerns, see
DCNs SE04208 and SE04222.
Some commenters also claimed that
the efficacy of biological systems in
removing selenium is subject to changes
in switching from one coal type to
another (also referred to as fuel flexing).
Where EPA had biological treatment
performance data paired with fuel type,
EPA reviewed it and found that existing
biological treatment systems continue to
perform well during periods of fuel
switching. See DCN SE05846. The data
show that, in all cases except one, the
plants met the selenium limitations
following fuel switches. In one instance
when a plant switched to a certain coal
type, the plant exceeded the final daily
maximum selenium limitation for one
out of thirteen observations for the
month while the average of all values
for that month were below the final
monthly selenium limitation. This plant
was not subject to a selenium limit at
the time data was collected. Moreover,
EPA’s record demonstrates that effective
22 EPA included the equipment for chemical
addition of a reducing agent in its cost estimates for
Options B through E.
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communication between the operator(s)
of the generating unit and the boiler, as
well as bench testing and monitoring
the ORP, and making proper
adjustments to the operation of the
treatment system, would make it
possible to prevent potential selenium
exceedances at this plant. Data for two
other plants operating full-scale
biological treatment systems shows that
fuel switches should not result in
exceeding the effluent limitations. EPA
also has data from a pilot project at
another plant employing the same type
of coal used by the one plant that
experienced elevated selenium effluent
concentrations following a coal switch.
The data for this pilot project
demonstrate effective selenium removal
by the BAT technology basis, with all
effluent values at concentrations below
the BAT limitations established in this
rule.
EPA also reviewed effluent data in the
record for plants operating combined
chemical precipitation and biological
treatment for FGD wastewater to
evaluate how cycling operation (i.e.,
changes in electricity generation rate)
and short or extended shutdown periods
may affect the ability of plants to meet
the BAT effluent limitations. These data
demonstrate that cycling operations and
shutdown periods, whether short or
long in duration, are manageable and do
not result in plants being unable to meet
the ELG effluent limitations. See DCN
SE05846.
EPA did not select surface
impoundments as the BAT technology
basis for FGD wastewater because it
would not result in reasonable further
progress toward eliminating the
discharge of all pollutants, particularly
toxic pollutants (see CWA section
301(b)(2)(A)). Surface impoundments,
which rely on gravity to remove
particulates from wastewater, are the
technology basis for the previously
promulgated BPT effluent limitations
for low volume waste sources.
Pollutants that are present mostly in
soluble (dissolved) form, such as
selenium, boron, and magnesium, are
not effectively and reliably removed by
gravity in surface impoundments. For
metals present in both soluble and
particulate forms (such as mercury),
gravity settling in surface
impoundments does not effectively
remove the dissolved fraction.
Furthermore, the environment in some
surface impoundments can create
chemical conditions (e.g., low pH) that
convert particulate forms of metals to
soluble forms, which are not removed
by the gravity settling process.
Additionally, the Electric Power
Research Institute (EPRI) has reported
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that adding FGD wastewater to surface
impoundments used to treat ash
transport water can reduce the settling
efficiency in the impoundments due to
gypsum particle dissolution, thus
increasing the effluent TSS
concentrations. Discharging wastewater
containing elevated levels of TSS would
likely result in also discharging other
pollutants (e.g., metals) in higher
concentrations. EPRI has also reported
that FGD wastewater includes high
loadings of volatile metals, which can
increase the solubility of metals in
surface impoundments, thereby leading
to increased levels of dissolved metals
and higher concentrations of metals in
discharges from surface impoundments.
Finally, as described in Section 8 of the
TDD, surface impoundments are also
subject to seasonal turnover, which
adversely affects their efficacy. Seasonal
turnover occurs when the
impoundment’s upper layer of water
becomes cooler and denser, typically as
the season changes from summer to fall.
The cooler, upper layer of water then
sinks and causes the entire volume of
the impoundment to circulate, which
can result in resuspension of solids that
had settled to the bottom and a
consequent increase in the
concentrations of pollutants discharged
from the impoundment.
Chemical precipitation and biological
treatment are more effective than
surface impoundments at removing both
soluble and particulate forms of metals,
as well as other pollutants such as
nitrogen compounds and TDS. Because
many of the pollutants of concern in
FGD wastewater are present in
dissolved form and would not be
removed by surface impoundments, and
because of the relatively large mass
loads of these pollutants (e.g., selenium,
dissolved mercury) discharged in the
FGD wastestream, EPA decided not to
finalize BAT effluent limitations for
FGD wastewater based on surface
impoundments.
EPA also rejected identifying
chemical precipitation, alone, (Option
A) as BAT for FGD wastewater because,
while chemical precipitation systems
are capable of achieving removals of
various metals, the technology is not
effective at removing selenium, nitrogen
compounds, and certain metals that
contribute to high concentrations of
TDS in FGD wastewater. These
pollutants of concern are discharged by
steam electric power plants throughout
the nation, causing adverse human
health impacts and some of the most
egregious environmental impacts (see
Section XIII and EA). In light of this,
and the fact that economically
achievable technologies are available to
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reduce these pollutants of concern, EPA
determined that, by itself, chemical
precipitation would not result in
reasonable further progress toward the
national goal of eliminating the
discharge of all pollutants (see CWA
section 301(b)(2)(A)), and rejected that
technology basis as BAT in favor of
chemical precipitation followed by
anaerobic/anoxic biological treatment.
EPA also decided not to establish, for
all steam electric power plants, BAT
limitations for FGD wastewater based on
treatment using an evaporation system.
In particular, this technology basis
would employ a falling-film evaporator
(also known as a brine concentrator) to
produce a concentrated wastewater
stream (brine) and a distillate stream.23
While evaporation systems are effective
at removing boron and pollutants that
contribute to high concentrations of
TDS, EPA decided it would not be
appropriate to identify evaporation as
the BAT technology basis for FGD
wastewater at all steam electric power
plants because of the high cost of
possible regulatory requirements based
on evaporation for discharges of FGD
wastewater at existing facilities. The
annual cost to the industry of
limitations based on evaporation would
be more than 2 and 1⁄2 times the cost to
industry estimated for the final rule
(after tax) (approximately $570 million
more expensive than the final rule, on
an annual basis, after tax). Given the
high costs associated with the
technology, and the fact that the steam
electric industry is facing costs
associated with several other rules in
addition to this rule, EPA decided not
to establish BAT limitations for FGD
wastewater based on evaporation for all
steam electric power plants.
Nevertheless, as described further
below, in Section VIII.C.13, the final
rule does establish a voluntary
incentives program under which steam
electric power plants can choose to be
subject to more stringent BAT
limitations for FGD wastewater based on
evaporation.
Finally, EPA decided not to establish
a requirement that would direct
permitting authorities to establish
limitations for FGD wastewater using
site-specific BPJ. Public commenters
representing industry, state, and
environmental group interests urged
EPA not to establish any requirement
that would leave BAT effluent
limitations for FGD wastewater to be
determined on a BPJ basis. Sections 301
23 This
evaporation step would have been
preceded by a chemical precipitation step using
hydroxide precipitation, sulfide precipitation, and
iron co-precipitation, as well as a softening step.
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and 304 of the CWA require EPA to
develop nationally applicable ELGs
based on the best available technology
economically achievable, taking certain
factors into account. EPA decided that
it would not be appropriate to leave
FGD wastewater requirements in the
final rule to be determined on a BPJ
basis because there are sufficient data to
set uniform, nationally applicable
limitations on FGD wastewater at plants
across the nation. Given this, BPJ
permitting of FGD wastewater would
place an unnecessary burden on
permitting authorities, including state
and local agencies, to conduct a
complex technical analysis that they
may not have the resources or expertise
to complete. BPJ permitting of FGD
wastewater would also unnecessarily
burden the regulated industry because
of associated delays and uncertainty
with respect to permits.
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
This rule identifies dry handling as
the BAT technology basis for control of
pollutants in fly ash transport water.
Specifically, the technology basis for
BAT is a dry vacuum system that
employs a mechanical exhauster to
pneumatically convey the fly ash (via a
change in air pressure) from hoppers
directly to a silo. Dry handling is clearly
available to control the pollutants
present in fly ash transport water.
Today, the vast majority of steam
electric power plants use dry handling
techniques to manage fly ash, and by
doing so avoid generating fly ash
transport water. All new generating
units built since the ELGs were last
revised in 1982 have been subject to a
zero discharge standard for pollutants in
fly ash transport water. In addition,
many owners and operators with
generating units that are not subject to
the previously established zero
discharge NSPS for fly ash transport
water have chosen to retrofit their units
with dry fly ash handling technology to
meet operational needs or for economic
reasons. The trend in the industry is,
moreover, toward the conversion and
use of dry fly ash handling systems. See
TDD Section 4.5. Based on data
collected in the industry survey, EPA
estimates that approximately 80 percent
of coal and petroleum coke-fired
generating units operate dry fly ash
handling systems. Since the survey,
companies have continued to upgrade,
or announce plans to upgrade, their ash
handling systems at generating units.
See TDD Section 4.5.
Dry ash handling does not adversely
affect plant operations or reliability, and
it promotes the beneficial reuse of coal
combustion residuals. In addition,
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converting to dry fly ash handling
eliminates the need to treat fly ash
transport water in a surface
impoundment, and it reduces the
amount of wastes entering surface
impoundments and the risk and severity
of structural failures and spills.
EPA decided not to finalize a BAT
limitation on fly ash transport water
equal to the previously promulgated
BPT limitation on TSS, based on the
technology of surface impoundments,
for the same reasons (where applicable)
that EPA did not identify surface
impoundments as BAT for FGD
wastewater (see Section VIII.C.1).
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
This rule identifies dry handling or
closed-loop systems as the BAT
technology basis for control of
pollutants in bottom ash transport
water.24 More specifically, the first
technology basis for BAT is a system in
which bottom ash is collected in a water
quench bath and a drag chain conveyor
(mechanical drag system) then pulls the
bottom ash out of the water bath on an
incline to dewater the bottom ash. The
second technology basis for BAT is a
system in which the bottom ash is
transported using the same processes as
a wet-sluicing system, but instead of
going to an impoundment, the bottom
ash is sluiced to a remote mechanical
drag system. Once there, a drag chain
conveyor pulls the bottom ash out of the
water on an incline to dewater the
bottom ash, and the transport (sluice)
water is then recycled back to the
bottom ash collection system.
These technologies for control of
bottom ash transport water are
demonstrably available. Based on
survey data, more than 80 percent of
coal-fired generating units built in the
last 20 years have installed dry bottom
ash handling systems. In addition, EPA
found that more than half of the entities
that would be subject to BAT
requirements for bottom ash transport
water are already employing zero
discharge technologies (dry handling or
closed-loop wet ash handling) or
planning to do so in the near future.
Dry bottom ash handling does not
adversely affect plant operations or
reliability, and shifting to dry bottom
ash handling offers certain benefits. As
was the case for dry fly ash handling,
shifting to dry bottom ash handling
eliminates the need to send bottom ash
transport water to a surface
impoundment, and it reduces the
24 EPA identified two technologies, a mechanical
drag system or a remote mechanical drag system, as
the BAT technology basis for bottom ash transport
water because of potential space constraints at some
plants’ boilers.
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amount of waste entering surface
impoundments and the risk and severity
of structural failures and spills.
Furthermore, one way companies may
choose to comply with the final rule’s
requirements is to install a completely
dry bottom ash system, which increases
the energy efficiency of the boiler, thus
reducing the amount of coal burned and
associated emissions of carbon dioxide
(CO2) and other pollutants per MW of
electricity generated. On an annual
basis, EPA calculated significant fuel
savings and reduced air emissions from
such systems, the value of which EPA
estimates to be $41 million to $117
million per year.25 See DCN SE05980.
EPA did not identify surface
impoundments as BAT for bottom ash
transport water for the same reasons
(where applicable) that it did not
identify surface impoundments as BAT
for FGD wastewater (see Section
VIII.C.1). Moreover, because the
estimated overall cost of the rule has
decreased since proposal (see Section
IX), EPA also decided that establishing
different bottom ash transport water
limitations for generating units of and
below a certain size (other than 50 MW,
as described in Section VIII.C.12), as in
Option C, was not warranted.
At proposal and for the final rule,
EPA considered an option that would
have established differentiated bottom
ash transport water requirements for
units below 400 MW (Option C). Some
public commenters stated that EPA’s
record does not support differentiated
requirements for bottom ash transport
water. They stated that BAT should be
established at a level at which the costs
are affordable to the industry as a
whole, and that the cost to a unit in
terms of dollars per amount of energy
produced (in MW) is not a relevant
factor. They cited EPA’s record, which
demonstrates that units of all sizes have
installed dry handling and closed-loop
systems, as well as EPA’s economic
achievability analysis, which does not
show that units of 400 MW or less are
especially likely to shut down if faced
with a zero discharge requirement.
Other commenters supported EPA’s
consideration of the relative magnitude
of costs per amount of energy produced
for units below or equal to 400 MW, as
compared to larger units, as well as
differentiated bottom ash transport
water requirements for these units.
EPA reviewed its record and reevaluated whether it would be
appropriate to establish differentiated
requirements for discharges of bottom
25 Neither these savings nor the fuel and
emissions reductions have been incorporated into
EPA’s analyses for this final rule.
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ash transport water from existing
sources based on unit size, in light of
comments and the key changes since
proposal discussed in Section V.
Annualized cost per amount of energy
produced increases along a smooth
curve moving from the very largest units
to the smallest units. See DCN SE05813.
That, however, is expected due to
economies of scale. There is no clear
breaking point at which to establish a
size threshold for purposes of
differentiated requirements for bottom
ash transport water.26 Furthermore, EPA
collected information in the industry
survey that found that units of all sizes,
including those less than 400 MW, have
installed dry handling and closed-loop
systems. And, as further described
below, EPA projects a net retirement of
only 843 MW under the final rule. This
suggests that, as a group, units of 400
MW or less do not face particularly
unique hardships under the final rule
with respect to the industry as a whole.
For these reasons, the final rule does not
establish differentiated bottom ash
transport water requirements for units
equal to or below 400 MW (or for units
equal to or below any other size
threshold, other than 50 MW, as
explained in Section VIII.C.12).
4. FGMC Wastewater
This rule identifies dry handling as
the BAT technology basis for the control
of pollutants in FGMC wastewater. More
specifically, the technology basis for
BAT is a dry vacuum system that
employs a mechanical exhauster to
convey the FGMC waste (via a change
in air pressure) from hoppers directly to
a silo. Dry handling of FGMC waste is
available and well demonstrated in the
industry; indeed, nearly all plants with
FGMC systems use dry handling
systems. Plants using sorbent injection
systems (e.g., activated carbon injection)
to reduce mercury emissions from the
flue gas typically handle the spent
sorbent in the same manner as their fly
ash (see Section VI.B.4 and TDD Section
7.5). As of 2009, 92 percent of the
industry generating FGMC waste uses
dry handling to manage it. Only a few
plants use wet systems to transport the
spent sorbent to disposal in surface
impoundments. Based on the industry
survey, the plants using wet handling
systems operate them as closed-loop
systems and do not discharge FGMC
26 At the same time, costs per amount of energy
produced do begin to increase very dramatically as
one moves from units above 50 MW to units that
are equal to 50 MW and smaller, and thus for
reasons described in Section VIII.C.12, the final rule
establishes different requirements for units of 50
MW or less for several wastestreams, including
bottom ash transport water.
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wastewater, or they already have a dry
handling system that is capable of
achieving zero discharge. Under the
zero discharge limitation, these plants
could choose to continue to operate
their wet systems as closed-loop
systems, or they could convert to dry
handling technologies by managing the
fly ash and spent sorbent together in a
retrofitted dry system (rather than an
impoundment) or by installing
dedicated dry handling equipment for
the FGMC waste similar to the
equipment used for fly ash.
EPA decided that it would not be
appropriate to establish BAT limitations
for FGMC wastewater based on surface
impoundments for the same reasons
(where applicable) that it did not
identify surface impoundments as BAT
for FGD wastewater (see Section
VIII.C.1).
5. Gasification Wastewater
This rule identifies evaporation as the
BAT technology basis for the control of
pollutants in gasification wastewater.
More specifically, the technology basis
for BAT is an evaporation system using
a falling-film evaporator (or brine
concentrator) to produce a concentrated
wastewater stream (brine) and a
reusable distillate stream. This
evaporation technology is available and
well demonstrated in the industry for
treatment of gasification wastewater. All
three IGCC plants now operating in the
U.S. (the only existing sources of
gasification wastewater) use evaporation
technology to treat their gasification
wastewater.
EPA did not identify surface
impoundments as BAT for gasification
wastewater for the same reasons (where
applicable) that it did not identify
surface impoundments as BAT for FGD
wastewater (see Section VIII.C.1). In
addition, one existing IGCC plant
previously used a surface impoundment
to treat its gasification wastewater, and
the impoundment effluent repeatedly
exceeded its NPDES permit effluent
limitations necessary to meet applicable
WQS. Because of the demonstrated
inability of surface impoundments to
remove the pollutants of concern, and
given that current industry practice is
treatment of gasification wastewater
using evaporation, EPA concluded that
surface impoundments do not represent
BAT for gasification wastewater.
EPA also considered including
cyanide treatment as part of the
technology basis for BAT (as well as
NSPS, PSES, and PSNS) for gasification
wastewater. EPA is aware that the
Edwardsport IGCC plant, which began
commercial operation in June 2013,
includes cyanide destruction as one step
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in the treatment process for gasification
wastewater. EPA, however, does not
currently have sufficient data with
which to calculate possible ELGs for
cyanide. Thus, EPA decided not to
establish cyanide limitations or
standards for gasification wastewater in
this rule. This decision does not
preclude permitting authorities from
setting more stringent effluent
limitations where necessary to meet
WQS. In those cases, plants may elect to
install additional treatment, like
cyanide destruction, to meet water
quality-based effluent limitations.
6. Combustion Residual Leachate
EPA received public comments
expressing concern that the proposed
definition of combustion residual
leachate would apply to contaminated
stormwater. Although this was not the
Agency’s intention, for the final rule,
EPA revised the definition to make it
clear that contaminated stormwater does
not fall within the final definition of
combustion residual leachate. This rule
identifies surface impoundments as the
BAT technology basis for control of
pollutants in combustion residual
leachate. Based on surface
impoundments, which relies on gravity
to remove particulates, this rule
establishes a BAT limitation on TSS in
combustion residual leachate equal to
the previously promulgated BPT
limitation on TSS in low volume waste
sources. Few steam electric power
plants currently employ technologies
other than surface impoundments for
treatment of combustion residual
leachate. Throughout the development
of this rule, EPA considered whether
technologies in place for treatment of
other wastestreams at steam electric
power plants and wastestreams
generated by other industries, including
chemical precipitation, could be used
for combustion residual leachate. At
proposal, noting the small amount of
pollutants in combustion residual
leachate relative to other significant
wastestreams at steam electric power
plants, and that this was an area ripe for
innovation, EPA requested additional
information related to cost, pollutant
reduction, and effectiveness of chemical
precipitation and alternative approaches
to treat combustion residual leachate.
Commenters did not provide
information that EPA could use to
establish BAT limitations. Thus, EPA
decided not to finalize BAT limitations
for combustion residual leachate based
on chemical precipitation (Option E).
The record demonstrates that the
amount of pollutants collectively
discharged in combustion residual
leachate by steam electric power plants
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is a very small portion of the pollutants
discharged collectively by all steam
electric power plants (approximately 3
percent of baseline loadings, on a toxicweighted basis). Given this, and the fact
that this rule regulates the wastestreams
representing the three largest sources of
pollutants from steam electric power
plants (including by setting a zero
discharge standard for two out of the
three wastestreams), EPA decided that
this rule already represents reasonable
further progress toward the CWA’s
goals. The final rule, therefore,
establishes BAT limitations for
combustion residual leachate equal to
the BPT limitation on TSS for low
volume waste sources.
7. Timing
As part of the consideration of the
technological availability and economic
achievability of the BAT limitations in
the rule, EPA considered the magnitude
and complexity of process changes and
new equipment installations that would
be required at facilities to meet the
rule’s requirements. As described in
greater detail in Section XVI.A.1, where
BAT limitations in this rule are more
stringent than previously established
BPT limitations, those limitations do
not apply until a date determined by the
permitting authority that is as soon as
possible beginning November 1, 2018
(approximately three years following
promulgation of this rule), but that is
also no later than December 31, 2023
(approximately eight years following
promulgation).
Consistent with the proposal and
supported by many commenters, the
final rule takes this approach in order to
provide the time that many facilities
need to raise capital, plan and design
systems, procure equipment, and
construct and then test systems. It also
allows for consideration of plant
changes being made in response to other
Agency rules affecting the steam electric
industry (see Section V.B). Moreover, it
enables facilities to take advantage of
planned shutdown or maintenance
periods to install new pollution control
technologies.27 EPA’s decision is also
designed to allow, more broadly, for the
coordination of generating unit outages
in order to maintain grid reliability and
prevent any potential impacts on
electricity availability, something that
public commenters urged EPA to
consider. In addition, as requested by
industry and states, this final rule and
preamble clarify how the ‘‘as soon as
27 EPA’s record demonstrates that plants typically
have one or two planned shut-downs annually and
that the length of these shutdowns is more than
adequate to complete installation of relevant
treatment and control technologies.
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possible date’’ is determined and
implemented for steam electric power
plants. The final rule specifies the
factors that the permitting authority
must consider in determining the ‘‘as
soon as possible’’ date, and Section
XVI.A.1 provides guidance on
implementation with respect to timing.
In addition, the rule includes a ‘‘no later
than’’ date of December 31, 2023, for
implementation because, as public
commenters pointed out, without such
a date, implementation could be
substantially delayed, and a firm ‘‘no
later than’’ date creates a more level
playing field across the industry. EPA’s
economic analysis assumes prompt
renewal of permits (no permits will be
administratively continued) and, thus,
that the requirements of the rule will be
fully implemented by 2023. While some
commenters requested that EPA give
permitting authorities the ability to
extend the implementation period
beyond December 31, 2023, in light of
public comments received on the
proposal, and the fact that plants can
reasonably be expected to meet the new
ELGs by December 31, 2023, this
timeframe is appropriate given the
CWA’s pollutant discharge elimination
goals (see CWA section 101(a)).
8. Legacy Wastewater
For purposes of the BAT limitations
in this rule, this preamble uses the term
‘‘legacy wastewater’’ to refer to FGD
wastewater, fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, FGMC
wastewater, or gasification wastewater
generated prior to the date determined
by the permitting authority that is as
soon as possible beginning November 1,
2018, but no later than December 31,
2023 (see Section VIII.C.7). Under this
rule, legacy wastewater must comply
with specific BAT limitations, which
EPA is setting equal to the previously
promulgated BPT limitations on TSS in
the discharge of fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, and low
volume waste sources.
EPA did not establish zero discharge
BAT limitations for legacy wastewater
because technologies that can achieve
zero discharge (such as the ones on
which the final BAT requirements
discussed in Sections VIII.C.2, 3, and 4,
above, are based) are not shown to be
available for legacy wastewater. Legacy
wastewater already exists in wet form,
and thus dry handling could not be used
eliminate its discharge. Furthermore,
EPA lacks data to show that legacy
wastewater could be reliably
incorporated into a closed-loop process
that eliminates discharges, given the
variation in operating practices among
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surface impoundments containing
legacy wastewater.
EPA also decided not to establish
BAT limitations for legacy wastewater
based on a technology other than
surface impoundments (chemical
precipitation, chemical precipitation
plus biological treatment, evaporation)
because it does not have the data to do
so. Data are not available because of the
way that legacy wastewater is currently
handled at plants.
The vast majority of plants combine
some of their legacy wastewater with
each other and with other wastestreams,
including cooling water, coal pile
runoff, metal cleaning wastes, and low
volume waste sources in surface
impoundments.28 Once combined in
surface impoundments, the legacy
wastewater no longer has the same
characteristics that it did when it was
first generated. For example, the
addition of cooling water can dilute
legacy wastewater to a point where the
pollutants are no longer present at
treatable levels. Additionally, some
wastestreams have significant variations
in flow, such as metal cleaning wastes,
which are generally infrequently
generated, or coal pile runoff, which is
generated during precipitation events.
Because surface impoundments are
typically open, with no cover, they also
receive direct precipitation. As a result
of all of this, the characteristics of
legacy wastewater contained in surface
impoundments (flow rate and pollutant
concentrations) vary at both any given
plant, as well as across plants
nationwide. Furthermore, EPA generally
would like to have enough performance
data at a well-designed, well-operated
plant or plants to derive limitations and
standards using its well-established and
judicially upheld statistical
methodology. In this case, except in
limited circumstances, plants do not
treat the legacy wastewater that they
send to an impoundment using anything
beyond the surface impoundment
itself.29 Thus, the final rule establishes
28 For example, there are 65 plants for which EPA
estimated FGD wastewater compliance costs and
that use an impoundment as part of their treatment
system. For 54 of the 65 plants (83 percent), the
FGD wastewater is commingled with, at least, fly
and/or bottom ash transport water, and for another
eight of the 65 plants (12 percent), the FGD
wastewater is commingled with non-ash
wastewater, such as cooling tower blowdown or
low volume waste sources. DCN SE05875.
29 For example, no plant uses biological treatment
or evaporation to treat its legacy fly ash transport
water or legacy bottom ash transport water
contained in an impoundment, including any
impoundment that may contain only legacy fly ash
transport water or only legacy bottom ash transport
water. Although EPA identified fewer than ten
plants that use chemical precipitation to treat
wastewater that contains, among other things, ash
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BAT limitations for legacy wastewater
equal to the previously promulgated
BPT limitations on TSS in discharges of
fly ash transport water, bottom ash
transport water, and low volume waste
sources.
Finally, while there are a few plants
that discharge from an impoundment
containing only legacy FGD
wastewater,30 EPA rejected establishing
requirements for such legacy FGD
wastewater based on a technology other
than surface impoundments. EPA
determined that, while it could be
possible for plants to treat the legacy
FGD wastewater with the same
technology used to treat FGD
wastewater subject to the BAT
limitations described in Section VIII.C.1
(because their characteristics could be
similar), establishing requirements
based on any technology more advanced
than surface impoundments for these
legacy ‘‘FGD-only’’ wastewater
impoundments could encourage plants
to alter their operations prior to the date
that the final limitations apply in order
to avoid the new requirements. Likely,
a plant would begin commingling other
process wastewater with their legacy
FGD wastewater in the impoundment so
that any legacy ‘‘FGD-only’’ wastewater
requirements would no longer apply.
Alternatively, plants might choose to
pump the legacy FGD wastewater out of
the impoundment on an accelerated
schedule and prior to the date that the
final limitations apply. In this case, the
more rapid discharge of the wastewater
could result in temporary increases in
environmental impacts (e.g.,
exceedances of WQC for acute impacts
to aquatic life). EPA wanted to avoid
creating such incentives in this rule,
and it therefore decided to establish
BAT limitations for discharges of legacy
FGD wastewater based on the
previously promulgated BPT limitations
on TSS for low volume waste sources.
Finally, EPA notes that, as a result of the
zero discharge requirements for
discharges of all pollutants in three
wastestreams (fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, and flue gas
mercury control wastewater), this rule
provides strong incentives for steam
transport water, EPA does not have any data to
characterize the effluent from these systems. Thus,
no steam electric industry data exist to establish
BAT limitations for possible ‘‘fly ash-only’’
impoundments or ‘‘bottom ash-only’’
impoundments based on these technologies.
30 EPA determined that there are three plants that
are estimated to incur FGD wastewater compliance
costs and that use an impoundment as part of the
treatment system, but where the FGD wastewater is
not commingled with other process wastewaters in
the impoundment. There are no plants that
discharge from an impoundment containing only
gasification wastewater.
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electric power plants to greatly reduce,
if not completely eliminate, the disposal
and treatment of their major sources of
ash-containing wastewater in surface
impoundments. As a result, EPA
anticipates that overall volumes of
legacy wastewater will continue to
decrease dramatically over time, as this
rule becomes fully implemented.
9. Economic Achievability
EPA’s analysis for the final BAT
limitations demonstrates that they are
economically achievable for the steam
electric industry as a whole, as required
by CWA section 301(b)(2)(A). EPA
performed cost and economic impact
assessments using the Integrated
Planning Model (IPM) using a baseline
that reflects impacts from other relevant
environmental regulations (see RIA).31
For the final rule, the model showed
very small additional effects on the
electricity market, on both a national
and regional sub-market basis. Based on
the results of these analyses, EPA
estimated that the requirements
associated with the final rule would
result in a net reduction of 843 MW in
steam electric generating capacity as of
the model year 2030, reflecting full
compliance by all plants. This capacity
reduction corresponds to a net effect of
two unit closures or, when aggregating
to the level of steam electric generating
plants, and net plant closure.32 These
IPM results support EPA’s conclusion
that the final rule is economically
achievable.
10. Non-Water Quality Environmental
Impacts, Including Energy
Requirements 33
The final BAT effluent limitations
have acceptable non-water quality
31 IPM is a comprehensive electricity market
optimization model that can evaluate such impacts
within the context of regional and national
electricity markets. See Section IX for additional
discussion.
32 Given the design of IPM, unit-level and thereby
plant-level projections are presented as an indicator
of overall regulatory impact rather than a precise
prediction of future unit–level or plant-specific
compliance actions.
33 As described in Section VIII.C.13, this rule
includes a voluntary incentives program that
provides the certainty of more time for plants to
implement new BAT requirements, if they adopt
additional process changes and controls that
achieve limitations on mercury, arsenic, selenium,
and TDS in FGD wastewater, based on evaporation
technology. The information presented in this
section assumes plants will choose to comply with
BAT limitations for FGD wastewater based on
chemical precipitation and biological treatment.
EPA does not know how many plants will opt into
the voluntary incentives program. Therefore, EPA
also calculated non-water quality environmental
impacts assuming all plants will elect to comply
with the voluntary incentives program and
similarly found these impacts to be acceptable. See
DCN SE05051.
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environmental impacts, including
energy requirements. Section XII
describes in more detail EPA’s analysis
of non-water quality environmental
impacts and energy requirements. EPA
estimates that by year 2023, under the
final rule and reflecting full compliance,
energy consumption increases by less
than 0.01 percent of the total electricity
generated by power plants. EPA also
estimates that the amount of fuel
consumed by increased operation of
motor vehicles (e.g., for transporting fly
ash) increases by approximately 0.002
percent of total fuel consumption by all
motor vehicles.
EPA also evaluated the effect of the
BAT effluent limitations on air
emissions generated by all electric
power plants (NOX, sulfur oxides (SOX),
and CO2), solid waste generation, and
water usage. Under the final rule, NOX
emissions are projected to decrease by
1.16 percent, SOX emissions are
projected to increase by 0.04 percent,
and CO2 emissions are projected to
decrease by 0.106 percent due to
changes in the mix of electricity
generation (e.g., less electricity from
coal-fired steam electric generating units
and more electricity from natural gasfired steam electric generating units).
Moreover, solid waste generation is
projected to increase by less than 0.001
percent of total solid waste generated by
all electric power plants. Finally, EPA
estimates that the final rule has a
positive impact on water withdrawal,
with steam electric power plants
reducing the amount of water they
withdraw by 57 billion gallons per year
(155 million gallons per day).
11. Impacts on Residential Electricity
Prices and Low-Income and Minority
Populations
EPA examined the effects of the final
rule on consumers as an additional
factor that might be appropriate when
considering what level of control
represents BAT. If all annualized
compliance costs were passed on to
residential consumers of electricity,
instead of being borne by the operators
and owners of power plants (a very
conservative assumption), the average
monthly increase in electricity bill for a
typical household would be no more
than $0.12 under the final rule.
EPA also considered the effect of the
rule on minority and low-income
populations. As explained in Section
XVII.J, using demographic data
regarding who resides closest to steam
electric power plant discharges and who
consumes the most fish from waters
receiving power plant discharges, EPA
concluded that low-income and
minority populations benefit to an even
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greater degree than the general
population from the reductions in
discharges associated with the final
rule.
12. Existing Oil-Fired and Small
Generating Units
EPA considered whether
subcategorization of the ELGs was
warranted based on the factors specified
in CWA section 304(b)(2)(B) (see
Section IV.B.3 and TDD Section 5).
Ultimately, EPA concluded that it
would be appropriate to set different
limitations for existing small generating
units (50 MW or less) and existing oilfired generating units. No other,
different requirements were warranted
for this rule under the factors
considered.
Oil-Fired Generating Units. For oilfired generating units, the final rule
establishes BAT effluent limitations for
FGD wastewater, fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, FGMC
wastewater, and gasification wastewater
equal to previously established BPT
limitations on TSS in fly ash transport
water, bottom ash transport water, and
low volume waste sources. As defined
in the rule, oil-fired generating units
refer to those that use oil as either the
primary or secondary fuel and do not
burn coal or petroleum coke. Units that
use only oil during startup or for flame
stabilization are not considered oil-fired
generating units.
EPA decided to finalize these
limitations for oil-fired generating units
because EPA’s record demonstrates that,
in comparison to coal- and petroleum
coke-fired units, oil-fired units generate
substantially fewer pollutants, are
generally older and operate less
frequently, and in many cases are more
susceptible to early retirement when
faced with compliance costs attributable
to the final rule.
The amount of ash generated by oilfired units is a small fraction of the
amount produced by coal-fired units.
Coal-fired units generate hundreds to
thousands of tons of ash each day, with
some plants generating more than 2,000
tons per day of ash. In contrast, oil-fired
units generate less than ten tons of ash
per day. This disparity is also apparent
when comparing the ash tonnage to the
amount of power generated, with coalfired units producing nearly 1,800 times
more ash than oil-fired units (0.6 tons
per MW-hour on average for coal units;
0.000319 tons per MW-hour on average
for oil units). The amount of pollutants
discharged to surface waters is roughly
correlated to the amount of ash
wastewater discharged; thus, oil-fired
generating units discharge substantially
fewer pollutants to surface waters than
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coal-fired units, even when generating
the same amount of electricity. EPA
estimates that the amount of pollutants
discharged collectively by all oil-fired
generating units is a very small portion
of the pollutants discharged collectively
by all steam electric power plants (less
than one percent, on a toxic-weighted
basis).
Oil-fired generating units are
generally among the oldest steam
electric units in the industry. Eightyseven percent of the units are more than
25 years old. In fact, more than a quarter
of the units began operation more than
50 years ago. Based on responses to the
industry survey, fewer than 20 oil-fired
generating units discharged fly ash or
bottom ash transport water in 2009. This
is likely because only about 20 percent
of oil-fired generating units operate as
baseload units; the rest are either
cycling/intermediate units (about 45
percent) or peaking units (about 35
percent). These units also have notably
low capacity utilization. While about 30
percent of the baseload units report
capacity utilization greater than 75
percent, almost half report a capacity
utilization of less than 25 percent.
Eighty percent of the cycling/
intermediate units and all peaking units
also report capacity utilization less than
25 percent. Thirty-five percent of oilfired generating units operated for more
than six months in 2009; nearly half of
the units operated for fewer than 30
days.
While these older and generally
intermittently operated oil-fired
generating units are capable of installing
and operating the treatment
technologies that form the bases for this
rule, and the costs would be affordable
for most plants, EPA concludes that,
due to the factors described here,
companies may choose to shut down
these oil-fired units instead of making
new investments to comply with the
rule. If these units shut down, EPA is
concerned about resulting reductions in
the flexibility that grid operators have
during peak demand due to less reserve
generating capacity to draw upon. But,
more importantly, maintaining a diverse
fleet of generating units that includes a
variety of fuel sources is important to
the nation’s energy security. Because the
supply/delivery network for oil is
different from other fuel sources,
maintaining the existence of oil-fired
generating units helps ensure reliable
electric power generation, as
commenters confirmed. EPA considered
these potential impacts on electric grid
reliability and the nation’s energy
security, under CWA section
304(b)(2)(B), in its decision to establish
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supported EPA’s consideration of the
relative magnitude of costs for smaller
units compared to larger units, and
some suggested EPA should increase the
size threshold to 100 MW because those
units also have disproportionate costs
per amount of energy produced, and
they collectively discharge a small
fraction of the total pollutants
discharged by all steam electric power
plants.
EPA reviewed the record and reevaluated the threshold for small units
in light of comments and the key
changes since proposal discussed in
Section V. EPA considered establishing
no threshold, as well as several different
size thresholds, for small units. The
Agency looked closely at establishing a
threshold at 50 MW or 100 MW. While
the total amount of pollutants
discharged by units at these thresholds
is relatively small in comparison to
those discharged by all steam electric
power plants, the amount of pollutants
discharged by units smaller than or
equal to 100 MW is almost double the
amount of pollutants discharged by
units smaller than or equal to 50 MW.
See DCN SE05813 for specific
information on these pollutant
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discharges. The record indicates that the
cost per unit of energy produced
increases as the size of the generating
unit decreases, and while there is no
clear ‘‘knee of the curve’’ at which to
establish a size threshold, there is a
difference between units at 50 MW and
below compared to those above 50 MW.
Figure VIII–1, below, shows the
annualized cost per amount of energy
produced for existing units under
Regulatory Option D. Figure VIII–1
shows that the cost per amount of
energy produced increases as the size of
the generating unit decreases.
Annualized cost per amount of energy
produced increases gradually as one
moves from the very largest units down
to 100 MW, and then the cost per
amount of energy produced begins to
increase more rapidly as one moves
from 100 MW down to 50 MW, until it
increases very rapidly for units at
50MW and below. Additionally, Figure
VIII–1 shows that nearly all of the ratios
of cost to amount of energy produced for
units smaller than or equal to 50 MW
are above those for the entire population
of remaining units. The same cannot be
said of the ratio for units smaller than
or equal to 100 MW.
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different BAT limitations for oil-fired
generating units.
Small Generating Units. The final rule
also establishes BAT effluent limitations
for FGD wastewater, fly ash transport
water, bottom ash transport water,
FGMC wastewater, and gasification
water at small generating units equal to
previously established BPT limitations
on TSS for fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, and low
volume waste sources. For purposes of
this rule, small generating units refer to
those units with a total nameplate
generating capacity of 50 MW or less.
EPA decided to establish these different
BAT limitations for small units because
they are more likely to incur compliance
costs that are significantly and
disproportionately higher per amount of
energy produced (dollars per MW) than
those incurred by larger units.
Some commenters stated that the cost
to a unit in terms of dollars per MW is
not relevant because BAT should be
established at a level at which the costs
are affordable to the industry as a
whole. They noted that EPA’s IPM
analysis demonstrates that the most
stringent proposed regulatory option is
economically achievable for all units
above 50 MW. Other commenters
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In light of the fact that the costs per
amount of energy produced are
significantly and disproportionately
higher for units smaller than or equal to
50 MW compared to larger units, and in
light of the very small fraction of
pollutants discharged by units smaller
than or equal to 50 MW, EPA ultimately
decided to establish different
requirements for units at this threshold.
Keeping in mind the statutory directive
to set effluent limitations that result in
reasonable further progress toward the
national goal of eliminating the
discharge of all pollutants (CWA section
301(b)(2)(A)), EPA used its best
judgment to balance the competing
interests. EPA recognizes that any
attempt to establish a size threshold for
generating units will be imperfect due to
individual differences across units and
firms. EPA concludes, however, that a
threshold of 50 MW or less reasonably
and effectively targets those generating
units that should receive different
treatment based on the considerations
described above, while advancing the
CWA’s goals. Furthermore, as shown in
Section IX.C, EPA’s analysis
demonstrates that the final rule, with a
threshold established at 50 MW, is
economically achievable.
13. Voluntary Incentives Program
As part of the BAT for existing
sources, the final rule establishes a
voluntary incentives program that
provides the certainty of more time
(until December 31, 2023) for plants to
implement new BAT requirements, if
they adopt additional process changes
and controls that achieve limitations on
mercury, arsenic, selenium, and TDS in
FGD wastewater, based on evaporation
technology (see Section VIII.C.1 for a
more complete description of the
evaporation technology basis). This
optional program offers significant
environmental protections beyond those
achieved by the final BAT limitations
for FGD wastewater based on chemical
precipitation plus biological treatment
because evaporation technology is
capable of achieving significant
removals of toxic metals, as well as
TDS.34
EPA’s proposal included a voluntary
incentives program that contained, as
one element, incentives in the form of
additional implementation time for
plants that eliminate the discharge of all
process wastewater (except cooling
water). Public commenters urged EPA to
consider establishing, instead, a
program that provided incentives for
34 Properly
operated evaporation systems are also
capable of achieving the BAT limitations based on
chemical precipitation plus biological treatment.
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plants that go further than the rule’s
requirements to reduce discharges from
individual wastestreams. Because the
final rule already contains zero
discharge limitations for several key
wastestreams, EPA decided that the
voluntary incentives program should
focus on FGD wastewater.
EPA concluded that additional
pollutant reductions could be achieved
under a voluntary incentives program
because there are certain reasons a plant
might opt to treat its FGD wastewater
using evaporation rather than chemical
precipitation plus biological treatment.
One such reason is the possibility that
a plant’s NPDES permit may need more
stringent limitations necessary to meet
applicable WQS. For example, some
power plant discharges containing TDS
(including bromide) that occur upstream
of drinking water treatment plants can
negatively impact treatment of source
waters at the drinking water treatment
plants. A recent study identified four
drinking water treatment plants that
experienced increased levels of bromide
in their source water, and corresponding
increases in the formation of
carcinogenic disinfection by-products
(brominated DPBs) in the finished
drinking water, after the installation of
wet FGD scrubbers at upstream steam
electric power plants (DCN SE04503).
Furthermore, based on trends in the
industry and experience with this and
other industries, EPA expects that, over
time, the costs of evaporation (and other
technologies that could achieve the
limitations in the voluntary incentives
program, including zero discharge
practices) will decrease so as to make it
an even more attractive option for
plants. EPA understands that vendors
are already working on changes to this
technology to reduce the costs, reduce
the amount of solids generated, and
improve the solids handling. See TDD
Section 7.1.4.
The technology on which the BAT
limitations in the voluntary incentives
program are based, evaporation, is
available to steam electric power plants.
EPA identified three plants in the U.S.
that have installed, and one plant that
is in the process of installing,
evaporation systems to treat their FGD
wastewater. Four coal-fired power
plants in Italy treat FGD wastewater
using evaporation. See TDD Section 7.
Furthermore, the voluntary program is
economically achievable because only
those plants that opt to be subject to the
BAT limitations based on evaporation,
rather than the BAT limitations based
on chemical precipitation plus
biological treatment, must achieve them.
Therefore, any plant that chooses to be
subject to the more stringent limitations
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has determined for itself, in light of its
own financial information and
economic outlook, that such limitations
are economically achievable. Finally,
EPA analyzed the non-water quality
environmental impacts and energy
requirements associated with the
voluntary incentives program, and it
found them acceptable. See DCN
SE05574.
The development of this voluntary
incentives program furthers the CWA’s
ultimate goal of eliminating the
discharge of pollutants into the Nation’s
waters. See CWA section 101(a)(1) and
section 301(b)(2)(A) (specifying that
BAT will result in ‘‘reasonable further
progress toward the national goal of
eliminating the discharge of
pollutants’’). While the final rule’s BAT
limitations based on chemical
precipitation plus biological treatment
represent ‘‘reasonable further progress,’’
the voluntary incentives program is
designed to press further toward
achieving the national goal of the Act,
as wastewater that has been treated
properly using evaporation has very low
pollutant concentrations (also making it
possible to reuse the wastewater and
completely eliminate the discharge of
any pollutants). In addition, CWA
section 104(a)(1) gives the
Administrator authority to establish
national programs for the prevention,
reduction, and elimination of pollution,
and it provides that such programs shall
promote the acceleration of research,
experiments, and demonstrations
relating to the prevention, reduction,
and elimination of pollution. EPA
anticipates that the voluntary incentives
program will effectively accelerate the
research into and demonstration of
controls and processes intended to
prevent, reduce, and eliminate pollution
because, under it, plants will opt to
employ control and treatment strategies
to significantly reduce discharges of
pollutants found in FGD wastewater.
Steam electric power plants agreeing
to meet BAT limitations for FGD
wastewater based on evaporation must
comply with those limitations on
arsenic, mercury, selenium, and TDS in
FGD wastewater.35 For such plants, the
BAT limitations based on evaporation
apply as of December 31, 2023, to FGD
wastewater generated on and after
December 31, 2023. Plants opting to
participate in the voluntary program can
use the period in advance of this date
to research, engineer, design, procure,
construct, and optimize systems capable
35 For some plants, proper pretreatment such as
softening or chemical precipitation is likely
appropriate to ensure effective and efficient
operation of evaporation systems.
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of meeting the limitations based on
evaporation.
For purposes of the voluntary
incentives program BAT limitations,
legacy FGD wastewater is FGD
wastewater generated prior to December
31, 2023. For such legacy FGD
wastewater, the final rule establishes
BAT limitations on TSS in discharges of
FGD wastewater that are equal to BPT
limitations for low volume waste
sources.
EPA decided not to make the
voluntary incentives program available
to plants that send their FGD
wastewater to POTWs. Under CWA
section 307(b)(1), PSES must specify a
time for compliance that does not
exceed three years from the date of
promulgation, and thus the additional
time of up to 2023 cannot be given to
indirect dischargers. Of course, nothing
prohibits an indirect discharger from
using any technology, including
evaporation, to comply with the final
PSES and PSNS.
EPA expects that any plant interested
in the voluntary incentives program
would indicate their intent to opt into
the program prior to issuance of its next
NPDES permit, following the effective
date of this rule. A plant can indicate its
intent to opt into the voluntary program
on its permit application or through
separate correspondence to the NPDES
Director, as long as the signatory
requirements of 40 CFR 122.22 are met.
D. Best Available Demonstrated Control
Technology/NSPS
After considering all of the
technologies described in this preamble
and TDD Section 7, as well as public
comments, and in light of the factors
specified in CWA section 306 (see
Section IV.B.4), EPA concluded that the
technologies described in Option F
represent BADCT for steam electric
power plants, and the final rule
promulgates NSPS based on that option.
Thus, the final NSPS establish: (1)
Standards on arsenic, mercury,
selenium, and TDS in FGD wastewater,
based on evaporation (same basis as for
BAT limitations in voluntary incentives
program); (2) a zero discharge standard
on all pollutants in bottom ash transport
water, based on dry handling or closedloop systems (same bases as for BAT
limitations); (3) a zero discharge
standard on all pollutants in FGMC
wastewater, based on dry handling
(same basis as for BAT limitations); (4)
standards on mercury, arsenic,
selenium, and TDS in gasification
wastewater, based on evaporation
technology (same basis as for BAT
limitations); and (5) standards on
mercury and arsenic in discharges of
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combustion residual leachate, based on
chemical precipitation (more
specifically, the technology basis is a
chemical precipitation system that
employs hydroxide precipitation,
sulfide precipitation, and iron
coprecipitation to remove heavy
metals). The final rule also maintains
the previously established zero
discharge NSPS on discharges of fly ash
transport water, based on dry handling.
The record indicates that the
technologies that serve as the bases for
the final NSPS are well demonstrated
based on the performance of plants
using the technologies. For example,
new steam electric power generating
sources have been meeting the
previously established zero discharge
standard for fly ash transport water
since 1982, predominantly through the
use of dry handling technologies.
Moreover, as described in Section
VIII.C.13, three plants in the U.S. and
four plants in Italy use evaporation
technology to treat their FGD
wastewater, and another U.S. plant is in
the process of installing such
technology for that purpose. Of the
approximately 50 coal-fired generating
units that were built within the last 20
years, most (83 percent) manage their
bottom ash without using water to
transport the ash and, as a result, do not
discharge bottom ash transport water.
The technology basis identified as BAT
technology for gasification wastewater
represents current industry practice.
Every IGCC power plant currently in
operation uses evaporation to treat their
gasification wastewater, even when the
wastewater is not discharged and is
instead reused at the plant. In the case
of FGMC wastewater, every plant
currently using post-combustion sorbent
injection (e.g., activated carbon
injection) either handles the captured
spent sorbent with a dry process or
manages the FGMC wastewater so that
it is not discharged to surface waters (or
has the capability to do so). For
combustion residual leachate, chemical
precipitation is a well-demonstrated
technology for removing metals and
other pollutants from a variety of
industrial wastewaters, including
leachate from landfills not located at
power plants. Chemical precipitation is
also well demonstrated at steam electric
power plants for treatment of FGD
wastewater that contains the pollutants
in combustion residual leachate.
The NSPS in the final rule pose no
barrier to entry. The cost to install
technologies at new units is typically
less than the cost to retrofit existing
units. For example, the cost differential
between Options B, C, and D for existing
sources is mostly associated with
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retrofitting controls for bottom ash
handling systems. For new sources,
however, NSPS based on Option F do
not present plants with the same choice
of retrofit versus modification of
existing processes. This is because every
new generating unit must install some
type of bottom ash handling system as
the unit is constructed. Establishing a
zero discharge standard for all
pollutants in bottom ash transport water
as part of the NSPS means that power
plants will install a dry bottom ash
handling system during construction
instead of installing a wet-sluicing
system.
Moreover, EPA assessed the possible
impacts of the final NSPS on new
sources by comparing the incremental
costs of the Option F technologies to the
costs of hypothetical new generating
units. EPA is not able to predict which
plants might construct new units or the
exact characteristics of such units.
Instead, EPA calculated and analyzed
compliance costs for a variety of plant
and unit configurations. EPA developed
NSPS compliance costs for new sources
using a methodology similar to the one
used to develop compliance costs for
existing sources. EPA’s estimates for
compliance costs for new sources are
based on the net difference in costs
between wastewater treatment system
technologies that would likely have
been implemented at new sources under
the previously established regulatory
requirements, and those that would
likely be implemented under the final
rule. EPA estimated that the incremental
compliance costs for a new generating
unit (capital and O&M) represent
approximately 3.3 percent of the
annualized cost of building and
operating a new 1,300 MW coal-fired
plant, with capital costs representing 0.3
to 2.8 percent of the overnight
construction costs, and annual O&M
costs representing 0.3 to 3.9 percent of
the fuel and other O&M cost of
operating a new plant.
Finally, EPA analyzed the non-water
quality environmental impacts and
energy requirements associated with
Option F for both existing and new
sources. See DCN SE05952 and DCN
SE05951. Since there is nothing
inherently different between an existing
and new source, EPA’s analysis with
respect to existing sources is instructive.
Using both of these analyses, EPA
determined that NSPS based on the
Option F technologies have acceptable
non-water quality environmental
impacts and energy requirements.
In contrast to the BAT effluent
limitations, this rule establishes the
same NSPS for oil-fired generating units
and small generating units as for all
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other new sources. A key factor that
affects compliance costs for existing
sources is the need to retrofit new
pollution controls to replace existing
pollution controls. New sources do not
incur retrofit costs because the pollution
controls (process operations or
treatment technology) are installed at
the time of construction. Thus the costs
for new sources are lower, even if the
pollution controls are identical.
For each of the wastestreams except
combustion residual leachate, EPA
rejected establishing NSPS based on
surface impoundments for the same
reasons it rejected establishing BAT
based on surface impoundments. For
FGD wastewater, EPA also did not
establish NSPS based on chemical
precipitation for the same reasons it
rejected establishing BAT based on that
technology. In particular, these other
technologies would not achieve as much
pollutant reduction as the technology
bases in Option F—which is
technologically available and
economically achievable with
acceptable non-water quality
environmental impacts and energy
requirements—and thus do not
represent best available demonstrated
control technology.
EPA did not select surface
impoundments as the basis for NSPS for
combustion residual leachate because,
unlike BAT, NSPS represent the
‘‘greatest degree of effluent reduction
. . . achievable’’ (CWA section 306),
and (besides ‘‘cost’’ and ‘‘any non-water
quality environmental impact and
energy requirements,’’ discussed above)
EPA does not consider ‘‘other factors’’
in establishing NSPS. When used to
treat combustion residual leachate,
chemical precipitation can achieve
substantial pollutant reductions as
compared to surface impoundments.
Thus, EPA has determined that NSPS
for leachate based on chemical
precipitation achieve the ‘‘greatest
degree of effluent reduction’’ as that
term is used in CWA section 306.
Similarly, EPA did not select
chemical precipitation plus biological
treatment as the basis for NSPS for FGD
wastewater because, under CWA section
306, NSPS reflect ‘‘the greatest degree of
effluent reduction . . . achievable.’’
Evaporation systems are capable of
achieving extremely low pollutant
discharge levels, and in fact can be the
basis for a plant completely eliminating
all discharges associated with FGD
wastewater. Moreover, unlike EPA’s
decision not to identify evaporation as
the technology basis for FGD wastewater
discharges from all existing sources due
to the large associated cost, establishing
NSPS for FGD wastewater based on
evaporation does not add to the overall
estimated cost of the rule because EPA
does not predict any new coal-fired
generating units will be installed in the
foreseeable future. As explained above,
however, in the event that a new unit is
installed, EPA determined that the
NSPS compliance costs would not
present a barrier to entry.
E. PSES
Table VIII–2 summarizes the results of
EPA’s pass-through analysis for the
regulated pollutants (with numeric
limitations) in each wastestream, as
controlled by the relevant BAT and
NSPS technology bases.36 As explained
in Section VII.C, EPA did not conduct
its traditional pass-through analysis for
wastestreams with zero discharge
limitations or standards. Zero discharge
limitations and standards achieve 100
percent removal of pollutants; therefore,
all pollutants in those wastestreams
pass through the POTW. As shown in
the table, all of the pollutants regulated
under BAT/NSPS pass through
secondary treatment by a POTW.
TABLE VIII–2—SUMMARY OF PASS-THROUGH ANALYSIS RESULTS
Pass through?
(yes/no)
Technology basis/Wastewater stream
Pollutant
Chemical Precipitation for Combustion Residual Leachate (only for NSPS) .......
Arsenic ..................................................
Mercury .................................................
Arsenic ..................................................
Mercury .................................................
Nitrate/Nitrite as N .................................
Selenium ...............................................
Arsenic ..................................................
Mercury .................................................
Selenium ...............................................
TDS .......................................................
Arsenic ..................................................
Mercury .................................................
Selenium ...............................................
TDS .......................................................
Chemical Precipitation plus Biological Treatment for FGD Wastewater ..............
Evaporation for FGD wastewater (only for NSPS) ...............................................
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Evaporation for Gasification Wastewater .............................................................
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
After considering all of the relevant
factors and technology options in this
preamble and in the TDD, as well as
public comments, as is the case with
BAT, EPA decided to establish PSES
based on the technologies described in
Option D. For PSES, the final rule
establishes: (1) Standards on arsenic,
mercury, selenium and nitrate/nitrite as
N in FGD wastewater; (2) a zero
discharge standard on all pollutants in
fly ash transport water; (3) a zero
discharge standard on all pollutants in
bottom ash transport water; (4) a zero
discharge standard on all pollutants in
FGMC wastewater; (5) standards on
mercury, arsenic, selenium, and TDS in
gasification wastewater. All of the
technology bases for the final PSES are
the same as those described for the final
BAT limitations. The final rule does not
establish PSES for combustion residual
leachate because TSS does not pass
through POTWs.
EPA selected the Option D
technologies as the bases for PSES for
the same reasons that EPA selected the
Option D technologies as the bases for
BAT. EPA’s analysis shows that, for
both direct and indirect dischargers, the
Option D technologies are available and
economically achievable, and Option D
has acceptable non-water quality
environmental impacts, including
energy requirements (see Sections IX
and XII). EPA rejected other options for
36 The regulation of TSS in combustion residual
leachate (based on surface impoundments) under
the final BAT limitations is not represented here
because TSS is a conventional pollutant that is
effectively treated by POTWs (it does not pass
through).
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PSES for the same reasons that the
Agency rejected other options for BAT.
Furthermore, for the same reasons that
apply to EPA’s final BAT limitations for
oil-fired generating units and small
generating units, and described in
Section VIII.C.12, the final rule does not
establish PSES that apply to oil-fired
generating units and small generating
units (50 MW or smaller).37 Finally,
EPA determined that the final PSES
prevent pass through of pollutants from
POTWs into receiving streams and also
help control contamination of POTW
sludge.
As with the final BAT effluent
limitations, in considering the
availability and achievability of the final
PSES, EPA concluded that existing
indirect dischargers need some time to
achieve the final standards, in part to
avoid forced outages (see Section
VIII.C.7). However, in contrast to the
BAT limitations (which apply on a date
determined by the permitting authority
that is as soon as possible beginning
November 1, 2018, but no later than
December 31, 2023), the new PSES
apply as of November 1, 2018. Under
CWA section 307(b)(1), pretreatment
standards shall specify a time for
compliance not to exceed three years
from the date of promulgation, so EPA
cannot establish a longer
implementation period. Moreover,
unlike requirements on direct
discharges, requirements on indirect
discharges are not implemented through
an NPDES permit and thus are not
subject to awaiting the next permit
issuance before the limitations are
specified clearly for the discharger. EPA
has determined that all of the existing
indirect dischargers can meet the
standards by November 1, 2018, and
because there are a handful of indirect
dischargers (who would have
approximately three years from the date
of promulgation to achieve the
standards), implementation of the
standards by that date would not lead to
electricity availability concerns. See
RIA.
For purposes of the PSES in this rule,
this preamble uses the term ‘‘legacy
wastewater’’ to refer to FGD wastewater,
fly ash transport water, bottom ash
transport water, FGMC wastewater, or
gasification wastewater generated prior
to November 1, 2018. For the same
reasons that EPA decided to establish
BAT limitations on TSS in discharges of
37 Whereas the final rule establishes BAT
limitations on TSS in fly ash and bottom ash
transport water, FGMC wastewater, FGD
wastewater, and gasification wastewater for small
generating units and oil-fired generating units, TSS
and the pollutants that they represent do not pass
through POTWs.
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legacy wastewater equal to BPT
limitations for fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, and low
volume waste sources, the final rule
does not establish PSES for legacy
wastewater (see Section VIII.C.8). TSS
and the pollutants it represents are
effectively treated by, and thus do not
pass through, POTWs.
F. PSNS
After considering all of the relevant
factors and technology options
described in this preamble and TDD
Section 7, as well as public comments,
as was the case for NSPS, EPA selected
the Option F technologies as the bases
for PSNS in this rule. As a result, the
final PSNS establish: (1) Standards on
arsenic, mercury, selenium, and TDS in
FGD wastewater; (2) a zero discharge
standard on all pollutants in bottom ash
transport water; (3) a zero discharge
standard on all pollutants in FGMC
wastewater; (4) standards on mercury,
arsenic, selenium, and TDS in
gasification wastewater; and (5)
standards on mercury and arsenic in
combustion residual leachate. All the
technology bases for the final PSNS are
the same as those described for the final
NSPS. The final rule also maintains the
previously established zero discharge
PSNS on discharges of fly ash transport
water. As with the final NSPS, this rule
establishes the same PSNS for oil-fired
generating units and small generating
units as for all other new sources.
EPA selected the Option F
technologies as the bases for PSNS for
the same reasons that EPA selected the
Option F technologies as the bases for
NSPS (see Section VIII.D). EPA’s record
demonstrates that the technologies
described in Option F are available and
demonstrated, and Option F does not
pose a barrier to entry and has
acceptable non-water quality
environmental impacts, including
energy requirements (see Sections IX
and XII). EPA rejected other options for
PSNS for the same reasons that the
Agency rejected other options for NSPS.
And, as with the final PSES, EPA
determined that the final PSNS prevent
pass through of pollutants from POTWs
into receiving streams and also help
control contamination of POTW sludge.
G. Anti-Circumvention Provision
The final rule establishes one of the
three anti-circumvention provisions that
EPA proposed. The one anticircumvention provision that EPA
decided to establish applies only for
existing sources to those wastestreams
for which this rule established zero
discharge limitations or standards. In
general, this provision prevents steam
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electric power plants from
circumventing the final rule by moving
effluent produced by a process
operation for which there is an
applicable zero discharge effluent
limitation or standard to another plant
process operation for discharge.38 EPA
determined it was appropriate to
include this provision in the final rule
to make clear that, just because a
wastestream that is subject to a zero
discharge limitation or standard is
moved to another plant process, it does
not mean that the wastestream ceases
being subject to the applicable zero
discharge limitation or standard. For
example, using fly ash or bottom ash
transport water as makeup water for a
cooling tower does not relieve a plant of
having to meet the zero discharge
limitations and standards for fly ash and
bottom ash transport water. EPA
encourages the reuse of wastewater
where appropriate, but not to the extent
that it undermines the zero discharge
effluent limitations and standards in
this rule. Plants are free to reuse their
wastewater, so long as the wastewater
ultimately complies with the final
limitations and standards.
Some public commenters stated that
zero discharge effluent limitations and
standards for fly ash and bottom ash
transport water, together with this anticircumvention provision, would
prohibit water reuse and prevent water
withdrawal reduction at steam electric
power plants. In general, EPA disagrees
with these commenters. Most plants
will choose to comply with the
requirements for ash transport water by
operating either a dry or closed-loop
wet-sluicing system to handle their fly
and bottom ash, which will eliminate or
substantially reduce the amount of
water they currently use in the
traditional wet-sluicing system. To the
extent that a plant currently uses (or
was considering using) ash transport
water, such as the effluent from an
impoundment, as makeup water for
processes such as make-up cooling
water and would be precluded from
doing so because of the anticircumvention provision in this rule,
the plant could merely switch to an
alternate source for the makeup water,
such as the water that was (prior to
implementing the zero discharge
requirement for ash transport water)
used to sluice fly ash or bottom ash to
the impoundment. In other words, the
volume of water that is currently used
to sluice ash to an impoundment and
38 The anti-circumvention provision applies only
to limitations and standards established in this final
rule. It does not apply to limitations and standards
promulgated previously.
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subsequently reused as makeup water
would no longer be needed to sluice the
ash and could instead be directly used
as makeup water for the cooling water
system or other processes. Because of
this, the zero discharge limitations in
this rule will not lead to a net increase
at the plant and in fact could result in
a decrease in water withdrawal. Lastly,
a plant is free to reuse ash transport
water, and would be in compliance with
the anti-circumvention provision, so
long as it is used in a process that does
not ultimately result in a discharge.
There is one particular type of plant
practice that the final rule’s anticircumvention provision does not apply
to. Many industry commenters noted
that they use ash transport water in their
FGD scrubber. They stated that this
practice is preferable to using a fresh
water source and allows for an overall
reduction in source water withdrawals.
They further stated that, under the final
rule, any wastewater that passes through
the scrubber would undergo significant
treatment in order to meet the final FGD
wastewater limitations and standards.
EPA agrees, in part, with these
comments. As explained above, EPA
does not agree that using wastewater
from one industrial process as makeup
water in another industrial process
necessarily results in a net reduction in
water withdrawals. EPA does agree,
however, that using wastewater from an
industrial process as makeup water in
another industrial process may be
preferable to using a fresh water source.
EPA is mindful of the CWA’s pollutant
discharge elimination goal, but also
wants to promote opportunities for
water reuse. Furthermore, as explained
in Section V, EPA recognizes the
extensive changes in this industry, and
it wants to provide flexibility to plants
in managing their wastewater and
operations, as well as preserve the
ability of plants to retain existing
approaches where it is consistent with
the CWA’s goals. While EPA would not
choose to promote these considerations
where it resulted in no further progress
toward the pollutant discharge
elimination goal of the Act, in the case
of using ash transport water in an FGD
scrubber, since any resulting wastewater
discharges would still be required to
meet BAT or PSES requirements based
on either chemical precipitation plus
biological treatment or chemical
precipitation plus evaporation under
this final rule, EPA decided not to apply
the anti-circumvention provision to this
particular practice.
The final rule does not establish an
anti-circumvention provision that
would have required internal
monitoring to demonstrate compliance
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with certain numeric limitations and
standards. Some public commenters
argued that the proposed provision was
unduly restrictive, and they stated that
EPA already has authority to
accomplish the goal of this particular
provision, which is to ensure that
wastestreams are being treated rather
than simply diluted. EPA agrees with
these commenters and thus decided that
existing rules, along with the guidance
in Section XVI.A.4 of this preamble and
TDD Section 14, provide appropriate
flexibility to steam electric power plants
to combine wastestreams with similar
pollutants and treatability, while
adequately addressing EPA’s concern
that plants meet the effluent limitations
and standards in this rule through
treatment and control strategies, rather
than through dilution. Furthermore,
some commenters raised concerns that
the proposed provision would be a
disincentive for plants to internally reuse the treated wastewater within the
plant, particularly when the re-use
eliminates the discharge of the
wastewater. For example, they stated
that some steam electric power plants
might opt to use a wet scrubber’s FGD
wastewater as reagent make-up for a
new dry scrubber in an integrated
design which would essentially
evaporate the wet FGD wastewater. EPA
notes that plants that internally reuse
wastestreams for which EPA is
establishing numeric limitations and
standards (e.g., FGD wastewater) in a
way that completely prevents discharge
of that wastestream would not be
subject to the numeric limitations and
standards because they do not discharge
the wastewater. EPA is aware of at least
one plant that elected to take such an
approach as an alternative to meeting
NPDES permit limitations by installing
wastewater treatment technology. See
DCN SE06338. In general, EPA supports
such approaches because they result in
further progress towards achieving the
pollutant discharge elimination goal of
the CWA. Moreover, such approaches
are favored because they reduce overall
water intake needs.
The final rule also does not establish
an anti-circumvention provision that
would have required permittees to use
EPA-approved analytical methods that
are sufficiently sensitive to provide
reliable, quantified results at levels
necessary to demonstrate compliance
with the final effluent limitations and
standards because another recently
promulgated rule already accomplishes
this. As public commenters pointed out,
EPA was conducting a rulemaking on
that topic; and, in August 2014, EPA
published a rule requiring the use of
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sufficiently sensitive analytical test
methods when completing any NPDES
permit application. Moreover, the
NPDES permit authority must prescribe
that only sufficiently sensitive methods
be used for analyses of pollutants or
pollutant parameters under an NPDES
permit where EPA has promulgated a
CWA method for analysis of that
pollutant. That rule clarifies that NPDES
applicants and permittees must use
EPA-approved analytical methods that
are capable of detecting and measuring
the pollutants at, or below, the
applicable water quality criteria or
permit limits.
H. Other Revisions
1. Correction of Typographical Error for
PSNS
As EPA proposed to do, the final rule
corrects a typographical error in the
previously established PSNS for cooling
tower blowdown. As is clear from the
development document for the 1982
rulemaking, as well as the previously
promulgated NSPS for cooling tower
blowdown, EPA inadvertently omitted a
footnote in the table that appeared in 40
CFR 423.17(d)(1). The footnote reads
‘‘No detectable amount,’’ and it applies
to the effluent standard for 124 of the
126 priority pollutants contained in
chemicals added for cooling tower
maintenance. See ‘‘Development
Document for Final Effluent Guidelines,
New Source Performance Standards and
Pretreatment Standards for the Steam
Electric Power Generating Point Source
Category,’’ Document No. EPA 440/1–
82/029. November 1982.
2. Clarification of Applicability
In addition, the final rule contains
three minor modifications to the
wording of the applicability provision
in the steam electric power generating
ELGs to reflect EPA’s longstanding
interpretation and implementation of
the rule. These revisions do not alter the
universe of generating units regulated
by the ELGs, nor do they impose
compliance costs on the industry.
Instead, they remove potential
ambiguity in the regulations by revising
the text to more clearly reflect EPA’s
longstanding interpretation.
First, the applicability provision in
the previous ELGs stated, in part, that
the ELGs apply to ‘‘an establishment
primarily engaged in the generation of
electricity for distribution and
sale. . . .’’ 40 CFR 423.10. The final
rule revises that phrase to read ‘‘an
establishment whose generation of
electricity is the predominant source of
revenue or principal reason for
operation. . . .’’ The final rule thus
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clarifies that certain facilities, such as
generating units owned and operated by
industrial facilities in other sectors (e.g.,
petroleum refineries, pulp and paper
mills) that have not traditionally been
regulated by the steam electric ELGs, are
not within the scope of the ELGs. In
addition, the final rule clarifies that
certain municipally owned facilities
that generate and distribute electricity
within a service area (such as
distributing electric power to
municipal-owned buildings), but use
accounting practices that are not
commonly thought of as a ‘‘sale,’’ are
subject to the ELGs. Such facilities have
traditionally been regulated by the
steam electric ELGs.
Second, the final rule clarifies that
fuels derived from fossil fuel are within
the scope of the ELGs. The previous
ELGs stated, in part, that they apply to
discharges resulting from the generation
of electricity ‘‘which results primarily
from a process utilizing fossil-type fuels
(coal, oil, or gas) or nuclear fuel. . . .’’
40 CFR 423.10. Because a number of
fuel types are derived from fossil fuels,
and thus are fossil fuels themselves, the
final rule explicitly mentions and gives
examples of such fuels. Thus, the rule
reads that the ELGs apply to discharges
resulting from the operation of a
generating unit ‘‘whose generation
results primarily from a process
utilizing fossil-type fuel (coal, oil, or
gas), fuel derived from fossil fuel (e.g.,
petroleum coke, synthesis gas), or
nuclear fuel. . . .’’
Third, the final rule clarifies the
applicability provision to reflect the
current interpretation that combined
cycle systems are subject to the ELGs.
The ELGs apply to electric generation
processes that utilize ‘‘a thermal cycle
employing the steam water system as
the thermodynamic medium.’’ 40 CFR
423.10. EPA’s longstanding
interpretation is that the ELGs apply to
discharges from all electric generation
processes with at least one prime mover
that utilizes steam (and that meet the
other applicability factors in 40 CFR
423.10). Combined cycle systems, which
are generating units composed of one or
more combustion turbines operating in
conjunction with one or more steam
turbines, are subject to the ELGs. The
combustion turbines for a combined
cycle system operate in tandem with the
steam turbines; therefore, the ELGs
apply to wastewater discharges
associated with both the combustion
turbine and steam turbine portions of
the combined cycle system. The final
rule, therefore, clarifies that ‘‘[t]his part
applies to discharges associated with
both the combustion turbine and steam
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turbine portions of a combined cycle
generating unit.’’
I. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Waste
EPA proposed to establish BAT/
NSPS/PSES/PSNS requirements for
non-chemical metal cleaning wastes
equal to previously established BPT
limitations for metal cleaning wastes.39
EPA based the proposal on EPA’s
understanding, from industry survey
responses, that most steam electric
power plants manage their chemical and
non-chemical metal cleaning wastes in
the same manner. Since then, based in
part on public comments submitted by
industry groups, the Agency has learned
that plants refer to the same operation
using different terminology; some
classify non-chemical metal cleaning
waste as such, while others classify it as
low volume waste sources. Because the
survey responses reflect each plant’s
individual nomenclature, the survey
results for non-chemical metal cleaning
wastes are skewed. Furthermore, EPA
does not know the nomenclature each
plant used in responding to the survey,
so it has no way to adjust the results to
account for this. Consequently, EPA
does not have sufficient information on
the extent to which discharges of nonchemical metal cleaning wastes occur,
or on the ways that industry manages
their non-chemical metal cleaning
wastes. Moreover, EPA also does not
have information on potential best
available technologies or best available
demonstrated control technologies, or
the potential costs to industry to comply
with any new requirements. Due to
incomplete data, some public
commenters urged EPA not to establish
BAT limitations for non-chemical metal
cleaning wastes in this final rule.
Ultimately, EPA decided that it does not
have enough information on a national
basis to establish BAT/NSPS/PSES/
PSNS requirements for non-chemical
metal cleaning wastes. The final rule,
therefore, continues to ‘‘reserve’’ BAT/
NSPS/PSES/PSNS for non-chemical
metal cleaning wastes, as the previously
promulgated regulations did.40
By reserving limitations and
standards for non-chemical metal
cleaning waste in the final rule, the
39 Under the structure of the previously
promulgated regulations, non-chemical metal
cleaning wastes are a subset of metal cleaning
wastes.
40 As part of its proposal to establish new BAT/
PSES/NSPS/PSNS requirements for non-chemical
metal cleaning waste equal to BPT limitations for
metal cleaning waste, EPA also proposed an
exemption for certain discharges of non-chemical
metal cleaning waste, which would be treated as
low volume waste sources. Because the final rule
does not establish these new requirements, EPA
also did not finalize the proposed exemption.
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67863
permitting authority must establish such
requirements based on BPJ for any
steam electric power plant discharged
non-chemical metal cleaning wastes. As
part of this determination, EPA expects
that the permitting authority would
examine the historical permitting record
for the particular plant to determine
how discharges of non-chemical metal
cleaning waste had been permitted in
the past, including whether such
discharges had been treated as low
volume waste sources or metal cleaning
waste. See Section XVI.
J. Best Management Practices
EPA proposed to include BMPs in the
ELGs that would require plant operators
to conduct periodic inspections of
active and inactive surface
impoundments to ensure their structural
integrity and to take corrective actions
where warranted. The proposed BMPs
were largely similar to those proposed
for the CCR rule, except for the closure
requirements. EPA took comments on
whether establishment of BMPs was
more appropriate under the authority of
the Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act (RCRA) or the CWA.
While some commenters asked EPA to
establish BMPs in the final rule, many
others urged EPA not to do so, arguing
that BMPs are better suited for the CCR
rule. Because EPA promulgated BMPs in
the CCR rule, to avoid unnecessary
duplication, this rule does not establish
BMPs.
IX. Costs and Economic Impact
EPA evaluated the costs and
associated impacts of the ELGs on
existing generating units at steam
electric power plants, and on new
sources to which the ELGs may apply in
the future. See TDD Section 9. This
section provides an overview of the
methodology EPA used to assess the
costs and the economic impacts of the
final ELGs and summarizes the results
of these analyses. See the RIA for
additional detail.
EPA used certain indicators to assess
the economic achievability of the ELGs
for the steam electric industry as a
whole, as required by CWA section
301(b)(2)(A). These values were
compared to a baseline described
elsewhere in this document. For
existing sources, EPA considered the
number of generating units and plants
expected to close due to the ELGs, and
their generating capacity relative to total
capacity (see Section IX.C.1.b).
Although not used as the sole criterion
to determine economic achievability,
EPA also analyzed the ratio of
compliance costs to revenue to estimate
the number of plants and their owning
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entities that exceed set thresholds
indicating potential financial strain;
large numbers of such plants or owning
entities could suggest that the ELGs may
not be economically achievable by the
industry (see Section IX.C.1.a). For new
sources, EPA considered the magnitude
of compliance costs relative to the costs
of constructing and operating new coalfired generating units (Section IX.C.2).
In addition to the analyses used to
determine economic achievability, EPA
conducted other analyses to characterize
the potential broader economic impacts
of the ELGs (e.g., on entities that own
steam electric power plants, electricity
rates, employment) and to enable the
Agency to meet its requirements under
Executive Orders or other statutes (e.g.,
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Flexibility Act, Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act).
A. Plant-Specific and Industry Total
Costs
EPA first estimated plant-specific
costs to control discharges at existing
generating units at steam electric power
plants to which the final ELGs apply
(existing sources). For all applicable
wastestreams, EPA assessed the
operations and treatment system
components in place at a given unit in
the baseline (or expected to be in place
given other existing rules), identified
equipment and process changes that the
plant would likely make to meet the
final ELGs, and estimated the cost to
implement those changes. As explained
in Section V, since proposal, EPA
accounted for additional announced
unit retirements, conversions, and
relevant operational changes, as well as
changes plants are likely to make in
response to the CCR and CPP rules. As
a result, the number of plants projected
to incur non-zero compliance costs is
about 50 percent less than that
estimated at proposal. As appropriate,
EPA also accounted for cost savings
associated with these equipment and
process changes (e.g., avoided costs to
manage surface impoundments). EPA
thus derived capital and O&M costs at
the plant level for control of each
wastestream using the technologies that
form the bases for the final rule for
existing sources. See the TDD Section 9
for a more detailed description of the
methodology EPA used to estimate
plant-level costs.
EPA annualized one-time costs and
costs recurring on other than an annual
basis over a specific useful life,
implementation, and/or event
recurrence period, using a rate of seven
percent. For capital costs and initial
one-time costs, EPA used 20 years. For
O&M costs incurred at intervals greater
than one year, EPA used the interval as
the annualization period (3 years, 5
years, 6 years, 10 years). EPA added
annualized capital, initial one-time
costs, and the non-annual portion of
O&M costs to annual O&M costs to
derive total annualized plant costs.
