Hazardous and Solid Waste Management System: Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals From Electric Utilities; A Holistic Approach to Closure Part A: Deadline To Initiate Closure, 53516-53566 [2020-16872]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 168 / Friday, August 28, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 257
[EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172 and EPA–HQ–
OLEM–2018–0524; FRL–10013–20–OLEM]
RIN 2050–AH10
Hazardous and Solid Waste
Management System: Disposal of Coal
Combustion Residuals From Electric
Utilities; A Holistic Approach to
Closure Part A: Deadline To Initiate
Closure
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
On April 17, 2015, the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA
or the Agency) promulgated national
minimum criteria for existing and new
coal combustion residuals (CCR)
landfills and existing and new CCR
surface impoundments. On August 21,
2018, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
D.C. Circuit issued its opinion in the
case of Utility Solid Waste Activities
Group v. EPA, 901 F.3d 414 (per curiam)
(USWAG). This rule finalizes
regulations, proposed on December 2,
2019, to implement the court’s vacatur
of the 2015 provisions. The court
vacated provisions that allowed unlined
impoundments to continue receiving
coal ash unless they leak, and classified
‘‘clay-lined’’ impoundments as lined,
thereby allowing such units to operate
indefinitely. In addition, EPA is
establishing a revised date by which
unlined surface impoundments must
cease receiving waste and initiate
closure, following its reconsideration of
those dates in light of the USWAG
decision. Lastly, EPA is finalizing
amendments proposed on August 14,
2019, to the requirements for the annual
groundwater monitoring and corrective
action report and the requirements for
the publicly accessible CCR internet
sites.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
September 28, 2020.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established two
dockets for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172 and
EPA–HQ–OLEM–2018–0524. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov website.
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, is not placed on
the internet and will be publicly
SUMMARY:
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available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available electronically through https://
www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information concerning this final rule,
contact Kirsten Hillyer, Materials
Recovery and Waste Management
Division, Office of Resource
Conservation and Recovery,
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue NW, MC: 5304P,
Washington, DC 20460; telephone
number: (703) 347–0369; email address:
Hillyer.Kirsten@epa.gov. For more
information on this rulemaking, please
visit https://www.epa.gov/coalash.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of the Regulatory Action
B. Summary of the Major Provisions of the
Regulatory Action
C. Costs and Benefits
II. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
B. What action is the Agency taking?
C. What is the Agency’s authority for
taking this action?
D. What are the incremental costs and
benefits of this action?
III. Background
A. The ‘‘2015 CCR Rule’’
B. The 2018 USWAG Decision
C. The July 30, 2018 Final Rule and the
2019 Waterkeeper Decision
D. Public Participation With Respect to the
August 2019 and December 2019
Proposed Rules
IV. Statutory Authority
V. What final action is EPA taking on the
December 2, 2019 proposal?
A. Revisions to § 257.71 To Implement the
2018 USWAG Decision
B. Revisions to § 257.101 as a Result of
EPA’s Reconsideration
1. EPA’s Reconsideration of the October
31, 2020 Deadline
2. Approaches To Identify Alternative
Capacity
3. Establishing the Revised Deadline for
Affected Units To Cease Receipt of Waste
C. Revisions to the Alternative Closure
Standards (§ 257.103)
1. Short Term Alternative To Cease
Receipt of Waste Deadline (§ 257.103(e))
2. Issues Applicable to Both
§ 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2)
3. Requirements for Development of
Alternative Capacity Infeasible
(§ 257.103(f)(1))
4. Requirements for Permanent Cessation
of Coal-Fired Boiler(s) by a Date Certain
(§ 257.103(f)(2))
5. Procedures for Approval and Denial of
Alternative Compliance Deadlines
6. Conforming Amendments to
§ 257.103(a), (b), (c) and (d)
VI. What final action is EPA taking on the
August 14, 2019 proposal?
A. Revisions to the Annual Groundwater
Monitoring and Corrective Action Report
Requirements
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B. Revisions to the Publicly Accessible
CCR internet Site Requirements
VII. Rationale for 30-Day Effective Date
VIII. State CCR Programs
A. Effect on This Final Rule on States With
Approved CCR Programs
IX. Economic Impacts of This Action
A. Introduction
B. Affected Universe
C. Costs and Cost Savings of the Final Rule
X. Statutory and Executive Order (E.O.)
Reviews
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of the Regulatory Action
This rule takes final action on the
proposed rule published on December 2,
2019 (84 FR 65941), as well as two
issues included in the proposal issued
on August 14, 2019 (84 FR 40353). This
unit of the preamble summarizes public
participation activities associated with
both proposed rules. EPA is publishing
this final rule to revise portions of the
federal CCR regulations in title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part
257 so that they accurately reflect the
regulations as they now stand in light of
the D.C. Circuit’s 2018 decision in
USWAG, which vacated portions of
EPA’s 2015 final rule promulgating
national minimum criteria for existing
and new CCR landfills and existing and
new CCR surface impoundments.
Specifically, the D.C. Circuit vacated (1)
the provisions of the 2015 rule that
permitted unlined impoundments to
continue receiving coal ash unless they
leak (see 40 CFR 257.101(a)); and (2) the
provisions of the 2015 rule that
classified ‘‘clay-lined’’ impoundments
as lined (see 40 CFR 257.71(a)(1)(i)).
In addition, this final rule addresses
the October 31, 2020 deadline in
§§ 257.101(a) and (b)(1)(i), by which
CCR surface impoundments must cease
receipt of waste; in a separate case,
these regulatory provisions were
remanded back to EPA by the D.C.
Circuit for further reconsideration in
light of USWAG. See Waterkeeper
Alliance Inc. v. EPA, No. 18–1289 (D.C.
Cir. 2019).
Lastly, EPA is finalizing amendments
to the regulations in order to address
certain issues concerning publicly
accessible internet sites, and
groundwater monitoring and corrective
action annual reports that have arisen
since the April 17, 2015 publication of
the CCR rule. These amendments were
proposed in a separate August 14, 2019
proposal. 84 FR 40353.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions of
the Regulatory Action
In this action, EPA is finalizing five
amendments to the part 257 regulations.
First, EPA is finalizing a change to the
classification of compacted-soil lined or
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‘‘clay-lined’’ surface impoundments
from ‘‘lined’’ to ‘‘unlined’’ under
§ 257.71(a)(1)(i). This merely reflects the
vacatur ordered in the USWAG
decision.
Second, EPA is finalizing revisions to
the initiation of closure deadlines for
unlined CCR surface impoundments,
and for units that failed the aquifer
location restriction, found in
§§ 257.101(a) and (b)(1). These revisions
address the USWAG decisions with
respect to all unlined and ‘‘clay-lined’’
impoundments, as well as revisions to
the provisions that were remanded to
the Agency for further reconsideration
by the court in the Waterkeeper case.
Specifically, EPA is finalizing a new
deadline of April 11, 2021, for CCR
units to cease receipt of waste and
initiate closure because the unit either
(1) is an unlined or formerly ‘‘claylined’’ CCR surface impoundment
(§ 257.101(a)) or (2) failed the aquifer
location standard (§ 257.101(b)(1)).
Third, EPA is finalizing revisions to
the alternative closure provisions,
§ 257.103. These revisions will grant
facilities additional time to develop
alternative capacity to manage their
53517
wastestreams (both CCR and/or nonCCR), to achieve cease receipt of waste
and initiate closure of their CCR surface
impoundments. Table 1 below
summarizes the deadlines finalized in
this action.
Lastly, EPA is finalizing two of the
proposed amendments from the August
2019 rule: The addition of an executive
summary to the annual groundwater
monitoring and corrective action
reports; and the amended requirements
to the publicly accessible CCR internet
sites.
TABLE 1—NEW CEASE RECEIPT OF WASTE AND COMPLETION OF CLOSURE DEADLINES
Regulatory citations for CCR surface impoundments
Deadline date
New cease receipt of waste deadline for unlined and formerly ‘‘claylined’’ surface impoundments (§ 257.101(a)(1)).
New cease receipt of waste deadline for surface impoundments that
failed the minimum depth to aquifer location standard
(§ 257.101(b)(1)(i)).
New site-specific alternative to initiation of closure due to lack of capacity (§ 257.103(f)(1)).
New site-specific alternative to initiation of closure due to permanent
cessation of a coal-fired boiler(s) by a date certain (§ 257.103(f)(2)).
C. Costs and Benefits
Several developments have changed
the estimated costs of the CCR program
since the publication of the final rule in
2015. First, reporting data show that the
affected universe of surface
impoundments is composed of more
unlined units and more leaking surface
impoundments than were modeled in
the 2015 Regulatory Impact Analysis
(RIA). The affected universe of
impoundments is therefore incurring
higher closure costs sooner, which
increases the overall cost of the
program. Second, the D.C. Circuit
vacated provisions of the rule that
allowed certain classes of surface
impoundments to continue operating
until they leaked. This decision forces
these units to close sooner than they
were modeled to close in the 2015 RIA.
This also increases the overall cost of
the CCR program. This cost increase is
estimated and shown in the RIA. This
increase in costs is attributable solely to
the existing provisions of the 2015 CCR
rule. Overall, the provisions of this final
rule decrease costs by extending certain
existing compliance deadlines. The final
rule is therefore considered a cost
savings rule. This action is expected to
result in an estimated annualized net
cost savings of $26.1 million per year
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No later than April 11, 2021.
No later than April 11, 2021.
No later than October 15, 2023 (maximum of 5 years after USWAG decision mandate date).
For eligible unlined CCR surface impoundment: No later than October
15, 2024.
Completion of Closure:
• No later than October 17, 2023 for surface impoundments 40 acres
or smaller.
• No later than October 17, 2028 for surface impoundments larger
than 40 acres.
when discounting at 7 percent. It is also
expected to have a modest impact on a
subset of the benefits monetized in the
RIA accompanying the 2015 CCR Rule.
Further information on the economic
effects of this action can be found in
unit IX of this preamble and the RIA.1
II. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
This final rule applies to all CCR
generated by electric utilities and
independent power producers that fall
within the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) code
221112 and may affect the following
entities: Electric utility facilities and
independent power producers that fall
under the NAICS code 221112. This
discussion is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
for readers regarding entities likely to be
regulated by this action. This discussion
lists the types of entities that EPA is
now aware could potentially be
regulated by this action. Other types of
entities not described here could also be
regulated. To determine whether your
1 US EPA. ‘‘Regulatory Impact Analysis,
Hazardous and Solid Waste Management System:
Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals from
Electric Utilities; A Holistic Approach to Closure
Part A: Deadline to Initiate Closure’’. July 2020.
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entity is regulated by this action, you
should carefully examine the
applicability criteria found in § 257.50
of title 40 of the Code of Federal
Regulations. If you have questions
regarding the applicability of this action
to a particular entity, consult the person
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section.
B. What action is the Agency taking?
EPA is revising certain provisions of
the CCR regulations at 40 CFR part 257
in response to the decisions issued by
the D.C. Circuit on August 21, 2018, in
Utility Solid Waste Activities Group v.
EPA 901 F.3d 414 (D.C. Cir.), and on
March 13, 2019, in Waterkeeper
Alliance Inc. v. EPA, No. 18–1289 (D.C.
Cir.). In addition, the Agency is also
finalizing two of the proposed
amendments from the August 14, 2019
rulemaking that are not related to the
USWAG and Waterkeeper decisions.
This final rule addresses the USWAG
decision’s vacatur of the provisions in
the 2015 rule that permitted unlined
impoundments to continue receiving
waste unless they leak, 40 CFR
257.101(a), and that classified ‘‘claylined’’ impoundments as lined, thereby
allowing such units to operate, 40 CFR
257.71(a)(1)(i). The USWAG decision
also vacated the exemption from the
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2015 rule for inactive surface
impoundments at inactive power plants,
also known as legacy units, which will
be addressed in a subsequent advanced
notice of proposed rulemaking.
This final rule also addresses the date
by which unlined CCR surface
impoundments and CCR units that
failed the aquifer location standard must
cease receiving waste and initiate
closure, which the D.C. Circuit
remanded to EPA on March 13, 2019 in
the Waterkeeper case.
EPA is finalizing amendments to the
alternative closure provisions, 40 CFR
257.103. EPA is amending the existing
provisions (40 CFR 257.103(a) and (b))
to only apply to CCR landfills. EPA is
establishing new alternative closure
provisions, 40 CFR 257.103(f)(1) and
(f)(2), for which a facility must submit
a demonstration to EPA for approval to
continue operating a CCR surface
impoundment. These new alternative
closure provisions do not amend the
implementation schedules of
groundwater monitoring and corrective
action, as they remain unchanged. The
new alternative closure provisions will
grant facilities additional time to cease
receipt of waste and initiate closure.
EPA is finalizing amendments to the
regulations from the August 2019
proposal, addressing certain issues
raised by stakeholders. EPA is amending
the annual groundwater monitoring and
corrective action report to include an
executive summary. Additionally, EPA
is finalizing amendments to the publicly
accessible CCR internet sites
requirements to ensure that they are
truly accessible by the public.
EPA intends that the provisions of
this rule be severable. In the event that
any individual provision or part of this
rule is invalidated, EPA intends that
this would not render the entire rule
invalid, and that any individual
provisions that can continue to operate
will be left in place.
C. What is the Agency’s authority for
taking this action?
These regulations are established
under the authority of sections 1008(a),
2002(a), 4004, and 4005(a) and (d) of the
Solid Waste Disposal Act of 1970, as
amended by the Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act of 1976 (RCRA), the
Hazardous and Solid Waste
Amendments of 1984 (HSWA), and the
Water Infrastructure Improvements for
the Nation (WIIN) Act of 2016, 42 U.S.C.
6907(a), 6912(a), 6944, and 6945(a) and
(d).
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D. What are the incremental costs and
benefits of this action?
This action is expected to result in an
estimated annualized net cost savings of
$26.1 million per year when
discounting at 7 percent or an estimated
annualized net cost savings of $16.7
million per year when discounting at 3
percent. It is also expected to have a
modest impact on a subset of the
benefits monetized in the RIA
accompanying the 2015 CCR Rule.
Further information on the economic
effects of this action can be found in
unit IX of this preamble.
III. Background
A. The ‘‘2015 CCR Rule’’
On April 17, 2015, EPA finalized
national minimum criteria for the
disposal of CCR as a solid waste under
Subtitle D of RCRA. 80 FR 21302. The
Agency refers to the April 17, 2015 rule
as the ‘‘2015 CCR Rule’’ in this
preamble. CCR are generated from the
combustion of coal by electric utilities
and independent power producers for
the generation of electricity. CCR
include fly ash, bottom ash, boiler slag,
and flue gas desulfurization materials
and are commonly referred to as coal
ash. The CCR regulations are codified in
subpart D of part 257 of title 40 of the
CFR.
The 2015 CCR Rule regulated existing
and new CCR landfills and existing and
new CCR surface impoundments, as
well as all lateral expansions of these
CCR units. The federal national
minimum criteria consist of location
restrictions (siting limitations), design
and operating criteria, groundwater
monitoring and corrective action
requirements, and closure and postclosure care requirements. In addition,
the 2015 CCR Rule put in place
recordkeeping, notification, and internet
posting provisions that require owners
and operators of CCR units to maintain
a publicly accessible internet site of rule
compliance information. The 2015 CCR
Rule does not regulate CCR that are
beneficially used. It established a
definition of ‘‘beneficial use of CCR’’ to
distinguish between beneficial use and
disposal.
Of particular relevance to this action,
the 2015 CCR Rule required that any
existing unlined CCR surface
impoundment that causes groundwater
concentrations to exceed a groundwater
protection standard must stop receiving
waste (CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams) within six months of
making such exceedance determination.
This would also trigger the requirement
to initiate either unit retrofit or closure
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activities.2 See § 257.101(a)(1) at 80 FR
21490 (April 17, 2015). In the 2015 CCR
Rule, the term ‘‘unlined’’ CCR surface
impoundment included any unit not
constructed with one of the following
types of liners: (1) A composite liner; (2)
an alternative composite liner; or (3) a
liner consisting of a minimum of two
feet of compacted soil with a hydraulic
conductivity of no more than 1 × 10¥7
centimeters per second. Lined CCR
surface impoundments (as defined in
the CCR regulations) that impact
groundwater above the specified
groundwater protection standard are not
required to close and could continue to
operate while corrective action is
performed, and the source of the leak is
addressed.
The 2015 CCR Rule was challenged by
several parties, including a coalition of
regulated entities and a coalition of
environmental organizations
(‘‘Environmental Petitioners’’). See
USWAG v. EPA, 901 F.3d 414 (D.C. Cir.
2018). The Environmental Petitioners
raised two challenges 3 that are relevant
to this final rule. First, they challenged
the provision that allowed existing,
unlined CCR surface impoundments to
continue to operate until they cause
groundwater contamination. See
§ 257.101(a)(1) at 80 FR 21490 (April 17,
2015). They contended that EPA failed
to show how continued operation of
unlined impoundments met RCRA’s
baseline requirement that any solid
waste disposal site pose ‘‘no reasonable
probability of adverse effects on health
or the environment.’’ See 42 U.S.C.
6944(a). The Environmental Petitioners
also challenged the provisions that
allowed impoundments lined with two
feet of clay (i.e., compacted soil) to
continue operating even when they leak,
requiring only that they remediate the
resulting contamination. The petitioners
pointed to record evidence that ‘‘claylined’’ units are likely to leak and
contended that EPA’s approach
‘‘authorizes an endless cycle of spills
and clean-ups’’ in violation of RCRA.
B. The 2018 USWAG Decision
The D.C. Circuit issued the USWAG
decision on August 21, 2018. The Court
2 Certain units may be eligible for the alternative
closure procedures specified in § 257.103, which
would change the date by which the unit must stop
receiving waste.
3 Environmental Petitioners also challenged the
provisions exempting inactive surface
impoundments at inactive power plants from
regulation. The Court ruled for the Petitioners on
these claims, vacating these provisions and
remanding to EPA. However, in contrast to the
other provisions addressed in this rule, additional
rulemaking is necessary to effectuate the Court’s
order, as the Court’s vacatur alone did not subject
these units to regulation. This aspect of the decision
will be addressed in a subsequent proposal.
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upheld most of the 2015 CCR Rule but
ruled for the Environmental Petitioners
on the two claims discussed in unit III.A
of this preamble. The Court held that
EPA acted ‘‘arbitrarily and capriciously
and contrary to RCRA’’ in failing to
require the closure of unlined surface
impoundments and in classifying socalled ‘‘clay-lined’’ impoundments as
lined, based on the record supporting
the rule. 901 F.3d at 431–432. The Court
ordered that ‘‘the Final Rule be vacated
and remanded with respect to the
provisions that permit unlined
impoundments to continue receiving
coal ash unless they leak, § 257.101(a),
[and] classify ‘clay-lined’
impoundments as lined, see 40 CFR
257.71(a)(1)(i).’’ Id. The Court issued the
mandate for this decision on October 15,
2018. Therefore, part of this final
rulemaking action updates the
regulations to reflect the provisions that
the Court vacated.
C. The July 30, 2018 Final Rule and the
2019 Waterkeeper Decision
EPA issued a final rule on July 30,
2018, amending several parts of the CCR
federal regulations (83 FR 36435). First,
the rule extended the deadlines for two
categories of CCR surface
impoundments to cease receipt of waste
and to initiate closure when closing for
cause: (1) Unlined CCR surface
impoundments with an exceedance of a
groundwater protection standard for any
constituent listed on Appendix IV to
part 257; 4 and (2) CCR surface
impoundments that failed to meet the
location criteria in § 257.60(a) (requiring
either a minimum of five feet between
the unit base and the uppermost aquifer
or a demonstration that there will not be
an intermittent, recurring, or sustained
hydraulic connection between any
portion of the base of the unit and the
uppermost aquifer). These deadlines
were extended until October 31, 2020,
and were codified in § 257.101(a)(1) and
(b)(1)(i).
Second, the rule established
alternative risk-based groundwater
protection standards for the four
constituents without a maximum
contaminant level (MCL) that are listed
on Appendix IV to part 257. The four
constituents are cobalt, lead, lithium,
and molybdenum, and the alternative
4 A groundwater protection standard (GWPS) is
established using the methods specified in
§ 257.95(h). For constituents with a maximum
contaminant level (MCL), the GWPS is the MCL for
that constituent. For the constituents that do not
have an established MCL, the GWPS is the healthbased level EPA established in the July 30, 2018
rule. If the background level is higher than the MCL
or the health-based level, then background should
be used as the GWPS.
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standards were codified in
§ 257.95(h)(2).
Third, the rule established procedures
allowing for the suspension of
groundwater monitoring requirements,
provided that it can be demonstrated
that there is no potential for migration
of any CCR constituent listed in
Appendices III and IV of part 257 from
the CCR unit to the uppermost aquifer
during the active life of the unit and the
post-closure care period. See
§ 257.90(g).
Finally, the rule amended the federal
CCR regulations to allow a Participating
State Director (or EPA where EPA is the
permitting authority) to issue
certifications in lieu of requiring a
certification from a Professional
Engineer. The 2015 CCR Rule required
technical demonstrations, when made
by the owner or operator, to be certified
by a qualified Professional Engineer in
order to provide verification of the
facility’s technical judgments and to
otherwise ensure that the provisions of
the rule were properly applied. In 2015,
states were unable to apply to EPA for
approval to operate a permit program to
implement the CCR rule. The situation
changed with the passage of the Water
Infrastructure Improvements for the
Nation (WIIN) Act in 2016, which offers
the opportunity for state oversight under
an approved permit program. The 2018
amendments to the certification
requirements reflect the new authority
provided by the WIIN Act.
The July 2018 final rule was
challenged by Waterkeeper Alliance,
who also requested an expedited review
of the October 31, 2020, deadline. See
Waterkeeper Alliance Inc, et al v. EPA,
No. 18–1289 (D.C. Cir. 2018)
(Waterkeeper decision). On March 13,
2019, the Court granted EPA’s request to
remand the July 2018 rule, ‘‘to allow the
agency to reconsider that rule in light of
th[e] court’s decision in [USWAG].’’ The
December 2, 2019 proposed rule
reflected EPA’s reconsideration of one
of the remanded issues contained in the
July 2018 rule: Reconsideration of the
current deadline of October 31, 2020, for
unlined surface impoundments to cease
receiving waste. 84 FR 65944. The
Agency also stated in the December 2,
2019, proposal that EPA would address
its reconsideration of other aspects (e.g.,
the adopted alternative risk-based
groundwater protection standards for
cobalt, lead, lithium, and molybdenum)
of the July 2018 rule in subsequent
rulemaking actions. Id.
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53519
D. Public Participation With Respect to
the August 2019 and December 2019
Proposed Rules
This rule takes final action on the
proposed rule published on December 2,
2019 (84 FR 65941), as well as two
issues included in the proposal issued
on August 14, 2019 (84 FR 40353). This
unit of the preamble summarizes public
participation activities associated with
both proposed rules.
EPA conducted two public hearings to
provide the public with the opportunity
to present views or information
concerning the August 14, 2019
proposal. The first was an in-person
public hearing in Arlington, Virginia on
October 2, 2019. A total of 41 people
provided oral testimony at the hearing;
a transcript of the hearing proceedings
is available in the proposed rule
docket.5 The second was held on
October 10, 2019 as a virtual public
hearing using an internet-based software
platform. The platform allowed hearing
participants to provide oral testimony
using a microphone and speakers
connected to their computers or using a
phone. It provided the ability for any
person to listen to the public hearing via
their computer. A total of 52 people
provided oral testimony during the
virtual hearing and another 147 people
participated by listening. The transcript
for the virtual public hearing is
available in the proposed rule docket.6
The Agency received approximately
130,000 comments, of which nearly 300
were unique, from members of the
public on the August 2019 proposed
rule. Commenters included individual
electric utilities and independent power
producers, national trade associations,
state agencies, public interest and
environmental groups, and entities
involved with the beneficial use of CCR.
All public comment letters submitted in
response to the proposal can be found
in the proposed rule docket, Docket ID
EPA–HQ–OLEM–2018–0524. For those
elements included in the August 14,
2019 proposed rule that EPA is
finalizing in this action (see unit V of
this preamble), EPA’s responses to
public comments are either addressed in
this preamble or the response to
comment document available in the
docket to this final rule.
EPA also conducted one public
hearing to provide the public with the
opportunity to present views or
information concerning the December 2,
2019 proposed rule. On January 7, 2020,
the Agency conducted a virtual public
5 See docket items EPA–HQ–OLEM–2018–0524–
0046 through –0050.
6 See docket items EPA–HQ–OLEM–2018–0524–
0333 through –0335.
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hearing using an internet-based software
platform that allowed hearing
participants to provide oral testimony
using a microphone and speakers
connected to their computers or using a
phone. This platform also provided an
opportunity for any person to listen to
the public hearing via their computer. A
total of 37 people provided oral
testimony during the virtual hearing and
over 40 other people participated by
listening. The transcript for the virtual
public hearing is available in the
proposed rule docket.7
The Agency received over 67,200
comments, of which nearly 150 were
unique, comments from members of the
public on the December 2019 proposed
rule. Commenters included individual
electric utilities and independent power
producers, national trade associations,
state agencies, and public interest and
environmental groups. All public
comment letters submitted in response
to the proposal can be found in the
proposed rule docket, Docket ID EPA–
HQ–OLEM–2019–0172. EPA’s responses
to comments on the proposed rule are
either addressed in this preamble or the
response to comment document
available in the docket to this final rule.
IV. Statutory Authority
RCRA section 1008(a) authorizes EPA
to publish ‘‘suggested guidelines for
solid waste management.’’ 42 U.S.C.
6907(a). RCRA defines solid waste
management as ‘‘the systematic
administration of activities which
provide for the collection, source
separation, storage, transportation,
transfer, processing, treatment, and
disposal of solid waste.’’ 42 U.S.C.
6903(28).
Pursuant to section 1008(a)(3), the
guidelines are to include the minimum
criteria to be used by the states to define
the solid waste management practices
that constitute the open dumping of
solid waste or hazardous waste and are
prohibited as ‘‘open dumping’’ under
section 4005. Only those requirements
promulgated under the authority of
section 1008(a)(3) are enforceable under
section 7002 of RCRA.
RCRA section 4004(a) generally
requires EPA to promulgate regulations
containing criteria for determining
which facilities shall be classified as
sanitary landfills (and therefore not
‘‘open dumps’’). The statute directs that,
‘‘at a minimum, the criteria are to
ensure that units are classified as
sanitary landfills only if there is no
reasonable probability of adverse effects
on health or the environment from
7 See docket items EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0041 and 0042.
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disposal of solid wastes at such
facility.’’ 42 U.S.C. 6944(a).
RCRA section 4005(a), entitled
‘‘Closing or upgrading of existing open
dumps,’’ generally establishes the key
implementation and enforcement
provisions applicable to EPA
regulations issued under sections
1008(a) and 4004(a). Specifically, this
section prohibits any solid waste
management practices or disposal of
solid waste that does not comply with
EPA regulations issued under RCRA
section 1008(a) and 4004(a). 42 U.S.C.
6944(a). See also 42 U.S.C. 6903(14)
(definition of ‘‘open dump’’). This
prohibition takes effect ‘‘upon
promulgation’’ of any rules issued under
section 1008(a)(3) and is enforceable
through a citizen suit brought pursuant
to section 7002. As a general matter, this
means that facilities must be in
compliance with any EPA rules issued
under this section no later than the
effective date of such rules, or be subject
to a citizen suit for ‘‘open dumping.’’
See 42 U.S.C. 6945. RCRA section 4005
also directs that open dumps, i.e.,
facilities out of compliance with EPA’s
criteria, must be ‘‘closed or upgraded.’’
Id.
RCRA section 7004 lays out specific
requirements relating to public
participation in regulatory actions under
RCRA. Subsection (b) provides that
‘‘[p]ublic participation in the . . .
implementation, and enforcement of
any regulation under this chapter shall
be provided for, encouraged, and
assisted by the Administrator.’’ 42
U.S.C. 6974(b).
Comments on EPA Authority. Several
commenters stated that RCRA section
4004(a) allows EPA to take into account
non-risk considerations, citing EPA
statements in the preamble to the 1991
final rule for municipal solid waste
landfills (MSWLF).8 Specifically, these
commenters cited to EPA statements
that the term ‘‘reasonable’’ ‘‘has been
read in other contexts to imply a
balancing of competing factors,’’ and
that the ‘‘use of the word ‘probability’ in
‘no reasonable probability’ implies the
discretion to impose requirements that
are less certain to eliminate a perceived
health or environmental threat than
standards that are ‘necessary to protect
human health and the environment,’
thus allowing for the consideration of
other factors such as cost.’’ (quoting 56
FR 50978, 50983 (October 9, 1991)). A
number of other commenters, however,
stated that EPA lacked the authority to
consider costs in establishing any
regulation under RCRA section 4004(a),
citing EPA’s prior statements in the
8 56
PO 00000
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2015 CCR Rule and to the recent D.C.
Circuit opinion in USWAG v. EPA.
EPA disagrees that RCRA section
4004(a) allows EPA to take into account
non-risk considerations. The
commenters have misunderstood the
discussion in the MSWLF preambles.
The cited statements reflect EPA’s
interpretation of the combined authority
under both RCRA sections 4010(c) and
4004(a), rather than an interpretation of
section 4004(a) standing alone. 56 FR
50983–50984. As EPA has previously
explained, the Agency cannot rely on
section 4010(c) to issue regulations
applicable to CCR facilities. See 80 FR
21333–21334 (April 17, 2015).
By contrast, EPA has consistently
interpreted the mandate in section
4004(a), standing alone, not to authorize
consideration of costs or any other
factor unrelated to the protection of
human health and the environment.
EPA did not consider costs in
establishing the original part 257
regulations, noting in the 1979 preamble
that ‘‘[t]he Act does not call for a
balancing of the costs of disposal against
the ‘‘value’’ of ground-water resources.’’
44 FR 53447 (September 13, 1979).
Similarly, EPA explained in the 2015
CCR Rule ‘‘that Congress did not
authorize the consideration of costs in
establishing minimum national
standards under RCRA section 4004(a).’’
80 FR 21406. See also, 80 FR 21363,
21432; 83 FR 11597 (March 15, 2018).
As several commenters noted, the D.C.
Circuit upheld this interpretation,
concluding that ‘‘[u]nder any reasonable
reading of RCRA there is no textual
commitment of authority to the EPA to
consider costs in the open dump
standards.’’ 901 F.3d at 448–449 (D.C.
Cir. 2018). Accordingly, EPA has not
considered cost in developing any
provision of this final rule.9
Another commenter stated that EPA
lacks the statutory authority to impose
a mandatory closure requirement for
non-CCR wastestreams, arguing that
imposing deadlines under the CCR Rule
for wastestreams that are subject to
different deadlines under the ELG rule
runs afoul of RCRA section 1006(a)—the
anti-duplication provision. The
commenter argued that the proposal to
ban or greatly restrict the receipt of the
wastewater at unlined surface
impoundments is a duplicative and
inconsistent—and thus prohibited—
additional regulatory layer on top of the
existing NPDES requirements applicable
to those same impoundments.
9 Although EPA did not consider costs in
developing this rule, if the Agency had considered
costs, the final rule would not have been different.
Based on the estimates developed for the RIA, this
rule is expected to largely result in cost savings.
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According to the commenter, under the
proposed ELG regulations, up to 10
percent of bottom ash transport water
piping and equipment volume can be
discharged per day until December 31,
2023. Companies subject to the ELG
requirements will need to permit,
design, and construct a recycling system
for the bottom ash sluice waters, a new
CCR or non-CCR wastewater pond, or
convert to dry handling—essentially the
same solutions that must be pursued for
compliance under the CCR rules. Yet
the deadlines for doing so do not align.
The commenter provided a specific
example to demonstrate his concern:
One of the Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation (OVEC) plants is currently
sluicing fly ash to a surface
impoundment that is subject to the CCR
rule. Because that impoundment meets
the CCR siting criteria and has
monitored no statistically significant
increases above background
concentrations for any of the CCR
parameters, that plant has anticipated
continuing to operate the impoundment
through no later than December 31,
2023, consistent with the ELG
regulations. The proposed CCR rule,
with its August 31, 2020, deadline to
discontinue sluicing of fly ash to surface
impoundments, effectively eliminates
up to three years that OVEC had
anticipated using to engineer, design,
procure, construct and begin operation
of the new infrastructure needed to
comply with the ELG rule. The CCR rule
and the ELG rule must be aligned so that
the timeline for discontinuing
placement of CCR into a fly ash surface
impoundment is consistent with the
timeline that that source has for
completing dry fly ash conversion under
the final ELG rules applicable to this
wastestream.
RCRA section 1006(a) does not bar
EPA from imposing requirements under
one of the listed statutes and RCRA on
the same units and waste streams,
unless those requirements are
inconsistent with a requirement in one
of the statutes. 42 U.S.C. 6906(a). This
is clear from the second sentence, which
provides that ‘‘such integration shall be
effected only to the extent that it can be
done in a manner consistent with the
goals and policies expressed in this
chapter and in the other acts referred to
in this subsection.’’ Id. Numerous courts
have upheld this interpretation. See,
Ecological Rights Foundation v. Pacific
Gas & Electric Co., 874 F.3d 1083, 1095
(9th Cir., 2017) (‘‘RCRA’s antiduplication provision does not bar
RCRA’s application unless that
application contradicts a specific
mandate imposed under the CWA (or
another statute listed in RCRA section
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1006(a))’’); Goldfarb v. Mayor and City
Council of Baltimore, 791 F.3d 500 510
(4th Cir. 2015) (The CWA must require
something fundamentally at odds with
what RCRA would otherwise require to
be ‘‘inconsistent’’ under 1006(a));
Edison Electric Institute v. EPA, 996
F.2d 326, 337 (D.C. Cir.1993) (rejecting
‘‘generalized claim’’ that EPA action
was barred under section 1006(a)
because it interfered with ‘‘the primary
purpose’’ of the Atomic Energy Act);
U.S. v. E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.,
Inc., 341 F.Supp.2d 215, 236 (W.D. N.Y.
2004) (approving EPA action as ‘‘not
inconsistent’’ under RCRA where
CERCLA’s heightened standard would
not be met by release of hazardous
substance). The commenter has
identified no requirement in the Clean
Water Act that is inconsistent with
EPA’s proposal.
Instead, the commenter argues that
the deadlines under the two rules are
inconsistent and wholly duplicative.
EPA disagrees with both claims. First,
the deadlines for the two rules are in
fact consistent. To support its claim, the
commenter focused exclusively on the
proposed date of August 2020, by which
facilities must cease receipt of waste
into the unit. But EPA also proposed to
establish a process by which a facility
that needs to continue receiving waste
into the unit can do so, by
demonstrating that it was not feasible to
meet the deadline. See § 257.103(f).
Under that proposal, a facility can
continue to operate a unit until 2023 if
it can demonstrate that that amount of
time is necessary to complete its
construction of alternative capacity.
Neither are the ELG and CCR
proposals duplicative. The CCR
requirements are designed to protect
groundwater, while the ELG
requirements are designed to protect
surface waters.
Finally, one commenter stated their
belief that EPA was required to have
consulted with U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (FWS) under the Endangered
Species Act as part of developing this
final rule.
EPA disagrees with the suggestion
that consultation was required as part of
developing this rule. Under the existing
regulations, all CCR units must comply
with 40 CFR 257.3–2. 40 CFR 257.52(b).
That regulation, which was developed
after consultation with FWS, requires
facilities not to cause or contribute to
the taking of any endangered or
threatened species of plant or wildlife,
and not to result in the destruction or
adverse modification of critical habitat.
This obligation is not modified or
affected in any way by this final rule.
The commenter has presented no facts
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53521
that convince EPA that re-initiation is
warranted by this rule.
V. What final action is EPA taking on
the December 2, 2019 proposal?
A. Revisions to § 257.71 To Implement
the 2018 USWAG Decision
As discussed in unit III.B of this
preamble, the D.C. Circuit found in
USWAG that the rulemaking record did
not support the conclusion that the 2015
CCR Rule would adequately address the
adverse effects posed by clay-lined (or
compacted soil-lined) CCR surface
impoundments. Therefore, the Court
vacated the provision that treated ‘‘claylined’’ surface impoundments
differently than unlined impoundments,
with the result that such impoundments
are now required to be either retrofitted
or closed.10 The affected provision was
codified in § 257.71(a)(1)(i), which
stated that a unit with a liner consisting
of a minimum of two feet of compacted
soil with a hydraulic conductivity of no
more than 1 × 10¥7 centimeters per
second was considered to be lined. In
the December 2, 2019 proposed rule,
EPA proposed to remove
§ 257.71(a)(1)(i) from the CFR. 84 FR
65944. The Agency also proposed two
conforming revisions to § 257.71(a)(3)
that were necessary to properly
implement the removal of
§ 257.71(a)(1)(i). Id.
In this action, EPA is finalizing these
proposed changes to § 257.71(a)(1) and
(a)(3). Specifically, the Agency is
removing § 257.71(a)(1)(i) from the CFR
to reflect its vacatur as a result of the
2018 USWAG decision. In addition,
EPA is revising § 257.71(a)(3) by
removing two cross-references to
§ 257.71(a)(1)(i) that are no longer
appropriate given that paragraph
(a)(1)(i) has been removed. See revised
§ 257.71(a)(3)(i) and (ii).
B. Revisions to § 257.101 as a Result of
EPA’s Reconsideration
When the 2015 CCR Rule was
finalized, § 257.101 required certain
existing CCR surface impoundments to
close.11 This included: (1) Unlined CCR
10 On March 3, 2020, the Agency proposed to
allow a limited number of facilities to continue
using alternate liners (i.e., liner systems that would
otherwise be considered to be unlined systems
under the CCR regulations) at existing CCR surface
impoundments if the facility can demonstrate to
EPA or a Participating State Director that the unit
would not adversely affect groundwater, human
health, or the environment. 85 FR 12456.
11 Section 257.101 also requires certain existing
CCR landfills and new CCR surface impoundments
to close. However, those provisions are not
discussed in this preamble section because those
CCR units were not affected by the 2018 USWAG
decision.
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surface impoundments whose
groundwater monitoring shows an
exceedance of a groundwater protection
standard (§ 257.101(a)(1)); (2) CCR
surface impoundments that do not
comply with one or more of the location
(siting) criteria (§ 257.101(b)(1)); and (3)
CCR surface impoundments that are not
designed and operated to achieve
minimum factors of safety, which are a
component of the structural integrity
criteria (§ 257.101(b)(2)). In each of
these situations, the 2015 CCR Rule
specified that the owner or operator of
the CCR unit must cease placing CCR
and non-CCR wastestreams into the unit
and initiate closure activities (or retrofit
the unit under certain circumstances)
within a certain period of time after
making the relevant determination.
The D.C. Circuit found in the USWAG
decision that EPA acted ‘‘arbitrarily and
capriciously and contrary to RCRA’’ in
failing to require the closure of all
unlined CCR surface impoundments
and ordered that ‘‘the Final Rule be
vacated and remanded with respect to
the provisions that permit unlined
impoundments to continue receiving
coal ash unless they leak.’’ See 901 F.3d
at 449. This court-vacated provision is
codified in § 257.101(a). The USWAG
decision did not affect the codified
deadlines to cease receipt of waste and
initiate closure. These deadlines
remained for existing CCR surface
impoundments that do not comply with
one or more of the location criteria
under § 257.101(b)(1), as well as for
those impoundments that are not
designed and operated to achieve
minimum factors of safety under
§ 257.101(b)(2).