EPA calculated total industry costs by
applying survey weights to the plantspecific annualized costs and summing
them. For the assessment of industry
costs, EPA considered costs on both a
pre-tax and after-tax basis. Pre-tax
annualized costs provide insight on the
total expenditure as incurred, while
after-tax annualized costs are a more
meaningful measure of impact on
privately owned for-profit plants, and
incorporate approximate capital
depreciation and other relevant tax
treatments in the analysis. EPA uses
pre- and/or after-tax costs in different
analyses, depending on the concept
appropriate to each analysis (e.g., social
costs discussed in Section IX.B are
calculated using pre-tax costs whereas
cost-to-revenue screening-level analyses
discussed in Section IX.C are conducted
using after-tax costs). See Table IX–1 for
estimates of pre- and post-tax industry
costs.
TABLE IX–1—TOTAL ANNUALIZED INDUSTRY COSTS
[In millions, 2013$], 7% Discount Rate
Pre-tax
$496.2
Total Annualized Industry Costs ..........................................................................................................
Social costs are the costs of the rule
from the viewpoint of society as a
whole, rather than regulated facilities
only. In calculating social costs, EPA
tabulated the pre-tax costs in the year
when they are estimated to be incurred.
EPA assumed that all plants upgrading
their systems in order to meet the
effluent limitations and standards
would do so sometime over a five-year
period, during the implementation
period for this rule. Given the
implementation dates in this rule, and
the fact that permitting authorities have
to incorporate the final effluent
limitations into NPDES permits (which
have five-year terms) before they
become applicable, this assumption is a
reasonable estimate.
EPA performed the social cost
analysis over a 24-year analysis period,
which combines the length of the period
during which plants are anticipated to
install the control technologies and the
useful life of the longest-lived
technology installed at any facility (20
years). EPA calculated social cost of the
final rule for existing generating units at
steam electric power plants using both
a three percent discount rate and an
alternative discount rate of seven
percent.41
41 These discount rate values follow guidance
from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
$339.6
regulatory analysis guidance document, Circular A–
4 (OMB, 2003).
B. Social Costs
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After-tax
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Social costs include costs incurred by
both private entities and the government
(e.g., in implementing the regulation).
As described in Section XVII.B, EPA
estimates that the final rule will not lead
to additional costs to permitting
authorities. Consequently, the only
category of costs necessary to calculate
social costs are those estimated for
steam electric power plants.
Table IX–2 presents the total
annualized social cost of the final ELGs
on existing generating units at seam
electric power plants, calculated using
three percent and seven percent
discount rates.
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TABLE IX–2—TOTAL ANNUALIZED SOCIAL COSTS
[In millions, 2013$]
3% Discount rate
7% Discount rate
$479.5
$471.2
Total Annualized Social Costs .............................................................................................................
The value presented in Table IX–2 for
the seven percent discount rate is
slightly lower than the comparable
industry costs (pre-tax) in Table IX–1
(e.g., $471.2 million versus $496.2
million) due to the inclusion of the
timing of expenditures in the
annualized social costs calculations.
C. Economic Impacts
EPA assessed the economic impacts of
this rule in two ways: (1) A screeninglevel assessment of the cost impacts on
existing generating units at steam
electric power plants units and the
entities that own those plants, based on
comparison of costs to revenue; and (2)
an assessment of the impact of this rule
within the context of the broader
electricity market, which includes an
assessment of incremental plant
closures attributable to this rule.
The following sections summarize the
findings for these analyses. The RIA
discusses the methods and results in
greater detail.
1. Summary of Economic Impacts for
Existing Sources
The first set of cost and economic
impact analyses—including entity-level
impacts at both the steam electric power
plant and parent company levels—
reflects baseline operating
characteristics of steam electric power
plants incurring costs and assumes no
changes in those baseline operating
characteristics (e.g., level of electricity
generation and revenue) as a result of
the final rule. They provide screeninglevel indicators of the relative cost of
the ELGs to plants, owning entities, or
consumers.
The second set of analyses look at
broader electricity market impacts
taking into account the interconnection
of regional and national electricity
markets. It also looks at the distribution
of impacts at the plant level. This
second set of analyses provides insight
on the impacts of the final rule on steam
electric power plants, as well as the
electricity market as a whole, including
generation capacity closure and changes
in generation and wholesale electricity
prices.
As noted in the introduction to this
section, EPA used results from the
screening analysis of plant- and entitylevel impacts, together with projected
capacity closure from the market model,
to determine that the final rule is
economically achievable.
a. Screening-Level Assessment of
Impacts on Existing Units at Steam
Electric Power Plants and Parent
Entities
EPA conducted a screening-level
analysis of the rule’s potential impact to
existing generating units at steam
electric power plants and parent entities
based on cost-to-revenue ratios. For
each of the two levels of analysis (plant
and parent entity), the Agency assumed,
for analytic convenience and as a worstcase scenario, that none of the costs
would be passed on to consumers
through electricity rate increases and
would instead be absorbed by the steam
electric power plants and their parent
entities. This assumption overstates the
impacts of the final rule since steam
electric power plants that operate in a
regulated market may be able to recover
some of the increased production costs
to consumers through increased
electricity prices. It is, however, an
appropriate assumption for a screening-
level, upper-bound estimate of the
potential cost impacts.
Plant-Level Cost-to-Revenue Analysis.
EPA developed revenue estimates for
this analysis using EIA data. EPA then
calculated the annualized after-tax costs
of the final rule as a percent of baseline
annual revenues. See Chapter 4 of the
RIA report for a more detailed
discussion of the methodology used for
the plant-level cost-to-revenue analysis.
Table IX–3 summarizes the plantlevel cost-to-revenue analysis results for
the final rule. The cost-to-revenue ratios
provide screening-level indicators of
potential economic impacts. Plants
incurring costs below one percent of
revenue are unlikely to face economic
impacts, while plants with costs
between one percent and three percent
of revenue have a higher chance of
facing economic impacts, and plants
incurring costs above three percent of
revenue have a still higher probability of
economic impacts. EPA estimates that
the vast majority of steam electric power
plants (1,034 plants or 96 percent of the
universe) to which the final rule apply
will incur annualized costs amounting
to less than one percent of revenue. In
fact, most of these plants will incur no
cost at all. Only four percent of plants
have costs between one percent and
three percent of revenue (38 plants), and
less than one percent of plants have
costs above three percent of revenue (8
plants). The small fractions of steam
electric power plants with costs to
revenue ratios exceeding the one
percent and three percent thresholds
suggest that the final limitations and
standards are economically achievable
for the industry as a whole.
TABLE IX–3—PLANT-LEVEL COST-TO-REVENUE ANALYSIS RESULTS a
Number and fraction of existing steam electric power plants with cost-to-revenue ratio of
0%
0–1%
1–3%
>3%
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#
Count or Percent of Plants ..............................................................................
a This
%
#
%
#
%
#
%
946
88
88
8
38
4
8
1
analysis makes a counterfactual, conservative assumption of zero cost pass through. Plant counts are weighted estimates.
Parent Entity-Level Cost-to-Revenue
Analysis. EPA also assessed the
economic impact of the final rule at the
parent entity level. The screening-level
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cost-to-revenue analysis at the parent
entity level provides insight on the
impact of the final rule on those entities
that own existing generating units at
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steam electric power plants. In this
analysis, the domestic parent entity
associated with any given plant is
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defined as that entity with the largest
ownership share in the plant.
For each parent entity, EPA compared
the total annualized after-tax costs and
the total revenue for the entity (see
Chapter 4 of the RIA report for details).
EPA considered two approximate
bounding cases to analyze costs and
revenue for the owners of all existing
units at steam electric power plants,
based on the weights developed from
the industry survey. These cases, which
are described in more detail in Chapter
4 of the RIA, provide a range of
estimates for the number of entities
incurring costs and the costs incurred
by any entity owning an existing
generating unit at a steam electric power
plant.
Table IX–4 summarizes the results of
the entity-level analysis of the final rule
for the two analytic cases.
TABLE IX–4—PARENT ENTITY-LEVEL AFTER-TAX ANNUAL COSTS AS A PERCENTAGE OF REVENUE a
Not
analyzed
due to lack
of revenue
information
Total number of entities
#
%
Number and percentage with after tax annual
costs/annual revenue of:
0%
#
0–1%
%
#
%
3% or
greater
1–3%
#
%
#
%
Case 1: Lower-bound estimate of number of entities owning steam electric power plants (which also provides an upper-bound estimate of total
costs that an entity may incur)
243 ...........................................................................................................
14
6
166
68
53
22
8
3
2
1
Case 2: Upper-bound estimate of number of entities owning steam electric power plants (which also provides a lower-bound estimate of total
costs that an entity may incur)
507 ...........................................................................................................
30
6
414
82
53
10
8
2
2
<1
# equals the number of entities.
a This analysis makes a counterfactual, conservative assumption of zero cost pass-through.
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Similar to the plant-level analysis
above, cost-to-revenue ratios provide
screening-level indicators of potential
economic impacts, this time to the
owning entities; higher ratios suggest a
higher probability of economic impacts.
As presented in Table IX–4, EPA
estimated that the number of entities
owning existing generating units at
steam electric power plants ranges from
243 (lower-bound estimate) to 507
(upper-bound estimate), depending on
the assumed ownership structure of
plants not surveyed. EPA estimates that
90 percent to 92 percent of parent
entities will either incur no costs or the
annualized cost they incur to meet the
final limitations and standards will
represent less than one percent of their
revenues, under the lower- and upperbound cases, respectively.
Overall, this screening-level analysis
shows that the entity-level costs are low
in comparison to the entity-level
revenues; very few entities are likely to
face economic impacts at any level. This
finding supports EPA’s determination
that the final rule is economically
achievable by the steam electric power
generation industry as a whole.
b. Assessment of Impacts in the Context
of the Electricity Market
In analyzing the impacts of regulatory
actions affecting the electric power
sector, EPA has used IPM, a
comprehensive electricity market
optimization model that can evaluate
such impacts within the context of
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regional and national electricity
markets. The model is designed to
evaluate the effects of changes in
generating unit-level electric generation
costs on the total cost of electricity
supply, subject to specified demand and
emissions constraints.
Use of a comprehensive, market
analysis system is important in
assessing the potential impact of the
regulation because of the
interdependence of electric generating
units in supplying power to the electric
transmission grid. Increases in
electricity production costs at some
generating units can have a range of
broader market impacts affecting other
generating units, including the
likelihood that various units are
dispatched, on average. The analysis
also provides important insight on
steam electric capacity closures (e.g.,
retirements of generating units that
become uneconomical relative to other
generating units), based on a more
detailed analysis of market factors than
in the screening-level analyses above,
and it further informs EPA’s
determination of whether the final ELGs
are economically achievable by the
industry as a whole.
EPA used version 5.13 of IPM to
analyze the impacts of the final rule.
IPM V5.13 is based on an inventory of
U.S. utility- and non-utility-owned
boilers and generators that provide
power to the integrated electric
transmission grid, including plants to
which the ELGs apply. IPM V5.13
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embeds a baseline energy demand
forecast that is derived from DOE’s
‘‘Annual Energy Outlook 2013’’ (AEO
2013). IPM V5.13 also incorporates in its
analytic baseline the expected
compliance response to existing
regulatory requirements for air
regulations affecting the power sector.42
In addition, the Base Case for IPM
analyses of the final ELGs accounts for
the effects of the final CWIS rule and
CCR rule, as well as the CPP rule.43 As
explained in Section V, because of the
short time between finalizing the CPP
rule and this final rule, EPA’s IPM
analysis for this final rule incorporates
the proposed CPP rule in the baseline.
EPA concludes the proposed and final
CPP specifications are similar enough
that using the proposed rather than the
final CPP will not bias the results of the
42 The Base Case includes the following
regulations: Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR);
Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS) rule;
regulatory SO2 emission rates arising from State
Implementation Plans (SIP); Acid Rain Program
established under Title IV of the Clean Air Act
Amendments; NOX SIP Call trading program for
Rhode Island; Clean Air Act Reasonable Available
Control Technology requirements and Title IV unit
specific rate limits for NOX; the Regional
Greenhouse Gas Initiative; Renewable Portfolio
Standards; New Source Review Settlements; and
several state-level regulations affecting emissions of
SO2, NOX, and mercury that are already in place or
expected to come into force by 2017.
43 EPA typically includes only final rules in its
base case for its IPM analyses. However, at the time
EPA performed the IPM analyses for this rule, it did
not have details of the final CPP rule. EPA therefore
used information from the proposed CPP rule as a
proxy for purposes of the ELG analyses.
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analysis for this rule. This conclusion is
based on a careful evaluation of whether
the population of steam electricity
generating units that would incur costs
under the ELGs in the final CPP differs
meaningfully from the proposed CPP
baseline. The analyses led us to
conclude that using the proposed CPP
baseline in lieu of the final CPP baseline
is acceptable because (1) the number of
steam electric generating units that
would incur costs under the ELGs is
very similar on either baseline, and (2)
where the populations differ, the net
number of steam electric generating
units that are in one baseline and not
the other is small relative to the total
population of steam electric generating
units that would incur costs under the
ELGs in either baseline. See the RIA for
additional details.
In contrast to the screening-level
analyses, which are static analyses and
do not account for interdependence of
electric generating units in supplying
power to the electric transmission grid,
IPM accounts for potential changes in
the generation profile of steam electric
and other units and consequent changes
in market-level generation costs, as the
electric power market responds to
higher generation costs for steam
electric units due to the ELGs.
Additionally, in contrast to the
screening-level analyses in which EPA
assumed no cost pass through of the
final rule costs, IPM depicts production
activity in wholesale electricity markets
where some recovery of compliance
costs through increased electricity
prices is possible but not guaranteed.
In analyzing the final ELGs, EPA
specified additional fixed and variable
costs that are expected to be incurred by
specific steam electric power plants and
generating units to comply with the
ELGs (the costs discussed in Section
IX.A). EPA then ran IPM including these
additional costs to determine the
dispatch of electric generating units that
would meet projected demand at the
lowest costs, subject to the same
constraints as those present in the
analysis baseline. The estimated
changes in plant-specific and unitspecific production levels and costs—
and, in turn, changes in total electric
power sector costs and production
profile—are key data elements in
evaluating the expected national and
regional effects of the ELGs, including
closures of steam electric generating
units.
EPA considered impact metrics of
interest at three levels of aggregation: (1)
Impact on national and regional
electricity markets (all electric power
generation, including steam and nonsteam electric power plants), (2) impact
on steam electric power plants as a
group, and (3) impact on individual
steam electric power plants incurring
costs. Chapter 5 of the RIA discusses the
first analysis. The sections below
summarize the two analyses focusing on
steam electric power plants, which are
further described in Chapter 5 of the
RIA.
All results presented below are
representative of modeled market
conditions in the years 2028–2033, by
which time all plants will meet the
67867
effluent limitations and standards. Costs
are reflective of costs in the modeled
years.44
Impact on Existing Steam Electric
Power Plants. EPA used IPM V5.13
results for 2030 to assess the potential
impact of the final rule on existing
generating units at steam electric power
plants. The purpose of this analysis is
to assess impacts on existing generating
units at steam electric power plants
specifically. EPA used this information
in determining whether the ELGs are
economically achievable by the steam
electric power generating industry as a
whole.
Table IX–5 reports results for existing
generating units at steam electric power
plants, as a group. EPA looked at the
following metrics: (1) Incremental early
retirements and capacity closures,
calculated as the difference between
capacity under the ELGs and capacity
under the baseline, which includes both
full plant closures and partial plant
closures (unit closures) in aggregate
capacity terms; (2) incremental capacity
closures as a percentage of baseline
capacity; (3) post-compliance change in
electricity generation; (4) postcompliance changes in variable
production costs per MWh, calculated
as the sum of total fuel and variable
O&M costs divided by net generation;
and (5) changes in annual costs (fuel,
variable O&M, fixed O&M, and capital).
Items (1) and (2) provide important
insight for determining the economic
achievability of the ELGs.
TABLE IX–5—IMPACT OF FINAL ELGS ON STEAM ELECTRIC POWER PLANTS AS A GROUP AT THE YEAR 2030
Incremental early retirements
closures a
Region
Baseline
capacity
(MW)
Capacity
(MW)
% of
baseline
capacity
359,982
843
0.2%
Total U.S. ......................................................
Change in total
generation
(GWh or % of
baseline)
¥3,179
¥0.2%
Change in
variable
production cost
(2013$/MWh or %
of baseline)
Change in
annual costs
(million 2013$
or % of baseline)
$0.10
$496
0.3%
0.6%
a Values
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
for incremental early retirements or closures represent change relative to the baseline run. IPM may show partial (unit) or full plant early
retirements (closures). It may also show avoided closures (negative closure values) in which a unit or plant that is projected to close in the baseline
is estimated to continue operating in the post-compliance case. Avoided closures may occur among plants that incur no compliance costs or for
which compliance costs are low relative to other steam electric power plants.
Under the final rule, variable
production costs at steam electric power
plants increase by approximately 0.3
percent at the national level. The
resulting net change in total capacity for
steam electric power plants is very
small. For the group of steam electric
power plants, total capacity decreases
by 843 MW or approximately 0.2
percent of the 359,982 MW baseline
capacity, corresponding to a net closure
of two units, or when aggregating to the
level of steam electric generating plants,
one net plant closure.
The change in total generation is an
indicator of how steam electric power
plants fare, relative to the rest of the
electricity market. While at the market
level there is essentially no projected
change in total electricity generation,45
44 In contrast, the social costs estimated in
Section IX.B reflect the discounted value of
compliance costs over the entire 24-year period of
analysis, as of 2015.
45 As discussed in the RIA, at the national level,
the demand for electricity does not change between
Continued
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for steam electric power plants, total
available capacity and electricity
generation at the national level are
projected to fall by approximately 0.2
percent.
These findings of very small national
effects (and similarly very small
regional effects, as described in Chapter
5 of the RIA) in these impact metrics
support EPA’s conclusion that the final
rule will have little economic
consequence for the steam electric
power generating industry and the
electricity market and is, therefore,
economically achievable.
Impact on Individual Steam Electric
Power Plants Incurring Costs under this
Rulemaking. To assess potential plantlevel effects, EPA also analyzed plantspecific changes between the base case
and the post-compliance cases for the
following metrics: (1) Capacity
utilization (defined as annual generation
(in MWh) divided by [capacity (MW)
times 8,760 hours]) (2) electricity
generation, and (3) variable production
costs per MWh, defined as variable
O&M cost plus fuel cost divided by net
generation.
The analysis of changes in individual
plants as a result of the final rule is
detailed in Chapter 5 of the RIA. The
results indicate that steam electric
plants experience only slight effects—no
change, or less than a one percent
reduction or one percent increase. See
Table 5–4 in the RIA. Only 17 plants see
their capacity utilization reduced by
more than one percent, while 25 plants
increase their capacity utilization by
more than one percent. The estimated
change in variable production costs is
higher; 43 plants have an increase in
variable production costs exceeding one
percent; for seven of these plants, this
increase exceeds three percent, but
again the vast majority of plants
experience a less than one percent
increase in variable production costs.
Results for the subset of plants incurring
costs further support the conclusion that
the effects of the final rule on the steam
electric industry will be small.
2. Summary of Economic Impacts for
New Sources
EPA also evaluated the expected costs
of meeting the final standards for new
sources. The incremental cost associated
with complying with the final NSPS and
PSNS varies depending on the types of
processes, wastestreams, and waste
management systems that the plant
would have installed in the absence of
the new source requirements. EPA
estimated capital and O&M costs for
several scenarios that represent the
different types of operations present at
existing steam electric power plants or
typically included at new steam electric
power plants. These scenarios capture
differences in the plant status (building
a generating unit at a new location
versus adding a new generating unit at
an existing power plant), presence of
on-site impoundments or landfills, type
of ash handling, type of FGD systems in
service, and type of leachate collection
and handling.
EPA assessed the possible impact of
this final rule on new units by
comparing the incremental costs for
new units to the overall cost of building
and operating new scrubbed coal units,
on an annualized basis.
EPA estimated costs of a new coal
unit using the overnight 46 capital and
O&M costs of building and operating a
new scrubbed coal unit from the EIA’s
Annual Energy Outlook 2014. For
purposes of this analysis, EPA assumed
a new dual-unit plant with a total
generation capacity of 1,300 MW. Table
IX–6 shows capital and O&M costs of
building and operating a new coal unit
and contrasts these costs with the
incremental costs associated with the
final NSPS/PSNS.
TABLE IX–6—COMPARISON OF INCREMENTAL COMPLIANCE COSTS WITH COSTS FOR NEW COAL-FIRED STEAM ELECTRIC
UNITS
Costs of
new coal
generation
($2013/MW) a
Cost component
Incremental
compliance costs
($2013/MW) b
% of new
generation cost
Capital ..............................................................................................................................
Annual Non-Fuel O&M ....................................................................................................
Annual Fuel c ....................................................................................................................
$3,058,861
69,630
157,737
$8,328–$87,085
620–8,828
0.3–2.8
0.3–3.9
Total Annualized Costs ............................................................................................
497,213
1,354–16,511
0.3–3.3
a Source:
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New unit total cost value from Table 8.2 EIA NEMS Electricity Market Module. AEO 2014 Documentation. Available at https://www.eia.
gov/forecasts/aeo/assumptions/pdf/electricity.pdf. Capital costs are based on the total overnight costs for new scrubbed coal dual-unit plant,
1,300 MW capacity, coming online in 2017. EPA restated costs in 2013 dollars using the construction cost index. Total annual O&M costs assume 90% capacity utilization.
b Incremental costs for new 1300 MW unit for Option F. Range represents the costs for a new unit at a newly constructed plant (lower bound)
and new unit at an existing plant, with evaporation technology (upper bound).
c Fuel costs estimated assuming heat rate of 8,800 Btu/kWh (AEO 2014) and coal price delivered to the power sector of 2.27 $/Mbtu (AEO
2015, projected costs in 2017 in 2013$).
The comparison suggests that costs
associated with meeting the final NSPS/
PSNS represent a relatively small
fraction of overnight capital costs of a
new unit (less than one percent) and a
similarly small fraction of non-fuel
O&M and fuel costs (less than one
percent). On an annualized basis, costs
for meeting standards specified in the
final rule are 0.3 to 3.3 percent of
annualized costs for new coal generating
capacity. Based on this assessment, EPA
concludes that the final rule does not
present a barrier to entry.
X. Pollutant Reductions
EPA took a similar approach to the
one described above for plant-specific
costs in estimating pollutant reductions
associated with the final rule. For each
wastestream 47 and each POC, EPA first
estimated—on an annual, per plant
basis—plant-specific baseline pollutant
the baseline and the analyzed regulatory options
(generation within the regions is allowed to vary)
because meeting demand is an exogenous constraint
imposed by the model.
46 As defined by the EIA, ‘‘overnight cost’’ is an
estimate of the cost at which a plant could be
constructed assuming that the entire process from
planning through completion could be
accomplished in a single day. This concept is useful
to avoid any impact of project delays and of
financing issues and assumptions on estimated
costs.
47 EPA estimated pollutant reductions for
wastestreams with numeric and zero pollutant
discharge limitations and standards. The reductions
reflect a reduction in the mass of pollutant
discharged.
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loadings taking into account
components in place at the plant (or
expected to be in place given other
existing rules 48) and, where
appropriate, pollutant removals at the
POTW, since these removals result in
reduced discharges to receiving waters.
EPA similarly estimated plant-specific
post-compliance pollutant loadings
using the mean concentrations
associated with the final limitations and
standards. In cases where a plant had
already implemented approaches that
would allow them to comply with the
final rule, the baseline and postcompliance pollutant loadings are
equivalent. EPA then calculated the
pollutant reduction as the difference
between the estimated baseline and
post-compliance discharge loadings. For
each wastestream, EPA then calculated
total industry pollutant reductions by
applying survey weights to the plantspecific pollutant reductions and
summing them.
While plants are not required to
implement the specific technologies that
67869
form the bases for the final limitations
and standards, EPA calculated the
pollutant loadings for plants that
implement these technologies to
estimate the pollutant reductions
associated with the rule. See TDD
Section 10 for a detailed discussion of
EPA’s pollutant loadings and reductions
methodologies.
Table X–1 presents estimated
industry-level pollutant reductions for
the final rule.
TABLE X–1—TOTAL ANNUALIZED POLLUTANT LOADING REDUCTIONS
Pollutant reductions
(pounds per year)
Analysis baseline
Conventional
pollutants a
Final Rule ...............................................................................................................................
Priority
pollutants
Nonconventional
pollutants b
13,400,000
410,000
371,000,000
a The
loadings reduction for conventional pollutants includes BOD and TSS.
loadings reduction for nonconventional pollutants excludes TDS and COD to avoid double counting removals for certain pollutants that
would also be measured by these bulk parameters (e.g., sodium, magnesium).
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b The
XI. Development of Effluent Limitations
and Standards
The final rule establishes a zero
discharge limitation and standard
applicable to all pollutants in fly ash
transport water, bottom ash transport
water, and FGMC wastewater; therefore,
no effluent concentration data were
used to set the limitations and standards
for these wastestreams. The final rule
contains new numeric effluent
limitations and standards that apply to
discharges of FGD wastewater and
gasification wastewater at new and
existing sources, and to discharges of
combustion residual leachate at new
sources.49
EPA developed the new numeric
effluent limitations and standards in
this final rule using long-term average
effluent values and variability factors
that account for variation in
performance at well-operated facilities
that employ the technologies that
constitute the bases for control. EPA’s
methodology for derivation of
limitations in ELGs is longstanding and
has been upheld in court. See, e.g.,
Chem. Mfrs. Ass’n v. EPA, 870 F.2d 177
(5th Cir. 1989); Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n v.
EPA, 286 F.3d 554 (D.C. Cir. 2002). EPA
establishes the final effluent limitations
and standards as ‘‘daily maximums’’
and ‘‘maximums for monthly averages.’’
Definitions provided in 40 CFR 122.2
state that the daily maximum limitation
is the ‘‘highest allowable ‘daily
discharge’ ’’ and the maximum for
monthly average limitation is the
‘‘highest allowable average of ‘daily
discharges’ over a calendar month,
calculated as the sum of all ‘daily
discharges’ measured during a calendar
month divided by the number of ‘daily
discharges’ measured during that
month.’’ Daily discharges are defined to
be the ‘‘ ‘discharge of a pollutant’
measured during a calendar day or any
24-hour period that reasonably
represents the calendar day for purposes
of sampling.’’
EPA’s objective in establishing daily
maximum limitations is to restrict the
discharges on a daily basis at a level that
is achievable for a plant that targets its
treatment at the long-term average. EPA
acknowledges that variability around
the long-term average occurs during
normal operations. This variability
means that plants occasionally may
discharge at a level that is higher (or
lower) than the long-term average. To
allow for these possibly higher daily
discharges and provide an upper bound
for the allowable concentration of
pollutants that may be discharged,
while still targeting achievement of the
long-term average, EPA has established
the daily maximum limitation. A plant
that consistently discharges at a level
near the daily maximum limitation
would not be operating its treatment to
achieve the long-term average. Targeting
treatment to achieve the daily
limitation, rather than the long-term
average, may result in values that
frequently exceed the limitations due to
routine variability in treated effluent.
EPA’s objective in establishing
monthly average limitations is to
provide an additional restriction to help
ensure that plants target their average
discharges to achieve the long-term
average. The monthly average limitation
requires dischargers to provide ongoing
control, on a monthly basis, that
supplements controls imposed by the
daily maximum limitation. In order to
meet the monthly average limitation, a
plant must counterbalance a value near
the daily maximum limitation with one
or more values well below the daily
maximum limitation.
The TDD provides a detailed
description of the data and methodology
used to develop long-term averages,
variability factors, and limitations and
standards for the final rule. As a result
of public comments, EPA expanded the
data set used to calculate the BAT/PSES
effluent limitations and standards for
discharges of FGD wastewater from
existing sources. Largely, this expanded
data set includes additional selfmonitoring data from plants operating
48 As explained elsewhere in this preamble, for
this final rule, EPA adjusted its estimates to, among
other things, account for known generating unit
closures and conversions and known operating
changes, including those associated with the CCR
rule, expected to occur prior to the time in which
the limitations and standards in this rule would
apply. As such, baseline loadings in this final rule
reflect closures, conversions, and operational
changes that will take place prior to
implementation of the rule in NPDES permits,
rather than the industry survey baseline year of
2009 used in the proposed rule.
49 Effluent limitations and standards based on the
previously established BPT limitations on TSS are
not discussed in this section.
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the selected technology basis. EPA also
expanded the data set by including
treatment performance data from
another plant that, upon review of
comments, EPA determined would be
appropriate to use to calculate the
effluent limitations in this rule. The
combination of EPA sampling data (both
EPA-collected and CWA section 308
samples collected by plants for analysis
by EPA) and plant self-monitoring data
results in data sets characterizing the
treatment system performance over
several years at each of the plants used
to develop effluent limitations and
standards for FGD wastewater.
EPA identified certain data that
warranted exclusion from the
calculations of the limitations and
standards because: (1) The samples were
analyzed using an analytical method
that is not approved in 40 CFR part 136
for NPDES permit purposes; (2) the
samples were analyzed using an
insufficiently sensitive analytical
method (e.g., use of EPA Method 245.1
to measure the concentration of mercury
in effluent samples); (3) the samples
were analyzed in a manner which
resulted in an unacceptable level of
analytical interferences; (4) the samples
were collected during the initial
commissioning period for the
wastewater treatment system or the
plant decommissioning period and do
not represent BAT/NSPS level of
performance; (5) the analytical results
were identified as questionable due to
quality control issues, abnormal
conditions or treatment system upsets,
or were analytical anomalies; (6) the
samples were collected from a location
that is not representative of treated
effluent; or (7) the treatment system was
operating in a manner that does not
represent BAT/NSPS level of
performance. The results of EPA’s
evaluation of the data and reasons for
any data exclusions are summarized in
DCN SE05733.
Tables XI–1 and XI–2 present the
effluent limitations and standards for
FGD wastewater, gasification
wastewater, and combustion residual
leachate. For comparison, the tables also
present the long-term average treatment
performance calculated for these
wastestreams. Due to routine variability
in treated effluent, a power plant that
targets discharging its wastewater at a
level near the values of the daily
maximum limitation or the monthly
average limitation may experience
frequent values exceeding the
limitations. For this reason, EPA
recommends that plants design and
operate the treatment system to achieve
the long-term average for the model
technology. In doing so, a system that is
designed to represent the BAT/NSPS
level of control would be expected to
meet the limitations.
EPA expects that plants will be able
to meet their effluent limitations or
standards at all times. If an exceedance
is caused by an upset condition, the
plant would have an affirmative defense
to an enforcement action if the
requirements of 40 CFR 122.41(n) are
met. Exceedances caused by a design or
operational deficiency, however, are
indications that the plant’s performance
does not represent the appropriate level
of control. For these final limitations
and standards, EPA determined that
such exceedances can be controlled by
diligent process and wastewater
treatment system operational practices,
such as regular monitoring of influent
and effluent wastewater characteristics
and adjusting dosage rates for chemical
additives to target effluent performance
for regulated pollutants at the long-term
average concentration for the BAT/
NSPS technology. Additionally, some
plants may need to upgrade or replace
existing treatment systems to ensure
that the treatment system is designed to
achieve performance that targets the
effluent concentrations at the long-term
average. This is consistent with EPA’s
costing approach and its engineering
judgment developed over years of
evaluating wastewater treatment
processes for steam electric power
plants and other industrial sectors. EPA
recognizes that, as a result of the final
rule, some dischargers, including those
that are operating technologies
representing the technology bases for
the final rule, may need to improve their
treatment systems, process controls,
and/or treatment system operations in
order to consistently meet the effluent
limitations and standards. This is
consistent with the CWA, which
requires that discharge limitations and
standards reflect the best available
technology economically achievable or
the best available demonstrated control
technology.
See DCN SE05733 for details of the
calculation of the limitations and
standards presented in the tables below.
TABLE XI–1—LONG-TERM AVERAGES AND EFFLUENT LIMITATIONS AND STANDARDS FOR FGD WASTEWATER AND
GASIFICATION WASTEWATER FOR EXISTING SOURCES
Long-term
average
Wastestream
Pollutant
FGD Wastewater (BAT & PSES) .........................
Arsenic (μg/L) .......................................................
Mercury (ng/L) ......................................................
Nitrate/nitrite as N (mg/L) .....................................
Selenium (μg/L) ....................................................
Arsenic (μg/L) .......................................................
Mercury (ng/L) ......................................................
Selenium (μg/L) ....................................................
TDS (mg/L) ...........................................................
Arsenic (μg/L) .......................................................
Mercury (ng/L) ......................................................
Selenium (μg/L) ....................................................
TDS (mg/L) ...........................................................
Voluntary Incentives Program for FGD Wastewater (BAT only).
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Gasification Wastewater (BAT & PSES) ..............
5.98
159
1.3
7.5
a 4.0
17.8
a 5.0
14.9
a 4.0
1.08
147
15.2
a Long-term
average is the arithmetic mean of the quantitation limits since all observations were not detected.
is set equal to the quantitation limit.
c Monthly average limitation is not established when the daily maximum limitation is based on the quantitation limit.
b Limitation
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Daily
maximum
limitation
11
788
17.0
23
b4
39
b5
50
b4
1.8
453
38
Monthly
average
limitation
8
356
4.4
12
(c)
24
(c)
24
( c)
1.3
227
22
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TABLE XI–2—LONG-TERM AVERAGES AND STANDARDS FOR FGD WASTEWATER, GASIFICATION WASTEWATER, AND
COMBUSTION RESIDUAL LEACHATE FOR NEW SOURCES
Pollutant
FGD Wastewater (NSPS & PSNS) ......................
Arsenic (μg/L) .......................................................
Mercury (ng/L) ......................................................
Selenium (μg/L) ....................................................
TDS (mg/L) ...........................................................
Arsenic (μg/L) .......................................................
Mercury (ng/L) ......................................................
Selenium (μg/L) ....................................................
TDS (mg/L) ...........................................................
Arsenic (μg/L) d .....................................................
Mercury (ng/L) d ....................................................
Gasification Wastewater (NSPS & PSNS) ...........
Combustion Residual Leachate (NSPS & PSNS)
Daily
maximum
limitation
Long-term
average
Wastestream
Monthly
average
limitation
a 4.0
b4
17.8
a 5.0
14.9
a 4.0
1.08
147
15.2
5.98
159
39
b5
50
b4
1.8
453
38
11
788
(c )
24
(c )
24
(c )
1.3
227
22
8
356
a Long-term
average is the arithmetic mean of the quantitation limits since all observations were not detected.
is set equal to the quantitation limit.
c Monthly average limitation is not established when the daily maximum limitation is based on the quantitation limit.
d Long-term average and standards were transferred from performance of chemical precipitation in treating FGD wastewater.
b Limitation
XII. Non-Water Quality Environmental
Impacts
The elimination or reduction of one
form of pollution can create or aggravate
other environmental problems.
Therefore, CWA sections 304(b) and 306
require EPA to consider non-water
quality environmental impacts
(including energy requirements)
associated with ELGs. Accordingly, EPA
considered the potential impact of this
rule on energy consumption, air
emissions, and solid waste generation.50
In addition, EPA evaluated the effects
associated with water withdrawal. For
information on the methodologies EPA
used to estimate the non-water quality
environmental impacts, see TDD
Section 12.
Table XII–1 presents the net increases
in energy requirements for the final rule.
EPA estimates that energy increases
associated with this rule are less than
0.01 percent of the total electricity
generated by all electric power plants
and the fuel consumption increase is
0.002 percent of total fuel consumption
by all motor vehicles in the U.S.
TABLE XII–1—INDUSTRY-LEVEL ENERGY REQUIREMENTS FOR THE
FINAL RULE
Non-water quality environmental
impact
Final
rule
Electrical Energy Usage (MWh) .....
Fuel (GPY) ......................................
237,000
556,000
Table XII–2 presents the estimated net
change in air emissions for the final
rule. Table XII–2 shows that the
estimated air emission increases are less
than 0.04 percent of the total air
emissions generated in 2009 by the
electric power industry for the three
pollutants evaluated.
TABLE XII–2—AIR EMISSIONS ASSOCIATED WITH BAT/PSES FOR FINAL RULE
2009 emissions
by electric
power industry
(million tons)
Non-water quality environmental impact
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NOX ............................................................................................................................
SOX ............................................................................................................................
CO2 ............................................................................................................................
Change in air
emissions
associated with
final rule
(million tons)
Increase in
emissions for
final rule
(%)
¥0.0114
0.00243
¥2.58
1
6
2,403
¥1.16
0.0406
¥0.107
EPA compared the estimated increase
in solid waste generation to the amount
of solids generated in a year by electric
power plants throughout the U.S.—
approximately 134 billion tons. The
increase in solid waste generation
associated with the final rule is less
than 0.001 percent of the total solid
waste generated by all electric power
plants.
EPA estimates that, under the final
rule, steam electric power plants will
reduce their water withdrawal by 57
billion gallons per year (155 million
gallons per day). See TDD Section 12.
Based on these analyses, EPA
determined that the final BAT effluent
limitations and PSES have acceptable
non-water quality environmental
impacts, including energy impacts.
XIII. Environmental Assessment
50 Because EPA does not project any new coal or
oil-fired generating units, the results presented in
this section reflect existing generating units.
Because EPA expects non-water quality
environmental impacts for new generating units to
be similar to or the same as existing generating
units, EPA determined that in the event a new
generating unit is built, the non-water quality
environmental impacts associated with NSPS/PSNS
would be acceptable. For EPA’s analysis of nonwater quality impacts for existing generating units
for Option F, see Section 12 of the TDD.
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A. Introduction
Although not required to do so, EPA
conducted an environmental assessment
for the final rule, as it did for the
proposed rule. The environmental
assessment for the final rule reviewed
currently available literature on the
documented environmental and human
health impacts of steam electric power
plant wastewater discharges and
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conducted modeling to determine the
cumulative impacts of pollution from
the universe of steam electric power
plants to which the final rule applies.
EPA modeled both the impacts of steam
electric power plant discharges at
baseline conditions (pre-rule
conditions) and the improvements that
will likely result after implementation
of the rule.
EPA’s review of the scientific
literature; documented cases of the
extensive impacts of steam electric
power plant wastewater discharges on
human health and the environment; and
a full description of EPA’s modeling
methodology and results are provided in
the EA.
B. Summary of Human Health and
Environmental Impacts
As discussed in the environmental
assessment and proposed rule, current
scientific literature indicates that steam
electric power plant wastewaters such
as fly ash transport water, bottom ash
transport water, FGD wastewater, and
combustion residual leachate contain
large amounts of a wide range of
harmful pollutants, some of which are
toxic and bioaccumulative, and which
cause significant, widespread
detrimental environmental and human
health impacts.
Discharges of steam electric power
plant wastewaters present a serious
public health concern due to the
potential human exposure to toxic
pollutants through consumption of
contaminated fish and drinking water.
Toxic pollutants that detrimentally
affect human health that are commonly
found in steam electric power plant
wastewater discharges include mercury,
lead, arsenic, cadmium, thallium, and
selenium, along with numerous others
(see EA Section 3). These pollutants are
associated with a variety of documented
adverse human health impacts. For
example, human exposure to elevated
levels of mercury for relatively short
periods of time can result in kidney and
brain damage. Pregnant women who are
exposed to mercury can pass the
contaminant to their developing fetus,
leading to possible toxic injury of the
fetal brain and damage to other parts of
the nervous system. Human exposure to
elevated levels of lead can cause serious
damage to the brain, kidneys, nervous
system, and red blood cells, especially
in children. Arsenic is associated with
an increased risk of liver and bladder
cancer in humans, as well as non-cancer
impacts including dermal,
cardiovascular, respiratory, and
reproductive effects such as excess
incidences of miscarriages, stillbirths,
preterm births, and low birth weights.
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Chronic exposure to cadmium, a
probable carcinogen, can lead to kidney
failure, lung damage, and weakened
bones. Human exposure to elevated
levels of thallium can lead to
neurological symptoms, hair loss,
gastrointestinal effects, liver and kidney
damage, and reproductive and
developmental damage. Long-term
exposure to selenium can damage the
kidney, liver, and nervous and
circulatory systems.
The pollutants in steam electric
power plant wastewater can
bioaccumulate within fish and other
aquatic wildlife in the receiving waters
and subsequently be transferred to
recreational and subsistence fishers who
consume these contaminated fish,
potentially resulting in the acute and
chronic health impacts described above.
Certain populations are particularly at
risk, including women who are
pregnant, nursing, or may become
pregnant, and communities relying on
consumption of fish from contaminated
waters as a major food source.
Discharges of steam electric power
plant pollutants to surface waters also
have the potential to contaminate
drinking water sources, causing
potential problems for drinking water
systems and, if left untreated, potential
adverse health effects. A recent study
indicates that pollutants in ash and FGD
wastewater discharges exceeded MCLs
in every surface water that was
monitored in North Carolina during the
study (see DCN SE01984). Nitrogen
discharges from steam electric power
plants can contribute, along with other
sources, to harmful algal blooms.
Harmful algal blooms can affect
drinking water sources, such as the
recent incident in Toledo, Ohio (see
DCN SE04517).
Bromide discharges from steam
electric power plants can contribute to
the formation of carcinogenic DBPs in
public drinking water systems. A recent
study identified four drinking water
treatment plants that experienced
increased levels of bromide in their
source water, and in some, a
corresponding increase in the formation
of brominated DBPs in the drinking
water system, after the installation of
wet FGD scrubbers at upstream steam
electric power plants (see DCN
SE04503).
Although not directly addressed by
this final rule, ground water
contamination from surface
impoundments containing steam
electric power plant wastewater also
threatens drinking water sources. EPA
identified more than 30 documented
cases where ground water
contamination from surface
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impoundments extended beyond the
plant boundaries, illustrating the threat
to ground water drinking water sources
(see DCN SE04518). Where this final
rule helps to reduce or eliminate the
continued disposal or storage of steam
electric power plant wastewater
pollutants in unlined or leaking surface
impoundments, potential impacts to
ground water will also be reduced or
eliminated.
The ecological impacts of steam
electric power plant wastewater
pollutants include both acute (e.g., fish
kills) and chronic effects (e.g.,
reproductive failure, malformations, and
metabolic, hormonal, and behavioral
disorders) upon biota within the
receiving water and the surrounding
environment. Recovery of aquatic
environments from exposure to these
steam electric power plant pollutants
can be extremely slow due to the
accumulation and continued cycling of
the pollutants within ecosystems,
resulting in the potential to alter
ecological processes such as population
diversity and community dynamics.
Furthermore, many steam electric power
plants discharge pollutants to sensitive
environments such as the Great Lakes,
valuable estuaries such as the
Chesapeake Bay, 303(d) listed impaired
waters, and waters with fish
consumption advisories. EPA identified
69 steam electric power plants with
documented adverse environmental
impacts on surface waters (see DCN
SE04518).
C. Environmental Assessment
Methodology
As discussed in Section V.G, EPA
updated the environmental assessment
for the final rule to respond to public
comments and to better characterize the
environmental and human health
improvements associated with the final
rule. Although not required to do so,
EPA conducted an environmental
assessment for the final rule. The
environmental assessment reviewed
currently available literature on the
documented environmental and human
health impacts of steam electric power
plant wastewater discharges and
conducted modeling to determine the
cumulative impacts of pollution from
the universe of steam electric power
plants to which the final rule applies.
EPA modeled both of the impacts of
steam electric power plant discharges at
baseline conditions and the
improvements that will likely result
after implementation of this rule. The
final environmental assessment also
incorporates changes to the industry
profile to account for retirements,
conversions, and operational changes
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that EPA anticipates, given other
existing rules, primarily the CCR and
CPP rules.
The environmental assessment
modeling for the final rule consisted of
(1) a steady-state, national-scale
immediate receiving water (IRW) model
that evaluated the discharges from
steam electric power plants and focused
on impacts within the immediate
surface water where the discharges
occur (approximately one to 10
kilometers [km] from the outfall),51 and
(2) dynamic case study models with
more extensive, site-specific modeling
of selected waterbodies that receive, or
are downstream from, steam electric
power plant discharges. EPA also
modeled receiving water concentrations
downstream from steam electric power
plant discharges using EPA’s RiskScreening Environmental Indicators
(RSEI) model, and improved its
modeling of selenium bioaccumulation
in fish and wildlife.
Additionally, for the final rule, EPA
updated and improved several input
parameters for the IRW model,
including fish consumption rates for
recreational and subsistence fishers, the
bioconcentration factor for copper, and
benchmarks for assessing the potential
for impacts to benthic communities in
receiving waters.
The case-study modeling for the final
rule is based on EPA’s Water Quality
Analysis Simulation Program (WASP),
which accounts for fluctuations in
receiving water flow rates by using daily
stream flow monitoring data instead of
one annual average flow rate for the
receiving water, as used in the IRW. The
case-study modeling accounts for
pollutant transport and accumulation
within receiving water reaches that are
downstream from the discharge
location, allowing for an assessment of
environmental impacts over a larger
portion of the receiving waterbody. The
case study modeling also accounts for
pollutant contributions from other
point, nonpoint, and background
sources, to the extent practical, using
available data sources. EPA used the
water quality results of the case-study
modeling to supplement the results of
the IRW model (see EA Section 8).
EPA improved its selenium
bioaccumulation modeling for impacts
on wildlife by developing and using an
ecological risk model that predicts the
risk of reproductive impacts among fish
and waterfowl exposed to selenium
from steam electric power plant
51 The IRW model used for the final rule is
substantially similar to the one used for the
proposed rule, but with certain updates, as further
discussed in this section.
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wastewater discharges. The ecological
risk model accounts for the
bioaccumulation of selenium in aquatic
organisms through dietary exposure (the
food web), as contrasted with exposure
only to dissolved selenium in the water
column. Dietary exposure plays a more
significant role in determining the
extent of selenium bioaccumulation in
aquatic organisms. The ecological risk
model also accounts for the higher rates
of selenium bioaccumulation that can
occur in slow-flowing aquatic systems
such as lakes and reservoirs, and the
risk model translates selenium tissue
concentrations into the predicted risk of
adverse reproductive effects (e.g.,
reduced egg hatchability, larval
mortality, and deformities that affect
survival) among exposed fish and
waterfowl. EPA applied the ecological
risk model to the water quality outputs
from both the national-scale IRW model
and the case-study models. See EA
Section 5.2 for a more detailed
discussion.
D. Outputs From the Environmental
Assessment
EPA focused its quantitative analyses
on the environmental and human health
impacts associated with exposure to
toxic bioaccumulative pollutants via the
surface water pathway. EPA focused the
modeling on discharges of toxic
bioaccumulative pollutants from a
subset of evaluated wastestreams from
steam electric power plants (fly ash and
bottom ash transport water, FGD
wastewater, and combustion residual
leachate) into rivers/streams and lakes/
ponds (including reservoirs).52 EPA
addressed environmental impacts from
nutrients in a separate analysis
discussed in Section XIII.D.5.
The environmental assessment
concentrates on impacts to aquatic life
based on changes in surface water
quality; impacts to aquatic life based on
changes in sediment quality within
surface waters; impacts to wildlife from
consumption of contaminated aquatic
organisms; and impacts to human health
from consumption of contaminated fish
and water. Table XIII–1 presents a list
of the key environmental improvements
projected within the immediate
receiving waters due to the pollutant
loading reductions under the final rule.
These improvements are discussed in
detail, with quantified results, in the
EA.
52 EPA did not use the state 303d lists of impaired
waters in order to ensure comprehensive coverage
of all pollutants of concern.
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TABLE XIII–1—KEY ENVIRONMENTAL
IMPROVEMENTS WITHIN MODELED
IMMEDIATE
RECEIVING
WATERS
UNDER THE FINAL RULE 53
Criteria evaluated for
exceedances
Freshwater Acute National
Recommended WQC.
Freshwater Chronic National
Recommended WQC.
Human Health Water and Organism National Recommended WQC.
Human Health Organism
Only National Recommended WQC.
Drinking Water MCL ..............
Fish Ingestion NEHC for
Mink.
Fish Ingestion NEHC for Eagles.
Adverse Reproductive Effects
in Fish due to Selenium.
Adverse Reproductive Effects
in Mallards due to Selenium.
Non-Cancer Reference Dose
for Child (Recreational and
Subsistence fishers).
Non-Cancer Reference Dose
for Adult (Recreational and
Subsistence fishers).
Arsenic Cancer Risk for Child
(Recreational and Subsistence fishers).
Arsenic Cancer Risk for Adult
(Recreational and Subsistence fishers).
Will improve
under the final
rule?
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
YES
Acronyms: MCL (Maximum Contaminant
Level); NEHC (No Effect Hazard Concentration); WQC (Water Quality Criteria).
a The IRW model encompasses a total of
163 immediate receiving waters (144 rivers
and streams; 19 lakes, ponds, and reservoirs)
and loadings from 143 steam electric power
plants.
1. Improvements in Surface Water and
Ground Water Quality
EPA estimates a significant number of
environmental and ecological
improvements and reduced impacts to
wildlife and humans from reductions in
pollutant loadings under the final rule.
More specifically, the environmental
assessment evaluated (a) improvements
in water quality, (b) reduction in
impacts to wildlife, (c) reduction in
number of receiving waters with
potential human health cancer risks, (d)
reduction in number of receiving waters
with potential to cause non-cancer
human health effects, (e) reduction in
nutrient impacts, (f) reduction in other
environmental impacts, and (g) other
unquantified environmental
improvements.
53 See the EA for the details and amounts of the
projected improvements.
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EPA expects significantly reduced
contamination levels in surface waters
and sediments under the final rule. EPA
estimates that reduced pollutant
loadings to surface waters will
significantly improve water quality by
reducing pollutant concentrations by an
average of 56 percent within the
immediate receiving waters of steam
electric power plants where additional
treatment technologies are installed as a
result of this final rule. Based on the
water quality component of the IRW
model, which compares modeled
receiving water concentrations to
national recommended WQC and MCLs
to assess changes in receiving water
quality, the pollutants with the greatest
number of water quality standard
exceedances under baseline pollutant
loadings include: Total arsenic, total
thallium, total selenium, and dissolved
cadmium. EPA estimates that almost
half of the immediate receiving waters
exceed a water quality standard under
baseline loadings. EPA estimates that
the number of immediate receiving
waters with aquatic life exceedances,
which are driven by high total selenium
and dissolved cadmium concentrations,
will be reduced under the final rule.
EPA also estimates that the number of
immediate receiving waters with human
health water quality standards
exceedances, primarily driven by high
total arsenic and total thallium
concentrations, will be reduced under
the final rule.
Selenium is one of the primary
pollutants documented in the literature
as causing environmental impacts to
fish and wildlife. EPA calculates that
total selenium receiving water
concentrations will be reduced by twothirds under the final rule, leading to a
reduction in the number of immediate
receiving waters exceeding the
freshwater chronic criteria for selenium.
While the case-study models and IRW
model produced generally similar
results for the five receiving waters
included in both analyses, the casestudy model reveals additional potential
for baseline impacts to water quality,
aquatic life, and human health that are
not reflected in the IRW model. Casestudy modeling also reveals that these
potential impacts can extend beyond the
immediate receiving water and into
downstream waters, leading to the
potential for more widespread
environmental and human health effects
than those shown with the IRW model.
This is particularly true regarding water
quality standard exceedances; in four of
the five receiving waters included in
both analyses, the case-study model
indicates that the final rule will result
in further reductions in water quality
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standard exceedances beyond those
reflected in the IRW model.
As discussed in the EA, the RSEI
modeling indicates that surface waters
downstream from steam electric power
plant wastewater discharges will also
achieve water quality improvements
under the final rule.
This final rule will also potentially
help to both reduce ground water
contamination and improve the
availability of ground water resources
by complementing the CCR rule. This
rule provides strong incentives for
plants to greatly reduce, if not entirely
eliminate, disposal and treatment of
steam electric power plant wastewater
in unlined surface impoundments.
2. Reduced Impacts to Wildlife
EPA expects that once the rule is
implemented the number of immediate
receiving waterbodies with potential
impacts to wildlife will begin to be
reduced by more than a half compared
to baseline conditions under the final
rule.
EPA determined that steam electric
power plant wastewater discharges into
lakes pose the greatest risk to
piscivorous (fish eating) wildlife, with
almost a half of lakes exceeding a
protective benchmark for minks or
eagles under baseline pollutant loadings
(compared to about a third of rivers).
Mercury and selenium are the primary
pollutants with the greatest number of
receiving waters with benchmark
exceedances. EPA estimates that this
rule will reduce the number of
immediate receiving waters exceeding
the benchmark for minks and eagles by
approximately half for mercury and
selenium. Additionally, as discussed in
the EA, the downstream RSEI modeling
indicates that surface waters
downstream from steam electric power
plant wastewater discharges will also
achieve improvements in these wildlife
benchmarks under the final rule.
For the final rule, EPA also performed
modeling to estimate the risk of adverse
reproductive effects among fish (e.g.,
reduced larvae survival) and waterfowl
(e.g., reduced egg hatchability) with
dietary exposure to selenium from
steam electric power plant wastewater.
Based on the water quality output from
the IRW model, EPA determined that
approximately 15 percent of immediate
receiving waters contain selenium
concentrations that present at least a ten
percent risk of adverse reproductive
effects among fish or waterfowl that
consume prey from those waterbodies.
Under the final rule, EPA estimates that
the count of immediate receiving waters
presenting these reproductive risks will
be reduced by more than half. This
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indicates that the final rule will reduce
the long-term bioaccumulative impact of
selenium (and possibly other
bioaccumulative pollutants) throughout
aquatic ecosystems.
In addition, EPA estimates that the
improvements to water quality,
discussed above, will improve aquatic
and wildlife habitats in the immediate
and downstream receiving waters from
steam electric power plant discharges.
EPA determined that these water quality
and habitat improvements will enhance
efforts to protect threatened and
endangered species. EPA identified four
species with a high vulnerability to
changes in water quality whose recovery
will be enhanced by the pollutant
reductions associated with the final
rule.
3. Reduced Human Health Cancer Risk
EPA estimates that reductions in
arsenic loadings from the final rule will
result in a reduction in potential cancer
risks to humans that consume fish
exposed to steam electric power plant
discharges. In addition, based on the
downstream RSEI modeling, EPA
estimates that numerous river miles
downstream from steam electric
discharges contain fish contaminated
with inorganic arsenic that present
cancer risks to at least one of the
evaluated cohorts. The final rule
substantially reduces this number of
miles.
4. Reduced Threat of Non-Cancer
Human Health Effects
Exposure to toxic bioaccumulative
pollutants poses risk of systemic and
other effects to humans, including
effects on the circulatory, respiratory, or
digestive systems, and neurological and
developmental effects. EPA estimates
the final rule will significantly reduce
the number of receiving waters with the
potential to cause non-cancer health
effects in humans who consume fish
exposed to steam electric power plant
pollutants.
Under baseline pollutant loadings,
EPA determined that about half of
immediate receiving waters present
non-cancer health risks for one or more
of the human cohorts due to elevated
pollutant levels in fish. The final rule,
once implemented, will begin to reduce
this amount by approximately 50
percent for all the human cohorts that
were evaluated. Non-cancer risks are
caused primarily by mercury (as
methylmercury), total thallium, and
total selenium, and to a lesser degree,
total cadmium pollutant loadings.
Additionally, as discussed in the EA,
the downstream RSEI modeling
indicates that the final rule substantially
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reduces the prevalence of downstream
waters with contaminated fish that
present non-cancer health risks to at
least one of the human cohorts.
In addition to the assessment of noncancer impacts described above, EPA
also evaluated the adverse health effects
to children who consume fish
contaminated with lead from steam
electric power plant wastewater. EPA
estimates that the final rule will
significantly reduce the associated IQ
loss among children who live in
recreational angler and subsistence
fisher households. The final rule will
also reduce the incidence of other
health effects associated with lead
exposure among children, including
slowed or delayed growth, delinquent
and anti-social behavior, metabolic
effects, impaired heme synthesis,
anemia, and impaired hearing. The final
rule will also reduce IQ loss among
children exposed in utero to mercury
from maternal fish consumption.
Section XIV.B.1 provides additional
details on the benefits analysis of these
reduced IQ losses.
The final rule will also result in
additional non-cancer human health
improvements beyond those discussed
above, including reduced health hazards
due to exposure to contaminants in
waters that are used for recreational
purposes (e.g., swimming).
5. Reduced Nutrient Impacts
The primary concern with nutrients
(nitrogen and phosphorus) in steam
electric power plant discharges is the
potential for contributing to adverse
impacts in waterbodies that receive
nutrient discharges from multiple
sources. Excessive nutrient loadings to
receiving waters can significantly affect
the ecological stability of freshwater and
saltwater aquatic ecosystems and pose
health threats to humans from the
generation of toxins by cyanobacteria,
which can thrive in nitrogen driven
algal blooms (DCN SE04505).
Nine percent of surface waters
receiving steam electric power plant
wastewater discharges are impaired for
nutrients. Although the concentration of
nitrogen present in steam electric power
plant discharges from any individual
power plant is relatively low, the total
nitrogen loadings from a single plant
can be significant due to large
wastewater discharge flow rates.
EPA projects that the final rule will
reduce total nutrient loadings by steam
electric power plants in their
immediately downstream receiving
waters by more than 99 percent. Section
XIV provides additional details on the
water quality benefits analysis of
nutrient reductions, as determined
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using the SPARROW (Spatially
Referenced Regressions On Watershed
attributes) model.
E. Unquantified Environmental and
Human Health Improvements
The environmental assessment
focused primarily on the quantification
of environmental improvements within
rivers and lakes from post-compliance
pollutant reductions for toxic
bioaccumulative pollutants and
excessive nutrients. While extensive,
the environmental improvements
quantified do not encompass the full
range of improvements anticipated to
result from the final rule simply because
some of the improvements have no
method for measuring a quantifiable or
monetizable improvement. EPA
estimates post-compliance pollutant
reductions from the final rule to result
in much greater improvements than
those quantified for wildlife, human
health and the environment by:
• Reducing loadings of
bioaccumulative pollutants to the
broader ecosystem, resulting in the
reduction of long-term exposures and
sub-lethal ecological effects;
• Reducing sub-lethal chronic effects
of toxic pollutants on aquatic life not
captured by the national recommended
WQC;
• Reducing loadings of pollutants for
which EPA did not perform water
quality modeling in support of the
environmental assessment (e.g., boron,
manganese, aluminum, vanadium, and
iron);
• Mitigating impacts to aquatic and
aquatic-dependent wildlife population
diversity and community structures;
• Reducing exposure of wildlife to
pollutants through direct contact with
combustion residual surface
impoundments and constructed
wetlands built as treatment systems at
steam electric power plants; and
• Reducing the potential for the
formation of harmful algal blooms.
Data and analytical limitations
prevent modeling the scale and
complexity of the ecosystem processes
potentially impacted by steam electric
power plant wastewater, resulting in the
inability to quantify all potential
improvements. However, documented
site-specific impacts in the literature
reinforce that these impacts are common
in the environments surrounding steam
electric power plants and fully support
the conclusion that reducing pollutant
loadings will further reduce risks to
human health and wildlife and prevent
damage to the environment.
Although the environmental
assessment quantifies impacts to
wildlife that consume fish contaminated
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with pollutants from steam electric
power plant wastewater, it does not
capture the full range of exposure
pathways through which
bioaccumulative pollutants can enter
the surrounding food web. Wildlife can
encounter toxic bioaccumulative
pollutants from discharges of the
evaluated wastestreams through a
variety of exposure pathways such as
direct exposure, drinking water,
consumption of contaminated
vegetation, and consumption of
contaminated prey other than fish and
invertebrates. Therefore, the quantified
improvements underestimate the
complete loadings of bioaccumulative
pollutants that can impact wildlife in
the ecosystem. The final rule will lower
the total amount of toxic
bioaccumulative pollutants entering the
food web near steam electric power
plants.
EPA also estimates that reductions in
pollutant loadings will lower the
occurrence of sub-lethal effects
associated with many of the pollutants
in steam electric power plant
wastewater that are not captured by
comparisons with national
recommended WQC for aquatic life.
Chronic effects such as decreased
reproductive success, changes in
metabolic rates, decreased growth rates,
changes in morphology (e.g., fin erosion,
oral deformities), and changes in
behavior (e.g., swimming ability, ability
to catch prey, ability to escape from
predators) that can negatively affect
long-term survival, are well documented
in the literature as occurring in aquatic
environments near steam electric power
plants. Reductions in organism survival
rates from chronic effects such as
abnormalities can alter interspecies
relationships (e.g., declines in the
abundance or quality of prey) and
prolong ecosystem recovery.
Additionally, EPA was unable to
quantify changes to aquatic and wildlife
population diversity and community
dynamics; however, population effects
(decline in number and type of
organisms present) caused by exposure
to steam electric power plant
wastewater are well documented in the
literature. Changes in aquatic
populations can alter the structure and
function of aquatic communities and
cause cascading effects within the food
web that result in long-term impacts to
ecosystem dynamics. EPA estimates that
post-compliance pollutant loading
reductions associated with the final rule
will lower the stressors that can cause
alterations in population and
community dynamics and improve the
overall function of ecosystems
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surrounding steam electric power
plants, as well as help resolve issues
faced in other national ecosystem
protection programs such as the Great
Lakes program, the National Estuaries
program, and the 303(d) impaired
waters program.
The post-compliance pollutant
reductions associated with the final rule
will also decrease the environmental
impacts to wildlife exposed to
pollutants through direct contact with
surface impoundments and constructed
wetlands at steam electric power plants.
Documented site-specific impacts
demonstrate that wildlife living in close
proximity to combustion residual
impoundments exhibit elevated levels
of arsenic, cadmium, chromium, lead,
mercury, selenium, and vanadium.
Multiple studies have linked these
‘‘attractive nuisance’’ areas
(contaminated impoundments at a
steam electric power plant that attract
wildlife for nesting or feeding) to
diminished reproductive success. EPA
estimates that the post-compliance
pollutant reductions will decrease the
exposure of wildlife populations to
toxic pollutants and reduce the risks for
impacts on reproductive success.
F. Other Improvements
Other improvements will occur to
other resources that are associated
directly or indirectly with the final rule.
These include aesthetic and recreational
improvements, reduced economic
impacts such as clean up and treatment
costs in response to contamination or
impoundment failures, reduced injury
associated with pond failures, reduced
ground water contamination, support
for threatened and endangered species,
reduced water usage and reduced air
emissions. Section XIV provides
additional details on the monetized
benefits of these improvements.
XIV. Benefits Analysis
This section summarizes EPA’s
estimates of the national environmental
benefits expected to result from
reduction in steam electric power plant
wastewater discharges described in
Section X and the resultant
environmental effects summarized in
Section XIII. The BCA Report provides
additional details on benefits
methodologies and analyses, including
uncertainties and limitations. The
analysis methodology is generally the
same as that used by EPA for analysis
of the proposed rule, but with revised
inputs and assumptions that reflect
updated data and address comments the
Agency received on the proposed rule,
including additional categories of
benefits the Agency analyzed for the
final rule.
A. Categories of Benefits Analyzed
Table XIV–1 summarizes benefit
categories associated with the final rule
and notes which categories EPA was
able to quantify and monetize. Analyzed
benefits fall within five broad
categories: Human health benefits from
surface water quality improvements,
ecological conditions and recreational
use benefits from surface water quality
improvements, market and productivity
benefits, air-related benefits (which
include both human health and climate
change-related effects), and water
withdrawal benefits. Within these broad
categories, EPA was able to assess
benefits with varying degrees of
completeness and rigor. Where possible,
EPA quantified the expected effects and
estimated monetary values. However,
data limitations and gaps in the
understanding of how society values
certain water quality changes prevent
EPA from quantifying and/or
monetizing some benefit categories.
TABLE XIV–1—BENEFIT CATEGORIES ASSOCIATED WITH FINAL RULE
Quantified and
monetized
Benefit category
Quantified but
not monetized
Neither
quantified nor
monetized
1. Human Health Benefits from Surface Water Quality Improvements
Reduced incidence of cancer from arsenic exposure via fish consumption ...............................
Reduced incidence of cardiovascular disease from arsenic exposure via fish consumption .....
Reduced incidence of cardiovascular disease from lead exposure via fish consumption .........
Reduced incidence of other cancer and non-cancer adverse health effects (e.g., reproductive, immunological, neurological, circulatory, or respiratory toxicity) due to exposure to arsenic, lead, cadmium, and other toxics from fish consumption ..............................................
Reduced IQ loss in children from lead exposure via fish consumption ......................................
Reduced need for specialized education for children from lead exposure via fish consumption
Reduced in utero mercury exposure via maternal fish consumption ..........................................
Reduced health hazards from exposure to pollutants in waters used recreationally (e.g.,
swimming) ................................................................................................................................
X
X
Xa
X
X
X
X
X
2. Ecological Conditions and Recreational Use Benefits from Surface Water Quality Improvements
Benefits from improvements in surface water quality, including: Improved aquatic and wildlife
habitat; enhanced water-based recreation, including fishing, swimming, boating, and nearwater activities; increased aesthetic benefits, such as enhancement of adjoining site amenities (e.g., residing, working, traveling, and owning property near the water b; and non-use
value (existence, option, and bequest value from improved ecosystem health) b ..................
Benefits from improved protection of threatened and endangered species ...............................
Reduced sediment contamination ...............................................................................................
X
X
X
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3. Market and Productivity Benefits
Reduced impoundment failures (monetized benefits include avoided cleanup costs, transaction costs, and environmental damages; non-quantified benefits include avoided injury) ..
Reduced water treatment costs for municipal drinking water, irrigation water, and industrial
process .....................................................................................................................................
Improved commercial fisheries yields .........................................................................................
Increased tourism and participation in water-based recreation ..................................................
Increased property values from water quality improvements .....................................................
Increased ability to market coal combustion byproducts ............................................................
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X
X
X
X
X
X
Xa
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67877
TABLE XIV–1—BENEFIT CATEGORIES ASSOCIATED WITH FINAL RULE—Continued
Benefit category
Quantified and
monetized
Reduced maintenance dredging in navigational waterways and reservoirs from reduction in
sediment discharges ................................................................................................................
Quantified but
not monetized
Neither
quantified nor
monetized
Xa
4. Air-Related Benefits
Human health benefits from reduced morbidity and mortality from exposure to NOX, SO2 and
particulate matter (PM2.5) .........................................................................................................
Avoided climate change impacts from CO2 emissions ...............................................................
X
X
5. Benefits from Reduced Water Withdrawals
Increased availability of ground water resources ........................................................................
Reduced impingement and entrainment of aquatic organisms ...................................................
Reduced susceptibility to drought ...............................................................................................
X
X
X
a Monetized
b These
benefit category added for the final rule.
values are implicit in the total willingness to pay (WTP) for water quality improvements.
The following section summarizes
EPA’s analysis of the benefits that the
Agency was able to quantify and
monetize (identified in the second
column of Table XIV–1). The final rule
will also provide additional benefits
that the Agency was not able to
monetize. The BCA Report further
describes some of these additional nonmonetized benefits.
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B. Quantification and Monetization of
Benefits
1. Human Health Benefits From Surface
Water Quality Improvements
Reduced pollutant discharges from
steam electric power plants generate
human health benefits in a number of
ways. As described in Section XIII,
exposure to pollutants in steam electric
power plant discharges via consumption
of fish from affected waters can cause a
wide variety of adverse health effects,
including cancer, kidney damage,
nervous system damage, fatigue,
irritability, liver damage, circulatory
damage, vomiting, diarrhea, brain
damage, IQ loss, and many others.
Because the final rule will reduce
discharges of steam electric pollutants
into waterbodies that receive, or are
downstream from, these discharges, it is
likely to result in decreased incidences
of associated illnesses.
Due to data limitations and
uncertainties, EPA is able to monetize
only a subset of the health benefits
associated with reductions in pollutant
discharges from steam electric power
plants. EPA analyzed the following
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measures of human health-related
benefits: Reduced lead-related IQ loss in
children aged zero to seven from fish
consumption; reduced cardiovascular
disease in adults from lead and arsenic
exposure from fish consumption;
reduced mercury-related IQ loss in
children exposed in utero due to
maternal fish consumption; and reduced
cancer risk in adults due to arsenic
exposure from fish consumption. EPA
monetized these human health benefits
by estimating the change in the
expected number of individuals
experiencing adverse human health
effects in the populations exposed to
steam electric discharges and/or
reduced exposure levels, and valuing
these changes using a variety of
monetization approaches.
These are not the only human health
benefits expected to result from the final
rule. EPA also estimated additional
human health benefits derived from
changes in air emissions. These
additional benefits are discussed
separately in Section XIV.B.4.
a. Monetized Human Health Benefits
From Surface Water Quality
Improvements
EPA estimated health risks from the
consumption of contaminated fish from
waterbodies within 50 miles of
households. EPA used Census Block
population data, state-specific average
fishing rates, and data on fish
consumption advisories to estimate the
exposed population. EPA used cohortspecific fish consumption rates and
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waterbody-specific fish tissue
concentration estimates to calculate
exposure to steam electric pollutants.
Cohorts were defined by age, sex, race/
ethnicity, and fishing mode
(recreational/subsistence). EPA used
these data to quantify and monetize the
following six categories of human health
benefits, which are further detailed in
the BCA Report:
• Benefits from Reduced IQ Loss in
Children from Lead Exposure via Fish
Consumption.
• Benefits from Reduced Need for
Specialized Education for Children from
Lead Exposure via Fish Consumption.
• Benefits from Reduced Incidence of
Cardiovascular Disease from Lead
Exposure via Fish Consumption.
• Benefits of Reduced In Utero
Mercury Exposure via Maternal Fish
Consumption.
• Benefits from Reduced Incidence of
Cancer from Arsenic Exposure via Fish
Consumption.
• Benefits from Reduced Incidence of
Cardiovascular Disease from Arsenic
Exposure via Fish Consumption.
Table XIV–2 summarizes monetized
human health benefits from surface
water quality improvements. EPA
estimates that the final rule will provide
human health benefits valued at $16.5
to $17.9 million annually, using a three
percent discount rate, and $11.3 to
$11.6 million, using a seven percent
discount rate. In addition, EPA
estimated health benefits associated
with changes in air emissions, as
discussed in Section XIV.B.4.
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TABLE XIV–2—HUMAN HEALTH BENEFITS FROM SURFACE WATER QUALITY IMPROVEMENTS
Annualized benefits
(million 2013$)
Benefit category
3% Discount Rate
Benefits from Reduced IQ Loss in Children from Lead Exposure via Fish Consumption a ..........................................
Benefits from Reduced Need for Specialized Education for Children from Lead Exposure via Fish Consumption .....
Benefits from Reduced Incidence of Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) from Lead Exposure via Fish Consumption .....
Benefits of Reduced In Utero Mercury Exposure via Maternal Fish Consumption a .....................................................
Benefits from Reduced Incidence of Cancer from Arsenic Exposure via Fish Consumption .......................................
Subtotal b .................................................................................................................................................................
$1.0
($0.8 to $1.1)
<0.1
12.8
3.5
(2.9 to 4.0)
<0.1
16.5 to 17.9
(15.2 to 16.7)
7% Discount Rate
Benefits from Reduced IQ Loss in Children from Lead Exposure via Fish Consumption a ..........................................
Benefits from Reduced Need for Specialized Education for Children from Lead Exposure via Fish Consumption .....
Benefits from Reduced Incidence of CVD from Lead Exposure via Fish Consumption ...............................................
Benefits of Reduced In Utero Mercury Exposure via Maternal Fish Consumption a .....................................................
Benefits from Reduced Incidence of Cancer from Arsenic Exposure via Fish Consumption .......................................
Subtotal b .................................................................................................................................................................
0.2
(0.1 to 0.2)
<0.1
10.7
0.6
(0.5 to 0.7)
<0.1
11.4
(10.7 to 11.0)
a Low end is based on the assumption that the loss of one IQ point results in the loss of 1.76% of lifetime earnings (following Schwartz, 1994);
high end is based on the assumption that the loss of one IQ point results in the loss of 2.38% of lifetime earnings (following Salkever, 1995).
b Totals may not add up due to independent rounding.
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2. Improved Ecological Conditions and
Recreational Use Benefits From Surface
Water Quality Improvements
EPA expects the final rule will
provide ecological benefits by
improving ecosystems (aquatic and
terrestrial) affected by the electric power
industry’s discharges. Benefits
associated with changes in aquatic life
include restoration of sensitive species,
recovery of diseased species, changes in
taste-and odor-producing algae, changes
in dissolved oxygen (DO), increased
assimilative capacity of affected waters,
and improved recreational activities.
Activities such as fishing, swimming,
wildlife viewing, camping, waterfowl
hunting, and boating may be enhanced
when risks to aquatic life and
perceivable water quality effects
associated with pollutants are reduced.
EPA was able to monetize several
categories of ecological benefits
associated with this final rule, including
recreational use and nonuse (existence,
bequest, and altruistic) benefits from
improvements in the health of aquatic
environments, and nonuse benefits from
increased populations of threatened and
endangered species. As shown in Table
XIV–1, the Agency quantified and
monetized two main benefit
subcategories, discussed below: (1)
Benefits from improvements in surface
water quality, and (2) benefits from
improved protection of threatened and
endangered (T&E) species.
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a. Improvements in Surface Water
Quality
EPA expects the final rule will
improve aquatic habitats and human
welfare by reducing concentrations of
harmful pollutants such as arsenic,
cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury,
selenium, nitrogen, phosphorus, and
suspended sediment. As a result, some
of the waters that were not usable for
recreation under the baseline discharge
conditions may become usable
following the rule, thereby benefiting
recreational users. Waters that have
been used for recreation under the
baseline conditions can become more
attractive by making recreational trips
even more enjoyable. The final rule is
also expected to generate nonuse
benefits from bequest, altruism, and
existence motivations. Individuals may
value knowing that water quality is
being maintained, ecosystems are being
protected, and species populations are
healthy, independent of any use.
EPA estimates that approximately
19,600 reach miles will improve as a
result of the final rule, as indicated by
a higher post-compliance water quality
index (WQI) score. The WQI translates
water quality measurements, gathered
for multiple parameters that are
indicative of various aspects of water
quality, into a single numerical
indicator that reflects achievement of
quality consistent with the suitability
for certain uses.
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EPA estimated monetized benefit
values using a revised version of the
meta-regression of surface water
valuation studies used in the benefitcost analysis of the proposed ELGs
(DCN SE03172). Using a meta-dataset of
51 studies published between 1985 and
2011, EPA developed a meta-regression
model that predicts how marginal
willingness to pay (WTP) for water
quality improvements depends on a
variety of methodological, population,
resource, and water quality change
characteristics. EPA developed two
versions of the meta-regression model:
The first model (Model 1) provides a
central estimate of non-market benefits,
while the second model (Model 2)
provides a range of estimates to account
for uncertainty in the resulting WTP
values. Chapter 4 of the BCA provides
more details on the meta-regression
models and analysis.
EPA estimated economic values of
water quality improvements at the
Census block group level. Water quality
improvements are measured as a lengthweighted average of the changes in WQI
for waters within 100 miles of the center
of each Census block; these waters
includes both waters improving as a
result of the final rule and waters not
affected by steam electric plant
discharges but which may be substitutes
for improved waters.
EPA first estimated annual household
marginal WTP values for a given Census
block group using the meta- regression
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models (Model 1 and Model 2) and
multiplied this marginal WTP by the
annual average water quality change for
the Census block group to obtain the
annual household WTP.
EPA then estimated total WTP values
by multiplying the annual household
WTP values by the total number of
households within a Census block
group. EPA annualized the stream of
future benefits, expressed in 2013
dollars, using both 3 and 7 percent
discount rates.
Total national benefits are the sum of
estimated Census block group-level
WTP across all block groups for which
at least one waterbody within 100 miles
is improved.
Average annual household WTP
estimates for the final ELGs range from
$0.32 on the low end to $1.77 on the
high end, with a central estimate of
$0.45. An estimated 84.5 million
households reside in Census block
groups within 100 miles of affected
reaches. The total annualized benefits of
water quality improvements resulting
from reduced metal, nutrient, and
sediment pollution in the approximately
19,600 reach miles improving under the
final ELGs range from $23.2 million to
$129.5 million with a central estimate of
$31.3 million using a three percent
discount rate and $18.5 million to
$103.4 million with a central estimate of
$25.1 million using a seven percent
discount rate.