The Agency explained in the
December 2, 2019 proposed rule that
EPA interprets the USWAG decision as
only partially vacating § 257.101(a).
Specifically, the Agency explained that
only the following phrase in
§ 257.101(a)(1) was vacated by the
Court: ‘‘if at any time after October 19,
2015, an owner or operator of an
existing unlined CCR surface
impoundment determines in any
sampling event that the concentrations
of one or more constituents listed in
Appendix IV of this part are detected at
statistically significant levels above the
groundwater protection standard
established under § 257.95(h) for such
CCR unit’’. 84 FR 65944–45. The
proposal discussed that a vacatur of the
entire provision under § 257.101(a)
would remove the requirement for
unlined CCR surface impoundments to
close, which would be inconsistent with
the holding that it was arbitrary and
capricious for EPA not to have required
unlined CCR surface impoundments to
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close. In response to the December 2,
2019 proposed rule, EPA received no
comments opposing the Agency’s
interpretation of the effect of the
USWAG decision on § 257.101(a).
Therefore, and as EPA discussed in the
proposed rule, the vacatur of this phrase
from § 257.101(a)(1) results in a
requirement that owners and operators
must cease placement of both CCR and
non-CCR wastestreams into unlined
CCR surface impoundments and initiate
the closure of such units no later than
October 31, 2020. This requirement also
applied to both impoundments that
were formally considered to be ‘‘claylined,’’ and unlined impoundments that
are inactive.
The October 31, 2020 deadline was
established in a final rule published on
July 30, 2018 (83 FR 36435). The
December 2, 2019 proposal discussed
that the July 30, 2018 final rule had not
yet been challenged when the court
issued its USWAG decision on August
21, 2018. As discussed in the proposed
rule, the Waterkeeper Alliance
subsequently challenged the July 30,
2018 final rule and requested expedited
review of the October 31, 2020 deadline.
In response, EPA requested a remand of
the July 30, 2018 final rule, which the
court granted on March 13, 2019 ‘‘to
allow the agency to reconsider that rule
in light of this court’s decision in
[USWAG].’’
1. EPA’s Reconsideration of the October
31, 2020 Deadline
The December 2, 2019 proposed rule
reflects EPA’s reconsideration of the
deadline of October 31, 2020 for unlined
CCR surface impoundments to cease
receiving CCR and non-CCR
wastestreams and initiate closure or
retrofit activities.12 As explained in the
proposed rule, the USWAG decision
faulted EPA for failing to fully estimate
the risks associated with the continued
operation (and potential leakage) of
unlined impoundments and for failing
to address the risks from allowing these
units to continue to operate until they
leak. The court held that RCRA requires
the Agency to determine that such risks
would be acceptable under the § 4004(a)
standard in order to authorize the
continued operation of such units. In
the absence of such an assessment, the
court vacated the provision that allowed
for the continued operation of unlined
impoundments. 901 F.3d at 430. For the
reasons discussed in the proposed rule,
the Agency was unable to develop a
12 As stated in the proposed rule, EPA will
address its reconsideration of other aspects of the
July 30, 2018, final rule in subsequent rulemaking
actions. 84 FR 65944.
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nationwide risk assessment of
continued operation of these unlined
CCR surface impoundments. 84 FR
65945.
EPA further explained in the
December 2, 2019 proposal that many
utilities could not immediately cease
the placement of CCR and non-CCR
wastestreams into their surface
impoundments without causing
potentially significant disruptions to
plant operations, and thus the provision
of electricity to their customers. This is
because there is no additional capacity
to manage these wastes elsewhere. To
support this conclusion, EPA pointed to
the information laid out in several
industry filings to the Waterkeeper
court. The Waterkeeper court also
recognized this, declining to vacate the
July 2018 Rule partly because ‘‘EPA and
the intervenors have shown that the
consequences of vacatur would be
disruptive.’’ No. 18–1289, Order at 1.
To address these competing
considerations in a manner consistent
with the statute and the D.C. Circuit’s
decisions, EPA proposed to require that
facilities cease placement of all wastes
(both CCR and non-CCR) into
impoundments as soon as technically
feasible. 84 FR 65945. The proposal
explained that such a requirement
would meet the RCRA § 4004(a)
standard because it requires the facility
to do what is possible in the shortest
achievable time. Similar to the concept
behind a force majeure provision, EPA
cannot impose protective measures
under this provision that are not
technically feasible for any facility to
implement. See USWAG at 448; Hughey
v. JMS Development Corp, 78 F.3d 1523
(11th Cir. 1996); Cherry-Burrell Corp v.
United States, 367 F.2d 669 (8th Cir.
1966). The proposal further concluded
that requiring facilities to expedite the
initiation of closure of unlined CCR
surface impoundments is consistent
with the court’s finding that further
evidence is needed to permit such units
to continue to operate. See USWAG, 901
F.3d at 429–430. The proposal
explained that EPA lacked the evidence
to support the continued operation of
such units on a national level and it did
not anticipate being able to develop
such information in the near-term.
2. Approaches To Identify Alternative
Capacity
EPA proposed to determine technical
feasibility based on the steps that
owners and operators need to take to
obtain alternative disposal capacity. Six
approaches, and the timeframes needed
to implement them, were evaluated. 84
FR 65945–51. The evaluation relied
principally on information contained in
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the declarations submitted with the
Waterkeeper briefs, as well as CCR rule
compliance information posted on
facilities’ publicly accessible CCR
internet sites (e.g., written retrofit plans
required by § 257.102(k)(2)). The
proposed rule discussed each
technology approach and the Agency’s
analysis of the average time needed to
implement it. This included the entire
process to obtain alternative capacity,
from the start of the project to its
completion, including the general
project phases of planning and design,
procurement, permitting, and
construction, commissioning. Using the
average timeframe for each of the six
approaches was intended to capture
some of the variability due to sitespecific circumstances and to provide
for an accurate national benchmark. The
six technology approaches presented in
the proposed rule and the estimated
average time necessary to develop each
technology approach are shown in Table
2.
TABLE 2—SUMMARY OF PROPOSED
TECHNOLOGY APPROACHES
Alternative capacity
technology
Conversion to dry handling ...
Non-CCR wastewater basin ..
Wastewater treatment facility
New CCR surface impoundment.
Retrofit of a CCR surface impoundment.
Multiple technology system ...
Average time
(months)
36.
21.
16 to 21.
27.
31.5 (large
unit retrofits).
4 to 12 (small
unit retrofits).
21 to 36.
(a) Specific Comments on Individual
Alternative Capacity Technologies and
Average Time Estimates
This preamble unit summarizes the
data and information considered for
each of the six technology approaches in
the proposed rule; the comments
received in response to the use of these
data and information; and the Agency’s
response to comments on these
approaches. Several commenters
submitted actual project timeframes for
completed or ongoing efforts to obtain
alternative capacity. The Agency
evaluated each submission according to
the procedures described in this unit of
the preamble. In most cases, this project
information was used in the final rule
alternative capacity analysis.
In general, EPA considered
submissions that described completed
projects or portions of completed
projects to be the most persuasive and
reliable. These submissions reflect
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projects that were in fact completed
within the reported timeframe and
therefore provided some guarantee that
other facilities can replicate those
timeframes. As these projects were
initiated before the USWAG decision, it
is likely that they do not represent
expedited timeframes. EPA therefore
considered them to be outer bounds of
the amount of time necessary to
complete these projects.
The second most reliable category of
information came from submissions in
which the commenter provided a
detailed narrative description and
project schedule, explaining all phases
of the project. Submissions that fell into
this category generally provided
sufficient information to allow the
Agency to determine whether the
estimated timeframes were reasonable
and consistent with those timeframes
presented in submissions from
commenters describing completed
projects. In some cases, EPA discounted
some portions of the estimated time
where it appeared that the amount of
time substantially exceeded the time
presented in other submissions or were
based on factors unique to that site that
are unlikely to be relevant to other
facilities nationwide. EPA calculated
these adjustments by examining the
project schedule and determining
whether the task in question overlapped
with other tasks. If the discounted task
did not overlap with other activities, the
Agency reduced the project schedule by
the length of time of the task. However,
when the task in question partially
overlapped with another activity, EPA
only reduced the time duration by the
amount that did not overlap with a nondiscounted task. EPA also reduced some
portions of estimates if, based on other
submissions, EPA determined that the
commenter had assumed that a phase of
a project was sequential when in fact it
could be completed at the same time as
another phase of the project. In this final
rule, EPA used the information from
both of these categories of submissions
to calculate the deadline to cease receipt
of waste.
EPA did not use provided information
when a project timeline did not include
all phases of the project, or when the
project timeline was presented with
insufficient detail to evaluate it. EPA
also excluded estimates that appeared to
be outliers when compared to other
estimates. As EPA explained in the
proposal, outliers should not extend the
deadline for all facilities to cease receipt
of waste, because such action would not
be consistent with ensuring that this
transition occurs as quickly as
technically feasible. Rather, such
situations are more appropriately
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53523
accounted for and addressed, if
necessary, under the alternative closure
process in § 257.103.
Conversion to dry handling. The first
technology approach EPA considered in
the proposed rule was conversion to dry
handling of CCR. Some facilities use wet
sluicing (e.g., water) to convey CCR
from the boiler to a CCR surface
impoundment. In the context of this
rulemaking, a conversion from wet
sluicing to another means of CCR ash
conveyance (e.g., mechanical) would
allow the facility to cease use of the
unlined CCR surface impoundment
once the conversion is complete
(assuming, in this example, that no
other wastestreams are also directed to
the unlined impoundment). EPA
proposed that the average amount of
time needed to implement the
conversion to dry handling is 36
months, although the proposed rule
presented information that times ranged
from 36 to 48 months. 84 FR 65946. The
Agency also recognized that some
facilities may need new capacity to
dispose of the CCR after a conversion to
dry handling is complete, such as a CCR
landfill. EPA stated that it did not have
information on the time needed to
construct a new landfill and therefore
the time needed to obtain such capacity
was not included in the proposed 36month timeframe. The proposed rule
solicited information on whether
landfills are being constructed for
alternative capacity in conjunction with
dry handling system conversions and, if
so, the timeframes to put in place such
capacity. 84 FR 65947.
In response, several commenters
stated that CCR landfills are constructed
as part of the conversion to dry handling
and that the time required to construct
and permit these landfills is significant.
These commenters argued, therefore,
that EPA should include the time
required to obtain capacity for a CCR
landfill in its calculation of the time it
takes a facility to convert to dry
handling. These commenters provided
information on seven examples from
Delaware, Kentucky, Missouri, and
South Carolina showing that the process
from initial application to operational
permit issuance of a CCR landfill had
taken approximately three to five years.
The commenters further explained that
construction of three of these new CCR
landfills was done as part of the process
of converting to dry handling. However,
none of the landfill construction
information provided by the
commenters included integrated project
schedules showing both the
construction of the landfill and the dry
ash handling conversion, which could
proceed simultaneously.
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The Agency disagrees that the final
rule approach should include the time
to construct a CCR landfill in its
calculation of the time it takes a facility
to convert to dry handling. After further
consideration, EPA views a combined
dry ash handling conversion and new
CCR landfill construction project to be
more analogous to a multiple
technology system, which is discussed
in the ‘‘Multiple technology system’’
section of this preamble. In this
instance, the multiple technology
system would consist of a dry handling
conversion project and a separate
disposal capacity project. The Agency is
taking this position in the final rule
because some dry handling conversion
projects do not involve the need to
obtain disposal capacity for dry CCR,
while other conversions do. EPA also
notes that it did not receive any
integrated project schedules showing
the construction of the landfill and the
dry ash handling conversion.
EPA also received new project
information regarding conversions to
dry handling of CCR from Cleco
Corporate Holdings LLC (Cleco) and
DTE Energy.13 The information
provided by each is briefly summarized
below.
Cleco submitted detailed project
information and projections for dry ash
conversion projects at two different
Cleco plants in Louisiana. The first was
for the installation of a submerged flight
conveyor for bottom ash removal at its
Dolet Hills Power Plant (Dolet Hills). A
submerged flight conveyor is a type of
mechanical ash handling system that
collects bottom ash that has fallen from
the bottom of the boiler into a waterfilled trough.14 Currently at Dolet Hills,
bottom ash is wet sluiced to one of two
33-acre unlined CCR surface
impoundments. The commenter stated
that prior to the USWAG decision, these
bottom ash impoundments were not
subject to closure for cause. The
commenter’s project timeline shows that
it will take approximately 44.5 months
to complete the bottom ash handling
conversion. Cleco’s comments do not
indicate where the bottom ash will be
managed after the conversion, but EPA
notes that Cleco currently operates a
CCR landfill at Dolet Hills for the
disposal of fly ash and scrubber sludge.
The commenter’s conversion project
13 See docket items EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0085 and 0094, respectively.
14 For additional information on bottom ash
handling systems, see USEPA, 2019. ‘‘Supplemental
Technical Development Document for Proposed
Revisions to the Effluent Limitations Guidelines
and Standards for the Steam Electric Power
Generating Point Source Category’’. EPA–821–R–
19–009 (November).
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timeline includes approximately nine
months for the task of ‘‘joint owner &
board approval’’ and another five
months for a budgetary study. The
commenter explains that the coal-fired
boiler at Dolet Hills is jointly owned
and this time is needed to engage in
substantial discussions with and reach
concurrence with the joint owners. The
commenter further stated that the time
allotted for discussions and decisionmaking with joint owners is based on its
experience in reaching consensus with
joint owners on the EPA air rulemaking
titled the Mercury and Air Toxic
Standards rule.15 The commenter’s
project timeline also included three
months to seek an alternative liner
determination pursuant to a proposed
process under consideration by the
Agency in a separate rulemaking.16
However, this 17 months (3 + 5 + 9
months) reflected in Cleco’s timeline
only partially overlaps with the
planning and initial design phase of the
project, which increased the amount of
time estimated to complete the total
project.
The second bottom ash dry
conversion project described by Cleco
was for the installation of a submerged
grind conveyor, another type of
mechanical ash handling system, for
bottom ash removal at its Rodemacher
Power Plant. Currently, bottom ash is
wet sluiced to a 43-acre unlined CCR
surface impoundment. The commenter
stated that prior to the USWAG
decision, the bottom ash impoundment
was not subject to closure for cause. The
commenter’s project timeline shows that
it will take approximately 45 months to
complete the bottom ash handling
conversion. Cleco’s comments do not
indicate where the bottom ash will be
managed after the conversion nor if
disposal capacity is needed for
generated bottom ash. Similar to the
timeline for Dolet Hills, Cleco’s
conversion project timeline includes
approximately 17 months for obtaining
joint owner and board approval,
conducting the budgetary study, and
seeking an alternative liner
demonstration.
After evaluating the new information
provided by Cleco, EPA is using this
information in its final rule calculation
of the amount of time needed to convert
to dry handling because this commenter
provided a detailed narrative
description and project schedule
explaining all phases of the project that
allowed EPA to evaluate the
reasonableness of the estimate.
However, after reviewing the
15 77
16 85
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FR 12456 (March 3, 2020).
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commenter’s project schedule, the
Agency is adjusting the dry handling
conversion timeframes used in the
capacity analysis for the reasons
discussed below. As discussed earlier,
this commenter explains that the project
schedule includes approximately nine
months for the task of joint owner and
board approval, five months for a
budgetary study, and three months to
seek an alternative liner determination
(a total of 17 months). However, these
actions would only partially overlap
with the planning and initial design
phase of the project. As EPA explained
elsewhere in this preamble, the goal of
the Agency’s alternative capacity
analysis is to identify capacity that can
be obtained in the shortest feasible time.
A schedule based on a protracted
lengthy decision-making process is not
consistent with this goal. Moreover, the
length of time it takes to make a
decision is within the facility’s (or
multiple co-owner’s) control and can be
expedited as necessary. For similar
reasons EPA is not accounting for time
taken for the facility to seek a variance
under the proposed alternative liner
determination provisions. Developing
the materials for that process is largely
within the facility’s control and can
therefore be undertaken simultaneously
with other measures. Therefore, EPA is
eliminating the time to seek an
alternative liner determination (three
months) and additionally reducing by
eight months the upfront 14 months
allocated for joint owner and board
approval and the budgetary study. This
action would retain six months for the
planning and initial design phase of the
project, which is the same amount of
time identified for this phase at
proposal. Thus, for purposes of the final
rule alternative capacity analysis EPA
will use an adjusted estimate of 33.5
months (44.5 minus 11 months) to
complete the dry conversion at the Dolet
Hills facility and an adjusted estimate of
34 months (45 minus 11 months) to
complete the dry conversion at the
Rodemacher facility. In addition, the
Agency is using the Cleco data points in
lieu of the information considered in the
proposed rule because it is a more
comprehensive analysis of a dry ash
handling conversion project. Table 3 in
unit V.B.3.a of this preamble shows the
information used in the final rule
alternative capacity analysis for this
technology approach.
DTE Energy submitted comments
describing an ongoing dry fly ash
handling conversion project of four
boilers at its Monroe Power Plant
(Monroe) in Michigan. The commenter
states that one CCR surface
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impoundment currently receives wet
sluiced fly ash and that prior to the
USWAG decision, this 331-acre
impoundment was not subject to closure
for cause. The commenter’s narrative
description of the timeline estimates
that the dry fly ash conversion project
will take at least 57 months until the dry
ash handling systems are operational
and wet sluicing of ash can end. Monroe
currently operates a CCR landfill. The
commenter explained that the
conversion construction schedule has
been designed to coincide with already
scheduled periodic unit outages and has
been coordinated with the Midwest
Independent System Operator so as to
maintain grid stability and electrical
reliability.17 The commenter stated that
for plants such as Monroe that have
multiple generating units, outages for
those units are seldom concurrent.
Therefore, the commenter explained
that the schedule for the dry ash
handling conversions are coordinated
into a series of sequential generating
unit outages that adds to the required
time to install and start up the systems.
After considering the comments
submitted by DTE Energy, EPA is not
using its project information in the final
rule calculation of the amount of time
needed to convert all four of its boilers
to dry fly ash handling. DTE Energy
explained in its comments that two of
its boiler units currently have a dual ash
handling system that allows fly ash
generated from these boilers to be
handled dry or wet. The commenter
further explained that a portion of the
fly ash generated from these two boilers
is transported dry (e.g., collected fly ash
is conveyed to storage silos using air
pressure) and sold for beneficial use,
while the remaining portion of fly ash
not sold for beneficial use is wet sluiced
to its unlined CCR surface
impoundment. The commenter further
explained that fly ash generated by the
other two boilers is currently wet
sluiced to the same impoundment. As
explained earlier, the project timeline to
convert all four boilers to dry handling
is estimated to take 57 months;
however, the commenter does not
explain why closure of the unlined
surface impoundment could not be
initiated sooner than 57 months given
that two boilers are already currently
configured to dry handle fly ash. Nor is
the project timeline sufficiently detailed
for the Agency to discern whether
17 The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(FERC) defines an Independent System Operator as
an independent, federally regulated entity
established to coordinate regional transmission in a
non-discriminatory manner and ensure the safety
and reliability of the electric system.
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alternative capacity could be obtained
sooner than projected.
Non-CCR wastestream basins. The
second technology approach for
alternative capacity proposed by the
Agency was construction of a new
wastewater basin for non-CCR
wastestreams. A new wastewater basin
could be needed in a situation where
one or more non-CCR wastestreams are
managed in an existing unlined CCR
surface impoundment subject to closure.
EPA proposed that the average amount
of time needed to construct a new basin
for non-CCR wastestreams was 21
months, but also explained that
available data showed that permitting of
the unit can greatly impact the amount
of time needed to complete the new
capacity. The data in the proposal
showed new capacity could be obtained
in a range of 18 to 41 months. EPA
further explained that when removing
the variable permitting component from
consideration, the average time to plan
and design, procure, and construct and
commission the new basin was 21
months. 84 FR 65947.
In response to the proposed rule,
several commenters stated that
obtaining permits is a necessary
component of the process to construct a
non-CCR wastestream basin and
provided examples of the types of
permits, licenses or approvals that may
be needed. These commenters argued
that EPA must include some time for
obtaining permits for this alternative
capacity method. The Agency also
received new project information from
several entities regarding construction
of a new wastewater basin for non-CCR
wastestreams. However, these projects
were done as part of a larger multiple
technology system effort. These
multiple technology system projects
included the construction of non-CCR
wastewater basins or storage in
conjunction with either dry ash
handling conversions or development of
other alternative capacity at the New
Madrid Power Plant, Thomas Hill
Energy Center, Salt River Project, and
the Boswell Energy Center. Those
project descriptions are not included in
the capacity analysis for non-CCR
wastestream basins, but are discussed in
the ‘‘Multiple technology systems’’
section of this preamble. The Agency
did not receive any new project
information from commenters
documenting the time needed to
construct a new non-CCR wastewater
basin when such project was not part of
a multiple technology system.
After considering comments, EPA is
adjusting the approach used in the
proposed rule to determine the time
needed to obtain alternative capacity
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53525
with a non-CCR wastewater basin.
Several commenters were critical of the
proposed approach because it removed
permitting timeframes considerations
from the estimation. The Agency agrees
with commenters that obtaining a
permit (e.g., the time needed to modify
a National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System permit) is a
necessary component to putting in place
a new non-CCR wastewater capacity.
EPA re-evaluated the project schedule
associated with the high-end estimate of
41 months considered in the proposed
rule. This review determined that the
design and permitting phase of the
project—18 months of the project
duration—includes environmental
reviews required under the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). As
noted in the submission, the NEPA
review process ‘‘can take up to a year or
longer depending on the level of
review’’ required. The Agency also
reviewed other documents associated
with the NEPA review for this non-CCR
wastewater basin and found that the
process well exceeded a year to
complete.18 But because the majority of
facilities are not subject to NEPA, EPA
considers this situation to be an outlier
that is more appropriately accounted for
and, if necessary, addressed under the
alternative closure process in § 257.103.
Because the NEPA review process
overlaps with other project tasks, such
as detailed engineering design and
preparing permit applications, EPA
adjusted the estimate to remove 12 of
the 18 months associated with the
NEPA review process, rather than
deleting the entire 18 months. The
resulting six-month time frame is
consistent with the estimate provided
by other facilities for the engineering
design phase. Therefore, for purposes of
the final rule alternative capacity
analysis EPA will use an adjusted
estimate of 29 months (41 minus 12
months) to complete the construction of
the non-CCR wastewater basin.
EPA is using the estimate to construct
a new non-CCR wastewater basin
provided by Southern Company in the
final rule alternative capacity analysis.
This information was considered in the
proposed rule and describes a project
estimated to take 18 months. Table 3 in
unit V.B.3.a of this preamble shows the
information used in the final rule
alternative capacity analysis for this
approach.
18 83 FR 54162 (October 26, 2018). ‘‘Shawnee
Fossil Plant Coal Combustion Residual
Management; Issuance of Record of Decision.’’ The
draft Environmental Impact Statement was released
on June 8, 2017, and the final Record of Decision
was published on October 26, 2018.
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Wastewater treatment facility. The
third technology approach considered
by EPA at proposal was to build a new
wastewater treatment facility (or system)
for CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams.
A wastewater treatment system can take
different forms, as explained in the
proposed rule. For example, a chemical
precipitation wastewater treatment
system is a system where chemicals are
added to the wastewater to alter the
physical state of dissolved and
suspended solids to facilitate settling
and removal of solids. Other systems,
such as settling ponds, are designed to
remove particulates from wastewater by
means of gravity. EPA proposed that the
average amount of time needed to
construct a wastewater treatment system
is 16 to 21 months based on information
obtained for a related rulemaking for the
Steam Electric Power Generating
Effluent Guidelines and Standards
(Steam Electric ELG). The Agency also
presented an example of a concrete
treatment tank system being considered
by an electricity producer that estimated
the time to obtain alternative capacity to
be 27 months. 84 FR 65948.
In response to the proposed rule,
several commenters stated that
information available in the rulemaking
docket estimates significantly longer
timeframes to obtain capacity with a
wastewater treatment system than EPA’s
proposed time. These commenters
pointed to information in the docket
from Arizona Public Service stating that
it will require approximately 27 months
to complete construction of the
wastewater treatment facility.19 The
commenters also identified new
information contained in a comment by
Southern Company in the Steam
Electric rulemaking docket, stating that
a complex wastewater treatment project
at a plant with over 50 wastestreams can
take up to 52 months to implement.20
The commenters further stated that
EPA’s proposal fails to consider the time
needed to obtain or modify National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NPDES) permits, which is a crucial
aspect of the process of constructing and
implementing a wastewater treatment
facility. Therefore, these commenters
argued that the Agency should include
the time required to obtain or modify
NPDES permits in its calculation of the
time it takes to implement a wastewater
treatment facility as a method of
alternative capacity.
The Agency also received new project
information from several entities
19 See
docket item EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0008.
20 See docket item EPA–HQ–OW–2009–0819–
8457.
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regarding construction of a new
wastewater treatment facility. However,
these projects were done as part of a
larger multiple technology system effort.
These multiple technology system
projects included the construction of
wastewater treatment capacity in
conjunction with either dry ash
handling conversions or other
alternative capacity additions at the
New Madrid Power Plant, Thomas Hill
Energy Center, and the Leland Olds
Station. Those projects are not included
in the wastewater treatment system
analysis and are discussed in the
‘‘Multiple technology systems’’ section
of this preamble.
As discussed earlier for the approach
for non-CCR waste basins, the Agency
agrees with commenters that obtaining
or modifying a NPDES permit is a
necessary component to establishing
new capacity with a wastewater
treatment facility. To better capture the
range of times needed to obtain or
modify a NPDES permit, the final rule
is supplementing the Steam Electric
ELG information used at proposal with
the project information from Arizona
Public Service, which shows alternative
capacity will be in place within
approximately 26 months.21 In addition,
the Steam Electric ELG timeframes were
presented as ranging from 16 to 21
months in the proposed rule. For
reasons discussed in unit V.B.3 of this
preamble, the Agency is representing
this information as a mean of the range
(i.e., 18.5 months) so as to not
overrepresent this information relative
to other data. However, EPA is not
including in the alternative capacity
calculation the information
characterized as a ‘‘complex wastewater
treatment project at a plant with over 50
wastestreams’’ that can take up to 52
months to implement (these comments
were also submitted as comments in
response to a separate Steam Electric
ELG proposed rule). This information is
not being included in the calculation
because the Agency was unable to
determine whether this project at an
unspecified facility involved unique or
unusually complex site-specific
circumstances that would be better
addressed through the alternative
closure provisions discussed in unit V.C
of this preamble. Table 3 in unit V.B.3.a
of this preamble shows the information
used in the final rule alternative
capacity analysis for this technology
approach.
21 EPA re-examined the APS schedule to
complete construction of the wastewater treatment
facility and determined that the project would take
26 months versus the 27 months presented in the
proposed rule.
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New CCR surface impoundment. The
fourth technology approach considered
by EPA at proposal was to build a new
CCR surface impoundment to replace
the impoundment subject to closure for
cause. Such a unit could be used for
CCR alone or could also be used to
manage non-CCR wastestreams. EPA
proposed that the average length of time
needed to build a new CCR surface
impoundment is 27 months. 84 FR
65949. As explained in the proposed
rule, this average time was developed
from available information submitted by
three facilities—Xcel Energy, Arizona
Public Service, and Southern
Company.22 The proposed 27-month
average was comprised of six months for
planning and design, six months for
permitting (though the preamble
presented a range of six to 18 months
and acknowledged that the permitting
phase can take longer than this range),
14 months for material procurement and
construction, and one month for
capacity commissioning.
In response to the proposed rule,
several commenters stated that EPA
must fully consider the additional time
required to apply for and obtain the
necessary permits when estimating the
timeframe for constructing a new CCR
surface impoundment. These
commenters argued that EPA
inappropriately selected the low end of
the range needed for permitting (i.e., six
months), despite the record showing
that it is not a rare occurrence when
more time is needed for permitting.
These commenters stated that the
timeframes must also account for the
time needed to install a groundwater
monitoring system for the new
impoundment given that the federal
CCR regulations require that the new
impoundment must be in compliance
with groundwater monitoring
requirements prior to initial receipt of
CCR. These CCR requirements include,
for example, installing the groundwater
monitoring system and developing a
groundwater sampling and analysis
program.
EPA also received new project
information regarding the construction
of new CCR surface impoundments from
a number of companies, including Xcel
Energy (Xcel), Great River Energy (Great
River), and CPS Energy.23 The
information provided by each is briefly
summarized below.
Xcel submitted detailed project
information for a new CCR surface
impoundment that is currently under
22 See docket items EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0007, 0008, and 0011, respectively.
23 See docket items EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0067, 0076, and 0070, respectively.
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construction to replace an existing 18acre CCR surface impoundment. That
impoundment is used for the temporary
storage of bottom ash prior to its
excavation and beneficial use or
disposal elsewhere. The commenter
explained that the existing
impoundment at the Sherburne County
Generating Plant (Sherburne) in
Minnesota is currently considered
unlined pursuant to the CCR regulations
and that the unit was not subject to
closure for cause until the 2018 USWAG
decision. At proposal, EPA relied on
information provided by Xcel in an
earlier submission specific to this new
CCR surface impoundment. Xcel stated
in its comments that even with the
benefit of work completed prior to the
USWAG decision, it does not anticipate
that alternative capacity (the new
impoundment) will be available until
mid-October 2020. The commenter
explained that EPA’s time estimate at
proposal for the new Sherburne
impoundment did not include already
completed essential tasks related to the
new impoundment, including an
assessment of options for alternative
capacity, and preliminary design,
permitting and project planning. Xcel
further explained that the actual
timeline since project initiation in
January 2014 to completion in October
2020 would not be consistent with the
standard in the proposed rule to obtain
alternative capacity ‘‘as soon as
technically feasible,’’ because there has
not been a continuous and sustained
effort to obtain the alternative capacity.
Therefore, Xcel reconstructed the
activities completed prior to the
USWAG decision and developed a
hypothetical project schedule reflecting
a project start date of October 15, 2018
(i.e., the USWAG mandate). The
commenter stated that expedited
durations were used where feasible and
provided examples. The commenter
further stated that constructing the new
CCR surface impoundment would take a
minimum of 34 months, which would
equate to mid-August 2021 under this
hypothetical schedule. Xcel’s comments
included a narrative description
explaining all phases of the entire
project and a detailed project schedule,
both for the actual and hypothetical
cases.
Great River submitted detailed project
information for a new CCR surface
impoundment at its Coal Creek Station
in North Dakota. The commenter stated
that the new 66-acre impoundment will
replace two existing CCR surface
impoundments that receive fly ash,
bottom ash, and flue gas desulfurization
materials. The existing impoundments
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are approximately 75 and 100 acres in
size, according to the closure plans
posted on the plant’s CCR compliance
website. The commenter also explained
that the two existing surface
impoundments were considered lined
units pursuant to the CCR regulations
prior to the 2018 USWAG decision. The
commenter further stated that Coal
Creek Station initiated efforts to obtain
alternative disposal capacity
immediately following the USWAG
decision and that constructing the new
CCR surface impoundment will take
approximately 59.5 months. However,
the commenter explained that the future
location of the new CCR surface
impoundment is currently occupied by
two existing, state-regulated non-CCR
surface impoundments. The commenter
further explained that the proposed plan
is for the two non-CCR surface
impoundments to be combined into one
CCR surface impoundment, and to
expedite availability, construction
efforts will focus on conversion of only
one non-CCR surface impoundment at a
time. Great River’s comments included
a detailed project schedule and a
technical memorandum from its
engineering consultant explaining the
steps of the project in detail from start
to finish.
CPS Energy submitted information for
a new two-acre CCR surface
impoundment at its Calaveras Power
Station in Texas. The commenter stated
that the new impoundment will replace
two existing CCR surface
impoundments that receive CCR sludge
from the air pollution control
equipment. The existing impoundments
are each approximately 1.5 acres in size,
according to the closure plan posted on
the plant’s publicly accessible CCR
internet site. CPS Energy stated in its
comments that constructing the new
CCR surface impoundment will take
approximately 30 months. While the
commenter provided summary
information on the amount of time
needed to construct the new unit,
neither a detailed narrative description
nor a detailed project schedule
explaining all phases of the project was
submitted with the comments.
After evaluating the comments that
provided new information, EPA is
including the 34-month timeframe for
the Xcel project in its final rule
calculation of the amount of time
needed to put in place new CCR surface
impoundment capacity. This
commenter provided a detailed
narrative description and project
schedule explaining all phases of the
project that allowed EPA to evaluate the
reasonableness of the estimates. EPA is
not including, however, the summary
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53527
information for the new impoundment
planned at Coal Creek Station because
of the unique real estate challenges at
the site. As discussed earlier in this
section, construction of the new
impoundment cannot commence until
one of the former non-CCR surface
impoundments is dewatered and
cleaned out. According to the
commenter’s project schedule, these
tasks are anticipated to consume at least
one of the three construction seasons
dedicated to the construction of the new
impoundment. Given that the facility is
located in North Dakota, an area of the
country that has shorter construction
seasons, the decision to build the new
impoundment at a site occupied by two
state-regulated non-CCR surface
impoundments affects the project
duration by at least one year. While the
Agency recognizes that some facilities
have legitimate real estate constraints
and limitations, EPA considers these
situations to be outliers and more
appropriately accounted for and
addressed, if necessary, under the
alternative closure provisions under
§ 257.103 (see section V.C of this
preamble).
The Agency is also not including the
summary information provided by CPS
Energy in the final rule calculation
because the commenter did not provide
sufficient detail on its planned
alternative capacity project to allow the
Agency to evaluate whether the project
could have been concluded more
quickly.
EPA is using the 28-month estimate to
construct a new seven-acre
impoundment provided by Arizona
Public Service (APS FCPP) for the Four
Corners Power Plant in New Mexico in
the final rule alternative capacity
analysis. The APS FCPP information
was considered in the proposed rule
and describes the project schedule from
start to completion. EPA has included in
its calculations the time required to
obtain necessary permits and to install
a groundwater monitoring system for
the new impoundment. The data used
in the final rule alternative capacity
analysis represent the amount of time to
obtain capacity from start to completion,
including these permitting and
regulatory project elements. Table 3 in
unit V.B.3.a of this preamble shows the
information used in the final rule
alternative capacity analysis for this
technology approach.
Retrofit of a CCR surface
impoundment. The fifth technology
approach considered by EPA at proposal
was to retrofit a CCR surface
impoundment to meet the requirements
specified in the CCR regulations for a
new impoundment. Such a unit could
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be used for both CCR and non-CCR
wastestreams. EPA proposed that the
time to retrofit a large surface
impoundment (approximately 50 acres)
was 31.5 months. 84 FR 65950. The
31.5-month timeframe was based on
information provided by Vistra Energy
for the Martin Lake Power Plant (Martin
Lake) in Texas.24 While the Martin Lake
timeline pertains to a larger retrofit
project of four surface impoundments,
EPA used it to determine the time
needed to retrofit a single
impoundment. The Agency also
proposed that a small CCR surface
impoundment could be retrofitted in
four to 12 months. The small
impoundment time estimate was based
on information extracted from rule
information posted on publicly
accessible CCR internet sites for three
facilities (i.e., written retrofit plans
required by § 257.102(k)(2)), including
Keystone Generating Station, Weston
Generating Station, and Mount Storm
Power Station.
In response to the proposed rule,
several commenters stated that it was
not appropriate for EPA to discount the
need for sequential retrofitting of
impoundments at the Martin Lake
facility and use 31.5 months as the
average time to retrofit. Given that
Vistra Energy’s submission makes clear
that retrofitting must occur sequentially
in order for the plant to continue
operating and generating electricity
during the retrofit work, the
commenters argued that the final rule
should consider the full time to retrofit
its impoundments. These commenters
also objected to the proposed rule
averaging methodology stating that EPA
both overrepresented the impoundment
retrofit technology approach (i.e., three
of the ten data points used to calculate
the proposed 22.5-month average time
to obtain alternative disposal capacity
were derived from impoundment
retrofit information), and
inappropriately skewed the retrofit time
average to small units. The commenters
further contended that approximately 68
percent of CCR surface impoundments
are larger than 10 acres and more weight
should be given to the actual timeframes
experienced by facilities in retrofitting
these larger impoundments. These
commenters also argued that the
timeframes must account for situations
where the waste boundary of the unit
changes during the retrofit to provide
the time needed to install a groundwater
monitoring system for the retrofitted
impoundment, given that the federal
CCR regulations require that the
24 See docket item EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0005.
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impoundment must be in compliance
with groundwater monitoring
requirements prior to initial receipt of
CCR.
The Agency disagrees with
commenters that it was inappropriate to
discount the need for sequential
retrofitting of Martin Lake’s four
impoundments and instead used the
time to retrofit a single impoundment.
The Agency is using the Martin Lake
information to determine the time to
retrofit a single impoundment. The
Martin Lake circumstances are unique
in that the facility plans to retrofit four
impoundments, and each retrofit must
occur sequentially because the facility
requires a minimum of three
impoundments to be operating at any
one time in order for the plant to
operate. To use the Martin Lake
information, the Agency adjusted the
total retrofit time so that it is on the
same scale as other facilities (i.e.,
construction times normalized for a
single impoundment retrofit). The
proposed rule estimated it would take
Martin Lake 31.5 months to retrofit a
single impoundment.25 EPA continues
to believe that the 31.5-month estimate
is appropriate and is using this data
point in its final rule alternative
capacity analysis to determine the time
needed to retrofit of a CCR surface
impoundment. Finally, the Agency
intends for unique circumstances like
Martin Lake to be addressed through the
alternative closure provisions of the
final rule.
EPA also received new project
information regarding the amount of
time needed to retrofit a CCR surface
impoundment in comments from
Arizona Electric Power Cooperative
(AEPCO). AEPCO submitted project
information for a surface impoundment
retrofit project at its Apache Generating
Station in Arizona. The commenter
stated that this plant has four CCR ash
impoundments, which also manage
non-CCR wastestreams, and a scrubber
sludge impoundment subject to the CCR
regulations. The commenter explained
that it will need to retrofit one of the ash
impoundments and the scrubber sludge
impoundment before it can cease
placement of CCR in the units at the
plant. The existing ash and scrubber
sludge impoundments are
approximately 33 acres and 42 acres in
size, respectively, according to the
closure plans posted on the facility’s
25 See docket item EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0005. EPA subtracted off 27 months for the retrofit
of the remaining three impoundments and the six
months for contingencies built into the schedule to
obtain 31.5 months to retrofit a single
impoundment.
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publicly accessible CCR internet site.26
The commenter noted that these
existing surface impoundments were
not subject to closure for cause under
the CCR regulations prior to the 2018
USWAG decision. The commenter
further explained that after conducting
preliminary design work for evaluating
potential alternative capacity, AEPCO
decided to retrofit the existing
impoundments, which involves removal
of approximately 900,000 cubic yards of
solids from the existing impoundments.