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b. Benefits to Threatened and
Endangered Species
To assess the potential for impacts on
T&E species (both aquatic and
terrestrial), EPA analyzed the overlap
between waters currently exceeding
wildlife-based national recommended
WQC, but expected to have no wildlife
national recommended WQC
exceedances as a result of the final rule,
and the known critical habitat locations
of approximately 631 T&E species. EPA
examined the life history traits of
potentially affected T&E species to
categorize species by the potential for
population impacts likely to occur as a
result of changes in water quality.
Chapter 5 of the BCA Report details the
methodology.
EPA determined that of 15 species
whose recovery may be enhanced by the
final rule, three fish species and one
salamander species may experience
changes in population growth rates as a
result of the final rule. To quantify the
benefits to T&E species, EPA weighted
minimal population growth
assumptions (0.5, 1, or 1.5 percent) by
the percent of reaches used by T&E
species that are expected to meet
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wildlife-based national recommended
WQC because of the final rule.
The T&E species expected to benefit
from the rule include one species of
sturgeon and two species of minnows.
All of these species have nonuse values,
including existence, bequest, altruistic,
and ecological service values, apart from
human uses or motives. EPA estimated
the economic values of increased T&E
species populations using a benefit
function transfer approach based on a
meta-analysis of 31 stated preference
studies eliciting WTP for these changes
(Richardson and Loomis 2009). Because
the underlying metadata do not include
amphibian valuation studies, EPA was
unable to monetize any benefits for
potential population increases of
Hellbender salamander. EPA estimates
annualized benefits to T&E species of
approximately $0.02 million, using
either a three percent or seven percent
discount rate.
3. Market and Productivity Benefits
a. Benefits From Reduced Magnitude of
Impoundment Failures
Operational changes that plants
choose to make to meet requirements in
the final rule may cause some plants to
reduce their reliance on impoundments
to handle their waste. EPA expects these
changes to reduce the magnitude of
impoundment failures and the resulting
accidental, and sometimes catastrophic
releases, of CCRs.
To assess the benefits associated with
changes in impoundment use, EPA
estimated the costs associated with
expected releases under baseline
conditions (assuming no change in
operations relative to expected
operations under the CCR and CPP
rules) and for projected reductions in
the amount of CCR waste managed by
impoundments. EPA performed the
calculations for each of the 883 to 925
impoundments identified at steam
electric power plants,54 and for each
year between 2016 and 2042. EPA then
calculated benefits as the difference
between expected release costs for the
final rule and expected release costs
under baseline conditions.
To estimate the number of release
events that may be avoided as a result
of the ELGs, EPA followed the same
approach used by EPA for its RIA for the
54 The 883 to 925 impoundments represent the
estimated number of impoundments expected to
operate after accounting for the projected effects of
the CCR rule and CPP rule, relative to the initial
universe of 1,070 impoundments located at 347
plants (out of the total universe of 1,080 steam
electric plants). The range of impoundments reflects
different assumptions regarding the projected
effects of the CPP rule on impoundment operations.
See Chapter 6 in the BCA for more information.
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67879
CCR rule. The approach relies on
estimated failure rates and capacity
factors for two different types of releases
(wall breach and other release) and two
categories of impoundments (big and
small). For the final steam electric ELG
rule analysis, EPA used baseline releaserate assumptions that account for
changes projected to result from
implementation of the CCR rule. As
detailed in Chapter 6 of the BCA Report,
EPA calculated the expected costs of an
impoundment release, including
cleanup, natural resource damages
(NRD),55 and transaction costs.56
Using the approach above, EPA
estimates the annualized benefits of the
final rule are $95.6 million to $102.9
million using a three percent discount
rate, and $77.7 million to $83.7 million
using a seven percent discount rate.
b. Benefits From Increased Marketability
of Coal Combustion Residuals
The final rule may enhance the ability
of steam electric power plants to market
coal combustion byproducts for
beneficial use by converting from wet to
dry handling of fly ash, bottom ash and
FGD waste. In particular, EPA evaluated
the potential benefits from the increased
marketability of fly ash as a substitute
for Portland cement in concrete
production and fly and bottom ashes as
substitutes for sand and gravel in fill
applications. Based on the change in the
quantity of CCRs handled dry and statelevel demand for beneficial use
applications of CCRs, EPA calculated
avoided disposal costs and life-cycle
benefits from avoiding the production of
virgin materials. Chapter 10 of the BCA
Report details the methodology.
EPA estimates the annualized benefits
of the final rule at $30.8 million using
a three percent discount rate, and $31.1
million using a seven percent discount
rate.
4. Air-Related Benefits (Human Health
and Avoided Climate Change Impacts)
EPA expects the final rule to affect air
pollution through three main
mechanisms: (1) Additional auxiliary
electricity use by steam electric power
55 NRD include only the resource restoration and
compensation values; they do not include cleanup
costs (or legal costs).
56 For this analysis, transaction costs include the
costs associated with negotiating NRD, determining
responsibility among potentially responsible
parties, and litigating details regarding settlements
and remediation. These activities involve services,
whether performed by the complying entity or other
parties that EPA expects would be needed in the
absence of this regulation, in the event of an
impoundment release. Note that the transaction
costs do not include fines, cleanup costs, damages,
or other costs that constitute transfers or are already
accounted for in the other categories analyzed
separately.
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plants to operate wastewater treatment,
ash handling, and other systems, which
EPA predicts that plants will use to
meet the new effluent limitations and
standards; (2) additional transportationrelated air emissions due to the
increased trucking of CCR waste to
landfills; and (3) the change in the
profile of electricity generation due to
the relatively higher cost to generate
electricity at plants incurring
compliance costs for the final ELGs.
Changes in the profile of generation can
result in lower or higher emissions of air
pollutants because of variability in
emission factors for different types of
electric generating units. For this
analysis, the changes in air emissions
are based on the change in dispatch of
generation units projected by IPM
V5.13, as a result of overlaying the costs
of meeting the final ELGs onto steam
electric generating units’ production
costs. As discussed in Section IX.C.1,
the IPM analysis accounts for the effects
of other regulations affecting the electric
power sector.
EPA estimated the human health and
other benefits resulting from net
changes in air emissions of three
pollutants: NOX, SO2, and CO2. NOX
and SOX are known precursors to fine
particles (PM2.5), a criteria air pollutant
that has been associated with a variety
of adverse health effects—most notably,
premature mortality, non-fatal heart
attacks, hospital admissions, emergency
department visits, upper and lower
respiratory symptoms, acute bronchitis,
aggravated asthma, lost work days, and
acute respiratory symptoms. CO2 is a
key greenhouse gas that is linked to a
wide range of climate change effects.
EPA used average benefit-per-ton
estimates to value benefits of changes in
NOX and SO2 emissions, and social cost
of carbon (SCC) estimates to value
benefits of changes in CO2 emissions.
The calculations are based on the net
changes in air emissions and reflect the
net reductions in CO2 and NOX
emissions during the entire period of
analysis, and the net increase in SO2
emissions in 2023–2027, and net
decline in SO2 emissions during the rest
of the period. The values are specific to
the years 2016, 2020, 2025, and 2030.
Because they are almost linear as a
function of year, EPA interpolated
benefits per ton values for the
intermediate years (e.g., between 2020
and 2025) and projected values for the
years from 2031 through 2042 by linear
regression. While extrapolating
introduces some uncertainty, as it does
not account for meteorological and air
quality changes over time, this approach
is a reasonable one, given available
information.
Chapter 7 of the BCA Report provides
the details of this analysis. As shown in
Table XIV–3, EPA estimates that the
final rule will provide human health
benefits valued at $144.7 million using
a three percent discount rate, and
$108.8 million using a seven percent
discount rate. The rule is expected to
provide air-related benefits from
changes in CO2 emissions valued at
$139.8 million, using a three percent
discount rate.
TABLE XIV–3—ANNUALIZED BENEFITS OF CHANGES IN NOX, SO2, AND CO2 AIR EMISSIONS
[Million 2013$]a
3 Percent
discount rate
Benefit category
Human health benefits from reduced morbidity and mortality from exposure to NOX, SO2 and particulate matter (PM2.5) .............................................................................................................................................................
Avoided climate change impacts from CO2 emissions b .........................................................................................
Total ..................................................................................................................................................................
7 Percent
discount rate b
$144.7
$139.8
$284.5
$108.8
$139.8
$248.6
a Consistent with the assumptions used for the IPM analyses described in Section IX.C, EPA estimated the benefits relative to a baseline that
includes the CPP rule.
b EPA used the SCC based on a three percent discount rate to estimate values presented for the seven percent discount rate. EPA uses three
percent to discount CO2-related benefits and seven percent to discount benefits from changes in NOX and SO2 emissions. See Section 7.1 of
the BCA for details on the methodology.
5. Benefits From Reduced Water
Withdrawals (Increased Availability of
Ground Water Resources)
Steam electric power plants use water
for handling waste (e.g., fly ash, bottom
ash) and for operating wet FGD
scrubbers. By eliminating or reducing
water used in sluicing operations or
prompting the recycling of water in FGD
wastewater treatment systems, the ELGs
are expected to reduce water
withdrawals from surface waters and
reduce demand on aquifers, in the case
of plants that rely on ground water
sources.
EPA estimated the benefits of reduced
ground water withdrawals based on
avoided costs of ground water supply.
For each relevant plant, EPA multiplied
the reduction in ground water
withdrawal (in gallons per year) by
water costs of about $1,231 per acrefoot. Chapter 8 of the BCA Report
provides the details of this analysis.
EPA estimates the annualized benefits
of reduced ground water withdrawals
are less than $0.1 million annually. Due
to data limitations, EPA was not able to
monetize the benefits from reduced
surface water withdrawals. Chapter 8 of
the BCA Report provides additional
detail on benefits from reducing surface
water withdrawals.
C. Total Monetized Benefits
Using the analysis approach described
above, EPA estimates annual total
benefits of the final rule for the five
monetized categories at approximately
$450.6 million to $565.6 million (at a
three percent discount rate and $387.3
million to $478.4 million at a seven
percent discount rate) (Table XIV–4).
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TABLE XIV–4—SUMMARY OF TOTAL ANNUALIZED MONETIZED BENEFITS OF FINAL RULE
Annualized
monetized
benefits
(million 2013$)
Benefit category
3 Percent Discount Rate
Human Health Benefits from Surface Water Improvements a d ...................................................................................................
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67881
TABLE XIV–4—SUMMARY OF TOTAL ANNUALIZED MONETIZED BENEFITS OF FINAL RULE—Continued
Annualized
monetized
benefits
(million 2013$)
Benefit category
Improved Ecological Conditions and Recreational Uses a b d ......................................................................................................
Market and Productivity Benefits (impoundment failure and ash marketing) .............................................................................
Human Health Benefits from Air Quality Improvements .............................................................................................................
Other Air-Related Benefits (climate change) ...............................................................................................................................
Reduced Water Withdrawals .......................................................................................................................................................
$23.3 to $129.5
$126.4 to $133.7
$144.7
$139.8
<$0.1
Total benefits ........................................................................................................................................................................
$450.6 to $565.6
7 Percent Discount Rate
Human Health Benefits from Surface Water Improvements a .....................................................................................................
Improved Ecological Conditions and Recreational Uses a b ........................................................................................................
Market and Productivity Benefits (impoundment failure and ash marketing) .............................................................................
Human Health Benefits from Air Quality Improvements .............................................................................................................
Other Air-Related Benefits c (climate change) .............................................................................................................................
Reduced Water Withdrawals .......................................................................................................................................................
$11.3 to $11.6
$18.6 to $103.4
$108.8 to $114.8
$108.8
$139.8
<$0.1
Total benefits ........................................................................................................................................................................
$387.3 to $478.4
a Values
represent mean benefit estimates. Totals may not add up due to independent rounding.
may be some, expected to be small, overlap between the willingness-to-pay (WTP) for surface water quality improvements and WTP
for benefits to threatened and endangered species.
c EPA used the SCC based on a three percent discount rate and discounted CO -related benefits using a three percent discount rate, as com2
pared to benefits in other categories, which are discounted using the seven percent discount rate.
d Estimates for this benefit category do not reflect revised pollutant loadings, which could result in lower monetized benefits. See Section 1.4.3
of the Benefit Cost Analysis for this rule for details.
b There
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D. Other Benefits
The monetized benefits of this final
rule do not account for all benefits
because, as described above, EPA is
unable to monetize some categories.
Examples of benefit categories not
reflected in these estimates include
other cancer and non-cancer health
benefits, reduced cost of drinking water
treatment, avoided ground water
contamination corrective action costs,
reduced vulnerability to drought, and
reduced aquatic species mortality from
reduced surface water withdrawal. The
BCA Report discusses these benefits
qualitatively, indicating their potential
magnitude where possible.
XV. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
EPA often uses cost-effectiveness
analysis in the development and
revision of ELGs to evaluate the relative
efficiency of alternative regulatory
options in removing toxic pollutants
from effluent discharges to the nation’s
waters. Although not required by the
CWA, and not a determining factor for
establishing BAT and PSES, costeffectiveness analysis can be a useful
tool for describing regulatory options
that address toxic pollutants.
A. Methodology
The cost-effectiveness of a regulatory
option is defined as the incremental
annual cost (in 1981 constant dollars to
facilitate comparison to ELGs for other
industrial categories promulgated over
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different years) per incremental toxicweighted pollutant removals for that
option. This definition includes the
following concepts:
Toxic-weighted removals. The
estimated reductions in pollution
discharges, or pollutant removals, are
adjusted for toxicity by multiplying the
estimated removal quantity for each
pollutant by a normalizing toxic weight
(toxic weighting factor). The toxic
weight for each pollutant measures its
toxicity relative to copper, with more
toxic pollutants having higher toxic
weights. The use of toxic weights allows
the removals of different pollutants to
be expressed on a constant toxicity basis
as toxic pound-equivalents (lb-eq). In
the case of indirect dischargers, the
removal also accounts for the
effectiveness of treatment at POTWs and
reflects the toxic-weighted pounds
remaining after POTW treatment. The
cost-effectiveness analysis does not
address the removal of conventional
pollutants (e.g., TSS) or nutrients
(nitrogen, phosphorus), nor does it
address the removal of bulk parameters,
such as COD.
Annual costs. The costs used in the
cost-effectiveness analysis are the
estimated annualized pre-tax costs
described in Section IX, restated in 1981
dollars as a convention to allow
comparisons with the reported cost
effectiveness of other effluent
guidelines.
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The result of the cost-effectiveness
calculation represents the unit cost (in
constant 1981 dollars) of removing the
next pound-equivalent of pollutants.
EPA calculates cost-effectiveness
separately for direct and indirect
dischargers. EPA notes that only three
steam electric power plants are
estimated to incur costs associated with
the final PSES requirements, as
compared to 130 plants estimated to
incur costs associated with the final
BAT requirements.
Appendix F of the RIA details the
analysis.
B. Results
Collectively, the final BAT
requirements have a cost-effectiveness
ratio of $134/lb-eq ($1981). This costeffectiveness ratio is well within the
range of cost-effectiveness ratios for
BAT requirements in other industries. A
review of approximately 25 of the most
recently promulgated or revised BAT
limitations shows BAT costeffectiveness ranging from less than $1/
lb-eq (Inorganic Chemicals) to $404/lbeq (Electrical and Electronic
Components), in 1981 dollars.
Collectively, the final PSES
requirements have a cost effectiveness
of $1,228/lb-eq ($1981). This ratio is
higher than the cost-effectiveness for
PSES of other industries, which range
from less than $1/lb-eq (Inorganic
Chemicals) to $380/lb-eq
(Transportation Equipment Cleaning), in
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1981 dollars, based on a review of
approximately 25 of the most recently
promulgated or revised categorical
pretreatment standards. As noted above,
however, very few plants (three) are
indirect dischargers and the costeffectiveness for one of the three
indirect dischargers significantly
elevates the value for all three
combined. EPA calculated costs for this
plant based on a full conversion of its
bottom ash handling system to dry
handling. However, it is more likely that
this plant would choose to implement
modifications that would enable it to
completely recycle its bottom ash
transport water in order to meet the zero
discharge standard, rather than
undertake a full conversion. In that
event, the costs to this indirect
discharger—and consequently the costeffectiveness value for all indirect
dischargers, combined—would be
lower.
Collectively, cost-effectiveness for the
entire rule (BAT and PSES) is $136/lbeq ($1981).
For the purposes of calculating
pollutant loadings under this action,
EPA’s analysis first handled non-detect
values in the reported data by replacing
them with a value of one-half of the
detection level for the observation that
yielded the non-detect. This
methodology is standard procedure for
the ELG program as well as Clean Water
Act assessment and permitting, Safe
Drinking Water Act monitoring, and
Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act and Superfund programs; and this
approach is consistent with previous
ELGs.
In their comments on the proposed
rule, commenters raised the concern
that for some pollutants the loadings
calculations (particularly for bottom
ash) were biased high as a result of high
non-detected values in the reported
data. These high non-detected values
were the result of not using sufficiently
sensitive methods. The view was
expressed that, should the non-detects
fall significantly outside of the range of
detected values, assigning them one half
of the detection level would not be
sufficient to accurately represent
pollutant loadings and the associated
cost-effectiveness of the rule.
To assess this concern and provide
further transparency for this
rulemaking, EPA also implemented a
second method of treating non-detects
where all attributed non-detects (i.e.,
one-half of the detection limit) that
exceeded the highest detected value for
a particular pollutant were deleted.
Since it is possible that a plant’s actual
loading fell outside the range of
detected values of all of the plants, this
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methodology served to place an upper
bound on the effect of non-detects on
the pollutant loading and costeffectiveness calculations. EPA’s
decision to incorporate this second
approach for bottom ash transport water
in this rulemaking reflects the
exceptional circumstance in this case
where there are so few detected
observations in combination with wide
variability in sample-specific detection
values for the non-detected observations
for 6 analytes. For a full discussion of
the analysis method and results, see
Section 10.2.2 of the TDD and Section
F–4 of the RIA. EPA found that this
second method of treatment of nondetects affects the averaged pollutant
concentrations for 6 out of the 44
analytes, alters pollutant loadings and
decreases identified TWPE loadings and
removals in comparison to method 1.
EPA also calculated the costeffectiveness for the bottom ash
wastestream using the averaged
pollutant concentrations derived from
method 2, and found in comparison to
method 1 the method 2 analysis
changed the cost-effectiveness value
from $314/TWPE to $457/TWPE for this
wastestream and cost-effectiveness of
the full rule from $136/TWPE to $149/
TWPE. Where appropriate in the TDD,
RIA, BCA and certain other documents
for the rule, EPA has reflected the
results for pollutant loadings and cost
effectiveness under both of these
approaches. EPA’s determination of
BAT and the standards and rationale
supporting that determination, are
discussed in Section VIII; the
differences in loadings and cost
effectiveness associated with
incorporating this second approach to
addressing uncertainty related to nondetects do not alter that determination.
XVI. Regulatory Implementation
A. Implementation of the Limitations
and Standards
The requirements in this rule apply to
discharges from steam electric power
plants through incorporation into
NPDES permits issued by the EPA or
authorized states under Section 402 of
the Act and through local pretreatment
programs under Section 307 of the Act.
Permits or control mechanisms issued
after this rule’s effective date must
incorporate the ELGs, as applicable.
Also, under CWA section 510, states can
require effluent limitations under state
law as long as they are no less stringent
than the requirements of this rule.
Finally, in addition to requiring
application of the technology-based
ELGs in this rule, CWA section
301(b)(1)(C) requires the permitting
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authority to impose more stringent
effluent limitations, as necessary, to
meet applicable water quality standards.
1. Timing
The direct discharge limitations in
this rule apply only when implemented
in an NPDES permit issued to a
discharger after the effective date of this
rule. Under the CWA, the permitting
authority must incorporate these ELGs
into NPDES permits as a floor or a
minimum level of control. While the
rule is effective on its effective date (see
DATES section at the beginning of this
preamble), the rule allows a permitting
authority to determine a date when the
new effluent limitations for FGD
wastewater, fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, FGMC
wastewater, and gasification wastewater
apply to a given discharger. The
permitting authority must make these
final effluent limitations applicable on
or after November 1, 2018. For any final
effluent limitation that is specified to
become applicable after November 1,
2018, the specified date must be as soon
as possible, but in no case later than
December 31, 2023. For dischargers in
the voluntary incentives program
choosing to meet effluent limitations for
FGD wastewater based on use of
evaporation technology, the date for
meeting those limitations is December
31, 2023.
For combustion residual leachate, and
for certain wastestreams (FGD
wastewater, fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, FGMC
wastewater, and gasification
wastewater) at oil-fired generating units
and small generating units (50 MW or
less), the final BAT limitations apply on
the date that a permit is issued to a
discharger, following the effective date
of this rule. The rule does not build in
an implementation period for meeting
these limitations, as the BAT limitation
on TSS is equal to the previously
promulgated BPT limitation on TSS.
Pretreatment standards are selfimplementing, meaning they apply
directly, without the need for a permit.
In this rule, the pretreatment standards
for existing sources must be met by
November 1, 2018.
The requirements for new source
direct and indirect discharges (NSPS
and PSNS) provide no extended
implementation period. NSPS apply
when any NPDES permit is issued to a
new source direct discharger, following
the effective date of this rule; PSNS
apply to any new source discharging to
a POTW, as of the effective date of the
final rule.
Regardless of when a plant’s NPDES
permit is ready for renewal, the plant
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should immediately begin evaluating
how it intends to comply with the
requirements of the final ELGs. In cases
where significant changes in operation
are appropriate, the plant should
discuss such changes with the
permitting authority and evaluate
appropriate steps and a timeline for the
changes, even prior to the permit
renewal process.
In cases where a plant’s final NPDES
permit will be issued after the effective
date of the final ELGs, but before
November 1, 2018, the permitting
authority should apply limitations
based on the previously promulgated
BPT limitations or the plant’s other
applicable permit limitations until at
least November 1, 2018. The permitting
authority should also determine what
date represents the soonest date,
beginning November 1, 2018, that the
plant can meet the final BAT limitations
in this rule. The permit should require
compliance with the final BAT
limitations by that date, making clear
that in no case shall the limitations
apply later than December 31, 2023.
Then, for permits that might be
administratively continued, the final
date will apply, even if that date is at
the end of the implementation period.
For permits that are issued on or after
November 1, 2018, the permitting
authority should determine the earliest
possible date that the plant can meet the
limitations in this rule (but in no case
later than December 31, 2023), and
apply the final limitations as of that date
(BPT limitations or the plant’s other
applicable permit limitations would
apply until such date).
As specified by the rule, the ‘‘as soon
as possible’’ date determined by the
permitting authority is November 1,
2018, unless the permitting authority
determines another date after receiving
information submitted by the
discharger.57 Assuming that the
permitting authority receives relevant
information from the discharger, in
order to determine what date is ‘‘as soon
as possible’’ within the implementation
period, the permitting authority must
then consider the following factors:
(a) Time to expeditiously plan
(including to raise capital), design,
procure, and install equipment to
comply with the requirements of the
final rule;
(b) Changes being made or planned at
the plant in response to greenhouse gas
regulations for new or existing fossil
fuel-fired power plants under the Clean
57 Even after the permitting authority receives
information from the discharger, it still may be
appropriate to determine that November 1, 2018, is
‘‘as soon as possible’’ for that discharger.
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Air Act, as well as regulations for the
disposal of coal combustion residuals
under subtitle D of the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act;
(c) For FGD wastewater requirements
only, an initial commissioning period to
optimize the installed equipment; and
(d) Other factors as appropriate.
With respect to the first factor, the
permitting authority should evaluate
what operational changes are expected
at the plant to meet the new BAT
limitations for each wastestream,
including the types of new treatment
technologies that the plant plans to
install, process changes anticipated, and
the timeframe estimated to plan, design,
procure, and install any relevant
technologies. As specified in the second
factor, the permitting authority must
also consider scheduling for installation
of equipment, which includes a
consideration of plant changes planned
or being made to comply with certain
other key rules that affect the steam
electric power generating industry. As
specified in the third factor, for the FGD
wastewater requirements only, the
permitting authority must consider
whether it is appropriate to allow more
time for implementation, in addition to
the three years before implementation of
the rule begins on November 1, 2018, in
order to ensure that the plant has
appropriate time to optimize any
relevant technologies. EPA’s record
demonstrates that plants installing the
FGD technology basis spent several
months optimizing its operation (initial
commissioning period). Without
allowing additional time for
optimization, the plant would likely not
be able to meet the limitations because
they are based on the operation of
optimized systems. See TDD Section 14
for additional discussion and examples
regarding implementation of the final
ELGs into NPDES permits.
The ‘‘as soon as possible’’ date
determined by the permitting authority
may or may not be different for each
wastestream. EPA recommends that the
permitting authority provide a welldocumented justification of how it
determined the ‘‘as soon as possible’’
date in the fact sheet or administrative
record for the permit. If the permitting
authority determines a date later than
November 1, 2018, the justification
should explain why allowing additional
time to meet the limitations is
appropriate, and why the discharger
cannot meet the final effluent
limitations as of November 1, 2018. In
cases where the plant is already
operating the BAT technology basis for
a specific wastestream (e.g., dry fly ash
handling system), operates the majority
of the BAT technology basis (e.g., FGD
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chemical precipitation and biological
treatment, without sulfide addition), or
expects that relevant treatment and
process changes will be in place prior to
November 1, 2018, it would not
generally be appropriate to allow
additional time beyond that date.
Regardless, in all cases, the permitting
authority must make clear in the permit
what date the plant must meet the
limitations, and that date may be no
later than December 31, 2023.
Where a discharger chooses to
participate in the voluntary incentives
program and be subject to effluent
limitations for FGD wastewater based on
evaporation, the permitting authority
must allow the plant up to December 31,
2023, to meet those limitations; again,
the permit must make clear that the
plant must meet the final limitations by
December 31, 2023.
2. Applicability of NSPS/PSNS
In 1982, EPA promulgated NSPS/
PSNS for certain discharges from new
sources. Those sources that were subject
to the 1982 NSPS/PSNS will continue to
be subject to such standards under this
final rule. In addition, sources to which
the 1982 NSPS/PSNS apply are also
subject to the final BAT/PSES
requirements in this rule because they
will be existing sources with respect to
such new requirements. See 40 CFR
423.15(a) and 40 CFR 423.17(a).
3. Legacy Wastewater
For purposes of the BAT limitations
in this rule, legacy wastewater is FGD
wastewater, fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, FGMC
wastewater, and gasification wastewater
generated prior to the date established
by the permitting authority that is as
soon as possible beginning November 1,
2018, but no later than December 31,
2023 (see Section VIII.C.7 and Section
VIII.C.8).58 Direct discharges of legacy
wastewater are, under this rule, subject
to BAT effluent limitations on TSS in
such wastewater, which are equal to the
existing BPT effluent limitations on TSS
in fly ash transport water, bottom ash
transport water, and low volume waste
sources.59 See TDD Section 14 for
additional information regarding the
legacy wastewater BAT limitations and
58 For plants in the voluntary incentives program,
legacy FGD wastewater is FGD wastewater
generated prior to December 31, 2023 (see Section
VIII.C.13).
59 The final rule does not establish PSES
standards for legacy wastewater for these
wastestreams because TSS and the pollutants they
represent are effectively treated by POTWs; and,
therefore, EPA has determined that they do not pass
through the POTW (see Section VIII.E).
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guidance on implementing them into
NPDES permits.
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4. Combined Wastestreams
Most steam electric power plants
combine various wastewaters (e.g., FGD
wastewater, fly ash and bottom ash
transport water) and cooling water
either before or after treatment. In such
cases, to derive effluent limitations or
standards at the point of discharge, the
permitting authority typically combines
the allowable pollutant concentrations
loadings for each set of requirements to
arrive at a specific limitation or
standard, per pollutant, for the
combined wastestream, using the
building block approach or combined
waste stream formula (CWF). See
NPDES Permit Writer’s Manual and 40
CFR 403.6. For concentration-based
limitations, rather than mass-based
limitations, the effluent limitation or
standard for the mixed wastestream is a
flow-weighted combination of the
appropriate concentration–based
limitations or standards for each
applicable wastestream. Such a
calculation is relatively straightforward
if the individual wastestreams are
subject to limitations or standards for
the same pollutants and the flows of the
wastestreams are relatively consistent.
This, however, is not the case for all
wastestreams at steam electric power
plants.
Because EPA anticipates that
permitting authorities will apply
concentration-based limitations or
standards, rather than mass-based
limitations or standards, in NPDES
permits for steam electric power plants,
proper application of the building block
approach or CWF is necessary to ensure
that the reduced pollutant
concentrations observed in a combined
discharge reflect proper treatment and
control strategies rather than dilution.
Where a regulated wastestream is
combined with a well-known dilution
flow, such as cooling water,
uncontaminated stormwater, or cooling
tower blowdown, the concentrationbased limitation for the regulated
wastestream is reduced by multiplying
it by a factor.60 This factor is the total
flow for the combined wastestream
minus the dilution flow divided by the
total flow for the combined
wastestream. In some cases, a
wastestream (e.g., FGD wastewater)
containing a regulated pollutant (e.g.,
selenium or mercury) combines with
other wastestreams that contain the
60 As is the case with a single regulated
wastestream, if the combined wastestream is not
discharged, then the limitations and standards are
not applicable.
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same pollutant, but that are not
regulated for that pollutant (e.g., legacy
wastewater contained in a surface
impoundment). In these cases, based on
the information in its record, EPA
strongly recommends that in applying
the building block approach or CWF to
the regulated pollutant (selenium or
mercury, in the example above),
permitting authorities either treat the
wastestream that does not have a
limitation or standard for the pollutant
(legacy wastewater contained in a
surface impoundment, in the example
above) as a dilution flow or determine
a concentration for that pollutant based
on representative samples of that
wastestream.61
In all cases where the permitting
authority is applying the building block
approach or CWF, except where a
regulated wastestream is mixed with a
dilution wastestream, the permitting
authority must also determine the flow
rate for use in the building block
approach or CWF. EPA strongly
recommends that the permitting
authority calculate the flow rate based
on representative flow rates for each
wastestream.
EPA recommends that, where a steam
electric power plant chooses to combine
two or more wastestreams that would
call for the use of the building block
approach or CWF to determine the
appropriate limitations or standards for
the combined wastestream, the plant
should be responsible for providing
sufficient data that reflect representative
samples of each of the individual
wastestreams that make up the
combined wastestream. EPA strongly
recommends that the representative
samples reflect a study of each of the
applicable wastestreams that covers the
full range of variability in concentration
and flow for each wastestream.
EPA anticipates that proper
application of the building block
approach or CWF will result in
combined wastestream limitations and
standards that will enable steam electric
power plants to combine certain
wastestreams, while also ensuring that
the plant is actually treating its
wastewater as intended by the Act and
this rule, rather than simply diluting it.
EPA’s record demonstrates, however,
that combined wastestream limitations
and standards at the point of discharge,
61 EPA does not recommend that the permitting
authority assume that the pollutant is present at a
significant level in the wastestream that does not
have a relevant limitation or standard and just
apply the same limitation or standard for the
pollutant to the mixed wastestream. This will not
ensure that treatment and control strategies are
being employed to achieve the limitations or
standards, rather than simply dilution.
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derived using the building block
approach or CWF, may be impractical or
infeasible for some combined
wastestreams because the resulting
limitation or standard for any of the
regulated pollutants in the combined
wastestream would fall below analytical
detection levels. In such cases, the
permitting authority should establish
internal limitations on the regulated
wastestream, prior to mixing of the
wastestream with others, as authorized
pursuant to 40 CFR 122.45(h) and 40
CFR 403.6.62 See TDD Section 14 for
more examples and details about this
guidance.
5. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Wastes
By reserving BAT and NSPS for nonchemical metal cleaning wastes in this
final rule, the permitting authority must
continue to establish such requirements
based on BPJ for any steam electric
power plant discharging this
wastestream. As explained in Section
VIII.I, in permitting this wastestream,
some permitting authorities have
classified it as non-chemical metal
cleaning wastes (a subset of metal
cleaning wastes), while others have
classified it as a low volume waste
source; NPDES permit limitations for
this wastestream thus reflect that
classification. In making future BPJ BAT
determinations, EPA recommends that
the permitting authority examine the
historical permitting record for the
particular plant to determine how
discharges of non-chemical metal
cleaning wastes have been permitted in
the past. Using historical information
and its best professional judgment, the
permitting authority could determine
that the BPJ BAT limitations should be
set equal to existing BPT limitations or
it could determine that more stringent
BPJ BAT limitations should apply. In
making a BPJ determination for new
sources, EPA recommends that the
permitting authority consider whether it
would be appropriate to base standards
on BPT limitations for metal cleaning
wastes or on a technology that achieves
greater pollutant reductions.
B. Upset and Bypass Provisions
A ‘‘bypass’’ is an intentional diversion
of wastestreams from any portion of a
treatment facility. An ‘‘upset’’ is an
exceptional incident in which there is
unintentional and temporary
62 As described earlier for wastestreams with zero
discharge limitations or standards, just because a
wastestream with a numeric limitation or standard
is moved, prior to discharge, for use in another
plant process, that does not mean that the
wastestream ceases to be subject to the applicable
numeric limitation or standard, assuming that the
wastestream is eventually discharged.
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noncompliance with technology-based
permit effluent limitations because of
factors beyond the reasonable control of
the permittee. EPA’s regulations
concerning bypasses and upsets for
direct dischargers are set forth at 40 CFR
122.41(m) and (n) and for indirect
dischargers at 40 CFR 403.16 and
403.17.
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C. Variances and Modifications
The CWA requires application of
effluent limitations or pretreatment
standards established pursuant to CWA
section 301 to all direct and indirect
dischargers. The statute, however,
provides for the modification of these
national requirements in a limited
number of circumstances. The Agency
has established administrative
mechanisms to provide an opportunity
for relief from the application of the
national effluent limitations guidelines
for categories of existing sources for
toxic, conventional, and
nonconventional pollutants.
1. Fundamentally Different Factors
Variance
EPA can develop, with the
concurrence of the state, effluent
limitations or standards different from
the otherwise applicable requirements
for an individual existing discharger if
that discharger is fundamentally
different with respect to factors
considered in establishing the effluent
limitations guidelines or standards.
Such a modification is known as a
Fundamentally Different Factors (FDF)
variance.
EPA, in its initial implementation of
the effluent guidelines program,
provided for the FDF modifications in
regulations, which were variances from
the BPT effluent limitations, BAT
limitations for toxic and
nonconventional pollutants, and BCT
limitations for conventional pollutants
for direct dischargers. FDF variances for
toxic pollutants were challenged
judicially and ultimately sustained by
the Supreme Court in Chem. Mfrs. Ass’n
v. Natural Res. Def. Council, 470 U.S.
116, 124 (1985).
Subsequently, in the Water Quality
Act of 1987, Congress added a new
section to the CWA, section 301(n). This
provision explicitly authorizes
modifications of the otherwise
applicable BAT effluent limitations, if a
discharger is fundamentally different
with respect to the factors specified in
CWA section 304 or 403 (other than
costs) from those considered by EPA in
establishing the effluent limitations and
standards. CWA section 301(n) also
defined the conditions under which
EPA can establish alternative
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requirements. Under Section 301(n), an
application for approval of a FDF
variance must be based solely on (1)
information submitted during
rulemaking raising the factors that are
fundamentally different or (2)
information the applicant did not have
an opportunity to submit. The alternate
limitation must be no less stringent than
justified by the difference and must not
result in markedly more adverse nonwater quality environmental impacts
than the national limitation.
EPA regulations at 40 CFR part 125,
subpart D, authorizing the Regional
Administrators to establish alternative
limitations, further detail the
substantive criteria used to evaluate
FDF variance requests for direct
dischargers. Thus, 40 CFR 125.31(d)
identifies six factors (e.g., volume of
process wastewater, age and size of a
discharger’s facility) that can be
considered in determining if a
discharger is fundamentally different.
The Agency must determine whether,
based on one or more of these factors,
the discharger in question is
fundamentally different from the
dischargers and factors considered by
EPA in developing the nationally
applicable effluent guidelines. The
regulation also lists four other factors
(e.g., inability to install equipment
within the time allowed or a
discharger’s ability to pay) that cannot
provide a basis for an FDF variance. In
addition, under 40 CFR 125.31(b) (3), a
request for limitations less stringent
than the national limitation can be
approved only if compliance with the
national limitations will result in either
(a) a removal cost wholly out of
proportion to the removal cost
considered during development of the
national limitations, or (b) a non-water
quality environmental impact
(including energy requirements)
fundamentally more adverse than the
impact considered during development
of the national limits. The legislative
history of CWA section 301(n)
underscores the necessity for the FDF
variance applicant to establish
eligibility for the variance. EPA’s
regulations at 40 CFR 125.32(b)(1) and
40 CFR 403.13 impose this burden upon
the applicant. The applicant must show
that the factors relating to the discharge
controlled by the applicant’s permit that
are claimed to be fundamentally
different are, in fact, fundamentally
different from those factors considered
by EPA in establishing the applicable
guidelines and standards. In practice,
very few FDF variances have been
granted for past ELGs. An FDF variance
is not available to a new source subject
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to NSPS or PSNS. DuPont v. Train, 430
U.S. 112 (1977).
2. Economic Variances
Section 301(c) of the CWA authorizes
a variance from the otherwise applicable
BAT effluent guidelines for
nonconventional pollutants due to
economic factors. See also CWA section
301(l). The request for a variance from
effluent limitations developed from
BAT guidelines must normally be filed
by the discharger during the public
notice period for the draft permit. Other
filing periods can apply, as specified in
40 CFR 122.21(m)(2). Specific guidance
for this type of variance is provided in
‘‘Draft Guidance for Application and
Review of Section 301(c) Variance
Requests,’’ dated August 21, 1984,
available on EPA’s Web site at https://
www.epa.gov/npdes/pubs/
OWM0469.pdf.
3. Water Quality Variances
Section 301(g) of the CWA authorizes
a variance from BAT effluent guidelines
for certain nonconventional pollutants
(ammonia, chlorine, color, iron, and
total phenols) due to localized
environmental factors. As this final rule
does not establish limitations or
standards for any of these pollutants,
this variance is not applicable to this
particular rule.
4. Removal Credits
Section 307(b)(1) of the CWA
establishes a discretionary program for
POTWs to grant ‘‘removal credits’’ to
their indirect dischargers. Removal
credits are a regulatory mechanism by
which industrial users can discharge a
pollutant in quantities that exceed what
would otherwise be allowed under an
applicable categorical pretreatment
standard because it has been determined
that the POTW to which the industrial
user discharges consistently treats the
pollutant. EPA has promulgated
removal credit regulations as part of its
pretreatment regulations. See 40 CFR
403.7. These regulations provide that a
POTW can give removal credits if
prescribed requirements are met. The
POTW must apply to and receive
authorization from the Approval
Authority. To obtain authorization, the
POTW must demonstrate consistent
removal of the pollutant for which
approval authority is sought.
Furthermore, the POTW must have an
approved pretreatment program.
Finally, the POTW must demonstrate
that granting removal credits will not
cause the POTW to violate applicable
federal, state, or local sewage sludge
requirements. 40 CFR 403.7(a)(3).
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The U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Third Circuit interpreted the CWA as
requiring EPA to promulgate the
comprehensive sewage sludge
regulations pursuant to CWA section
405(d)(2)(A)(ii) before any removal
credits could be authorized. See Natural
Res. Def. Council v. EPA, 790 F.2d 289,
292 (3d Cir. 1986), cert. denied, 479 U.S.
1084 (1987). Congress made this explicit
in the Water Quality Act of 1987, which
provided that EPA could not authorize
any removal credits until it issued the
sewage sludge use and disposal
regulations. On February 19, 1993, EPA
promulgated Standards for the Use or
Disposal of Sewage Sludge, which are
codified at 40 CFR part 503 (58 FR
9248). EPA interprets the Court’s
decision in Natural Res. Def. Council v.
EPA as only allowing removal credits
for a pollutant if EPA has either
regulated the pollutant in part 503 or
established a concentration of the
pollutant in sewage sludge below which
public health and the environment are
protected when sewage sludge is used
or disposed.
The part 503 sewage sludge
regulations allow four options for
sewage sludge disposal: (1) Land
application for beneficial use, (2)
placement on a surface disposal unit, (3)
firing in a sewage sludge incinerator,
and (4) disposal in a landfill which
complies with the municipal solid
waste landfill criteria in 40 CFR part
258. Because pollutants in sewage
sludge are regulated differently
depending upon the use or disposal
method selected, under EPA’s
pretreatment regulations the availability
of a removal credit for a particular
pollutant is linked to the POTW’s
method of using or disposing of its
sewage sludge. The regulations provide
that removal credits can be potentially
available for the following situations:
(1) If a POTW applies its sewage
sludge to the land for beneficial uses,
disposes of it in a surface disposal unit,
or incinerates it in a sewage sludge
incinerator, removal credits can be
available for the pollutants for which
EPA has established limits in 40 CFR
part 503. EPA has set ceiling limitations
for nine metals in sludge that is land
applied, three metals in sludge that is
placed on a surface disposal unit, and
seven metals and 57 organic pollutants
in sludge that is incinerated in a sewage
sludge incinerator. 40 CFR
403.7(a)(3)(iv)(A).
(2) Additional removal credits can be
available for sewage sludge that is land
applied, placed in a surface disposal
unit, or incinerated in a sewage sludge
incinerator, so long as the concentration
of these pollutants in sludge do not
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exceed concentration levels established
in 40 CFR part 403, appendix G, Table
II. For sewage sludge that is land
applied, removal credits can be
available for an additional two metals
and 14 organic pollutants. For sewage
sludge that is placed on a surface
disposal unit, removal credits can be
available for an additional seven metals
and 13 organic pollutants. For sewage
sludge that is incinerated in a sewage
sludge incinerator, removal credits can
be available for three other metals 40
CFR 403.7(a)(3)(iv)(B).
(3) When a POTW disposes of its
sewage sludge in a municipal solid
waste landfill that meets the criteria of
40 CFR part 258, removal credits can be
available for any pollutant in the
POTW’s sewage sludge. 40 CFR
403.7(a)(3)(iv)(C).
D. Site-Specific Water Quality-Based
Effluent Limitations
Depending on site-specific conditions
and applicable state water quality
standards, it may be appropriate for
permitting authorities to establish water
quality-based effluent limitations on
bromide,63 especially where steam
electric power plants are located
upstream from drinking water intakes.
Bromides (a component of TDS) are
not directly controlled by the numeric
effluent limitations and standards for
existing sources under this final rule 64
(although they would be controlled by
the NSPS/PSNS for new sources and by
the BAT effluent limitations for existing
sources who choose to participate in the
voluntary program and are subject to the
final FGD wastewater limitations based
on use of evaporation technology).
Bromide discharges from coal-fired
steam electric power plants can occur
because bromide is naturally found in
coal and is released as particulates
when the coal is burned, or by the
addition of bromide compounds to the
coal prior to burning, or to the flue gas
scrubbing process, to reduce the amount
of mercury air pollution that is also
created when coal is burned.
While bromide itself is not thought to
be toxic at levels present in the
environment, its reaction with other
constituents in water may be a cause for
concern now and into the future. The
bromide ion in water can form
brominated DBPs when drinking water
plants treat the incoming source water
using certain disinfection processes
including chlorination and ozonation.
63 Some may establish limitations on TDS as an
indicator of bromide because bromide is a
component of TDS.
64 TDS, like all pollutants, are controlled where
there are zero discharge effluent limitations and
standards.
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Bromide can react with the ozone,
chlorine, or chlorine-based disinfectants
to form bromate and brominated and
mixed chloro-bromo DBPs, such as
trihalomethanes (THMs) or haloacetic
acids (HAAs) (see DCN SE01920).
Studies indicate that exposure to THMs
and other DBPs from chlorinated water
is associated with human bladder
cancer (see DCN SE01981 and DCN
SE01983). EPA has established the
following MCLs for DBPs:
• 0.010 mg/L for bromate due to
increased cancer risk from long-term
exposure;
• 0.060 for HAAs due to increased
cancer risk from long-term exposure;
and
• 0.080 mg/L for TTHMs due to
increased cancer risk and liver, kidney
or central nervous system problems
from long-term exposure (see DCN
SE01909).
The record indicates that steam
electric power plant FGD wastewater
discharges occur near more than 100
public drinking water intakes on rivers
and other waterbodies, and there is
evidence that these discharges are
already having adverse effects on the
quality of drinking water sources. A
2014 study by McTigue et. al. identified
four drinking water treatment plants
that experienced increased levels of
bromide in their source water, and
corresponding increases in the
formation of brominated DBPs, after the
installation of wet FGD scrubbers at
upstream steam electric power plants
(see DCN SE04503).
Drinking water utilities are concerned
as well, noting that the bromide
concentrations have made it
increasingly difficult for them to meet
SDWA requirements for total
trihalomethanes (TTHMs) (see DCN
SE01949). And, bromide loadings into
surface waters from coal-fired steam
electric power plants could potentially
increase in the future as more plant
operators use bromide addition to
improve the control of mercury
emissions. The American Water Works
Association requested that EPA
‘‘instruct NPDES permit writers to
adequately consider downstream
drinking water supplies in establishing
permit requirements for power plant
discharges’’ and take other steps to limit
adverse consequences for downstream
drinking water treatment plants. EPA
agrees that permitting authorities should
carefully consider whether water
quality-based effluent limitations on
bromide or TDS would be appropriate
for FGD wastewater discharges from
steam electric power plants upstream of
drinking water intakes.
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EPA regulations at 40 CFR
122.44(d)(1) require that each NPDES
permit shall include any requirements,
in addition to or more stringent than
effluent limitations guidelines or
standards promulgated pursuant to
sections 301, 304, 306, 307, 318 and 405
of the CWA, necessary to achieve water
quality standards established under
section 303 of the CWA, including state
narrative criteria for water quality.
Furthermore, those same regulations
require that limitations must control all
pollutants, or pollutant parameters
(either conventional, nonconventional,
or toxic pollutants) which the Director
determines are or may be discharged at
a level which will cause, have the
reasonable potential to cause, or
contribute to an excursion above any
state water quality standard, including
state narrative criteria for water quality.
Where the DBP problem described
above may be present, water qualitybased effluent limitations for steam
electric power plant discharges may be
required under the regulations at 40
CFR 122.44(d)(1), where necessary to
meet either numeric criteria (e.g., for
bromide, TDS or conductivity) or
narrative criteria in state water quality
standards. All states have narrative
water quality criteria that are designed
to prevent contamination and other
adverse impacts to the states’ surface
waters. These are often referred to as
‘‘free from’’ standards. For example, a
state narrative water quality criterion for
protecting drinking water sources may
require discharges to protect people
from adverse exposure to chemicals via
drinking water. These narrative criteria
may be used to develop water qualitybased effluent limitations on a sitespecific basis for the discharge of
pollutants that impact drinking water
sources, such as bromide.
To translate state narrative water
quality criteria and inform the
development of a water quality-based
limitation for bromide, it may be
appropriate for permitting authorities to
use EPA’s established MCLs for DBPs in
drinking water because the presence of
bromides in drinking water can result in
exceedances of drinking water MCLs as
a result of interactions during drinking
water treatment and disinfection
processes. The limitation would be
developed for the purpose of attaining
and maintaining the state’s applicable
narrative water quality criterion or
criteria and protecting the state’s
designated use(s), including the
protection of human health. See 40 CFR
122.44(d)(1)(vi).
For the reasons described above,
during development of the NPDES
permit for the steam electric power
plant, the permitting authority should
provide notification to any downstream
drinking water treatment plants of the
discharge of bromide. EPA recommends
that the permitting authority collaborate
with drinking water utilities and their
regulators to determine what
concentration of bromides at the PWS
intake is needed to ensure that levels of
bromate and DPBs do not exceed
applicable MCLs. The maximum level of
bromide in source waters at the intake
that does not result in an exceedance of
the MCL for DBPs is the numeric
interpretation of the narrative criterion
for protection of human health and may
vary depending on the treatment
processes employed at the drinking
water treatment facility. The permitting
authority would then determine the
level of bromide that may be discharged
from the steam electric power plant,
taking into account other sources of
bromide that may occur, such that the
level of bromide downstream at the
intake to the drinking water utility is
below a level that would result in an
exceedances of the applicable MCLs for
DBPs. In addition, applicants for NPDES
permits must, as part of their permit
application, indicate whether they know
or have reason to believe that
conventional and/or nonconventional
pollutants listed in Table IV of
Appendix D to 40 CFR part 122, (which
includes bromide), are discharged from
each outfall. For every pollutant in
67887
Table IV of Appendix D discharged
which is not limited in an applicable
effluent limitations guideline, the
applicant must either report quantitative
data or briefly describe the reasons the
pollutant is expected to be discharged as
set forth in 40 CFR 122.2l(g)(7)(vi)(A),
made applicable to the States at 40 CFR
123.25(a)(4).
In addition to requiring the permit
applicant to provide a complete
application, including proper
wastewater characterization, when
issuing the permit, the permitting
authority can incorporate appropriate
monitoring and reporting requirements,
as authorized under section 402(a)(2),
33 U.S.C. 1342(a)(2), and implementing
regulations at 40 CFR 122.48, 122.44(i),
122.43 and 122.41(1)(4). These
requirements apply to all dischargers
and include plants that have identified
the presence of bromide in effluent in
significant quantities and that are in
proximity to downstream water
treatment plants.
XVII. Related Acts of Congress,
Executive Orders, and Agency
Initiatives
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is an economically
significant regulatory action that was
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review. Any
changes made in response to OMB
recommendations have been
documented in the docket. EPA
prepared an analysis of the potential
costs and benefits associated with this
action. This analysis is contained in
Chapter 13 of the BCA Report, available
in the docket.
Table XVII–1 (drawn from Table 13–
1 of the BCA Report) provides the
results of the benefit-cost analysis with
both costs and benefits annualized over
24 years and discounted using a three
percent discount rate.
TABLE XVII–1—TOTAL MONETIZED ANNUALIZED BENEFITS AND COSTS OF THE FINAL BAT AND PSES
[Millions, 2013$, three percent discount rate] a
Total social
costs b
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Annualized Value .........................................................................................................................................
a All
Total monetized
benefits
$479.5
$450.6 to $565.6
costs and benefits were annualized over 24 years and using a three percent discount rate.
social costs include compliance costs to facilities.
b Total
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
OMB has previously approved the
information collection requirements
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contained in the existing regulations 40
CFR part 423 under the provisions of
the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq. and has assigned OMB
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control number 2040–0281. The OMB
control numbers for EPA’s regulations
in 40 CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 212 / Tuesday, November 3, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
EPA estimated small changes in
monitoring costs at steam electric power
plants for metals in the final rule; EPA
accounted for these costs as part of its
analysis of the economic impacts.
Plants, however, will also realize certain
savings by no longer monitoring effluent
that would cease to exist under the final
rule. The net changes in monitoring and
reporting are expected to be minimal,
and EPA determined that the existing
burden estimates appropriately reflect
any final rule burden associated with
monitoring.
Based on the information in its
record, EPA does not expect the final
rule to increase costs to permitting
authorities. The rule will not change
permit application requirements or the
associated review; it will not increase
the number of permits issued to steam
electric power plants; nor does it
increase the efforts involved in
developing or reviewing such permits.
In fact, the final rule will reduce the
burden to permitting authorities. In the
absence of nationally applicable BAT
requirements, as appropriate, permitting
authorities must establish technologybased effluent limitations using BPJ to
establish site-specific requirements
based on information submitted by the
discharger. Permitting authorities that
establish technology-based effluent
limitations on a BPJ basis often spend
significant time, effort, and resources
doing so, and dischargers may expend
significant resources providing
associated data and information.
Establishing nationally applicable BAT
requirements that eliminate the need to
develop BPJ-based limitations makes
permitting easier and less costly in this
respect.
As explained in Section XVI.A, under
this rule, after the permitting authority
receives information from the
discharger, it must determine, on a
facility-specific basis, what date is ‘‘as
soon as possible’’ during the period
beginning November 1, 2018, and
ending December 31, 2023. This onetime burden to the discharger and the
permitting authority, however, is no
more excessive than the existing burden
associated with developing technologybased effluent limitations on a BPJ basis;
in fact, it is very likely less burdensome.
Nevertheless, EPA conservatively
estimated no net change (increase or
decrease) in the cost burden to federal
or state governments or dischargers
associated with this final rule.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency to prepare
a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule subject to notice-and-comment
rulemaking requirements under the
Administrative Procedure Act or any
other statute, unless the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Small entities
include small businesses, small
organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions.
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA. The basis for this
finding is documented in Chapter 8 of
the RIA included in the docket and
summarized below. EPA estimates that
243 to 507 entities own steam electric
power plants to which the ELGs apply,
of which 110 to 191 entities are small
(see Table XVII–2).
TABLE XVII–2—NUMBER OF ENTITIES OWNING STEAM ELECTRIC POWER PLANTS BY SECTOR AND SIZE
[Assuming two different ownership cases] a
Lower bound estimate of number of
entities owning steam electric power
plants b
Ownership type
Small c
Total
% Small
Upper bound estimate of number of
entities owning steam electric power
plants b
Total
Small c
% Small
Investor-Owned Utilities ...............................................................
Nonutilities ....................................................................................
Cooperatives ................................................................................
Municipality ..................................................................................
Other Political Subdivision ...........................................................
Federal .........................................................................................
State .............................................................................................
Tribal ............................................................................................
97
36
29
65
12
0
2
0
28
19
26
36
1
0
0
0
28.9
52.8
89.7
55.4
8.3
N/A
0.0
N/A
244
77
49
101
30
0
2
0
66
35
46
43
1
0
0
0
27.1
46.1
93.9
42.1
3.3
N/A
0.0
N/A
All Entity Types .....................................................................
243
110
45.3
507
191
37.6
a In
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19 instances, a plant is owned by a joint venture of two entities; in one instance, the plant is owned by a joint venture of three entities.
b Of these, 75 entities, 21 of which are small, own steam electric power plants that are expected to incur compliance costs under the final rule
under both Case 1 and Case 2.
c EPA was unable to determine size for 16 parent entities; for this analysis, these entities are assumed to be small.
To assess whether small entities’
compliance costs might constitute a
significant impact, EPA summed
annualized compliance costs for the
steam electric power plants determined
to be owned by a given small entity and
calculated these costs as a percentage of
entity revenue (cost-to-revenue test).
EPA compared the resulting percentages
to impact criteria of one percent and
three percent of revenue. Small entities
estimated to incur compliance costs
exceeding one or more of the one
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percent and three percent impact
thresholds were identified as potentially
incurring a significant impact.
EPA notes that setting the BAT
limitations for FGD wastewater, fly ash
transport water, bottom ash transport
water, FGMC wastewater, and
gasification wastewater equal to the BPT
limitations on TSS in fly ash transport
water, bottom ash transport water, and
low volume waste sources at existing
generating units with a total nameplate
generating capacity of 50 MW or less (as
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discussed in Section VIII.C.12) reduces
the potential impacts of the rule on
small entities and municipalities. The
rulemaking record indicates that
establishing a size threshold of 50 MW
or less preferentially minimizes some of
the expected economic impacts on
municipalities and small entities.
Table XVII–3 presents the estimated
numbers of small entities incurring
costs exceeding one percent and three
percent of revenue, by ownership type.
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67889
TABLE XVII–3—ESTIMATED COST-TO-REVENUE IMPACT ON SMALL ENTITIES OWNING STEAM ELECTRIC POWER PLANTS,
BY OWNERSHIP TYPE
Lower bound estimate of number of entities owning
steam electric power plants
Upper bound estimate of number of entities owning
steam electric power plants
Cost ≥1% of revenue
Cost ≥1% of revenue
Cost ≥3% of revenue
% of
small
affected
entities b
Number
of small
entities
Ownership Type ...............
% of
small
affected
entities b
Number
of small
entities a
Cost ≥3% of revenue
% of
small
affected
entities b
Number
of small
entities
Out of total 110 small entities
% of
small
affected
entities b
Number
of small
entities a
Out of total 191 small entities
Cooperative ......................
Investor-Owned ................
Municipality ......................
Nonutility ..........................
Other Political Subdivision
1
0
4
1
0
3.8
0.0
11.1
5.3
0.0
0
0
1
0
0
0.0
0.0
2.8
0.0
0.0
1
0
4
1
0
2.2
0.0
9.4
2.8
0.0
0
0
1
0
0
0.0
0.0
2.3
0.0
0.0
Total ..........................
6
5.5
1
0.9
6
3.1
1
0.5
a The
number of entities with cost-to-revenue ratios exceeding three percent is a subset of the number of entities with such ratios exceeding
one percent.
b Percentage values were calculated relative to the total of 110 (Case 1) and 191 (Case 2) small entities owning steam electric power plants.
EPA expects that Case 2 is a more likely ownership scenario for small entities (e.g., small municipalities) as small entities may be less likely to
own multiple non-surveyed steam electric power plants. See RIA Chapter 8 for details.
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As reported in Table XVII–3, EPA
estimates that six small entities owning
steam electric power plants (one
cooperative, one nonutility, and four
municipalities) will incur costs
exceeding one percent of revenue as a
result of the final rule, and one small
municipality owning steam electric
power plants will incur costs exceeding
three percent of revenue. The numbers
of small entities incurring costs
exceeding either the one or three
percent of revenue impact threshold are
small in the absolute and represent
small percentages of the total estimated
number of small entities, which
supports EPA’s finding of no significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities (No SISNOSE).
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), 2 U.S.C.
1531–1538, requires federal agencies,
unless otherwise prohibited by law, to
assess the effects of their regulatory
actions on state, local, and tribal
governments and the private sector.
This action contains a federal mandate
that may result in expenditures of $100
million or more (annually, adjusted for
inflation) for state, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or the
private sector in any one year ($141
million in 2013). Accordingly, EPA
prepared a written statement required
under section 202 of UMRA. The
statement is included in the docket for
this action (see Chapter 9 in the RIA
report) and briefly summarized here.
Consistent with the intergovernmental
consultation provisions of UMRA
section 204, EPA consulted with
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governmental entities affected by this
rule. EPA described the government-togovernment dialogue leading to the
proposed rule in its preamble to the
proposed rulemaking. EPA received
comments from state and local
government representatives in response
to the proposed rule and considered this
input in developing the final rule.
Consistent with UMRA section 205,
EPA identified and analyzed a
reasonable number of regulatory
alternatives to determine BAT/BADCT.
Section VIII of this preamble describes
the options.
This action is not subject to the
requirements of UMRA section 203
because it contains no regulatory
requirements that might significantly or
uniquely affect small governments. For
its assessment of the impact of
compliance requirements on small
governments (governments for
populations of less than 50,000), EPA
compared total costs and costs per plant
estimated to be incurred by small
governments with the costs estimated to
be incurred by large governments. EPA
also compared costs for small
government-owned plants with those of
non-government-owned facilities. The
Agency evaluated both the average and
maximum annualized cost per plant.
Chapter 9 of the RIA report provides
details of these analyses. In all of these
comparisons, both for the cost totals
and, in particular, for the average and
maximum cost per plant, the costs for
small government-owned facilities were
less than those for large governmentowned facilities and for small nongovernment-owned facilities. On this
basis, EPA concluded that the final rule
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does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Under Executive Order (E.O.) 13132,
EPA may not issue an action that has
federalism implications, that imposes
substantial direct compliance costs, and
that is not required by statute, unless
the federal government provides the
funds necessary to pay the direct
compliance costs incurred by state and
local governments or EPA consults with
state and local officials early in the
process of developing the action.
This action has federalism
implications because it may impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
state or local governments, and the
federal government will not provide the
funds necessary to pay those costs.
EPA anticipates that this final rule
will not impose incremental
administrative burden on states from
issuing, reviewing, and overseeing
compliance with discharge
requirements. However, EPA has
identified 168 steam electric power
plants owned by state or local
government entities, out of which 16
plants are estimated to incur costs to
meet the limitations. EPA estimates that
the maximum aggregate compliance cost
in any one year to governments
(excluding the federal government) is
$171.4 million (see Chapter 9 of the RIA
report for details). Based on this
information, this action may impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
state or local governments. Accordingly,
EPA provides the following federalism
summary impact statement as required
by section 6(b) of E.O. 13132.
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EPA consulted with elected state and
local officials or their representative
national organizations early in the
process of developing the rule to ensure
their meaningful and timely input into
its development. The preamble to the
proposed rule described these
consultations, which included a briefing
on October 11, 2011, attended by
representatives from the National
League of Cities, the National
Conference of State Legislatures, the
National Association of Counties, the
National Association of Towns and
Townships, the U.S. Conference of
Mayors, the Council of State
Governments, the County Executives of
America, and the Environmental
Council of the States. Policy and
professional groups such as the National
Rural Electric Cooperative Association,
America’s Clean Water Agencies, and
the American Public Power Association
also participated in the briefing, as did
environmental and natural resource
policy staff representing nine state
agencies and approximately 25 local
governments and/or utilities. The
participants asked questions and raised
comments during the meeting. In
response to the Agency’s request for preproposal written submittals within eight
weeks of the briefing, EPA received
separate written submittals regarding
the technology options, pollutant
removal effectiveness, costs of specific
technologies and overall costs, impacts
on small generating units and on small
governments, among others. EPA
carefully considered these comments in
developing the proposed rule.
EPA received comment on the
proposed ELGs from 31 state and local
officials or their representatives. Some
state and local officials expressed
concerns EPA had underestimated the
costs and overstated the pollutant
removals of the technology options.
They stated that the ELGs would impose
significant costs on small entities, and
would result in electricity rate increases
that are unaffordable for households.
They also stated that small municipal
systems typically operate smaller units
with disproportionally greater
compliance costs as compared to larger
units. Commenters also expressed
concern about coordination of the CCR
and ELG rules, the potential premature
retirement of coal-fired units with
limited remaining life, and potential
downtime during retrofits. Finally, some
commenters asked that EPA allow more
time to phase-in the requirements. Other
state and local officials supported
revisions of the ELGs and generally
opposed reliance on BPJ as a basis for
establishing limitations for FGD
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wastewater. EPA considered these
comments in developing the final rule.
A list of the state and local government
commenters has been provided to OMB
and has been placed in the docket for
this rulemaking. In addition, the
detailed response to comments from
these entities is contained in EPA’s
response to comments document on this
final rulemaking, which has also been
placed in the docket for this rulemaking.
As explained in Section VIII, the final
rule establishes different BAT/PSES
requirements for oil-fired generating
units and units of 50 MW or less. These
different requirements alleviate some of
the concerns raised by state and local
government representatives by reducing
the number of government entities
incurring costs to meet the ELG
requirements. The implementation
schedule described in Section XVI gives
time to facilities to make changes to
their operations to meet the final
effluent limitations. Moreover, the rule
does not rely on BPJ determinations for
establishment of FGD wastewater
limitations or standards. Finally, as
explained in Section IX, EPA’s analysis
demonstrates that the requirements are
economically achievable for the steam
electric industry as a whole, including
plants owned by state or local
government entities.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action does not have tribal
implications, as specified in E.O. 13175
(65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000). It will
not have substantial direct effects on
tribal governments, on the relationship
between the federal government and the
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal government and Indian tribes,
as specified in E.O. 13175. EPA’s
analyses show that tribal governments
do not own any facility to which the
ELGs apply. Thus, E.O. 13175 does not
apply to this action.
Although E.O. 13175 does not apply
to this action, EPA consulted with
federally recognized tribal officials
under EPA’s Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Indian tribes early in
the process of developing this rule to
enable them to have meaningful and
timely input into its development. EPA
initiated consultation and coordination
with federally recognized tribal
governments in August 2011. EPA
shared information about the steam
electric effluent guidelines rulemaking
in discussions with the National Tribal
Caucus and the National Tribal Water
Council. EPA continued this
government-to-government dialogue by
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mailing a consultation notification letter
to tribal leaders, and on March 28, 2012,
held a tribal consultation conference
call with tribal representatives about the
rulemaking process and objectives, with
a focus on identifying specific ways that
the rulemaking may affect tribes.
Representatives from one tribe provided
input to the rule. EPA considered input
from tribal representatives in
developing this final rule.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
This action is not subject to E.O.
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997)
because the EPA does not expect that
the environmental health risks or safety
risks addressed by this action present a
disproportionate risk to children. This
action’s health and risk assessments are
contained in Chapter 3 of the BCA
Report and summarized below.
As described in Section XIV.B.1, EPA
assessed whether the final rule will
benefit children by reducing health risk
from exposure to steam electric
pollutants from consumption of
contaminated fish and improving
recreational opportunities. The Agency
was able to quantify two categories of
benefits specific to children: (1)
Avoided neurological damage to
preschool age children from reduced
exposure to lead and (2) avoided
neurological damages from in utero
exposure to mercury.
This analysis considered several
measures of children’s health benefits
associated with lead exposure for
children up to age six. Avoided
neurological and cognitive damages
were expressed as changes in three
metrics: (1) Overall IQ levels; (2) the
incidence of low IQ scores (<70); and (3)
the incidence of levels of lead in the
blood above 20 mg/dL.
EPA estimated the IQ-related benefits
associated with reduced in utero
mercury exposure from maternal fish
consumption in exposed populations.
Among approximately 418,953 babies
born per year who are potentially
exposed to discharges of mercury from
steam electric power plants, the final
rule reduces total IQ point losses over
the period of 2019 through 2042 by
about 7,219 points. The monetary
benefits associated with the avoided IQ
point losses are $3.5 million per year
(mean estimate, at three percent
discount rate).
EPA’s analysis also shows annualized
benefits to children from reduced lead
discharges of approximately $1.0
million (at three percent discount rate).
EPA identified additional benefits to
children, such as reduced exposure to
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lead and the resultant neurological and
cognitive damages in children over the
age of seven, as well as other adverse
health effects.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This action is not a ‘‘significant
energy action,’’ as defined by E.O. 13211
(66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001) because it
is not likely to have a significant
adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy.
The Agency analyzed the potential
energy effects of these ELGs. The
potentially significant effects of this rule
on energy supply, distribution, or use
concern the electric power sector. EPA
found that the final rule will not cause
effects in the electric power sector that
constitute a significant adverse effect
under E.O. 13211. Namely, the Agency
found that this rule does not reduce
electricity production in excess of 1
billion kilowatt hours per year or in
excess of 500 megawatts of installed
capacity, and therefore does not
constitute a significant regulatory action
under E.O. 13211.
For more detail on the potential
energy effects of this final rule, see
Chapter 10 in the RIA report.
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I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
E.O. 12898 (59 FR 7629, Feb. 16,
1994) establishes federal executive
policy on environmental justice. Its
main provision directs federal agencies,
to the greatest extent practicable and
permitted by law, to make
environmental justice part of their
mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations and low-income
populations in the U.S.
EPA determined that the human
health or environmental risk addressed
by this action will not have potential
disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects
on minority, low-income, or indigenous
populations. The results of this
evaluation are contained in Chapter 14
of the BCA Report, available in the
docket.
To meet the objectives of E.O. 12898,
EPA examined whether the rule creates
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potential environmental justice
concerns in the areas affected by steam
electric power plant discharges. The
Agency analyzed the demographic
characteristics of the populations who
live in proximity to steam electric
power plants and who may be exposed
to pollutants in steam electric power
plant discharges (populations who
consume recreationally caught fish from
affected reaches) to determine whether
minority and or low-income
populations are subject to
disproportionally high environmental
impacts.
EPA conducted the analysis in two
ways. First, EPA compared demographic
data for populations living in proximity
to steam electric power plants to
demographic characteristics at the state
and national levels. This analysis
focuses on the spatial distribution of
minority and low-income groups to
determine whether these groups are
more or less represented in the
populations that are expected to benefit
from the final rule, based on their
proximity to steam electric power
plants. This analysis shows that
approximately 450,000 people reside
within one mile of a steam electric
power plant currently discharging to
surface waters and 2.7 million people
reside within three miles. A greater
fraction of the populations living in
such proximity to the plants has income
below the poverty threshold (16.4 and
15.3 percent, respectively for
populations within one and three miles)
than the national average (13.9 percent).
Second, EPA conducted analyses of
populations exposed to steam electric
power plant discharges through
consumption of recreationally caught
fish by estimating exposure and health
effects by demographic cohort. Where
possible, EPA used analytic
assumptions specific to the
demographic cohorts—e.g., fish
consumption rates specific to different
racial groups. The results show that this
final rule will not have
disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects
on minority or low-income populations
because, in fact, it increases the level of
environmental protection (reduces
adverse human health and
environmental effects) for all affected
populations, including minority and
low-income populations. Furthermore,
EPA estimated that minority and lowincome populations will receive,
proportionately, more of the human
health benefits associated with the final
rule.
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K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and
the EPA will submit a rule report to
each House of the Congress and to the
Comptroller General of the United
States. This action is a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Appendix A to the Preamble:
Definitions, Acronyms, and
Abbreviations Used in This Preamble
The following acronyms and abbreviations
are used in this preamble.
Administrator. The Administrator of the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Agency. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency.
BAT. Best available technology
economically achievable, as defined by CWA
sections 301(b)(2)(A) and 304(b)(2)(B).
BCT. The best conventional pollutant
control technology applicable to discharges
of conventional pollutants from existing
industrial point sources, as defined by
sections 301(b)(2)(E) and 304(b)(4) of the
CWA.
Bioaccumulation. General term describing
a process by which chemicals are taken up
by an organism either directly from exposure
to a contaminated medium or by
consumption of food containing the
chemical, resulting in a net accumulation of
the chemical by an organism due to uptake
from all routes of exposure.
BMP. Best management practice.
Bottom ash. The ash, including boiler slag,
which settles in the furnace or is dislodged
from furnace walls. Economizer ash is
included when it is collected with bottom
ash.
BPT. The best practicable control
technology currently available as defined by
sections 301(b)(1) and 304(b)(1) of the CWA.
CBI. Confidential Business Information.
CCR. Coal Combustion Residuals.
Clean Water Act (CWA). The Federal Water
Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972
(33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.), as amended, e.g., by
the Clean Water Act of 1977 (Pub. L. 95–217),
and the Water Quality Act of 1987 (Pub. L.
100–4).
Combustion residuals. Solid wastes
associated with combustion-related power
plant processes, including fly and bottom ash
from coal-, petroleum coke-, or oil-fired
units; FGD solids; FGMC wastes; and other
wastewater treatment solids associated with
combustion wastewater. In addition to the
residuals that are associated with coal
combustion, this also includes residuals
associated with the combustion of other
fossil fuels.
Combustion residual leachate. Leachate
from landfills or surface impoundments
containing combustion residuals. Leachate is
composed of liquid, including any
suspended or dissolved constituents in the
liquid, that has percolated through waste or
other materials emplaced in a landfill, or that
passes through the surface impoundment’s
containment structure (e.g., bottom, dikes,
and berms). Combustion residual leachate
includes seepage and/or leakage from a
combustion residual landfill or
impoundment unit. Combustion residual
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leachate includes wastewater from landfills
and surface impoundments located on nonadjoining property when under the
operational control of the permitted facility.
Direct discharge. (a) Any addition of any
‘‘pollutant’’ or combination of pollutants to
‘‘waters of the United States’’ from any
‘‘point source,’’ or (b) any addition of any
pollutant or combination of pollutant to
waters of the ‘‘contiguous zone’’ or the ocean
from any point source other than a vessel or
other floating craft which is being used as a
means of transportation. This definition
includes additions of pollutants into waters
of the United States from: Surface runoff
which is collected or channeled by man;
discharges though pipes, sewers, or other
conveyances owned by a State, municipality,
or other person which do not lead to a
treatment works; and discharges through
pipes, sewers, or other conveyances, leading
into privately owned treatment works. This
term does not include an addition of
pollutants by any ‘‘indirect discharger.’’
Direct discharger. A facility that discharges
treated or untreated wastewaters into waters
of the U.S.
DOE. Department of Energy.
Dry bottom ash handling system. A system
that does not use water as the transport
medium to convey bottom ash away from the
boiler. It includes systems that collect and
convey the ash without any use of water, as
well as systems in which bottom ash is
quenched in a water bath and then
mechanically or pneumatically conveyed
away from the boiler. Dry bottom ash
handling systems do not include wet sluicing
systems (such as remote MDS or complete
recycle systems).
Dry fly ash handling system. A system that
does not use water as the transport medium
to convey fly ash away from particulate
collection equipment.
Effluent limitation. Under CWA section
502(11), any restriction, including schedules
of compliance, established by a state or the
Administrator on quantities, rates, and
concentrations of chemical, physical,
biological, and other constituents which are
discharged from point sources into navigable
waters, the waters of the contiguous zone, or
the ocean, including schedules of
compliance.
EIA. Energy Information Administration.
ELGs. Effluent limitations guidelines and
standards.
EO. Executive Order.
EPA. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency.
ESP. Electrostatic precipitator.
Facility. Any NPDES ‘‘point source’’ or any
other facility or activity (including land or
appurtenances thereto) that is subject to
regulation under the NPDES program.
FGD. Flue gas desulfurization.
FGD Wastewater. Wastewater generated
specifically from the wet flue gas
desulfurization scrubber system that comes
into contact with the flue gas or the FGD
solids, including but not limited to, the
blowdown or purge from the FGD scrubber
system, overflow or underflow from the
solids separation process, FGD solids wash
water, and the filtrate from the solids
dewatering process. Wastewater generated
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from cleaning the FGD scrubber, cleaning
FGD solids separation equipment, cleaning
FGD solids dewatering equipment, or that is
collected in floor drains in the FGD process
area is not considered FGD wastewater.
FGD gypsum. Gypsum generated
specifically from the wet FGD scrubber
system, including any solids separation or
solids dewatering processes.
FGMC. Flue gas mercury control.
FGMC System. An air pollution control
system installed or operated for the purpose
of removing mercury from flue gas.
Flue Gas Mercury Control Wastewater.
Wastewater generated from an air pollution
control system installed or operated for the
purpose of removing mercury from flue gas.
This includes fly ash collection systems
when the particulate control system follows
sorbent injection or other controls to remove
mercury from flue gas. FGD wastewater
generated at plants using oxidizing agents to
remove mercury in the FGD system and not
in a separate FGMC system is not included
in this definition.
Fly Ash. The ash that is carried out of the
furnace by a gas stream and collected by a
capture device such as a mechanical
precipitator, electrostatic precipitator, and/or
fabric filter. Economizer ash is included in
this definition when it is collected with fly
ash. Ash is not included in this definition
when it is collected in wet scrubber air
pollution control systems whose primary
purpose is particulate removal.
Gasification Wastewater. Any wastewater
generated at an integrated gasification
combined cycle operation from the gasifier or
the syngas cleaning, combustion, and cooling
processes. Gasification wastewater includes,
but is not limited to the following: Sour/grey
water; CO2/steam stripper wastewater; sulfur
recovery unit blowdown, and wastewater
resulting from slag handling or fly ash
handling, particulate removal, halogen
removal, or trace organic removal. Air
separation unit blowdown, noncontact
cooling water, and runoff from fuel and/or
byproduct piles are not considered
gasification wastewater. Wastewater that is
collected intermittently in floor drains in the
gasification process areas from leaks, spills
and cleaning occurring during normal
operation of the gasification operation is not
considered gasification wastewater.
Ground water. Water that is found in the
saturated part of the ground underneath the
land surface.
IGCC. Integrated gasification combined
cycle.
Indirect discharge. Wastewater discharged
or otherwise introduced to a POTW.
IPM. Integrated Planning Model.
Landfill. A disposal facility or part of a
facility where solid waste, sludges, or other
process residuals are placed in or on any
natural or manmade formation in the earth
for disposal and which is not a storage pile,
a land treatment facility, a surface
impoundment, an underground injection
well, a salt dome or salt bed formation, an
underground mine, a cave, or a corrective
action management unit.
Low Volume Waste Sources. Taken
collectively as if from one source, wastewater
from all sources except those for which
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specific limitations or standards are
otherwise established in this part. Low
volume waste sources include, but are not
limited to, the following: Wastewaters from
ion exchange water treatment systems, water
treatment evaporator blowdown, laboratory
and sampling streams, boiler blowdown,
floor drains, cooling tower basin cleaning
wastes, recirculating house service water
systems, and wet scrubber air pollution
control systems whose primary purpose is
particulate removal. Sanitary wastes, air
conditioning wastes, and wastewater from
carbon capture or sequestration systems are
not included in this definition.
MDS. Mechanical drag system.
Mechanical drag system. Bottom ash
handling system that collects bottom ash
from the bottom of the boiler in a water-filled
trough. The water bath in the trough
quenches the hot bottom ash as it falls from
the boiler and seals the boiler gases. A drag
chain operates in a continuous loop to drag
bottom ash from the water trough up an
incline, which dewaters the bottom ash by
gravity, draining the water back to the trough
as the bottom ash moves upward. The
dewatered bottom ash is often conveyed to a
nearby collection area, such as a small
bunker outside the boiler building, from
which it is loaded onto trucks and either sold
or transported to a landfill. The MDS is
considered a dry bottom ash handling system
because the ash transport mechanism is
mechanical removal by the drag chain, not
the water.
Metal cleaning wastes. Any wastewater
resulting from cleaning [with or without
chemical cleaning compounds] any metal
process equipment including, but not limited
to, boiler tube cleaning, boiler fireside
cleaning, and air preheater cleaning.
Mortality. Death rate or proportion of
deaths in a population.
NAICS. North American Industry
Classification System.
NPDES. National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System.
NSPS. New Source Performance Standards.
Oil-fired unit. A generating unit that uses
oil as the primary or secondary fuel source
and does not use a gasification process or any
coal or petroleum coke as a fuel source. This
definition does not include units that use oil
only for start up or flame-stabilization
purposes.
ORCR. Office of Resource Conservation
and Recovery.
Point source. Any discernable, confined,
and discrete conveyance, including but not
limited to, any pipe, ditch, channel, tunnel,
conduit, well, discrete fissure, container,
rolling stock, concentrated animal feeding
operation, or vessel or other floating craft
from which pollutants are or may be
discharged. The term does not include
agricultural stormwater discharges or return
flows from irrigated agriculture. See CWA
section 502(14), 33 U.S.C. 1362(14); 40 CFR
122.2.
POTW. Publicly owned treatment works.
See CWA section 212, 33 U.S.C. 1292; 40
CFR 122.2, 403.3
Primary particulate collection system. The
first place in the process where fly ash is
collected, such as collection at an ESP or
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baghouse. For example, a coal combustion
particulate collection system may include
multiple steps including a primary
particulate collection step such as ESP
followed by other processes such as a fabric
filter which would constitute a secondary
particulate collection system.
PSES. Pretreatment Standards for Existing
Sources.
PSNS. Pretreatment Standards for New
Sources.
Publicly Owned Treatment Works. Any
device or system, owned by a state or
municipality, used in the treatment
(including recycling and reclamation) of
municipal sewage or industrial wastes of a
liquid nature that is owned by a state or
municipality. This includes sewers, pipes, or
other conveyances only if they convey
wastewater to a POTW providing treatment.
See CWA section 212, 33 U.S.C. 1292; 40
CFR 122.2, 403.3.
RCRA. The Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. 6901 et seq.
Remote MDS. Bottom ash handling system
that collects bottom ash at the bottom of the
boiler, then uses transport water to sluice the
ash to a remote MDS that dewaters bottom
ash using a similar configuration as the MDS.
The remote MDS is considered a wet bottom
ash handling system because the ash
transport mechanism is water.
RFA. Regulatory Flexibility Act.
SBA. Small Business Administration.
Sediment. Particulate matter lying below
water.
Steam electric power plant wastewater.
Wastewaters associated with or resulting
from the combustion process, including ash
transport water from coal-, petroleum
coke-, or oil-fired units; air pollution control
wastewater (e.g., FGD wastewater, FGMC
wastewater, carbon capture wastewater); and
leachate from landfills or surface
impoundments containing combustion
residuals.
Surface water. All waters of the United
States, including rivers, streams, lakes,
reservoirs, and seas.
Toxic pollutants. As identified under the
CWA, 65 pollutants and classes of pollutants,
of which 126 specific substances have been
designated priority toxic pollutants. See
appendix A to 40 CFR part 423.
Transport water. Wastewater that is used to
convey fly ash, bottom ash, or economizer
ash from the ash collection or storage
equipment, or boiler, and has direct contact
with the ash. Transport water does not
include low volume, short duration
discharges of wastewater from minor leaks
(e.g., leaks from valve packing, pipe flanges,
or piping) or minor maintenance events (e.g.,
replacement of valves or pipe sections).
UMRA. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act.
Wet bottom ash handling system. A system
in which bottom ash is conveyed away from
the boiler using water as a transport medium.
Wet bottom ash systems typically send the
ash slurry to dewatering bins or a surface
impoundment. Wet bottom ash handling
systems include systems that operate in
conjunction with a traditional wet sluicing
system to recycle all bottom ash transport
water (remote MDS or complete recycle
system).
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Wet FGD system. Wet FGD systems capture
sulfur dioxide from the flue gas using a
sorbent that has mixed with water to form a
wet slurry, and that generates a water stream
that exits the FGD scrubber absorber.
Wet fly ash handling system. A system that
conveys fly ash away from particulate
removal equipment using water as a transport
medium. Wet fly ash systems typically
dispose of the ash slurry in a surface
impoundment.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 423
Environmental protection, Electric
power generation, Power plants, Waste
treatment and disposal, Water pollution
control.
Dated: September 30, 2015.
Gina McCarthy,
Administrator.
Therefore, 40 CFR Chapter I is
amended as follows:
PART 423—STEAM ELECTRIC POWER
GENERATING POINT SOURCE
CATEGORY
1. The authority citation for part 423
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 101; 301; 304(b), (c), (e),
and (g); 306; 307; 308 and 501, Clean Water
Act (Federal Water Pollution Control Act
Amendments of 1972, as amended; 33 U.S.C.
1251; 1311; 1314(b), (c), (e), and (g); 1316;
1317; 1318 and 1361).
■
2. Section 423.10 is revised as follows:
§ 423.10
Applicability.
The provisions of this part apply to
discharges resulting from the operation
of a generating unit by an establishment
whose generation of electricity is the
predominant source of revenue or
principal reason for operation, and
whose generation of electricity results
primarily from a process utilizing fossiltype fuel (coal, oil, or gas), fuel derived
from fossil fuel (e.g., petroleum coke,
synthesis gas), or nuclear fuel in
conjunction with a thermal cycle
employing the steam water system as
the thermodynamic medium. This part
applies to discharges associated with
both the combustion turbine and steam
turbine portions of a combined cycle
generating unit.
■ 3. Section 423.11 is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraphs (b), (e), and (f).
■ b. Adding paragraphs (n) through (t).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 423.11
Specialized definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The term low volume waste
sources means, taken collectively as if
from one source, wastewater from all
sources except those for which specific
limitations or standards are otherwise
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established in this part. Low volume
waste sources include, but are not
limited to, the following: Wastewaters
from ion exchange water treatment
systems, water treatment evaporator
blowdown, laboratory and sampling
streams, boiler blowdown, floor drains,
cooling tower basin cleaning wastes,
recirculating house service water
systems, and wet scrubber air pollution
control systems whose primary purpose
is particulate removal. Sanitary wastes,
air conditioning wastes, and wastewater
from carbon capture or sequestration
systems are not included in this
definition.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) The term fly ash means the ash
that is carried out of the furnace by a gas
stream and collected by a capture device
such as a mechanical precipitator,
electrostatic precipitator, or fabric filter.
Economizer ash is included in this
definition when it is collected with fly
ash. Ash is not included in this
definition when it is collected in wet
scrubber air pollution control systems
whose primary purpose is particulate
removal.
(f) The term bottom ash means the
ash, including boiler slag, which settles
in the furnace or is dislodged from
furnace walls. Economizer ash is
included in this definition when it is
collected with bottom ash.
*
*
*
*
*
(n) The term flue gas desulfurization
(FGD) wastewater means any
wastewater generated specifically from
the wet flue gas desulfurization scrubber
system that comes into contact with the
flue gas or the FGD solids, including but
not limited to, the blowdown from the
FGD scrubber system, overflow or
underflow from the solids separation
process, FGD solids wash water, and the
filtrate from the solids dewatering
process. Wastewater generated from
cleaning the FGD scrubber, cleaning
FGD solids separation equipment,
cleaning FGD solids dewatering
equipment, or that is collected in floor
drains in the FGD process area is not
considered FGD wastewater.
(o) The term flue gas mercury control
wastewater means any wastewater
generated from an air pollution control
system installed or operated for the
purpose of removing mercury from flue
gas. This includes fly ash collection
systems when the particulate control
system follows sorbent injection or
other controls to remove mercury from
flue gas. FGD wastewater generated at
plants using oxidizing agents to remove
mercury in the FGD system and not in
a separate FGMC system is not included
in this definition.
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(p) The term transport water means
any wastewater that is used to convey
fly ash, bottom ash, or economizer ash
from the ash collection or storage
equipment, or boiler, and has direct
contact with the ash. Transport water
does not include low volume, short
duration discharges of wastewater from
minor leaks (e.g., leaks from valve
packing, pipe flanges, or piping) or
minor maintenance events (e.g.,
replacement of valves or pipe sections).
(q) The term gasification wastewater
means any wastewater generated at an
integrated gasification combined cycle
operation from the gasifier or the syngas
cleaning, combustion, and cooling
processes. Gasification wastewater
includes, but is not limited to the
following: Sour/grey water; CO2/steam
stripper wastewater; sulfur recovery
unit blowdown, and wastewater
resulting from slag handling or fly ash
handling, particulate removal, halogen
removal, or trace organic removal. Air
separation unit blowdown, noncontact
cooling water, and runoff from fuel and/
or byproduct piles are not considered
gasification wastewater. Wastewater that
is collected intermittently in floor
drains in the gasification process area
from leaks, spills, and cleaning
occurring during normal operation of
the gasification operation is not
considered gasification wastewater.
(r) The term combustion residual
leachate means leachate from landfills
or surface impoundments containing
combustion residuals. Leachate is
composed of liquid, including any
suspended or dissolved constituents in
the liquid, that has percolated through
waste or other materials emplaced in a
landfill, or that passes through the
surface impoundment’s containment
structure (e.g., bottom, dikes, berms).
Combustion residual leachate includes
seepage and/or leakage from a
combustion residual landfill or
impoundment unit. Combustion
residual leachate includes wastewater
from landfills and surface
impoundments located on nonadjoining property when under the
operational control of the permitted
facility.
(s) The term oil-fired unit means a
generating unit that uses oil as the
primary or secondary fuel source and
does not use a gasification process or
any coal or petroleum coke as a fuel
source. This definition does not include
units that use oil only for start up or
flame-stabilization purposes.
(t) The phrase ‘‘as soon as possible’’
means November 1, 2018, unless the
permitting authority establishes a later
date, after receiving information from
the discharger, which reflects a
consideration of the following factors:
(1) Time to expeditiously plan
(including to raise capital), design,
procure, and install equipment to
comply with the requirements of this
part.
(2) Changes being made or planned at
the plant in response to:
(i) New source performance standards
for greenhouse gases from new fossil
fuel-fired electric generating units,
under sections 111, 301, 302, and
307(d)(1)(C) of the Clean Air Act, as
amended, 42 U.S.C. 7411, 7601, 7602,
7607(d)(1)(C);
(ii) Emission guidelines for
greenhouse gases from existing fossil
fuel-fired electric generating units,
under sections 111, 301, 302, and 307(d)
of the Clean Air Act, as amended, 42
U.S.C. 7411, 7601, 7602, 7607(d); or
(iii) Regulations that address the
disposal of coal combustion residuals as
solid waste, under sections 1006(b),
1008(a), 2002(a), 3001, 4004, and
4005(a) of the Solid Waste Disposal Act
of 1970, as amended by the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976,
as amended by the Hazardous and Solid
Waste Amendments of 1984, 42 U.S.C.
6906(b), 6907(a), 6912(a), 6944, and
6945(a).
(3) For FGD wastewater requirements
only, an initial commissioning period
for the treatment system to optimize the
installed equipment.
■ (4) Other factors as appropriate.
■ 4. Section 423.12 is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraphs (b)(11) and
(12).
■ b. Adding paragraph (b)(13).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 423.12 Effluent limitations guidelines
representing the degree of effluent
reduction attainable by the application of
the best practicable control technology
currently available (BPT).
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(11) The quantity of pollutants
discharged in FGD wastewater, flue gas
mercury control wastewater,
combustion residual leachate, or
gasification wastewater shall not exceed
the quantity determined by multiplying
the flow of the applicable wastewater
times the concentration listed in the
following table:
BPT Effluent limitations
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
(mg/l)
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
TSS ..................................................................................................................................................................
Oil and grease .................................................................................................................................................
(12) At the permitting authority’s
discretion, the quantity of pollutant
allowed to be discharged may be
expressed as a concentration limitation
instead of the mass-based limitations
specified in paragraphs (b)(3) through
(b)(7), and (b)(11), of this section.
Concentration limitations shall be those
concentrations specified in this section.
(13) In the event that wastestreams
from various sources are combined for
treatment or discharge, the quantity of
each pollutant or pollutant property
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controlled in paragraphs (b)(1) through
(b)(12) of this section attributable to
each controlled waste source shall not
exceed the specified limitations for that
waste source.
5. Section 423.13 is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraphs (g) and (h).
■ b. Adding paragraphs (i) through (n).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
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100.0
20.0
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
(mg/l)
30.0
15.0
§ 423.13 Effluent limitations guidelines
representing the degree of effluent
reduction attainable by the application of
the best available technology economically
achievable (BAT).
*
*
*
*
*
(g)(1)(i) FGD wastewater. Except for
those discharges to which paragraph
(g)(2) or (g)(3) of this section applies, the
quantity of pollutants in FGD
wastewater shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of FGD wastewater times the
concentration listed in the table
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following this paragraph (g)(1)(i).
Dischargers must meet the effluent
limitations for FGD wastewater in this
paragraph by a date determined by the
permitting authority that is as soon as
possible beginning November 1, 2018,
but no later than December 31, 2023.
These effluent limitations apply to the
discharge of FGD wastewater generated
on and after the date determined by the
67895
permitting authority for meeting the
effluent limitations, as specified in this
paragraph.
BAT Effluent limitations
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
Arsenic, total (ug/L) .........................................................................................................................................
Mercury, total (ng/L) ........................................................................................................................................
Selenium, total (ug/L) ......................................................................................................................................
Nitrate/nitrite as N (mg/L) ................................................................................................................................
(ii) For FGD wastewater generated
before the date determined by the
permitting authority, as specified in
paragraph (g)(1)(i), the quantity of
pollutants discharged in FGD
wastewater shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of FGD wastewater times the
concentration listed for TSS in
§ 423.12(b)(11).
(2) For any electric generating unit
with a total nameplate capacity of less
than or equal to 50 megawatts or that is
an oil-fired unit, the quantity of
pollutants discharged in FGD
wastewater shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of FGD wastewater times the
concentration listed for TSS in
§ 423.12(b)(11).
(3)(i) For dischargers who voluntarily
choose to meet the effluent limitations
for FGD wastewater in this paragraph,
the quantity of pollutants in FGD
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
11
788
23
17.0
8
356
12
4.4
wastewater shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of FGD wastewater times the
concentration listed in the table
following this paragraph (g)(3)(i).
Dischargers who choose to meet the
effluent limitations for FGD wastewater
in this paragraph must meet such
limitations by December 31, 2023. These
effluent limitations apply to the
discharge of FGD wastewater generated
on and after December 31, 2023.
BAT Effluent limitations
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Arsenic, total (ug/L) .........................................................................................................................................
Mercury, total (ng/L) ........................................................................................................................................
Selenium, total (ug/L) ......................................................................................................................................
TDS (mg/L) ......................................................................................................................................................
(ii) For discharges of FGD wastewater
generated before December 31, 2023, the
quantity of pollutants discharged in
FGD wastewater shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of FGD wastewater times the
concentration listed for TSS in
§ 423.12(b)(11).
(h)(1)(i) Fly ash transport water.
Except for those discharges to which
paragraph (h)(2) of this section applies,
or when the fly ash transport water is
used in the FGD scrubber, there shall be
no discharge of pollutants in fly ash
transport water. Dischargers must meet
the discharge limitation in this
paragraph by a date determined by the
permitting authority that is as soon as
possible beginning November 1, 2018,
but no later than December 31, 2023.
This limitation applies to the discharge
of fly ash transport water generated on
and after the date determined by the
permitting authority for meeting the
discharge limitation, as specified in this
paragraph. Whenever fly ash transport
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water is used in any other plant process
or is sent to a treatment system at the
plant (except when it is used in the FGD
scrubber), the resulting effluent must
comply with the discharge limitation in
this paragraph. When the fly ash
transport water is used in the FGD
scrubber, the quantity of pollutants in
fly ash transport water shall not exceed
the quantity determined by multiplying
the flow of fly ash transport water times
the concentration listed in the table in
paragraph (g)(1)(i) of this section.
(ii) For discharges of fly ash transport
water generated before the date
determined by the permitting authority,
as specified in paragraph (h)(1)(i) of this
section, the quantity of pollutants
discharged in fly ash transport water
shall not exceed the quantity
determined by multiplying the flow of
fly ash transport water times the
concentration listed for TSS in
§ 423.12(b)(4).
(2) For any electric generating unit
with a total nameplate generating
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4
39
5
50
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
................................
24
................................
24
capacity of less than or equal to 50
megawatts or that is an oil-fired unit,
the quantity of pollutants discharged in
fly ash transport water shall not exceed
the quantity determined by multiplying
the flow of fly ash transport water times
the concentration listed for TSS in
§ 423.12(b)(4).
(i)(1)(i) Flue gas mercury control
wastewater. Except for those discharges
to which paragraph (i)(2) of this section
applies, there shall be no discharge of
pollutants in flue gas mercury control
wastewater. Dischargers must meet the
discharge limitation in this paragraph
by a date determined by the permitting
authority that is as soon as possible
beginning November 1, 2018, but no
later than December 31, 2023. This
limitation applies to the discharge of
flue gas mercury control wastewater
generated on and after the date
determined by the permitting authority
for meeting the discharge limitation, as
specified in this paragraph. Whenever
flue gas mercury control wastewater is
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 212 / Tuesday, November 3, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
used in any other plant process or is
sent to a treatment system at the plant,
the resulting effluent must comply with
the discharge limitation in this
paragraph.
(ii) For discharges of flue gas mercury
control wastewater generated before the
date determined by the permitting
authority, as specified in paragraph
(i)(1)(i) of this section, the quantity of
pollutants discharged in flue gas
mercury control wastewater shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of flue gas mercury
control wastewater times the
concentration for TSS listed in
§ 423.12(b)(11).
(2) For any electric generating unit
with a total nameplate generating
capacity of less than or equal to 50
megawatts or that is an oil-fired unit,
the quantity of pollutants discharged in
flue gas mercury control wastewater
shall not exceed the quantity
determined by multiplying the flow of
flue gas mercury control wastewater
times the concentration for TSS listed in
§ 423.12(b)(11).
(j)(1)(i) Gasification wastewater.
Except for those discharges to which
paragraph (j)(2) of this section applies,
the quantity of pollutants in gasification
wastewater shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of gasification wastewater times
the concentration listed in the table
following this paragraph (j)(1)(i).
Dischargers must meet the effluent
limitations in this paragraph by a date
determined by the permitting authority
that is as soon as possible beginning
November 1, 2018, but no later than
December 31, 2023. These effluent
limitations apply to the discharge of
gasification wastewater generated on
and after the date determined by the
permitting authority for meeting the
effluent limitations, as specified in this
paragraph.
BAT Effluent limitations
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Arsenic, total (ug/L) .........................................................................................................................................
Mercury, total (ng/L) ........................................................................................................................................
Selenium, total (ug/L) ......................................................................................................................................
Total dissolved solids (mg/L) ...........................................................................................................................
(ii) For discharges of gasification
wastewater generated before the date
determined by the permitting authority,
as specified in paragraph (j)(1)(i) of this
section, the quantity of pollutants
discharged in gasification wastewater
shall not exceed the quantity
determined by multiplying the flow of
gasification wastewater times the
concentration for TSS listed in
§ 423.12(b)(11).
(2) For any electric generating unit
with a total nameplate generating
capacity of less than or equal to 50
megawatts or that is an oil-fired unit,
the quantity of pollutants discharged in
gasification wastewater shall not exceed
the quantity determined by multiplying
the flow of gasification wastewater
times the concentration listed for TSS in
§ 423.12(b)(11).
(k)(1)(i) Bottom ash transport water.
Except for those discharges to which
paragraph (k)(2) of this section applies,
or when the bottom ash transport water
is used in the FGD scrubber, there shall
be no discharge of pollutants in bottom
ash transport water. Dischargers must
meet the discharge limitation in this
paragraph by a date determined by the
permitting authority that is as soon as
possible beginning November 1, 2018,
but no later than December 31, 2023.
This limitation applies to the discharge
of bottom ash transport water generated
on and after the date determined by the
permitting authority for meeting the
discharge limitation, as specified in this
paragraph. Whenever bottom ash
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Jkt 238001
transport water is used in any other
plant process or is sent to a treatment
system at the plant (except when it is
used in the FGD scrubber), the resulting
effluent must comply with the discharge
limitation in this paragraph. When the
bottom ash transport water is used in
the FGD scrubber, the quantity of
pollutants in bottom ash transport water
shall not exceed the quantity
determined by multiplying the flow of
bottom ash transport water times the
concentration listed in the table in
paragraph (g)(1)(i) of this section.
(ii) For discharges of bottom ash
transport water generated before the
date determined by the permitting
authority, as specified in paragraph
(k)(1)(i) of this section, the quantity of
pollutants discharged in bottom ash
transport water shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of bottom ash transport water times
the concentration for TSS listed in
§ 423.12(b)(4).
(2) For any electric generating unit
with a total nameplate generating
capacity of less than or equal to 50
megawatts or that is an oil-fired unit,
the quantity of pollutants discharged in
bottom ash transport water shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of the applicable
wastewater times the concentration for
TSS listed in § 423.12(b)(4).
(l) Combustion residual leachate. The
quantity of pollutants discharged in
combustion residual leachate shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
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4
1.8
453
38
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
................................
1.3
227
22
multiplying the flow of combustion
residual leachate times the
concentration for TSS listed in
§ 423.12(b)(11).
(m) At the permitting authority’s
discretion, the quantity of pollutant
allowed to be discharged may be
expressed as a concentration limitation
instead of any mass based limitations
specified in paragraphs (b) through (l) of
this section. Concentration limitations
shall be those concentrations specified
in this section.
(n) In the event that wastestreams
from various sources are combined for
treatment or discharge, the quantity of
each pollutant or pollutant property
controlled in paragraphs (a) through (m)
of this section attributable to each
controlled waste source shall not exceed
the specified limitation for that waste
source.
■ 6. Section 423.15 is revised to read as
follows:
§ 423.15 New source performance
standards (NSPS).
(a) 1982 NSPS. Any new source as of
November 19, 1982, subject to
paragraph (a) of this section, must
achieve the following new source
performance standards, in addition to
the limitations in § 423.13 of this part,
established on November 3, 2015. In the
case of conflict, the more stringent
requirements apply:
(1) pH. The pH of all discharges,
except once through cooling water, shall
be within the range of 6.0–9.0.
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(2) PCBs. There shall be no discharge
of polychlorinated biphenyl compounds
such as those commonly used for
transformer fluid.
(3) Low volume waste sources, FGD
wastewater, flue gas mercury control
wastewater, combustion residual
leachate, and gasification wastewater.
The quantity of pollutants discharged in
low volume waste sources, FGD
wastewater, flue gas mercury control
wastewater, combustion residual
67897
leachate, and gasification wastewater
shall not exceed the quantity
determined by multiplying the flow of
low volume waste sources times the
concentration listed in the following
table:
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
(mg/l)
TSS ..................................................................................................................................................................
Oil and grease .................................................................................................................................................
(4) Chemical metal cleaning wastes.
The quantity of pollutants discharged in
chemical metal cleaning wastes shall
not exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of chemical metal
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
(mg/l)
100.0
20.0
30.0
15.0
cleaning wastes times the concentration
listed in the following table:
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
(mg/l)
TSS ..................................................................................................................................................................
Oil and grease .................................................................................................................................................
Copper, total ....................................................................................................................................................
Iron, total ..........................................................................................................................................................
(5) [Reserved]
(6) Bottom ash transport water. The
quantity of pollutants discharged in
bottom ash transport water shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of the bottom ash
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
(mg/l)
100.0
20.0
1.0
1.0
30.0
15.0
1.0
1.0
transport water times the concentration
listed in the following table:
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
(mg/l)
TSS ..................................................................................................................................................................
Oil and grease .................................................................................................................................................
(7) Fly ash transport water. There
shall be no discharge of pollutants in fly
ash transport water.
(8)(i) Once through cooling water. For
any plant with a total rated electric
generating capacity of 25 or more
megawatts, the quantity of pollutants
discharged in once through cooling
water from each discharge point shall
not exceed the quantity determined by
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
(mg/l)
100.0
20.0
30.0
15.0
multiplying the flow of once through
cooling water from each discharge point
times the concentration listed in the
following table:
NSPS
Maximum concentrations
(mg/l)
Total residual chlorine ...............................................................................................................................................
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Pollutant or pollutant property
0.20
(ii) Total residual chlorine may only
be discharged from any single
generating unit for more than two hours
per day when the discharger
demonstrates to the permitting authority
that discharge for more than two hours
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is required for macroinvertebrate
control. Simultaneous multi-unit
chlorination is permitted.
(9)(i) Once through cooling water. For
any plant with a total rated generating
capacity of less than 25 megawatts, the
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quantity of pollutants discharged in
once through cooling water shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of once through
cooling water sources times the
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03NOR2
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 212 / Tuesday, November 3, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
concentration listed in the following
table:
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum concentration
(mg/l)
Average concentration
(mg/l)
Free available chlorine ....................................................................................................
0.5
0.2
(ii) Neither free available chlorine nor
total residual chlorine may be
discharged from any unit for more than
two hours in any one day and not more
than one unit in any plant may
discharge free available or total residual
chlorine at any one time unless the
utility can demonstrate to the Regional
Administrator or state, if the state has
NPDES permit issuing authority, that
the units in a particular location cannot
operate at or below this level of
chlorination.
(10)(i) Cooling tower blowdown. The
quantity of pollutants discharged in
cooling tower blowdown shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of cooling tower
blowdown times the concentration
listed below:
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum concentration
(mg/l)
Average concentration
(mg/l)
Free available chlorine ....................................................................................................
0.5
0.2
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
(mg/l)
The 126 priority pollutants (appendix A) contained in chemicals added for cooling tower maintenance, except: ..............................................................................................................................................................
Chromium, total ........................................................................................................................................
zinc, total ..................................................................................................................................................
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
1 No
(1)
0.2
1.0
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
(mg/l)
( 1)
0.2
1.0
detectable amount.
(ii) Neither free available chlorine nor
total residual chlorine may be
discharged from any unit for more than
two hours in any one day and not more
than one unit in any plant may
discharge free available or total residual
chlorine at any one time unless the
utility can demonstrate to the Regional
Administrator or state, if the state has
NPDES permit issuing authority, that
the units in a particular location cannot
operate at or below this level of
chlorination.
(iii) At the permitting authority’s
discretion, instead of the monitoring in
40 CFR 122.11(b), compliance with the
standards for the 126 priority pollutants
in paragraph (a)(10)(i) of this section
may be determined by engineering
calculations which demonstrate that the
regulated pollutants are not detectable
in the final discharge by the analytical
methods in 40 CFR part 136.
(11) Coal pile runoff. Subject to the
provisions of paragraph (a)(12) of this
section, the quantity or quality of
pollutants or pollutant parameters
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Jkt 238001
discharged in coal pile runoff shall not
exceed the standards specified below:
Pollutant or pollutant
property
NSPS for any time
TSS ...........................
not to exceed 50 mg/
l.
(12) Coal pile runoff. Any untreated
overflow from facilities designed,
constructed, and operated to treat the
coal pile runoff which results from a 10
year, 24 hour rainfall event shall not be
subject to the standards in paragraph
(a)(11) of this section.
(13) At the permitting authority’s
discretion, the quantity of pollutant
allowed to be discharged may be
expressed as a concentration limitation
instead of any mass based limitations
specified in paragraphs (a)(3) through
(10) of this section. Concentration limits
shall be based on the concentrations
specified in this section.
(14) In the event that wastestreams
from various sources are combined for
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treatment or discharge, the quantity of
each pollutant or pollutant property
controlled in paragraphs (a)(1) through
(13) of this section attributable to each
controlled waste source shall not exceed
the specified limitation for that waste
source.
(b) 2015 NSPS. Any new source as of
November 17, 2015, subject to
paragraph (b) of this section, must
achieve the following new source
performance standards:
(1) pH. The pH of all discharges,
except once through cooling water, shall
be within the range of 6.0–9.0.
(2) PCBs. There shall be no discharge
of polychlorinated biphenyl compounds
such as those commonly used for
transformer fluid.
(3) Low volume waste sources. The
quantity of pollutants discharged from
low volume waste sources shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of low volume
waste sources times the concentration
listed in the following table:
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67899
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
(mg/l)
TSS ..................................................................................................................................................................
Oil and grease .................................................................................................................................................
(4) Chemical metal cleaning wastes.
The quantity of pollutants discharged in
chemical metal cleaning wastes shall
not exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of chemical metal
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
(mg/l)
100.0
20.0
30.0
15.0
cleaning wastes times the concentration
listed in the following table:
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
(mg/l)
TSS ..................................................................................................................................................................
Oil and grease .................................................................................................................................................
Copper, total ....................................................................................................................................................
Iron, total ..........................................................................................................................................................
(5) [Reserved]
(6) Bottom ash transport water. There
shall be no discharge of pollutants in
bottom ash transport water. Whenever
bottom ash transport water is used in
any other plant process or is sent to a
treatment system at the plant, the
resulting effluent must comply with the
discharge standard in this paragraph.
(7) Fly ash transport water. There
shall be no discharge of pollutants in fly
ash transport water. Whenever fly ash
transport water is used in any other
plant process or is sent to a treatment
system at the plant, the resulting
effluent must comply with the discharge
standard in this paragraph.
(8)(i) Once through cooling water. For
any plant with a total rated electric
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
(mg/l)
100.0
20.0
1.0
1.0
30.0
15.0
1.0
1.0
generating capacity of 25 or more
megawatts, the quantity of pollutants
discharged in once through cooling
water from each discharge point shall
not exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of once through
cooling water from each discharge point
times the concentration listed in the
following table:
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum concentration
(mg/l)
Total residual chlorine ...............................................................................................................................................
0.20
(ii) Total residual chlorine may only
be discharged from any single
generating unit for more than two hours
per day when the discharger
demonstrates to the permitting authority
that discharge for more than two hours
is required for macroinvertebrate
control. Simultaneous multi-unit
chlorination is permitted.
(9)(i) Once through cooling water. For
any plant with a total rated generating
capacity of less than 25 megawatts, the
quantity of pollutants discharged in
once through cooling water shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of once through
cooling water sources times the
concentration listed in the following
table:
NSPS
Maximum concentration
(mg/l)
Average concentration
(mg/l)
Free available chlorine ....................................................................................................
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Pollutant or pollutant property
0.5
0.2
(ii) Neither free available chlorine nor
total residual chlorine may be
discharged from any unit for more than
two hours in any one day and not more
than one unit in any plant may
discharge free available or total residual
chlorine at any one time unless the
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utility can demonstrate to the Regional
Administrator or state, if the state has
NPDES permit issuing authority, that
the units in a particular location cannot
operate at or below this level of
chlorination.
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(10)(i) Cooling tower blowdown. The
quantity of pollutants discharged in
cooling tower blowdown shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of cooling tower
blowdown times the concentration
listed below:
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NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum concentration
(mg/l)
Average concentration
(mg/l)
Free available chlorine ....................................................................................................
0.5
0.2
NSPS
Maximum for
any 1 day
(mg/l)
Pollutant or pollutant property
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
(mg/l)
(1 )
0.2
1.0
(1 )
0.2
1.0
The 126 priority pollutants (appendix A) contained in chemicals added for cooling
tower maintenance, except: .........................................................................................
Chromium, total ........................................................................................................
zinc, total ..................................................................................................................
1 No
detectable amount.
(ii) Neither free available chlorine nor
total residual chlorine may be
discharged from any unit for more than
two hours in any one day and not more
than one unit in any plant may
discharge free available or total residual
chlorine at any one time unless the
utility can demonstrate to the Regional
Administrator or state, if the state has
NPDES permit issuing authority, that
the units in a particular location cannot
operate at or below this level of
chlorination.
(iii) At the permitting authority’s
discretion, instead of the monitoring in
40 CFR 122.11(b), compliance with the
standards for the 126 priority pollutants
in paragraph (b)(10)(i) of this section
may be determined by engineering
calculations demonstrating that the
regulated pollutants are not detectable
in the final discharge by the analytical
methods in 40 CFR part 136.
(11) Coal pile runoff. Subject to the
provisions of paragraph (b)(12) of this
section, the quantity or quality of
pollutants or pollutant parameters
discharged in coal pile runoff shall not
exceed the standards specified below:
Pollutant or pollutant property
TSS ........................
NSPS for any time
(12) Coal pile runoff. Any untreated
overflow from facilities designed,
constructed, and operated to treat the
coal pile runoff which results from a 10
year, 24 hour rainfall event shall not be
subject to the standards in paragraph
(b)(11) of this section.
(13) FGD wastewater. The quantity of
pollutants discharged in FGD
wastewater shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of FGD wastewater times the
concentration listed in the following
table:
not to exceed 50 mg/l.
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
Arsenic, total (ug/L) .........................................................................................................................................
Mercury, total (ng/L) ........................................................................................................................................
Selenium, total (ug/L) ......................................................................................................................................
TDS (mg/L) ......................................................................................................................................................
(14) Flue gas mercury control
wastewater. There shall be no discharge
of pollutants in flue gas mercury control
wastewater. Whenever flue gas mercury
control wastewater is used in any other
plant process or is sent to a treatment
system at the plant, the resulting
effluent must comply with the discharge
standard in this paragraph.
(15) Gasification wastewater. The
quantity of pollutants discharged in
4
39
5
50
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
................................
24
................................
24
gasification wastewater shall not exceed
the quantity determined by multiplying
the flow of gasification wastewater
times the concentration listed in the
following table:
NSPS
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
Arsenic, total (ug/L) .........................................................................................................................................
Mercury, total (ng/L) ........................................................................................................................................
Selenium, total (ug/L) ......................................................................................................................................
Total dissolved solids (mg/L) ...........................................................................................................................
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4
1.8
453
38
03NOR2
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values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
................................
1.3
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22
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 212 / Tuesday, November 3, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
(16) Combustion residual leachate.
The quantity of pollutants discharged in
combustion residual leachate shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of combustion
residual leachate times the
67901
concentration listed in the following
table:
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
Arsenic, total (ug/L) .........................................................................................................................................
Mercury, total (ng/L) ........................................................................................................................................
(17) At the permitting authority’s
discretion, the quantity of pollutant
allowed to be discharged may be
expressed as a concentration limitation
instead of any mass based limitations
specified in paragraphs (b)(3) through
(16) of this section. Concentration limits
shall be based on the concentrations
specified in this section.
(18) In the event that wastestreams
from various sources are combined for
treatment or discharge, the quantity of
each pollutant or pollutant property
controlled in paragraphs (b)(1) through
(16) of this section attributable to each
controlled waste source shall not exceed
the specified limitation for that waste
source.
(The information collection
requirements contained in paragraphs
(a)(8)(ii), (a)(9)(ii), and (a)(10)(ii),
(b)(8)(ii), (b)(9)(ii), and (b)(10)(ii) were
approved by the Office of Management
and Budget under control number 2040–
0040. The information collection
requirements contained in paragraphs
(a)(10)(iii) and (b)(10)(iii) were approved
under control number 2040–0033.)
7. Section 423.16 is amended by
adding paragraphs (e) through (i) to read
as follows:
■
§ 423.16 Pretreatment standards for
existing sources (PSES).
*
*
*
*
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
11
788
8
356
(e) FGD wastewater. For any electric
generating unit with a total nameplate
generating capacity of more than 50
megawatts and that is not an oil-fired
unit, the quantity of pollutants in FGD
wastewater shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of FGD wastewater times the
concentration listed in the table
following this paragraph (e). Dischargers
must meet the standards in this
paragraph by November 1, 2018. These
standards apply to the discharge of FGD
wastewater generated on and after
November 1, 2018.
*
PSES
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Arsenic, total (ug/L) .........................................................................................................................................
Mercury, total (ng/L) ........................................................................................................................................
Selenium, total (ug/L) ......................................................................................................................................
Nitrate/nitrite as N (mg/L) ................................................................................................................................
(f) Fly ash transport water. Except
when the fly ash transport water is used
in the FGD scrubber, for any electric
generating unit with a total nameplate
generating capacity of more than 50
megawatts and that is not an oil-fired
unit, there shall be no discharge of
pollutants in fly ash transport water.
This standard applies to the discharge of
fly ash transport water generated on and
after November 1, 2018. Whenever fly
ash transport water is used in any other
plant process or is sent to a treatment
system at the plant (except when it is
used in the FGD scrubber), the resulting
effluent must comply with the discharge
standard in this paragraph. When the fly
ash transport water is used in the FGD
scrubber, the quantity of pollutants in
fly ash transport water shall not exceed
the quantity determined by multiplying
the flow of fly ash transport water times
the concentration listed in the table in
paragraph (e) of this section.
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(g) Bottom ash transport water. Except
when the bottom ash transport water is
used in the FGD scrubber, for any
electric generating unit with a total
nameplate generating capacity of more
than 50 megawatts and that is not an oilfired unit, there shall be no discharge of
pollutants in bottom ash transport
water. This standard applies to the
discharge of bottom ash transport water
generated on and after November 1,
2018. Whenever bottom ash transport
water is used in any other plant process
or is sent to a treatment system at the
plant (except when it is used in the FGD
scrubber), the resulting effluent must
comply with the discharge standard in
this paragraph. When the bottom ash
transport water is used in the FGD
scrubber, the quantity of pollutants in
bottom ash transport water shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of bottom ash
transport water times the concentration
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11
788
23
17.0
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
8
356
12
4.4
listed in the table in paragraph (e) of
this section.
(h) Flue gas mercury control
wastewater. For any electric generating
unit with a total nameplate generating
capacity of more than 50 megawatts and
that is not an oil-fired unit, there shall
be no discharge of pollutants in flue gas
mercury control wastewater. This
standard applies to the discharge of flue
gas mercury control wastewater
generated on and after November 1,
2018. Whenever flue gas mercury
control wastewater is used in any other
plant process or is sent to a treatment
system at the plant, the resulting
effluent must comply with the discharge
standard in this paragraph.
(i) Gasification wastewater. For any
electric generating unit with a total
nameplate generating capacity of more
than 50 megawatts and that is not an oilfired unit, the quantity of pollutants in
gasification wastewater shall not exceed
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 212 / Tuesday, November 3, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
the quantity determined by multiplying
the flow of gasification wastewater
times the concentration listed in the
table following this paragraph (i).
Dischargers must meet the standards in
this paragraph by November 1, 2018.
These standards apply to the discharge
of gasification wastewater generated on
and after November 1, 2018.
PSES
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
Arsenic, total (μg/L) .........................................................................................................................................
Mercury, total (ng/L) ........................................................................................................................................
Selenium, total (μg/L) ......................................................................................................................................
Total dissolved solids (mg/L) ...........................................................................................................................
8. Section 423.17 is revised to read as
follows:
■
§ 423.17 Pretreatment standards for new
sources (PSNS).
(a) 1982 PSNS. Except as provided in
40 CFR 403.7, any new source as of
October 14, 1980, subject to paragraph
(a) of this section, which introduces
pollutants into a publicly owned
treatment works, must comply with 40
CFR part 403, the following
pretreatment standards for new sources,
and the PSES in § 423.16, established on
November 3, 2015. In the case of
conflict, the more stringent standards
apply:
4
1.8
453
38
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
................................
1.3
227
22
(1) PCBs. There shall be no discharge
of polychlorinated biphenyl compounds
such as those used for transformer fluid.
(2) Chemical metal cleaning wastes.
The pollutants discharged in chemical
metal cleaning wastes shall not exceed
the concentration listed in the following
table:
PSNS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for any 1 day
(mg/L)
Copper, total ..............................................................................................................................................................
1.0
(3) [Reserved]
(4)(i) Cooling tower blowdown. The
pollutants discharged in cooling tower
blowdown shall not exceed the
concentration listed in the following
table:
PSNS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for any time
(mg/L)
The 126 priority pollutants (appendix A) contained in chemicals added for cooling tower maintenance, except: ..
Chromium, total ..................................................................................................................................................
zinc, total ............................................................................................................................................................
(1)
0.2
1.0
1 No
detectable amount.
(ii) At the permitting authority’s
discretion, instead of the monitoring in
40 CFR 122.11(b), compliance with the
standards for the 126 priority pollutants
in paragraph (a)(4)(i) of this section may
be determined by engineering
calculations which demonstrate that the
regulated pollutants are not detectable
in the final discharge by the analytical
methods in 40 CFR part 136.
(5) Fly ash transport water. There
shall be no discharge of wastewater
pollutants from fly ash transport water.
(b) 2015 PSNS. Except as provided in
40 CFR 403.7, any new source as of June
7, 2013, subject to this paragraph (b),
which introduces pollutants into a
publicly owned treatment works must
comply with 40 CFR part 403 and the
following pretreatment standards for
new sources:
(1) PCBs. There shall be no discharge
of polychlorinated biphenyl compounds
such as those used for transformer fluid.
(2) Chemical metal cleaning wastes.
The pollutants discharged in chemical
metal cleaning wastes shall not exceed
the concentration listed in the following
table:
PSNS
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for 1 day
(mg/L)
Copper, total ..............................................................................................................................................................
1.0
(3) [Reserved]
(4)(i) Cooling tower blowdown. The
pollutants discharged in cooling tower
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blowdown shall not exceed the
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concentration listed in the following
table:
E:\FR\FM\03NOR2.SGM
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67903
PSNS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for any time
(mg/L)
The 126 priority pollutants (appendix A) contained in chemicals added for cooling tower maintenance, except: ..
Chromium, total ..................................................................................................................................................
zinc, total ............................................................................................................................................................
(1)
0.2
1.0
1 No
detectable amount.
(ii) At the permitting authority’s
discretion, instead of the monitoring in
40 CFR 122.11(b), compliance with the
standards for the 126 priority pollutants
in paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section may
be determined by engineering
calculations which demonstrate that the
regulated pollutants are not detectable
in the final discharge by the analytical
methods in 40 CFR part 136.
(5) Fly ash transport water. There
shall be no discharge of pollutants in fly
ash transport water. Whenever fly ash
transport water is used in any other
plant process or is sent to a treatment
system at the plant, the resulting
effluent must comply with the discharge
standard in this paragraph.
(6) FGD wastewater. The quantity of
pollutants discharged in FGD
wastewater shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of FGD wastewater times the
concentration listed in the following
table:
PSNS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
Arsenic, total (μg/L) .........................................................................................................................................
Mercury, total (ng/L) ........................................................................................................................................
Selenium, total (μg/L) ......................................................................................................................................
TDS (mg/L) ......................................................................................................................................................
(7) Flue gas mercury control
wastewater. There shall be no discharge
of pollutants in flue gas mercury control
wastewater. Whenever flue gas mercury
control wastewater is used in any other
plant process or is sent to a treatment
system at the plant, the resulting
effluent must comply with the discharge
standard in this paragraph.
(8) Bottom ash transport water. There
shall be no discharge of pollutants in
bottom ash transport water. Whenever
bottom ash transport water is used in
any other plant process or is sent to a
treatment system at the plant, the
resulting effluent must comply with the
discharge standard in this paragraph.
4
39
5
50
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
................................
24
................................
24
(9) Gasification wastewater. The
quantity of pollutants discharged in
gasification wastewater shall not exceed
the quantity determined by multiplying
the flow of gasification wastewater
times the concentration listed in the
following table:
PSNS
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
Arsenic, total (μg/L) .........................................................................................................................................
Mercury, total (ng/L) ........................................................................................................................................
Selenium, total (μg/L) ......................................................................................................................................
Total dissolved solids (mg/L) ...........................................................................................................................
(10) Combustion residual leachate.
The quantity of pollutants discharged in
combustion residual leachate shall not
exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of combustion
residual leachate times the
4
1.8
453
38
Average of daily
values for 30
consecutive days
shall not exceed
................................
1.3
227
22
concentration listed in the following
table:
PSNS
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Pollutant or pollutant property
Maximum for
any 1 day
Arsenic, total (μg/L) .........................................................................................................................................
Mercury, total (ng/L) ........................................................................................................................................
11
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[FR Doc. 2015–25663 Filed 11–2–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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356
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 212 (Tuesday, November 3, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 67837-67903]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-25663]
[[Page 67837]]
Vol. 80
Tuesday,
No. 212
November 3, 2015
Part II
Environmental Protection Agency
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
40 CFR Part 423
Effluent Limitations Guidelines and Standards for the Steam Electric
Power Generating Point Source Category; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 80 , No. 212 / Tuesday, November 3, 2015 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 67838]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 423
[EPA-HQ-OW-2009-0819; FRL-9930-48-OW]
RIN 2040-AF14
Effluent Limitations Guidelines and Standards for the Steam
Electric Power Generating Point Source Category
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule, promulgated under the Clean Water Act (CWA),
protects public health and the environment from toxic metals and other
harmful pollutants, including nutrients, by strengthening the
technology-based effluent limitations guidelines and standards (ELGs)
for the steam electric power generating industry. Steam electric power
plants contribute the greatest amount of all toxic pollutants
discharged to surface waters by industrial categories regulated under
the CWA. The pollutants discharged by this industry can cause severe
health and environmental problems in the form of cancer and non-cancer
risks in humans, lowered IQ among children, and deformities and
reproductive harm in fish and wildlife. Many of these pollutants, once
in the environment, remain there for years. Due to their close
proximity to these discharges and relatively high consumption of fish,
some minority and low-income communities have greater exposure to, and
are therefore at greater risk from, pollutants in steam electric power
plant discharges. The final rule establishes the first nationally
applicable limits on the amount of toxic metals and other harmful
pollutants that steam electric power plants are allowed to discharge in
several of their largest sources of wastewater. On an annual basis, the
rule reduces the amount of toxic metals, nutrients, and other
pollutants that steam electric power plants are allowed to discharge by
1.4 billion pounds; it reduces water withdrawal by 57 billion gallons;
and, it has social costs of $480 million and monetized benefits of $451
to $566 million.
DATES: The final rule is effective on January 4, 2016. In accordance
with 40 CFR part 23, this regulation shall be considered issued for
purposes of judicial review at 1 p.m. Eastern time on November 17,
2015. Under section 509(b)(1) of the CWA, judicial review of this
regulation can be had only by filing a petition for review in the U.S.
Court of Appeals within 120 days after the regulation is considered
issued for purposes of judicial review. Under section 509(b)(2), the
requirements in this regulation may not be challenged later in civil or
criminal proceedings brought by EPA to enforce these requirements.
ADDRESSES: Docket: All documents in the docket are listed in the https://www.regulations.gov index. A detailed record index, organized by
subject, is available on EPA's Web site at https://www2.epa.gov/eg/steam-electric-power-generating-effluent-guidelines-2015-final-rule.
Although listed in the index, some information is not publicly
available, e.g., Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material, will be publicly available only
in hard copy. Publicly available docket materials are available either
electronically in https://www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at the
Water Docket in the EPA Docket Center, 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 Water Docket is 202-566-
2426.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For technical information, contact
Ronald Jordan, Engineering and Analysis Division, Telephone: 202-566-
1003; Email: jordan.ronald@epa.gov. For economic information, contact
James Covington, Engineering and Analysis Division, Telephone: 202-566-
1034; Email: covington.james@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Organization of This Preamble
Table of Contents
I. Regulated Entities and Supporting Documentation
A. Regulated Entities
B. Supporting Documentation
II. Legal Authority for This Action
III. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of the Rule
B. Summary of Final Rule
C. Summary of Costs and Benefits
IV. Background
A. Clean Water Act
B. Effluent Guidelines Program
1. Best Practicable Control Technology Currently Available
2. Best Conventional Pollutant Control Technology
3. Best Available Technology Economically Achievable
4. Best Available Demonstrated Control Technology/New Source
Performance Standards
5. Pretreatment Standards for Existing Sources
6. Pretreatment Standards for New Sources
C. Steam Electric Effluent Guidelines Rulemaking History
V. Key Updates Since Proposal
A. Industry Profile Changes Due to Retirements and Conversions
B. EPA Consideration of Other Federal Rules
C. Advancements in Technologies
D. Engineering Costs
E. Economic Impact Analysis
F. Pollutant Data
G. Environmental Assessment Models
VI. Industry Description
A. General Description of Industry
B. Steam Electric Process Wastewater and Control Technologies
1. FGD Wastewater
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
4. FGMC Wastewater
5. Combustion Residual Leachate From Landfills and Surface
Impoundments
6. Gasification Wastewater
VII. Selection of Regulated Pollutants
A. Identifying the Pollutants of Concern
B. Selection of Pollutants for Regulation Under BAT/NSPS
C. Methodology for the POTW Pass-Through Analysis (PSES/PSNS)
VIII. The Final Rule
A. BPT
B. BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS Options
1. FGD Wastewater
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
4. FGMC Wastewater
5. Gasification Wastewater
6. Combustion Residual Leachate
7. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Wastes
C. Best Available Technology
1. FGD Wastewater
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
4. FGMC Wastewater
5. Gasification Wastewater
6. Combustion Residual Leachate
7. Timing
8. Legacy Wastewater
9. Economic Achievability
10. Non-Water Quality Environmental Impacts, Including Energy
Requirements
11. Impacts on Residential Electricity Prices and Low-Income and
Minority Populations
12. Existing Oil-Fired and Small Generating Units
13. Voluntary Incentives Program
D. Best Available Demonstrated Control Technology/NSPS
E. PSES
F. PSNS
G. Anti-Circumvention Provision
H. Other Revisions
1. Correction of Typographical Error for PSNS
2. Clarification of Applicability
I. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Wastes
J. Best Management Practices
IX. Costs and Economic Impact
A. Plant-Specific and Industry Total Costs
[[Page 67839]]
B. Social Costs
C. Economic Impacts
1. Summary of Economic Impacts for Existing Sources
2. Summary of Economic Impacts for New Sources
X. Pollutant Reductions
XI. Development of Effluent Limitations and Standards
XII. Non-Water Quality Environmental Impacts
XIII. Environmental Assessment
A. Introduction
B. Summary of Human Health and Environmental Impacts
C. Environmental Assessment Methodology
D. Outputs From the Environmental Assessment
1. Improvements in Surface Water and Ground Water Quality
2. Reduced Impacts to Wildlife
3. Reduced Human Health Cancer Risk
4. Reduced Threat of Non-Cancer Human Health Effects
5. Reduced Nutrient Impacts
E. Unquantified Environmental and Human Health Improvements
F. Other Secondary Improvements
XIV. Benefit Analysis
A. Categories of Benefits Analyzed
B. Quantification and Monetization of Benefits
1. Human Health Benefits From Surface Water Quality Improvements
2. Improved Ecological Conditions and Recreational Use Benefits
From Surface Water Quality Improvements
3. Market and Productivity Benefits
4. Air-Related Benefits (Human Health and Avoided Climate Change
Impacts)
5. Benefits From Reduced Water Withdrawals (Increased
Availability of Ground Water Resources)
C. Total Monetized Benefits
D. Other Benefits
XV. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
A. Methodology
B. Results
XVI. Regulatory Implementation
A. Implementation of the Limitations and Standards
1. Timing
2. Applicability of NSPS/PSNS
3. Legacy Wastewater
4. Combined Wastestreams
5. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Wastes
B. Upset and Bypass Provisions
C. Variances and Modifications
1. Fundamentally Different Factors Variance
2. Economic Variances
3. Water Quality Variances
4. Removal Credits
D. Site-Specific Water Quality-Based Effluent Limitations
XVII. Related Acts of Congress, Executive Orders, and Agency
Initiatives
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
Appendix A to the Preamble: Definitions, Acronyms, and Abbreviations
Used in This Preamble
I. Regulated Entities and Supporting Documentation
A. Regulated Entities
Entities potentially regulated by this action include:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
North American
Industry
Category Example of regulated Classification
entity System (NAICS)
Code
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Industry...................... Electric Power 22111
Generation
Facilities--Electric
Power Generation.
Electric Power 221112
Generation
Facilities--Fossil
Fuel Electric Power
Generation.
Electric Power 221113
Generation
Facilities--Nuclear
Electric Power
Generation.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
This section is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides
a guide for readers regarding entities likely regulated by this action.
Other types of entities that do not meet the above criteria could also
be regulated. To determine whether your facility is regulated by this
action, you should carefully examine the applicability criteria listed
in 40 CFR 423.10 and the definitions in 40 CFR 423.11 of the rule. If
you still have questions regarding the applicability of this action to
a particular entity, consult the person listed for technical
information in the preceding FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
B. Supporting Documentation
This rule is supported, in part, by the following documents:
Technical Development Document for the Effluent
Limitations Guidelines and Standards for the Steam Electric Power
Generating Point Source Category (TDD), Document No. EPA-821-R-15-007.
Environmental Assessment for the Effluent Limitations
Guidelines and Standards for the Steam Electric Power Generating Point
Source Category (EA), Document No. EPA-821-R-15-006.
Benefits and Cost Analysis for the Effluent Limitations
Guidelines and Standards for the Steam Electric Power Generating Point
Source Category (BCA), Document No. EPA-821-R-15-005.
Regulatory Impact Analysis for the Effluent Limitations
Guidelines and Standards for the Steam Electric Power Generating Point
Source Category (RIA), Document No. EPA-821-R-15-004.
These documents are available in the public record for this rule and on
EPA's Web site at https://www2.epa.gov/eg/steam-electric-power-generating-effluent-guidelines-2015-final-rule.
II. Legal Authority for This Action
EPA promulgates this rule under the authority of sections 301, 304,
306, 307, 308, 402, and 501 of the CWA, 33 U.S.C. 1311, 1314, 1316,
1317, 1318, 1342, and 1361.
III. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of the Rule
Steam electric power plants \1\ discharge large wastewater volumes,
containing vast quantities of pollutants, into waters of the United
States. The pollutants include both toxic and bioaccumulative
pollutants such as arsenic, mercury, selenium, chromium, and cadmium.
Today, these discharges account for about 30 percent of all toxic
pollutants discharged into surface
[[Page 67840]]
waters by all industrial categories regulated under the CWA.\2\ The
electric power industry has made great strides to reduce air pollutant
emissions under Clean Air Act programs. Yet many of these pollutants
are transferred to the wastewater as plants employ technologies to
reduce air pollution. The pollutants in steam electric power plant
wastewater discharges present a serious public health concern and cause
severe ecological damage, as demonstrated by numerous documented
impacts, scientific modeling, and other studies. When toxic metals such
as mercury, arsenic, lead, and selenium accumulate in fish or
contaminate drinking water, they can cause adverse effects in people
who consume the fish or water. These effects can include cancer,
cardiovascular disease, neurological disorders, kidney and liver
damage, and lowered IQs in children.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The steam electric power plants covered by the ELGs use
nuclear or fossil fuels, such as coal, oil, or natural gas, to heat
water in boilers, which generate steam. This rule does not apply to
plants that use non-fossil fuel or non-nuclear fuel or other energy
sources, such as biomass or solar thermal energy. The steam is used
to drive turbines connected to electric generators. The plants
generate wastewater composed of chemical pollutants and thermal
pollution (heated water) from their wastewater treatment, power
cycle, ash handling and air pollution control systems, as well as
from coal piles, yard and floor drainage, and other plant processes.
\2\ Although the way electricity is generated in this country is
changing, EPA projects that, without this final rule, steam electric
power plant discharges would likely continue to account, over the
foreseeable future, for about thirty percent of all toxic pollutants
discharged into surface waters by all industrial categories
regulated under the CWA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
There are, however, affordable technologies that are widely
available, and already in place at some plants, which are capable of
reducing or eliminating steam electric power plant discharges. In the
several decades since the steam electric ELGs were last revised, such
technologies have increasingly been used at plants. This final rule is
the first to ensure that plants in the steam electric industry employ
technologies designed to reduce discharges of toxic metals and other
harmful pollutants discharged in the plants' largest sources of
wastewater.
Steam electric power plant discharges occur in proximity to nearly
100 public drinking water intakes and more than 1,500 public wells
across the nation, and recent studies indicate that steam electric
power plant discharges can adversely affect surface waters used as
drinking water supplies. One study found that arsenic in ash and flue
gas desulfurization (FGD) wastewater discharges from four steam
electric power plants exceeded Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) Maximum
Contaminant Levels (MCLS) in the waterbodies into which they
discharged, indicating that these contaminants are present in surface
waters, and at levels above standards used to protect drinking water.
See DCN SE01984. A second, more recent study found increased levels of
bromide in rivers used as drinking water after FGD systems were
installed at upstream steam electric power plants. The study showed an
increase in bromides at four drinking water utilities' intakes after
wastewater from these FGD systems began to be discharged to the rivers,
whereas prior to the FGD wastewater discharges, bromides were not a
problem in the intake waters of the utilities. With bromides present in
their drinking water source waters at increased levels, carcinogenic
disinfection by-products (brominated DBPs, in particular
trihalomethanes (THMs)) began forming, and at one drinking water
utility, violations of the THM MCL began occurring. See DCN SE04503.
Nitrogen discharged by steam electric power plants can also impact
drinking water sources by contributing to harmful algal blooms in
reservoirs and lakes that are used as drinking water sources. Ground
water contamination from surface impoundments (ash ponds) containing
steam electric power plant wastewater also threatens drinking water, as
evidenced by more than 30 documented cases. See EA Section 3.3.
Steam electric power plant discharges also adversely affect the
quality of fish that people eat. Water quality modeling shows that
about half of waterbodies that receive steam electric power plant
discharges exhibit health risks to people consuming fish from those
waters (primarily from mercury). Nearly half of waterbodies that
receive steam electric power plant discharges exhibit pollutant levels
for one or more steam electric power plant pollutants in excess of
human health water quality criteria (WQC).\3\ See EA Section 4. People
who eat large amounts of fish from lakes and rivers contaminated by
mercury, lead, and arsenic are particularly at risk, and consumption of
such fish poses additional risk to the fetuses of pregnant women.
Compared to the general public, minority and low-income communities
have greater exposure to, and are therefore at greater risk from,
pollutants in steam electric power plant discharges, due to their
closer proximity to the discharges and greater consumption of fish from
contaminated waters. See Section XVII.J.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ WQCs are established by states to protect beneficial uses of
waterbodies, such as the support of aquatic life and provision of
fishing and swimming.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Steam electric power plant discharges adversely affect our nation's
waters and their ecology. Pollutants in such discharges, particularly
mercury and selenium, bioaccumulate in fish and wildlife, and they
accumulate in the sediments of lakes and reservoirs, remaining there
for decades. Documented adverse impacts include the near eradication of
an entire fish population in the late 1970s in Belews Lake, North
Carolina, due to selenium discharges from a steam electric power plant
(DCN SE01842); a series of fish kills in the 1970s in Martin Lake,
Texas, also due to selenium discharges from a steam electric power
plant (elevated selenium levels and deformities persisted for at least
eight years after the plant ceased discharging) (DCN SE01861);
reproductive impairment and deformities in fish and birds from selenium
discharges (DCN SE04519); and other forms of impacts to surface waters,
as documented by numerous other damage cases associated with discharges
from surface impoundments containing steam electric power plant
wastewater. See EA Section 3.3.
Waterbodies receiving steam electric power plant discharges have
routinely exhibited pollutant levels routinely in excess of state WQC
for pollutants found in the plant discharges. This includes pollutants
such as selenium, arsenic, and cadmium. Nutrients in steam electric
power plant discharges can cause over-enrichment of receiving waters,
resulting in water quality problems, such as low oxygen levels and loss
of critical submerged aquatic vegetation, further impairing beneficial
uses such as fishing. EPA's modeling corroborates such documented
impacts, revealing that nearly one fifth of waterbodies receiving steam
electric power plant discharges exceed WQC for protection of aquatic
life and nearly one third of such receiving waters pose potential
reproductive risks to birds that prey on fish.
The steam electric ELGs that EPA promulgated and revised in 1974,
1977, and 1982 are out of date. They do not adequately control the
pollutants (toxic metals and other) discharged by this industry, nor do
they reflect relevant process and technology advances that have
occurred in the last 30-plus years. The rise of new processes for
generating electric power (e.g. coal gasification) and the widespread
implementation of air pollution controls (e.g., FGD and flue gas
mercury control (FGMC)) have altered existing wastestreams and created
new types of wastewater at many steam electric power plants,
particularly coal-fired plants. The processes employed and pollutants
discharged by the industry look very different today than they did in
1982. Many plants, nonetheless, still treat their wastewater using only
surface impoundments, which are largely ineffective at controlling
discharges of toxic pollutants and nutrients. This final rule addresses
an outstanding public health and environmental problem by
[[Page 67841]]
revising the steam electric ELGs, as they apply to a subset of power
plants that discharge wastestreams containing toxic and other
pollutants. As the CWA requires, this rule is economically achievable
(affordable for the industry as a whole) and is based on available
technologies. On an annual basis, the rule is projected to reduce the
amount of toxic metals, nutrients, and other pollutants that steam
electric power plants are allowed to discharge by 1.4 billion pounds;
reduce water withdrawal by 57 billion gallons; and, it has estimated
social costs of $480 million. Finally, of the benefits that were able
to be monetized, EPA projects $451 to $566 million in benefits
associated with this rule.
B. Summary of Final Rule
To further its ultimate objective to ``restore and maintain the
chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation's waters,''
the CWA authorizes EPA to establish national technology-based effluent
limitations guidelines and new source performance standards for
discharges from categories of point sources that occur directly into
waters of the U.S. The CWA also authorizes EPA to promulgate nationally
applicable pretreatment standards that control pollutant discharges
from existing and new sources that discharge wastewater indirectly to
waters of the U.S. through sewers flowing to publicly owned treatment
works (POTWs). EPA establishes ELGs based on the performance of well-
designed and well-operated control and treatment technologies.
EPA completed a study of the steam electric category in 2009 and
proposed the ELG rule in June 2013. The public comment period extended
for more than three months. This final rule reflects the statutory
factors outlined in the CWA, as well as EPA's full consideration of the
comments received and updated analytical results.
Existing Sources--Direct Discharges. For existing sources that
discharge directly to surface water, with the exception of oil-fired
generating units and small generating units (those with a nameplate
capacity of 50 megawatts (MW) or less), the final rule establishes
effluent limitations based on Best Available Technology Economically
Achievable (BAT). BAT is based on technological availability, economic
achievability, and other statutory factors and is intended to reflect
the highest performance in the industry (see Section IV.B.3). The final
rule establishes BAT limitations as follows: \4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ For details on when the following BAT limitations apply, see
Section VIII.C.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For fly ash transport water, bottom ash transport water,
and FGMC wastewater, there are two sets of BAT limitations. The first
set of BAT limitations is a numeric effluent limitation on Total
Suspended Solids (TSS) in the discharge of these wastewaters (these
limitations are equal to the TSS limitations in the previously
established Best Practicable Control Technology Currently Available
(BPT) regulations). The second set of BAT limitations is a zero
discharge limitation for all pollutants in these wastewaters.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ When fly ash transport water or bottom ash transport water
is used in the FGD scrubber, the applicable limitations are those
established for FGD wastewater on mercury, arsenic, selenium and
nitrate/nitrite as N.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For FGD wastewater, there are two sets of BAT limitations.
The first set of limitations is a numeric effluent limitation on TSS in
the discharge of FGD wastewater (these limitations are equal to the TSS
limitations in the previously established BPT regulations). The second
set of BAT limitations is numeric effluent limitations on mercury,
arsenic, selenium, and nitrate/nitrite as N in the discharge of FGD
wastewater.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ For plants that opt into the voluntary incentives program,
the second set of BAT limitations is numeric effluent limitations on
mercury, arsenic, selenium, and TDS in the discharge of FGD
wastewater.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For gasification wastewater, there are two sets of BAT
limitations. The first set of limitations is a numeric effluent
limitation on TSS in the discharge of gasification wastewater (this
limitation is equal to the TSS limitation in the previously established
BPT regulations). The second set of BAT limitations is numeric effluent
limitations on mercury, arsenic, selenium, and total dissolved solids
(TDS) in the discharge of gasification wastewater.
A numeric effluent limitation on TSS in the discharge of
combustion residual leachate from landfills and surface impoundments.
This limitation is equal to the TSS limitation in the previously
established BPT regulations.
For oil-fired generating units and small generating units (50 MW or
smaller), the final rule establishes BAT limitations on TSS in the
discharge of fly ash transport water, bottom ash transport water, FGMC
wastewater, FGD wastewater, and gasification wastewater. These
limitations are equal to the TSS limitations in the existing BPT
regulations.
New Sources--Direct Discharges. The CWA mandates that new source
performance standards (NSPS) reflect the greatest degree of effluent
reduction that is achievable, including, where practicable, a standard
permitting no discharge of pollutants (see Section IV.B.4). NSPS
represent the most stringent controls attainable, taking into
consideration the cost of achieving the effluent reduction and any non-
water quality environmental impacts and energy requirements. For direct
discharges to surface waters from new sources, including discharges
from oil-fired generating units and small generating units, the final
rule establishes NSPS as follows:
A zero discharge standard for all pollutants in fly ash
transport water, bottom ash transport water, and FGMC wastewater.
Numeric standards on mercury, arsenic, selenium, and TDS
in the discharge of FGD wastewater.
Numeric standards on mercury and arsenic in the discharge
of combustion residual leachate.
Existing Sources--Discharges to POTWs. Pretreatment Standards for
Existing Sources (PSES) are designed to prevent the discharge of
pollutants that pass through, interfere with, or are otherwise
incompatible with the operation of POTWs. PSES are analogous to BAT
effluent limitations for direct dischargers and are generally based on
the same factors (see Section IV.B.5). The final rule establishes PSES
as follows: \7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ For details on when PSES apply, see Section VIII.E.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A zero discharge standard for all pollutants in fly ash
transport water, bottom ash transport water, and FGMC wastewater.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ When fly ash transport water or bottom ash transport water
is used in the FGD scrubber, the applicable standards are those
established for FGD wastewater on mercury, arsenic, selenium and
nitrate/nitrite as N.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Numeric standards on mercury, arsenic, selenium, and
nitrate/nitrite as N in the discharge of FGD wastewater.
Numeric standards on mercury, arsenic, selenium and TDS in
the discharge of gasification wastewater.
New Sources--Discharges to POTWs. Pretreatment standards for new
sources (PSNS) are also designed to prevent the discharge of any
pollutant into a POTW that interferes with, passes through, or is
otherwise incompatible with the POTW. PSNS are analogous to NSPS for
direct dischargers, and EPA generally considers the same factors for
both sets of standards (see Section IV.B.6). The final rule establishes
PSNS that are the same as the rule's NSPS.
[[Page 67842]]
C. Summary of Costs and Benefits
Table III-1 summarizes the benefits and social costs for the final
rule, at three percent and seven percent discount rates. EPA's analysis
reflects the Agency's understanding of the actions steam electric power
plants will take to meet the limitations and standards in the final
rule. EPA based its analysis on a baseline that reflects the expected
impacts of other environmental regulations affecting steam electric
power plants, such as the Clean Power Plan (CPP) rule that the Agency
finalized in July 2015 (as well as other relevant rules such as the
Coal Combustion Residuals (CCR) rule that the Agency promulgated in
April 2015). EPA understands that these modeled results have
uncertainty due to the possibility of unexpected implementation
approaches and thus that the actual costs could be somewhat higher or
lower than estimated. The current estimate reflects the best data and
analysis available at this time. In this preamble, EPA presents costs
and monetized benefits accounting for these other rules.\9\ Under this
final rule, EPA estimates that about 12 percent of steam electric power
plants and 28 percent of coal-fired or petroleum coke-fired power
plants will incur some costs.\10\ For additional information, see
Sections V and IX.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ EPA estimates that the population of steam electric power
plants is about 1080.
Table III-1--Total Monetized Annualized Benefits and Costs of the Final Rule
[Millions; 2013$]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total monetized social benefits Total social costs
Discount rate -------------------------------------------------------------------
3% 7% 3% 7%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Final Rule.................................. $451 to $566 $387 to $478 $480 $471
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The remainder of this preamble is structured as follows. Section IV
provides additional background on the CWA and the ELG program. Section
V outlines key updates since the proposal, including updates to the
industry profile, estimated costs and economic impacts, and pollutant
data. Section VI gives an overview of the industry, and Section VII
reviews the identification and selection of the regulated pollutants.
Section VIII describes the final rule requirements, along with the
bases for EPA's decisions. Section IX presents the costs and economic
impacts, while Section X shows the accompanying pollutant reductions.
Section XI presents the numeric limitations and standards for existing
and new sources that are established in this final rule. Sections XII
through XIV explain the non-water quality environmental impacts
(including energy requirements), the environmental assessment, and the
resulting benefits analysis. Section XV presents results of the cost-
effectiveness analysis, and Section XVI provides information regarding
implementation of the rule.
IV. Background
A. Clean Water Act
Congress passed the CWA to ``restore and maintain the chemical,
physical, and biological integrity of the Nation's waters.'' 33 U.S.C.
1251(a). In order to achieve this objective, the Act has, as a national
goal, the elimination of the discharge of all pollutants into the
nation's waters. 33 U.S.C. 1251(a)(1). The CWA establishes a
comprehensive program for protecting our nation's waters. Among its
core provisions, the CWA prohibits the discharge of pollutants from a
point source to waters of the U.S., except as authorized under the CWA.
Under section 402 of the CWA, 33 U.S.C. 1342, discharges may be
authorized through a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NPDES) permit. The CWA establishes a dual approach for these permits,
technology-based controls that establish a floor of performance for all
dischargers, and water quality-based effluent limitations, where the
technology-based effluent limitations are insufficient to meet
applicable WQS. To serve as the basis for the technology-based
controls, the CWA authorizes EPA to establish national technology-based
effluent limitations guidelines and new source performance standards
for discharges from categories of point sources (such as industrial,
commercial, and public sources) that occur directly into waters of the
U.S.
The CWA also authorizes EPA to promulgate nationally applicable
pretreatment standards that control pollutant discharges from sources
that discharge wastewater indirectly to waters of the U.S., through
sewers flowing to POTWs, as outlined in sections 307(b) and (c) of the
CWA, 33 U.S.C. 1317(b) and (c). EPA establishes national pretreatment
standards for those pollutants in wastewater from indirect dischargers
that pass through, interfere with, or are otherwise incompatible with
POTW operations. Generally, pretreatment standards are designed to
ensure that wastewaters from direct and indirect industrial dischargers
are subject to similar levels of treatment. See CWA section 301(b), 33
U.S.C. 1311(b). In addition, POTWs are required to implement local
treatment limits applicable to their industrial indirect dischargers to
satisfy any local requirements. See 40 CFR 403.5.
Direct dischargers (those discharging directly to surface waters)
must comply with effluent limitations in NPDES permits. Indirect
dischargers, who discharge through POTWs, must comply with pretreatment
standards. Technology-based effluent limitations and standards in NPDES
permits are derived from effluent limitations guidelines (CWA sections
301 and 304, 33 U.S.C. 1311 and 1314) and new source performance
standards (CWA section 306, 33 U.S.C. 1316) promulgated by EPA, or
based on best professional judgment (BPJ) where EPA has not promulgated
an applicable effluent limitation guideline or new source performance
standard (CWA section 402(a)(1)(B), 33 U.S.C. 1342(a)(1)(B)).
Additional limitations are also required in the permit where necessary
to meet WQS. CWA section 301(b)(1)(C), 33 U.S.C. 1311(b)(1)(C). The
ELGs are established by EPA regulation for categories of industrial
dischargers and are based on the degree of control that can be achieved
using various levels of pollution control technology, as specified in
the Act (e.g., BPT, BCT, BAT; see below).
EPA promulgates national ELGs for major industrial categories for
three classes of pollutants: (1) Conventional pollutants (TSS, oil and
grease, biochemical oxygen demand (BOD5), fecal coliform,
and pH), as outlined in
[[Page 67843]]
CWA section 304(a)(4) and 40 CFR 401.16; (2) toxic pollutants (e.g.,
toxic metals such as arsenic, mercury, selenium, and chromium; toxic
organic pollutants such as benzene, benzo-a-pyrene, phenol, and
naphthalene), as outlined in CWA section 307(a), 33 U.S.C. 1317(a); 40
CFR 401.15 and 40 CFR part 423, appendix A; and (3) nonconventional
pollutants, which are those pollutants that are not categorized as
conventional or toxic (e.g., ammonia-N, phosphorus, and TDS).
B. Effluent Guidelines Program
EPA establishes ELGs based on the performance of well-designed and
well-operated control and treatment technologies. The legislative
history of CWA section 304(b), which is the heart of the effluent
guidelines program, describes the need to press toward higher levels of
control through research and development of new processes,
modifications, replacement of obsolete plants and processes, and other
improvements in technology, taking into account the cost of controls.
Congress has also stated that EPA need not consider water quality
impacts on individual water bodies as the guidelines are developed; see
Statement of Senator Muskie (principal author) (October 4, 1972),
reprinted in Legislative History of the Water Pollution Control Act
Amendments of 1972, at 170. (U.S. Senate, Committee on Public Works,
Serial No. 93-1, January 1973).
There are four types of standards applicable to direct dischargers,
and two types of standards applicable to indirect dischargers,
described in detail below.
1. Best Practicable Control Technology Currently Available
Traditionally, EPA establishes effluent limitations based on BPT by
reference to the average of the best performances of facilities within
the industry, grouped to reflect various ages, sizes, processes, or
other common characteristics. EPA can promulgate BPT effluent
limitations for conventional, toxic, and nonconventional pollutants. In
specifying BPT, EPA looks at a number of factors. EPA first considers
the cost of achieving effluent reductions in relation to the effluent
reduction benefits. The Agency also considers the age of equipment and
facilities, the processes employed, engineering aspects of the control
technologies, any required process changes, non-water quality
environmental impacts (including energy requirements), and such other
factors as the Administrator deems appropriate. See CWA section
304(b)(1)(B), 33 U.S.C. 1314(b)(1)(B). If, however, existing
performance is uniformly inadequate, EPA may establish limitations
based on higher levels of control than what is currently in place in an
industrial category, when based on an Agency determination that the
technology is available in another category or subcategory and can be
practically applied.
2. Best Conventional Pollutant Control Technology
The 1977 amendments to the CWA require EPA to identify additional
levels of effluent reduction for conventional pollutants associated
with Best Conventional Pollutant Control Technology (BCT) for
discharges from existing industrial point sources. In addition to other
factors specified in section 304(b)(4)(B), 33 U.S.C. 1314(b)(4)(B), the
CWA requires that EPA establish BCT limitations after consideration of
a two-part ``cost reasonableness'' test. EPA explained its methodology
for the development of BCT limitations on July 9, 1986 (51 FR 24974).
Section 304(a)(4) designates the following as conventional pollutants:
BOD5, TSS, fecal coliform, pH, and any additional pollutants
defined by the Administrator as conventional. The Administrator
designated oil and grease as a conventional pollutant on July 30, 1979
(44 FR 44501; 40 CFR 401.16).
3. Best Available Technology Economically Achievable
BAT represents the second level of stringency for controlling
direct discharges of toxic and nonconventional pollutants. As the
statutory phrase intends, EPA considers the technological availability
and the economic achievability in determining what level of control
represents BAT. CWA section 301(b)(2)(A), 33 U.S.C. 1311(b)(2)(A).
Other statutory factors that EPA considers in assessing BAT are the
cost of achieving BAT effluent reductions, the age of equipment and
facilities involved, the process employed, potential process changes,
non-water quality environmental impacts (including energy
requirements), and such other factors as the Administrator deems
appropriate. The Agency retains considerable discretion in assigning
the weight to be accorded these factors. Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Costle,
590 F.2d 1011, 1045 (D.C. Cir. 1978). Generally, EPA determines
economic achievability based on the effect of the cost of compliance
with BAT limitations on overall industry and subcategory (if
applicable) financial conditions. BAT is intended to reflect the
highest performance in the industry, and it may reflect a higher level
of performance than is currently being achieved based on technology
transferred from a different subcategory or category, bench scale or
pilot studies, or foreign plants. Am. Paper Inst. v. Train, 543 F.2d
328, 353 (D.C. Cir. 1976); Am. Frozen Food Inst. v. Train, 539 F.2d
107, 132 (D.C. Cir. 1976). BAT may be based upon process changes or
internal controls, even when these technologies are not common industry
practice. See Am. Frozen Food Inst., 539 F.2d at 132, 140; Reynolds
Metals Co. v. EPA, 760 F.2d 549, 562 (4th Cir. 1985); Cal. & Hawaiian
Sugar Co. v. EPA, 553 F.2d 280, 285-88 (2nd Cir. 1977).