The commenter estimated that it will
take approximately 47 months to
complete the retrofit of the scrubber
sludge impoundment and 55 months to
retrofit one ash impoundment; however,
both impoundment retrofits, which will
be conducted concurrently, must be
completed before the facility can cease
using the existing impoundments.
AEPCO must first obtain Board approval
of an initial scoping of the project and
initiate project financing activities. The
commenter explained that many electric
cooperatives finance large projects
through the U.S. Department of
Agriculture’s Rural Utilities Service
(RUS) because RUS can offer lowinterest federal loans. RUS funding can
require an environmental review under
the National Environmental Policy Act
before funds will be released by RUS to
the cooperative. The commenter’s
project schedule included
approximately 16 months for obtaining
internal approval of the project,
initiating RUS financing, and
completing preliminary design work.
AEPCO’s comments included a
narrative description explaining all
phases of the project and a detailed
project schedule, including an estimate
of the impact of pursuing RUS funding
for these retrofits.
After evaluating AEPCO’s comments,
EPA is incorporating the impoundment
retrofit projects at Apache Generating
Station into the final rule alternative
capacity analysis. However, the Agency
is adjusting the project timeframes used
in the capacity analysis for this facility
for reasons discussed below. As
discussed earlier, this commenter
explained that the project schedule
includes 16 months for Board approval
activities and initiating a process to
obtain lower-cost financing through the
RUS program. The environmental
review process required by RUS can be
a lengthy process—longer than a year in
some cases—as noted by this and other
26 ‘‘Closure Plan—Revision No. 1, Apache
Generating Station, Arizona Electric Power
Cooperative, Inc., Cochise County, Arizona’’,
October 13, 2016.
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commenters.27 These commenters
further explained that borrowers must
wait for the conclusion of RUS’s
environmental review before taking any
action on projects that could have an
environmental impact or otherwise limit
or affect the USDA’s final decision.
As EPA explained elsewhere in this
preamble, the goal of the Agency’s
alternative capacity analysis is to
identify capacity that can be obtained in
the shortest feasible time. A schedule
based on a lengthy decision-making and
administrative process is not consistent
with this goal, especially when other
faster financing options are available
and within the facility’s control. The
length of time it takes to make a
decision is also within the facility’s
control and can be expedited as
necessary. Therefore, EPA evaluated the
timeline to determine the extent that the
lengthy decision-making and financing
approach impacted the project’s
schedule. As a result, the Agency is
reducing the initial 16-month decisionmaking and financing activities by nine
months. This adjustment would retain
seven months for the planning and
initial design phase of the project that
would occur within the initial 16-month
period. The seven-month period is the
same amount of time identified for this
project phase at proposal. Therefore, for
purposes of the final rule alternative
capacity analysis EPA will use an
adjusted estimate of 38 months (47
minus nine months) to complete the
retrofit of the scrubber sludge
impoundment and 46 months (55 minus
nine months) to retrofit one ash
impoundment. Finally, given that the
retrofits of the scrubber sludge and ash
impoundments were concurrent
activities (i.e., the retrofit construction
began at the same time), EPA views this
as one retrofit project and is including
the longer retrofit estimate of 46 months
in its alternative capacity analysis
because the impoundment retrofits
would be completed within this 46month period.
As discussed elsewhere in this
preamble, EPA also received comments
that the proposed alternative capacity
technology approaches are missing key
components of the project planning
process (e.g., the time needed to obtain
required permits). These commenters
stated that EPA must account for any
missing components when determining
the time needed to obtain alternative
capacity. EPA re-evaluated the
information available in the three
retrofit reports for small impoundment
retrofits that supported the proposed
27 See docket items EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0086 and –0102.
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rule. Weston Generating Station
(Weston) located in Wisconsin operates
two sets of bottom ash dewatering and
settlement basins (each set is
approximately three acres in size). The
two sets are operated in parallel thus
allowing one set of basins to be taken
offline while the second set remains in
use. Thus, only one set of basins must
be in operation in order for the plant to
operate. The schedule provided in its
retrofit plan includes time estimates for
all project components, including the
phases of planning and design,
procurement, permitting, construction,
and capacity commissioning.28 This
report shows that it will take
approximately 12 months to complete
the retrofit of the first series of
dewatering and settlement basins and
an additional three months to complete
the retrofit construction of the second
series of basins. Weston posted a
construction certification at the end of
November 2017 documenting the
completion of the retrofit project 29
confirming that the actual time needed
to complete the retrofit project was
consistent with the project schedule
considered by EPA in the proposed rule.
Therefore, EPA continues to believe that
12 months accurately reflects the
amount of time the commenter needs to
retrofit a single surface impoundment
and is including this data point in the
final rule alternative capacity analysis.
Regarding the surface impoundment
retrofits at Keystone Generating Station
in Pennsylvania and Mount Storm
Power Station in West Virginia, EPA’s
re-evaluation found that the retrofit
reports for both plants lack information
on the phases of planning and design,
procurement and permitting. The
Agency was unable to obtain additional
information for these retrofit projects.
As a result, EPA is no longer
considering these retrofit reports as part
of the final rule alternative capacity
analysis.
Finally, as a result of including new
retrofit information from commenters
and of the Agency’s re-evaluation of
information used in the proposed rule,
two thirds of the data used in final rule
alternative capacity analysis for the
impoundment retrofit method is
associated with impoundments greater
than ten acres. EPA believes this
addresses the comment that the retrofit
alternative capacity analysis was
overrepresented by information from
28 See docket item EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0004.
29 ‘‘Construction Certification for the Weston
Units 3 & 4 Ash Basins Liner Retrofit, Wisconsin
Public Service Corporation, Weston Generating
Station, Rothschild, Wisconsin’’, November 29,
2017.
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53529
small units under ten acres in size.
Table 3 in unit V.B.3.a of this preamble
shows the information used in the final
rule alternative capacity analysis for this
technology approach.
Multiple technology system. The final
technology approach considered in the
proposed rule was utilizing a
combination of technologies that
together could provide alternative
capacity. An example is a utility that
decides to end wet sluicing of bottom
ash to a CCR surface impoundment by
making modifications to the boiler so
that the bottom ash can be handled dry,
thereby allowing its unlined CCR
surface impoundment to be closed or
retrofitted. If, in this example, the
existing unlined impoundment was also
used to manage non-CCR wastestreams,
then the utility would also need to
obtain alternative capacity for its nonCCR wastestreams (e.g., a wastewater
treatment system). Thus, the
combination of a dry ash handling
system and wastewater treatment
system is an example of a multiple
technology system.
EPA proposed that the average
amount of time needed to obtain
alternative capacity with a multiple
technology system was 21 to 36 months,
although the Agency generally lacked
detailed information on the engineering,
design and permitting phases of the
underlying projects. In the proposed
rule, EPA estimated the time needed for
the engineering and design phase and
assumed that permitting occurs
concurrently with other project steps.
The Agency also acknowledged in the
proposed rule that the time needed to
construct a multiple technology system
is highly dependent on the alternative
capacity approaches selected and that
more time may be needed for planning
and design because these systems can be
more complex. 84 FR 65950.
In response to the proposed rule,
several commenters stated that
permitting considerations were omitted
from the proposed timelines because
permitting was assumed to occur
concurrently with other project steps,
such as construction. These commenters
further stated that this assumption is not
supported by the information in the
record which demonstrates that
permitting is a necessary and key
component of the process of developing
alternative capacity and that
construction work rarely can proceed
until all the necessary permits are
obtained. Therefore, they argued that
the final rule should include some time
for obtaining permits. Commenters also
stated that the proposed rule approach
does not contemplate multiple
technology systems when they must be
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implemented sequentially. An example
presented was for a facility that
implements a dry ash handling
conversion; once the large-volume
sluice flows are removed from the
impoundment, the facility begins a
partial retrofit within that impoundment
footprint for other non-CCR
wastestreams. The commenters
explained that this could be the case
when the facility has real estate
constraints that prevent construction
from beginning until after the sluice
flows are removed. Impoundment
closure could not begin until after the
partial retrofit is completed and the
non-CCR wastestreams relocated. Other
commenters stated that schedules based
on completed projects, such as those of
Duke Energy, did not provide enough
details to understand whether the
facility acted as expeditiously as
possible or whether tasks were
conducted sequentially or with some
overlap.
EPA also received project information
from several entities regarding multiple
technology systems, including from
Associated Electric Cooperative, Inc.
(AECI), Minnesota Power, American
Electric Power (AEP), Salt River Project
Agricultural Improvement and Power
District (Salt River Project), and Basin
Electric Power Cooperative (Basin
Electric).30 The information provided by
each is briefly summarized below.
AECI submitted project timelines and
related information for its two CCRgenerating facilities in Missouri: New
Madrid Power Plant (New Madrid) and
Thomas Hill Energy Center (Thomas
Hill). The commenter described ongoing
efforts at both facilities to put in place
new alternative capacity using multiple
technology systems. The commenter
further explained that both facilities are
subject to the CCR rules and the Steam
Electric ELG rules. The project timelines
provided include six projects required
to comply with the CCR and Steam
Electric ELG rules. The commenter
stated that the proposed rule does not
account for several integral steps in the
process of obtaining alternative
capacity. For example, they contend
that EPA’s proposal did not fully
consider the interactive relationship
between multiple technology systems
that require iterative engineering design
and construction sequencing to
accommodate complex system
development and functionality, such as
a new wastewater treatment facility that
will discharge into a non-CCR surface
impoundment. The commenter also
stated that the proposal did not fully
30 See docket items EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0087, 0075, 0077, 0079, and 0069, respectively.
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consider the commissioning and startup testing phase for multiple technology
systems. The commenter’s experience is
that more complex systems with
multiple and varying water streams will
take more time to allow for start-up of
equipment before becoming fully
operational. For example, elements such
as seasonality, varying plant operating
conditions, periodic activities (e.g.,
boiler washes), and inconsistent flow
rates require extensive post-construction
operational configuring and calibration
of pumps, treatment dosing, and
effluent monitoring. In addition, initial
design activities, such as feasibility
studies and alternatives analyses, are
more complex for multiple technology
systems, which they argued are not
properly accounted for in the proposed
rule. The commenter stated that the
capacity timelines must account for the
inherent complexities with multiple
technology systems due to the iterative
nature of the process.
Of the six projects AECI described,
four are underway at the New Madrid
facility, including two separate
conversions to dry handling (a dry light
ash handling conversion and a dry
boiler slag handling conversion);
construction of a non-CCR wastestream
basin for coal pile runoff and process
water; and construction of a new water
treatment facility for other
wastestreams. According to information
provided by the commenter, the dry
light ash handling conversion was
initiated in April 2015 and is expected
to be completed by February 2021, a
duration of approximately 71 months.
The dry boiler slag handing conversion,
which includes conversions for two
boilers, also began in April 2015 and is
estimated to be completed by August
2023, a duration of approximately 102
months.
The final two projects at the New
Madrid facility were initiated in October
2018 following the USWAG decision.
According to information provided by
the commenter, they are planned for
completion in November 2021, a
duration of approximately 37.5 months.
The two projects at the Thomas Hill
facility include plans to construct a
wastewater treatment facility and nonCCR wastestream basins. The specific
projects include constructing a concrete
dewatering tank to handle boiler slag
wastewaters, a new coal pile runoff
pond, and other process water ponds.
According to information provided by
the commenter, these projects would
take approximately 37.5 months to
complete.
Minnesota Power also submitted
project timelines and related
information for its Boswell Energy
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Center (Boswell) in Minnesota
describing ongoing efforts to put in
place new alternative capacity using
multiple technology systems. The
commenter stated that it has two CCR
surface impoundments that are subject
to closure for cause. The first
impoundment receives bottom ash and
non-CCR wastestreams and the second
impoundment receives flue gas
desulfurization (FGD) materials, as well
as bottom ash dredge materials from the
first impoundment. The commenter
stated that a multiple technology system
for alternative capacity is being pursued
at Boswell that will convert the bottom
ash handling systems for two boilers to
dry systems and install an FGD
dewatering system on one of the boiler
systems. In addition, a new wastewater
storage unit will be constructed for nonCCR wastestreams. The commenter
stated that completion of these projects
will allow CCR to be managed at its onsite CCR landfill, allowing for the
closure of the two CCR surface
impoundments. The project timelines
submitted by the commenter show that
both dry handling conversions will be
completed early in 2023, with one
conversion taking 40 months to
complete and the other one 52 months.
The construction of the non-CCR storage
unit is planned to be finished in 34
months.
The commenter stated that the
proposed rule timelines were deficient
in that they did not adequately address
the role and extent to which existing
economic regulation requires
coordinated decision-making for electric
utility investments. These regulations
include requirements for review and
approval of investments to comply with
state and federal environmental
requirements, which would apply to the
dry handling conversions being
implemented. The commenter
explained its requirements under the
Minnesota statute and argued that the
proposal would create an environmental
regulatory approach that contradicts the
economic regulatory approach under
which Minnesota Power must make its
decisions. The commenter also stated
that the proposal did not allow adequate
time for state permitting for dry
conversion or solid waste management,
which, they contended, can be the
longest and most uncertain part of the
entire dry conversion process. The
commenter explained that construction
of conversion activities cannot
commence until the permits for those
changes are issued by the appropriate
state or federal regulatory agency. A dry
handling conversion will require a
major Title V Permit amendment, due to
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increased air emissions that will result
from the conversion from wet to dry.
The commenter also stated that it is
projected to take between nine and 21.5
months to receive final permits, and the
commenter provided a letter from the
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
indicating that this is a reasonable
estimate for its conversion project.
AEP also submitted project planning
information regarding timeframes to
convert to dry bottom ash and fly ash
handling and to develop alternative
disposal capacity for non-CCR
wastewater streams. AEP explained its
methodology for performing engineering
design, planning and construction of all
construction projects, but that it has not
previously converted any of its facilities
to a dry bottom ash handling system,
nor has it developed alternative storage
or treatment options for non-CCR
wastewater streams. The commenter
presented a typical timeline for
obtaining such alternative capacity that
indicates that it could take 62 months to
complete a new non-CCR wastestream
basin and 51 months to complete the
dry ash handling conversion. These
timeframes appear to be based on a
scenario where the non-CCR
wastestream basin would be constructed
on top of a closing CCR surface
impoundment. The commenter notes on
its timeline that the impoundment
would be closed in phases, so that new
alternative disposal capacity can be
built in the existing footprint of the
impoundment.
Salt River Project also submitted
detailed project information for a new
CCR surface impoundment and nonCCR wastewater impoundment to
replace an existing 330-acre CCR surface
impoundment used primarily for the
disposal of flue gas desulfurization
materials and other non-CCR
wastestreams. The commenter stated
that the existing impoundment at the
Coronado Generating Station in Arizona
is currently considered unlined under
the CCR regulations and that the unit
was not subject to closure for cause
until the 2018 USWAG decision. The
commenter stated that it immediately
began a preliminary analysis of
compliance options under the CCR rule
after the USWAG decision and began to
evaluate options for developing
alternative disposal capacity. The
commenter further explained that the
facility plans to obtain alternative
capacity using a collection of modular
surface impoundments for CCR and
non-CCR wastestreams having an
aggregate surface area of approximately
100 acres. Salt River Project stated that
it selected a staged pond construction
project approach, which will establish
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initial alternative capacity for both CCR
and non-CCR wastestreams in separate
impoundments and allow additional
ponds to be constructed as needed in
the future. Salt River Project stated it
will take approximately 55 months to
replace the existing unlined
impoundment with the new CCR and
non-CCR impoundments. Salt River
Project’s comments included a narrative
description explaining all phases of the
entire project and a detailed project
schedule.
Basin Electric submitted information
for a multiple technology system
involving dry bottom ash conversion
and construction of a process water
treatment system at its Leland Olds
Station in North Dakota. The commenter
stated that the project took
approximately 40 months from start to
completion, beginning in January 2016
and ending in the spring of 2019. While
the commenter provided summary
information on the amount of time
needed to construct the new unit,
neither a detailed narrative description
nor a detailed project schedule
explaining all phases of the project were
submitted with the comments.
After evaluating the comments that
provided new project information, EPA
is including the information from
Thomas Hill, Boswell Energy Center,
Salt River Project, and Leland Olds, as
well as an average time derived from the
Duke Energy data described in the
proposed rule (the Duke Energy data are
discussed further in the next paragraph),
in its final rule alternative capacity
calculation for multiple technology
systems. The Agency is not including
the information for the New Madrid
facility in the final rule calculation. The
New Madrid information shows that the
engineering design and procurement
phases last approximately three years
for each boiler’s dry handling
conversion (the timeline calls for two
boilers to be converted sequentially).
The commenter did not provide
sufficient details for EPA to understand
why these timeframes are substantially
longer than other dry handling
conversions. As a result, the Agency
attributes these longer timelines to
unique or unusually complex sitespecific circumstances that would be
better addressed through the alternative
closure provisions discussed in unit V.C
of this preamble.
EPA is also not including the new
information provided by AEP in its final
rule alternative capacity calculation for
multiple technology systems. As
discussed in its comments, the
commenter’s estimate of 62 months to
obtain alternative capacity is governed
by the amount of time to construct a
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non-CCR wastestream basin, which in
turn cannot be constructed until real
estate becomes available by closing part
of a CCR surface impoundment. While
the Agency recognizes that some
facilities may be constrained by
available real estate, the commenter did
not provide any design information or
site-specific circumstances supporting
this construction approach. EPA has not
received information from the utility
sector stating that it will be
commonplace and necessary to build
new alternative capacity on top of
existing disposal units that first need to
be closed. For these reasons, the Agency
is not using this new information in the
final capacity calculation.
The Agency included information
submitted by Duke Energy regarding
various multiple technology system
projects that have been completed at
nine Duke Energy plants in Indiana,
Kentucky and North Carolina at
proposal. The projects varied at each
facility, but they generally involved
converting to dry ash handling and
construction of non-CCR wastestream
basins and/or wastewater treatment
facilities. While the submission
includes detailed information on the
time needed to complete the
construction and capacity
commissioning phases of the project,
less information is available on the
project phases prior to construction,
such as planning and design,
procurement, and permitting. However,
because the data reflect completed
projects, EPA considers the data are
sufficiently reliable to include in its
estimate. The commenter provides the
total time for all project phases to
develop alternative capacity at these
nine facilities, which ranged from 30 to
42 months, including the time to obtain
necessary permits. However, the
commenter did not provide specific
timeframes for each of the nine
facilities, and because the projects were
initiated before the USWAG decision,
they may not represent expedited
timeframes. Even though these
timeframes are considered to be the
outer bounds of the time necessary to
complete these projects, the Agency
considers these timeframes persuasive
because they provide some guarantee
that other facilities can replicate them.
Consequently, the Agency is using the
average time of the range—36 months—
that it took Duke Energy to obtain
alternative capacity. Nevertheless,
because the timeframe for Duke Energy
represents nine facilities, EPA considers
this to represent nine data points. When
taken with the data from the four other
facilities discussed above, EPA has 13
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data points to factor into its final
alternative capacity calculation.
Regarding commenters stating that the
capacity timelines must account for the
inherent complexities with multiple
technology systems, and the permitting
of such systems, the Agency believes
this issue is addressed in the final rule
by incorporating actual timelines from
four additional multiple technology
system projects. Table 3 in unit V.B.3.a
of this preamble shows the information
used in the final rule alternative
capacity analysis for this technology
approach.