4. Best Available Demonstrated Control Technology/New Source
Performance Standards
NSPS reflect ``the greatest degree of effluent reduction'' that is
achievable based on the ``best available demonstrated control
technology'' (BADCT), ``including, where practicable, a standard
permitting no discharge of pollutants.'' CWA section 306(a)(1), 33
U.S.C. 1316(a)(1). Owners of new facilities have the opportunity to
install the best and most efficient production processes and wastewater
treatment technologies. As a result, NSPS generally represent the most
stringent controls attainable through the application of BADCT for all
pollutants (that is, conventional, nonconventional, and toxic
pollutants). In establishing NSPS, EPA is directed to take into
consideration the cost of achieving the effluent reduction and any non-
water quality environmental impacts and energy requirements. CWA
section 306(b)(1)(B), 33 U.S.C. 1316(b)(1)(B).
5. Pretreatment Standards for Existing Sources
Section 307(b) of the CWA, 33 U.S.C. 1317(b), authorizes EPA to
promulgate pretreatment standards for discharges of pollutants to
POTWs. PSES are designed to prevent the discharge of pollutants that
pass through, interfere with, or are otherwise incompatible with the
operation of POTWs. Categorical pretreatment standards are technology-
based and are analogous to BPT and BAT effluent limitations guidelines,
and thus the Agency typically considers the same factors in
promulgating PSES as it considers in promulgating BAT. Congress
intended for the combination of pretreatment and treatment by the POTW
to achieve the level of treatment that would be required if the
industrial source were making a direct discharge. Conf. Rep. No. 95-
830, at 87 (1977), reprinted in U.S. Congress. Senate Committee on
Public Works (1978), A
[[Page 67844]]
Legislative History of the CWA of 1977, Serial No. 95-14 at 271 (1978).
The General Pretreatment Regulations, which set forth the framework for
the implementation of categorical pretreatment standards, are found at
40 CFR part 403. These regulations establish pretreatment standards
that apply to all non-domestic dischargers. See 52 FR 1586 (January 14,
1987).
6. Pretreatment Standards for New Sources
Section 307(c) of the CWA, 33 U.S.C. 1317(c), authorizes EPA to
promulgate PSNS at the same time it promulgates NSPS. As is the case
for PSES, PSNS are designed to prevent the discharge of any pollutant
into a POTW that interferes with, passes through, or is otherwise
incompatible with the POTW. In selecting the PSNS technology basis, the
Agency generally considers the same factors it considers in
establishing NSPS, along with the results of a pass-through analysis.
Like new sources of direct discharges, new sources of indirect
discharges have the opportunity to incorporate into their operations
the best available demonstrated technologies. As a result, EPA
typically promulgates pretreatment standards for new sources based on
best available demonstrated control technology for new sources. See
Nat'l Ass'n of Metal Finishers v. EPA, 719 F.2d 624, 634 (3rd Cir.
1983).
C. Steam Electric Effluent Guidelines Rulemaking History
EPA provided a detailed history of the steam electric ELGs in the
preamble for the proposed rule, including an explanation of why EPA
initiated a steam electric ELG rulemaking following a detailed study in
2009. EPA published the proposed rule on June 7, 2013, and took public
comments until September 20, 2013. 78 FR 34432. During the public
comment period, EPA received over 200,000 comments. EPA also held a
public hearing on July 9, 2013.
V. Key Updates Since Proposal
This section discusses key updates since EPA proposed its rule in
June 2013, including how these updates are reflected in the final rule.
A. Industry Profile Changes Due to Retirements and Conversions
For the final rule, EPA adjusted the population of steam electric
power plants that will likely incur costs and the associated benefits
as a result of this final rule based on company announcements, as of
August 2014, regarding changes in plant operations. The steam electric
industry is a dynamic one, influenced by many factors, including
electricity demand, fuel prices, availability of resources, and
regulation. Since proposal, there have been some important changes in
the overall industry profile. Some companies have retired or announced
plans to retire specific steam electric generating units, as well as
converted or announced plans to convert specific units to a different
fuel source. See DCN SE05069 for information on the data sources for
these announced retirements and conversions. In addition to actual or
announced retirements and fuel conversions, in some cases, plants have
altered, or announced plans to alter, their wastewater treatment or ash
handling practices. To the extent possible, EPA adjusted its analyses
of costs, pollutant loadings, non-water quality environmental impacts,
and benefits for the final rule to account for these actual and
anticipated changes. The final rule accounts for plant retirements and
fuel conversions, as well as changes in plants' ash handling and
wastewater treatment practices, expected to occur by the implementation
dates in the final rule. For more details, see TDD Section 4.5 or
``Changes to Industry Profile for Steam Electric Generating Units for
the Steam Electric Effluent Guidelines Final Rule,'' DCN SE05059.
B. EPA Consideration of Other Federal Rules
EPA made every effort to appropriately account for other rules in
its many analyses for this rule. Since proposal, EPA has promulgated
other rules affecting the steam electric industry: the Cooling Water
Intake Structures (CWIS) rule for existing facilities (79 FR 48300;
Aug. 15, 2014), the CCR rule (80 FR 21302; Apr. 17, 2015), the CPP rule
(see https://www2.epa.gov/cleanpowerplan/clean-power-plan-existing-power-plants), and the Carbon Pollution Standard for New Power Plants
(CPS) rule (see https://www2.epa.gov/cleanpowerplan/carbon-pollution-standards-new-modified-and-reconstructed-power-plants). One result of
taking into account these rules is a change in the population of units
and plants that EPA estimates would incur incremental costs, as well as
additional estimated benefits, under this final rule. In some cases,
EPA performed two sets of parallel analyses to demonstrate how the
other rules affected this final rule. For example, EPA conducted an
assessment of compliance costs and pollutant loadings for this rule
both with and without accounting for the CCR rule (this preamble only
presents results accounting for the CCR rule). Then, using results from
the analyses of costs and loadings accounting for the CCR rule, EPA
also conducted an additional set of analyses of compliance costs and
pollutant loadings accounting for the proposed CPP rule (this preamble
only presents results accounting for the proposed CPP rule). At the
time EPA conducted its analyses, the CPP had not yet been finalized,
and thus EPA used the proposed CPP for its analyses. EPA concluded that
the proposed and final CPP specifications are similar enough that using
the proposed rather than the final CPP will not bias the results of the
analysis for this rule. See Section IX for additional information.
Because EPA used the proposal as a proxy for the final rule, the rest
of the preamble simply refers to the CPP rule. Given that final CPP
state plans have not yet been determined, EPA recognizes that the
modeled results have uncertainty due to the possibility of unexpected
implementation approaches and that actual market responses may be
somewhat more or less pronounced than estimated. The current estimate
reflects the best data and analysis available at this time. For more
information on these federal rules, see TDD Section 1.3.3. For more
information on how EPA accounted for the effect of these rules on its
compliance cost, pollutant loadings estimates, and non-water quality
environmental impacts, see TDD Sections 9, 10, and 12. See Section V.D.
and Section IX, below, and the RIA regarding how EPA considered other
federal rules in its economic impact analysis.
C. Advancements in Technologies
There have been advancements in several technologies since proposal
that reinforce EPA's decision regarding those technologies that serve
as the appropriate basis for the final rule. For proposal, EPA
evaluated a variety of technologies available to control and treat
wastewater generated by the steam electric industry. The final rule is
based on several treatment technologies discussed in depth at proposal.
As explained then, and further discussed in Section VIII, the record
demonstrates that the technologies that form the basis for the final
rule are available. Moreover, the record indicates that, based on the
emerging market for treatment technologies, plants will have many
options to choose from when deciding how to meet the requirements of
the final rule.
The biological treatment technology that serves as part of the
basis for the final requirements for FGD wastewater
[[Page 67845]]
discharged from existing sources has been tested at power plants for
more than ten years and demonstrated in full-scale systems for more
than seven years. As this technology has matured, new vendors have
emerged to provide expertise in applying it to steam electric power
plants. In addition, other advanced technologies that plants may use to
achieve the effluent limitations and standards for FGD wastewater in
the final rule are now entering the marketplace, such as lower-cost
biological treatment systems that utilize a modular-based bioreactor,
which is prefabricated and can be delivered directly to the site.
Another advancement related to evaporation and crystallization
technology, operating at low temperatures to crystallize dissolved
solids, requires no chemical treatment of the wastewater and generates
no additional sludge for disposal, resulting in a simpler and more
economical application for treatment of both FGD wastewater and
gasification wastewater. Another development concerning the evaporation
system (which is the basis for the BAT limitations for FGD wastewater
in the voluntary incentives program, as well as the basis for the NSPS
for FGD wastewater) is a process that generates a pozzolanic material
instead of crystallized salts as a solid waste product of the treatment
system; although the pozzolanic material is expected to require
landfill disposal since it likely would not be a marketable material,
the capital and operating cost of the overall evaporation treatment
process would be reduced.
Zero valent iron (ZVI) cementation, sorption media, ion exchange,
and electrocoagulation are also examples of emerging treatment
technologies that are being developed to treat FGD wastewater, and they
could be used to achieve the limitations in the final rule. See TDD
Section 7 for a more detailed discussion.
The technologies used as the basis for the final requirements for
ash transport water (dry handling and closed-loop systems) have been in
operation at power plants for more than 20 years and are amply
demonstrated by the record supporting the final rule. Recent
advancements related to bottom ash handling technologies have focused
on providing more flexible retrofit solutions and improving the thermal
efficiency of the boiler operation. These advancements result in
additional savings related to electricity use, operation and
maintenance, water costs, and thermal energy recovery.
In sum, the record demonstrates that there have been significant
advancements in relevant treatment technologies since proposal, and EPA
expects that the advancements will continue as this rule is implemented
by the industry.
D. Engineering Costs
For the final rule, EPA updated its cost estimates to account for
public comments. The following list summarizes the main adjustments EPA
made to its cost estimates for the final rule:
Adjustment of population of generating units and changes
in wastewater treatment or ash handling practices to account for
company-announced generating unit retirements/repowerings and
conversions of ash handling systems (see Section IV.A);
Adjustment of population of generating units and changes
in wastewater treatment or ash handling practices to account for
implementation of the CCR rule and CPP rule (see Section IV.B);
Adjustments to the direct capital costs factors to better
reflect all associated installation costs;
Adjustments to the indirect capital cost factors to
account for appropriate engineering and contingency costs;
Adjustment to plant population receiving one-time bottom
ash management costs;
Addition of costs for denitrification pretreatment prior
to biological treatment of FGD wastewater (for certain plants);
Updates to costing inputs to account for costs of
additional redundancy for the fly ash dry handling system;
Addition of tank rental costs for surge capacity during
certain bottom ash handling system maintenance;
Addition of building costs for certain bottom ash and FGD
wastewater systems; and
Addition of costs for equipment that can be used to
mitigate high oxidation-reduction potential (ORP) levels in FGD
wastewater.
See Section 9 of the TDD for additional information on the plant-
specific compliance cost estimates for the final rule.
E. Economic Impact Analysis
For its analysis of the economic impact of the final rule, EPA
began with the same financial data sources for steam electric power
plants and their parent companies that were used and described in the
proposed rule, primarily collected through the Questionnaire for the
Steam Electric Power Generating Effluent Guidelines (industry survey)
\11\ and public sources. Since proposal, EPA updated some of the
analysis input data obtained from public sources to reflect the most
current information about the economic/financial conditions in, and the
regulatory environment of, the electric power industry, as well as data
on electricity prices and electricity consumption. Thus, EPA updated
its analysis to use the most current publicly available data from the
following sources: The Department of Energy's Energy Information
Administration (EIA) (in particular, the EIA 860, 861, and 906/920/923
databases),\12\ the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), the
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), and the Bureau of Economic Analysis
(BEA). As was the case for the proposed rule, EPA performed an analysis
using the Integrated Planning Model (IPM), a comprehensive electricity
market optimization model that can evaluate impacts within the context
of regional and national electricity markets. For the final rule, EPA
used an updated IPM base case (v5.13) that incorporates improvements
and data updates to the previous version (v.4.10), notably regarding
electricity demand forecast, generating capacity, market conditions,
and newly promulgated environmental regulations also affecting this
industry (see Section IX).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ For details on the industry survey, see TDD Section 3 and
78 FR 34432; June 7, 2013).
\12\ EIA-860: Annual Electric Generator Report; EIA-861: Annual
Electric Power Industry Database; EIA-923: Utility, Non-Utility, and
Combined Heat & Power Plant Database (monthly). The most current EIA
data at the time of the analysis was for the year 2012.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
F. Pollutant Data
For the final rule, EPA incorporated data submitted by public
commenters in its effluent limitations and standards development,
pollutants of concern identification, and pollutant loadings estimates.
Such data include:
Industry-submitted data representing the FGD purge, FGD
chemical precipitation effluent, and FGD biological treatment effluent
for the plants identified as operating BAT systems;
Industry-submitted ash transport water characterization
and source water data; \13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Industry also submitted bottom ash transport water data
approximately 14 months after the close of the public comment
period. EPA did not incorporate these late data into its analyses,
but it did perform a sensitivity analysis to determine how these
late data might have impacted EPA's analyses and decisions. EPA
concluded from the sensitivity analysis that the late bottom ash
transport water data would not have changed EPA's ultimate decisions
for this final rule. See DCN SE05581.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 67846]]
Industry-submitted ash impoundment effluent
concentrations; and
Industry-submitted pilot-test data related to treatment of
FGD wastewater.
EPA subjected the new data to its data quality acceptance criteria
and, as appropriate, updated its analyses accordingly. See TDD Section
3 for additional information on the data sources used in the
development of the final rule.
G. Environmental Assessment Models
Although not required to do so, EPA conducted an Environmental
Assessment for the final rule, as it did for the proposed rule. EPA
updated the environmental assessment in several ways to respond to
public comments, and improve the characterization of the environmental
and human health improvements associated with the final rule. EPA
performed dynamic water quality modeling of selected case-study
locations to supplement the results of the national-scale Immediate
Receiving Water (IRW) model. EPA supplemented the wildlife analysis by
developing and using an ecological risk model that predicts the risk of
reproductive impacts among fish and birds with dietary exposure to
selenium from steam electric power plant wastewater discharges. EPA
also updated and improved several input parameters for the IRW model,
including fish consumption rates for recreational and subsistence
fishers, the bioconcentration factor for copper, and benchmarks for
assessing the potential for impacts to benthic communities in receiving
waters. See Section XIII.A for additional discussion.
VI. Industry Description
A. General Description of Industry
EPA provided a general description of the steam electric industry
in the proposed rule and provides a complete discussion of the industry
in TDD Section 4. As described in TDD Section 4.5 (and Section V.A,
above), EPA considered retirements, fuel conversions, ash handling
conversions, wastewater treatment updates, and other industry profile
changes in the development of the final rule and supporting technical
analyses; however, the data presented in the general industry
description represents 2009 conditions, as the industry survey (See TDD
Section 3) remains the best available source of information for
characterizing operations across the industry.
B. Steam Electric Process Wastewater and Control Technologies
While almost all steam electric power plants generate certain
wastewater, like cooling water and boiler blowdown, the presence of
other wastestreams depends on the type of fuel burned. Coal- and
petroleum coke-fired generating units, and to a lesser degree oil-fired
generating units, generate a flue gas stream that contains large
quantities of particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxides,
which would be emitted to the atmosphere if they were not cleaned from
the flue gas prior to emission. Therefore, many of these generating
units are outfitted with air pollution control systems (e.g.,
particulate removal systems, FGD systems, nitrogen oxide
(NOX)-removal systems, and mercury control systems). Gas-
fired generating units generate fewer emissions of particulate matter,
sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxides than coal- or oil-fired generating
units, and therefore do not typically operate air pollution control
systems to control emissions from their flue gas. In addition, coal-,
oil-, and petroleum coke-fired generating units create fly and/or
bottom ash as a result of coal combustion. The wastewaters associated
with ash transport and air pollution control systems contain large
quantities of metals (e.g., arsenic, mercury, and selenium).
See TDD Sections 4, 6, and 7 for details on these systems, the
wastewaters they generate, the number of facilities that operate the
systems and generate wastewater, and the control technologies used for
wastewater treatment prior to discharge.
1. FGD Wastewater
FGD systems are used to remove sulfur dioxide from the flue gas so
that it is not emitted into the air. Dry FGD systems spray a sorbent
slurry into a reactor vessel so that the droplets dry as they contact
the hot flue gas. Although dry FGD scrubbers use water in their
operation, the water in most systems evaporates and they generally do
not discharge wastewater. Wet FGD systems contact the sorbent slurry
with flue gas in a reactor vessel producing a wastewater stream.
Treatment technologies for FGD wastewater include chemical
precipitation, biological treatment, and evaporation. At some plants,
this wastewater is handled in surface impoundments, constructed
wetlands, or through practices achieving zero discharge. As described
above in Section V.C and TDD section 7, EPA identified other
technologies that have been evaluated or are being developed to treat
FGD wastewater, including iron cementation, ZVI cementation, reverse
osmosis, absorption or adsorption media, ion exchange, and
electrocoagulation.
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
Plants use particulate removal systems to collect fly ash and other
particulates from the flue gas in hoppers located underneath the
equipment. Of the coal-, petroleum coke-, and oil-fired steam electric
power plants that generate fly ash, most of them transport fly ash
pneumatically from the hoppers to temporary storage silos, thereby not
generating any transport water. Some plants, however, use water to
transport (sluice) the fly ash from the hoppers to a surface
impoundment. The water used to transport the fly ash to the surface
impoundment is usually discharged to surface water as overflow from the
impoundment after the fly ash has settled to the bottom.
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
Bottom ash consists of heavier ash particles that are not entrained
in the flue gas and fall to the bottom of the furnace. In most
furnaces, the hot bottom ash is quenched in a water-filled hopper. For
purposes of this rule, boiler slag is considered bottom ash. Boiler
slag is the molten bottom ash collected at the base of the furnace that
is quenched with water. Most plants use water to transport (sluice) the
bottom ash from the hopper to an impoundment or dewatering bins. The
ash sent to a dewatering bin is separated from the transport water and
then disposed. For both of these systems, the water used to transport
the bottom ash to the impoundment or dewatering bins is usually
discharged to surface water as overflow from the systems, after the
bottom ash has settled to the bottom.
Of the coal-, petroleum coke-, and oil-fired steam electric power
plants that generate bottom ash, most operate wet sluicing handling
systems. There are two types of bottom ash handling technologies that
can meet zero discharge requirements: (1) Dry handling technologies
that do not use any water, including systems such as dry vacuum or
pressure systems, dry mechanical conveyor systems, and vibratory belt
systems; and (2) wet systems that do not generate or discharge ash
transport water, including mechanical drag systems (MDS), remote MDS,
and complete-recycle systems.
4. FGMC Wastewater
FGMC systems remove mercury from the flue gas, so that it is not
emitted into
[[Page 67847]]
the air. There are two types of systems used to control flue gas
mercury emissions: (1) Addition of oxidizing agents to the coal prior
to combustion; and (2) injection of activated carbon into the flue gas
after combustion. Addition of oxidizing agents to the coal prior to
combustion does not generate a new wastewater stream; it can, however,
increase the mercury concentration in the FGD wastewater because the
oxidized mercury is more easily removed by the FGD system. Injection of
activated carbon into the flue gas does have the potential to generate
a new wastestream at a plant, depending on the location of the
injection. If the injection occurs upstream of the primary particulate
removal system, then the mercury-containing carbon (FGMC waste) is
collected and handled the same way as, and together with, the fly ash.
Therefore, if the fly ash is wet sluiced, then the FGMC wastes are also
wet sluiced and likely sent to the same surface impoundment. In this
case, adding the FGMC waste to the fly ash can increase the amount of
mercury in the fly ash transport water. If the injection occurs
downstream of the primary particulate removal system, the plant will
need a secondary particulate removal system (typically a fabric filter)
to capture the FGMC wastes.
Of the current or planned activated carbon injection systems, most
operate upstream injection. However, plants that wish to market their
fly ash will typically inject the activated carbon downstream of the
primary particulate removal system to prevent contaminating the fly ash
with carbon. For plants operating downstream injection, the FGMC
wastes, which would be collected with some carry-over fly ash, could be
handled separately from fly ash in either a wet or dry handling system.
5. Combustion Residual Leachate From Landfills and Surface Impoundments
Combustion residuals comprise a variety of wastes from the
combustion process, which are generally collected by or generated from
air pollution control technologies. These combustion residuals can be
stored at the plant in on-site landfills or surface impoundments.
Leachate includes liquid, including any suspended or dissolved
constituents in the liquid, that has percolated through or drained from
waste or other materials placed in a landfill, or that passes through
the containment structure (e.g., bottom, dikes, berms) of a surface
impoundment. Based on data from the industry survey, most landfills and
some impoundments have a system to collect the leachate.
In a lined landfill or impoundment, the combustion residual
leachate collected in the liner is typically transported to an
impoundment (e.g., collection pond). Some plants discharge the effluent
from these impoundments containing combustion residual leachate
directly to receiving waters, while other plants first send the
impoundment effluent to another impoundment handling the ash transport
water or other treatment system (e.g., constructed wetlands) prior to
discharge. Unlined impoundments and landfills usually do not collect
leachate, which would allow the leachate to potentially migrate to
nearby ground waters, drinking water wells, or surface waters.
Using data from the industry survey and site visits, surface
impoundments are the most widely used systems to treat combustion
residual leachate. EPA also identified different management practices,
with approximately one-third of plants collecting the combustion
residual leachate from impoundments and recycling it back to the
impoundment from which it was collected. Some plants use their
collected leachate as water for moisture conditioning of dry fly ash
prior to disposal or for dust control around dry unloading areas and
landfills.
6. Gasification Wastewater
Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) plants use a carbon-
based feedstock (e.g., coal or petroleum coke) and subject it to high
temperature and pressure to produce a synthetic gas (syngas), which is
used as the fuel for a combined cycle generating unit. After the syngas
is produced, it undergoes cleaning prior to combustion. The wastewater
generated by these cleaning processes, along with any condensate
generated in flash tanks, slag handling water, or wastewater generated
from the production of sulfuric acid, is referred to as ``grey water''
or ``sour water,'' and is generally treated prior to reuse or
discharge.
EPA is aware of three plants that operate IGCC units in the U.S.
All three plants currently treat their gasification wastewater with
vapor-compression evaporation systems. One of these plants also
includes a cyanide destruction stage as part of the treatment system.
VII. Selection of Regulated Pollutants
A. Identifying the Pollutants of Concern
In determining which pollutants warrant regulation in this rule,
EPA first evaluated the wastewater characteristics to identify
pollutants of concern (POCs). Constituents present in steam electric
power plant wastewater are primarily derived from the parent carbon
feedstock (e.g., coal, petroleum coke). EPA characterized the
wastewater generated by the industry and identified POCs (those
pollutants commonly found) for each of the regulated wastestreams. For
wastestreams where the final rule establishes numeric effluent
limitations or standards, the POCs are those pollutants that have been
quantified in a wastestream at sufficient frequency at treatable levels
(concentrations). For wastestreams where EPA is establishing zero
discharge limitations or standards, the POCs identified for each
wastestream are those pollutants that are confirmed to be present at
sufficient frequency in untreated wastewater samples of that
wastestream. In both cases, in response to public comments, where EPA
had available paired source water (intake water) data for a particular
pollutant in an untreated process wastewater sample, EPA compared the
two to confirm that the concentration in the untreated process
wastewater sample exceeded that of the source water. See TDD Section
6.6 for details on EPA's analysis of POCs.
B. Selection of Pollutants for Regulation Under BAT/NSPS
For wastestreams where the final rule establishes numeric effluent
limitations or standards, effluent limitations or standards for all
POCs are not necessary to ensure that the pollutants are adequately
controlled because many of the pollutants originate from similar
sources, have similar treatability, and are removed by similar
mechanisms. Because of this, it is sufficient to establish effluent
limitations or standards for one or more indicator pollutants, which
will ensure the removal of other POCs. For wastestreams where the final
rule establishes zero discharge limitations or standards, all POCs are
directly regulated.
For wastestreams where the final rule establishes numeric effluent
limitations or standards, EPA selected a subset of pollutants as
indicators for all regulated pollutants upon consideration of the
following factors:
EPA did not set limitations or standards for pollutants
associated with treatment system additives because regulating these
pollutants could interfere with efforts to optimize treatment system
operation.
EPA did not set limitations or standards for pollutants
for which the treatment technology was ineffective
[[Page 67848]]
(e.g., pollutant concentrations remained approximately unchanged or
increased across the treatment system).
EPA did not set limitations or standards for pollutants
that are adequately controlled through the regulation of another
indicator pollutant because they have similar properties and are
treated by similar mechanisms as a regulated pollutant.
See TDD Section 11 for additional detail on EPA's analysis and
rationale for selecting the regulated pollutants.
C. Methodology for the POTW Pass-Through Analysis (PSES/PSNS)
Before establishing PSES/PSNS for a pollutant, EPA examines whether
the pollutant ``passes through'' a POTW to waters of the U.S. or
interferes with the POTW operation or sludge disposal practices. In
determining whether a pollutant passes through POTWs for these
purposes, EPA generally compares the percentage of a pollutant removed
by well-operated POTWs performing secondary treatment to the percentage
removed by the BAT/NSPS technology basis. A pollutant is determined to
pass through POTWs when the median percentage removed nationwide by
well-operated POTWs is less than the median percentage removed by the
BAT/NSPS technology basis. Pretreatment standards are established for
those pollutants regulated under BAT/NSPS that pass through POTWs.
Under this rule, for those wastestreams regulated with a zero
discharge limitation or standard, EPA set the percentage removed by the
technology basis at 100 percent. Because a POTW would not be able to
achieve 100 percent removal of wastewater pollutants, it is appropriate
to set PSES at zero discharge, otherwise pollutants would pass through
the POTW.
For wastestreams for which the final rule establishes numeric
limitations and standards, EPA determined the pollutant percentage
removed by the rule's technology basis using the same data sources used
to determine the long-term averages for each set of limitations and
standards (see TDD Section 13). As it has done for other rulemakings,
EPA determined the nationwide percentage removed by well-operated POTWs
performing secondary treatment using one of two data sources:
Fate of Priority Pollutants in Publicly Owned Treatment
Works, September 1982, EPA 440/1-82/303 (50 POTW Study); or
National Risk Management Research Laboratory Treatability
Database, Version 5.0, February 2004 (formerly called the Risk
Reduction Engineering Laboratory database).
With a few exceptions, EPA performs a POTW pass-through analysis
for pollutants selected for regulation for BAT/NSPS for each
wastestream of concern. The exception is for conventional pollutants
such as BOD5, TSS, and oil and grease. POTWs are designed to
treat these conventional pollutants; therefore, they are not considered
to pass through.
Section VIII, below, summarizes the results of the pass-through
analysis. EPA found that all of the pollutants considered for
regulation under BAT/NSPS pass through and, therefore, also selected
them for regulation under PSES/PSNS. For a more detailed discussion of
how EPA performed its pass-through analysis, see TDD Section 11.
VIII. The Final Rule
A. BPT
The final rule does not revise the previously established BPT
effluent limitations because the rule regulates the same wastestreams
at the more stringent BAT/NSPS level of control. The rule does,
however, make certain structural modifications to the BPT regulations
in light of new and revised definitions. In particular, the final rule
establishes separate definitions for FGD wastewater, FGMC wastewater,
gasification wastewater, and combustion residual leachate, making clear
that these four wastestreams are no longer considered low volume waste
sources. Given these new and revised definitions, the final rule
modifies the structure of the previously established BPT regulations so
that they specifically identify these four wastestreams, but without
changing their applicable BPT limitations, which are equal to those for
low volume waste sources.
B. BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS Options
EPA analyzed many regulatory options at proposal, the details of
which were discussed fully in the document published on June 7, 2013
(78 FR 34432). EPA proposed to regulate pollutants found in seven
wastestreams found at steam electric power plants, each based on
particular control technologies. Depending on the interests
represented, public commenters supported virtually all of the
regulatory options that EPA proposed--from the least stringent to the
most stringent, and many options in between. For this final rule, based
on public comments, EPA also considered a few additional regulatory
options. None of these additional regulatory options involve regulation
of different pollutants or wastestreams, or the application of
different control technologies, than those explicitly considered and
presented at proposal. Rather, they involve slight variations on the
overall packaging of the key options presented at proposal. Thus, in
developing this final rule, EPA named six main regulatory options,
Options A, B, C, D, E, and F.\14\ Table VIII-1 summarizes these six
regulatory options. In general, as one moves from Option A to Option F,
there is a greater estimated reduction in pollutant discharges from
steam electric power plants and a higher associated cost.
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\14\ Option B is equivalent to Proposed Option 3, Option C is
equivalent to Proposed Option 4a, Option E is equivalent to Proposed
Option 4, and Option F is equivalent to Proposed Option 5. Option A
is a slight variant of Proposed Options 1 and 3 and Option D is a
slight variant of Proposed Option 4.
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The following paragraphs describe the six options (Options A
through F), by wastestream, including the technology bases for the
requirements associated with each.
TABLE VIII-1--Final Rule: Steam Electric Main Regulatory Options
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Technology basis for the main BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS regulatory options
Wastestreams -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A B C D E F
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FGD Wastewater.................. Chemical Chemical Chemical Chemical Chemical Evaporation.
Precipitation. Precipitation + Precipitation + Precipitation + Precipitation +
Biological Biological Biological Biological
Treatment. Treatment. Treatment. Treatment.
Fly Ash Transport Water......... Dry handling...... Dry handling...... Dry handling...... Dry handling...... Dry handling...... Dry handling.
[[Page 67849]]
Bottom Ash Transport Water...... Impoundment (Equal Impoundment (Equal Dry handling/ Dry handling/ Dry handling/ Dry handling/
to BPT). to BPT). Closed loop (for Closed loop. Closed loop. Closed loop.
units >400 MW);
Impoundment
(Equal to
BPT)(for units
<=400 MW).
FGMC Wastewater................. Dry handling...... Dry handling...... Dry handling...... Dry handling...... Dry handling...... Dry handling.
Gasification Wastewater......... Evaporation....... Evaporation....... Evaporation....... Evaporation....... Evaporation....... Evaporation.
Combustion Residual Leachate.... Impoundment (Equal Impoundment (Equal Impoundment (Equal Impoundment (Equal Chemical Chemical
to BPT). to BPT). to BPT). to BPT). Precipitation. Precipitation.
Nonchemical Metal Cleaning [Reserved]........ [Reserved]........ [Reserved]........ [Reserved]........ [Reserved]........ [Reserved].
Wastes.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with the proposal, under all Options A through F, for
oil-fired generating units and small generating units (50 MW or
smaller) that are existing sources, the rule would establish BAT/PSES
effluent limitations and standards on TSS in fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, FGD wastewater, FGMC wastewater, combustion
residual leachate, and gasification wastewater equal to the previously
promulgated BPT effluent limitations on TSS \15\ in fly ash transport
water, bottom ash transport water, and low volume waste sources, where
applicable. Under Options A through E, EPA would establish a voluntary
incentives program for plants that choose to meet BAT limitations for
FGD wastewater based on evaporation technology, as described in Section
VIII.C.13. Moreover, as EPA proposed, under all Options A through F,
the rule would establish an anti-circumvention provision designed to
ensure that the purpose of the rule is achieved, as further described
below, in Section VIII.G. Finally, as EPA proposed, under all Options A
through F, the rule would correct a typographical error in the
previously promulgated regulations, as well as make certain clarifying
revisions to the applicability provision of the regulations, as further
described below, in Section VIII.H.
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\15\ Although TSS is a conventional pollutant, whenever EPA
would be regulating TSS in this final rule, it would be regulating
it as an indicator pollutant for the particulate form of toxic
metals.
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1. FGD Wastewater
Under Option A, EPA would establish effluent limitations and
standards for mercury and arsenic in FGD wastewater based on treatment
using chemical precipitation. Under Options B through E, EPA would
establish effluent limitations and standards for mercury, arsenic,
selenium, and nitrate/nitrite as N in FGD wastewater based on treatment
using chemical precipitation (as under Option A) followed by biological
treatment. Under Option F, EPA would establish effluent limitations and
standards for mercury, arsenic, selenium, and TDS in FGD wastewater
based on treatment using an evaporation system. Under all options, to
facilitate implementation of the new BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS requirements,
EPA would also promulgate a definition for FGD wastewater, making clear
it would no longer be considered a low volume waste source.
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
Under all Options A through F, EPA would establish (or in the case
of NSPS/PSNS, maintain) zero discharge effluent limitations and
standards for pollutants in fly ash transport water based on use of a
dry handling system.
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
Under Options A and B, EPA would establish effluent limitations and
standards for bottom ash transport water equal to the previously
promulgated BPT limitation on TSS, which is based on the use of a
surface impoundment. Under Options D, E, and F, EPA would establish
zero discharge effluent limitations and standards for pollutants in
bottom ash transport water based on one of two technologies: A dry
handling system or a closed-loop system. Under Option C, EPA would
establish, for bottom ash transport water, zero discharge limitations
and standards based on dry handling or closed-loop systems only for
generating units with a nameplate capacity of more than 400 MW. Units
with a nameplate capacity equal to or less than 400 MW would have to
meet new effluent limitations and standards equal to the previously
established BPT limitation on TSS, based on surface impoundments.
4. FGMC Wastewater
Under all Options A through F, EPA would establish zero discharge
effluent limitations and standards for FGMC wastewater based on use of
a dry handling system. Under all Options A through F, EPA would
establish a separate definition for FGMC wastewater, making clear it
would no longer be considered a low volume waste source.
5. Gasification Wastewater
The technology basis for control of gasification wastewater under
all Options A through F is an evaporation system. Under these options,
EPA would establish limitations and standards on arsenic, mercury,
selenium, and TDS in gasification wastewater. Under all Options A
through F, EPA would establish a separate definition for gasification
wastewater, making clear it would no longer be considered a low volume
waste source.
6. Combustion Residual Leachate
Under Options A through D, EPA would establish effluent limitations
and standards for combustion residual leachate equal to the previously
promulgated BPT limitation on TSS for low volume waste sources. Under
Options E and F, EPA would establish additional limitations and
standards for arsenic and mercury in combustion residual leachate based
on treatment using a chemical precipitation system (the same technology
basis for control of FGD wastewater under Option A). Under all Options
A through F, EPA would establish a separate definition for combustion
residual leachate, making
[[Page 67850]]
clear it would no longer be considered a low volume waste source.
7. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Wastes
Under all Options A through F, EPA would continue to reserve BAT/
NSPS/PSES/PSNS for non-chemical metal cleaning wastes, as the
previously established regulations do.
C. Best Available Technology
After considering the technologies described in this preamble and
Section 7 of the TDD, as well as public comments, and in light of the
factors specified in CWA sections 304(b)(2)(B) and 301(b)(2)(A) (see
Section IV.B.3), EPA decided to establish BAT effluent limitations
based on the technologies described in Option D. Thus, for BAT, the
final rule establishes: (1) Limitations on arsenic, mercury, selenium,
and nitrate/nitrite as N in FGD wastewater, based on chemical
precipitation plus biological treatment; \16\ (2) a zero discharge
limitation for pollutants in fly ash transport water, based on dry
handling; (3) a zero discharge limitation for pollutants in bottom ash
transport water, based on dry handling or closed-loop systems; (4) a
zero discharge limitation on all pollutants in FGMC wastewater, based
on dry handling; (5) limitations on mercury, arsenic, selenium, and TDS
in gasification wastewater, based on evaporation; \17\ and (6) a
limitation on TSS in combustion residual leachate, based on surface
impoundments.\18\ The final rule also establishes new definitions for
FGD wastewater, FGMC wastewater, gasification wastewater, and
combustion residual leachate.
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\16\ For those plants that choose to participate in the
voluntary incentives program, the applicable limitations are for
arsenic, mercury, selenium, and TDS in FGD wastewater, based on the
use of an evaporation system (see Section VIII.C.13).
\17\ For small (50 MW or less) generating units and oil-fired
generating units, the final rule establishes different BAT
limitations for FGD wastewater, fly ash transport water, bottom ash
transport water, FGMC wastewater, and gasification wastewater (see
Section VIII.C.12).
\18\ The final rule also establishes BAT limitations on TSS in
discharges of ``legacy wastewater,'' which are equal to previously
established TSS limitations. See Section VIII.C.8.
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1. FGD Wastewater
This rule identifies treatment using chemical precipitation
followed by biological treatment as the BAT technology basis for
control of pollutants discharged in FGD wastewater. More specifically,
the technology basis for BAT is a chemical precipitation system that
employs hydroxide precipitation, sulfide precipitation (organosulfide),
and iron coprecipitation, followed by an anoxic/anaerobic fixed-film
biological treatment system designed to remove heavy metals, selenium,
and nitrates.\19\ After accounting for industry changes described in
Section V, forty-five percent of all steam electric power plants with
wet scrubbers have equipment or processes in place able to meet the
final BAT/PSES effluent limitations and standards.\20\ Many of these
plants use FGD wastewater management approaches that eliminate the
discharge of FGD wastewater.\21\ Other plants employ wastewater
treatment technologies that reduce the amount of pollutants in the FGD
wastestream. Both chemical precipitation and biological treatment are
well-demonstrated technologies that are available to steam electric
power plants for use in treating FGD wastewater. Based on industry
survey responses, 39 U.S. steam electric power plants (44 percent of
plants discharging FGD wastewater) use some form of chemical
precipitation as part of their FGD wastewater treatment system. More
than half of these plants (30 percent of plants discharging FGD
wastewater) use both hydroxide and sulfide precipitation in the process
to further reduce metals concentrations. In addition, chemical
precipitation has been used at thousands of industrial facilities
nationwide for the last several decades (see TDD Section 7).
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\19\ In estimating costs associated with this technology basis,
EPA assumed that in order to meet the limitations and standards,
certain plants with high FGD discharge flow rates (greater than or
equal to 1,000 gpm) would elect to incorporate flow minimization
into their operating practices (by reducing the FGD purge rate or
recycling a portion of their FGD wastewater back to the FGD system),
where the FGD system metallurgy can accommodate an increase in
chlorides. See Section 4.5.4 of EPA's Incremental Costs and
Pollutant Removals for the Final Effluent Limitations Guidelines and
Standards for the Steam Electric Power Generating Point Source
Category (DCNs SE05831 and SE05832).
\20\ This value accounts for announced retirements, conversions,
and changes plants are projected to make to comply with the CPP and
CCR rules.
\21\ A variety of approaches that depend on plant specific
conditions are used to achieve zero pollutant discharge at these
plants, including evaporation ponds, complete recycle, and processes
that combine the FGD wastewater with other materials for landfill
disposal. Although these technologies, as well as others currently
used for achieve zero pollutant discharge, may be available for some
plants with FGD wastewater, EPA determined they are not available
nationally. For example, evaporation ponds are only available in
certain climates. Similarly, complete recycle is only available at
plants with appropriate FGD metallurgy.
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Biological treatment has been tested at power plants for more than
ten years and full-scale systems have been operating at a subset of
plants for seven years. It has been widely used in many industrial
applications for decades, in both the U.S. and abroad, and it has been
employed at coal mines. Currently, six U.S. steam electric power plants
(approximately ten percent of those discharging FGD wastewater) use
biological treatment designed to substantially reduce nitrogen
compounds and selenium in their FGD wastewater. Other power plants are
considering installing biological treatment to remove selenium, and at
least one plant is scheduled to begin operating a biological treatment
system for selenium removal soon. Four of the six plants using
biological systems to treat their FGD wastewater precede the biological
treatment stage with chemical precipitation; thus, the entire system is
designed to remove suspended solids, particulate and dissolved metals
(such as mercury and arsenic), soluble and insoluble forms of selenium,
and nitrate and nitrite forms of nitrogen. These plants show that
chemical precipitation followed by biological treatment is
technologically available and demonstrated. The other two plants
operating anoxic/anaerobic bioreactors to remove selenium precede the
biological treatment stage with surface impoundments instead of
chemical precipitation. The treatment systems at these two plants are
likely to be less effective at removing metals (including many
dissolved metals) and would likely face more operational problems than
the plants employing chemical pretreatment, but they nevertheless show
the efficacy and availability of biological treatment for removing
selenium and nitrate/nitrite in FGD wastewater.
A few commenters questioned the feasibility of biological treatment
at some power plants. Specifically, they claimed, in part, that the
efficacy of biological systems is unpredictable and is subject to
temperature changes, high chloride concentrations, scaling, and high
oxidation-reduction potential (ORP) in the absorber, which could kill
the microorganisms in the bioreactor. EPA's record does not support
these assertions for a well-designed and well-operated chemical
precipitation and biological treatment system.
EPA's record demonstrates that proper pretreatment prior to
biological treatment and proper monitoring with adjustments to the
treatment system as necessary are key to reducing operational concerns
raised by commenters. Proper pretreatment includes chemical
precipitation, which can address wastewater containing high oxidant
loads through addition of a reducing agent in one of the treatment
[[Page 67851]]
system's reaction tanks.\22\ It also includes pretreatment of FGD
wastewater containing exceptionally high levels of nitrates (e.g.,
greater than 100 ppm nitrate/nitrite as N) using standard
denitrification technologies such as membrane bioreactors or stirred-
tank bioreactors. Moreover, recent pilot studies of biological
treatment systems for FGD wastewater treatment, along with data for
full-scale biological treatment systems, demonstrate that monitoring
ORP, pH, and total oxidant load is essential for proper operation of
these systems. Monitoring these parameters enables the plant to adjust
the system as necessary. For example, plants that monitor ORP in the
absorber or in the FGD purge will have sufficient advanced warning to
respond to elevated ORP levels by adding a chemical reductant to the
chemical precipitation system and/or increasing the feed rate of the
nutrient mix in the biological reactor. EPA's cost estimates account
for all of these pretreatment and monitoring steps. EPA's record,
moreover, shows that the treatment systems that form the bases for the
BAT limitations for FGD wastewater are able to effectively remove the
regulated pollutants at varying influent concentrations. See DCN
SE05733. Finally, as discussed in Section V.C, vendors continue to make
improvements to these systems and to develop non-biological systems for
selenium removal. For additional information on strategies to address
potential operational concerns, see DCNs SE04208 and SE04222.
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\22\ EPA included the equipment for chemical addition of a
reducing agent in its cost estimates for Options B through E.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters also claimed that the efficacy of biological
systems in removing selenium is subject to changes in switching from
one coal type to another (also referred to as fuel flexing). Where EPA
had biological treatment performance data paired with fuel type, EPA
reviewed it and found that existing biological treatment systems
continue to perform well during periods of fuel switching. See DCN
SE05846. The data show that, in all cases except one, the plants met
the selenium limitations following fuel switches. In one instance when
a plant switched to a certain coal type, the plant exceeded the final
daily maximum selenium limitation for one out of thirteen observations
for the month while the average of all values for that month were below
the final monthly selenium limitation. This plant was not subject to a
selenium limit at the time data was collected. Moreover, EPA's record
demonstrates that effective communication between the operator(s) of
the generating unit and the boiler, as well as bench testing and
monitoring the ORP, and making proper adjustments to the operation of
the treatment system, would make it possible to prevent potential
selenium exceedances at this plant. Data for two other plants operating
full-scale biological treatment systems shows that fuel switches should
not result in exceeding the effluent limitations. EPA also has data
from a pilot project at another plant employing the same type of coal
used by the one plant that experienced elevated selenium effluent
concentrations following a coal switch. The data for this pilot project
demonstrate effective selenium removal by the BAT technology basis,
with all effluent values at concentrations below the BAT limitations
established in this rule.
EPA also reviewed effluent data in the record for plants operating
combined chemical precipitation and biological treatment for FGD
wastewater to evaluate how cycling operation (i.e., changes in
electricity generation rate) and short or extended shutdown periods may
affect the ability of plants to meet the BAT effluent limitations.
These data demonstrate that cycling operations and shutdown periods,
whether short or long in duration, are manageable and do not result in
plants being unable to meet the ELG effluent limitations. See DCN
SE05846.
EPA did not select surface impoundments as the BAT technology basis
for FGD wastewater because it would not result in reasonable further
progress toward eliminating the discharge of all pollutants,
particularly toxic pollutants (see CWA section 301(b)(2)(A)). Surface
impoundments, which rely on gravity to remove particulates from
wastewater, are the technology basis for the previously promulgated BPT
effluent limitations for low volume waste sources. Pollutants that are
present mostly in soluble (dissolved) form, such as selenium, boron,
and magnesium, are not effectively and reliably removed by gravity in
surface impoundments. For metals present in both soluble and
particulate forms (such as mercury), gravity settling in surface
impoundments does not effectively remove the dissolved fraction.
Furthermore, the environment in some surface impoundments can create
chemical conditions (e.g., low pH) that convert particulate forms of
metals to soluble forms, which are not removed by the gravity settling
process. Additionally, the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) has
reported that adding FGD wastewater to surface impoundments used to
treat ash transport water can reduce the settling efficiency in the
impoundments due to gypsum particle dissolution, thus increasing the
effluent TSS concentrations. Discharging wastewater containing elevated
levels of TSS would likely result in also discharging other pollutants
(e.g., metals) in higher concentrations. EPRI has also reported that
FGD wastewater includes high loadings of volatile metals, which can
increase the solubility of metals in surface impoundments, thereby
leading to increased levels of dissolved metals and higher
concentrations of metals in discharges from surface impoundments.
Finally, as described in Section 8 of the TDD, surface impoundments are
also subject to seasonal turnover, which adversely affects their
efficacy. Seasonal turnover occurs when the impoundment's upper layer
of water becomes cooler and denser, typically as the season changes
from summer to fall. The cooler, upper layer of water then sinks and
causes the entire volume of the impoundment to circulate, which can
result in resuspension of solids that had settled to the bottom and a
consequent increase in the concentrations of pollutants discharged from
the impoundment.
Chemical precipitation and biological treatment are more effective
than surface impoundments at removing both soluble and particulate
forms of metals, as well as other pollutants such as nitrogen compounds
and TDS. Because many of the pollutants of concern in FGD wastewater
are present in dissolved form and would not be removed by surface
impoundments, and because of the relatively large mass loads of these
pollutants (e.g., selenium, dissolved mercury) discharged in the FGD
wastestream, EPA decided not to finalize BAT effluent limitations for
FGD wastewater based on surface impoundments.
EPA also rejected identifying chemical precipitation, alone,
(Option A) as BAT for FGD wastewater because, while chemical
precipitation systems are capable of achieving removals of various
metals, the technology is not effective at removing selenium, nitrogen
compounds, and certain metals that contribute to high concentrations of
TDS in FGD wastewater. These pollutants of concern are discharged by
steam electric power plants throughout the nation, causing adverse
human health impacts and some of the most egregious environmental
impacts (see Section XIII and EA). In light of this, and the fact that
economically achievable technologies are available to
[[Page 67852]]
reduce these pollutants of concern, EPA determined that, by itself,
chemical precipitation would not result in reasonable further progress
toward the national goal of eliminating the discharge of all pollutants
(see CWA section 301(b)(2)(A)), and rejected that technology basis as
BAT in favor of chemical precipitation followed by anaerobic/anoxic
biological treatment.
EPA also decided not to establish, for all steam electric power
plants, BAT limitations for FGD wastewater based on treatment using an
evaporation system. In particular, this technology basis would employ a
falling-film evaporator (also known as a brine concentrator) to produce
a concentrated wastewater stream (brine) and a distillate stream.\23\
While evaporation systems are effective at removing boron and
pollutants that contribute to high concentrations of TDS, EPA decided
it would not be appropriate to identify evaporation as the BAT
technology basis for FGD wastewater at all steam electric power plants
because of the high cost of possible regulatory requirements based on
evaporation for discharges of FGD wastewater at existing facilities.
The annual cost to the industry of limitations based on evaporation
would be more than 2 and \1/2\ times the cost to industry estimated for
the final rule (after tax) (approximately $570 million more expensive
than the final rule, on an annual basis, after tax). Given the high
costs associated with the technology, and the fact that the steam
electric industry is facing costs associated with several other rules
in addition to this rule, EPA decided not to establish BAT limitations
for FGD wastewater based on evaporation for all steam electric power
plants. Nevertheless, as described further below, in Section VIII.C.13,
the final rule does establish a voluntary incentives program under
which steam electric power plants can choose to be subject to more
stringent BAT limitations for FGD wastewater based on evaporation.
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\23\ This evaporation step would have been preceded by a
chemical precipitation step using hydroxide precipitation, sulfide
precipitation, and iron co-precipitation, as well as a softening
step.
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Finally, EPA decided not to establish a requirement that would
direct permitting authorities to establish limitations for FGD
wastewater using site-specific BPJ. Public commenters representing
industry, state, and environmental group interests urged EPA not to
establish any requirement that would leave BAT effluent limitations for
FGD wastewater to be determined on a BPJ basis. Sections 301 and 304 of
the CWA require EPA to develop nationally applicable ELGs based on the
best available technology economically achievable, taking certain
factors into account. EPA decided that it would not be appropriate to
leave FGD wastewater requirements in the final rule to be determined on
a BPJ basis because there are sufficient data to set uniform,
nationally applicable limitations on FGD wastewater at plants across
the nation. Given this, BPJ permitting of FGD wastewater would place an
unnecessary burden on permitting authorities, including state and local
agencies, to conduct a complex technical analysis that they may not
have the resources or expertise to complete. BPJ permitting of FGD
wastewater would also unnecessarily burden the regulated industry
because of associated delays and uncertainty with respect to permits.
2. Fly Ash Transport Water
This rule identifies dry handling as the BAT technology basis for
control of pollutants in fly ash transport water. Specifically, the
technology basis for BAT is a dry vacuum system that employs a
mechanical exhauster to pneumatically convey the fly ash (via a change
in air pressure) from hoppers directly to a silo. Dry handling is
clearly available to control the pollutants present in fly ash
transport water. Today, the vast majority of steam electric power
plants use dry handling techniques to manage fly ash, and by doing so
avoid generating fly ash transport water. All new generating units
built since the ELGs were last revised in 1982 have been subject to a
zero discharge standard for pollutants in fly ash transport water. In
addition, many owners and operators with generating units that are not
subject to the previously established zero discharge NSPS for fly ash
transport water have chosen to retrofit their units with dry fly ash
handling technology to meet operational needs or for economic reasons.
The trend in the industry is, moreover, toward the conversion and use
of dry fly ash handling systems. See TDD Section 4.5. Based on data
collected in the industry survey, EPA estimates that approximately 80
percent of coal and petroleum coke-fired generating units operate dry
fly ash handling systems. Since the survey, companies have continued to
upgrade, or announce plans to upgrade, their ash handling systems at
generating units. See TDD Section 4.5.
Dry ash handling does not adversely affect plant operations or
reliability, and it promotes the beneficial reuse of coal combustion
residuals. In addition, converting to dry fly ash handling eliminates
the need to treat fly ash transport water in a surface impoundment, and
it reduces the amount of wastes entering surface impoundments and the
risk and severity of structural failures and spills.
EPA decided not to finalize a BAT limitation on fly ash transport
water equal to the previously promulgated BPT limitation on TSS, based
on the technology of surface impoundments, for the same reasons (where
applicable) that EPA did not identify surface impoundments as BAT for
FGD wastewater (see Section VIII.C.1).
3. Bottom Ash Transport Water
This rule identifies dry handling or closed-loop systems as the BAT
technology basis for control of pollutants in bottom ash transport
water.\24\ More specifically, the first technology basis for BAT is a
system in which bottom ash is collected in a water quench bath and a
drag chain conveyor (mechanical drag system) then pulls the bottom ash
out of the water bath on an incline to dewater the bottom ash. The
second technology basis for BAT is a system in which the bottom ash is
transported using the same processes as a wet-sluicing system, but
instead of going to an impoundment, the bottom ash is sluiced to a
remote mechanical drag system. Once there, a drag chain conveyor pulls
the bottom ash out of the water on an incline to dewater the bottom
ash, and the transport (sluice) water is then recycled back to the
bottom ash collection system.
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\24\ EPA identified two technologies, a mechanical drag system
or a remote mechanical drag system, as the BAT technology basis for
bottom ash transport water because of potential space constraints at
some plants' boilers.
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These technologies for control of bottom ash transport water are
demonstrably available. Based on survey data, more than 80 percent of
coal-fired generating units built in the last 20 years have installed
dry bottom ash handling systems. In addition, EPA found that more than
half of the entities that would be subject to BAT requirements for
bottom ash transport water are already employing zero discharge
technologies (dry handling or closed-loop wet ash handling) or planning
to do so in the near future.
Dry bottom ash handling does not adversely affect plant operations
or reliability, and shifting to dry bottom ash handling offers certain
benefits. As was the case for dry fly ash handling, shifting to dry
bottom ash handling eliminates the need to send bottom ash transport
water to a surface impoundment, and it reduces the
[[Page 67853]]
amount of waste entering surface impoundments and the risk and severity
of structural failures and spills. Furthermore, one way companies may
choose to comply with the final rule's requirements is to install a
completely dry bottom ash system, which increases the energy efficiency
of the boiler, thus reducing the amount of coal burned and associated
emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other pollutants per
MW of electricity generated. On an annual basis, EPA calculated
significant fuel savings and reduced air emissions from such systems,
the value of which EPA estimates to be $41 million to $117 million per
year.\25\ See DCN SE05980.
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\25\ Neither these savings nor the fuel and emissions reductions
have been incorporated into EPA's analyses for this final rule.
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EPA did not identify surface impoundments as BAT for bottom ash
transport water for the same reasons (where applicable) that it did not
identify surface impoundments as BAT for FGD wastewater (see Section
VIII.C.1). Moreover, because the estimated overall cost of the rule has
decreased since proposal (see Section IX), EPA also decided that
establishing different bottom ash transport water limitations for
generating units of and below a certain size (other than 50 MW, as
described in Section VIII.C.12), as in Option C, was not warranted.
At proposal and for the final rule, EPA considered an option that
would have established differentiated bottom ash transport water
requirements for units below 400 MW (Option C). Some public commenters
stated that EPA's record does not support differentiated requirements
for bottom ash transport water. They stated that BAT should be
established at a level at which the costs are affordable to the
industry as a whole, and that the cost to a unit in terms of dollars
per amount of energy produced (in MW) is not a relevant factor. They
cited EPA's record, which demonstrates that units of all sizes have
installed dry handling and closed-loop systems, as well as EPA's
economic achievability analysis, which does not show that units of 400
MW or less are especially likely to shut down if faced with a zero
discharge requirement. Other commenters supported EPA's consideration
of the relative magnitude of costs per amount of energy produced for
units below or equal to 400 MW, as compared to larger units, as well as
differentiated bottom ash transport water requirements for these units.
EPA reviewed its record and re-evaluated whether it would be
appropriate to establish differentiated requirements for discharges of
bottom ash transport water from existing sources based on unit size, in
light of comments and the key changes since proposal discussed in
Section V. Annualized cost per amount of energy produced increases
along a smooth curve moving from the very largest units to the smallest
units. See DCN SE05813. That, however, is expected due to economies of
scale. There is no clear breaking point at which to establish a size
threshold for purposes of differentiated requirements for bottom ash
transport water.\26\ Furthermore, EPA collected information in the
industry survey that found that units of all sizes, including those
less than 400 MW, have installed dry handling and closed-loop systems.
And, as further described below, EPA projects a net retirement of only
843 MW under the final rule. This suggests that, as a group, units of
400 MW or less do not face particularly unique hardships under the
final rule with respect to the industry as a whole. For these reasons,
the final rule does not establish differentiated bottom ash transport
water requirements for units equal to or below 400 MW (or for units
equal to or below any other size threshold, other than 50 MW, as
explained in Section VIII.C.12).
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\26\ At the same time, costs per amount of energy produced do
begin to increase very dramatically as one moves from units above 50
MW to units that are equal to 50 MW and smaller, and thus for
reasons described in Section VIII.C.12, the final rule establishes
different requirements for units of 50 MW or less for several
wastestreams, including bottom ash transport water.
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4. FGMC Wastewater
This rule identifies dry handling as the BAT technology basis for
the control of pollutants in FGMC wastewater. More specifically, the
technology basis for BAT is a dry vacuum system that employs a
mechanical exhauster to convey the FGMC waste (via a change in air
pressure) from hoppers directly to a silo. Dry handling of FGMC waste
is available and well demonstrated in the industry; indeed, nearly all
plants with FGMC systems use dry handling systems. Plants using sorbent
injection systems (e.g., activated carbon injection) to reduce mercury
emissions from the flue gas typically handle the spent sorbent in the
same manner as their fly ash (see Section VI.B.4 and TDD Section 7.5).
As of 2009, 92 percent of the industry generating FGMC waste uses dry
handling to manage it. Only a few plants use wet systems to transport
the spent sorbent to disposal in surface impoundments. Based on the
industry survey, the plants using wet handling systems operate them as
closed-loop systems and do not discharge FGMC wastewater, or they
already have a dry handling system that is capable of achieving zero
discharge. Under the zero discharge limitation, these plants could
choose to continue to operate their wet systems as closed-loop systems,
or they could convert to dry handling technologies by managing the fly
ash and spent sorbent together in a retrofitted dry system (rather than
an impoundment) or by installing dedicated dry handling equipment for
the FGMC waste similar to the equipment used for fly ash.
EPA decided that it would not be appropriate to establish BAT
limitations for FGMC wastewater based on surface impoundments for the
same reasons (where applicable) that it did not identify surface
impoundments as BAT for FGD wastewater (see Section VIII.C.1).
5. Gasification Wastewater
This rule identifies evaporation as the BAT technology basis for
the control of pollutants in gasification wastewater. More
specifically, the technology basis for BAT is an evaporation system
using a falling-film evaporator (or brine concentrator) to produce a
concentrated wastewater stream (brine) and a reusable distillate
stream. This evaporation technology is available and well demonstrated
in the industry for treatment of gasification wastewater. All three
IGCC plants now operating in the U.S. (the only existing sources of
gasification wastewater) use evaporation technology to treat their
gasification wastewater.
EPA did not identify surface impoundments as BAT for gasification
wastewater for the same reasons (where applicable) that it did not
identify surface impoundments as BAT for FGD wastewater (see Section
VIII.C.1). In addition, one existing IGCC plant previously used a
surface impoundment to treat its gasification wastewater, and the
impoundment effluent repeatedly exceeded its NPDES permit effluent
limitations necessary to meet applicable WQS. Because of the
demonstrated inability of surface impoundments to remove the pollutants
of concern, and given that current industry practice is treatment of
gasification wastewater using evaporation, EPA concluded that surface
impoundments do not represent BAT for gasification wastewater.
EPA also considered including cyanide treatment as part of the
technology basis for BAT (as well as NSPS, PSES, and PSNS) for
gasification wastewater. EPA is aware that the Edwardsport IGCC plant,
which began commercial operation in June 2013, includes cyanide
destruction as one step
[[Page 67854]]
in the treatment process for gasification wastewater. EPA, however,
does not currently have sufficient data with which to calculate
possible ELGs for cyanide. Thus, EPA decided not to establish cyanide
limitations or standards for gasification wastewater in this rule. This
decision does not preclude permitting authorities from setting more
stringent effluent limitations where necessary to meet WQS. In those
cases, plants may elect to install additional treatment, like cyanide
destruction, to meet water quality-based effluent limitations.
6. Combustion Residual Leachate
EPA received public comments expressing concern that the proposed
definition of combustion residual leachate would apply to contaminated
stormwater. Although this was not the Agency's intention, for the final
rule, EPA revised the definition to make it clear that contaminated
stormwater does not fall within the final definition of combustion
residual leachate. This rule identifies surface impoundments as the BAT
technology basis for control of pollutants in combustion residual
leachate. Based on surface impoundments, which relies on gravity to
remove particulates, this rule establishes a BAT limitation on TSS in
combustion residual leachate equal to the previously promulgated BPT
limitation on TSS in low volume waste sources. Few steam electric power
plants currently employ technologies other than surface impoundments
for treatment of combustion residual leachate. Throughout the
development of this rule, EPA considered whether technologies in place
for treatment of other wastestreams at steam electric power plants and
wastestreams generated by other industries, including chemical
precipitation, could be used for combustion residual leachate. At
proposal, noting the small amount of pollutants in combustion residual
leachate relative to other significant wastestreams at steam electric
power plants, and that this was an area ripe for innovation, EPA
requested additional information related to cost, pollutant reduction,
and effectiveness of chemical precipitation and alternative approaches
to treat combustion residual leachate. Commenters did not provide
information that EPA could use to establish BAT limitations. Thus, EPA
decided not to finalize BAT limitations for combustion residual
leachate based on chemical precipitation (Option E). The record
demonstrates that the amount of pollutants collectively discharged in
combustion residual leachate by steam electric power plants is a very
small portion of the pollutants discharged collectively by all steam
electric power plants (approximately 3 percent of baseline loadings, on
a toxic-weighted basis). Given this, and the fact that this rule
regulates the wastestreams representing the three largest sources of
pollutants from steam electric power plants (including by setting a
zero discharge standard for two out of the three wastestreams), EPA
decided that this rule already represents reasonable further progress
toward the CWA's goals. The final rule, therefore, establishes BAT
limitations for combustion residual leachate equal to the BPT
limitation on TSS for low volume waste sources.
7. Timing
As part of the consideration of the technological availability and
economic achievability of the BAT limitations in the rule, EPA
considered the magnitude and complexity of process changes and new
equipment installations that would be required at facilities to meet
the rule's requirements. As described in greater detail in Section
XVI.A.1, where BAT limitations in this rule are more stringent than
previously established BPT limitations, those limitations do not apply
until a date determined by the permitting authority that is as soon as
possible beginning November 1, 2018 (approximately three years
following promulgation of this rule), but that is also no later than
December 31, 2023 (approximately eight years following promulgation).
Consistent with the proposal and supported by many commenters, the
final rule takes this approach in order to provide the time that many
facilities need to raise capital, plan and design systems, procure
equipment, and construct and then test systems. It also allows for
consideration of plant changes being made in response to other Agency
rules affecting the steam electric industry (see Section V.B).
Moreover, it enables facilities to take advantage of planned shutdown
or maintenance periods to install new pollution control
technologies.\27\ EPA's decision is also designed to allow, more
broadly, for the coordination of generating unit outages in order to
maintain grid reliability and prevent any potential impacts on
electricity availability, something that public commenters urged EPA to
consider. In addition, as requested by industry and states, this final
rule and preamble clarify how the ``as soon as possible date'' is
determined and implemented for steam electric power plants. The final
rule specifies the factors that the permitting authority must consider
in determining the ``as soon as possible'' date, and Section XVI.A.1
provides guidance on implementation with respect to timing. In
addition, the rule includes a ``no later than'' date of December 31,
2023, for implementation because, as public commenters pointed out,
without such a date, implementation could be substantially delayed, and
a firm ``no later than'' date creates a more level playing field across
the industry. EPA's economic analysis assumes prompt renewal of permits
(no permits will be administratively continued) and, thus, that the
requirements of the rule will be fully implemented by 2023. While some
commenters requested that EPA give permitting authorities the ability
to extend the implementation period beyond December 31, 2023, in light
of public comments received on the proposal, and the fact that plants
can reasonably be expected to meet the new ELGs by December 31, 2023,
this timeframe is appropriate given the CWA's pollutant discharge
elimination goals (see CWA section 101(a)).
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\27\ EPA's record demonstrates that plants typically have one or
two planned shut-downs annually and that the length of these
shutdowns is more than adequate to complete installation of relevant
treatment and control technologies.
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8. Legacy Wastewater
For purposes of the BAT limitations in this rule, this preamble
uses the term ``legacy wastewater'' to refer to FGD wastewater, fly ash
transport water, bottom ash transport water, FGMC wastewater, or
gasification wastewater generated prior to the date determined by the
permitting authority that is as soon as possible beginning November 1,
2018, but no later than December 31, 2023 (see Section VIII.C.7). Under
this rule, legacy wastewater must comply with specific BAT limitations,
which EPA is setting equal to the previously promulgated BPT
limitations on TSS in the discharge of fly ash transport water, bottom
ash transport water, and low volume waste sources.
EPA did not establish zero discharge BAT limitations for legacy
wastewater because technologies that can achieve zero discharge (such
as the ones on which the final BAT requirements discussed in Sections
VIII.C.2, 3, and 4, above, are based) are not shown to be available for
legacy wastewater. Legacy wastewater already exists in wet form, and
thus dry handling could not be used eliminate its discharge.
Furthermore, EPA lacks data to show that legacy wastewater could be
reliably incorporated into a closed-loop process that eliminates
discharges, given the variation in operating practices among
[[Page 67855]]
surface impoundments containing legacy wastewater.
EPA also decided not to establish BAT limitations for legacy
wastewater based on a technology other than surface impoundments
(chemical precipitation, chemical precipitation plus biological
treatment, evaporation) because it does not have the data to do so.
Data are not available because of the way that legacy wastewater is
currently handled at plants.
The vast majority of plants combine some of their legacy wastewater
with each other and with other wastestreams, including cooling water,
coal pile runoff, metal cleaning wastes, and low volume waste sources
in surface impoundments.\28\ Once combined in surface impoundments, the
legacy wastewater no longer has the same characteristics that it did
when it was first generated. For example, the addition of cooling water
can dilute legacy wastewater to a point where the pollutants are no
longer present at treatable levels. Additionally, some wastestreams
have significant variations in flow, such as metal cleaning wastes,
which are generally infrequently generated, or coal pile runoff, which
is generated during precipitation events. Because surface impoundments
are typically open, with no cover, they also receive direct
precipitation. As a result of all of this, the characteristics of
legacy wastewater contained in surface impoundments (flow rate and
pollutant concentrations) vary at both any given plant, as well as
across plants nationwide. Furthermore, EPA generally would like to have
enough performance data at a well-designed, well-operated plant or
plants to derive limitations and standards using its well-established
and judicially upheld statistical methodology. In this case, except in
limited circumstances, plants do not treat the legacy wastewater that
they send to an impoundment using anything beyond the surface
impoundment itself.\29\ Thus, the final rule establishes BAT
limitations for legacy wastewater equal to the previously promulgated
BPT limitations on TSS in discharges of fly ash transport water, bottom
ash transport water, and low volume waste sources.
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\28\ For example, there are 65 plants for which EPA estimated
FGD wastewater compliance costs and that use an impoundment as part
of their treatment system. For 54 of the 65 plants (83 percent), the
FGD wastewater is commingled with, at least, fly and/or bottom ash
transport water, and for another eight of the 65 plants (12
percent), the FGD wastewater is commingled with non-ash wastewater,
such as cooling tower blowdown or low volume waste sources. DCN
SE05875.
\29\ For example, no plant uses biological treatment or
evaporation to treat its legacy fly ash transport water or legacy
bottom ash transport water contained in an impoundment, including
any impoundment that may contain only legacy fly ash transport water
or only legacy bottom ash transport water. Although EPA identified
fewer than ten plants that use chemical precipitation to treat
wastewater that contains, among other things, ash transport water,
EPA does not have any data to characterize the effluent from these
systems. Thus, no steam electric industry data exist to establish
BAT limitations for possible ``fly ash-only'' impoundments or
``bottom ash-only'' impoundments based on these technologies.
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Finally, while there are a few plants that discharge from an
impoundment containing only legacy FGD wastewater,\30\ EPA rejected
establishing requirements for such legacy FGD wastewater based on a
technology other than surface impoundments. EPA determined that, while
it could be possible for plants to treat the legacy FGD wastewater with
the same technology used to treat FGD wastewater subject to the BAT
limitations described in Section VIII.C.1 (because their
characteristics could be similar), establishing requirements based on
any technology more advanced than surface impoundments for these legacy
``FGD-only'' wastewater impoundments could encourage plants to alter
their operations prior to the date that the final limitations apply in
order to avoid the new requirements. Likely, a plant would begin
commingling other process wastewater with their legacy FGD wastewater
in the impoundment so that any legacy ``FGD-only'' wastewater
requirements would no longer apply. Alternatively, plants might choose
to pump the legacy FGD wastewater out of the impoundment on an
accelerated schedule and prior to the date that the final limitations
apply. In this case, the more rapid discharge of the wastewater could
result in temporary increases in environmental impacts (e.g.,
exceedances of WQC for acute impacts to aquatic life). EPA wanted to
avoid creating such incentives in this rule, and it therefore decided
to establish BAT limitations for discharges of legacy FGD wastewater
based on the previously promulgated BPT limitations on TSS for low
volume waste sources. Finally, EPA notes that, as a result of the zero
discharge requirements for discharges of all pollutants in three
wastestreams (fly ash transport water, bottom ash transport water, and
flue gas mercury control wastewater), this rule provides strong
incentives for steam electric power plants to greatly reduce, if not
completely eliminate, the disposal and treatment of their major sources
of ash-containing wastewater in surface impoundments. As a result, EPA
anticipates that overall volumes of legacy wastewater will continue to
decrease dramatically over time, as this rule becomes fully
implemented.
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\30\ EPA determined that there are three plants that are
estimated to incur FGD wastewater compliance costs and that use an
impoundment as part of the treatment system, but where the FGD
wastewater is not commingled with other process wastewaters in the
impoundment. There are no plants that discharge from an impoundment
containing only gasification wastewater.
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9. Economic Achievability
EPA's analysis for the final BAT limitations demonstrates that they
are economically achievable for the steam electric industry as a whole,
as required by CWA section 301(b)(2)(A). EPA performed cost and
economic impact assessments using the Integrated Planning Model (IPM)
using a baseline that reflects impacts from other relevant
environmental regulations (see RIA).\31\ For the final rule, the model
showed very small additional effects on the electricity market, on both
a national and regional sub-market basis. Based on the results of these
analyses, EPA estimated that the requirements associated with the final
rule would result in a net reduction of 843 MW in steam electric
generating capacity as of the model year 2030, reflecting full
compliance by all plants. This capacity reduction corresponds to a net
effect of two unit closures or, when aggregating to the level of steam
electric generating plants, and net plant closure.\32\ These IPM
results support EPA's conclusion that the final rule is economically
achievable.
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\31\ IPM is a comprehensive electricity market optimization
model that can evaluate such impacts within the context of regional
and national electricity markets. See Section IX for additional
discussion.
\32\ Given the design of IPM, unit-level and thereby plant-level
projections are presented as an indicator of overall regulatory
impact rather than a precise prediction of future unit-level or
plant-specific compliance actions.
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10. Non-Water Quality Environmental Impacts, Including Energy
Requirements \33\
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\33\ As described in Section VIII.C.13, this rule includes a
voluntary incentives program that provides the certainty of more
time for plants to implement new BAT requirements, if they adopt
additional process changes and controls that achieve limitations on
mercury, arsenic, selenium, and TDS in FGD wastewater, based on
evaporation technology. The information presented in this section
assumes plants will choose to comply with BAT limitations for FGD
wastewater based on chemical precipitation and biological treatment.
EPA does not know how many plants will opt into the voluntary
incentives program. Therefore, EPA also calculated non-water quality
environmental impacts assuming all plants will elect to comply with
the voluntary incentives program and similarly found these impacts
to be acceptable. See DCN SE05051.
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The final BAT effluent limitations have acceptable non-water
quality
[[Page 67856]]
environmental impacts, including energy requirements. Section XII
describes in more detail EPA's analysis of non-water quality
environmental impacts and energy requirements. EPA estimates that by
year 2023, under the final rule and reflecting full compliance, energy
consumption increases by less than 0.01 percent of the total
electricity generated by power plants. EPA also estimates that the
amount of fuel consumed by increased operation of motor vehicles (e.g.,
for transporting fly ash) increases by approximately 0.002 percent of
total fuel consumption by all motor vehicles.
EPA also evaluated the effect of the BAT effluent limitations on
air emissions generated by all electric power plants (NOX,
sulfur oxides (SOX), and CO2), solid waste
generation, and water usage. Under the final rule, NOX
emissions are projected to decrease by 1.16 percent, SOX
emissions are projected to increase by 0.04 percent, and CO2
emissions are projected to decrease by 0.106 percent due to changes in
the mix of electricity generation (e.g., less electricity from coal-
fired steam electric generating units and more electricity from natural
gas-fired steam electric generating units). Moreover, solid waste
generation is projected to increase by less than 0.001 percent of total
solid waste generated by all electric power plants. Finally, EPA
estimates that the final rule has a positive impact on water
withdrawal, with steam electric power plants reducing the amount of
water they withdraw by 57 billion gallons per year (155 million gallons
per day).
11. Impacts on Residential Electricity Prices and Low-Income and
Minority Populations
EPA examined the effects of the final rule on consumers as an
additional factor that might be appropriate when considering what level
of control represents BAT. If all annualized compliance costs were
passed on to residential consumers of electricity, instead of being
borne by the operators and owners of power plants (a very conservative
assumption), the average monthly increase in electricity bill for a
typical household would be no more than $0.12 under the final rule.
EPA also considered the effect of the rule on minority and low-
income populations. As explained in Section XVII.J, using demographic
data regarding who resides closest to steam electric power plant
discharges and who consumes the most fish from waters receiving power
plant discharges, EPA concluded that low-income and minority
populations benefit to an even greater degree than the general
population from the reductions in discharges associated with the final
rule.
12. Existing Oil-Fired and Small Generating Units
EPA considered whether subcategorization of the ELGs was warranted
based on the factors specified in CWA section 304(b)(2)(B) (see Section
IV.B.3 and TDD Section 5). Ultimately, EPA concluded that it would be
appropriate to set different limitations for existing small generating
units (50 MW or less) and existing oil-fired generating units. No
other, different requirements were warranted for this rule under the
factors considered.
Oil-Fired Generating Units. For oil-fired generating units, the
final rule establishes BAT effluent limitations for FGD wastewater, fly
ash transport water, bottom ash transport water, FGMC wastewater, and
gasification wastewater equal to previously established BPT limitations
on TSS in fly ash transport water, bottom ash transport water, and low
volume waste sources. As defined in the rule, oil-fired generating
units refer to those that use oil as either the primary or secondary
fuel and do not burn coal or petroleum coke. Units that use only oil
during startup or for flame stabilization are not considered oil-fired
generating units.
EPA decided to finalize these limitations for oil-fired generating
units because EPA's record demonstrates that, in comparison to coal-
and petroleum coke-fired units, oil-fired units generate substantially
fewer pollutants, are generally older and operate less frequently, and
in many cases are more susceptible to early retirement when faced with
compliance costs attributable to the final rule.
The amount of ash generated by oil-fired units is a small fraction
of the amount produced by coal-fired units. Coal-fired units generate
hundreds to thousands of tons of ash each day, with some plants
generating more than 2,000 tons per day of ash. In contrast, oil-fired
units generate less than ten tons of ash per day. This disparity is
also apparent when comparing the ash tonnage to the amount of power
generated, with coal-fired units producing nearly 1,800 times more ash
than oil-fired units (0.6 tons per MW-hour on average for coal units;
0.000319 tons per MW-hour on average for oil units). The amount of
pollutants discharged to surface waters is roughly correlated to the
amount of ash wastewater discharged; thus, oil-fired generating units
discharge substantially fewer pollutants to surface waters than coal-
fired units, even when generating the same amount of electricity. EPA
estimates that the amount of pollutants discharged collectively by all
oil-fired generating units is a very small portion of the pollutants
discharged collectively by all steam electric power plants (less than
one percent, on a toxic-weighted basis).
Oil-fired generating units are generally among the oldest steam
electric units in the industry. Eighty-seven percent of the units are
more than 25 years old. In fact, more than a quarter of the units began
operation more than 50 years ago. Based on responses to the industry
survey, fewer than 20 oil-fired generating units discharged fly ash or
bottom ash transport water in 2009. This is likely because only about
20 percent of oil-fired generating units operate as baseload units; the
rest are either cycling/intermediate units (about 45 percent) or
peaking units (about 35 percent). These units also have notably low
capacity utilization. While about 30 percent of the baseload units
report capacity utilization greater than 75 percent, almost half report
a capacity utilization of less than 25 percent. Eighty percent of the
cycling/intermediate units and all peaking units also report capacity
utilization less than 25 percent. Thirty-five percent of oil-fired
generating units operated for more than six months in 2009; nearly half
of the units operated for fewer than 30 days.
While these older and generally intermittently operated oil-fired
generating units are capable of installing and operating the treatment
technologies that form the bases for this rule, and the costs would be
affordable for most plants, EPA concludes that, due to the factors
described here, companies may choose to shut down these oil-fired units
instead of making new investments to comply with the rule. If these
units shut down, EPA is concerned about resulting reductions in the
flexibility that grid operators have during peak demand due to less
reserve generating capacity to draw upon. But, more importantly,
maintaining a diverse fleet of generating units that includes a variety
of fuel sources is important to the nation's energy security. Because
the supply/delivery network for oil is different from other fuel
sources, maintaining the existence of oil-fired generating units helps
ensure reliable electric power generation, as commenters confirmed. EPA
considered these potential impacts on electric grid reliability and the
nation's energy security, under CWA section 304(b)(2)(B), in its
decision to establish
[[Page 67857]]
different BAT limitations for oil-fired generating units.
Small Generating Units. The final rule also establishes BAT
effluent limitations for FGD wastewater, fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, FGMC wastewater, and gasification water at
small generating units equal to previously established BPT limitations
on TSS for fly ash transport water, bottom ash transport water, and low
volume waste sources. For purposes of this rule, small generating units
refer to those units with a total nameplate generating capacity of 50
MW or less. EPA decided to establish these different BAT limitations
for small units because they are more likely to incur compliance costs
that are significantly and disproportionately higher per amount of
energy produced (dollars per MW) than those incurred by larger units.
Some commenters stated that the cost to a unit in terms of dollars
per MW is not relevant because BAT should be established at a level at
which the costs are affordable to the industry as a whole. They noted
that EPA's IPM analysis demonstrates that the most stringent proposed
regulatory option is economically achievable for all units above 50 MW.
Other commenters supported EPA's consideration of the relative
magnitude of costs for smaller units compared to larger units, and some
suggested EPA should increase the size threshold to 100 MW because
those units also have disproportionate costs per amount of energy
produced, and they collectively discharge a small fraction of the total
pollutants discharged by all steam electric power plants.
EPA reviewed the record and re-evaluated the threshold for small
units in light of comments and the key changes since proposal discussed
in Section V. EPA considered establishing no threshold, as well as
several different size thresholds, for small units. The Agency looked
closely at establishing a threshold at 50 MW or 100 MW. While the total
amount of pollutants discharged by units at these thresholds is
relatively small in comparison to those discharged by all steam
electric power plants, the amount of pollutants discharged by units
smaller than or equal to 100 MW is almost double the amount of
pollutants discharged by units smaller than or equal to 50 MW. See DCN
SE05813 for specific information on these pollutant discharges. The
record indicates that the cost per unit of energy produced increases as
the size of the generating unit decreases, and while there is no clear
``knee of the curve'' at which to establish a size threshold, there is
a difference between units at 50 MW and below compared to those above
50 MW. Figure VIII-1, below, shows the annualized cost per amount of
energy produced for existing units under Regulatory Option D. Figure
VIII-1 shows that the cost per amount of energy produced increases as
the size of the generating unit decreases. Annualized cost per amount
of energy produced increases gradually as one moves from the very
largest units down to 100 MW, and then the cost per amount of energy
produced begins to increase more rapidly as one moves from 100 MW down
to 50 MW, until it increases very rapidly for units at 50MW and below.
Additionally, Figure VIII-1 shows that nearly all of the ratios of cost
to amount of energy produced for units smaller than or equal to 50 MW
are above those for the entire population of remaining units. The same
cannot be said of the ratio for units smaller than or equal to 100 MW.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR03NO15.221
[[Page 67858]]
In light of the fact that the costs per amount of energy produced
are significantly and disproportionately higher for units smaller than
or equal to 50 MW compared to larger units, and in light of the very
small fraction of pollutants discharged by units smaller than or equal
to 50 MW, EPA ultimately decided to establish different requirements
for units at this threshold. Keeping in mind the statutory directive to
set effluent limitations that result in reasonable further progress
toward the national goal of eliminating the discharge of all pollutants
(CWA section 301(b)(2)(A)), EPA used its best judgment to balance the
competing interests. EPA recognizes that any attempt to establish a
size threshold for generating units will be imperfect due to individual
differences across units and firms. EPA concludes, however, that a
threshold of 50 MW or less reasonably and effectively targets those
generating units that should receive different treatment based on the
considerations described above, while advancing the CWA's goals.
Furthermore, as shown in Section IX.C, EPA's analysis demonstrates that
the final rule, with a threshold established at 50 MW, is economically
achievable.
13. Voluntary Incentives Program
As part of the BAT for existing sources, the final rule establishes
a voluntary incentives program that provides the certainty of more time
(until December 31, 2023) for plants to implement new BAT requirements,
if they adopt additional process changes and controls that achieve
limitations on mercury, arsenic, selenium, and TDS in FGD wastewater,
based on evaporation technology (see Section VIII.C.1 for a more
complete description of the evaporation technology basis). This
optional program offers significant environmental protections beyond
those achieved by the final BAT limitations for FGD wastewater based on
chemical precipitation plus biological treatment because evaporation
technology is capable of achieving significant removals of toxic
metals, as well as TDS.\34\
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\34\ Properly operated evaporation systems are also capable of
achieving the BAT limitations based on chemical precipitation plus
biological treatment.
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EPA's proposal included a voluntary incentives program that
contained, as one element, incentives in the form of additional
implementation time for plants that eliminate the discharge of all
process wastewater (except cooling water). Public commenters urged EPA
to consider establishing, instead, a program that provided incentives
for plants that go further than the rule's requirements to reduce
discharges from individual wastestreams. Because the final rule already
contains zero discharge limitations for several key wastestreams, EPA
decided that the voluntary incentives program should focus on FGD
wastewater.
EPA concluded that additional pollutant reductions could be
achieved under a voluntary incentives program because there are certain
reasons a plant might opt to treat its FGD wastewater using evaporation
rather than chemical precipitation plus biological treatment. One such
reason is the possibility that a plant's NPDES permit may need more
stringent limitations necessary to meet applicable WQS. For example,
some power plant discharges containing TDS (including bromide) that
occur upstream of drinking water treatment plants can negatively impact
treatment of source waters at the drinking water treatment plants. A
recent study identified four drinking water treatment plants that
experienced increased levels of bromide in their source water, and
corresponding increases in the formation of carcinogenic disinfection
by-products (brominated DPBs) in the finished drinking water, after the
installation of wet FGD scrubbers at upstream steam electric power
plants (DCN SE04503).
Furthermore, based on trends in the industry and experience with
this and other industries, EPA expects that, over time, the costs of
evaporation (and other technologies that could achieve the limitations
in the voluntary incentives program, including zero discharge
practices) will decrease so as to make it an even more attractive
option for plants. EPA understands that vendors are already working on
changes to this technology to reduce the costs, reduce the amount of
solids generated, and improve the solids handling. See TDD Section
7.1.4.
The technology on which the BAT limitations in the voluntary
incentives program are based, evaporation, is available to steam
electric power plants. EPA identified three plants in the U.S. that
have installed, and one plant that is in the process of installing,
evaporation systems to treat their FGD wastewater. Four coal-fired
power plants in Italy treat FGD wastewater using evaporation. See TDD
Section 7. Furthermore, the voluntary program is economically
achievable because only those plants that opt to be subject to the BAT
limitations based on evaporation, rather than the BAT limitations based
on chemical precipitation plus biological treatment, must achieve them.
Therefore, any plant that chooses to be subject to the more stringent
limitations has determined for itself, in light of its own financial
information and economic outlook, that such limitations are
economically achievable. Finally, EPA analyzed the non-water quality
environmental impacts and energy requirements associated with the
voluntary incentives program, and it found them acceptable. See DCN
SE05574.
The development of this voluntary incentives program furthers the
CWA's ultimate goal of eliminating the discharge of pollutants into the
Nation's waters. See CWA section 101(a)(1) and section 301(b)(2)(A)
(specifying that BAT will result in ``reasonable further progress
toward the national goal of eliminating the discharge of pollutants'').
While the final rule's BAT limitations based on chemical precipitation
plus biological treatment represent ``reasonable further progress,''
the voluntary incentives program is designed to press further toward
achieving the national goal of the Act, as wastewater that has been
treated properly using evaporation has very low pollutant
concentrations (also making it possible to reuse the wastewater and
completely eliminate the discharge of any pollutants). In addition, CWA
section 104(a)(1) gives the Administrator authority to establish
national programs for the prevention, reduction, and elimination of
pollution, and it provides that such programs shall promote the
acceleration of research, experiments, and demonstrations relating to
the prevention, reduction, and elimination of pollution. EPA
anticipates that the voluntary incentives program will effectively
accelerate the research into and demonstration of controls and
processes intended to prevent, reduce, and eliminate pollution because,
under it, plants will opt to employ control and treatment strategies to
significantly reduce discharges of pollutants found in FGD wastewater.
Steam electric power plants agreeing to meet BAT limitations for
FGD wastewater based on evaporation must comply with those limitations
on arsenic, mercury, selenium, and TDS in FGD wastewater.\35\ For such
plants, the BAT limitations based on evaporation apply as of December
31, 2023, to FGD wastewater generated on and after December 31, 2023.
Plants opting to participate in the voluntary program can use the
period in advance of this date to research, engineer, design, procure,
construct, and optimize systems capable
[[Page 67859]]
of meeting the limitations based on evaporation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ For some plants, proper pretreatment such as softening or
chemical precipitation is likely appropriate to ensure effective and
efficient operation of evaporation systems.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For purposes of the voluntary incentives program BAT limitations,
legacy FGD wastewater is FGD wastewater generated prior to December 31,
2023. For such legacy FGD wastewater, the final rule establishes BAT
limitations on TSS in discharges of FGD wastewater that are equal to
BPT limitations for low volume waste sources.
EPA decided not to make the voluntary incentives program available
to plants that send their FGD wastewater to POTWs. Under CWA section
307(b)(1), PSES must specify a time for compliance that does not exceed
three years from the date of promulgation, and thus the additional time
of up to 2023 cannot be given to indirect dischargers. Of course,
nothing prohibits an indirect discharger from using any technology,
including evaporation, to comply with the final PSES and PSNS.
EPA expects that any plant interested in the voluntary incentives
program would indicate their intent to opt into the program prior to
issuance of its next NPDES permit, following the effective date of this
rule. A plant can indicate its intent to opt into the voluntary program
on its permit application or through separate correspondence to the
NPDES Director, as long as the signatory requirements of 40 CFR 122.22
are met.
D. Best Available Demonstrated Control Technology/NSPS
After considering all of the technologies described in this
preamble and TDD Section 7, as well as public comments, and in light of
the factors specified in CWA section 306 (see Section IV.B.4), EPA
concluded that the technologies described in Option F represent BADCT
for steam electric power plants, and the final rule promulgates NSPS
based on that option. Thus, the final NSPS establish: (1) Standards on
arsenic, mercury, selenium, and TDS in FGD wastewater, based on
evaporation (same basis as for BAT limitations in voluntary incentives
program); (2) a zero discharge standard on all pollutants in bottom ash
transport water, based on dry handling or closed-loop systems (same
bases as for BAT limitations); (3) a zero discharge standard on all
pollutants in FGMC wastewater, based on dry handling (same basis as for
BAT limitations); (4) standards on mercury, arsenic, selenium, and TDS
in gasification wastewater, based on evaporation technology (same basis
as for BAT limitations); and (5) standards on mercury and arsenic in
discharges of combustion residual leachate, based on chemical
precipitation (more specifically, the technology basis is a chemical
precipitation system that employs hydroxide precipitation, sulfide
precipitation, and iron coprecipitation to remove heavy metals). The
final rule also maintains the previously established zero discharge
NSPS on discharges of fly ash transport water, based on dry handling.
The record indicates that the technologies that serve as the bases
for the final NSPS are well demonstrated based on the performance of
plants using the technologies. For example, new steam electric power
generating sources have been meeting the previously established zero
discharge standard for fly ash transport water since 1982,
predominantly through the use of dry handling technologies. Moreover,
as described in Section VIII.C.13, three plants in the U.S. and four
plants in Italy use evaporation technology to treat their FGD
wastewater, and another U.S. plant is in the process of installing such
technology for that purpose. Of the approximately 50 coal-fired
generating units that were built within the last 20 years, most (83
percent) manage their bottom ash without using water to transport the
ash and, as a result, do not discharge bottom ash transport water. The
technology basis identified as BAT technology for gasification
wastewater represents current industry practice. Every IGCC power plant
currently in operation uses evaporation to treat their gasification
wastewater, even when the wastewater is not discharged and is instead
reused at the plant. In the case of FGMC wastewater, every plant
currently using post-combustion sorbent injection (e.g., activated
carbon injection) either handles the captured spent sorbent with a dry
process or manages the FGMC wastewater so that it is not discharged to
surface waters (or has the capability to do so). For combustion
residual leachate, chemical precipitation is a well-demonstrated
technology for removing metals and other pollutants from a variety of
industrial wastewaters, including leachate from landfills not located
at power plants. Chemical precipitation is also well demonstrated at
steam electric power plants for treatment of FGD wastewater that
contains the pollutants in combustion residual leachate.
The NSPS in the final rule pose no barrier to entry. The cost to
install technologies at new units is typically less than the cost to
retrofit existing units. For example, the cost differential between
Options B, C, and D for existing sources is mostly associated with
retrofitting controls for bottom ash handling systems. For new sources,
however, NSPS based on Option F do not present plants with the same
choice of retrofit versus modification of existing processes. This is
because every new generating unit must install some type of bottom ash
handling system as the unit is constructed. Establishing a zero
discharge standard for all pollutants in bottom ash transport water as
part of the NSPS means that power plants will install a dry bottom ash
handling system during construction instead of installing a wet-
sluicing system.
Moreover, EPA assessed the possible impacts of the final NSPS on
new sources by comparing the incremental costs of the Option F
technologies to the costs of hypothetical new generating units. EPA is
not able to predict which plants might construct new units or the exact
characteristics of such units. Instead, EPA calculated and analyzed
compliance costs for a variety of plant and unit configurations. EPA
developed NSPS compliance costs for new sources using a methodology
similar to the one used to develop compliance costs for existing
sources. EPA's estimates for compliance costs for new sources are based
on the net difference in costs between wastewater treatment system
technologies that would likely have been implemented at new sources
under the previously established regulatory requirements, and those
that would likely be implemented under the final rule. EPA estimated
that the incremental compliance costs for a new generating unit
(capital and O&M) represent approximately 3.3 percent of the annualized
cost of building and operating a new 1,300 MW coal-fired plant, with
capital costs representing 0.3 to 2.8 percent of the overnight
construction costs, and annual O&M costs representing 0.3 to 3.9
percent of the fuel and other O&M cost of operating a new plant.
Finally, EPA analyzed the non-water quality environmental impacts
and energy requirements associated with Option F for both existing and
new sources. See DCN SE05952 and DCN SE05951. Since there is nothing
inherently different between an existing and new source, EPA's analysis
with respect to existing sources is instructive. Using both of these
analyses, EPA determined that NSPS based on the Option F technologies
have acceptable non-water quality environmental impacts and energy
requirements.
In contrast to the BAT effluent limitations, this rule establishes
the same NSPS for oil-fired generating units and small generating units
as for all
[[Page 67860]]
other new sources. A key factor that affects compliance costs for
existing sources is the need to retrofit new pollution controls to
replace existing pollution controls. New sources do not incur retrofit
costs because the pollution controls (process operations or treatment
technology) are installed at the time of construction. Thus the costs
for new sources are lower, even if the pollution controls are
identical.
For each of the wastestreams except combustion residual leachate,
EPA rejected establishing NSPS based on surface impoundments for the
same reasons it rejected establishing BAT based on surface
impoundments. For FGD wastewater, EPA also did not establish NSPS based
on chemical precipitation for the same reasons it rejected establishing
BAT based on that technology. In particular, these other technologies
would not achieve as much pollutant reduction as the technology bases
in Option F--which is technologically available and economically
achievable with acceptable non-water quality environmental impacts and
energy requirements--and thus do not represent best available
demonstrated control technology.
EPA did not select surface impoundments as the basis for NSPS for
combustion residual leachate because, unlike BAT, NSPS represent the
``greatest degree of effluent reduction . . . achievable'' (CWA section
306), and (besides ``cost'' and ``any non-water quality environmental
impact and energy requirements,'' discussed above) EPA does not
consider ``other factors'' in establishing NSPS. When used to treat
combustion residual leachate, chemical precipitation can achieve
substantial pollutant reductions as compared to surface impoundments.
Thus, EPA has determined that NSPS for leachate based on chemical
precipitation achieve the ``greatest degree of effluent reduction'' as
that term is used in CWA section 306.
Similarly, EPA did not select chemical precipitation plus
biological treatment as the basis for NSPS for FGD wastewater because,
under CWA section 306, NSPS reflect ``the greatest degree of effluent
reduction . . . achievable.'' Evaporation systems are capable of
achieving extremely low pollutant discharge levels, and in fact can be
the basis for a plant completely eliminating all discharges associated
with FGD wastewater. Moreover, unlike EPA's decision not to identify
evaporation as the technology basis for FGD wastewater discharges from
all existing sources due to the large associated cost, establishing
NSPS for FGD wastewater based on evaporation does not add to the
overall estimated cost of the rule because EPA does not predict any new
coal-fired generating units will be installed in the foreseeable
future. As explained above, however, in the event that a new unit is
installed, EPA determined that the NSPS compliance costs would not
present a barrier to entry.
E. PSES
Table VIII-2 summarizes the results of EPA's pass-through analysis
for the regulated pollutants (with numeric limitations) in each
wastestream, as controlled by the relevant BAT and NSPS technology
bases.\36\ As explained in Section VII.C, EPA did not conduct its
traditional pass-through analysis for wastestreams with zero discharge
limitations or standards. Zero discharge limitations and standards
achieve 100 percent removal of pollutants; therefore, all pollutants in
those wastestreams pass through the POTW. As shown in the table, all of
the pollutants regulated under BAT/NSPS pass through secondary
treatment by a POTW.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ The regulation of TSS in combustion residual leachate
(based on surface impoundments) under the final BAT limitations is
not represented here because TSS is a conventional pollutant that is
effectively treated by POTWs (it does not pass through).
Table VIII-2--Summary of Pass-Through Analysis Results
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Technology basis/Wastewater Pass through? (yes/
stream Pollutant no)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chemical Precipitation for Arsenic........... Yes.
Combustion Residual Leachate Mercury........... Yes.
(only for NSPS).
Chemical Precipitation plus Arsenic........... Yes.
Biological Treatment for FGD Mercury........... Yes.
Wastewater. Nitrate/Nitrite as Yes.
N. Yes.
Selenium..........
Evaporation for FGD wastewater Arsenic........... Yes.
(only for NSPS). Mercury........... Yes.
Selenium.......... Yes.
TDS............... Yes.
Evaporation for Gasification Arsenic........... Yes.
Wastewater. Mercury........... Yes.
Selenium.......... Yes.
TDS............... Yes.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering all of the relevant factors and technology
options in this preamble and in the TDD, as well as public comments, as
is the case with BAT, EPA decided to establish PSES based on the
technologies described in Option D. For PSES, the final rule
establishes: (1) Standards on arsenic, mercury, selenium and nitrate/
nitrite as N in FGD wastewater; (2) a zero discharge standard on all
pollutants in fly ash transport water; (3) a zero discharge standard on
all pollutants in bottom ash transport water; (4) a zero discharge
standard on all pollutants in FGMC wastewater; (5) standards on
mercury, arsenic, selenium, and TDS in gasification wastewater. All of
the technology bases for the final PSES are the same as those described
for the final BAT limitations. The final rule does not establish PSES
for combustion residual leachate because TSS does not pass through
POTWs.
EPA selected the Option D technologies as the bases for PSES for
the same reasons that EPA selected the Option D technologies as the
bases for BAT. EPA's analysis shows that, for both direct and indirect
dischargers, the Option D technologies are available and economically
achievable, and Option D has acceptable non-water quality environmental
impacts, including energy requirements (see Sections IX and XII). EPA
rejected other options for
[[Page 67861]]
PSES for the same reasons that the Agency rejected other options for
BAT. Furthermore, for the same reasons that apply to EPA's final BAT
limitations for oil-fired generating units and small generating units,
and described in Section VIII.C.12, the final rule does not establish
PSES that apply to oil-fired generating units and small generating
units (50 MW or smaller).\37\ Finally, EPA determined that the final
PSES prevent pass through of pollutants from POTWs into receiving
streams and also help control contamination of POTW sludge.
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\37\ Whereas the final rule establishes BAT limitations on TSS
in fly ash and bottom ash transport water, FGMC wastewater, FGD
wastewater, and gasification wastewater for small generating units
and oil-fired generating units, TSS and the pollutants that they
represent do not pass through POTWs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As with the final BAT effluent limitations, in considering the
availability and achievability of the final PSES, EPA concluded that
existing indirect dischargers need some time to achieve the final
standards, in part to avoid forced outages (see Section VIII.C.7).
However, in contrast to the BAT limitations (which apply on a date
determined by the permitting authority that is as soon as possible
beginning November 1, 2018, but no later than December 31, 2023), the
new PSES apply as of November 1, 2018. Under CWA section 307(b)(1),
pretreatment standards shall specify a time for compliance not to
exceed three years from the date of promulgation, so EPA cannot
establish a longer implementation period. Moreover, unlike requirements
on direct discharges, requirements on indirect discharges are not
implemented through an NPDES permit and thus are not subject to
awaiting the next permit issuance before the limitations are specified
clearly for the discharger. EPA has determined that all of the existing
indirect dischargers can meet the standards by November 1, 2018, and
because there are a handful of indirect dischargers (who would have
approximately three years from the date of promulgation to achieve the
standards), implementation of the standards by that date would not lead
to electricity availability concerns. See RIA.
For purposes of the PSES in this rule, this preamble uses the term
``legacy wastewater'' to refer to FGD wastewater, fly ash transport
water, bottom ash transport water, FGMC wastewater, or gasification
wastewater generated prior to November 1, 2018. For the same reasons
that EPA decided to establish BAT limitations on TSS in discharges of
legacy wastewater equal to BPT limitations for fly ash transport water,
bottom ash transport water, and low volume waste sources, the final
rule does not establish PSES for legacy wastewater (see Section
VIII.C.8). TSS and the pollutants it represents are effectively treated
by, and thus do not pass through, POTWs.
F. PSNS
After considering all of the relevant factors and technology
options described in this preamble and TDD Section 7, as well as public
comments, as was the case for NSPS, EPA selected the Option F
technologies as the bases for PSNS in this rule. As a result, the final
PSNS establish: (1) Standards on arsenic, mercury, selenium, and TDS in
FGD wastewater; (2) a zero discharge standard on all pollutants in
bottom ash transport water; (3) a zero discharge standard on all
pollutants in FGMC wastewater; (4) standards on mercury, arsenic,
selenium, and TDS in gasification wastewater; and (5) standards on
mercury and arsenic in combustion residual leachate. All the technology
bases for the final PSNS are the same as those described for the final
NSPS. The final rule also maintains the previously established zero
discharge PSNS on discharges of fly ash transport water. As with the
final NSPS, this rule establishes the same PSNS for oil-fired
generating units and small generating units as for all other new
sources.
EPA selected the Option F technologies as the bases for PSNS for
the same reasons that EPA selected the Option F technologies as the
bases for NSPS (see Section VIII.D). EPA's record demonstrates that the
technologies described in Option F are available and demonstrated, and
Option F does not pose a barrier to entry and has acceptable non-water
quality environmental impacts, including energy requirements (see
Sections IX and XII). EPA rejected other options for PSNS for the same
reasons that the Agency rejected other options for NSPS. And, as with
the final PSES, EPA determined that the final PSNS prevent pass through
of pollutants from POTWs into receiving streams and also help control
contamination of POTW sludge.
G. Anti-Circumvention Provision
The final rule establishes one of the three anti-circumvention
provisions that EPA proposed. The one anti-circumvention provision that
EPA decided to establish applies only for existing sources to those
wastestreams for which this rule established zero discharge limitations
or standards. In general, this provision prevents steam electric power
plants from circumventing the final rule by moving effluent produced by
a process operation for which there is an applicable zero discharge
effluent limitation or standard to another plant process operation for
discharge.\38\ EPA determined it was appropriate to include this
provision in the final rule to make clear that, just because a
wastestream that is subject to a zero discharge limitation or standard
is moved to another plant process, it does not mean that the
wastestream ceases being subject to the applicable zero discharge
limitation or standard. For example, using fly ash or bottom ash
transport water as makeup water for a cooling tower does not relieve a
plant of having to meet the zero discharge limitations and standards
for fly ash and bottom ash transport water. EPA encourages the reuse of
wastewater where appropriate, but not to the extent that it undermines
the zero discharge effluent limitations and standards in this rule.
Plants are free to reuse their wastewater, so long as the wastewater
ultimately complies with the final limitations and standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ The anti-circumvention provision applies only to
limitations and standards established in this final rule. It does
not apply to limitations and standards promulgated previously.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some public commenters stated that zero discharge effluent
limitations and standards for fly ash and bottom ash transport water,
together with this anti-circumvention provision, would prohibit water
reuse and prevent water withdrawal reduction at steam electric power
plants. In general, EPA disagrees with these commenters. Most plants
will choose to comply with the requirements for ash transport water by
operating either a dry or closed-loop wet-sluicing system to handle
their fly and bottom ash, which will eliminate or substantially reduce
the amount of water they currently use in the traditional wet-sluicing
system. To the extent that a plant currently uses (or was considering
using) ash transport water, such as the effluent from an impoundment,
as makeup water for processes such as make-up cooling water and would
be precluded from doing so because of the anti-circumvention provision
in this rule, the plant could merely switch to an alternate source for
the makeup water, such as the water that was (prior to implementing the
zero discharge requirement for ash transport water) used to sluice fly
ash or bottom ash to the impoundment. In other words, the volume of
water that is currently used to sluice ash to an impoundment and
[[Page 67862]]
subsequently reused as makeup water would no longer be needed to sluice
the ash and could instead be directly used as makeup water for the
cooling water system or other processes. Because of this, the zero
discharge limitations in this rule will not lead to a net increase at
the plant and in fact could result in a decrease in water withdrawal.
Lastly, a plant is free to reuse ash transport water, and would be in
compliance with the anti-circumvention provision, so long as it is used
in a process that does not ultimately result in a discharge.
There is one particular type of plant practice that the final
rule's anti-circumvention provision does not apply to. Many industry
commenters noted that they use ash transport water in their FGD
scrubber. They stated that this practice is preferable to using a fresh
water source and allows for an overall reduction in source water
withdrawals. They further stated that, under the final rule, any
wastewater that passes through the scrubber would undergo significant
treatment in order to meet the final FGD wastewater limitations and
standards. EPA agrees, in part, with these comments. As explained
above, EPA does not agree that using wastewater from one industrial
process as makeup water in another industrial process necessarily
results in a net reduction in water withdrawals. EPA does agree,
however, that using wastewater from an industrial process as makeup
water in another industrial process may be preferable to using a fresh
water source. EPA is mindful of the CWA's pollutant discharge
elimination goal, but also wants to promote opportunities for water
reuse. Furthermore, as explained in Section V, EPA recognizes the
extensive changes in this industry, and it wants to provide flexibility
to plants in managing their wastewater and operations, as well as
preserve the ability of plants to retain existing approaches where it
is consistent with the CWA's goals. While EPA would not choose to
promote these considerations where it resulted in no further progress
toward the pollutant discharge elimination goal of the Act, in the case
of using ash transport water in an FGD scrubber, since any resulting
wastewater discharges would still be required to meet BAT or PSES
requirements based on either chemical precipitation plus biological
treatment or chemical precipitation plus evaporation under this final
rule, EPA decided not to apply the anti-circumvention provision to this
particular practice.
The final rule does not establish an anti-circumvention provision
that would have required internal monitoring to demonstrate compliance
with certain numeric limitations and standards. Some public commenters
argued that the proposed provision was unduly restrictive, and they
stated that EPA already has authority to accomplish the goal of this
particular provision, which is to ensure that wastestreams are being
treated rather than simply diluted. EPA agrees with these commenters
and thus decided that existing rules, along with the guidance in
Section XVI.A.4 of this preamble and TDD Section 14, provide
appropriate flexibility to steam electric power plants to combine
wastestreams with similar pollutants and treatability, while adequately
addressing EPA's concern that plants meet the effluent limitations and
standards in this rule through treatment and control strategies, rather
than through dilution. Furthermore, some commenters raised concerns
that the proposed provision would be a disincentive for plants to
internally re-use the treated wastewater within the plant, particularly
when the re-use eliminates the discharge of the wastewater. For
example, they stated that some steam electric power plants might opt to
use a wet scrubber's FGD wastewater as reagent make-up for a new dry
scrubber in an integrated design which would essentially evaporate the
wet FGD wastewater. EPA notes that plants that internally reuse
wastestreams for which EPA is establishing numeric limitations and
standards (e.g., FGD wastewater) in a way that completely prevents
discharge of that wastestream would not be subject to the numeric
limitations and standards because they do not discharge the wastewater.
EPA is aware of at least one plant that elected to take such an
approach as an alternative to meeting NPDES permit limitations by
installing wastewater treatment technology. See DCN SE06338. In
general, EPA supports such approaches because they result in further
progress towards achieving the pollutant discharge elimination goal of
the CWA. Moreover, such approaches are favored because they reduce
overall water intake needs.
The final rule also does not establish an anti-circumvention
provision that would have required permittees to use EPA-approved
analytical methods that are sufficiently sensitive to provide reliable,
quantified results at levels necessary to demonstrate compliance with
the final effluent limitations and standards because another recently
promulgated rule already accomplishes this. As public commenters
pointed out, EPA was conducting a rulemaking on that topic; and, in
August 2014, EPA published a rule requiring the use of sufficiently
sensitive analytical test methods when completing any NPDES permit
application. Moreover, the NPDES permit authority must prescribe that
only sufficiently sensitive methods be used for analyses of pollutants
or pollutant parameters under an NPDES permit where EPA has promulgated
a CWA method for analysis of that pollutant. That rule clarifies that
NPDES applicants and permittees must use EPA-approved analytical
methods that are capable of detecting and measuring the pollutants at,
or below, the applicable water quality criteria or permit limits.
H. Other Revisions
1. Correction of Typographical Error for PSNS
As EPA proposed to do, the final rule corrects a typographical
error in the previously established PSNS for cooling tower blowdown. As
is clear from the development document for the 1982 rulemaking, as well
as the previously promulgated NSPS for cooling tower blowdown, EPA
inadvertently omitted a footnote in the table that appeared in 40 CFR
423.17(d)(1). The footnote reads ``No detectable amount,'' and it
applies to the effluent standard for 124 of the 126 priority pollutants
contained in chemicals added for cooling tower maintenance. See
``Development Document for Final Effluent Guidelines, New Source
Performance Standards and Pretreatment Standards for the Steam Electric
Power Generating Point Source Category,'' Document No. EPA 440/1-82/
029. November 1982.
2. Clarification of Applicability
In addition, the final rule contains three minor modifications to
the wording of the applicability provision in the steam electric power
generating ELGs to reflect EPA's longstanding interpretation and
implementation of the rule. These revisions do not alter the universe
of generating units regulated by the ELGs, nor do they impose
compliance costs on the industry. Instead, they remove potential
ambiguity in the regulations by revising the text to more clearly
reflect EPA's longstanding interpretation.
First, the applicability provision in the previous ELGs stated, in
part, that the ELGs apply to ``an establishment primarily engaged in
the generation of electricity for distribution and sale. . . .'' 40 CFR
423.10. The final rule revises that phrase to read ``an establishment
whose generation of electricity is the predominant source of revenue or
principal reason for operation. . . .'' The final rule thus
[[Page 67863]]
clarifies that certain facilities, such as generating units owned and
operated by industrial facilities in other sectors (e.g., petroleum
refineries, pulp and paper mills) that have not traditionally been
regulated by the steam electric ELGs, are not within the scope of the
ELGs. In addition, the final rule clarifies that certain municipally
owned facilities that generate and distribute electricity within a
service area (such as distributing electric power to municipal-owned
buildings), but use accounting practices that are not commonly thought
of as a ``sale,'' are subject to the ELGs. Such facilities have
traditionally been regulated by the steam electric ELGs.
Second, the final rule clarifies that fuels derived from fossil
fuel are within the scope of the ELGs. The previous ELGs stated, in
part, that they apply to discharges resulting from the generation of
electricity ``which results primarily from a process utilizing fossil-
type fuels (coal, oil, or gas) or nuclear fuel. . . .'' 40 CFR 423.10.
Because a number of fuel types are derived from fossil fuels, and thus
are fossil fuels themselves, the final rule explicitly mentions and
gives examples of such fuels. Thus, the rule reads that the ELGs apply
to discharges resulting from the operation of a generating unit ``whose
generation results primarily from a process utilizing fossil-type fuel
(coal, oil, or gas), fuel derived from fossil fuel (e.g., petroleum
coke, synthesis gas), or nuclear fuel. . . .''
Third, the final rule clarifies the applicability provision to
reflect the current interpretation that combined cycle systems are
subject to the ELGs. The ELGs apply to electric generation processes
that utilize ``a thermal cycle employing the steam water system as the
thermodynamic medium.'' 40 CFR 423.10. EPA's longstanding
interpretation is that the ELGs apply to discharges from all electric
generation processes with at least one prime mover that utilizes steam
(and that meet the other applicability factors in 40 CFR 423.10).
Combined cycle systems, which are generating units composed of one or
more combustion turbines operating in conjunction with one or more
steam turbines, are subject to the ELGs. The combustion turbines for a
combined cycle system operate in tandem with the steam turbines;
therefore, the ELGs apply to wastewater discharges associated with both
the combustion turbine and steam turbine portions of the combined cycle
system. The final rule, therefore, clarifies that ``[t]his part applies
to discharges associated with both the combustion turbine and steam
turbine portions of a combined cycle generating unit.''
I. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Waste
EPA proposed to establish BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS requirements for non-
chemical metal cleaning wastes equal to previously established BPT
limitations for metal cleaning wastes.\39\ EPA based the proposal on
EPA's understanding, from industry survey responses, that most steam
electric power plants manage their chemical and non-chemical metal
cleaning wastes in the same manner. Since then, based in part on public
comments submitted by industry groups, the Agency has learned that
plants refer to the same operation using different terminology; some
classify non-chemical metal cleaning waste as such, while others
classify it as low volume waste sources. Because the survey responses
reflect each plant's individual nomenclature, the survey results for
non-chemical metal cleaning wastes are skewed. Furthermore, EPA does
not know the nomenclature each plant used in responding to the survey,
so it has no way to adjust the results to account for this.
Consequently, EPA does not have sufficient information on the extent to
which discharges of non-chemical metal cleaning wastes occur, or on the
ways that industry manages their non-chemical metal cleaning wastes.
Moreover, EPA also does not have information on potential best
available technologies or best available demonstrated control
technologies, or the potential costs to industry to comply with any new
requirements. Due to incomplete data, some public commenters urged EPA
not to establish BAT limitations for non-chemical metal cleaning wastes
in this final rule. Ultimately, EPA decided that it does not have
enough information on a national basis to establish BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS
requirements for non-chemical metal cleaning wastes. The final rule,
therefore, continues to ``reserve'' BAT/NSPS/PSES/PSNS for non-chemical
metal cleaning wastes, as the previously promulgated regulations
did.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Under the structure of the previously promulgated
regulations, non-chemical metal cleaning wastes are a subset of
metal cleaning wastes.
\40\ As part of its proposal to establish new BAT/PSES/NSPS/PSNS
requirements for non-chemical metal cleaning waste equal to BPT
limitations for metal cleaning waste, EPA also proposed an exemption
for certain discharges of non-chemical metal cleaning waste, which
would be treated as low volume waste sources. Because the final rule
does not establish these new requirements, EPA also did not finalize
the proposed exemption.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By reserving limitations and standards for non-chemical metal
cleaning waste in the final rule, the permitting authority must
establish such requirements based on BPJ for any steam electric power
plant discharged non-chemical metal cleaning wastes. As part of this
determination, EPA expects that the permitting authority would examine
the historical permitting record for the particular plant to determine
how discharges of non-chemical metal cleaning waste had been permitted
in the past, including whether such discharges had been treated as low
volume waste sources or metal cleaning waste. See Section XVI.
J. Best Management Practices
EPA proposed to include BMPs in the ELGs that would require plant
operators to conduct periodic inspections of active and inactive
surface impoundments to ensure their structural integrity and to take
corrective actions where warranted. The proposed BMPs were largely
similar to those proposed for the CCR rule, except for the closure
requirements. EPA took comments on whether establishment of BMPs was
more appropriate under the authority of the Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act (RCRA) or the CWA. While some commenters asked EPA to
establish BMPs in the final rule, many others urged EPA not to do so,
arguing that BMPs are better suited for the CCR rule. Because EPA
promulgated BMPs in the CCR rule, to avoid unnecessary duplication,
this rule does not establish BMPs.
IX. Costs and Economic Impact
EPA evaluated the costs and associated impacts of the ELGs on
existing generating units at steam electric power plants, and on new
sources to which the ELGs may apply in the future. See TDD Section 9.
This section provides an overview of the methodology EPA used to assess
the costs and the economic impacts of the final ELGs and summarizes the
results of these analyses. See the RIA for additional detail.
EPA used certain indicators to assess the economic achievability of
the ELGs for the steam electric industry as a whole, as required by CWA
section 301(b)(2)(A). These values were compared to a baseline
described elsewhere in this document. For existing sources, EPA
considered the number of generating units and plants expected to close
due to the ELGs, and their generating capacity relative to total
capacity (see Section IX.C.1.b). Although not used as the sole
criterion to determine economic achievability, EPA also analyzed the
ratio of compliance costs to revenue to estimate the number of plants
and their owning
[[Page 67864]]
entities that exceed set thresholds indicating potential financial
strain; large numbers of such plants or owning entities could suggest
that the ELGs may not be economically achievable by the industry (see
Section IX.C.1.a). For new sources, EPA considered the magnitude of
compliance costs relative to the costs of constructing and operating
new coal-fired generating units (Section IX.C.2). In addition to the
analyses used to determine economic achievability, EPA conducted other
analyses to characterize the potential broader economic impacts of the
ELGs (e.g., on entities that own steam electric power plants,
electricity rates, employment) and to enable the Agency to meet its
requirements under Executive Orders or other statutes (e.g., Executive
Order 12866, Regulatory Flexibility Act, Unfunded Mandates Reform Act).
A. Plant-Specific and Industry Total Costs
EPA first estimated plant-specific costs to control discharges at
existing generating units at steam electric power plants to which the
final ELGs apply (existing sources). For all applicable wastestreams,
EPA assessed the operations and treatment system components in place at
a given unit in the baseline (or expected to be in place given other
existing rules), identified equipment and process changes that the
plant would likely make to meet the final ELGs, and estimated the cost
to implement those changes. As explained in Section V, since proposal,
EPA accounted for additional announced unit retirements, conversions,
and relevant operational changes, as well as changes plants are likely
to make in response to the CCR and CPP rules. As a result, the number
of plants projected to incur non-zero compliance costs is about 50
percent less than that estimated at proposal. As appropriate, EPA also
accounted for cost savings associated with these equipment and process
changes (e.g., avoided costs to manage surface impoundments). EPA thus
derived capital and O&M costs at the plant level for control of each
wastestream using the technologies that form the bases for the final
rule for existing sources. See the TDD Section 9 for a more detailed
description of the methodology EPA used to estimate plant-level costs.
EPA annualized one-time costs and costs recurring on other than an
annual basis over a specific useful life, implementation, and/or event
recurrence period, using a rate of seven percent. For capital costs and
initial one-time costs, EPA used 20 years. For O&M costs incurred at
intervals greater than one year, EPA used the interval as the
annualization period (3 years, 5 years, 6 years, 10 years). EPA added
annualized capital, initial one-time costs, and the non-annual portion
of O&M costs to annual O&M costs to derive total annualized plant
costs.
EPA calculated total industry costs by applying survey weights to
the plant-specific annualized costs and summing them. For the
assessment of industry costs, EPA considered costs on both a pre-tax
and after-tax basis. Pre-tax annualized costs provide insight on the
total expenditure as incurred, while after-tax annualized costs are a
more meaningful measure of impact on privately owned for-profit plants,
and incorporate approximate capital depreciation and other relevant tax
treatments in the analysis. EPA uses pre- and/or after-tax costs in
different analyses, depending on the concept appropriate to each
analysis (e.g., social costs discussed in Section IX.B are calculated
using pre-tax costs whereas cost-to-revenue screening-level analyses
discussed in Section IX.C are conducted using after-tax costs). See
Table IX-1 for estimates of pre- and post-tax industry costs.
Table IX-1--Total Annualized Industry Costs
[In millions, 2013$], 7% Discount Rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pre-tax After-tax
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Annualized Industry $496.2 $339.6
Costs......................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Social Costs
Social costs are the costs of the rule from the viewpoint of
society as a whole, rather than regulated facilities only. In
calculating social costs, EPA tabulated the pre-tax costs in the year
when they are estimated to be incurred. EPA assumed that all plants
upgrading their systems in order to meet the effluent limitations and
standards would do so sometime over a five-year period, during the
implementation period for this rule. Given the implementation dates in
this rule, and the fact that permitting authorities have to incorporate
the final effluent limitations into NPDES permits (which have five-year
terms) before they become applicable, this assumption is a reasonable
estimate.
EPA performed the social cost analysis over a 24-year analysis
period, which combines the length of the period during which plants are
anticipated to install the control technologies and the useful life of
the longest-lived technology installed at any facility (20 years). EPA
calculated social cost of the final rule for existing generating units
at steam electric power plants using both a three percent discount rate
and an alternative discount rate of seven percent.\41\
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\41\ These discount rate values follow guidance from the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) regulatory analysis guidance
document, Circular A-4 (OMB, 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Social costs include costs incurred by both private entities and
the government (e.g., in implementing the regulation). As described in
Section XVII.B, EPA estimates that the final rule will not lead to
additional costs to permitting authorities. Consequently, the only
category of costs necessary to calculate social costs are those
estimated for steam electric power plants.
Table IX-2 presents the total annualized social cost of the final
ELGs on existing generating units at seam electric power plants,
calculated using three percent and seven percent discount rates.
[[Page 67865]]
Table IX-2--Total Annualized Social Costs
[In millions, 2013$]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3% Discount rate 7% Discount rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Annualized Social $479.5 $471.2
Costs......................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The value presented in Table IX-2 for the seven percent discount
rate is slightly lower than the comparable industry costs (pre-tax) in
Table IX-1 (e.g., $471.2 million versus $496.2 million) due to the
inclusion of the timing of expenditures in the annualized social costs
calculations.
C. Economic Impacts
EPA assessed the economic impacts of this rule in two ways: (1) A
screening-level assessment of the cost impacts on existing generating
units at steam electric power plants units and the entities that own
those plants, based on comparison of costs to revenue; and (2) an
assessment of the impact of this rule within the context of the broader
electricity market, which includes an assessment of incremental plant
closures attributable to this rule.
The following sections summarize the findings for these analyses.
The RIA discusses the methods and results in greater detail.
1. Summary of Economic Impacts for Existing Sources
The first set of cost and economic impact analyses--including
entity-level impacts at both the steam electric power plant and parent
company levels--reflects baseline operating characteristics of steam
electric power plants incurring costs and assumes no changes in those
baseline operating characteristics (e.g., level of electricity
generation and revenue) as a result of the final rule. They provide
screening-level indicators of the relative cost of the ELGs to plants,
owning entities, or consumers.
The second set of analyses look at broader electricity market
impacts taking into account the interconnection of regional and
national electricity markets. It also looks at the distribution of
impacts at the plant level. This second set of analyses provides
insight on the impacts of the final rule on steam electric power
plants, as well as the electricity market as a whole, including
generation capacity closure and changes in generation and wholesale
electricity prices.
As noted in the introduction to this section, EPA used results from
the screening analysis of plant- and entity-level impacts, together
with projected capacity closure from the market model, to determine
that the final rule is economically achievable.
a. Screening-Level Assessment of Impacts on Existing Units at Steam
Electric Power Plants and Parent Entities
EPA conducted a screening-level analysis of the rule's potential
impact to existing generating units at steam electric power plants and
parent entities based on cost-to-revenue ratios. For each of the two
levels of analysis (plant and parent entity), the Agency assumed, for
analytic convenience and as a worst-case scenario, that none of the
costs would be passed on to consumers through electricity rate
increases and would instead be absorbed by the steam electric power
plants and their parent entities. This assumption overstates the
impacts of the final rule since steam electric power plants that
operate in a regulated market may be able to recover some of the
increased production costs to consumers through increased electricity
prices. It is, however, an appropriate assumption for a screening-
level, upper-bound estimate of the potential cost impacts.
Plant-Level Cost-to-Revenue Analysis. EPA developed revenue
estimates for this analysis using EIA data. EPA then calculated the
annualized after-tax costs of the final rule as a percent of baseline
annual revenues. See Chapter 4 of the RIA report for a more detailed
discussion of the methodology used for the plant-level cost-to-revenue
analysis.
Table IX-3 summarizes the plant-level cost-to-revenue analysis
results for the final rule. The cost-to-revenue ratios provide
screening-level indicators of potential economic impacts. Plants
incurring costs below one percent of revenue are unlikely to face
economic impacts, while plants with costs between one percent and three
percent of revenue have a higher chance of facing economic impacts, and
plants incurring costs above three percent of revenue have a still
higher probability of economic impacts. EPA estimates that the vast
majority of steam electric power plants (1,034 plants or 96 percent of
the universe) to which the final rule apply will incur annualized costs
amounting to less than one percent of revenue. In fact, most of these
plants will incur no cost at all. Only four percent of plants have
costs between one percent and three percent of revenue (38 plants), and
less than one percent of plants have costs above three percent of
revenue (8 plants). The small fractions of steam electric power plants
with costs to revenue ratios exceeding the one percent and three
percent thresholds suggest that the final limitations and standards are
economically achievable for the industry as a whole.
Table IX-3--Plant-Level Cost-to-Revenue Analysis Results a
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number and fraction of existing steam electric power plants with cost-to-revenue ratio of
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0% 0-1% 1-3% >3%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
# % # % # % # %
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Count or Percent of Plants.............. 946 88 88 8 38 4 8 1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ This analysis makes a counterfactual, conservative assumption of zero cost pass through. Plant counts are
weighted estimates.
Parent Entity-Level Cost-to-Revenue Analysis. EPA also assessed the
economic impact of the final rule at the parent entity level. The
screening-level cost-to-revenue analysis at the parent entity level
provides insight on the impact of the final rule on those entities that
own existing generating units at steam electric power plants. In this
analysis, the domestic parent entity associated with any given plant is
[[Page 67866]]
defined as that entity with the largest ownership share in the plant.
For each parent entity, EPA compared the total annualized after-tax
costs and the total revenue for the entity (see Chapter 4 of the RIA
report for details). EPA considered two approximate bounding cases to
analyze costs and revenue for the owners of all existing units at steam
electric power plants, based on the weights developed from the industry
survey. These cases, which are described in more detail in Chapter 4 of
the RIA, provide a range of estimates for the number of entities
incurring costs and the costs incurred by any entity owning an existing
generating unit at a steam electric power plant.
Table IX-4 summarizes the results of the entity-level analysis of
the final rule for the two analytic cases.
Table IX-4--Parent Entity-Level After-Tax Annual Costs as a Percentage of Revenue a
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Not analyzed Number and percentage with after tax annual costs/annual
due to lack of revenue of:
revenue ---------------------------------------------------------------
Total number of entities information 0% 0-1% 1-3% 3% or greater
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# % # % # % # % # %
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Case 1: Lower-bound estimate of number of entities owning steam electric power plants (which also provides an
upper-bound estimate of total costs that an entity may incur)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243............................. 14 6 166 68 53 22 8 3 2 1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Case 2: Upper-bound estimate of number of entities owning steam electric power plants (which also provides a
lower-bound estimate of total costs that an entity may incur)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
507............................. 30 6 414 82 53 10 8 2 2 <1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# equals the number of entities.
\a\ This analysis makes a counterfactual, conservative assumption of zero cost pass-through.
Similar to the plant-level analysis above, cost-to-revenue ratios
provide screening-level indicators of potential economic impacts, this
time to the owning entities; higher ratios suggest a higher probability
of economic impacts. As presented in Table IX-4, EPA estimated that the
number of entities owning existing generating units at steam electric
power plants ranges from 243 (lower-bound estimate) to 507 (upper-bound
estimate), depending on the assumed ownership structure of plants not
surveyed. EPA estimates that 90 percent to 92 percent of parent
entities will either incur no costs or the annualized cost they incur
to meet the final limitations and standards will represent less than
one percent of their revenues, under the lower- and upper-bound cases,
respectively.
Overall, this screening-level analysis shows that the entity-level
costs are low in comparison to the entity-level revenues; very few
entities are likely to face economic impacts at any level. This finding
supports EPA's determination that the final rule is economically
achievable by the steam electric power generation industry as a whole.
b. Assessment of Impacts in the Context of the Electricity Market
In analyzing the impacts of regulatory actions affecting the
electric power sector, EPA has used IPM, a comprehensive electricity
market optimization model that can evaluate such impacts within the
context of regional and national electricity markets. The model is
designed to evaluate the effects of changes in generating unit-level
electric generation costs on the total cost of electricity supply,
subject to specified demand and emissions constraints.
Use of a comprehensive, market analysis system is important in
assessing the potential impact of the regulation because of the
interdependence of electric generating units in supplying power to the
electric transmission grid. Increases in electricity production costs
at some generating units can have a range of broader market impacts
affecting other generating units, including the likelihood that various
units are dispatched, on average. The analysis also provides important
insight on steam electric capacity closures (e.g., retirements of
generating units that become uneconomical relative to other generating
units), based on a more detailed analysis of market factors than in the
screening-level analyses above, and it further informs EPA's
determination of whether the final ELGs are economically achievable by
the industry as a whole.
EPA used version 5.13 of IPM to analyze the impacts of the final
rule. IPM V5.13 is based on an inventory of U.S. utility- and non-
utility-owned boilers and generators that provide power to the
integrated electric transmission grid, including plants to which the
ELGs apply. IPM V5.13 embeds a baseline energy demand forecast that is
derived from DOE's ``Annual Energy Outlook 2013'' (AEO 2013). IPM V5.13
also incorporates in its analytic baseline the expected compliance
response to existing regulatory requirements for air regulations
affecting the power sector.\42\ In addition, the Base Case for IPM
analyses of the final ELGs accounts for the effects of the final CWIS
rule and CCR rule, as well as the CPP rule.\43\ As explained in Section
V, because of the short time between finalizing the CPP rule and this
final rule, EPA's IPM analysis for this final rule incorporates the
proposed CPP rule in the baseline. EPA concludes the proposed and final
CPP specifications are similar enough that using the proposed rather
than the final CPP will not bias the results of the
[[Page 67867]]
analysis for this rule. This conclusion is based on a careful
evaluation of whether the population of steam electricity generating
units that would incur costs under the ELGs in the final CPP differs
meaningfully from the proposed CPP baseline. The analyses led us to
conclude that using the proposed CPP baseline in lieu of the final CPP
baseline is acceptable because (1) the number of steam electric
generating units that would incur costs under the ELGs is very similar
on either baseline, and (2) where the populations differ, the net
number of steam electric generating units that are in one baseline and
not the other is small relative to the total population of steam
electric generating units that would incur costs under the ELGs in
either baseline. See the RIA for additional details.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ The Base Case includes the following regulations: Clean Air
Interstate Rule (CAIR); Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS)
rule; regulatory SO2 emission rates arising from State
Implementation Plans (SIP); Acid Rain Program established under
Title IV of the Clean Air Act Amendments; NOX SIP Call
trading program for Rhode Island; Clean Air Act Reasonable Available
Control Technology requirements and Title IV unit specific rate
limits for NOX; the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative;
Renewable Portfolio Standards; New Source Review Settlements; and
several state-level regulations affecting emissions of
SO2, NOX, and mercury that are already in
place or expected to come into force by 2017.
\43\ EPA typically includes only final rules in its base case
for its IPM analyses. However, at the time EPA performed the IPM
analyses for this rule, it did not have details of the final CPP
rule. EPA therefore used information from the proposed CPP rule as a
proxy for purposes of the ELG analyses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In contrast to the screening-level analyses, which are static
analyses and do not account for interdependence of electric generating
units in supplying power to the electric transmission grid, IPM
accounts for potential changes in the generation profile of steam
electric and other units and consequent changes in market-level
generation costs, as the electric power market responds to higher
generation costs for steam electric units due to the ELGs.
Additionally, in contrast to the screening-level analyses in which EPA
assumed no cost pass through of the final rule costs, IPM depicts
production activity in wholesale electricity markets where some
recovery of compliance costs through increased electricity prices is
possible but not guaranteed.
In analyzing the final ELGs, EPA specified additional fixed and
variable costs that are expected to be incurred by specific steam
electric power plants and generating units to comply with the ELGs (the
costs discussed in Section IX.A). EPA then ran IPM including these
additional costs to determine the dispatch of electric generating units
that would meet projected demand at the lowest costs, subject to the
same constraints as those present in the analysis baseline. The
estimated changes in plant-specific and unit-specific production levels
and costs--and, in turn, changes in total electric power sector costs
and production profile--are key data elements in evaluating the
expected national and regional effects of the ELGs, including closures
of steam electric generating units.
EPA considered impact metrics of interest at three levels of
aggregation: (1) Impact on national and regional electricity markets
(all electric power generation, including steam and non-steam electric
power plants), (2) impact on steam electric power plants as a group,
and (3) impact on individual steam electric power plants incurring
costs. Chapter 5 of the RIA discusses the first analysis. The sections
below summarize the two analyses focusing on steam electric power
plants, which are further described in Chapter 5 of the RIA.
All results presented below are representative of modeled market
conditions in the years 2028-2033, by which time all plants will meet
the effluent limitations and standards. Costs are reflective of costs
in the modeled years.\44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ In contrast, the social costs estimated in Section IX.B
reflect the discounted value of compliance costs over the entire 24-
year period of analysis, as of 2015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impact on Existing Steam Electric Power Plants. EPA used IPM V5.13
results for 2030 to assess the potential impact of the final rule on
existing generating units at steam electric power plants. The purpose
of this analysis is to assess impacts on existing generating units at
steam electric power plants specifically. EPA used this information in
determining whether the ELGs are economically achievable by the steam
electric power generating industry as a whole.
Table IX-5 reports results for existing generating units at steam
electric power plants, as a group. EPA looked at the following metrics:
(1) Incremental early retirements and capacity closures, calculated as
the difference between capacity under the ELGs and capacity under the
baseline, which includes both full plant closures and partial plant
closures (unit closures) in aggregate capacity terms; (2) incremental
capacity closures as a percentage of baseline capacity; (3) post-
compliance change in electricity generation; (4) post-compliance
changes in variable production costs per MWh, calculated as the sum of
total fuel and variable O&M costs divided by net generation; and (5)
changes in annual costs (fuel, variable O&M, fixed O&M, and capital).
Items (1) and (2) provide important insight for determining the
economic achievability of the ELGs.
Table IX-5--Impact of Final ELGs on Steam Electric Power Plants as a Group at the Year 2030
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incremental early retirements
closures \a\
----------------------------------
Change in
Change in total
variable
Change in
Region Baseline % of generation
production cost
annual costs
capacity Capacity baseline (GWh or % of
(2013$/MWh or %
(million 2013$
(MW) (MW) capacity baseline)
of baseline)
or % of baseline)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total U.S......................... 359,982 843 0.2% -3,179 -0.2% $0.10 0.3% $496 0.6%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Values for incremental early retirements or closures represent change relative to the baseline run. IPM may show partial (unit) or full plant early
retirements (closures). It may also show avoided closures (negative closure values) in which a unit or plant that is projected to close in the
baseline is estimated to continue operating in the post-compliance case. Avoided closures may occur among plants that incur no compliance costs or for
which compliance costs are low relative to other steam electric power plants.
Under the final rule, variable production costs at steam electric
power plants increase by approximately 0.3 percent at the national
level. The resulting net change in total capacity for steam electric
power plants is very small. For the group of steam electric power
plants, total capacity decreases by 843 MW or approximately 0.2 percent
of the 359,982 MW baseline capacity, corresponding to a net closure of
two units, or when aggregating to the level of steam electric
generating plants, one net plant closure.
The change in total generation is an indicator of how steam
electric power plants fare, relative to the rest of the electricity
market. While at the market level there is essentially no projected
change in total electricity generation,\45\
[[Page 67868]]
for steam electric power plants, total available capacity and
electricity generation at the national level are projected to fall by
approximately 0.2 percent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ As discussed in the RIA, at the national level, the demand
for electricity does not change between the baseline and the
analyzed regulatory options (generation within the regions is
allowed to vary) because meeting demand is an exogenous constraint
imposed by the model.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These findings of very small national effects (and similarly very
small regional effects, as described in Chapter 5 of the RIA) in these
impact metrics support EPA's conclusion that the final rule will have
little economic consequence for the steam electric power generating
industry and the electricity market and is, therefore, economically
achievable.
Impact on Individual Steam Electric Power Plants Incurring Costs
under this Rulemaking. To assess potential plant-level effects, EPA
also analyzed plant-specific changes between the base case and the
post-compliance cases for the following metrics: (1) Capacity
utilization (defined as annual generation (in MWh) divided by [capacity
(MW) times 8,760 hours]) (2) electricity generation, and (3) variable
production costs per MWh, defined as variable O&M cost plus fuel cost
divided by net generation.
The analysis of changes in individual plants as a result of the
final rule is detailed in Chapter 5 of the RIA. The results indicate
that steam electric plants experience only slight effects--no change,
or less than a one percent reduction or one percent increase. See Table
5-4 in the RIA. Only 17 plants see their capacity utilization reduced
by more than one percent, while 25 plants increase their capacity
utilization by more than one percent. The estimated change in variable
production costs is higher; 43 plants have an increase in variable
production costs exceeding one percent; for seven of these plants, this
increase exceeds three percent, but again the vast majority of plants
experience a less than one percent increase in variable production
costs. Results for the subset of plants incurring costs further support
the conclusion that the effects of the final rule on the steam electric
industry will be small.
2. Summary of Economic Impacts for New Sources
EPA also evaluated the expected costs of meeting the final
standards for new sources. The incremental cost associated with
complying with the final NSPS and PSNS varies depending on the types of
processes, wastestreams, and waste management systems that the plant
would have installed in the absence of the new source requirements. EPA
estimated capital and O&M costs for several scenarios that represent
the different types of operations present at existing steam electric
power plants or typically included at new steam electric power plants.
These scenarios capture differences in the plant status (building a
generating unit at a new location versus adding a new generating unit
at an existing power plant), presence of on-site impoundments or
landfills, type of ash handling, type of FGD systems in service, and
type of leachate collection and handling.
EPA assessed the possible impact of this final rule on new units by
comparing the incremental costs for new units to the overall cost of
building and operating new scrubbed coal units, on an annualized basis.
EPA estimated costs of a new coal unit using the overnight \46\
capital and O&M costs of building and operating a new scrubbed coal
unit from the EIA's Annual Energy Outlook 2014. For purposes of this
analysis, EPA assumed a new dual-unit plant with a total generation
capacity of 1,300 MW. Table IX-6 shows capital and O&M costs of
building and operating a new coal unit and contrasts these costs with
the incremental costs associated with the final NSPS/PSNS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ As defined by the EIA, ``overnight cost'' is an estimate of
the cost at which a plant could be constructed assuming that the
entire process from planning through completion could be
accomplished in a single day. This concept is useful to avoid any
impact of project delays and of financing issues and assumptions on
estimated costs.
Table IX-6--Comparison of Incremental Compliance Costs With Costs for New Coal-Fired Steam Electric Units
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs of new Incremental
Cost component coal generation compliance costs % of new
($2013/MW) \a\ ($2013/MW) \b\ generation cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital................................................... $3,058,861 $8,328-$87,085 0.3-2.8
Annual Non-Fuel O&M....................................... 69,630 620-8,828 0.3-3.9
Annual Fuel \c\........................................... 157,737
-----------------------------------------------------
Total Annualized Costs................................ 497,213 1,354-16,511 0.3-3.3
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Source: New unit total cost value from Table 8.2 EIA NEMS Electricity Market Module. AEO 2014 Documentation.
Available at https://www.eia.gov/forecasts/aeo/assumptions/pdf/electricity.pdf. Capital costs are based on the
total overnight costs for new scrubbed coal dual-unit plant, 1,300 MW capacity, coming online in 2017. EPA
restated costs in 2013 dollars using the construction cost index. Total annual O&M costs assume 90% capacity
utilization.
\b\ Incremental costs for new 1300 MW unit for Option F. Range represents the costs for a new unit at a newly
constructed plant (lower bound) and new unit at an existing plant, with evaporation technology (upper bound).
\c\ Fuel costs estimated assuming heat rate of 8,800 Btu/kWh (AEO 2014) and coal price delivered to the power
sector of 2.27 $/Mbtu (AEO 2015, projected costs in 2017 in 2013$).
The comparison suggests that costs associated with meeting the
final NSPS/PSNS represent a relatively small fraction of overnight
capital costs of a new unit (less than one percent) and a similarly
small fraction of non-fuel O&M and fuel costs (less than one percent).
On an annualized basis, costs for meeting standards specified in the
final rule are 0.3 to 3.3 percent of annualized costs for new coal
generating capacity. Based on this assessment, EPA concludes that the
final rule does not present a barrier to entry.
X. Pollutant Reductions
EPA took a similar approach to the one described above for plant-
specific costs in estimating pollutant reductions associated with the
final rule. For each wastestream \47\ and each POC, EPA first
estimated--on an annual, per plant basis--plant-specific baseline
pollutant
[[Page 67869]]
loadings taking into account components in place at the plant (or
expected to be in place given other existing rules \48\) and, where
appropriate, pollutant removals at the POTW, since these removals
result in reduced discharges to receiving waters. EPA similarly
estimated plant-specific post-compliance pollutant loadings using the
mean concentrations associated with the final limitations and
standards. In cases where a plant had already implemented approaches
that would allow them to comply with the final rule, the baseline and
post-compliance pollutant loadings are equivalent. EPA then calculated
the pollutant reduction as the difference between the estimated
baseline and post-compliance discharge loadings. For each wastestream,
EPA then calculated total industry pollutant reductions by applying
survey weights to the plant-specific pollutant reductions and summing
them.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ EPA estimated pollutant reductions for wastestreams with
numeric and zero pollutant discharge limitations and standards. The
reductions reflect a reduction in the mass of pollutant discharged.
\48\ As explained elsewhere in this preamble, for this final
rule, EPA adjusted its estimates to, among other things, account for
known generating unit closures and conversions and known operating
changes, including those associated with the CCR rule, expected to
occur prior to the time in which the limitations and standards in
this rule would apply. As such, baseline loadings in this final rule
reflect closures, conversions, and operational changes that will
take place prior to implementation of the rule in NPDES permits,
rather than the industry survey baseline year of 2009 used in the
proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While plants are not required to implement the specific
technologies that form the bases for the final limitations and
standards, EPA calculated the pollutant loadings for plants that
implement these technologies to estimate the pollutant reductions
associated with the rule. See TDD Section 10 for a detailed discussion
of EPA's pollutant loadings and reductions methodologies.
Table X-1 presents estimated industry-level pollutant reductions
for the final rule.
Table X-1--Total Annualized Pollutant Loading Reductions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pollutant reductions (pounds per year)
-----------------------------------------------------
Analysis baseline Conventional Priority Nonconventional
pollutants \a\ pollutants pollutants \b\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Final Rule................................................ 13,400,000 410,000 371,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ The loadings reduction for conventional pollutants includes BOD and TSS.
\b\ The loadings reduction for nonconventional pollutants excludes TDS and COD to avoid double counting removals
for certain pollutants that would also be measured by these bulk parameters (e.g., sodium, magnesium).
XI. Development of Effluent Limitations and Standards
The final rule establishes a zero discharge limitation and standard
applicable to all pollutants in fly ash transport water, bottom ash
transport water, and FGMC wastewater; therefore, no effluent
concentration data were used to set the limitations and standards for
these wastestreams. The final rule contains new numeric effluent
limitations and standards that apply to discharges of FGD wastewater
and gasification wastewater at new and existing sources, and to
discharges of combustion residual leachate at new sources.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ Effluent limitations and standards based on the previously
established BPT limitations on TSS are not discussed in this
section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA developed the new numeric effluent limitations and standards in
this final rule using long-term average effluent values and variability
factors that account for variation in performance at well-operated
facilities that employ the technologies that constitute the bases for
control. EPA's methodology for derivation of limitations in ELGs is
longstanding and has been upheld in court. See, e.g., Chem. Mfrs. Ass'n
v. EPA, 870 F.2d 177 (5th Cir. 1989); Nat'l Wildlife Fed'n v. EPA, 286
F.3d 554 (D.C. Cir. 2002). EPA establishes the final effluent
limitations and standards as ``daily maximums'' and ``maximums for
monthly averages.'' Definitions provided in 40 CFR 122.2 state that the
daily maximum limitation is the ``highest allowable `daily discharge'
'' and the maximum for monthly average limitation is the ``highest
allowable average of `daily discharges' over a calendar month,
calculated as the sum of all `daily discharges' measured during a
calendar month divided by the number of `daily discharges' measured
during that month.'' Daily discharges are defined to be the ``
`discharge of a pollutant' measured during a calendar day or any 24-
hour period that reasonably represents the calendar day for purposes of
sampling.''
EPA's objective in establishing daily maximum limitations is to
restrict the discharges on a daily basis at a level that is achievable
for a plant that targets its treatment at the long-term average. EPA
acknowledges that variability around the long-term average occurs
during normal operations. This variability means that plants
occasionally may discharge at a level that is higher (or lower) than
the long-term average. To allow for these possibly higher daily
discharges and provide an upper bound for the allowable concentration
of pollutants that may be discharged, while still targeting achievement
of the long-term average, EPA has established the daily maximum
limitation. A plant that consistently discharges at a level near the
daily maximum limitation would not be operating its treatment to
achieve the long-term average. Targeting treatment to achieve the daily
limitation, rather than the long-term average, may result in values
that frequently exceed the limitations due to routine variability in
treated effluent.
EPA's objective in establishing monthly average limitations is to
provide an additional restriction to help ensure that plants target
their average discharges to achieve the long-term average. The monthly
average limitation requires dischargers to provide ongoing control, on
a monthly basis, that supplements controls imposed by the daily maximum
limitation. In order to meet the monthly average limitation, a plant
must counterbalance a value near the daily maximum limitation with one
or more values well below the daily maximum limitation.
The TDD provides a detailed description of the data and methodology
used to develop long-term averages, variability factors, and
limitations and standards for the final rule. As a result of public
comments, EPA expanded the data set used to calculate the BAT/PSES
effluent limitations and standards for discharges of FGD wastewater
from existing sources. Largely, this expanded data set includes
additional self-monitoring data from plants operating
[[Page 67870]]
the selected technology basis. EPA also expanded the data set by
including treatment performance data from another plant that, upon
review of comments, EPA determined would be appropriate to use to
calculate the effluent limitations in this rule. The combination of EPA
sampling data (both EPA-collected and CWA section 308 samples collected
by plants for analysis by EPA) and plant self-monitoring data results
in data sets characterizing the treatment system performance over
several years at each of the plants used to develop effluent
limitations and standards for FGD wastewater.
EPA identified certain data that warranted exclusion from the
calculations of the limitations and standards because: (1) The samples
were analyzed using an analytical method that is not approved in 40 CFR
part 136 for NPDES permit purposes; (2) the samples were analyzed using
an insufficiently sensitive analytical method (e.g., use of EPA Method
245.1 to measure the concentration of mercury in effluent samples); (3)
the samples were analyzed in a manner which resulted in an unacceptable
level of analytical interferences; (4) the samples were collected
during the initial commissioning period for the wastewater treatment
system or the plant decommissioning period and do not represent BAT/
NSPS level of performance; (5) the analytical results were identified
as questionable due to quality control issues, abnormal conditions or
treatment system upsets, or were analytical anomalies; (6) the samples
were collected from a location that is not representative of treated
effluent; or (7) the treatment system was operating in a manner that
does not represent BAT/NSPS level of performance. The results of EPA's
evaluation of the data and reasons for any data exclusions are
summarized in DCN SE05733.
Tables XI-1 and XI-2 present the effluent limitations and standards
for FGD wastewater, gasification wastewater, and combustion residual
leachate. For comparison, the tables also present the long-term average
treatment performance calculated for these wastestreams. Due to routine
variability in treated effluent, a power plant that targets discharging
its wastewater at a level near the values of the daily maximum
limitation or the monthly average limitation may experience frequent
values exceeding the limitations. For this reason, EPA recommends that
plants design and operate the treatment system to achieve the long-term
average for the model technology. In doing so, a system that is
designed to represent the BAT/NSPS level of control would be expected
to meet the limitations.
EPA expects that plants will be able to meet their effluent
limitations or standards at all times. If an exceedance is caused by an
upset condition, the plant would have an affirmative defense to an
enforcement action if the requirements of 40 CFR 122.41(n) are met.
Exceedances caused by a design or operational deficiency, however, are
indications that the plant's performance does not represent the
appropriate level of control. For these final limitations and
standards, EPA determined that such exceedances can be controlled by
diligent process and wastewater treatment system operational practices,
such as regular monitoring of influent and effluent wastewater
characteristics and adjusting dosage rates for chemical additives to
target effluent performance for regulated pollutants at the long-term
average concentration for the BAT/NSPS technology. Additionally, some
plants may need to upgrade or replace existing treatment systems to
ensure that the treatment system is designed to achieve performance
that targets the effluent concentrations at the long-term average. This
is consistent with EPA's costing approach and its engineering judgment
developed over years of evaluating wastewater treatment processes for
steam electric power plants and other industrial sectors. EPA
recognizes that, as a result of the final rule, some dischargers,
including those that are operating technologies representing the
technology bases for the final rule, may need to improve their
treatment systems, process controls, and/or treatment system operations
in order to consistently meet the effluent limitations and standards.
This is consistent with the CWA, which requires that discharge
limitations and standards reflect the best available technology
economically achievable or the best available demonstrated control
technology.
See DCN SE05733 for details of the calculation of the limitations
and standards presented in the tables below.
Table XI-1--Long-Term Averages and Effluent Limitations and Standards for FGD Wastewater and Gasification
Wastewater for Existing Sources
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Daily Monthly
Wastestream Pollutant Long-term maximum average
average limitation limitation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FGD Wastewater (BAT & PSES)............... Arsenic ([micro]g/L)......... 5.98 11 8
Mercury (ng/L)............... 159 788 356
Nitrate/nitrite as N (mg/L).. 1.3 17.0 4.4
Selenium ([micro]g/L)........ 7.5 23 12
Voluntary Incentives Program for FGD Arsenic ([micro]g/L)......... \a\ 4.0 \b\ 4 (\c\)
Wastewater (BAT only). Mercury (ng/L)............... 17.8 39 24
Selenium ([micro]g/L)........ \a\ 5.0 \b\ 5 (\c\)
TDS (mg/L)................... 14.9 50 24
Gasification Wastewater (BAT & PSES)...... Arsenic ([micro]g/L)......... \a\ 4.0 \b\ 4 (\c\)
Mercury (ng/L)............... 1.08 1.8 1.3
Selenium ([micro]g/L)........ 147 453 227
TDS (mg/L)................... 15.2 38 22
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Long-term average is the arithmetic mean of the quantitation limits since all observations were not
detected.
\b\ Limitation is set equal to the quantitation limit.
\c\ Monthly average limitation is not established when the daily maximum limitation is based on the quantitation
limit.
[[Page 67871]]
Table XI-2--Long-Term Averages and Standards for FGD Wastewater, Gasification Wastewater, and Combustion
Residual Leachate for New Sources
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Daily Monthly
Wastestream Pollutant Long-term maximum average
average limitation limitation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FGD Wastewater (NSPS & PSNS).............. Arsenic ([micro]g/L)......... \a\ 4.0 \b\ 4 (\c\)
Mercury (ng/L)............... 17.8 39 24
Selenium ([micro]g/L)........ \a\ 5.0 \b\ 5 (\c\)
TDS (mg/L)................... 14.9 50 24
Gasification Wastewater (NSPS & PSNS)..... Arsenic ([micro]g/L)......... \a\ 4.0 \b\ 4 (\c\)
Mercury (ng/L)............... 1.08 1.8 1.3
Selenium ([micro]g/L)........ 147 453 227
TDS (mg/L)................... 15.2 38 22
Combustion Residual Leachate (NSPS & PSNS) Arsenic ([micro]g/L) \d\..... 5.98 11 8
Mercury (ng/L) \d\........... 159 788 356
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Long-term average is the arithmetic mean of the quantitation limits since all observations were not
detected.
\b\ Limitation is set equal to the quantitation limit.
\c\ Monthly average limitation is not established when the daily maximum limitation is based on the quantitation
limit.
\d\ Long-term average and standards were transferred from performance of chemical precipitation in treating FGD
wastewater.
XII. Non-Water Quality Environmental Impacts
The elimination or reduction of one form of pollution can create or
aggravate other environmental problems. Therefore, CWA sections 304(b)
and 306 require EPA to consider non-water quality environmental impacts
(including energy requirements) associated with ELGs. Accordingly, EPA
considered the potential impact of this rule on energy consumption, air
emissions, and solid waste generation.\50\ In addition, EPA evaluated
the effects associated with water withdrawal. For information on the
methodologies EPA used to estimate the non-water quality environmental
impacts, see TDD Section 12.
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\50\ Because EPA does not project any new coal or oil-fired
generating units, the results presented in this section reflect
existing generating units. Because EPA expects non-water quality
environmental impacts for new generating units to be similar to or
the same as existing generating units, EPA determined that in the
event a new generating unit is built, the non-water quality
environmental impacts associated with NSPS/PSNS would be acceptable.
For EPA's analysis of non-water quality impacts for existing
generating units for Option F, see Section 12 of the TDD.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table XII-1 presents the net increases in energy requirements for
the final rule. EPA estimates that energy increases associated with
this rule are less than 0.01 percent of the total electricity generated
by all electric power plants and the fuel consumption increase is 0.002
percent of total fuel consumption by all motor vehicles in the U.S.
Table XII-1--Industry-Level Energy Requirements for the Final Rule
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Final
Non-water quality environmental impact rule
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Electrical Energy Usage (MWh)................................. 237,000
Fuel (GPY).................................................... 556,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table XII-2 presents the estimated net change in air emissions for
the final rule. Table XII-2 shows that the estimated air emission
increases are less than 0.04 percent of the total air emissions
generated in 2009 by the electric power industry for the three
pollutants evaluated.
Table XII-2--Air Emissions Associated With BAT/PSES for Final Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Change in air
2009 emissions emissions Increase in
Non-water quality environmental impact by electric associated with emissions for
power industry final rule final rule (%)
(million tons) (million tons)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOX.................................................... 1 -0.0114 -1.16
SOX.................................................... 6 0.00243 0.0406
CO2.................................................... 2,403 -2.58 -0.107
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA compared the estimated increase in solid waste generation to
the amount of solids generated in a year by electric power plants
throughout the U.S.--approximately 134 billion tons. The increase in
solid waste generation associated with the final rule is less than
0.001 percent of the total solid waste generated by all electric power
plants.
EPA estimates that, under the final rule, steam electric power
plants will reduce their water withdrawal by 57 billion gallons per
year (155 million gallons per day). See TDD Section 12.
Based on these analyses, EPA determined that the final BAT effluent
limitations and PSES have acceptable non-water quality environmental
impacts, including energy impacts.
XIII. Environmental Assessment
A. Introduction
Although not required to do so, EPA conducted an environmental
assessment for the final rule, as it did for the proposed rule. The
environmental assessment for the final rule reviewed currently
available literature on the documented environmental and human health
impacts of steam electric power plant wastewater discharges and
[[Page 67872]]
conducted modeling to determine the cumulative impacts of pollution
from the universe of steam electric power plants to which the final
rule applies. EPA modeled both the impacts of steam electric power
plant discharges at baseline conditions (pre-rule conditions) and the
improvements that will likely result after implementation of the rule.
EPA's review of the scientific literature; documented cases of the
extensive impacts of steam electric power plant wastewater discharges
on human health and the environment; and a full description of EPA's
modeling methodology and results are provided in the EA.