(b) Response to Comments on Other
Types of Technology Approaches That
Commenters Believe EPA Should Have
Considered
Several commenters stated the
proposed rule should have addressed
additional options for obtaining
alternative capacity. For each of these
approaches, the commenters argued that
alternative capacity could be obtained
faster as compared to EPA’s proposed
timeframes. First, commenters stated
that the proposed rule should have
considered staged construction. The
comments described ‘‘staged
construction’’ as quickly building some
capacity initially followed by the
building of additional capacity that will
be needed for the long term. A second
approach identified by commenters was
described as preventing the
commingling of stormwater with nonCCR wastestreams which can allow the
faster development of alternative
capacity. The commenters explained
that the quantities of non-CCR
wastestreams are magnified because low
volume non-CCR wastestreams
generated at the facility are allowed to
commingle with stormwater. Third,
commenters stated that the installation
of temporary tanks to manage non-CCR
wastes should have been considered in
the proposal. The commenters claimed
that an approach using temporary tanks
would allow the facility to avoid sitingrelated delays typically associated with
in-ground options such as wastewater
treatment plants and impoundments.
One of these commenters was a vendor
of mobile wastewater treatment systems,
which can support the dewatering of
CCR surface impoundments and the
treatment of non-CCR wastestreams. The
commenter stated that such mobile
treatment systems are commercially
proven at full-scale, including at
utilities, available on demand, and can
be put in place in less time than any of
EPA’s proposed technology approaches.
EPA disagrees with commenters that
‘‘staged construction’’ should be
considered as an additional alternative
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capacity approach on par with the six
technology approaches considered. The
Agency does not view staged
construction as a separate, standalone
technology comparable to the existing
categories, but instead as a technique
that could be employed to expedite a
project when feasible. The commenter
neither described how the Agency could
incorporate staged construction as a
separate technology into the final rule
alternative capacity analysis, nor
identified any source of data or
information that could be used. While
the commenter identified an example
where staged construction was used,
EPA notes that there are several other
examples where this technique is
incorporated in projects supporting the
final rule alternative capacity analysis.
This suggests that the final rule
approach already includes elements of
staged construction in the analyses
when it was feasible, so it does not
merit consideration as a separate
approach. In one example, a utility
pursuing construction of a new CCR
surface impoundment selected a ‘‘staged
pond construction project approach,
with the first few ponds being
constructed for initial commissioning
and remaining ponds constructed as
needed for future use.’’ 31 Another
example involved the retrofit of a set of
dewatering and settlement basins
subsequently followed by the retrofit of
a second set of basins.32 In this example,
the facility was able to cease use of the
unlined impoundments after the first set
of basins were retrofitted, which was the
time used in the final rule capacity
analysis. A final example of staged
construction considered by EPA was a
facility planning to build a new CCR
surface impoundment in a location
currently occupied by two existing,
state-regulated non-CCR surface
impoundments.33 The commenter
explained that the plan is for the two
non-CCR surface impoundments to be
combined into one CCR surface
impoundment, but to expedite
availability, construction efforts will
focus on conversion of only one nonCCR surface impoundment at a time.
EPA disagrees with commenters that
preventing the commingling of
stormwater with non-CCR wastestreams
would have had a material effect on the
timeframes to obtain alternative
capacity. The Agency reviewed the CCR
surface impoundment projects included
31 See docket item EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0079.
32 See docket item EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0004.
33 See docket item EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0076.
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in the final rule alternative capacity
analysis and available information
indicates that stormwater is not
commingled with other wastes.
Therefore, the design and size of the
new impoundments were not impacted
by commingling of stormwater.
The Agency agrees with commenters
that temporary tanks could serve as
alternative capacity to manage non-CCR
wastestreams for either storage or
treatment. EPA also agrees that such
storage or treatment capacity may likely
be implemented on a faster timeframe at
some facilities. However, EPA does not
have detailed project information
covering the entire process of obtaining
alternative capacity through this
method. For some project phases, such
as planning and design, EPA would
expect the timeframes to obtain capacity
through temporary tanks to be
comparable to the technology
approaches considered in the final rule.
For other project phases, such as
procurement and construction, the
timeframes to secure alternative
capacity may be shorter. Without such
detailed information, EPA cannot
include the suggested approach in its
analysis. Under the alternative closure
procedures discussed in unit V.C.3.a of
this preamble, the Agency is requiring
owners to evaluate the viability of
obtaining temporary storage or
treatment capacity while other
permanent capacity is developed.
3. Establishing the Revised Deadline for
Affected Units To Cease Receipt of
Waste
For all unlined CCR surface
impoundments, EPA proposed to revise
the deadline to cease receipt of waste
under § 257.101(a)(1) from October 31,
2020, to August 31, 2020, based on the
Agency’s analysis of the average time
needed to obtain alternative disposal
capacity. 84 FR 65951. This preamble
section explains how EPA calculated
the average length of time needed to
obtain alternative disposal capacity,
how the Agency determined the
deadline, key changes that EPA is
making in response to comments
submitted on the proposed rule, and our
responses to many of the comments
received. A full response to comments
is provided in the response to comments
document available in the docket to this
rulemaking.
(a) Average Length of Time Needed To
Obtain Alternative Disposal Capacity
EPA proposed that the average length
of time needed to obtain alternative
disposal capacity for an unlined CCR
surface impoundment was 22.5 months.
84 FR 65951 (December 2, 2019). The
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Agency calculated this average time by
summing the ten estimates for the six
technology approaches shown in Table
2 of this preamble and dividing by the
number of estimates shown in Table 2.
The proposal stated that 22.5 months,
although an average, would appear to
provide enough time for a substantial
proportion of facilities to put in place
alternative disposal capacity. In
addition, EPA explained that 22.5
months would be a sufficient amount of
time to retrofit all but the largest surface
impoundments, and smaller surface
impoundments with unique design
situations. Id. The proposal stated that
these outliers should not be the basis to
extend the time for all facilities beyond
22.5 months because such action would
not be consistent with ensuring that the
development of alternative disposal
capacity occurs as quickly as technically
feasible; outliers can be accommodated
by the proposed alternative closure
provisions.34
The proposed rule also discussed why
the Agency chose to rely on a single
average time (i.e., the average of the
average times associated with the six
technology approaches) to establish a
single new deadline to cease receipt of
waste. First, the proposal stated that
22.5 months would provide sufficient
(but not excessive) time for a substantial
proportion of facilities, under a variety
of approaches. Second, the proposal
explained that some facilities will need
less than the average amount of time to
obtain the alternative capacity and some
will need more. Each of the averages
summarized in Table 2 reflects ranges of
estimated times to develop alternative
capacity, which can vary depending on
site conditions and the specific facility
operations. The Agency explained in the
proposal that to reliably determine
which facilities need less time, EPA
would need to make individual facilityspecific determinations and that trying
to craft individualized time frames
could ultimately result in longer delays
in the initiation of closure for a greater
number of facilities than would
potentially be caused by reliance on an
overall average that most facilities can
meet.
Recognizing that a single deadline is
necessarily less precise and that some
facilities may in fact be able to construct
alternative capacity more quickly than
EPA’s proposed deadline, the Agency
also solicited comment on an alternative
approach under which the deadline
would vary according to the technology
adopted. For example, a facility that
chose to install a non-CCR wastewater
34 The alternative closure provisions are
discussed in section V.C of this preamble.
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basin would have a different deadline
than a facility that constructed a new
wastewater treatment facility. 84 FR
65951. In this scenario, the timeframes
for each approach could be based on the
averages presented in Table 2 of this
preamble. The proposal discussed EPA’s
concern that this option could be
challenging to implement and to track
compliance. In addition, EPA expressed
concern that this approach may not
result in measurably shorter time frames
for most facilities, given the range of
time estimates, and could lead to a
greater number of variance requests
under the alternative closure provisions.
The proposal sought comment on this
approach, including, for example,
whether this more complicated
regulatory approach would result in
measurably shorter time frames for most
facilities.
Several commenters stated that the
Agency’s methodology used to calculate
the 22.5-month time frame is flawed.
These commenters argued that EPA did
not calculate a true average of the data
points used in the proposal (see Table
2 of this preamble) because the Agency
used more than one data point for a
single method when calculating the
average, which had the effect of
overrepresenting that method in the
calculated average.35 In doing so, the
commenters explained that EPA has
skewed the data by overrepresenting
certain technology approaches
compared to other approaches with
fewer data points, and stated that EPA
did not provide a rationale for giving
more weight to certain technologies.
Accordingly, these commenters urged
the Agency to recalculate the average
time needed to obtain alternative
capacity so that alternative capacity
technologies are equally represented.
EPA agrees that the proposed
methodology to calculate the average
time needed to obtain alternative
capacity overrepresented certain
technology approaches over others (e.g.,
the retrofit of a CCR surface
impoundment was overrepresented
relative to constructing a new CCR
surface impoundment). In the final rule,
each technology approach is
represented by a single average, which
is calculated as the arithmetic mean of
the individual data points for the
specific technology. Thus, the final rule
methodology ensures that none of the
six technologies is overrepresented
compared to another technology.
35 For example, the ‘‘wastewater treatment
facility’’, ‘‘retrofit of a CCR surface impoundment’’,
and ‘‘multiple technology system’’ technology
approaches include two, three and two data points,
respectively, while the remaining three approaches
each include one data point.
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53533
As discussed in unit V.B.2.a of this
preamble, several commenters stated
that the estimated timeframes to obtain
alternative capacity overlooked key
project components that must be
completed in order to construct and
bring online each of the proposed
alternative capacity approaches. As an
example, these commenters explained
that the proposed time estimates fail to
account for the time that is actually
needed by regulatory agencies to
complete permit reviews and obtain the
necessary permits required for
construction of alternative capacity.
These commenters further explained
that the proposed time estimates fail to
factor in the additional time needed to
accommodate site-specific
circumstances such as plant size, the
number of boilers at the plant, location
of the plant, and the number and
volume of wastestreams affected by the
conversion.
The Agency also agrees with
commenters stating that certain project
components (e.g., time to obtain a
permit) were missing from the
calculations for some technology
approaches in the proposed rule. In
response to this comment, EPA’s final
rule calculation relies on information
that covers the entire process of
obtaining alternative capacity, from the
start of the project to its completion,
including the general project phases of
planning and design, procurement,
permitting, and construction and
capacity commissioning. For those data
used in the proposed rule that were
missing a project component, the
Agency removed them from the final
rule calculation if the missing
information could not be located. An
example of where the Agency removed
a data source from the final rule
calculation is the surface impoundment
retrofits at Keystone Generating Station
in Pennsylvania. As discussed in the
‘‘Retrofit of a CCR surface
impoundment’’ section of the preamble,
EPA’s re-evaluation of the retrofit report
considered at proposal contained
missing components of the project
planning process. Because the Agency
was unable to obtain additional
information for this retrofit project, it
was not used as part of the final rule
alternative capacity analysis. Individual
data handling decisions are discussed
further in unit V.B.2.a of this preamble.
For each of the technology approaches
evaluated, Table 3 summarizes the
individual time estimates to obtain such
capacity, as well as average timeframe
for each technology. As discussed
earlier in unit V.B.2.a of this preamble,
the Agency supplemented the data set
used in the proposed rule with
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additional project timeframes submitted
by commenters. These new timeframes
were not simply incorporated into the
alternative capacity analysis. Instead,
each submission was examined
thoroughly, and, in some cases, portions
of the estimated time were reduced
where EPA determined that those
portions were not appropriate for the
analysis.
TABLE 3—SUMMARY OF DATA USED IN FINAL RULE ALTERNATIVE CAPACITY ANALYSIS
Alternative capacity technology
Data used in final rule analysis
(months)
Conversion to dry handling ..........................................................................................
Non-CCR wastestream basin .......................................................................................
Wastewater treatment facility .......................................................................................
New CCR surface impoundment .................................................................................
Retrofit of a CCR surface impoundment ......................................................................
Multiple technology system ..........................................................................................
33.5, 34 .....................................................
18, 29 ........................................................
18.5, 26 .....................................................
28, 34 ........................................................
12, 31.5, 46 ...............................................
36, 36, 36, 36, 36, 36, 36, 36, 36, 37.5,
40, 52, 55.
33.8
23.5
22.3
31.0
29.8
39.1
Average .................................................................................................................
...................................................................
29.9
(b) Deadline To Cease Receipt of Waste
for Unlined CCR Surface Impoundments
EPA proposed to revise the deadline
for unlined CCR surface impoundments
under § 257.101(a)(1) from October 31,
2020, to August 31, 2020. 84 FR 65951.
The proposed rule explained that this
revised deadline would apply to both
CCR and non-CCR wastestreams. The
proposal also explained that the August
31, 2020 deadline was derived by
adding 22.5 months (i.e., the average
length of time needed to obtain
alternative disposal capacity) to October
15, 2018, which is the date of the
issuance of the court’s mandate for the
USWAG decision. The proposal
explained that the language of the
USWAG decision was clear that all units
that do not have a composite liner or
alternative composite liner (see
§ 257.71(a)(1)(ii) and (iii)) will be
required to cease receiving waste and
close. The proposal further explained
EPA’s belief that owners and operators
of unlined CCR surface impoundments
would have started preparing to close
such units upon issuance of the
mandate on October 15, 2018.
Many commenters criticized EPA’s
proposal to rely on the date of the
USWAG mandate as the starting point to
calculate the deadline for initiating
closure. These commenters argued that
the USWAG decision did not set a new
deadline or other requirements
regarding the mandatory closure of CCR
surface impoundments. Rather, the
USWAG court vacated the mandatory
closure provisions in § 257.101(a) that
allowed unlined surface impoundments
to continue to operate even when they
are not leaking, and the relevant
provisions in § 257.71(a)(1) for ‘‘claylined’’ impoundments, based on the
rulemaking record before the court at
the time of ruling, which was August
21, 2018. These commenters also noted
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that the court did not prohibit the
Agency from developing future
regulations that might allow some
unlined and ‘‘clay-lined’’
impoundments to continue to operate if
EPA determines that those
impoundments do not pose a risk to
human health and environment, but left
open this issue for EPA to address in
future rulemakings in response to the
court’s remand of the case.
Another commenter argued that EPA
has issued no formal guidance on the
impact of the USWAG vacatur or how
EPA intends to address the court
decision. This commenter stated that
the commenter was hesitant to make
significant investments involving
advanced engineering design, state
permitting, and equipment procurement
before receiving further guidance on
whether and to what extent its ‘‘claylined’’ impoundments would be
affected. This commenter further stated
that regulatory uncertainty still persists
due to ongoing EPA rulemakings and, as
a result, the commenter argued that it
was not provided adequate notice
required under administrative law that
its ‘‘clay-lined’’ impoundments would
be re-classified as ‘‘unlined’’ until EPA
issued the December 2, 2019 proposed
rule. Therefore, the commenter
contended that the date of the USWAG
decision is not appropriate. Another
commenter further argued that ‘‘any
effort by the Agency to impose a closure
deadline with a start date tied to
issuance date of the USWAG mandate
would have the effect of imposing a
retroactive legislative regulation that is
impermissible under the RCRA statutory
scheme.’’
Other commenters stated that EPA’s
proposal to use the date of the USWAG
mandate (i.e., October 15, 2018)
represents an unlawful deadline
extension. With one exception, these
commenters argued that the proposed
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Average
(months)
USWAG starting point provides owners
and operators of unlined CCR surface
impoundments with additional time to
begin closing impoundments that they
would have otherwise been prepared to
close consistent with the requirements
of the 2015 CCR Rule.36 These
commenters stated that the one
exception would be for CCR surface
impoundments that did not face closure
deadlines but will now have to close
following the USWAG decision.
The commenters also stated that the
proposed deadline of August 31, 2020
represents an unjustified extension of
the 2015 CCR Rule requirements for
CCR surface impoundments that leak or
fail the aquifer location restriction,
which were the minimum standard
necessary to ensure no reasonable
probability of adverse effect on human
health and the environment for these
types of CCR units. The commenters
further explained that neither the
current proposal nor the July 30, 2018
final rule 37 provide any evidence
showing that a later deadline (than the
deadlines finalized in the 2015 CCR
Rule) meets RCRA’s protectiveness
standard. The commenters also argued
that the proposed deadline is
inconsistent with the USWAG decision.
The commenters stated that the current
36 The 2015 CCR Rule required owners and
operators of an existing unlined CCR surface
impoundment to cease placing CCR and non-CCR
wastestreams into such CCR surface impoundment
and either retrofit or close the CCR unit within six
months of making a determination that the
concentrations of one or more constituents listed in
Appendix IV to this part are detected at statistically
significant levels above the groundwater protection
standard established under § 257.95(h).
37 83 FR 36435. In this final rule EPA extended
the deadline to October 31, 2020 by which facilities
must cease the placement of waste in CCR units
closing for cause in the situations where the facility
has detected a statistically significant increase
above a groundwater protection standard and where
the impoundment is unable to comply with the
aquifer location restriction.
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proposal and the July 30, 2018 final rule
are based on impermissible
considerations of cost and ignore
evidence of widespread contamination
caused by leaking impoundments.
Finally, these commenters criticized
the proposal for failing to actually
require facilities to close as soon as
feasible. According to these
commenters, because it would establish
a single deadline, the proposal would
effectively grant additional time to units
that could in fact close more quickly.
The commenters explained that an
industry average violates RCRA’s
protectiveness standard by basing
regulatory requirements on what is
convenient or most affordable for
facilities, rather than the most
expeditious schedule that is technically
feasible. The commenters also stated
that the rulemaking record was lacking
in that the proposal did not include a
determination about whether the
projects reflected in the industry
submissions supporting the alternative
capacity analyses are representative of
conditions at CCR impoundments across
the country, whether the projects were
completed expeditiously, or whether the
facilities picked among the various
options based on the need for timely
compliance with the CCR rule or on the
relative costs of the options.
Finally, many of these commenters
stated that the CCR Part A proposed rule
failed to meet the RCRA 4004(a)
protectiveness standard because EPA
failed to consider the risks associated
with new groundwater monitoring data,
violations of location standards,
extensions of the operating life of
unlined surface impoundments and
known compliance issues with
groundwater monitoring, annual
inspection and liner requirements.
Other commenters suggested that
deadlines be extended a specific amount
of time following the publication of the
final rule or to specific dates. These
commenters recommended that the
proposed deadline to cease receipt of
waste be pushed back by six months to
February 2021. This deadline would
provide facilities the time needed to
understand their obligations and
comply with the new regulations, the
commenters argued.
The commenters have misunderstood
the basis for EPA’s proposal. EPA
proposed to start the clock on October
15, 2018 because on that date, all
unlined surface impoundments,
including those that are ‘‘clay-lined,’’
were required to cease receipt of waste
and initiate closure no later than
October 31, 2020. In other words, EPA’s
proposal merely reflected the state of
the law as it existed on that date.
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The court ordered that ‘‘the final rule
be vacated and remanded with respect
to the provisions that permit unlined
impoundments to continue receiving
coal ash unless they leak.’’ 901 F.3d at
431–432. As explained in the proposal,
EPA interprets the court as having
vacated only the following phrase in
§ 257.101(a)(1): ‘‘if at any time after
October 19, 2015, an owner or operator
of an existing unlined CCR surface
impoundment determines in any
sampling event that the concentrations
of one or more constituents listed in
Appendix IV of this part are detected at
statistically significant levels above the
groundwater protection standard
established under § 257.95(h) for such
CCR unit . . . .’’ The court further
ordered that ‘‘the Final Rule be vacated
and remanded with respect to the
provisions that . . . classify ‘‘claylined’’ impoundments as lined, see 40
CFR 257.71(a)(1)(i) . . . .’’ Id. Once the
mandate issued on October 15, 2018, the
vacatur became effective, and with the
deletion of those phrases the regulation
in fact required all unlined and ‘‘claylined’’ CCR surface impoundments to
cease receipt of waste no later than
October 31, 2020. It is for this reason
that EPA believes facilities began to
plan for closure on that date—a belief
confirmed by several commenters who
acknowledged that they began planning
to close their impoundments as of this
date.