B. Summary of Human Health and Environmental Impacts
As discussed in the environmental assessment and proposed rule,
current scientific literature indicates that steam electric power plant
wastewaters such as fly ash transport water, bottom ash transport
water, FGD wastewater, and combustion residual leachate contain large
amounts of a wide range of harmful pollutants, some of which are toxic
and bioaccumulative, and which cause significant, widespread
detrimental environmental and human health impacts.
Discharges of steam electric power plant wastewaters present a
serious public health concern due to the potential human exposure to
toxic pollutants through consumption of contaminated fish and drinking
water. Toxic pollutants that detrimentally affect human health that are
commonly found in steam electric power plant wastewater discharges
include mercury, lead, arsenic, cadmium, thallium, and selenium, along
with numerous others (see EA Section 3). These pollutants are
associated with a variety of documented adverse human health impacts.
For example, human exposure to elevated levels of mercury for
relatively short periods of time can result in kidney and brain damage.
Pregnant women who are exposed to mercury can pass the contaminant to
their developing fetus, leading to possible toxic injury of the fetal
brain and damage to other parts of the nervous system. Human exposure
to elevated levels of lead can cause serious damage to the brain,
kidneys, nervous system, and red blood cells, especially in children.
Arsenic is associated with an increased risk of liver and bladder
cancer in humans, as well as non-cancer impacts including dermal,
cardiovascular, respiratory, and reproductive effects such as excess
incidences of miscarriages, stillbirths, preterm births, and low birth
weights. Chronic exposure to cadmium, a probable carcinogen, can lead
to kidney failure, lung damage, and weakened bones. Human exposure to
elevated levels of thallium can lead to neurological symptoms, hair
loss, gastrointestinal effects, liver and kidney damage, and
reproductive and developmental damage. Long-term exposure to selenium
can damage the kidney, liver, and nervous and circulatory systems.
The pollutants in steam electric power plant wastewater can
bioaccumulate within fish and other aquatic wildlife in the receiving
waters and subsequently be transferred to recreational and subsistence
fishers who consume these contaminated fish, potentially resulting in
the acute and chronic health impacts described above. Certain
populations are particularly at risk, including women who are pregnant,
nursing, or may become pregnant, and communities relying on consumption
of fish from contaminated waters as a major food source.
Discharges of steam electric power plant pollutants to surface
waters also have the potential to contaminate drinking water sources,
causing potential problems for drinking water systems and, if left
untreated, potential adverse health effects. A recent study indicates
that pollutants in ash and FGD wastewater discharges exceeded MCLs in
every surface water that was monitored in North Carolina during the
study (see DCN SE01984). Nitrogen discharges from steam electric power
plants can contribute, along with other sources, to harmful algal
blooms. Harmful algal blooms can affect drinking water sources, such as
the recent incident in Toledo, Ohio (see DCN SE04517).
Bromide discharges from steam electric power plants can contribute
to the formation of carcinogenic DBPs in public drinking water systems.
A recent study identified four drinking water treatment plants that
experienced increased levels of bromide in their source water, and in
some, a corresponding increase in the formation of brominated DBPs in
the drinking water system, after the installation of wet FGD scrubbers
at upstream steam electric power plants (see DCN SE04503).
Although not directly addressed by this final rule, ground water
contamination from surface impoundments containing steam electric power
plant wastewater also threatens drinking water sources. EPA identified
more than 30 documented cases where ground water contamination from
surface impoundments extended beyond the plant boundaries, illustrating
the threat to ground water drinking water sources (see DCN SE04518).
Where this final rule helps to reduce or eliminate the continued
disposal or storage of steam electric power plant wastewater pollutants
in unlined or leaking surface impoundments, potential impacts to ground
water will also be reduced or eliminated.
The ecological impacts of steam electric power plant wastewater
pollutants include both acute (e.g., fish kills) and chronic effects
(e.g., reproductive failure, malformations, and metabolic, hormonal,
and behavioral disorders) upon biota within the receiving water and the
surrounding environment. Recovery of aquatic environments from exposure
to these steam electric power plant pollutants can be extremely slow
due to the accumulation and continued cycling of the pollutants within
ecosystems, resulting in the potential to alter ecological processes
such as population diversity and community dynamics. Furthermore, many
steam electric power plants discharge pollutants to sensitive
environments such as the Great Lakes, valuable estuaries such as the
Chesapeake Bay, 303(d) listed impaired waters, and waters with fish
consumption advisories. EPA identified 69 steam electric power plants
with documented adverse environmental impacts on surface waters (see
DCN SE04518).
C. Environmental Assessment Methodology
As discussed in Section V.G, EPA updated the environmental
assessment for the final rule to respond to public comments and to
better characterize the environmental and human health improvements
associated with the final rule. Although not required to do so, EPA
conducted an environmental assessment for the final rule. The
environmental assessment reviewed currently available literature on the
documented environmental and human health impacts of steam electric
power plant wastewater discharges and conducted modeling to determine
the cumulative impacts of pollution from the universe of steam electric
power plants to which the final rule applies. EPA modeled both of the
impacts of steam electric power plant discharges at baseline conditions
and the improvements that will likely result after implementation of
this rule. The final environmental assessment also incorporates changes
to the industry profile to account for retirements, conversions, and
operational changes
[[Page 67873]]
that EPA anticipates, given other existing rules, primarily the CCR and
CPP rules.
The environmental assessment modeling for the final rule consisted
of (1) a steady-state, national-scale immediate receiving water (IRW)
model that evaluated the discharges from steam electric power plants
and focused on impacts within the immediate surface water where the
discharges occur (approximately one to 10 kilometers [km] from the
outfall),\51\ and (2) dynamic case study models with more extensive,
site-specific modeling of selected waterbodies that receive, or are
downstream from, steam electric power plant discharges. EPA also
modeled receiving water concentrations downstream from steam electric
power plant discharges using EPA's Risk-Screening Environmental
Indicators (RSEI) model, and improved its modeling of selenium
bioaccumulation in fish and wildlife.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ The IRW model used for the final rule is substantially
similar to the one used for the proposed rule, but with certain
updates, as further discussed in this section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, for the final rule, EPA updated and improved several
input parameters for the IRW model, including fish consumption rates
for recreational and subsistence fishers, the bioconcentration factor
for copper, and benchmarks for assessing the potential for impacts to
benthic communities in receiving waters.
The case-study modeling for the final rule is based on EPA's Water
Quality Analysis Simulation Program (WASP), which accounts for
fluctuations in receiving water flow rates by using daily stream flow
monitoring data instead of one annual average flow rate for the
receiving water, as used in the IRW. The case-study modeling accounts
for pollutant transport and accumulation within receiving water reaches
that are downstream from the discharge location, allowing for an
assessment of environmental impacts over a larger portion of the
receiving waterbody. The case study modeling also accounts for
pollutant contributions from other point, nonpoint, and background
sources, to the extent practical, using available data sources. EPA
used the water quality results of the case-study modeling to supplement
the results of the IRW model (see EA Section 8).
EPA improved its selenium bioaccumulation modeling for impacts on
wildlife by developing and using an ecological risk model that predicts
the risk of reproductive impacts among fish and waterfowl exposed to
selenium from steam electric power plant wastewater discharges. The
ecological risk model accounts for the bioaccumulation of selenium in
aquatic organisms through dietary exposure (the food web), as
contrasted with exposure only to dissolved selenium in the water
column. Dietary exposure plays a more significant role in determining
the extent of selenium bioaccumulation in aquatic organisms. The
ecological risk model also accounts for the higher rates of selenium
bioaccumulation that can occur in slow-flowing aquatic systems such as
lakes and reservoirs, and the risk model translates selenium tissue
concentrations into the predicted risk of adverse reproductive effects
(e.g., reduced egg hatchability, larval mortality, and deformities that
affect survival) among exposed fish and waterfowl. EPA applied the
ecological risk model to the water quality outputs from both the
national-scale IRW model and the case-study models. See EA Section 5.2
for a more detailed discussion.
D. Outputs From the Environmental Assessment
EPA focused its quantitative analyses on the environmental and
human health impacts associated with exposure to toxic bioaccumulative
pollutants via the surface water pathway. EPA focused the modeling on
discharges of toxic bioaccumulative pollutants from a subset of
evaluated wastestreams from steam electric power plants (fly ash and
bottom ash transport water, FGD wastewater, and combustion residual
leachate) into rivers/streams and lakes/ponds (including
reservoirs).\52\ EPA addressed environmental impacts from nutrients in
a separate analysis discussed in Section XIII.D.5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ EPA did not use the state 303d lists of impaired waters in
order to ensure comprehensive coverage of all pollutants of concern.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The environmental assessment concentrates on impacts to aquatic
life based on changes in surface water quality; impacts to aquatic life
based on changes in sediment quality within surface waters; impacts to
wildlife from consumption of contaminated aquatic organisms; and
impacts to human health from consumption of contaminated fish and
water. Table XIII-1 presents a list of the key environmental
improvements projected within the immediate receiving waters due to the
pollutant loading reductions under the final rule. These improvements
are discussed in detail, with quantified results, in the EA.
Table XIII-1--Key Environmental Improvements Within Modeled Immediate
Receiving Waters Under the Final Rule 53
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Will improve under the final
Criteria evaluated for exceedances rule?
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Freshwater Acute National Recommended WQC. YES
Freshwater Chronic National Recommended YES
WQC.
Human Health Water and Organism National YES
Recommended WQC.
Human Health Organism Only National YES
Recommended WQC.
Drinking Water MCL........................ YES
Fish Ingestion NEHC for Mink.............. YES
Fish Ingestion NEHC for Eagles............ YES
Adverse Reproductive Effects in Fish due YES
to Selenium.
Adverse Reproductive Effects in Mallards YES
due to Selenium.
Non-Cancer Reference Dose for Child YES
(Recreational and Subsistence fishers).
Non-Cancer Reference Dose for Adult YES
(Recreational and Subsistence fishers).
Arsenic Cancer Risk for Child YES
(Recreational and Subsistence fishers).
Arsenic Cancer Risk for Adult YES
(Recreational and Subsistence fishers).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Acronyms: MCL (Maximum Contaminant Level); NEHC (No Effect Hazard
Concentration); WQC (Water Quality Criteria).
\a\ The IRW model encompasses a total of 163 immediate receiving waters
(144 rivers and streams; 19 lakes, ponds, and reservoirs) and loadings
from 143 steam electric power plants.
1. Improvements in Surface Water and Ground Water Quality
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ See the EA for the details and amounts of the projected
improvements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA estimates a significant number of environmental and ecological
improvements and reduced impacts to wildlife and humans from reductions
in pollutant loadings under the final rule. More specifically, the
environmental assessment evaluated (a) improvements in water quality,
(b) reduction in impacts to wildlife, (c) reduction in number of
receiving waters with potential human health cancer risks, (d)
reduction in number of receiving waters with potential to cause non-
cancer human health effects, (e) reduction in nutrient impacts, (f)
reduction in other environmental impacts, and (g) other unquantified
environmental improvements.
[[Page 67874]]
EPA expects significantly reduced contamination levels in surface
waters and sediments under the final rule. EPA estimates that reduced
pollutant loadings to surface waters will significantly improve water
quality by reducing pollutant concentrations by an average of 56
percent within the immediate receiving waters of steam electric power
plants where additional treatment technologies are installed as a
result of this final rule. Based on the water quality component of the
IRW model, which compares modeled receiving water concentrations to
national recommended WQC and MCLs to assess changes in receiving water
quality, the pollutants with the greatest number of water quality
standard exceedances under baseline pollutant loadings include: Total
arsenic, total thallium, total selenium, and dissolved cadmium. EPA
estimates that almost half of the immediate receiving waters exceed a
water quality standard under baseline loadings. EPA estimates that the
number of immediate receiving waters with aquatic life exceedances,
which are driven by high total selenium and dissolved cadmium
concentrations, will be reduced under the final rule. EPA also
estimates that the number of immediate receiving waters with human
health water quality standards exceedances, primarily driven by high
total arsenic and total thallium concentrations, will be reduced under
the final rule.
Selenium is one of the primary pollutants documented in the
literature as causing environmental impacts to fish and wildlife. EPA
calculates that total selenium receiving water concentrations will be
reduced by two-thirds under the final rule, leading to a reduction in
the number of immediate receiving waters exceeding the freshwater
chronic criteria for selenium.
While the case-study models and IRW model produced generally
similar results for the five receiving waters included in both
analyses, the case-study model reveals additional potential for
baseline impacts to water quality, aquatic life, and human health that
are not reflected in the IRW model. Case-study modeling also reveals
that these potential impacts can extend beyond the immediate receiving
water and into downstream waters, leading to the potential for more
widespread environmental and human health effects than those shown with
the IRW model. This is particularly true regarding water quality
standard exceedances; in four of the five receiving waters included in
both analyses, the case-study model indicates that the final rule will
result in further reductions in water quality standard exceedances
beyond those reflected in the IRW model.
As discussed in the EA, the RSEI modeling indicates that surface
waters downstream from steam electric power plant wastewater discharges
will also achieve water quality improvements under the final rule.
This final rule will also potentially help to both reduce ground
water contamination and improve the availability of ground water
resources by complementing the CCR rule. This rule provides strong
incentives for plants to greatly reduce, if not entirely eliminate,
disposal and treatment of steam electric power plant wastewater in
unlined surface impoundments.
2. Reduced Impacts to Wildlife
EPA expects that once the rule is implemented the number of
immediate receiving waterbodies with potential impacts to wildlife will
begin to be reduced by more than a half compared to baseline conditions
under the final rule.
EPA determined that steam electric power plant wastewater
discharges into lakes pose the greatest risk to piscivorous (fish
eating) wildlife, with almost a half of lakes exceeding a protective
benchmark for minks or eagles under baseline pollutant loadings
(compared to about a third of rivers). Mercury and selenium are the
primary pollutants with the greatest number of receiving waters with
benchmark exceedances. EPA estimates that this rule will reduce the
number of immediate receiving waters exceeding the benchmark for minks
and eagles by approximately half for mercury and selenium.
Additionally, as discussed in the EA, the downstream RSEI modeling
indicates that surface waters downstream from steam electric power
plant wastewater discharges will also achieve improvements in these
wildlife benchmarks under the final rule.
For the final rule, EPA also performed modeling to estimate the
risk of adverse reproductive effects among fish (e.g., reduced larvae
survival) and waterfowl (e.g., reduced egg hatchability) with dietary
exposure to selenium from steam electric power plant wastewater. Based
on the water quality output from the IRW model, EPA determined that
approximately 15 percent of immediate receiving waters contain selenium
concentrations that present at least a ten percent risk of adverse
reproductive effects among fish or waterfowl that consume prey from
those waterbodies. Under the final rule, EPA estimates that the count
of immediate receiving waters presenting these reproductive risks will
be reduced by more than half. This indicates that the final rule will
reduce the long-term bioaccumulative impact of selenium (and possibly
other bioaccumulative pollutants) throughout aquatic ecosystems.
In addition, EPA estimates that the improvements to water quality,
discussed above, will improve aquatic and wildlife habitats in the
immediate and downstream receiving waters from steam electric power
plant discharges. EPA determined that these water quality and habitat
improvements will enhance efforts to protect threatened and endangered
species. EPA identified four species with a high vulnerability to
changes in water quality whose recovery will be enhanced by the
pollutant reductions associated with the final rule.
3. Reduced Human Health Cancer Risk
EPA estimates that reductions in arsenic loadings from the final
rule will result in a reduction in potential cancer risks to humans
that consume fish exposed to steam electric power plant discharges. In
addition, based on the downstream RSEI modeling, EPA estimates that
numerous river miles downstream from steam electric discharges contain
fish contaminated with inorganic arsenic that present cancer risks to
at least one of the evaluated cohorts. The final rule substantially
reduces this number of miles.
4. Reduced Threat of Non-Cancer Human Health Effects
Exposure to toxic bioaccumulative pollutants poses risk of systemic
and other effects to humans, including effects on the circulatory,
respiratory, or digestive systems, and neurological and developmental
effects. EPA estimates the final rule will significantly reduce the
number of receiving waters with the potential to cause non-cancer
health effects in humans who consume fish exposed to steam electric
power plant pollutants.
Under baseline pollutant loadings, EPA determined that about half
of immediate receiving waters present non-cancer health risks for one
or more of the human cohorts due to elevated pollutant levels in fish.
The final rule, once implemented, will begin to reduce this amount by
approximately 50 percent for all the human cohorts that were evaluated.
Non-cancer risks are caused primarily by mercury (as methylmercury),
total thallium, and total selenium, and to a lesser degree, total
cadmium pollutant loadings. Additionally, as discussed in the EA, the
downstream RSEI modeling indicates that the final rule substantially
[[Page 67875]]
reduces the prevalence of downstream waters with contaminated fish that
present non-cancer health risks to at least one of the human cohorts.
In addition to the assessment of non-cancer impacts described
above, EPA also evaluated the adverse health effects to children who
consume fish contaminated with lead from steam electric power plant
wastewater. EPA estimates that the final rule will significantly reduce
the associated IQ loss among children who live in recreational angler
and subsistence fisher households. The final rule will also reduce the
incidence of other health effects associated with lead exposure among
children, including slowed or delayed growth, delinquent and anti-
social behavior, metabolic effects, impaired heme synthesis, anemia,
and impaired hearing. The final rule will also reduce IQ loss among
children exposed in utero to mercury from maternal fish consumption.
Section XIV.B.1 provides additional details on the benefits analysis of
these reduced IQ losses.
The final rule will also result in additional non-cancer human
health improvements beyond those discussed above, including reduced
health hazards due to exposure to contaminants in waters that are used
for recreational purposes (e.g., swimming).
5. Reduced Nutrient Impacts
The primary concern with nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) in
steam electric power plant discharges is the potential for contributing
to adverse impacts in waterbodies that receive nutrient discharges from
multiple sources. Excessive nutrient loadings to receiving waters can
significantly affect the ecological stability of freshwater and
saltwater aquatic ecosystems and pose health threats to humans from the
generation of toxins by cyanobacteria, which can thrive in nitrogen
driven algal blooms (DCN SE04505).
Nine percent of surface waters receiving steam electric power plant
wastewater discharges are impaired for nutrients. Although the
concentration of nitrogen present in steam electric power plant
discharges from any individual power plant is relatively low, the total
nitrogen loadings from a single plant can be significant due to large
wastewater discharge flow rates.
EPA projects that the final rule will reduce total nutrient
loadings by steam electric power plants in their immediately downstream
receiving waters by more than 99 percent. Section XIV provides
additional details on the water quality benefits analysis of nutrient
reductions, as determined using the SPARROW (Spatially Referenced
Regressions On Watershed attributes) model.
E. Unquantified Environmental and Human Health Improvements
The environmental assessment focused primarily on the
quantification of environmental improvements within rivers and lakes
from post-compliance pollutant reductions for toxic bioaccumulative
pollutants and excessive nutrients. While extensive, the environmental
improvements quantified do not encompass the full range of improvements
anticipated to result from the final rule simply because some of the
improvements have no method for measuring a quantifiable or monetizable
improvement. EPA estimates post-compliance pollutant reductions from
the final rule to result in much greater improvements than those
quantified for wildlife, human health and the environment by:
Reducing loadings of bioaccumulative pollutants to the
broader ecosystem, resulting in the reduction of long-term exposures
and sub-lethal ecological effects;
Reducing sub-lethal chronic effects of toxic pollutants on
aquatic life not captured by the national recommended WQC;
Reducing loadings of pollutants for which EPA did not
perform water quality modeling in support of the environmental
assessment (e.g., boron, manganese, aluminum, vanadium, and iron);
Mitigating impacts to aquatic and aquatic-dependent
wildlife population diversity and community structures;
Reducing exposure of wildlife to pollutants through direct
contact with combustion residual surface impoundments and constructed
wetlands built as treatment systems at steam electric power plants; and
Reducing the potential for the formation of harmful algal
blooms.
Data and analytical limitations prevent modeling the scale and
complexity of the ecosystem processes potentially impacted by steam
electric power plant wastewater, resulting in the inability to quantify
all potential improvements. However, documented site-specific impacts
in the literature reinforce that these impacts are common in the
environments surrounding steam electric power plants and fully support
the conclusion that reducing pollutant loadings will further reduce
risks to human health and wildlife and prevent damage to the
environment.
Although the environmental assessment quantifies impacts to
wildlife that consume fish contaminated with pollutants from steam
electric power plant wastewater, it does not capture the full range of
exposure pathways through which bioaccumulative pollutants can enter
the surrounding food web. Wildlife can encounter toxic bioaccumulative
pollutants from discharges of the evaluated wastestreams through a
variety of exposure pathways such as direct exposure, drinking water,
consumption of contaminated vegetation, and consumption of contaminated
prey other than fish and invertebrates. Therefore, the quantified
improvements underestimate the complete loadings of bioaccumulative
pollutants that can impact wildlife in the ecosystem. The final rule
will lower the total amount of toxic bioaccumulative pollutants
entering the food web near steam electric power plants.
EPA also estimates that reductions in pollutant loadings will lower
the occurrence of sub-lethal effects associated with many of the
pollutants in steam electric power plant wastewater that are not
captured by comparisons with national recommended WQC for aquatic life.
Chronic effects such as decreased reproductive success, changes in
metabolic rates, decreased growth rates, changes in morphology (e.g.,
fin erosion, oral deformities), and changes in behavior (e.g., swimming
ability, ability to catch prey, ability to escape from predators) that
can negatively affect long-term survival, are well documented in the
literature as occurring in aquatic environments near steam electric
power plants. Reductions in organism survival rates from chronic
effects such as abnormalities can alter interspecies relationships
(e.g., declines in the abundance or quality of prey) and prolong
ecosystem recovery. Additionally, EPA was unable to quantify changes to
aquatic and wildlife population diversity and community dynamics;
however, population effects (decline in number and type of organisms
present) caused by exposure to steam electric power plant wastewater
are well documented in the literature. Changes in aquatic populations
can alter the structure and function of aquatic communities and cause
cascading effects within the food web that result in long-term impacts
to ecosystem dynamics. EPA estimates that post-compliance pollutant
loading reductions associated with the final rule will lower the
stressors that can cause alterations in population and community
dynamics and improve the overall function of ecosystems
[[Page 67876]]
surrounding steam electric power plants, as well as help resolve issues
faced in other national ecosystem protection programs such as the Great
Lakes program, the National Estuaries program, and the 303(d) impaired
waters program.
The post-compliance pollutant reductions associated with the final
rule will also decrease the environmental impacts to wildlife exposed
to pollutants through direct contact with surface impoundments and
constructed wetlands at steam electric power plants. Documented site-
specific impacts demonstrate that wildlife living in close proximity to
combustion residual impoundments exhibit elevated levels of arsenic,
cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, selenium, and vanadium. Multiple
studies have linked these ``attractive nuisance'' areas (contaminated
impoundments at a steam electric power plant that attract wildlife for
nesting or feeding) to diminished reproductive success. EPA estimates
that the post-compliance pollutant reductions will decrease the
exposure of wildlife populations to toxic pollutants and reduce the
risks for impacts on reproductive success.
F. Other Improvements
Other improvements will occur to other resources that are
associated directly or indirectly with the final rule. These include
aesthetic and recreational improvements, reduced economic impacts such
as clean up and treatment costs in response to contamination or
impoundment failures, reduced injury associated with pond failures,
reduced ground water contamination, support for threatened and
endangered species, reduced water usage and reduced air emissions.
Section XIV provides additional details on the monetized benefits of
these improvements.
XIV. Benefits Analysis
This section summarizes EPA's estimates of the national
environmental benefits expected to result from reduction in steam
electric power plant wastewater discharges described in Section X and
the resultant environmental effects summarized in Section XIII. The BCA
Report provides additional details on benefits methodologies and
analyses, including uncertainties and limitations. The analysis
methodology is generally the same as that used by EPA for analysis of
the proposed rule, but with revised inputs and assumptions that reflect
updated data and address comments the Agency received on the proposed
rule, including additional categories of benefits the Agency analyzed
for the final rule.
A. Categories of Benefits Analyzed
Table XIV-1 summarizes benefit categories associated with the final
rule and notes which categories EPA was able to quantify and monetize.
Analyzed benefits fall within five broad categories: Human health
benefits from surface water quality improvements, ecological conditions
and recreational use benefits from surface water quality improvements,
market and productivity benefits, air-related benefits (which include
both human health and climate change-related effects), and water
withdrawal benefits. Within these broad categories, EPA was able to
assess benefits with varying degrees of completeness and rigor. Where
possible, EPA quantified the expected effects and estimated monetary
values. However, data limitations and gaps in the understanding of how
society values certain water quality changes prevent EPA from
quantifying and/or monetizing some benefit categories.
TABLE XIV-1--Benefit Categories Associated With Final Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Neither
Benefit category Quantified and Quantified but quantified nor
monetized not monetized monetized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Human Health Benefits from Surface Water Quality Improvements
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reduced incidence of cancer from arsenic exposure via fish X
consumption.................................................
Reduced incidence of cardiovascular disease from arsenic X
exposure via fish consumption...............................
Reduced incidence of cardiovascular disease from lead X \a\
exposure via fish consumption...............................
Reduced incidence of other cancer and non-cancer adverse X
health effects (e.g., reproductive, immunological,
neurological, circulatory, or respiratory toxicity) due to
exposure to arsenic, lead, cadmium, and other toxics from
fish consumption............................................
Reduced IQ loss in children from lead exposure via fish X
consumption.................................................
Reduced need for specialized education for children from lead X
exposure via fish consumption...............................
Reduced in utero mercury exposure via maternal fish X
consumption.................................................
Reduced health hazards from exposure to pollutants in waters X
used recreationally (e.g., swimming)........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Ecological Conditions and Recreational Use Benefits from Surface Water Quality Improvements
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benefits from improvements in surface water quality, X
including: Improved aquatic and wildlife habitat; enhanced
water-based recreation, including fishing, swimming,
boating, and near-water activities; increased aesthetic
benefits, such as enhancement of adjoining site amenities
(e.g., residing, working, traveling, and owning property
near the water \b\; and non-use value (existence, option,
and bequest value from improved ecosystem health) \b\.......
Benefits from improved protection of threatened and X
endangered species..........................................
Reduced sediment contamination............................... X
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Market and Productivity Benefits
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reduced impoundment failures (monetized benefits include X X
avoided cleanup costs, transaction costs, and environmental
damages; non-quantified benefits include avoided injury)....
Reduced water treatment costs for municipal drinking water, X
irrigation water, and industrial process....................
Improved commercial fisheries yields......................... X
Increased tourism and participation in water-based recreation X
Increased property values from water quality improvements.... X
Increased ability to market coal combustion byproducts....... X \a\
[[Page 67877]]
Reduced maintenance dredging in navigational waterways and X \a\
reservoirs from reduction in sediment discharges............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Air-Related Benefits
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Human health benefits from reduced morbidity and mortality X
from exposure to NOX, SO2 and particulate matter (PM2.5)....
Avoided climate change impacts from CO2 emissions............ X
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Benefits from Reduced Water Withdrawals
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increased availability of ground water resources............. X
Reduced impingement and entrainment of aquatic organisms..... X
Reduced susceptibility to drought............................ X
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Monetized benefit category added for the final rule.
\b\ These values are implicit in the total willingness to pay (WTP) for water quality improvements.
The following section summarizes EPA's analysis of the benefits
that the Agency was able to quantify and monetize (identified in the
second column of Table XIV-1). The final rule will also provide
additional benefits that the Agency was not able to monetize. The BCA
Report further describes some of these additional non-monetized
benefits.
B. Quantification and Monetization of Benefits
1. Human Health Benefits From Surface Water Quality Improvements
Reduced pollutant discharges from steam electric power plants
generate human health benefits in a number of ways. As described in
Section XIII, exposure to pollutants in steam electric power plant
discharges via consumption of fish from affected waters can cause a
wide variety of adverse health effects, including cancer, kidney
damage, nervous system damage, fatigue, irritability, liver damage,
circulatory damage, vomiting, diarrhea, brain damage, IQ loss, and many
others. Because the final rule will reduce discharges of steam electric
pollutants into waterbodies that receive, or are downstream from, these
discharges, it is likely to result in decreased incidences of
associated illnesses.
Due to data limitations and uncertainties, EPA is able to monetize
only a subset of the health benefits associated with reductions in
pollutant discharges from steam electric power plants. EPA analyzed the
following measures of human health-related benefits: Reduced lead-
related IQ loss in children aged zero to seven from fish consumption;
reduced cardiovascular disease in adults from lead and arsenic exposure
from fish consumption; reduced mercury-related IQ loss in children
exposed in utero due to maternal fish consumption; and reduced cancer
risk in adults due to arsenic exposure from fish consumption. EPA
monetized these human health benefits by estimating the change in the
expected number of individuals experiencing adverse human health
effects in the populations exposed to steam electric discharges and/or
reduced exposure levels, and valuing these changes using a variety of
monetization approaches.
These are not the only human health benefits expected to result
from the final rule. EPA also estimated additional human health
benefits derived from changes in air emissions. These additional
benefits are discussed separately in Section XIV.B.4.
a. Monetized Human Health Benefits From Surface Water Quality
Improvements
EPA estimated health risks from the consumption of contaminated
fish from waterbodies within 50 miles of households. EPA used Census
Block population data, state-specific average fishing rates, and data
on fish consumption advisories to estimate the exposed population. EPA
used cohort-specific fish consumption rates and waterbody-specific fish
tissue concentration estimates to calculate exposure to steam electric
pollutants. Cohorts were defined by age, sex, race/ethnicity, and
fishing mode (recreational/subsistence). EPA used these data to
quantify and monetize the following six categories of human health
benefits, which are further detailed in the BCA Report:
Benefits from Reduced IQ Loss in Children from Lead
Exposure via Fish Consumption.
Benefits from Reduced Need for Specialized Education for
Children from Lead Exposure via Fish Consumption.
Benefits from Reduced Incidence of Cardiovascular Disease
from Lead Exposure via Fish Consumption.
Benefits of Reduced In Utero Mercury Exposure via Maternal
Fish Consumption.
Benefits from Reduced Incidence of Cancer from Arsenic
Exposure via Fish Consumption.
Benefits from Reduced Incidence of Cardiovascular Disease
from Arsenic Exposure via Fish Consumption.
Table XIV-2 summarizes monetized human health benefits from surface
water quality improvements. EPA estimates that the final rule will
provide human health benefits valued at $16.5 to $17.9 million
annually, using a three percent discount rate, and $11.3 to $11.6
million, using a seven percent discount rate. In addition, EPA
estimated health benefits associated with changes in air emissions, as
discussed in Section XIV.B.4.
[[Page 67878]]
TABLE XIV-2--Human Health Benefits From Surface Water Quality
Improvements
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benefit category Annualized benefits (million 2013$)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3% Discount Rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benefits from Reduced IQ Loss in $1.0
Children from Lead Exposure via ($0.8 to $1.1)
Fish Consumption \a\.
Benefits from Reduced Need for <0.1
Specialized Education for
Children from Lead Exposure via
Fish Consumption.
Benefits from Reduced Incidence of 12.8
Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) from
Lead Exposure via Fish
Consumption.
Benefits of Reduced In Utero 3.5
Mercury Exposure via Maternal (2.9 to 4.0)
Fish Consumption \a\.
Benefits from Reduced Incidence of <0.1
Cancer from Arsenic Exposure via
Fish Consumption.
Subtotal \b\.................. 16.5 to 17.9
(15.2 to 16.7)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
7% Discount Rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benefits from Reduced IQ Loss in 0.2
Children from Lead Exposure via (0.1 to 0.2)
Fish Consumption \a\.
Benefits from Reduced Need for <0.1
Specialized Education for
Children from Lead Exposure via
Fish Consumption.
Benefits from Reduced Incidence of 10.7
CVD from Lead Exposure via Fish
Consumption.
Benefits of Reduced In Utero 0.6
Mercury Exposure via Maternal (0.5 to 0.7)
Fish Consumption \a\.
Benefits from Reduced Incidence of <0.1
Cancer from Arsenic Exposure via
Fish Consumption.
Subtotal \b\.................. 11.4
(10.7 to 11.0)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Low end is based on the assumption that the loss of one IQ point
results in the loss of 1.76% of lifetime earnings (following Schwartz,
1994); high end is based on the assumption that the loss of one IQ
point results in the loss of 2.38% of lifetime earnings (following
Salkever, 1995).
\b\ Totals may not add up due to independent rounding.
2. Improved Ecological Conditions and Recreational Use Benefits From
Surface Water Quality Improvements
EPA expects the final rule will provide ecological benefits by
improving ecosystems (aquatic and terrestrial) affected by the electric
power industry's discharges. Benefits associated with changes in
aquatic life include restoration of sensitive species, recovery of
diseased species, changes in taste-and odor-producing algae, changes in
dissolved oxygen (DO), increased assimilative capacity of affected
waters, and improved recreational activities. Activities such as
fishing, swimming, wildlife viewing, camping, waterfowl hunting, and
boating may be enhanced when risks to aquatic life and perceivable
water quality effects associated with pollutants are reduced.
EPA was able to monetize several categories of ecological benefits
associated with this final rule, including recreational use and nonuse
(existence, bequest, and altruistic) benefits from improvements in the
health of aquatic environments, and nonuse benefits from increased
populations of threatened and endangered species. As shown in Table
XIV-1, the Agency quantified and monetized two main benefit
subcategories, discussed below: (1) Benefits from improvements in
surface water quality, and (2) benefits from improved protection of
threatened and endangered (T&E) species.
a. Improvements in Surface Water Quality
EPA expects the final rule will improve aquatic habitats and human
welfare by reducing concentrations of harmful pollutants such as
arsenic, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, selenium, nitrogen,
phosphorus, and suspended sediment. As a result, some of the waters
that were not usable for recreation under the baseline discharge
conditions may become usable following the rule, thereby benefiting
recreational users. Waters that have been used for recreation under the
baseline conditions can become more attractive by making recreational
trips even more enjoyable. The final rule is also expected to generate
nonuse benefits from bequest, altruism, and existence motivations.
Individuals may value knowing that water quality is being maintained,
ecosystems are being protected, and species populations are healthy,
independent of any use.
EPA estimates that approximately 19,600 reach miles will improve as
a result of the final rule, as indicated by a higher post-compliance
water quality index (WQI) score. The WQI translates water quality
measurements, gathered for multiple parameters that are indicative of
various aspects of water quality, into a single numerical indicator
that reflects achievement of quality consistent with the suitability
for certain uses.
EPA estimated monetized benefit values using a revised version of
the meta-regression of surface water valuation studies used in the
benefit-cost analysis of the proposed ELGs (DCN SE03172). Using a meta-
dataset of 51 studies published between 1985 and 2011, EPA developed a
meta-regression model that predicts how marginal willingness to pay
(WTP) for water quality improvements depends on a variety of
methodological, population, resource, and water quality change
characteristics. EPA developed two versions of the meta-regression
model: The first model (Model 1) provides a central estimate of non-
market benefits, while the second model (Model 2) provides a range of
estimates to account for uncertainty in the resulting WTP values.
Chapter 4 of the BCA provides more details on the meta-regression
models and analysis.
EPA estimated economic values of water quality improvements at the
Census block group level. Water quality improvements are measured as a
length-weighted average of the changes in WQI for waters within 100
miles of the center of each Census block; these waters includes both
waters improving as a result of the final rule and waters not affected
by steam electric plant discharges but which may be substitutes for
improved waters.
EPA first estimated annual household marginal WTP values for a
given Census block group using the meta- regression
[[Page 67879]]
models (Model 1 and Model 2) and multiplied this marginal WTP by the
annual average water quality change for the Census block group to
obtain the annual household WTP.
EPA then estimated total WTP values by multiplying the annual
household WTP values by the total number of households within a Census
block group. EPA annualized the stream of future benefits, expressed in
2013 dollars, using both 3 and 7 percent discount rates.
Total national benefits are the sum of estimated Census block
group-level WTP across all block groups for which at least one
waterbody within 100 miles is improved.
Average annual household WTP estimates for the final ELGs range
from $0.32 on the low end to $1.77 on the high end, with a central
estimate of $0.45. An estimated 84.5 million households reside in
Census block groups within 100 miles of affected reaches. The total
annualized benefits of water quality improvements resulting from
reduced metal, nutrient, and sediment pollution in the approximately
19,600 reach miles improving under the final ELGs range from $23.2
million to $129.5 million with a central estimate of $31.3 million
using a three percent discount rate and $18.5 million to $103.4 million
with a central estimate of $25.1 million using a seven percent discount
rate.
b. Benefits to Threatened and Endangered Species
To assess the potential for impacts on T&E species (both aquatic
and terrestrial), EPA analyzed the overlap between waters currently
exceeding wildlife-based national recommended WQC, but expected to have
no wildlife national recommended WQC exceedances as a result of the
final rule, and the known critical habitat locations of approximately
631 T&E species. EPA examined the life history traits of potentially
affected T&E species to categorize species by the potential for
population impacts likely to occur as a result of changes in water
quality. Chapter 5 of the BCA Report details the methodology.
EPA determined that of 15 species whose recovery may be enhanced by
the final rule, three fish species and one salamander species may
experience changes in population growth rates as a result of the final
rule. To quantify the benefits to T&E species, EPA weighted minimal
population growth assumptions (0.5, 1, or 1.5 percent) by the percent
of reaches used by T&E species that are expected to meet wildlife-based
national recommended WQC because of the final rule.
The T&E species expected to benefit from the rule include one
species of sturgeon and two species of minnows. All of these species
have nonuse values, including existence, bequest, altruistic, and
ecological service values, apart from human uses or motives. EPA
estimated the economic values of increased T&E species populations
using a benefit function transfer approach based on a meta-analysis of
31 stated preference studies eliciting WTP for these changes
(Richardson and Loomis 2009). Because the underlying metadata do not
include amphibian valuation studies, EPA was unable to monetize any
benefits for potential population increases of Hellbender salamander.
EPA estimates annualized benefits to T&E species of approximately $0.02
million, using either a three percent or seven percent discount rate.
3. Market and Productivity Benefits
a. Benefits From Reduced Magnitude of Impoundment Failures
Operational changes that plants choose to make to meet requirements
in the final rule may cause some plants to reduce their reliance on
impoundments to handle their waste. EPA expects these changes to reduce
the magnitude of impoundment failures and the resulting accidental, and
sometimes catastrophic releases, of CCRs.
To assess the benefits associated with changes in impoundment use,
EPA estimated the costs associated with expected releases under
baseline conditions (assuming no change in operations relative to
expected operations under the CCR and CPP rules) and for projected
reductions in the amount of CCR waste managed by impoundments. EPA
performed the calculations for each of the 883 to 925 impoundments
identified at steam electric power plants,\54\ and for each year
between 2016 and 2042. EPA then calculated benefits as the difference
between expected release costs for the final rule and expected release
costs under baseline conditions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ The 883 to 925 impoundments represent the estimated number
of impoundments expected to operate after accounting for the
projected effects of the CCR rule and CPP rule, relative to the
initial universe of 1,070 impoundments located at 347 plants (out of
the total universe of 1,080 steam electric plants). The range of
impoundments reflects different assumptions regarding the projected
effects of the CPP rule on impoundment operations. See Chapter 6 in
the BCA for more information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To estimate the number of release events that may be avoided as a
result of the ELGs, EPA followed the same approach used by EPA for its
RIA for the CCR rule. The approach relies on estimated failure rates
and capacity factors for two different types of releases (wall breach
and other release) and two categories of impoundments (big and small).
For the final steam electric ELG rule analysis, EPA used baseline
release-rate assumptions that account for changes projected to result
from implementation of the CCR rule. As detailed in Chapter 6 of the
BCA Report, EPA calculated the expected costs of an impoundment
release, including cleanup, natural resource damages (NRD),\55\ and
transaction costs.\56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ NRD include only the resource restoration and compensation
values; they do not include cleanup costs (or legal costs).
\56\ For this analysis, transaction costs include the costs
associated with negotiating NRD, determining responsibility among
potentially responsible parties, and litigating details regarding
settlements and remediation. These activities involve services,
whether performed by the complying entity or other parties that EPA
expects would be needed in the absence of this regulation, in the
event of an impoundment release. Note that the transaction costs do
not include fines, cleanup costs, damages, or other costs that
constitute transfers or are already accounted for in the other
categories analyzed separately.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Using the approach above, EPA estimates the annualized benefits of
the final rule are $95.6 million to $102.9 million using a three
percent discount rate, and $77.7 million to $83.7 million using a seven
percent discount rate.
b. Benefits From Increased Marketability of Coal Combustion Residuals
The final rule may enhance the ability of steam electric power
plants to market coal combustion byproducts for beneficial use by
converting from wet to dry handling of fly ash, bottom ash and FGD
waste. In particular, EPA evaluated the potential benefits from the
increased marketability of fly ash as a substitute for Portland cement
in concrete production and fly and bottom ashes as substitutes for sand
and gravel in fill applications. Based on the change in the quantity of
CCRs handled dry and state-level demand for beneficial use applications
of CCRs, EPA calculated avoided disposal costs and life-cycle benefits
from avoiding the production of virgin materials. Chapter 10 of the BCA
Report details the methodology.
EPA estimates the annualized benefits of the final rule at $30.8
million using a three percent discount rate, and $31.1 million using a
seven percent discount rate.
4. Air-Related Benefits (Human Health and Avoided Climate Change
Impacts)
EPA expects the final rule to affect air pollution through three
main mechanisms: (1) Additional auxiliary electricity use by steam
electric power
[[Page 67880]]
plants to operate wastewater treatment, ash handling, and other
systems, which EPA predicts that plants will use to meet the new
effluent limitations and standards; (2) additional transportation-
related air emissions due to the increased trucking of CCR waste to
landfills; and (3) the change in the profile of electricity generation
due to the relatively higher cost to generate electricity at plants
incurring compliance costs for the final ELGs. Changes in the profile
of generation can result in lower or higher emissions of air pollutants
because of variability in emission factors for different types of
electric generating units. For this analysis, the changes in air
emissions are based on the change in dispatch of generation units
projected by IPM V5.13, as a result of overlaying the costs of meeting
the final ELGs onto steam electric generating units' production costs.
As discussed in Section IX.C.1, the IPM analysis accounts for the
effects of other regulations affecting the electric power sector.
EPA estimated the human health and other benefits resulting from
net changes in air emissions of three pollutants: NOX,
SO2, and CO2. NOX and SOX
are known precursors to fine particles (PM2.5), a criteria
air pollutant that has been associated with a variety of adverse health
effects--most notably, premature mortality, non-fatal heart attacks,
hospital admissions, emergency department visits, upper and lower
respiratory symptoms, acute bronchitis, aggravated asthma, lost work
days, and acute respiratory symptoms. CO2 is a key
greenhouse gas that is linked to a wide range of climate change
effects.
EPA used average benefit-per-ton estimates to value benefits of
changes in NOX and SO2 emissions, and social cost
of carbon (SCC) estimates to value benefits of changes in
CO2 emissions. The calculations are based on the net changes
in air emissions and reflect the net reductions in CO2 and
NOX emissions during the entire period of analysis, and the
net increase in SO2 emissions in 2023-2027, and net decline
in SO2 emissions during the rest of the period. The values
are specific to the years 2016, 2020, 2025, and 2030. Because they are
almost linear as a function of year, EPA interpolated benefits per ton
values for the intermediate years (e.g., between 2020 and 2025) and
projected values for the years from 2031 through 2042 by linear
regression. While extrapolating introduces some uncertainty, as it does
not account for meteorological and air quality changes over time, this
approach is a reasonable one, given available information.
Chapter 7 of the BCA Report provides the details of this analysis.
As shown in Table XIV-3, EPA estimates that the final rule will provide
human health benefits valued at $144.7 million using a three percent
discount rate, and $108.8 million using a seven percent discount rate.
The rule is expected to provide air-related benefits from changes in
CO2 emissions valued at $139.8 million, using a three
percent discount rate.
Table XIV-3--Annualized Benefits of Changes in NOX, SO2, and CO2 Air
Emissions
[Million 2013$]a
------------------------------------------------------------------------
7 Percent
Benefit category 3 Percent discount rate
discount rate b
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Human health benefits from reduced $144.7 $108.8
morbidity and mortality from exposure
to NOX, SO2 and particulate matter
(PM2.5)................................
Avoided climate change impacts from CO2 $139.8 $139.8
emissions \b\..........................
Total............................... $284.5 $248.6
------------------------------------------------------------------------
a Consistent with the assumptions used for the IPM analyses described in
Section IX.C, EPA estimated the benefits relative to a baseline that
includes the CPP rule.
b EPA used the SCC based on a three percent discount rate to estimate
values presented for the seven percent discount rate. EPA uses three
percent to discount CO2-related benefits and seven percent to discount
benefits from changes in NOX and SO2 emissions. See Section 7.1 of the
BCA for details on the methodology.
5. Benefits From Reduced Water Withdrawals (Increased Availability of
Ground Water Resources)
Steam electric power plants use water for handling waste (e.g., fly
ash, bottom ash) and for operating wet FGD scrubbers. By eliminating or
reducing water used in sluicing operations or prompting the recycling
of water in FGD wastewater treatment systems, the ELGs are expected to
reduce water withdrawals from surface waters and reduce demand on
aquifers, in the case of plants that rely on ground water sources.
EPA estimated the benefits of reduced ground water withdrawals
based on avoided costs of ground water supply. For each relevant plant,
EPA multiplied the reduction in ground water withdrawal (in gallons per
year) by water costs of about $1,231 per acre-foot. Chapter 8 of the
BCA Report provides the details of this analysis. EPA estimates the
annualized benefits of reduced ground water withdrawals are less than
$0.1 million annually. Due to data limitations, EPA was not able to
monetize the benefits from reduced surface water withdrawals. Chapter 8
of the BCA Report provides additional detail on benefits from reducing
surface water withdrawals.
C. Total Monetized Benefits
Using the analysis approach described above, EPA estimates annual
total benefits of the final rule for the five monetized categories at
approximately $450.6 million to $565.6 million (at a three percent
discount rate and $387.3 million to $478.4 million at a seven percent
discount rate) (Table XIV-4).
Table XIV-4--Summary of Total Annualized Monetized Benefits of Final
Rule
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized
monetized
Benefit category benefits (million
2013$)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3 Percent Discount Rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Human Health Benefits from Surface Water $16.5 to $17.9
Improvements a d...................................
[[Page 67881]]
Improved Ecological Conditions and Recreational Uses $23.3 to $129.5
a b d..............................................
Market and Productivity Benefits (impoundment $126.4 to $133.7
failure and ash marketing).........................
Human Health Benefits from Air Quality Improvements. $144.7
Other Air-Related Benefits (climate change)......... $139.8
Reduced Water Withdrawals........................... <$0.1
-------------------
Total benefits.................................. $450.6 to $565.6
------------------------------------------------------------------------
7 Percent Discount Rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Human Health Benefits from Surface Water $11.3 to $11.6
Improvements a.....................................
Improved Ecological Conditions and Recreational Uses $18.6 to $103.4
a b................................................
Market and Productivity Benefits (impoundment $108.8 to $114.8
failure and ash marketing).........................
Human Health Benefits from Air Quality Improvements. $108.8
Other Air-Related Benefits c (climate change)....... $139.8
Reduced Water Withdrawals........................... <$0.1
-------------------
Total benefits.................................. $387.3 to $478.4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Values represent mean benefit estimates. Totals may not add up due
to independent rounding.
\b\ There may be some, expected to be small, overlap between the
willingness-to-pay (WTP) for surface water quality improvements and
WTP for benefits to threatened and endangered species.
\c\ EPA used the SCC based on a three percent discount rate and
discounted CO2-related benefits using a three percent discount rate,
as compared to benefits in other categories, which are discounted
using the seven percent discount rate.
\d\ Estimates for this benefit category do not reflect revised pollutant
loadings, which could result in lower monetized benefits. See Section
1.4.3 of the Benefit Cost Analysis for this rule for details.
D. Other Benefits
The monetized benefits of this final rule do not account for all
benefits because, as described above, EPA is unable to monetize some
categories. Examples of benefit categories not reflected in these
estimates include other cancer and non-cancer health benefits, reduced
cost of drinking water treatment, avoided ground water contamination
corrective action costs, reduced vulnerability to drought, and reduced
aquatic species mortality from reduced surface water withdrawal. The
BCA Report discusses these benefits qualitatively, indicating their
potential magnitude where possible.
XV. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
EPA often uses cost-effectiveness analysis in the development and
revision of ELGs to evaluate the relative efficiency of alternative
regulatory options in removing toxic pollutants from effluent
discharges to the nation's waters. Although not required by the CWA,
and not a determining factor for establishing BAT and PSES, cost-
effectiveness analysis can be a useful tool for describing regulatory
options that address toxic pollutants.
A. Methodology
The cost-effectiveness of a regulatory option is defined as the
incremental annual cost (in 1981 constant dollars to facilitate
comparison to ELGs for other industrial categories promulgated over
different years) per incremental toxic-weighted pollutant removals for
that option. This definition includes the following concepts:
Toxic-weighted removals. The estimated reductions in pollution
discharges, or pollutant removals, are adjusted for toxicity by
multiplying the estimated removal quantity for each pollutant by a
normalizing toxic weight (toxic weighting factor). The toxic weight for
each pollutant measures its toxicity relative to copper, with more
toxic pollutants having higher toxic weights. The use of toxic weights
allows the removals of different pollutants to be expressed on a
constant toxicity basis as toxic pound-equivalents (lb-eq). In the case
of indirect dischargers, the removal also accounts for the
effectiveness of treatment at POTWs and reflects the toxic-weighted
pounds remaining after POTW treatment. The cost-effectiveness analysis
does not address the removal of conventional pollutants (e.g., TSS) or
nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus), nor does it address the removal of
bulk parameters, such as COD.
Annual costs. The costs used in the cost-effectiveness analysis are
the estimated annualized pre-tax costs described in Section IX,
restated in 1981 dollars as a convention to allow comparisons with the
reported cost effectiveness of other effluent guidelines.
The result of the cost-effectiveness calculation represents the
unit cost (in constant 1981 dollars) of removing the next pound-
equivalent of pollutants. EPA calculates cost-effectiveness separately
for direct and indirect dischargers. EPA notes that only three steam
electric power plants are estimated to incur costs associated with the
final PSES requirements, as compared to 130 plants estimated to incur
costs associated with the final BAT requirements.
Appendix F of the RIA details the analysis.
B. Results
Collectively, the final BAT requirements have a cost-effectiveness
ratio of $134/lb-eq ($1981). This cost-effectiveness ratio is well
within the range of cost-effectiveness ratios for BAT requirements in
other industries. A review of approximately 25 of the most recently
promulgated or revised BAT limitations shows BAT cost-effectiveness
ranging from less than $1/lb-eq (Inorganic Chemicals) to $404/lb-eq
(Electrical and Electronic Components), in 1981 dollars.
Collectively, the final PSES requirements have a cost effectiveness
of $1,228/lb-eq ($1981). This ratio is higher than the cost-
effectiveness for PSES of other industries, which range from less than
$1/lb-eq (Inorganic Chemicals) to $380/lb-eq (Transportation Equipment
Cleaning), in
[[Page 67882]]
1981 dollars, based on a review of approximately 25 of the most
recently promulgated or revised categorical pretreatment standards. As
noted above, however, very few plants (three) are indirect dischargers
and the cost-effectiveness for one of the three indirect dischargers
significantly elevates the value for all three combined. EPA calculated
costs for this plant based on a full conversion of its bottom ash
handling system to dry handling. However, it is more likely that this
plant would choose to implement modifications that would enable it to
completely recycle its bottom ash transport water in order to meet the
zero discharge standard, rather than undertake a full conversion. In
that event, the costs to this indirect discharger--and consequently the
cost-effectiveness value for all indirect dischargers, combined--would
be lower.
Collectively, cost-effectiveness for the entire rule (BAT and PSES)
is $136/lb-eq ($1981).
For the purposes of calculating pollutant loadings under this
action, EPA's analysis first handled non-detect values in the reported
data by replacing them with a value of one-half of the detection level
for the observation that yielded the non-detect. This methodology is
standard procedure for the ELG program as well as Clean Water Act
assessment and permitting, Safe Drinking Water Act monitoring, and
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act and Superfund programs; and this
approach is consistent with previous ELGs.
In their comments on the proposed rule, commenters raised the
concern that for some pollutants the loadings calculations
(particularly for bottom ash) were biased high as a result of high non-
detected values in the reported data. These high non-detected values
were the result of not using sufficiently sensitive methods. The view
was expressed that, should the non-detects fall significantly outside
of the range of detected values, assigning them one half of the
detection level would not be sufficient to accurately represent
pollutant loadings and the associated cost-effectiveness of the rule.
To assess this concern and provide further transparency for this
rulemaking, EPA also implemented a second method of treating non-
detects where all attributed non-detects (i.e., one-half of the
detection limit) that exceeded the highest detected value for a
particular pollutant were deleted. Since it is possible that a plant's
actual loading fell outside the range of detected values of all of the
plants, this methodology served to place an upper bound on the effect
of non-detects on the pollutant loading and cost-effectiveness
calculations. EPA's decision to incorporate this second approach for
bottom ash transport water in this rulemaking reflects the exceptional
circumstance in this case where there are so few detected observations
in combination with wide variability in sample-specific detection
values for the non-detected observations for 6 analytes. For a full
discussion of the analysis method and results, see Section 10.2.2 of
the TDD and Section F-4 of the RIA. EPA found that this second method
of treatment of non-detects affects the averaged pollutant
concentrations for 6 out of the 44 analytes, alters pollutant loadings
and decreases identified TWPE loadings and removals in comparison to
method 1. EPA also calculated the cost-effectiveness for the bottom ash
wastestream using the averaged pollutant concentrations derived from
method 2, and found in comparison to method 1 the method 2 analysis
changed the cost-effectiveness value from $314/TWPE to $457/TWPE for
this wastestream and cost-effectiveness of the full rule from $136/TWPE
to $149/TWPE. Where appropriate in the TDD, RIA, BCA and certain other
documents for the rule, EPA has reflected the results for pollutant
loadings and cost effectiveness under both of these approaches. EPA's
determination of BAT and the standards and rationale supporting that
determination, are discussed in Section VIII; the differences in
loadings and cost effectiveness associated with incorporating this
second approach to addressing uncertainty related to non-detects do not
alter that determination.
XVI. Regulatory Implementation
A. Implementation of the Limitations and Standards
The requirements in this rule apply to discharges from steam
electric power plants through incorporation into NPDES permits issued
by the EPA or authorized states under Section 402 of the Act and
through local pretreatment programs under Section 307 of the Act.
Permits or control mechanisms issued after this rule's effective date
must incorporate the ELGs, as applicable. Also, under CWA section 510,
states can require effluent limitations under state law as long as they
are no less stringent than the requirements of this rule. Finally, in
addition to requiring application of the technology-based ELGs in this
rule, CWA section 301(b)(1)(C) requires the permitting authority to
impose more stringent effluent limitations, as necessary, to meet
applicable water quality standards.
1. Timing
The direct discharge limitations in this rule apply only when
implemented in an NPDES permit issued to a discharger after the
effective date of this rule. Under the CWA, the permitting authority
must incorporate these ELGs into NPDES permits as a floor or a minimum
level of control. While the rule is effective on its effective date
(see DATES section at the beginning of this preamble), the rule allows
a permitting authority to determine a date when the new effluent
limitations for FGD wastewater, fly ash transport water, bottom ash
transport water, FGMC wastewater, and gasification wastewater apply to
a given discharger. The permitting authority must make these final
effluent limitations applicable on or after November 1, 2018. For any
final effluent limitation that is specified to become applicable after
November 1, 2018, the specified date must be as soon as possible, but
in no case later than December 31, 2023. For dischargers in the
voluntary incentives program choosing to meet effluent limitations for
FGD wastewater based on use of evaporation technology, the date for
meeting those limitations is December 31, 2023.
For combustion residual leachate, and for certain wastestreams (FGD
wastewater, fly ash transport water, bottom ash transport water, FGMC
wastewater, and gasification wastewater) at oil-fired generating units
and small generating units (50 MW or less), the final BAT limitations
apply on the date that a permit is issued to a discharger, following
the effective date of this rule. The rule does not build in an
implementation period for meeting these limitations, as the BAT
limitation on TSS is equal to the previously promulgated BPT limitation
on TSS.
Pretreatment standards are self-implementing, meaning they apply
directly, without the need for a permit. In this rule, the pretreatment
standards for existing sources must be met by November 1, 2018.
The requirements for new source direct and indirect discharges
(NSPS and PSNS) provide no extended implementation period. NSPS apply
when any NPDES permit is issued to a new source direct discharger,
following the effective date of this rule; PSNS apply to any new source
discharging to a POTW, as of the effective date of the final rule.
Regardless of when a plant's NPDES permit is ready for renewal, the
plant
[[Page 67883]]
should immediately begin evaluating how it intends to comply with the
requirements of the final ELGs. In cases where significant changes in
operation are appropriate, the plant should discuss such changes with
the permitting authority and evaluate appropriate steps and a timeline
for the changes, even prior to the permit renewal process.
In cases where a plant's final NPDES permit will be issued after
the effective date of the final ELGs, but before November 1, 2018, the
permitting authority should apply limitations based on the previously
promulgated BPT limitations or the plant's other applicable permit
limitations until at least November 1, 2018. The permitting authority
should also determine what date represents the soonest date, beginning
November 1, 2018, that the plant can meet the final BAT limitations in
this rule. The permit should require compliance with the final BAT
limitations by that date, making clear that in no case shall the
limitations apply later than December 31, 2023. Then, for permits that
might be administratively continued, the final date will apply, even if
that date is at the end of the implementation period. For permits that
are issued on or after November 1, 2018, the permitting authority
should determine the earliest possible date that the plant can meet the
limitations in this rule (but in no case later than December 31, 2023),
and apply the final limitations as of that date (BPT limitations or the
plant's other applicable permit limitations would apply until such
date).
As specified by the rule, the ``as soon as possible'' date
determined by the permitting authority is November 1, 2018, unless the
permitting authority determines another date after receiving
information submitted by the discharger.\57\ Assuming that the
permitting authority receives relevant information from the discharger,
in order to determine what date is ``as soon as possible'' within the
implementation period, the permitting authority must then consider the
following factors:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ Even after the permitting authority receives information
from the discharger, it still may be appropriate to determine that
November 1, 2018, is ``as soon as possible'' for that discharger.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) Time to expeditiously plan (including to raise capital),
design, procure, and install equipment to comply with the requirements
of the final rule;
(b) Changes being made or planned at the plant in response to
greenhouse gas regulations for new or existing fossil fuel-fired power
plants under the Clean Air Act, as well as regulations for the disposal
of coal combustion residuals under subtitle D of the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act;
(c) For FGD wastewater requirements only, an initial commissioning
period to optimize the installed equipment; and
(d) Other factors as appropriate.
With respect to the first factor, the permitting authority should
evaluate what operational changes are expected at the plant to meet the
new BAT limitations for each wastestream, including the types of new
treatment technologies that the plant plans to install, process changes
anticipated, and the timeframe estimated to plan, design, procure, and
install any relevant technologies. As specified in the second factor,
the permitting authority must also consider scheduling for installation
of equipment, which includes a consideration of plant changes planned
or being made to comply with certain other key rules that affect the
steam electric power generating industry. As specified in the third
factor, for the FGD wastewater requirements only, the permitting
authority must consider whether it is appropriate to allow more time
for implementation, in addition to the three years before
implementation of the rule begins on November 1, 2018, in order to
ensure that the plant has appropriate time to optimize any relevant
technologies. EPA's record demonstrates that plants installing the FGD
technology basis spent several months optimizing its operation (initial
commissioning period). Without allowing additional time for
optimization, the plant would likely not be able to meet the
limitations because they are based on the operation of optimized
systems. See TDD Section 14 for additional discussion and examples
regarding implementation of the final ELGs into NPDES permits.
The ``as soon as possible'' date determined by the permitting
authority may or may not be different for each wastestream. EPA
recommends that the permitting authority provide a well-documented
justification of how it determined the ``as soon as possible'' date in
the fact sheet or administrative record for the permit. If the
permitting authority determines a date later than November 1, 2018, the
justification should explain why allowing additional time to meet the
limitations is appropriate, and why the discharger cannot meet the
final effluent limitations as of November 1, 2018. In cases where the
plant is already operating the BAT technology basis for a specific
wastestream (e.g., dry fly ash handling system), operates the majority
of the BAT technology basis (e.g., FGD chemical precipitation and
biological treatment, without sulfide addition), or expects that
relevant treatment and process changes will be in place prior to
November 1, 2018, it would not generally be appropriate to allow
additional time beyond that date. Regardless, in all cases, the
permitting authority must make clear in the permit what date the plant
must meet the limitations, and that date may be no later than December
31, 2023.
Where a discharger chooses to participate in the voluntary
incentives program and be subject to effluent limitations for FGD
wastewater based on evaporation, the permitting authority must allow
the plant up to December 31, 2023, to meet those limitations; again,
the permit must make clear that the plant must meet the final
limitations by December 31, 2023.
2. Applicability of NSPS/PSNS
In 1982, EPA promulgated NSPS/PSNS for certain discharges from new
sources. Those sources that were subject to the 1982 NSPS/PSNS will
continue to be subject to such standards under this final rule. In
addition, sources to which the 1982 NSPS/PSNS apply are also subject to
the final BAT/PSES requirements in this rule because they will be
existing sources with respect to such new requirements. See 40 CFR
423.15(a) and 40 CFR 423.17(a).
3. Legacy Wastewater
For purposes of the BAT limitations in this rule, legacy wastewater
is FGD wastewater, fly ash transport water, bottom ash transport water,
FGMC wastewater, and gasification wastewater generated prior to the
date established by the permitting authority that is as soon as
possible beginning November 1, 2018, but no later than December 31,
2023 (see Section VIII.C.7 and Section VIII.C.8).\58\ Direct discharges
of legacy wastewater are, under this rule, subject to BAT effluent
limitations on TSS in such wastewater, which are equal to the existing
BPT effluent limitations on TSS in fly ash transport water, bottom ash
transport water, and low volume waste sources.\59\ See TDD Section 14
for additional information regarding the legacy wastewater BAT
limitations and
[[Page 67884]]
guidance on implementing them into NPDES permits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ For plants in the voluntary incentives program, legacy FGD
wastewater is FGD wastewater generated prior to December 31, 2023
(see Section VIII.C.13).
\59\ The final rule does not establish PSES standards for legacy
wastewater for these wastestreams because TSS and the pollutants
they represent are effectively treated by POTWs; and, therefore, EPA
has determined that they do not pass through the POTW (see Section
VIII.E).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Combined Wastestreams
Most steam electric power plants combine various wastewaters (e.g.,
FGD wastewater, fly ash and bottom ash transport water) and cooling
water either before or after treatment. In such cases, to derive
effluent limitations or standards at the point of discharge, the
permitting authority typically combines the allowable pollutant
concentrations loadings for each set of requirements to arrive at a
specific limitation or standard, per pollutant, for the combined
wastestream, using the building block approach or combined waste stream
formula (CWF). See NPDES Permit Writer's Manual and 40 CFR 403.6. For
concentration-based limitations, rather than mass-based limitations,
the effluent limitation or standard for the mixed wastestream is a
flow-weighted combination of the appropriate concentration-based
limitations or standards for each applicable wastestream. Such a
calculation is relatively straightforward if the individual
wastestreams are subject to limitations or standards for the same
pollutants and the flows of the wastestreams are relatively consistent.
This, however, is not the case for all wastestreams at steam electric
power plants.
Because EPA anticipates that permitting authorities will apply
concentration-based limitations or standards, rather than mass-based
limitations or standards, in NPDES permits for steam electric power
plants, proper application of the building block approach or CWF is
necessary to ensure that the reduced pollutant concentrations observed
in a combined discharge reflect proper treatment and control strategies
rather than dilution. Where a regulated wastestream is combined with a
well-known dilution flow, such as cooling water, uncontaminated
stormwater, or cooling tower blowdown, the concentration-based
limitation for the regulated wastestream is reduced by multiplying it
by a factor.\60\ This factor is the total flow for the combined
wastestream minus the dilution flow divided by the total flow for the
combined wastestream. In some cases, a wastestream (e.g., FGD
wastewater) containing a regulated pollutant (e.g., selenium or
mercury) combines with other wastestreams that contain the same
pollutant, but that are not regulated for that pollutant (e.g., legacy
wastewater contained in a surface impoundment). In these cases, based
on the information in its record, EPA strongly recommends that in
applying the building block approach or CWF to the regulated pollutant
(selenium or mercury, in the example above), permitting authorities
either treat the wastestream that does not have a limitation or
standard for the pollutant (legacy wastewater contained in a surface
impoundment, in the example above) as a dilution flow or determine a
concentration for that pollutant based on representative samples of
that wastestream.\61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ As is the case with a single regulated wastestream, if the
combined wastestream is not discharged, then the limitations and
standards are not applicable.
\61\ EPA does not recommend that the permitting authority assume
that the pollutant is present at a significant level in the
wastestream that does not have a relevant limitation or standard and
just apply the same limitation or standard for the pollutant to the
mixed wastestream. This will not ensure that treatment and control
strategies are being employed to achieve the limitations or
standards, rather than simply dilution.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In all cases where the permitting authority is applying the
building block approach or CWF, except where a regulated wastestream is
mixed with a dilution wastestream, the permitting authority must also
determine the flow rate for use in the building block approach or CWF.
EPA strongly recommends that the permitting authority calculate the
flow rate based on representative flow rates for each wastestream.
EPA recommends that, where a steam electric power plant chooses to
combine two or more wastestreams that would call for the use of the
building block approach or CWF to determine the appropriate limitations
or standards for the combined wastestream, the plant should be
responsible for providing sufficient data that reflect representative
samples of each of the individual wastestreams that make up the
combined wastestream. EPA strongly recommends that the representative
samples reflect a study of each of the applicable wastestreams that
covers the full range of variability in concentration and flow for each
wastestream.
EPA anticipates that proper application of the building block
approach or CWF will result in combined wastestream limitations and
standards that will enable steam electric power plants to combine
certain wastestreams, while also ensuring that the plant is actually
treating its wastewater as intended by the Act and this rule, rather
than simply diluting it. EPA's record demonstrates, however, that
combined wastestream limitations and standards at the point of
discharge, derived using the building block approach or CWF, may be
impractical or infeasible for some combined wastestreams because the
resulting limitation or standard for any of the regulated pollutants in
the combined wastestream would fall below analytical detection levels.
In such cases, the permitting authority should establish internal
limitations on the regulated wastestream, prior to mixing of the
wastestream with others, as authorized pursuant to 40 CFR 122.45(h) and
40 CFR 403.6.\62\ See TDD Section 14 for more examples and details
about this guidance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ As described earlier for wastestreams with zero discharge
limitations or standards, just because a wastestream with a numeric
limitation or standard is moved, prior to discharge, for use in
another plant process, that does not mean that the wastestream
ceases to be subject to the applicable numeric limitation or
standard, assuming that the wastestream is eventually discharged.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Non-Chemical Metal Cleaning Wastes
By reserving BAT and NSPS for non-chemical metal cleaning wastes in
this final rule, the permitting authority must continue to establish
such requirements based on BPJ for any steam electric power plant
discharging this wastestream. As explained in Section VIII.I, in
permitting this wastestream, some permitting authorities have
classified it as non-chemical metal cleaning wastes (a subset of metal
cleaning wastes), while others have classified it as a low volume waste
source; NPDES permit limitations for this wastestream thus reflect that
classification. In making future BPJ BAT determinations, EPA recommends
that the permitting authority examine the historical permitting record
for the particular plant to determine how discharges of non-chemical
metal cleaning wastes have been permitted in the past. Using historical
information and its best professional judgment, the permitting
authority could determine that the BPJ BAT limitations should be set
equal to existing BPT limitations or it could determine that more
stringent BPJ BAT limitations should apply. In making a BPJ
determination for new sources, EPA recommends that the permitting
authority consider whether it would be appropriate to base standards on
BPT limitations for metal cleaning wastes or on a technology that
achieves greater pollutant reductions.
B. Upset and Bypass Provisions
A ``bypass'' is an intentional diversion of wastestreams from any
portion of a treatment facility. An ``upset'' is an exceptional
incident in which there is unintentional and temporary
[[Page 67885]]
noncompliance with technology-based permit effluent limitations because
of factors beyond the reasonable control of the permittee. EPA's
regulations concerning bypasses and upsets for direct dischargers are
set forth at 40 CFR 122.41(m) and (n) and for indirect dischargers at
40 CFR 403.16 and 403.17.
C. Variances and Modifications
The CWA requires application of effluent limitations or
pretreatment standards established pursuant to CWA section 301 to all
direct and indirect dischargers. The statute, however, provides for the
modification of these national requirements in a limited number of
circumstances. The Agency has established administrative mechanisms to
provide an opportunity for relief from the application of the national
effluent limitations guidelines for categories of existing sources for
toxic, conventional, and nonconventional pollutants.
1. Fundamentally Different Factors Variance
EPA can develop, with the concurrence of the state, effluent
limitations or standards different from the otherwise applicable
requirements for an individual existing discharger if that discharger
is fundamentally different with respect to factors considered in
establishing the effluent limitations guidelines or standards. Such a
modification is known as a Fundamentally Different Factors (FDF)
variance.
EPA, in its initial implementation of the effluent guidelines
program, provided for the FDF modifications in regulations, which were
variances from the BPT effluent limitations, BAT limitations for toxic
and nonconventional pollutants, and BCT limitations for conventional
pollutants for direct dischargers. FDF variances for toxic pollutants
were challenged judicially and ultimately sustained by the Supreme
Court in Chem. Mfrs. Ass'n v. Natural Res. Def. Council, 470 U.S. 116,
124 (1985).
Subsequently, in the Water Quality Act of 1987, Congress added a
new section to the CWA, section 301(n). This provision explicitly
authorizes modifications of the otherwise applicable BAT effluent
limitations, if a discharger is fundamentally different with respect to
the factors specified in CWA section 304 or 403 (other than costs) from
those considered by EPA in establishing the effluent limitations and
standards. CWA section 301(n) also defined the conditions under which
EPA can establish alternative requirements. Under Section 301(n), an
application for approval of a FDF variance must be based solely on (1)
information submitted during rulemaking raising the factors that are
fundamentally different or (2) information the applicant did not have
an opportunity to submit. The alternate limitation must be no less
stringent than justified by the difference and must not result in
markedly more adverse non-water quality environmental impacts than the
national limitation.
EPA regulations at 40 CFR part 125, subpart D, authorizing the
Regional Administrators to establish alternative limitations, further
detail the substantive criteria used to evaluate FDF variance requests
for direct dischargers. Thus, 40 CFR 125.31(d) identifies six factors
(e.g., volume of process wastewater, age and size of a discharger's
facility) that can be considered in determining if a discharger is
fundamentally different. The Agency must determine whether, based on
one or more of these factors, the discharger in question is
fundamentally different from the dischargers and factors considered by
EPA in developing the nationally applicable effluent guidelines. The
regulation also lists four other factors (e.g., inability to install
equipment within the time allowed or a discharger's ability to pay)
that cannot provide a basis for an FDF variance. In addition, under 40
CFR 125.31(b) (3), a request for limitations less stringent than the
national limitation can be approved only if compliance with the
national limitations will result in either (a) a removal cost wholly
out of proportion to the removal cost considered during development of
the national limitations, or (b) a non-water quality environmental
impact (including energy requirements) fundamentally more adverse than
the impact considered during development of the national limits. The
legislative history of CWA section 301(n) underscores the necessity for
the FDF variance applicant to establish eligibility for the variance.
EPA's regulations at 40 CFR 125.32(b)(1) and 40 CFR 403.13 impose this
burden upon the applicant. The applicant must show that the factors
relating to the discharge controlled by the applicant's permit that are
claimed to be fundamentally different are, in fact, fundamentally
different from those factors considered by EPA in establishing the
applicable guidelines and standards. In practice, very few FDF
variances have been granted for past ELGs. An FDF variance is not
available to a new source subject to NSPS or PSNS. DuPont v. Train, 430
U.S. 112 (1977).
2. Economic Variances
Section 301(c) of the CWA authorizes a variance from the otherwise
applicable BAT effluent guidelines for nonconventional pollutants due
to economic factors. See also CWA section 301(l). The request for a
variance from effluent limitations developed from BAT guidelines must
normally be filed by the discharger during the public notice period for
the draft permit. Other filing periods can apply, as specified in 40
CFR 122.21(m)(2). Specific guidance for this type of variance is
provided in ``Draft Guidance for Application and Review of Section
301(c) Variance Requests,'' dated August 21, 1984, available on EPA's
Web site at https://www.epa.gov/npdes/pubs/OWM0469.pdf.
3. Water Quality Variances
Section 301(g) of the CWA authorizes a variance from BAT effluent
guidelines for certain nonconventional pollutants (ammonia, chlorine,
color, iron, and total phenols) due to localized environmental factors.
As this final rule does not establish limitations or standards for any
of these pollutants, this variance is not applicable to this particular
rule.
4. Removal Credits
Section 307(b)(1) of the CWA establishes a discretionary program
for POTWs to grant ``removal credits'' to their indirect dischargers.
Removal credits are a regulatory mechanism by which industrial users
can discharge a pollutant in quantities that exceed what would
otherwise be allowed under an applicable categorical pretreatment
standard because it has been determined that the POTW to which the
industrial user discharges consistently treats the pollutant. EPA has
promulgated removal credit regulations as part of its pretreatment
regulations. See 40 CFR 403.7. These regulations provide that a POTW
can give removal credits if prescribed requirements are met. The POTW
must apply to and receive authorization from the Approval Authority. To
obtain authorization, the POTW must demonstrate consistent removal of
the pollutant for which approval authority is sought. Furthermore, the
POTW must have an approved pretreatment program. Finally, the POTW must
demonstrate that granting removal credits will not cause the POTW to
violate applicable federal, state, or local sewage sludge requirements.
40 CFR 403.7(a)(3).
[[Page 67886]]
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit interpreted the CWA
as requiring EPA to promulgate the comprehensive sewage sludge
regulations pursuant to CWA section 405(d)(2)(A)(ii) before any removal
credits could be authorized. See Natural Res. Def. Council v. EPA, 790
F.2d 289, 292 (3d Cir. 1986), cert. denied, 479 U.S. 1084 (1987).
Congress made this explicit in the Water Quality Act of 1987, which
provided that EPA could not authorize any removal credits until it
issued the sewage sludge use and disposal regulations. On February 19,
1993, EPA promulgated Standards for the Use or Disposal of Sewage
Sludge, which are codified at 40 CFR part 503 (58 FR 9248). EPA
interprets the Court's decision in Natural Res. Def. Council v. EPA as
only allowing removal credits for a pollutant if EPA has either
regulated the pollutant in part 503 or established a concentration of
the pollutant in sewage sludge below which public health and the
environment are protected when sewage sludge is used or disposed.
The part 503 sewage sludge regulations allow four options for
sewage sludge disposal: (1) Land application for beneficial use, (2)
placement on a surface disposal unit, (3) firing in a sewage sludge
incinerator, and (4) disposal in a landfill which complies with the
municipal solid waste landfill criteria in 40 CFR part 258. Because
pollutants in sewage sludge are regulated differently depending upon
the use or disposal method selected, under EPA's pretreatment
regulations the availability of a removal credit for a particular
pollutant is linked to the POTW's method of using or disposing of its
sewage sludge. The regulations provide that removal credits can be
potentially available for the following situations:
(1) If a POTW applies its sewage sludge to the land for beneficial
uses, disposes of it in a surface disposal unit, or incinerates it in a
sewage sludge incinerator, removal credits can be available for the
pollutants for which EPA has established limits in 40 CFR part 503. EPA
has set ceiling limitations for nine metals in sludge that is land
applied, three metals in sludge that is placed on a surface disposal
unit, and seven metals and 57 organic pollutants in sludge that is
incinerated in a sewage sludge incinerator. 40 CFR 403.7(a)(3)(iv)(A).
(2) Additional removal credits can be available for sewage sludge
that is land applied, placed in a surface disposal unit, or incinerated
in a sewage sludge incinerator, so long as the concentration of these
pollutants in sludge do not exceed concentration levels established in
40 CFR part 403, appendix G, Table II. For sewage sludge that is land
applied, removal credits can be available for an additional two metals
and 14 organic pollutants. For sewage sludge that is placed on a
surface disposal unit, removal credits can be available for an
additional seven metals and 13 organic pollutants. For sewage sludge
that is incinerated in a sewage sludge incinerator, removal credits can
be available for three other metals 40 CFR 403.7(a)(3)(iv)(B).
(3) When a POTW disposes of its sewage sludge in a municipal solid
waste landfill that meets the criteria of 40 CFR part 258, removal
credits can be available for any pollutant in the POTW's sewage sludge.
40 CFR 403.7(a)(3)(iv)(C).
D. Site-Specific Water Quality-Based Effluent Limitations
Depending on site-specific conditions and applicable state water
quality standards, it may be appropriate for permitting authorities to
establish water quality-based effluent limitations on bromide,\63\
especially where steam electric power plants are located upstream from
drinking water intakes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ Some may establish limitations on TDS as an indicator of
bromide because bromide is a component of TDS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bromides (a component of TDS) are not directly controlled by the
numeric effluent limitations and standards for existing sources under
this final rule \64\ (although they would be controlled by the NSPS/
PSNS for new sources and by the BAT effluent limitations for existing
sources who choose to participate in the voluntary program and are
subject to the final FGD wastewater limitations based on use of
evaporation technology).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ TDS, like all pollutants, are controlled where there are
zero discharge effluent limitations and standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bromide discharges from coal-fired steam electric power plants can
occur because bromide is naturally found in coal and is released as
particulates when the coal is burned, or by the addition of bromide
compounds to the coal prior to burning, or to the flue gas scrubbing
process, to reduce the amount of mercury air pollution that is also
created when coal is burned.
While bromide itself is not thought to be toxic at levels present
in the environment, its reaction with other constituents in water may
be a cause for concern now and into the future. The bromide ion in
water can form brominated DBPs when drinking water plants treat the
incoming source water using certain disinfection processes including
chlorination and ozonation. Bromide can react with the ozone, chlorine,
or chlorine-based disinfectants to form bromate and brominated and
mixed chloro-bromo DBPs, such as trihalomethanes (THMs) or haloacetic
acids (HAAs) (see DCN SE01920). Studies indicate that exposure to THMs
and other DBPs from chlorinated water is associated with human bladder
cancer (see DCN SE01981 and DCN SE01983). EPA has established the
following MCLs for DBPs:
0.010 mg/L for bromate due to increased cancer risk from
long-term exposure;
0.060 for HAAs due to increased cancer risk from long-term
exposure; and
0.080 mg/L for TTHMs due to increased cancer risk and
liver, kidney or central nervous system problems from long-term
exposure (see DCN SE01909).
The record indicates that steam electric power plant FGD wastewater
discharges occur near more than 100 public drinking water intakes on
rivers and other waterbodies, and there is evidence that these
discharges are already having adverse effects on the quality of
drinking water sources. A 2014 study by McTigue et. al. identified four
drinking water treatment plants that experienced increased levels of
bromide in their source water, and corresponding increases in the
formation of brominated DBPs, after the installation of wet FGD
scrubbers at upstream steam electric power plants (see DCN SE04503).
Drinking water utilities are concerned as well, noting that the
bromide concentrations have made it increasingly difficult for them to
meet SDWA requirements for total trihalomethanes (TTHMs) (see DCN
SE01949). And, bromide loadings into surface waters from coal-fired
steam electric power plants could potentially increase in the future as
more plant operators use bromide addition to improve the control of
mercury emissions. The American Water Works Association requested that
EPA ``instruct NPDES permit writers to adequately consider downstream
drinking water supplies in establishing permit requirements for power
plant discharges'' and take other steps to limit adverse consequences
for downstream drinking water treatment plants. EPA agrees that
permitting authorities should carefully consider whether water quality-
based effluent limitations on bromide or TDS would be appropriate for
FGD wastewater discharges from steam electric power plants upstream of
drinking water intakes.
[[Page 67887]]
EPA regulations at 40 CFR 122.44(d)(1) require that each NPDES
permit shall include any requirements, in addition to or more stringent
than effluent limitations guidelines or standards promulgated pursuant
to sections 301, 304, 306, 307, 318 and 405 of the CWA, necessary to
achieve water quality standards established under section 303 of the
CWA, including state narrative criteria for water quality. Furthermore,
those same regulations require that limitations must control all
pollutants, or pollutant parameters (either conventional,
nonconventional, or toxic pollutants) which the Director determines are
or may be discharged at a level which will cause, have the reasonable
potential to cause, or contribute to an excursion above any state water
quality standard, including state narrative criteria for water quality.
Where the DBP problem described above may be present, water
quality-based effluent limitations for steam electric power plant
discharges may be required under the regulations at 40 CFR
122.44(d)(1), where necessary to meet either numeric criteria (e.g.,
for bromide, TDS or conductivity) or narrative criteria in state water
quality standards. All states have narrative water quality criteria
that are designed to prevent contamination and other adverse impacts to
the states' surface waters. These are often referred to as ``free
from'' standards. For example, a state narrative water quality
criterion for protecting drinking water sources may require discharges
to protect people from adverse exposure to chemicals via drinking
water. These narrative criteria may be used to develop water quality-
based effluent limitations on a site-specific basis for the discharge
of pollutants that impact drinking water sources, such as bromide.
To translate state narrative water quality criteria and inform the
development of a water quality-based limitation for bromide, it may be
appropriate for permitting authorities to use EPA's established MCLs
for DBPs in drinking water because the presence of bromides in drinking
water can result in exceedances of drinking water MCLs as a result of
interactions during drinking water treatment and disinfection
processes. The limitation would be developed for the purpose of
attaining and maintaining the state's applicable narrative water
quality criterion or criteria and protecting the state's designated
use(s), including the protection of human health. See 40 CFR
122.44(d)(1)(vi).
For the reasons described above, during development of the NPDES
permit for the steam electric power plant, the permitting authority
should provide notification to any downstream drinking water treatment
plants of the discharge of bromide. EPA recommends that the permitting
authority collaborate with drinking water utilities and their
regulators to determine what concentration of bromides at the PWS
intake is needed to ensure that levels of bromate and DPBs do not
exceed applicable MCLs. The maximum level of bromide in source waters
at the intake that does not result in an exceedance of the MCL for DBPs
is the numeric interpretation of the narrative criterion for protection
of human health and may vary depending on the treatment processes
employed at the drinking water treatment facility. The permitting
authority would then determine the level of bromide that may be
discharged from the steam electric power plant, taking into account
other sources of bromide that may occur, such that the level of bromide
downstream at the intake to the drinking water utility is below a level
that would result in an exceedances of the applicable MCLs for DBPs. In
addition, applicants for NPDES permits must, as part of their permit
application, indicate whether they know or have reason to believe that
conventional and/or nonconventional pollutants listed in Table IV of
Appendix D to 40 CFR part 122, (which includes bromide), are discharged
from each outfall. For every pollutant in Table IV of Appendix D
discharged which is not limited in an applicable effluent limitations
guideline, the applicant must either report quantitative data or
briefly describe the reasons the pollutant is expected to be discharged
as set forth in 40 CFR 122.2l(g)(7)(vi)(A), made applicable to the
States at 40 CFR 123.25(a)(4).
In addition to requiring the permit applicant to provide a complete
application, including proper wastewater characterization, when issuing
the permit, the permitting authority can incorporate appropriate
monitoring and reporting requirements, as authorized under section
402(a)(2), 33 U.S.C. 1342(a)(2), and implementing regulations at 40 CFR
122.48, 122.44(i), 122.43 and 122.41(1)(4). These requirements apply to
all dischargers and include plants that have identified the presence of
bromide in effluent in significant quantities and that are in proximity
to downstream water treatment plants.
XVII. Related Acts of Congress, Executive Orders, and Agency
Initiatives
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is an economically significant regulatory action that
was submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review.
Any changes made in response to OMB recommendations have been
documented in the docket. EPA prepared an analysis of the potential
costs and benefits associated with this action. This analysis is
contained in Chapter 13 of the BCA Report, available in the docket.
Table XVII-1 (drawn from Table 13-1 of the BCA Report) provides the
results of the benefit-cost analysis with both costs and benefits
annualized over 24 years and discounted using a three percent discount
rate.
Table XVII-1--Total Monetized Annualized Benefits and Costs of the Final
BAT and PSES
[Millions, 2013$, three percent discount rate] \a\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total social costs Total monetized
\b\ benefits
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Value................ $479.5 $450.6 to $565.6
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ All costs and benefits were annualized over 24 years and using a
three percent discount rate.
\b\ Total social costs include compliance costs to facilities.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
OMB has previously approved the information collection requirements
contained in the existing regulations 40 CFR part 423 under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and
has assigned OMB control number 2040-0281. The OMB control numbers for
EPA's regulations in 40 CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
[[Page 67888]]
EPA estimated small changes in monitoring costs at steam electric
power plants for metals in the final rule; EPA accounted for these
costs as part of its analysis of the economic impacts. Plants, however,
will also realize certain savings by no longer monitoring effluent that
would cease to exist under the final rule. The net changes in
monitoring and reporting are expected to be minimal, and EPA determined
that the existing burden estimates appropriately reflect any final rule
burden associated with monitoring.
Based on the information in its record, EPA does not expect the
final rule to increase costs to permitting authorities. The rule will
not change permit application requirements or the associated review; it
will not increase the number of permits issued to steam electric power
plants; nor does it increase the efforts involved in developing or
reviewing such permits. In fact, the final rule will reduce the burden
to permitting authorities. In the absence of nationally applicable BAT
requirements, as appropriate, permitting authorities must establish
technology-based effluent limitations using BPJ to establish site-
specific requirements based on information submitted by the discharger.
Permitting authorities that establish technology-based effluent
limitations on a BPJ basis often spend significant time, effort, and
resources doing so, and dischargers may expend significant resources
providing associated data and information. Establishing nationally
applicable BAT requirements that eliminate the need to develop BPJ-
based limitations makes permitting easier and less costly in this
respect.
As explained in Section XVI.A, under this rule, after the
permitting authority receives information from the discharger, it must
determine, on a facility-specific basis, what date is ``as soon as
possible'' during the period beginning November 1, 2018, and ending
December 31, 2023. This one-time burden to the discharger and the
permitting authority, however, is no more excessive than the existing
burden associated with developing technology-based effluent limitations
on a BPJ basis; in fact, it is very likely less burdensome.
Nevertheless, EPA conservatively estimated no net change (increase or
decrease) in the cost burden to federal or state governments or
dischargers associated with this final rule.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires an agency
to prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis of any rule subject to
notice-and-comment rulemaking requirements under the Administrative
Procedure Act or any other statute, unless the agency certifies that
the rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Small entities include small businesses,
small organizations, and small governmental jurisdictions.
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. The
basis for this finding is documented in Chapter 8 of the RIA included
in the docket and summarized below. EPA estimates that 243 to 507
entities own steam electric power plants to which the ELGs apply, of
which 110 to 191 entities are small (see Table XVII-2).
Table XVII-2--Number of Entities Owning Steam Electric Power Plants by Sector and Size
[Assuming two different ownership cases] \a\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lower bound estimate of number of Upper bound estimate of number of
entities owning steam electric entities owning steam electric
Ownership type power plants \b\ power plants \b\
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Small \c\ % Small Total Small \c\ % Small
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investor-Owned Utilities................ 97 28 28.9 244 66 27.1
Nonutilities............................ 36 19 52.8 77 35 46.1
Cooperatives............................ 29 26 89.7 49 46 93.9
Municipality............................ 65 36 55.4 101 43 42.1
Other Political Subdivision............. 12 1 8.3 30 1 3.3
Federal................................. 0 0 N/A 0 0 N/A
State................................... 2 0 0.0 2 0 0.0
Tribal.................................. 0 0 N/A 0 0 N/A
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
All Entity Types.................... 243 110 45.3 507 191 37.6
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ In 19 instances, a plant is owned by a joint venture of two entities; in one instance, the plant is owned by
a joint venture of three entities.
\b\ Of these, 75 entities, 21 of which are small, own steam electric power plants that are expected to incur
compliance costs under the final rule under both Case 1 and Case 2.
\c\ EPA was unable to determine size for 16 parent entities; for this analysis, these entities are assumed to be
small.
To assess whether small entities' compliance costs might constitute
a significant impact, EPA summed annualized compliance costs for the
steam electric power plants determined to be owned by a given small
entity and calculated these costs as a percentage of entity revenue
(cost-to-revenue test). EPA compared the resulting percentages to
impact criteria of one percent and three percent of revenue. Small
entities estimated to incur compliance costs exceeding one or more of
the one percent and three percent impact thresholds were identified as
potentially incurring a significant impact.
EPA notes that setting the BAT limitations for FGD wastewater, fly
ash transport water, bottom ash transport water, FGMC wastewater, and
gasification wastewater equal to the BPT limitations on TSS in fly ash
transport water, bottom ash transport water, and low volume waste
sources at existing generating units with a total nameplate generating
capacity of 50 MW or less (as discussed in Section VIII.C.12) reduces
the potential impacts of the rule on small entities and municipalities.
The rulemaking record indicates that establishing a size threshold of
50 MW or less preferentially minimizes some of the expected economic
impacts on municipalities and small entities.
Table XVII-3 presents the estimated numbers of small entities
incurring costs exceeding one percent and three percent of revenue, by
ownership type.
[[Page 67889]]
Table XVII-3--Estimated Cost-to-Revenue Impact on Small Entities Owning Steam Electric Power Plants, by Ownership Type
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lower bound estimate of number of entities owning Upper bound estimate of number of entities owning
steam electric power plants steam electric power plants
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost >=1% of revenue Cost >=3% of revenue Cost >=1% of revenue Cost >=3% of revenue
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
% of small Number of % of small % of small Number of % of small
Number of affected small affected Number of affected small affected
small entities entities entities small entities entities entities
entities \b\ \a\ \b\ entities \b\ \a\ \b\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ownership Type.................................. Out of total 110 small entities
Out of total 191 small entities
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cooperative..................................... 1 3.8 0 0.0 1 2.2 0 0.0
Investor-Owned.................................. 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0
Municipality.................................... 4 11.1 1 2.8 4 9.4 1 2.3
Nonutility...................................... 1 5.3 0 0.0 1 2.8 0 0.0
Other Political Subdivision..................... 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................................... 6 5.5 1 0.9 6 3.1 1 0.5
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ The number of entities with cost-to-revenue ratios exceeding three percent is a subset of the number of entities with such ratios exceeding one
percent.
\b\ Percentage values were calculated relative to the total of 110 (Case 1) and 191 (Case 2) small entities owning steam electric power plants. EPA
expects that Case 2 is a more likely ownership scenario for small entities (e.g., small municipalities) as small entities may be less likely to own
multiple non-surveyed steam electric power plants. See RIA Chapter 8 for details.
As reported in Table XVII-3, EPA estimates that six small entities
owning steam electric power plants (one cooperative, one nonutility,
and four municipalities) will incur costs exceeding one percent of
revenue as a result of the final rule, and one small municipality
owning steam electric power plants will incur costs exceeding three
percent of revenue. The numbers of small entities incurring costs
exceeding either the one or three percent of revenue impact threshold
are small in the absolute and represent small percentages of the total
estimated number of small entities, which supports EPA's finding of no
significant impact on a substantial number of small entities (No
SISNOSE).
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), 2
U.S.C. 1531-1538, requires federal agencies, unless otherwise
prohibited by law, to assess the effects of their regulatory actions on
state, local, and tribal governments and the private sector. This
action contains a federal mandate that may result in expenditures of
$100 million or more (annually, adjusted for inflation) for state,
local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or the private sector
in any one year ($141 million in 2013). Accordingly, EPA prepared a
written statement required under section 202 of UMRA. The statement is
included in the docket for this action (see Chapter 9 in the RIA
report) and briefly summarized here.
Consistent with the intergovernmental consultation provisions of
UMRA section 204, EPA consulted with governmental entities affected by
this rule. EPA described the government-to-government dialogue leading
to the proposed rule in its preamble to the proposed rulemaking. EPA
received comments from state and local government representatives in
response to the proposed rule and considered this input in developing
the final rule.
Consistent with UMRA section 205, EPA identified and analyzed a
reasonable number of regulatory alternatives to determine BAT/BADCT.
Section VIII of this preamble describes the options.
This action is not subject to the requirements of UMRA section 203
because it contains no regulatory requirements that might significantly
or uniquely affect small governments. For its assessment of the impact
of compliance requirements on small governments (governments for
populations of less than 50,000), EPA compared total costs and costs
per plant estimated to be incurred by small governments with the costs
estimated to be incurred by large governments. EPA also compared costs
for small government-owned plants with those of non-government-owned
facilities. The Agency evaluated both the average and maximum
annualized cost per plant. Chapter 9 of the RIA report provides details
of these analyses. In all of these comparisons, both for the cost
totals and, in particular, for the average and maximum cost per plant,
the costs for small government-owned facilities were less than those
for large government-owned facilities and for small non-government-
owned facilities. On this basis, EPA concluded that the final rule does
not significantly or uniquely affect small governments.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Under Executive Order (E.O.) 13132, EPA may not issue an action
that has federalism implications, that imposes substantial direct
compliance costs, and that is not required by statute, unless the
federal government provides the funds necessary to pay the direct
compliance costs incurred by state and local governments or EPA
consults with state and local officials early in the process of
developing the action.
This action has federalism implications because it may impose
substantial direct compliance costs on state or local governments, and
the federal government will not provide the funds necessary to pay
those costs.
EPA anticipates that this final rule will not impose incremental
administrative burden on states from issuing, reviewing, and overseeing
compliance with discharge requirements. However, EPA has identified 168
steam electric power plants owned by state or local government
entities, out of which 16 plants are estimated to incur costs to meet
the limitations. EPA estimates that the maximum aggregate compliance
cost in any one year to governments (excluding the federal government)
is $171.4 million (see Chapter 9 of the RIA report for details). Based
on this information, this action may impose substantial direct
compliance costs on state or local governments. Accordingly, EPA
provides the following federalism summary impact statement as required
by section 6(b) of E.O. 13132.
[[Page 67890]]
EPA consulted with elected state and local officials or their
representative national organizations early in the process of
developing the rule to ensure their meaningful and timely input into
its development. The preamble to the proposed rule described these
consultations, which included a briefing on October 11, 2011, attended
by representatives from the National League of Cities, the National
Conference of State Legislatures, the National Association of Counties,
the National Association of Towns and Townships, the U.S. Conference of
Mayors, the Council of State Governments, the County Executives of
America, and the Environmental Council of the States. Policy and
professional groups such as the National Rural Electric Cooperative
Association, America's Clean Water Agencies, and the American Public
Power Association also participated in the briefing, as did
environmental and natural resource policy staff representing nine state
agencies and approximately 25 local governments and/or utilities. The
participants asked questions and raised comments during the meeting. In
response to the Agency's request for pre-proposal written submittals
within eight weeks of the briefing, EPA received separate written
submittals regarding the technology options, pollutant removal
effectiveness, costs of specific technologies and overall costs,
impacts on small generating units and on small governments, among
others. EPA carefully considered these comments in developing the
proposed rule.
EPA received comment on the proposed ELGs from 31 state and local
officials or their representatives. Some state and local officials
expressed concerns EPA had underestimated the costs and overstated the
pollutant removals of the technology options. They stated that the ELGs
would impose significant costs on small entities, and would result in
electricity rate increases that are unaffordable for households. They
also stated that small municipal systems typically operate smaller
units with disproportionally greater compliance costs as compared to
larger units. Commenters also expressed concern about coordination of
the CCR and ELG rules, the potential premature retirement of coal-fired
units with limited remaining life, and potential downtime during
retrofits. Finally, some commenters asked that EPA allow more time to
phase-in the requirements. Other state and local officials supported
revisions of the ELGs and generally opposed reliance on BPJ as a basis
for establishing limitations for FGD wastewater. EPA considered these
comments in developing the final rule. A list of the state and local
government commenters has been provided to OMB and has been placed in
the docket for this rulemaking. In addition, the detailed response to
comments from these entities is contained in EPA's response to comments
document on this final rulemaking, which has also been placed in the
docket for this rulemaking.
As explained in Section VIII, the final rule establishes different
BAT/PSES requirements for oil-fired generating units and units of 50 MW
or less. These different requirements alleviate some of the concerns
raised by state and local government representatives by reducing the
number of government entities incurring costs to meet the ELG
requirements. The implementation schedule described in Section XVI
gives time to facilities to make changes to their operations to meet
the final effluent limitations. Moreover, the rule does not rely on BPJ
determinations for establishment of FGD wastewater limitations or
standards. Finally, as explained in Section IX, EPA's analysis
demonstrates that the requirements are economically achievable for the
steam electric industry as a whole, including plants owned by state or
local government entities.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal implications, as specified in E.O.
13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000). It will not have substantial
direct effects on tribal governments, on the relationship between the
federal government and the Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the Federal government and Indian
tribes, as specified in E.O. 13175. EPA's analyses show that tribal
governments do not own any facility to which the ELGs apply. Thus, E.O.
13175 does not apply to this action.
Although E.O. 13175 does not apply to this action, EPA consulted
with federally recognized tribal officials under EPA's Policy on
Consultation and Coordination with Indian tribes early in the process
of developing this rule to enable them to have meaningful and timely
input into its development. EPA initiated consultation and coordination
with federally recognized tribal governments in August 2011. EPA shared
information about the steam electric effluent guidelines rulemaking in
discussions with the National Tribal Caucus and the National Tribal
Water Council. EPA continued this government-to-government dialogue by
mailing a consultation notification letter to tribal leaders, and on
March 28, 2012, held a tribal consultation conference call with tribal
representatives about the rulemaking process and objectives, with a
focus on identifying specific ways that the rulemaking may affect
tribes. Representatives from one tribe provided input to the rule. EPA
considered input from tribal representatives in developing this final
rule.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
This action is not subject to E.O. 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23,
1997) because the EPA does not expect that the environmental health
risks or safety risks addressed by this action present a
disproportionate risk to children. This action's health and risk
assessments are contained in Chapter 3 of the BCA Report and summarized
below.
As described in Section XIV.B.1, EPA assessed whether the final
rule will benefit children by reducing health risk from exposure to
steam electric pollutants from consumption of contaminated fish and
improving recreational opportunities. The Agency was able to quantify
two categories of benefits specific to children: (1) Avoided
neurological damage to preschool age children from reduced exposure to
lead and (2) avoided neurological damages from in utero exposure to
mercury.
This analysis considered several measures of children's health
benefits associated with lead exposure for children up to age six.
Avoided neurological and cognitive damages were expressed as changes in
three metrics: (1) Overall IQ levels; (2) the incidence of low IQ
scores (<70); and (3) the incidence of levels of lead in the blood
above 20 mg/dL.
EPA estimated the IQ-related benefits associated with reduced in
utero mercury exposure from maternal fish consumption in exposed
populations. Among approximately 418,953 babies born per year who are
potentially exposed to discharges of mercury from steam electric power
plants, the final rule reduces total IQ point losses over the period of
2019 through 2042 by about 7,219 points. The monetary benefits
associated with the avoided IQ point losses are $3.5 million per year
(mean estimate, at three percent discount rate).
EPA's analysis also shows annualized benefits to children from
reduced lead discharges of approximately $1.0 million (at three percent
discount rate).
EPA identified additional benefits to children, such as reduced
exposure to
[[Page 67891]]
lead and the resultant neurological and cognitive damages in children
over the age of seven, as well as other adverse health effects.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use
This action is not a ``significant energy action,'' as defined by
E.O. 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001) because it is not likely to have
a significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy.
The Agency analyzed the potential energy effects of these ELGs. The
potentially significant effects of this rule on energy supply,
distribution, or use concern the electric power sector. EPA found that
the final rule will not cause effects in the electric power sector that
constitute a significant adverse effect under E.O. 13211. Namely, the
Agency found that this rule does not reduce electricity production in
excess of 1 billion kilowatt hours per year or in excess of 500
megawatts of installed capacity, and therefore does not constitute a
significant regulatory action under E.O. 13211.
For more detail on the potential energy effects of this final rule,
see Chapter 10 in the RIA report.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
E.O. 12898 (59 FR 7629, Feb. 16, 1994) establishes federal
executive policy on environmental justice. Its main provision directs
federal agencies, to the greatest extent practicable and permitted by
law, to make environmental justice part of their mission by identifying
and addressing, as appropriate, disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects of their programs, policies, and
activities on minority populations and low-income populations in the
U.S.
EPA determined that the human health or environmental risk
addressed by this action will not have potential disproportionately
high and adverse human health or environmental effects on minority,
low-income, or indigenous populations. The results of this evaluation
are contained in Chapter 14 of the BCA Report, available in the docket.
To meet the objectives of E.O. 12898, EPA examined whether the rule
creates potential environmental justice concerns in the areas affected
by steam electric power plant discharges. The Agency analyzed the
demographic characteristics of the populations who live in proximity to
steam electric power plants and who may be exposed to pollutants in
steam electric power plant discharges (populations who consume
recreationally caught fish from affected reaches) to determine whether
minority and or low-income populations are subject to disproportionally
high environmental impacts.
EPA conducted the analysis in two ways. First, EPA compared
demographic data for populations living in proximity to steam electric
power plants to demographic characteristics at the state and national
levels. This analysis focuses on the spatial distribution of minority
and low-income groups to determine whether these groups are more or
less represented in the populations that are expected to benefit from
the final rule, based on their proximity to steam electric power
plants. This analysis shows that approximately 450,000 people reside
within one mile of a steam electric power plant currently discharging
to surface waters and 2.7 million people reside within three miles. A
greater fraction of the populations living in such proximity to the
plants has income below the poverty threshold (16.4 and 15.3 percent,
respectively for populations within one and three miles) than the
national average (13.9 percent).
Second, EPA conducted analyses of populations exposed to steam
electric power plant discharges through consumption of recreationally
caught fish by estimating exposure and health effects by demographic
cohort. Where possible, EPA used analytic assumptions specific to the
demographic cohorts--e.g., fish consumption rates specific to different
racial groups. The results show that this final rule will not have
disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental
effects on minority or low-income populations because, in fact, it
increases the level of environmental protection (reduces adverse human
health and environmental effects) for all affected populations,
including minority and low-income populations. Furthermore, EPA
estimated that minority and low-income populations will receive,
proportionately, more of the human health benefits associated with the
final rule.
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and the EPA will submit a rule
report to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of
the United States. This action is a ``major rule'' as defined by 5
U.S.C. 804(2).
Appendix A to the Preamble: Definitions, Acronyms, and Abbreviations
Used in This Preamble
The following acronyms and abbreviations are used in this
preamble.
Administrator. The Administrator of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
Agency. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
BAT. Best available technology economically achievable, as
defined by CWA sections 301(b)(2)(A) and 304(b)(2)(B).
BCT. The best conventional pollutant control technology
applicable to discharges of conventional pollutants from existing
industrial point sources, as defined by sections 301(b)(2)(E) and
304(b)(4) of the CWA.
Bioaccumulation. General term describing a process by which
chemicals are taken up by an organism either directly from exposure
to a contaminated medium or by consumption of food containing the
chemical, resulting in a net accumulation of the chemical by an
organism due to uptake from all routes of exposure.
BMP. Best management practice.
Bottom ash. The ash, including boiler slag, which settles in the
furnace or is dislodged from furnace walls. Economizer ash is
included when it is collected with bottom ash.
BPT. The best practicable control technology currently available
as defined by sections 301(b)(1) and 304(b)(1) of the CWA.
CBI. Confidential Business Information.
CCR. Coal Combustion Residuals.
Clean Water Act (CWA). The Federal Water Pollution Control Act
Amendments of 1972 (33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.), as amended, e.g., by
the Clean Water Act of 1977 (Pub. L. 95-217), and the Water Quality
Act of 1987 (Pub. L. 100-4).
Combustion residuals. Solid wastes associated with combustion-
related power plant processes, including fly and bottom ash from
coal-, petroleum coke-, or oil-fired units; FGD solids; FGMC wastes;
and other wastewater treatment solids associated with combustion
wastewater. In addition to the residuals that are associated with
coal combustion, this also includes residuals associated with the
combustion of other fossil fuels.
Combustion residual leachate. Leachate from landfills or surface
impoundments containing combustion residuals. Leachate is composed
of liquid, including any suspended or dissolved constituents in the
liquid, that has percolated through waste or other materials
emplaced in a landfill, or that passes through the surface
impoundment's containment structure (e.g., bottom, dikes, and
berms). Combustion residual leachate includes seepage and/or leakage
from a combustion residual landfill or impoundment unit. Combustion
residual
[[Page 67892]]
leachate includes wastewater from landfills and surface impoundments
located on non-adjoining property when under the operational control
of the permitted facility.
Direct discharge. (a) Any addition of any ``pollutant'' or
combination of pollutants to ``waters of the United States'' from
any ``point source,'' or (b) any addition of any pollutant or
combination of pollutant to waters of the ``contiguous zone'' or the
ocean from any point source other than a vessel or other floating
craft which is being used as a means of transportation. This
definition includes additions of pollutants into waters of the
United States from: Surface runoff which is collected or channeled
by man; discharges though pipes, sewers, or other conveyances owned
by a State, municipality, or other person which do not lead to a
treatment works; and discharges through pipes, sewers, or other
conveyances, leading into privately owned treatment works. This term
does not include an addition of pollutants by any ``indirect
discharger.''
Direct discharger. A facility that discharges treated or
untreated wastewaters into waters of the U.S.
DOE. Department of Energy.
Dry bottom ash handling system. A system that does not use water
as the transport medium to convey bottom ash away from the boiler.
It includes systems that collect and convey the ash without any use
of water, as well as systems in which bottom ash is quenched in a
water bath and then mechanically or pneumatically conveyed away from
the boiler. Dry bottom ash handling systems do not include wet
sluicing systems (such as remote MDS or complete recycle systems).
Dry fly ash handling system. A system that does not use water as
the transport medium to convey fly ash away from particulate
collection equipment.
Effluent limitation. Under CWA section 502(11), any restriction,
including schedules of compliance, established by a state or the
Administrator on quantities, rates, and concentrations of chemical,
physical, biological, and other constituents which are discharged
from point sources into navigable waters, the waters of the
contiguous zone, or the ocean, including schedules of compliance.
EIA. Energy Information Administration.
ELGs. Effluent limitations guidelines and standards.
EO. Executive Order.
EPA. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
ESP. Electrostatic precipitator.
Facility. Any NPDES ``point source'' or any other facility or
activity (including land or appurtenances thereto) that is subject
to regulation under the NPDES program.
FGD. Flue gas desulfurization.
FGD Wastewater. Wastewater generated specifically from the wet
flue gas desulfurization scrubber system that comes into contact
with the flue gas or the FGD solids, including but not limited to,
the blowdown or purge from the FGD scrubber system, overflow or
underflow from the solids separation process, FGD solids wash water,
and the filtrate from the solids dewatering process. Wastewater
generated from cleaning the FGD scrubber, cleaning FGD solids
separation equipment, cleaning FGD solids dewatering equipment, or
that is collected in floor drains in the FGD process area is not
considered FGD wastewater.
FGD gypsum. Gypsum generated specifically from the wet FGD
scrubber system, including any solids separation or solids
dewatering processes.
FGMC. Flue gas mercury control.
FGMC System. An air pollution control system installed or
operated for the purpose of removing mercury from flue gas.
Flue Gas Mercury Control Wastewater. Wastewater generated from
an air pollution control system installed or operated for the
purpose of removing mercury from flue gas. This includes fly ash
collection systems when the particulate control system follows
sorbent injection or other controls to remove mercury from flue gas.
FGD wastewater generated at plants using oxidizing agents to remove
mercury in the FGD system and not in a separate FGMC system is not
included in this definition.
Fly Ash. The ash that is carried out of the furnace by a gas
stream and collected by a capture device such as a mechanical
precipitator, electrostatic precipitator, and/or fabric filter.
Economizer ash is included in this definition when it is collected
with fly ash. Ash is not included in this definition when it is
collected in wet scrubber air pollution control systems whose
primary purpose is particulate removal.
Gasification Wastewater. Any wastewater generated at an
integrated gasification combined cycle operation from the gasifier
or the syngas cleaning, combustion, and cooling processes.
Gasification wastewater includes, but is not limited to the
following: Sour/grey water; CO2/steam stripper
wastewater; sulfur recovery unit blowdown, and wastewater resulting
from slag handling or fly ash handling, particulate removal, halogen
removal, or trace organic removal. Air separation unit blowdown,
noncontact cooling water, and runoff from fuel and/or byproduct
piles are not considered gasification wastewater. Wastewater that is
collected intermittently in floor drains in the gasification process
areas from leaks, spills and cleaning occurring during normal
operation of the gasification operation is not considered
gasification wastewater.
Ground water. Water that is found in the saturated part of the
ground underneath the land surface.
IGCC. Integrated gasification combined cycle.
Indirect discharge. Wastewater discharged or otherwise
introduced to a POTW.
IPM. Integrated Planning Model.
Landfill. A disposal facility or part of a facility where solid
waste, sludges, or other process residuals are placed in or on any
natural or manmade formation in the earth for disposal and which is
not a storage pile, a land treatment facility, a surface
impoundment, an underground injection well, a salt dome or salt bed
formation, an underground mine, a cave, or a corrective action
management unit.
Low Volume Waste Sources. Taken collectively as if from one
source, wastewater from all sources except those for which specific
limitations or standards are otherwise established in this part. Low
volume waste sources include, but are not limited to, the following:
Wastewaters from ion exchange water treatment systems, water
treatment evaporator blowdown, laboratory and sampling streams,
boiler blowdown, floor drains, cooling tower basin cleaning wastes,
recirculating house service water systems, and wet scrubber air
pollution control systems whose primary purpose is particulate
removal. Sanitary wastes, air conditioning wastes, and wastewater
from carbon capture or sequestration systems are not included in
this definition.
MDS. Mechanical drag system.
Mechanical drag system. Bottom ash handling system that collects
bottom ash from the bottom of the boiler in a water-filled trough.
The water bath in the trough quenches the hot bottom ash as it falls
from the boiler and seals the boiler gases. A drag chain operates in
a continuous loop to drag bottom ash from the water trough up an
incline, which dewaters the bottom ash by gravity, draining the
water back to the trough as the bottom ash moves upward. The
dewatered bottom ash is often conveyed to a nearby collection area,
such as a small bunker outside the boiler building, from which it is
loaded onto trucks and either sold or transported to a landfill. The
MDS is considered a dry bottom ash handling system because the ash
transport mechanism is mechanical removal by the drag chain, not the
water.
Metal cleaning wastes. Any wastewater resulting from cleaning
[with or without chemical cleaning compounds] any metal process
equipment including, but not limited to, boiler tube cleaning,
boiler fireside cleaning, and air preheater cleaning.
Mortality. Death rate or proportion of deaths in a population.
NAICS. North American Industry Classification System.
NPDES. National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System.
NSPS. New Source Performance Standards.
Oil-fired unit. A generating unit that uses oil as the primary
or secondary fuel source and does not use a gasification process or
any coal or petroleum coke as a fuel source. This definition does
not include units that use oil only for start up or flame-
stabilization purposes.
ORCR. Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery.
Point source. Any discernable, confined, and discrete
conveyance, including but not limited to, any pipe, ditch, channel,
tunnel, conduit, well, discrete fissure, container, rolling stock,
concentrated animal feeding operation, or vessel or other floating
craft from which pollutants are or may be discharged. The term does
not include agricultural stormwater discharges or return flows from
irrigated agriculture. See CWA section 502(14), 33 U.S.C. 1362(14);
40 CFR 122.2.
POTW. Publicly owned treatment works. See CWA section 212, 33
U.S.C. 1292; 40 CFR 122.2, 403.3
Primary particulate collection system. The first place in the
process where fly ash is collected, such as collection at an ESP or
[[Page 67893]]
baghouse. For example, a coal combustion particulate collection
system may include multiple steps including a primary particulate
collection step such as ESP followed by other processes such as a
fabric filter which would constitute a secondary particulate
collection system.
PSES. Pretreatment Standards for Existing Sources.
PSNS. Pretreatment Standards for New Sources.
Publicly Owned Treatment Works. Any device or system, owned by a
state or municipality, used in the treatment (including recycling
and reclamation) of municipal sewage or industrial wastes of a
liquid nature that is owned by a state or municipality. This
includes sewers, pipes, or other conveyances only if they convey
wastewater to a POTW providing treatment. See CWA section 212, 33
U.S.C. 1292; 40 CFR 122.2, 403.3.
RCRA. The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, 42
U.S.C. 6901 et seq.
Remote MDS. Bottom ash handling system that collects bottom ash
at the bottom of the boiler, then uses transport water to sluice the
ash to a remote MDS that dewaters bottom ash using a similar
configuration as the MDS. The remote MDS is considered a wet bottom
ash handling system because the ash transport mechanism is water.
RFA. Regulatory Flexibility Act.
SBA. Small Business Administration.
Sediment. Particulate matter lying below water.
Steam electric power plant wastewater. Wastewaters associated
with or resulting from the combustion process, including ash
transport water from coal-, petroleum coke-, or oil-fired units; air
pollution control wastewater (e.g., FGD wastewater, FGMC wastewater,
carbon capture wastewater); and leachate from landfills or surface
impoundments containing combustion residuals.
Surface water. All waters of the United States, including
rivers, streams, lakes, reservoirs, and seas.
Toxic pollutants. As identified under the CWA, 65 pollutants and
classes of pollutants, of which 126 specific substances have been
designated priority toxic pollutants. See appendix A to 40 CFR part
423.
Transport water. Wastewater that is used to convey fly ash,
bottom ash, or economizer ash from the ash collection or storage
equipment, or boiler, and has direct contact with the ash. Transport
water does not include low volume, short duration discharges of
wastewater from minor leaks (e.g., leaks from valve packing, pipe
flanges, or piping) or minor maintenance events (e.g., replacement
of valves or pipe sections).
UMRA. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act.
Wet bottom ash handling system. A system in which bottom ash is
conveyed away from the boiler using water as a transport medium. Wet
bottom ash systems typically send the ash slurry to dewatering bins
or a surface impoundment. Wet bottom ash handling systems include
systems that operate in conjunction with a traditional wet sluicing
system to recycle all bottom ash transport water (remote MDS or
complete recycle system).
Wet FGD system. Wet FGD systems capture sulfur dioxide from the
flue gas using a sorbent that has mixed with water to form a wet
slurry, and that generates a water stream that exits the FGD
scrubber absorber.
Wet fly ash handling system. A system that conveys fly ash away
from particulate removal equipment using water as a transport
medium. Wet fly ash systems typically dispose of the ash slurry in a
surface impoundment.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 423
Environmental protection, Electric power generation, Power plants,
Waste treatment and disposal, Water pollution control.
Dated: September 30, 2015.
Gina McCarthy,
Administrator.
Therefore, 40 CFR Chapter I is amended as follows:
PART 423--STEAM ELECTRIC POWER GENERATING POINT SOURCE CATEGORY
0
1. The authority citation for part 423 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 101; 301; 304(b), (c), (e), and (g); 306; 307;
308 and 501, Clean Water Act (Federal Water Pollution Control Act
Amendments of 1972, as amended; 33 U.S.C. 1251; 1311; 1314(b), (c),
(e), and (g); 1316; 1317; 1318 and 1361).
0
2. Section 423.10 is revised as follows:
Sec. 423.10 Applicability.
The provisions of this part apply to discharges resulting from the
operation of a generating unit by an establishment whose generation of
electricity is the predominant source of revenue or principal reason
for operation, and whose generation of electricity results primarily
from a process utilizing fossil-type fuel (coal, oil, or gas), fuel
derived from fossil fuel (e.g., petroleum coke, synthesis gas), or
nuclear fuel in conjunction with a thermal cycle employing the steam
water system as the thermodynamic medium. This part applies to
discharges associated with both the combustion turbine and steam
turbine portions of a combined cycle generating unit.
0
3. Section 423.11 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (b), (e), and (f).
0
b. Adding paragraphs (n) through (t).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 423.11 Specialized definitions.
* * * * *
(b) The term low volume waste sources means, taken collectively as
if from one source, wastewater from all sources except those for which
specific limitations or standards are otherwise established in this
part. Low volume waste sources include, but are not limited to, the
following: Wastewaters from ion exchange water treatment systems, water
treatment evaporator blowdown, laboratory and sampling streams, boiler
blowdown, floor drains, cooling tower basin cleaning wastes,
recirculating house service water systems, and wet scrubber air
pollution control systems whose primary purpose is particulate removal.
Sanitary wastes, air conditioning wastes, and wastewater from carbon
capture or sequestration systems are not included in this definition.
* * * * *
(e) The term fly ash means the ash that is carried out of the
furnace by a gas stream and collected by a capture device such as a
mechanical precipitator, electrostatic precipitator, or fabric filter.
Economizer ash is included in this definition when it is collected with
fly ash. Ash is not included in this definition when it is collected in
wet scrubber air pollution control systems whose primary purpose is
particulate removal.
(f) The term bottom ash means the ash, including boiler slag, which
settles in the furnace or is dislodged from furnace walls. Economizer
ash is included in this definition when it is collected with bottom
ash.
* * * * *
(n) The term flue gas desulfurization (FGD) wastewater means any
wastewater generated specifically from the wet flue gas desulfurization
scrubber system that comes into contact with the flue gas or the FGD
solids, including but not limited to, the blowdown from the FGD
scrubber system, overflow or underflow from the solids separation
process, FGD solids wash water, and the filtrate from the solids
dewatering process. Wastewater generated from cleaning the FGD
scrubber, cleaning FGD solids separation equipment, cleaning FGD solids
dewatering equipment, or that is collected in floor drains in the FGD
process area is not considered FGD wastewater.
(o) The term flue gas mercury control wastewater means any
wastewater generated from an air pollution control system installed or
operated for the purpose of removing mercury from flue gas. This
includes fly ash collection systems when the particulate control system
follows sorbent injection or other controls to remove mercury from flue
gas. FGD wastewater generated at plants using oxidizing agents to
remove mercury in the FGD system and not in a separate FGMC system is
not included in this definition.
[[Page 67894]]
(p) The term transport water means any wastewater that is used to
convey fly ash, bottom ash, or economizer ash from the ash collection
or storage equipment, or boiler, and has direct contact with the ash.
Transport water does not include low volume, short duration discharges
of wastewater from minor leaks (e.g., leaks from valve packing, pipe
flanges, or piping) or minor maintenance events (e.g., replacement of
valves or pipe sections).
(q) The term gasification wastewater means any wastewater generated
at an integrated gasification combined cycle operation from the
gasifier or the syngas cleaning, combustion, and cooling processes.
Gasification wastewater includes, but is not limited to the following:
Sour/grey water; CO2/steam stripper wastewater; sulfur
recovery unit blowdown, and wastewater resulting from slag handling or
fly ash handling, particulate removal, halogen removal, or trace
organic removal. Air separation unit blowdown, noncontact cooling
water, and runoff from fuel and/or byproduct piles are not considered
gasification wastewater. Wastewater that is collected intermittently in
floor drains in the gasification process area from leaks, spills, and
cleaning occurring during normal operation of the gasification
operation is not considered gasification wastewater.
(r) The term combustion residual leachate means leachate from
landfills or surface impoundments containing combustion residuals.
Leachate is composed of liquid, including any suspended or dissolved
constituents in the liquid, that has percolated through waste or other
materials emplaced in a landfill, or that passes through the surface
impoundment's containment structure (e.g., bottom, dikes, berms).
Combustion residual leachate includes seepage and/or leakage from a
combustion residual landfill or impoundment unit. Combustion residual
leachate includes wastewater from landfills and surface impoundments
located on non-adjoining property when under the operational control of
the permitted facility.
(s) The term oil-fired unit means a generating unit that uses oil
as the primary or secondary fuel source and does not use a gasification
process or any coal or petroleum coke as a fuel source. This definition
does not include units that use oil only for start up or flame-
stabilization purposes.
(t) The phrase ``as soon as possible'' means November 1, 2018,
unless the permitting authority establishes a later date, after
receiving information from the discharger, which reflects a
consideration of the following factors:
(1) Time to expeditiously plan (including to raise capital),
design, procure, and install equipment to comply with the requirements
of this part.
(2) Changes being made or planned at the plant in response to:
(i) New source performance standards for greenhouse gases from new
fossil fuel-fired electric generating units, under sections 111, 301,
302, and 307(d)(1)(C) of the Clean Air Act, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 7411,
7601, 7602, 7607(d)(1)(C);
(ii) Emission guidelines for greenhouse gases from existing fossil
fuel-fired electric generating units, under sections 111, 301, 302, and
307(d) of the Clean Air Act, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 7411, 7601, 7602,
7607(d); or
(iii) Regulations that address the disposal of coal combustion
residuals as solid waste, under sections 1006(b), 1008(a), 2002(a),
3001, 4004, and 4005(a) of the Solid Waste Disposal Act of 1970, as
amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, as
amended by the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984, 42 U.S.C.
6906(b), 6907(a), 6912(a), 6944, and 6945(a).
(3) For FGD wastewater requirements only, an initial commissioning
period for the treatment system to optimize the installed equipment.
0
(4) Other factors as appropriate.
0
4. Section 423.12 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (b)(11) and (12).
0
b. Adding paragraph (b)(13).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 423.12 Effluent limitations guidelines representing the degree
of effluent reduction attainable by the application of the best
practicable control technology currently available (BPT).
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(11) The quantity of pollutants discharged in FGD wastewater, flue
gas mercury control wastewater, combustion residual leachate, or
gasification wastewater shall not exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of the applicable wastewater times the
concentration listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BPT Effluent limitations
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day (mg/ consecutive days
l) shall not exceed
(mg/l)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TSS................................. 100.0 30.0
Oil and grease...................... 20.0 15.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(12) At the permitting authority's discretion, the quantity of
pollutant allowed to be discharged may be expressed as a concentration
limitation instead of the mass-based limitations specified in
paragraphs (b)(3) through (b)(7), and (b)(11), of this section.
Concentration limitations shall be those concentrations specified in
this section.
(13) In the event that wastestreams from various sources are
combined for treatment or discharge, the quantity of each pollutant or
pollutant property controlled in paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(12) of
this section attributable to each controlled waste source shall not
exceed the specified limitations for that waste source.
0
5. Section 423.13 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (g) and (h).
0
b. Adding paragraphs (i) through (n).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 423.13 Effluent limitations guidelines representing the degree
of effluent reduction attainable by the application of the best
available technology economically achievable (BAT).
* * * * *
(g)(1)(i) FGD wastewater. Except for those discharges to which
paragraph (g)(2) or (g)(3) of this section applies, the quantity of
pollutants in FGD wastewater shall not exceed the quantity determined
by multiplying the flow of FGD wastewater times the concentration
listed in the table
[[Page 67895]]
following this paragraph (g)(1)(i). Dischargers must meet the effluent
limitations for FGD wastewater in this paragraph by a date determined
by the permitting authority that is as soon as possible beginning
November 1, 2018, but no later than December 31, 2023. These effluent
limitations apply to the discharge of FGD wastewater generated on and
after the date determined by the permitting authority for meeting the
effluent limitations, as specified in this paragraph.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BAT Effluent limitations
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day consecutive days
shall not exceed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arsenic, total (ug/L)............... 11 8
Mercury, total (ng/L)............... 788 356
Selenium, total (ug/L).............. 23 12
Nitrate/nitrite as N (mg/L)......... 17.0 4.4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) For FGD wastewater generated before the date determined by the
permitting authority, as specified in paragraph (g)(1)(i), the quantity
of pollutants discharged in FGD wastewater shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the flow of FGD wastewater times the
concentration listed for TSS in Sec. 423.12(b)(11).
(2) For any electric generating unit with a total nameplate
capacity of less than or equal to 50 megawatts or that is an oil-fired
unit, the quantity of pollutants discharged in FGD wastewater shall not
exceed the quantity determined by multiplying the flow of FGD
wastewater times the concentration listed for TSS in Sec.
423.12(b)(11).
(3)(i) For dischargers who voluntarily choose to meet the effluent
limitations for FGD wastewater in this paragraph, the quantity of
pollutants in FGD wastewater shall not exceed the quantity determined
by multiplying the flow of FGD wastewater times the concentration
listed in the table following this paragraph (g)(3)(i). Dischargers who
choose to meet the effluent limitations for FGD wastewater in this
paragraph must meet such limitations by December 31, 2023. These
effluent limitations apply to the discharge of FGD wastewater generated
on and after December 31, 2023.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BAT Effluent limitations
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day consecutive days
shall not exceed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arsenic, total (ug/L)............... 4 ..................
Mercury, total (ng/L)............... 39 24
Selenium, total (ug/L).............. 5 ..................
TDS (mg/L).......................... 50 24
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) For discharges of FGD wastewater generated before December 31,
2023, the quantity of pollutants discharged in FGD wastewater shall not
exceed the quantity determined by multiplying the flow of FGD
wastewater times the concentration listed for TSS in Sec.
423.12(b)(11).
(h)(1)(i) Fly ash transport water. Except for those discharges to
which paragraph (h)(2) of this section applies, or when the fly ash
transport water is used in the FGD scrubber, there shall be no
discharge of pollutants in fly ash transport water. Dischargers must
meet the discharge limitation in this paragraph by a date determined by
the permitting authority that is as soon as possible beginning November
1, 2018, but no later than December 31, 2023. This limitation applies
to the discharge of fly ash transport water generated on and after the
date determined by the permitting authority for meeting the discharge
limitation, as specified in this paragraph. Whenever fly ash transport
water is used in any other plant process or is sent to a treatment
system at the plant (except when it is used in the FGD scrubber), the
resulting effluent must comply with the discharge limitation in this
paragraph. When the fly ash transport water is used in the FGD
scrubber, the quantity of pollutants in fly ash transport water shall
not exceed the quantity determined by multiplying the flow of fly ash
transport water times the concentration listed in the table in
paragraph (g)(1)(i) of this section.
(ii) For discharges of fly ash transport water generated before the
date determined by the permitting authority, as specified in paragraph
(h)(1)(i) of this section, the quantity of pollutants discharged in fly
ash transport water shall not exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of fly ash transport water times the concentration
listed for TSS in Sec. 423.12(b)(4).
(2) For any electric generating unit with a total nameplate
generating capacity of less than or equal to 50 megawatts or that is an
oil-fired unit, the quantity of pollutants discharged in fly ash
transport water shall not exceed the quantity determined by multiplying
the flow of fly ash transport water times the concentration listed for
TSS in Sec. 423.12(b)(4).
(i)(1)(i) Flue gas mercury control wastewater. Except for those
discharges to which paragraph (i)(2) of this section applies, there
shall be no discharge of pollutants in flue gas mercury control
wastewater. Dischargers must meet the discharge limitation in this
paragraph by a date determined by the permitting authority that is as
soon as possible beginning November 1, 2018, but no later than December
31, 2023. This limitation applies to the discharge of flue gas mercury
control wastewater generated on and after the date determined by the
permitting authority for meeting the discharge limitation, as specified
in this paragraph. Whenever flue gas mercury control wastewater is
[[Page 67896]]
used in any other plant process or is sent to a treatment system at the
plant, the resulting effluent must comply with the discharge limitation
in this paragraph.
(ii) For discharges of flue gas mercury control wastewater
generated before the date determined by the permitting authority, as
specified in paragraph (i)(1)(i) of this section, the quantity of
pollutants discharged in flue gas mercury control wastewater shall not
exceed the quantity determined by multiplying the flow of flue gas
mercury control wastewater times the concentration for TSS listed in
Sec. 423.12(b)(11).
(2) For any electric generating unit with a total nameplate
generating capacity of less than or equal to 50 megawatts or that is an
oil-fired unit, the quantity of pollutants discharged in flue gas
mercury control wastewater shall not exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of flue gas mercury control wastewater times the
concentration for TSS listed in Sec. 423.12(b)(11).
(j)(1)(i) Gasification wastewater. Except for those discharges to
which paragraph (j)(2) of this section applies, the quantity of
pollutants in gasification wastewater shall not exceed the quantity
determined by multiplying the flow of gasification wastewater times the
concentration listed in the table following this paragraph (j)(1)(i).
Dischargers must meet the effluent limitations in this paragraph by a
date determined by the permitting authority that is as soon as possible
beginning November 1, 2018, but no later than December 31, 2023. These
effluent limitations apply to the discharge of gasification wastewater
generated on and after the date determined by the permitting authority
for meeting the effluent limitations, as specified in this paragraph.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BAT Effluent limitations
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day consecutive days
shall not exceed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arsenic, total (ug/L)............... 4 ..................
Mercury, total (ng/L)............... 1.8 1.3
Selenium, total (ug/L).............. 453 227
Total dissolved solids (mg/L)....... 38 22
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) For discharges of gasification wastewater generated before the
date determined by the permitting authority, as specified in paragraph
(j)(1)(i) of this section, the quantity of pollutants discharged in
gasification wastewater shall not exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of gasification wastewater times the concentration
for TSS listed in Sec. 423.12(b)(11).
(2) For any electric generating unit with a total nameplate
generating capacity of less than or equal to 50 megawatts or that is an
oil-fired unit, the quantity of pollutants discharged in gasification
wastewater shall not exceed the quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of gasification wastewater times the concentration listed for TSS
in Sec. 423.12(b)(11).
(k)(1)(i) Bottom ash transport water. Except for those discharges
to which paragraph (k)(2) of this section applies, or when the bottom
ash transport water is used in the FGD scrubber, there shall be no
discharge of pollutants in bottom ash transport water. Dischargers must
meet the discharge limitation in this paragraph by a date determined by
the permitting authority that is as soon as possible beginning November
1, 2018, but no later than December 31, 2023. This limitation applies
to the discharge of bottom ash transport water generated on and after
the date determined by the permitting authority for meeting the
discharge limitation, as specified in this paragraph. Whenever bottom
ash transport water is used in any other plant process or is sent to a
treatment system at the plant (except when it is used in the FGD
scrubber), the resulting effluent must comply with the discharge
limitation in this paragraph. When the bottom ash transport water is
used in the FGD scrubber, the quantity of pollutants in bottom ash
transport water shall not exceed the quantity determined by multiplying
the flow of bottom ash transport water times the concentration listed
in the table in paragraph (g)(1)(i) of this section.
(ii) For discharges of bottom ash transport water generated before
the date determined by the permitting authority, as specified in
paragraph (k)(1)(i) of this section, the quantity of pollutants
discharged in bottom ash transport water shall not exceed the quantity
determined by multiplying the flow of bottom ash transport water times
the concentration for TSS listed in Sec. 423.12(b)(4).
(2) For any electric generating unit with a total nameplate
generating capacity of less than or equal to 50 megawatts or that is an
oil-fired unit, the quantity of pollutants discharged in bottom ash
transport water shall not exceed the quantity determined by multiplying
the flow of the applicable wastewater times the concentration for TSS
listed in Sec. 423.12(b)(4).
(l) Combustion residual leachate. The quantity of pollutants
discharged in combustion residual leachate shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the flow of combustion residual
leachate times the concentration for TSS listed in Sec. 423.12(b)(11).
(m) At the permitting authority's discretion, the quantity of
pollutant allowed to be discharged may be expressed as a concentration
limitation instead of any mass based limitations specified in
paragraphs (b) through (l) of this section. Concentration limitations
shall be those concentrations specified in this section.
(n) In the event that wastestreams from various sources are
combined for treatment or discharge, the quantity of each pollutant or
pollutant property controlled in paragraphs (a) through (m) of this
section attributable to each controlled waste source shall not exceed
the specified limitation for that waste source.
0
6. Section 423.15 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 423.15 New source performance standards (NSPS).
(a) 1982 NSPS. Any new source as of November 19, 1982, subject to
paragraph (a) of this section, must achieve the following new source
performance standards, in addition to the limitations in Sec. 423.13
of this part, established on November 3, 2015. In the case of conflict,
the more stringent requirements apply:
(1) pH. The pH of all discharges, except once through cooling
water, shall be within the range of 6.0-9.0.
[[Page 67897]]
(2) PCBs. There shall be no discharge of polychlorinated biphenyl
compounds such as those commonly used for transformer fluid.
(3) Low volume waste sources, FGD wastewater, flue gas mercury
control wastewater, combustion residual leachate, and gasification
wastewater. The quantity of pollutants discharged in low volume waste
sources, FGD wastewater, flue gas mercury control wastewater,
combustion residual leachate, and gasification wastewater shall not
exceed the quantity determined by multiplying the flow of low volume
waste sources times the concentration listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day (mg/ consecutive days
l) shall not exceed
(mg/l)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TSS................................. 100.0 30.0
Oil and grease...................... 20.0 15.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(4) Chemical metal cleaning wastes. The quantity of pollutants
discharged in chemical metal cleaning wastes shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the flow of chemical metal cleaning
wastes times the concentration listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day (mg/ consecutive days
l) shall not exceed
(mg/l)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TSS................................. 100.0 30.0
Oil and grease...................... 20.0 15.0
Copper, total....................... 1.0 1.0
Iron, total......................... 1.0 1.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(5) [Reserved]
(6) Bottom ash transport water. The quantity of pollutants
discharged in bottom ash transport water shall not exceed the quantity
determined by multiplying the flow of the bottom ash transport water
times the concentration listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day (mg/ consecutive days
l) shall not exceed
(mg/l)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TSS................................. 100.0 30.0
Oil and grease...................... 20.0 15.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(7) Fly ash transport water. There shall be no discharge of
pollutants in fly ash transport water.
(8)(i) Once through cooling water. For any plant with a total rated
electric generating capacity of 25 or more megawatts, the quantity of
pollutants discharged in once through cooling water from each discharge
point shall not exceed the quantity determined by multiplying the flow
of once through cooling water from each discharge point times the
concentration listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
------------------------------
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum concentrations (mg/
l)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total residual chlorine.................. 0.20
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) Total residual chlorine may only be discharged from any single
generating unit for more than two hours per day when the discharger
demonstrates to the permitting authority that discharge for more than
two hours is required for macroinvertebrate control. Simultaneous
multi-unit chlorination is permitted.
(9)(i) Once through cooling water. For any plant with a total rated
generating capacity of less than 25 megawatts, the quantity of
pollutants discharged in once through cooling water shall not exceed
the quantity determined by multiplying the flow of once through cooling
water sources times the
[[Page 67898]]
concentration listed in the following table:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-------------------------------------------------------
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum concentration (mg/ Average concentration (mg/
l) l)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Free available chlorine................................. 0.5 0.2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) Neither free available chlorine nor total residual chlorine
may be discharged from any unit for more than two hours in any one day
and not more than one unit in any plant may discharge free available or
total residual chlorine at any one time unless the utility can
demonstrate to the Regional Administrator or state, if the state has
NPDES permit issuing authority, that the units in a particular location
cannot operate at or below this level of chlorination.
(10)(i) Cooling tower blowdown. The quantity of pollutants
discharged in cooling tower blowdown shall not exceed the quantity
determined by multiplying the flow of cooling tower blowdown times the
concentration listed below:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-------------------------------------------------------
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum concentration (mg/ Average concentration (mg/
l) l)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Free available chlorine................................. 0.5 0.2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day (mg/ consecutive days
l) shall not exceed
(mg/l)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 126 priority pollutants (\1\) (\1\)
(appendix A) contained in chemicals
added for cooling tower
maintenance, except:...............
Chromium, total................. 0.2 0.2
zinc, total..................... 1.0 1.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ No detectable amount.
(ii) Neither free available chlorine nor total residual chlorine
may be discharged from any unit for more than two hours in any one day
and not more than one unit in any plant may discharge free available or
total residual chlorine at any one time unless the utility can
demonstrate to the Regional Administrator or state, if the state has
NPDES permit issuing authority, that the units in a particular location
cannot operate at or below this level of chlorination.
(iii) At the permitting authority's discretion, instead of the
monitoring in 40 CFR 122.11(b), compliance with the standards for the
126 priority pollutants in paragraph (a)(10)(i) of this section may be
determined by engineering calculations which demonstrate that the
regulated pollutants are not detectable in the final discharge by the
analytical methods in 40 CFR part 136.
(11) Coal pile runoff. Subject to the provisions of paragraph
(a)(12) of this section, the quantity or quality of pollutants or
pollutant parameters discharged in coal pile runoff shall not exceed
the standards specified below:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pollutant or pollutant property NSPS for any time
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TSS....................................... not to exceed 50 mg/l.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(12) Coal pile runoff. Any untreated overflow from facilities
designed, constructed, and operated to treat the coal pile runoff which
results from a 10 year, 24 hour rainfall event shall not be subject to
the standards in paragraph (a)(11) of this section.
(13) At the permitting authority's discretion, the quantity of
pollutant allowed to be discharged may be expressed as a concentration
limitation instead of any mass based limitations specified in
paragraphs (a)(3) through (10) of this section. Concentration limits
shall be based on the concentrations specified in this section.
(14) In the event that wastestreams from various sources are
combined for treatment or discharge, the quantity of each pollutant or
pollutant property controlled in paragraphs (a)(1) through (13) of this
section attributable to each controlled waste source shall not exceed
the specified limitation for that waste source.
(b) 2015 NSPS. Any new source as of November 17, 2015, subject to
paragraph (b) of this section, must achieve the following new source
performance standards:
(1) pH. The pH of all discharges, except once through cooling
water, shall be within the range of 6.0-9.0.
(2) PCBs. There shall be no discharge of polychlorinated biphenyl
compounds such as those commonly used for transformer fluid.
(3) Low volume waste sources. The quantity of pollutants discharged
from low volume waste sources shall not exceed the quantity determined
by multiplying the flow of low volume waste sources times the
concentration listed in the following table:
[[Page 67899]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day (mg/ consecutive days
l) shall not exceed
(mg/l)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TSS................................. 100.0 30.0
Oil and grease...................... 20.0 15.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(4) Chemical metal cleaning wastes. The quantity of pollutants
discharged in chemical metal cleaning wastes shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the flow of chemical metal cleaning
wastes times the concentration listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day (mg/ consecutive days
l) shall not exceed
(mg/l)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TSS................................. 100.0 30.0
Oil and grease...................... 20.0 15.0
Copper, total....................... 1.0 1.0
Iron, total......................... 1.0 1.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(5) [Reserved]
(6) Bottom ash transport water. There shall be no discharge of
pollutants in bottom ash transport water. Whenever bottom ash transport
water is used in any other plant process or is sent to a treatment
system at the plant, the resulting effluent must comply with the
discharge standard in this paragraph.
(7) Fly ash transport water. There shall be no discharge of
pollutants in fly ash transport water. Whenever fly ash transport water
is used in any other plant process or is sent to a treatment system at
the plant, the resulting effluent must comply with the discharge
standard in this paragraph.
(8)(i) Once through cooling water. For any plant with a total rated
electric generating capacity of 25 or more megawatts, the quantity of
pollutants discharged in once through cooling water from each discharge
point shall not exceed the quantity determined by multiplying the flow
of once through cooling water from each discharge point times the
concentration listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
Pollutant or pollutant property ------------------------------
Maximum concentration (mg/l)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total residual chlorine.................. 0.20
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) Total residual chlorine may only be discharged from any single
generating unit for more than two hours per day when the discharger
demonstrates to the permitting authority that discharge for more than
two hours is required for macroinvertebrate control. Simultaneous
multi-unit chlorination is permitted.
(9)(i) Once through cooling water. For any plant with a total rated
generating capacity of less than 25 megawatts, the quantity of
pollutants discharged in once through cooling water shall not exceed
the quantity determined by multiplying the flow of once through cooling
water sources times the concentration listed in the following table:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-------------------------------------------------------
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum concentration (mg/ Average concentration (mg/
l) l)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Free available chlorine................................. 0.5 0.2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) Neither free available chlorine nor total residual chlorine
may be discharged from any unit for more than two hours in any one day
and not more than one unit in any plant may discharge free available or
total residual chlorine at any one time unless the utility can
demonstrate to the Regional Administrator or state, if the state has
NPDES permit issuing authority, that the units in a particular location
cannot operate at or below this level of chlorination.
(10)(i) Cooling tower blowdown. The quantity of pollutants
discharged in cooling tower blowdown shall not exceed the quantity
determined by multiplying the flow of cooling tower blowdown times the
concentration listed below:
[[Page 67900]]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-------------------------------------------------------
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum concentration (mg/ Average concentration (mg/
l) l)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Free available chlorine................................. 0.5 0.2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-------------------------------------------------------
Pollutant or pollutant property Average of daily values
Maximum for any 1 day (mg/ for 30 consecutive days
l) shall not exceed (mg/l)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 126 priority pollutants (appendix A) contained in (\1\) (\1\)
chemicals added for cooling tower maintenance, except:.
Chromium, total..................................... 0.2 0.2
zinc, total......................................... 1.0 1.0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ No detectable amount.
(ii) Neither free available chlorine nor total residual chlorine
may be discharged from any unit for more than two hours in any one day
and not more than one unit in any plant may discharge free available or
total residual chlorine at any one time unless the utility can
demonstrate to the Regional Administrator or state, if the state has
NPDES permit issuing authority, that the units in a particular location
cannot operate at or below this level of chlorination.
(iii) At the permitting authority's discretion, instead of the
monitoring in 40 CFR 122.11(b), compliance with the standards for the
126 priority pollutants in paragraph (b)(10)(i) of this section may be
determined by engineering calculations demonstrating that the regulated
pollutants are not detectable in the final discharge by the analytical
methods in 40 CFR part 136.
(11) Coal pile runoff. Subject to the provisions of paragraph
(b)(12) of this section, the quantity or quality of pollutants or
pollutant parameters discharged in coal pile runoff shall not exceed
the standards specified below:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pollutant or pollutant property NSPS for any time
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TSS....................................... not to exceed 50 mg/l.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(12) Coal pile runoff. Any untreated overflow from facilities
designed, constructed, and operated to treat the coal pile runoff which
results from a 10 year, 24 hour rainfall event shall not be subject to
the standards in paragraph (b)(11) of this section.
(13) FGD wastewater. The quantity of pollutants discharged in FGD
wastewater shall not exceed the quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of FGD wastewater times the concentration listed in the following
table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day consecutive days
shall not exceed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arsenic, total (ug/L)............... 4 ..................
Mercury, total (ng/L)............... 39 24
Selenium, total (ug/L).............. 5 ..................
TDS (mg/L).......................... 50 24
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(14) Flue gas mercury control wastewater. There shall be no
discharge of pollutants in flue gas mercury control wastewater.
Whenever flue gas mercury control wastewater is used in any other plant
process or is sent to a treatment system at the plant, the resulting
effluent must comply with the discharge standard in this paragraph.
(15) Gasification wastewater. The quantity of pollutants discharged
in gasification wastewater shall not exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of gasification wastewater times the concentration
listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day consecutive days
shall not exceed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arsenic, total (ug/L)............... 4 ..................
Mercury, total (ng/L)............... 1.8 1.3
Selenium, total (ug/L).............. 453 227
Total dissolved solids (mg/L)....... 38 22
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 67901]]
(16) Combustion residual leachate. The quantity of pollutants
discharged in combustion residual leachate shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the flow of combustion residual
leachate times the concentration listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSPS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day consecutive days
shall not exceed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arsenic, total (ug/L)............... 11 8
Mercury, total (ng/L)............... 788 356
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(17) At the permitting authority's discretion, the quantity of
pollutant allowed to be discharged may be expressed as a concentration
limitation instead of any mass based limitations specified in
paragraphs (b)(3) through (16) of this section. Concentration limits
shall be based on the concentrations specified in this section.
(18) In the event that wastestreams from various sources are
combined for treatment or discharge, the quantity of each pollutant or
pollutant property controlled in paragraphs (b)(1) through (16) of this
section attributable to each controlled waste source shall not exceed
the specified limitation for that waste source.
(The information collection requirements contained in paragraphs
(a)(8)(ii), (a)(9)(ii), and (a)(10)(ii), (b)(8)(ii), (b)(9)(ii), and
(b)(10)(ii) were approved by the Office of Management and Budget under
control number 2040-0040. The information collection requirements
contained in paragraphs (a)(10)(iii) and (b)(10)(iii) were approved
under control number 2040-0033.)
0
7. Section 423.16 is amended by adding paragraphs (e) through (i) to
read as follows:
Sec. 423.16 Pretreatment standards for existing sources (PSES).
* * * * *
(e) FGD wastewater. For any electric generating unit with a total
nameplate generating capacity of more than 50 megawatts and that is not
an oil-fired unit, the quantity of pollutants in FGD wastewater shall
not exceed the quantity determined by multiplying the flow of FGD
wastewater times the concentration listed in the table following this
paragraph (e). Dischargers must meet the standards in this paragraph by
November 1, 2018. These standards apply to the discharge of FGD
wastewater generated on and after November 1, 2018.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSES
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day consecutive days
shall not exceed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arsenic, total (ug/L)............... 11 8
Mercury, total (ng/L)............... 788 356
Selenium, total (ug/L).............. 23 12
Nitrate/nitrite as N (mg/L)......... 17.0 4.4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(f) Fly ash transport water. Except when the fly ash transport
water is used in the FGD scrubber, for any electric generating unit
with a total nameplate generating capacity of more than 50 megawatts
and that is not an oil-fired unit, there shall be no discharge of
pollutants in fly ash transport water. This standard applies to the
discharge of fly ash transport water generated on and after November 1,
2018. Whenever fly ash transport water is used in any other plant
process or is sent to a treatment system at the plant (except when it
is used in the FGD scrubber), the resulting effluent must comply with
the discharge standard in this paragraph. When the fly ash transport
water is used in the FGD scrubber, the quantity of pollutants in fly
ash transport water shall not exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of fly ash transport water times the concentration
listed in the table in paragraph (e) of this section.
(g) Bottom ash transport water. Except when the bottom ash
transport water is used in the FGD scrubber, for any electric
generating unit with a total nameplate generating capacity of more than
50 megawatts and that is not an oil-fired unit, there shall be no
discharge of pollutants in bottom ash transport water. This standard
applies to the discharge of bottom ash transport water generated on and
after November 1, 2018. Whenever bottom ash transport water is used in
any other plant process or is sent to a treatment system at the plant
(except when it is used in the FGD scrubber), the resulting effluent
must comply with the discharge standard in this paragraph. When the
bottom ash transport water is used in the FGD scrubber, the quantity of
pollutants in bottom ash transport water shall not exceed the quantity
determined by multiplying the flow of bottom ash transport water times
the concentration listed in the table in paragraph (e) of this section.
(h) Flue gas mercury control wastewater. For any electric
generating unit with a total nameplate generating capacity of more than
50 megawatts and that is not an oil-fired unit, there shall be no
discharge of pollutants in flue gas mercury control wastewater. This
standard applies to the discharge of flue gas mercury control
wastewater generated on and after November 1, 2018. Whenever flue gas
mercury control wastewater is used in any other plant process or is
sent to a treatment system at the plant, the resulting effluent must
comply with the discharge standard in this paragraph.
(i) Gasification wastewater. For any electric generating unit with
a total nameplate generating capacity of more than 50 megawatts and
that is not an oil-fired unit, the quantity of pollutants in
gasification wastewater shall not exceed
[[Page 67902]]
the quantity determined by multiplying the flow of gasification
wastewater times the concentration listed in the table following this
paragraph (i). Dischargers must meet the standards in this paragraph by
November 1, 2018. These standards apply to the discharge of
gasification wastewater generated on and after November 1, 2018.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSES
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day consecutive days
shall not exceed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arsenic, total ([mu]g/L)............ 4 ..................
Mercury, total (ng/L)............... 1.8 1.3
Selenium, total ([mu]g/L)........... 453 227
Total dissolved solids (mg/L)....... 38 22
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0
8. Section 423.17 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 423.17 Pretreatment standards for new sources (PSNS).
(a) 1982 PSNS. Except as provided in 40 CFR 403.7, any new source
as of October 14, 1980, subject to paragraph (a) of this section, which
introduces pollutants into a publicly owned treatment works, must
comply with 40 CFR part 403, the following pretreatment standards for
new sources, and the PSES in Sec. 423.16, established on November 3,
2015. In the case of conflict, the more stringent standards apply:
(1) PCBs. There shall be no discharge of polychlorinated biphenyl
compounds such as those used for transformer fluid.
(2) Chemical metal cleaning wastes. The pollutants discharged in
chemical metal cleaning wastes shall not exceed the concentration
listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSNS
Pollutant or pollutant property ------------------------------
Maximum for any 1 day (mg/L)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copper, total............................ 1.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) [Reserved]
(4)(i) Cooling tower blowdown. The pollutants discharged in cooling
tower blowdown shall not exceed the concentration listed in the
following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSNS
Pollutant or pollutant property ------------------------------
Maximum for any time (mg/L)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 126 priority pollutants (appendix A) (\1\)
contained in chemicals added for cooling
tower maintenance, except:..............
Chromium, total...................... 0.2
zinc, total.......................... 1.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ No detectable amount.
(ii) At the permitting authority's discretion, instead of the
monitoring in 40 CFR 122.11(b), compliance with the standards for the
126 priority pollutants in paragraph (a)(4)(i) of this section may be
determined by engineering calculations which demonstrate that the
regulated pollutants are not detectable in the final discharge by the
analytical methods in 40 CFR part 136.
(5) Fly ash transport water. There shall be no discharge of
wastewater pollutants from fly ash transport water.
(b) 2015 PSNS. Except as provided in 40 CFR 403.7, any new source
as of June 7, 2013, subject to this paragraph (b), which introduces
pollutants into a publicly owned treatment works must comply with 40
CFR part 403 and the following pretreatment standards for new sources:
(1) PCBs. There shall be no discharge of polychlorinated biphenyl
compounds such as those used for transformer fluid.
(2) Chemical metal cleaning wastes. The pollutants discharged in
chemical metal cleaning wastes shall not exceed the concentration
listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSNS
Pollutant or pollutant property ------------------------------
Maximum for 1 day (mg/L)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copper, total............................ 1.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) [Reserved]
(4)(i) Cooling tower blowdown. The pollutants discharged in cooling
tower blowdown shall not exceed the concentration listed in the
following table:
[[Page 67903]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSNS
Pollutant or pollutant property ------------------------------
Maximum for any time (mg/L)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 126 priority pollutants (appendix A) (\1\)
contained in chemicals added for cooling
tower maintenance, except:..............
Chromium, total...................... 0.2
zinc, total.......................... 1.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ No detectable amount.
(ii) At the permitting authority's discretion, instead of the
monitoring in 40 CFR 122.11(b), compliance with the standards for the
126 priority pollutants in paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section may be
determined by engineering calculations which demonstrate that the
regulated pollutants are not detectable in the final discharge by the
analytical methods in 40 CFR part 136.
(5) Fly ash transport water. There shall be no discharge of
pollutants in fly ash transport water. Whenever fly ash transport water
is used in any other plant process or is sent to a treatment system at
the plant, the resulting effluent must comply with the discharge
standard in this paragraph.
(6) FGD wastewater. The quantity of pollutants discharged in FGD
wastewater shall not exceed the quantity determined by multiplying the
flow of FGD wastewater times the concentration listed in the following
table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSNS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day consecutive days
shall not exceed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arsenic, total ([mu]g/L)............ 4 ..................
Mercury, total (ng/L)............... 39 24
Selenium, total ([mu]g/L)........... 5 ..................
TDS (mg/L).......................... 50 24
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(7) Flue gas mercury control wastewater. There shall be no
discharge of pollutants in flue gas mercury control wastewater.
Whenever flue gas mercury control wastewater is used in any other plant
process or is sent to a treatment system at the plant, the resulting
effluent must comply with the discharge standard in this paragraph.
(8) Bottom ash transport water. There shall be no discharge of
pollutants in bottom ash transport water. Whenever bottom ash transport
water is used in any other plant process or is sent to a treatment
system at the plant, the resulting effluent must comply with the
discharge standard in this paragraph.
(9) Gasification wastewater. The quantity of pollutants discharged
in gasification wastewater shall not exceed the quantity determined by
multiplying the flow of gasification wastewater times the concentration
listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSNS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day consecutive days
shall not exceed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arsenic, total ([mu]g/L)............ 4 ..................
Mercury, total (ng/L)............... 1.8 1.3
Selenium, total ([mu]g/L)........... 453 227
Total dissolved solids (mg/L)....... 38 22
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(10) Combustion residual leachate. The quantity of pollutants
discharged in combustion residual leachate shall not exceed the
quantity determined by multiplying the flow of combustion residual
leachate times the concentration listed in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSNS
-----------------------------------
Average of daily
Pollutant or pollutant property Maximum for values for 30
any 1 day consecutive days
shall not exceed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arsenic, total ([mu]g/L)............ 11 8
Mercury, total (ng/L)............... 788 356
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[FR Doc. 2015-25663 Filed 11-2-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P