For the same reason, EPA disagrees
that any facility lacked notice that
‘‘clay-lined’’ units would be required to
close. And while it is true that the court
did not preclude EPA from developing
a record to support a new rule, any such
future actions would be purely
speculative. EPA does not believe that it
would be reasonable for facilities to
have relied on the mere potential that
EPA might adopt some other
requirement in the future.
EPA also disagrees that its proposal to
rely on the date of the court’s mandate
would constitute a retroactive
application of law. For a regulation to be
retroactive, it must change the prior
legal status or consequences of past
behavior. See Landgraf v. USI Film
Products, 511 U.S. 244, 269, n.4 (1994)
(A rule ‘‘is not made retroactive merely
because it draws upon antecedent facts
for its operation.’’). Treasure State
Resource Industry Ass’n v. E.P.A., 805
F.3d 300, 305 (D.C. Cir. 2015). By
contrast, here EPA has merely relied on
a past fact to support future
requirements.
As a result, the Agency is finalizing
an amended version of the approach
presented in the proposed rule to
determine the deadline for unlined CCR
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53535
surface impoundments to cease receipt
of waste. Specifically, the deadline to
cease receipt of waste in the final rule
is based on adding the average time to
obtain alternative capacity to October
15, 2018, which is the date of the
issuance of the court’s mandate for the
USWAG decision. As discussed in unit
V.B.3.a of this preamble, EPA
determined the average time to obtain
alternative capacity to be 29.9 months
(or 29 months, 27 days). Adding 29.9
months to October 15, 2018, results in
a deadline to cease receipt of waste and
to initiate closure of April 11, 2021,
which is the new deadline being
codified in § 257.101(a)(1). This
deadline applies to all unlined CCR
surface impoundments, including ‘‘claylined’’ impoundments. Note that this
deadline also applies to any unlined
inactive CCR surface impoundments,
pursuant to § 257.100(a), which
provides that all requirements
applicable to existing impoundments
apply also to inactive impoundments.
An inactive unit is one that has ceased
receipt of CCR. Section 257.53.
Although these units have already
ceased receipt of CCR, some facilities
continue to use the unit to manage other
non-CCR wastes. Irrespective of whether
the unit continues to receive non-CCR
waste or has ceased receipt of all waste,
they must now initiate closure by the
new deadline.
EPA acknowledges that it was unable
to conduct a new risk assessment to
support this rulemaking in the
timeframe that was available.
Nevertheless, this rule is consistent with
the decisions from the D.C. Circuit. As
explained previously, EPA considers
that requiring facilities to cease receipt
of waste as soon as is technically
feasible necessarily meets the RCRA
4004(a) standard, as EPA cannot impose
more stringent requirements than those
that can be successfully implemented by
at least some entities.
Moreover, although the D.C. Circuit
determined that EPA lacked the record
to authorize the unlimited operation of
unlined CCR surface impoundments—
and consequently mandated their
closure—neither the USWAG nor the
Waterkeeper decision addressed the
timing of such actions or what kind of
process would be appropriate or
necessary. Rather, both the relevant
portion of the 2015 CCR rule and the
July 18, 2018 rule were remanded back
to EPA to allow the Agency to
determine the further actions necessary
to be consistent with the decision. As
part of this rulemaking, EPA is
mandating the closure of all unlined
impoundments, which is fully
consistent with the holding in USWAG
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that the closure of these units is
warranted based on the record before
the Agency. This rule merely creates an
orderly process for ensuring that this
occurs.
EPA further disagrees that the use of
an average effectively based the
requirements on what is convenient or
that the Agency failed to evaluate
whether the industry estimates
represented expeditious time frames. As
discussed previously, EPA expressly
recognized that in many cases the
schedules presented did not reflect an
expedited timeline and therefore
considered those time frames to reflect
the upper bound of the amount of time
necessary to complete construction.
EPA also discounted estimates that were
inconsistent with timeframes presented
in submissions from commenters
describing completed projects, or were
based on factors unique to that site that
are unlikely to be relevant to other
facilities nationwide. EPA also reduced
some portions of estimates to account
for overlapping tasks.
EPA also disagrees that the final
deadline fails to account for
representative conditions across the
country. Approximately 85 percent of
CCR facilities are located in three
geographic regions of the U.S.: The
Midwest (41 percent), the Southeast (34
percent), and the Southwest (10
percent). The facilities represented in
the final rule alternative capacity
analysis include multiple facilities in
each of these three geographic regions.
The final rule analysis includes
facilities located in regions with shorter
construction seasons due to frigid
winters (Minnesota, Wisconsin, North
Dakota), as well as regions with the
generally mild winters with longer
construction seasons (New Mexico,
Arizona, Texas). The analysis also
includes facilities located in semiarid
regions that receive 10 to 20 inches of
rain per year (New Mexico and
Arizona), as well as subtropical regions
that annually receive 40 to 60 inches of
precipitation (North Carolina, Kentucky,
Louisiana). As a consequence, the data
on which EPA relied to develop the
final deadline included data from
construction projects located in a wide
range of geographic and climactic
conditions. The Agency also believes
the final rule deadline is representative
regarding impoundment size, using
surface area acreage of the unit as the
surrogate of size. The facilities
represented in the final rule alternative
capacity analysis include a wide range
of unit sizes, including units ranging
from less than 10 acres to over 100
acres. As a whole EPA considers these
to be representative of the range of
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conditions at CCR surface
impoundments across the country.
EPA acknowledges that one approach
would have been to calculate a
timeframe based on a single technology
method to developing alternative
capacity—e.g., selecting a single ‘‘best’’
or fastest approach, such as converting
to dry handling or constructing a
wastewater treatment plant. However,
EPA disagrees that this would be
appropriate; there are many technical
reasons that a facility might select one
approach over another that have nothing
to do with cost or convenience. For
example, the facility might not have
sufficient available real estate to
construct the alternative capacity, and
so might need to retrofit their existing
surface impoundment so that they can
continue to use a single unit to manage
all of their wastes.38 Similarly, if a
facility is trying to comply with
multiple EPA regulations or moving
away from the commingling of CCR and
non-CCR wastestreams, adopting a
multiple technology approach may
ultimately result in faster compliance
overall, even if individual components
could theoretically be adopted sooner.
Another example could be a facility that
sluices bottom ash (or fly ash) to a zerodischarge unlined impoundment where
construction of a wastewater treatment
facility would not be a viable disposal
substitute. In addition, EPA currently
lacks the technical record to determine
that mandating the single fastest
technology for constructing alternative
capacity can effectively be implemented
by all facilities.
EPA agrees that facilities that can
cease receipt of waste more quickly than
April 11, 2021 must do so. To address
the concern that the new deadline
would improperly grant more time to
facilities that could close more quickly,
EPA has revised the regulation to
require that facilities close their unlined
impoundments ‘‘as soon as technically
feasible, but no later than April 11,
2021.’’ See § 257.101(a)(1).
EPA further disagrees that the
approach in this rule fails to adequately
address the risks. As explained in the
proposal, EPA lacked the data to
develop a revised nationwide risk
assessment to support this rulemaking.
Although the commenters are correct
that facilities have posted substantial
amounts of groundwater monitoring
data, as EPA explained, this information
could not be easily or readily
incorporated into a nationwide risk
assessment. EPA estimates that it could
have taken as long as one year to
38 See docket item EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–
0005 for an example of real estate constraints.
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develop a revised risk assessment even
assuming the Agency could obtain the
necessary data. This would have further
extended this rulemaking process,
which EPA had originally hoped to
complete in nine months. A delay in the
rulemaking would effectively grant
facilities additional time to continue
operating these units. Ultimately, the
approach that the Agency has taken will
result in the initiation of closure—with
all the risk reduction that entails—much
sooner.
In addition, EPA considers that the
approach taken in this rule effectively
addresses the risk from these facilities.
EPA is requiring facilities to close as
soon as it is technically feasible to do
so. The final rule defines technical
feasibility to mean ‘‘possible to do in a
way that would likely be successful.’’
As EPA has explained, this standard
effectively addresses the risk because it
is not possible to impose more
protective measures than those that can
actually be implemented.
As further measures to address the
risk from continued operation of these
units, the Agency is requiring all surface
impoundments that seek additional time
to be in compliance with all applicable
requirements in 40 CFR part 257,
subpart D. And for those facilities
seeking an extension under
§ 257.103(f)(2) the owner or operator
must develop a risk mitigation plan for
that surface impoundment. If EPA
determines that further measures are
needed to address the risk during its
review of the § 257.103(f)(2) extension
request, EPA will require those
measures as a condition of its approval.
These provisions are discussed in more
detail in subsequent Units of this
preamble.
Finally, EPA believes that the revised
deadline of April 11, 2021 to cease
placing waste into the impoundment
provides facilities with adequate time to
understand and comply with their
obligations under the final rule.
(c) Deadline To Cease Receipt of Waste
for CCR Surface Impoundments That
Failed the Aquifer Location Restriction
The proposed rule explained that the
October 31, 2020 cease receipt of waste
date applied not only to the unlined
leaking CCR surface impoundments
subject to § 257.101(a), but also to the
units that failed the minimum depth to
aquifer location restriction standard
subject to § 257.101(b)(1)(i). 84 FR
65951 (December 2, 2019). Therefore,
EPA proposed that the deadline to cease
receipt of CCR and non-CCR
wastestreams for these CCR units also be
amended to August 31, 2020.
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This proposed rule discussed that the
new date was selected based on the
same rationale explained for unlined
CCR surface impoundments. The
proposal stated that these units are
similarly situated in that these facilities
need additional time to develop
alternative capacity to transition away
from their surface impoundments. As
previously discussed, based on the data
received from stakeholders, EPA
calculated that the average amount of
time to take the necessary steps to cease
placement of waste into a surface
impoundment was approximately 22.5
months. In addition, based on the data
on facilities’ publicly accessible CCR
internet site regarding compliance with
the location restriction standards, the
majority of the units that failed the
aquifer location restriction are also
unlined and must close under
§ 257.101(a). The proposed rule
explained that it is therefore logical to
establish the same deadline to cease
receipt of waste for units that failed the
minimum depth to aquifer location
restriction standard. The proposal also
stated EPA’s belief that it is technically
infeasible for a majority of these units to
be able to cease receipt of waste prior
to August 31, 2020 due to the lack of
alternative capacities. EPA further
raised the concern that requiring the
immediate initiation of closure could
disrupt operations at the power plants.
Therefore, EPA proposed the date of
August 31, 2020 for the deadline to
cease placement of waste for
§ 257.101(b)(1)(i) to replace the date of
October 31, 2020, which was
established in the July 30, 2018 Final
Rule.
This final rule uses the same
approach as for unlined and ‘‘claylined’’ units to establish the cease
receipt of waste date to April 11, 2021
for CCR surface impoundments that
failed to meet the aquifer location
restriction.
(d) Revisions to the Groundwater
Monitoring and Corrective Action
Requirements in § 257.91(d) and
§ 257.95(g)(5)
The CCR regulations require each CCR
unit to have its own groundwater
monitoring system, unless the owner or
operator chooses to install a multiunit
groundwater monitoring system. If a
multiunit groundwater monitoring
system is installed, the CCR regulations
state that the system must be based on
the consideration of several factors that
are specified in § 257.91(d)(1).
Furthermore, the regulations currently
provide under § 257.91(d)(2) that if a
multiunit groundwater monitoring
system includes at least one unlined
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CCR surface impoundment, and the
concentrations of one or more
constituents listed in Appendix IV to
this part are detected at statistically
significant levels above the groundwater
protection standard for the multiunit
system, then all unlined CCR surface
impoundments comprising the
multiunit groundwater monitoring
system are subject to the requirements
under § 257.101(a) to retrofit or close. In
addition, under the assessment
monitoring provisions in § 257.95(g),
owners and operators of all CCR units
are required to take certain actions
when one or more constituents listed in
Appendix IV of part 257 are detected at
statistically significant levels above the
groundwater protection standard.
Section 257.95(g)(5) specifies that
existing unlined CCR surface
impoundments are subject to the closure
requirements under § 257.101(a) if an
assessment of corrective measures is
required under § 257.96. Another
requirement of § 257.95(g) is that the
owner and operator must also prepare a
notification stating that an assessment of
corrective measures has been initiated.
In the December 2, 2019 rule, the
Agency proposed to delete the multiunit
system requirements under
§ 257.91(d)(2) because the provision is
no longer relevant, as all unlined CCR
surface impoundments are required to
retrofit or close. 84 FR 65952. EPA
received no comments on this proposed
action and the Agency is therefore
removing and reserving § 257.91(d)(2) in
this action. EPA is also revising
§ 257.95(g)(5) to remove the requirement
specifying that existing unlined CCR
surface impoundments are subject to the
closure requirements under § 257.101(a)
if an assessment of corrective measures
is required under § 257.96. The Agency
is finalizing this revision because it is
redundant to the requirement codified
in § 257.101(a) for unlined CCR surface
impoundments, which requires all
unlined impoundments to close or
retrofit. However, the Agency is
retaining the other requirement of
§ 257.95(g)(5) that specifies an owner or
operator must prepare a notification
stating that an assessment of corrective
measures has been initiated.
C. Revisions to the Alternative Closure
Standards (§ 257.103)
In the December 2, 2019 proposal,
EPA proposed three new alternative
closure provisions. As explained in the
proposal, these provisions were
intended to create procedures by which
a CCR surface impoundment could
obtain additional time to cease the
receipt of waste and initiate closure.
The original provisions in the 2015 rule,
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53537
§ 257.103(a) and (b), only allow the
continued placement of CCR; both
exclude the placement of non-CCR
wastestreams. EPA proposed to allow a
facility to temporarily continue to
manage both the CCR and non-CCR
wastestreams currently being managed
in the CCR surface impoundment. EPA
proposed three new alternative closure
standards: (1) A short term alternative to
initiation of closure (§ 257.103(e)), (2) a
site-specific alternative to initiation of
closure due to lack of capacity
(§ 257.103(f)(1)), and (3) a site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to
permanent cessation of a coal-fired
boiler(s) by a date certain
(§ 257.103(f)(2)). As explained in the
proposal, most of these provisions rely
on determinations of how quickly it is
feasible for the facility to cease receipt
of waste, rather than a determination
that continued operation will result in
acceptable levels of risk. The exception
is that the extension under
§ 257.103(f)(2) is based on a qualitative
risk-risk tradeoff (the increased risk of
continuing to operate the unit is offset
by the decreased risk of the expedited
closure) and a site-specific risk
mitigation plan. For all of these, EPA
believed it was important to require
facilities to submit demonstrations to
EPA for approval. This was a significant
change from the existing provisions
which are self-implementing. Finally,
EPA proposed conforming changes to
have the existing alternative closure
provisions in the 2015 rule, § 257.103(a)
and (b), only apply to landfills. The new
provisions at § 257.103(f) would then
apply only to CCR surface
impoundments.
1. Short Term Alternative Deadline To
Cease Receipt of Waste (§ 257.103(e))
In the December 2, 2019 proposal,
EPA proposed a self-implementing short
term alternative to the cease receipt of
waste deadline. This alternative was
designed for those facilities that need
only a little more time to complete
development of an alternative capacity
technology. EPA proposed that facilities
demonstrate and certify that additional
time is needed for it to be technically
feasible to cease receipt of waste and
initiate closure. The provision would
have allowed for no more than a threemonth extension from the deadlines in
§ 257.101(a) and (b)(1)(i). The proposal
was an acknowledgement that events
can occur which are completely out of
the facility’s control, such as extreme
weather or a delay in material
fabrication. In essence, this would have
been a limited ‘‘force majeure’’
provision. EPA proposed requirements
of the certification mirroring those in
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the current requirements of § 257.103(a).
84 FR 65953. EPA proposed that the
owner or operator would have to certify
the following: (1) No alternative
disposal capacity is available on or offsite (an increase in costs or
inconvenience is not sufficient support);
(2) the owner or operator has made and
continues to make efforts to obtain
additional capacity; and (3) the owner
or operator is (and must remain) in
compliance with all other requirements
of part 257. EPA proposed that a brief
narrative of each component of the
certification would be required to
explain why a three-month extension is
necessary. EPA proposed that the
certification to be placed in the facility’s
operating record, placed on the facility’s
publicly accessible CCR internet site,
and submitted to EPA as a notification
of the facility’s intent to comply with
the alternative deadline under this
provision.
EPA received several comments from
environmental groups stating concerns
that EPA’s proposal failed to establish
strict criteria that would actually ensure
that this extension would only be used
in true ‘‘force majeure’’ situations. They
additionally commented that the
demonstration requirements failed to
meet the protectiveness standard of
RCRA § 4004(a) because it allowed
facilities to consider costs or practicable
capability.
Industry groups provided comments
that supported this proposal on the
grounds that events do happen that are
out of the facility’s control, such as
extreme weather, that have a high
impact on their construction schedule.
They supported this provision being
self-implementing. A few industry
groups did comment that the short-term
alternative and the site-specific longer
alternatives should not be mutually
exclusive options. They further
commented that because the proposed
deadline to cease receipt of waste fell in
the middle of construction season it was
unlikely for facilities to be able to
accurately gauge if they could complete
development in three months or if they
would need longer depending on the
severity of the event.
After evaluating the comments, EPA
is not finalizing this provision. As
discussed in unit V.B.3, EPA has
recalculated the deadline by which
facilities must cease receipt of waste
based on data received in comments; the
new deadline is April 11, 2021. As a
consequence, EPA considers that this
proposal is no longer necessary. In part,
the proposal was intended to account
for the short interval between the
proposed deadline to cease receipt of
waste (August 31, 2020) and the
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expected promulgation of the final rule
(July 2020). Such an interval would be
too short for a facility to accommodate
unforeseen events that impact the
construction schedule. This is no longer
the case with the revised deadline.
Facilities will have several months
between promulgation of the final rule
and the date by which they must cease
receiving waste, and thus should be able
to accommodate the circumstances that
would have been addressed by the
three-month extension. As a further
consideration, because the final
deadline was calculated with more data
than was available for the proposal, EPA
has greater confidence that most
facilities will be able to meet the
deadline.
EPA is reserving paragraph (e) of
§ 257.103, where the short-term
extension was proposed, rather than
renumbering the proposed regulation to
avoid confusion.
2. Issues Applicable to Both
§ 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2)
(a) Scope of Waste That May Continue
To Be Managed in the Surface
Impoundment
In the December 2, 2019 proposal EPA
proposed to allow facilities under the
new alternative closure provisions to
obtain approval to continue to place
CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams. The
existing alternative closure provisions
§ 257.103(a) and (b) only allow the
continued disposal of CCR. EPA sought
comment on whether the proposed sitespecific alternative closure provisions
should only apply to non-CCR
wastestreams. Under such an approach,
facilities could continue to dispose of
CCR pursuant to the existing provisions
§ 257.103(a) and (b). As explained in the
proposal, in the record before the
Agency many facilities highlighted that
not having capacity for non-CCR
wastestreams is a critical issue that
places the operation of the facility at
risk. Evidence suggests that the average
time to develop alternative capacity for
non-CCR wastestreams is often the
primary driver of determining a
technically feasible timeframe for being
able to initiate the closure of surface
impoundments that comingle CCR and
non-CCR wastestreams.
EPA received several comments from
industry groups stating that they believe
the existing alternative closure
provisions, § 257.103(a) and (b), do not
prohibit the continued placement of
non-CCR wastestreams. Some
commented that facilities should be able
to continue to use the existing
provisions for continued CCR disposal,
and only be required to submit
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applications under the new provisions if
they lack capacity for both CCR and
non-CCR wastestreams or for non-CCR
wastestreams. They claimed that it was
burdensome to submit the
demonstrations and they believe the
self-implementing extensions are
sufficient for CCR wastestreams.
EPA received comments from
environmental groups stating that nonCCR wastestreams may be subject to
hazardous waste regulations when not
co-disposed with CCR in surface
impoundments. They argued that
owners and operators must determine
whether the non-CCR wastestreams are
listed wastes or whether they exhibit
any of the characteristics of a hazardous
waste. They further stated that the
December 2019 proposed rule did not
identify what constitutes a non-CCR
wastestream nor any requirements to
evaluate different non-CCR
wastestreams to determine whether they
contain listed hazardous wastes or
display hazardous waste characteristics.
Lastly, they stated EPA must evaluate
the full nature and extent of the risk
before allowing disposal of non-CCR
wastestreams without adequate
safeguards.
After reviewing the public comments,
EPA is maintaining its proposed
approach that the new site-specific
alternative closure provisions will, upon
successful demonstration, allow certain
CCR surface impoundments to receive
CCR wastestreams, or non-CCR
wastestreams, or a combination of both.
No commenter provided any
information rebutting the Agency’s
conclusion that the need to find
alternative capacity for non-CCR
wastestream is often the most critical
factor in determining the amount of
time needed to initiate closure of the
unit.
Moreover, if the new provisions
applied exclusively to non-CCR
wastestreams there would be two sets of
regulatory requirements with different
criteria applicable to the same surface
impoundment. This would create
unnecessary complications in
implementing and enforcing the
provisions. Nor does it make sense for
the more stringent requirements in the
new provisions to apply exclusively to
the non-CCR wastestreams when the
vast majority of hazardous constituents
are found in the CCR wastestream. EPA
understands the concerns that the
demonstrations require a new effort by
the facilities. However, these
considerations are offset by the benefits
that come with the enhanced regulatory
oversight of the new provisions and
having all wastestreams managed in the
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disposal unit under a single set of
regulatory requirements.
EPA disagrees that the proposed rule
should have defined non-CCR
wastestreams. The regulations already
define CCR; therefore, a non-CCR
wastestream is any other waste managed
in the impoundment. See 40 CFR 257.53
and 261.4(b)(4). EPA agrees that some
non-CCR wastestreams are not Bevillexempt (e.g., wastes that are not covered
by § 261.4(b)(4)) and consequently they
remain subject to all requirements
applicable to solid waste, and if they
meet the criteria, the requirements
applicable to hazardous waste. This
includes the requirement to determine
whether the waste is hazardous based
on either the generator’s knowledge or
testing. If the waste is hazardous it must
be managed according to the
requirements of RCRA subtitle C; when
going to an impoundment, the
impoundment must meet subtitle C
requirements. Mixtures of hazardous
waste and Bevill exempt wastes are not
exempt unless the only hazardous
constituents in the mixture are those
that are found in the Bevill exempt
waste. In addition, mixing a hazardous
waste with a Bevill exempt waste may
be considered treatment in some
circumstances, which would itself
require a permit. However, EPA has no
data to indicate that non-CCR
wastestreams are characteristically
hazardous. Given the existing
requirements that currently apply to
these wastestreams, EPA disagrees that
additional requirements are needed or
should have been proposed. Finally,
EPA explains below, in unit V.2.d, the
reasons that these revisions rely
primarily on feasibility rather than risk
considerations.
(b) Units Potentially Eligible for
Alternative Closure Timeframes
In the December 2, 2019 proposal,
EPA discussed several options as to the
CCR surface impoundments that would
be eligible for the new alternative
closure provisions. EPA proposed to
allow all CCR surface impoundments to
be eligible to submit demonstrations for
the new alternative closure provisions.
This included surface impoundments
that failed one or more location
restrictions other than the depth to
aquifer location restriction. EPA
recognized that these units were not
included in the July 2018 final rule that
established the October 31, 2020
deadline to cease receipt of waste, and
consequently their deadline to cease
receipt of waste was April 2019.
However, EPA proposed to include
them in this new approach to create a
consistent regulatory system. 84 FR
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65,953. EPA also sought comment on
whether the proposed site-specific
alternatives to initiation of closure
provisions should only apply to the CCR
surface impoundments forced into
closure by the USWAG decision (now
defined as ‘‘eligible unlined CCR surface
impoundments’’—i.e., units that were
certified as ‘‘clay-lined’’ or units that are
unlined but not leaking, compliant with
all location standards and compliant
with structural stability).
Several utility companies provided
comments that surface impoundments
closing due to § 257.101(b)(1)(ii) should
be able to apply for the new alternatives.
They further stated that those who had
filed a notification of intent to close
pursuant to §§ 257.103(a) or (b) should
be grandfathered into the new
alternatives. Environmental groups
stated that this group of units should
not be eligible for the new alternative
closure provisions because they should
have initiated closure in April 2019 and
because it would violate the RCRA
4004(a) protectiveness standard.
Industry groups commented that the
alternative closure provisions should
not be limited to the eligible unlined
CCR surface impoundments. They
elaborated that lack of capacity for CCR
and/or non-CCR wastestreams is not
limited to the facilities recently forced
into closure but most facilities. By
contrast, environmental groups stated
that many facilities have been on notice
that they would be required to close and
should have prepared for that in
advance, and so EPA should not grant
them even further time. However, even
these commenters acknowledged that
the surface impoundments that are
unlined, not leaking, and passed all
location restrictions were forced into
closure unexpectedly, and so may need
additional time to initiate closure.
Consistent with the proposal, under
the final rule all CCR surface
impoundments will be subject to the
new provisions in § 257.103. EPA
continues to believe there is value in
subjecting CCR surface impoundments
to a common regulatory system. A
common regulatory system for CCR
surface impoundments requiring the use
of § 257.103 will move these units to
initiate closure as quickly as possible
and decrease any confusion to the
public. The new alternative closure
provisions will grant facilities no more
than the specific amount of time
required for them to cease receipt of
waste as fast as technically feasible. EPA
cannot compel facilities to do the
impossible; therefore, these new
provisions will ensure facilities cease
receipt of waste as fast as technically
feasible.
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EPA agrees that the eligible unlined
CCR surface impoundments should be
eligible to apply for the new alternative
closure provisions. The owners and
operators of these units had no
expectation that they would need to
close these units in the near future and
so would not have begun planning for
such an event. They may, therefore,
need more time to construct the
alternative capacity necessary to allow
them to cease receipt of waste.
However, EPA no longer believes that
all surface impoundments should be
eligible to apply for all of the new
alternative closure provisions.
Consequently, the final rule provides
that only CCR surface impoundments
closing pursuant to § 257.101(a) and
§ 257.101(b)(1)(i) may apply for the new
alternative closure provisions under
§ 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2) for CCR and/or
non-CCR wastestreams. As previously
stated, the surface impoundments that
failed a non-aquifer location restriction
or multiple location restrictions were
triggered into closure under
§ 257.101(b)(1)(ii) and were to initiate
closure in April 2019. The only
exception would be for the facilities that
posted a notification of intent to close
pursuant to § 257.103(a) or (b) based on
a lack of capacity for only CCR, as those
provisions only authorized continued
receipt of CCR. EPA agrees with
commenters that no one has presented
a factual basis for allowing these units
to commence or resume the receipt of
wastes (i.e., non-CCR wastestreams) two
years after they were required to have
ceased. This stands in direct contrast to
the units subject to the October 31, 2020
deadline, which currently are
authorized to continue receiving both
CCR and non-CCR wastestreams.
Moreover, the purpose of this
rulemaking was to reconsider the
closure deadlines in the July 2018 final
rule in light of the decision in USWAG.
What matters in this context is how, if
at all, EPA should revise the regulatory
status quo based on the direction from
the D.C. Circuit. The closure deadlines
for impoundments closing in
accordance with § 257.101(b)(1)(ii) were
not affected by either the USWAG
decision or the July 2018 rule. EPA does
not intend in this rulemaking to revisit
closure provisions that were unaffected
by either of these things, contrary to the
commenter who contended that EPA
was relying on the decision and its
reconsideration to provide a clean slate
to recalculate all deadlines.
Therefore, this final rule allows CCR
surface impoundments closing due to
§ 257.101(b)(1)(ii) that have posted a
notification pursuant to § 257.103(a) or
(b) to apply to be transitioned to the
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new alternative closure provisions
under § 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2) for CCR
wastestreams only.
(c) Transition for Surface
Impoundments Operating Under
§ 257.103(a) and (b)
In the December 2, 2019 proposal,
EPA sought comment on how to
transition the facilities that have posted
notifications pursuant to § 257.103(a) or
(b) due to forced closure under
§ 257.101(b)(1)(ii) to the new alternative
closure provisions. Several utility
companies commented that these
facilities should be grandfathered into
the new provisions without submitting
demonstrations to EPA for approval.
These commenters additionally stated
that these units should be allowed to
continue to operate for the amount of
time authorized under the existing
regulations, which potentially authorize
continued operation for as long as 5
years from the notification date. They
further stated that the demonstration
requirements would add unnecessary
burden to the facilities currently closing
pursuant to § 257.103(a) and (b).
EPA acknowledges the concern that
the demonstrations will add burden to
the facilities currently operating under
§ 257.103(a) and (b). However, the
commenters have not provided a
compelling rationale for creating two
distinct regulatory frameworks for units
that are essentially identical. There is
substantial value in creating a consistent
regulatory framework for all CCR
surface impoundments requiring more
time to cease receiving waste. As part of
that framework, EPA has concluded that
closer regulatory oversight is necessary
to ensure that facilities initiate closure
as soon as technically feasible. EPA has
come to this decision based on an
evaluation of the current status of
compliance of the facilities operating
under the self-implementing provisions
of § 257.103(a) and (b). For example,
notifications and progress reports on
facilities’ publicly accessible CCR
internet sites do not contain all of the
information required under § 257.103(a),
(b), and (c). Some of these documents do
not include the method by which the
facility is obtaining alternative capacity,
the date by which alternative capacity
will be obtained, or a clear
demonstration that no other disposal
capacity is available on or off-site.39
Based on this record, it is clear that
these provisions require the closer
regulatory oversight that comes with
requiring prior EPA approval.
Consequently, EPA will not grandfather
39 Compiled reports from the facilities utilizing
the alternative closure provisions.
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in the facilities that have filed
notifications and will require all
facilities to submit demonstrations to
EPA for approval under the new sitespecific alternative closure provisions in
order to continue operating that surface
impoundment.
Any facility that currently has posted
on its publicly accessible CCR internet
site a notification to close a CCR surface
impoundment pursuant to § 257.103(a)
or (b) must submit a demonstration for
EPA approval that meets the
requirements under § 257.103(f)(1) or
(f)(2) in order to continue operating that
unit. Therefore, if a facility has a
notification posted and is currently
operating under § 257.103(a) or (b) due
to closure under § 257.101(b)(1)(ii) and
does not submit a demonstration to EPA
by November 30, 2020, then the facility
must cease the receipt of waste into the
unit no later than April 11, 2021 and
initiate closure.
(d) Consistency With Statutory Standard
and USWAG
EPA received comments from
environmental groups that the
December 2, 2019 proposal with the
addition of the new alternative closure
provision is inconsistent with the
statutory standard and the USWAG
decision. These commenters stated that
the alternative closure provisions
allowed unlined CCR surface
impoundments to continue to operate
when the USWAG decision mandated
that these units present a risk to human
health and the environment and must
close. Additionally, they stated that the
new alternative closure provisions do
not address the risks posed by the
continued operation of the surface
impoundment, and that as a
consequence, the proposed
demonstration requirements fail to meet
the RCRA protectiveness standard.
EPA disagrees with commenters that
these provisions fail to meet the
statutory standard as interpreted by the
court in USWAG. It is true that EPA was
unable to conduct a nationwide risk
assessment to document that all
facilities that obtain an extension under
one of the alternative closure provisions
will meet the statutory standard;
however, both subsections (f)(1) and
(f)(2) include conditions designed to
address the risks. Both provisions
require facilities to affirmatively
demonstrate that they are in compliance
with all the requirements of part 257,
and therefore meet the baseline level of
acceptable risk. In addition, as
explained in more detail below,
subsection (f)(2) requires the submission
of a risk mitigation plan as part as a
condition of obtaining the extension.
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Moreover, with regard to the
extensions pursuant to § 257.103(f)(1),
as explained in the proposal, EPA
considers that requiring facilities to
cease receipt of waste as quickly as is
feasible necessarily meets the standard
in RCRA 4004(a) as it is not possible
under this provision to require more
stringent—or more protective—
measures than can be implemented by
at least some facilities. EPA has ensured
that the statutory standard has been met
by requiring facilities to affirmatively
demonstrate to EPA the infeasibility of
ceasing receipt of waste by April 11,
2021 and by requiring prior EPA
approval of any requested extension,
allowing EPA to ensure that units stop
receipt of waste as soon as feasible.
EPA also considers that the provisions
authorizing extensions pursuant to
§ 257.103(f)(2) meet the statutory
standard. Although facilities are not
required to demonstrate that they will
cease receipt of waste as soon as feasible
under this section, they will be required
to expedite the closure of the surface
impoundment. Not only will this reduce
the risks over the long term, the
deadlines will ensure that continued
operation of the unit will be limited.
Moreover, as discussed at greater length
in unit V.C.4, EPA is requiring
submission of a risk mitigation plan to
address any increased risk from
continued operation of the surface
impoundment, which EPA will review
as part of determining whether to grant
the extension. If additional measures to
mitigate the risk are necessary to ensure
that the statutory standard is met, EPA
will require those as a condition of
granting the extension.
3. Requirements for Development of
Alternative Capacity Infeasible
(§ 257.103(f)(1))
In the December 2, 2019 proposal,
EPA proposed that a facility can obtain
a site-specific deadline to cease receipt
of waste by submitting a demonstration
that development of alternative capacity
for CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams
cannot be completed prior to November
30, 2020 (the end date of the short term
alternative) to EPA or the Participating
State Director for approval. The owner
or operator would be required to
demonstrate that it is not technically
feasible to complete the development/
installation of alternative capacity prior
to the deadline to cease receipt of waste.
In this demonstration, the facility would
need to present in detail the specifics of
the process they are undertaking to
develop alternative capacities for the
necessary CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams to support the claim that
additional time is necessary.
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(a) Criteria and Documentation
In order to obtain the § 257.103(f)(1)
extension, EPA proposed the owner or
operator must meet and maintain the
criteria listed in the provision. EPA
proposed to require that the
demonstration for each surface
impoundment document or provide
evidence for all of the following: (1)
That there is no alternative capacity
available on or off-site; (2) That CCR
and/or non-CCR wastestreams must
continue to be managed in the CCR
surface impoundment due to the
technical infeasibility of obtaining
alternative capacity prior to the
deadline to cease receipt of waste; as
part of this demonstration the facility
was required to include an analysis of
the adverse impact to plant operations
if the CCR surface impoundment in
question were to no longer be available
for use; (3) a detailed workplan on
obtaining alternative capacity for CCR
and/or non-CCR wastestreams; and (4) a
narrative of how the owner or operator
will continue to maintain compliance
with all other aspects of the CCR rule
(including ongoing groundwater
monitoring and corrective action
requirements). Additionally, EPA
proposed that this showing must be
made for each wastestream that would
continue to be managed in the unit and
the owner or operator would be required
to cease receipt of each wastestream
when alternative capacity for each
wastestream becomes available. Finally,
EPA proposed the time to develop the
alternative capacity could not extend
beyond October 15, 2023, and that the
owner or operator must remain in
compliance with all the applicable
requirements of this subpart.
No alternative capacity on or off-site.
The first criterion EPA proposed is
generally the same that is required in
§ 257.103(a)(1)(i). The owner or operator
must demonstrate the lack of alternative
capacity available on or off-site to
manage the waste. EPA also proposed
that an increase in costs or
inconvenience would not be sufficient
to support qualification under this
section.
EPA received no comments opposing
the inclusion of this requirement in the
final rule. One commenter, who
believed that costs should not be
considered as part of this determination,
raised the concern that the regulatory
text would not preclude consideration
of cost as part of this determination.
EPA disagrees that the regulatory text is
ambiguous on this point. EPA proposed
to include the same provisions currently
found at § 257.103(a) and (b); these
provisions were challenged on the
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grounds that the regulation precluded
the consideration of costs in making this
exact showing. See USWAG, 901 F.3d at
448–449. Therefore, EPA considers the
regulatory text to be clear on this point
and is finalizing the proposed
requirement without revision.
Documentation requirements of no
alternative capacity on or off-site. EPA
proposed to require facilities to provide
documentation that no alternative
capacity exists on or off-site of the
facility that could be used to manage
their waste as part of their submission.
EPA received comments from utilities
requesting clarification on the
acceptable measures for determining
lack of off-site alternative disposal
capacity. For example, the comments
contended that if the facility sluices
CCR to their surface impoundment,
their off-site disposal options are
significantly limited. However, the
disposal options greatly increase for dry
handled CCR and the off-site capacity
evaluation could then be more
extensive. EPA received comments from
environmental groups stating that EPA
should require the facility to
demonstrate the lack of alternative
capacity for each wastestream. Some
commenters also raised concern that
some of the proposed regulatory text
could be construed to permit a facility
to continue disposing CCR into surface
impoundments, even when there is
alternative capacity of CCR, due to the
lack of alternative disposal capacity for
the non-CCR wastestreams. Specifically
they pointed to changes to the
introductory language of § 257.103 that
they believed would allow owners or
operators of CCR units that are subject
to closure to continue receiving CCR in
those units even if alternative disposal
capacity for CCR is available, as long as
they demonstrate that they lack
alternative disposal capacity for nonCCR wastestreams.
EPA agrees that the disposal options
for sluiced or wet handled CCR are
greatly limited compared to the options
available for dry handled CCR. However
as discussed below there are disposal
options even for sluiced or wet handled
CCR, and consistent with the proposal
the final rule requires owners or
operators to document that no options
other than the CCR surface
impoundment are available on or offsite to manage these wastes.
EPA also agrees that the owner or
operator needs to document the lack of
alternative capacity both on and off-site
for each wastestream they wish to
continue placing into the CCR surface
impoundment after the April 11, 2021
deadline. As these commenters pointed
out, the justification for continuing to
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53541
use an unlined or leaking unit based on
a lack of capacity for one waste does not
extend to any other waste for which
there is capacity. It was for this reason
that EPA proposed to require
documentation of the lack of capacity
both on and off-site for each individual
wastestream, and that the facility cease
receipt of any waste for which capacity
becomes available. Accordingly, the
final rule requires owners and operators
to cease using the CCR surface
impoundment as soon as feasible, to
document the lack of both on and offsite capacity for each individual
wastestream, and expressly requires that
as capacity for an individual
wastestream becomes available, owners
or operators are required to use that
capacity, which will slowly decrease the
amount of waste being disposed in the
unit. EPA has also revised the
introductory text at § 257.103 to be
consistent with these provisions.
Specifically, the text now states that the
facility may continue only to receive the
wastes specified in either paragraph (a),
(b), (f)(1), or (f)(2) in the unit provided
the owner or operator meets all of the
requirements contained in the
respective paragraph.
For sluiced CCR and non-CCR
wastestreams, EPA expects the owner or
operator to evaluate the viability of
other wet temporary storage, such as
tanks, to use in lieu of the CCR surface
impoundment while permanent
capacity is developed. Some of these
wastestreams can be very large, and
therefore tanks may not be a viable or
realistic option to handle such volumes;
however, tanks could be a viable option
for small volume wastestreams. For dry
CCR, EPA expects the owner or operator
to evaluate the option of transporting
the CCR to landfills. The owner or
operator must provide documentation of
this evaluation of on and off-site
capacity for each wastestream.
Additionally, the owner or operator
must cease receipt of each wastestream
when alternative capacity for each
wastestream becomes available. This
documentation requirement has been
incorporated into the requirements of
section one of the workplan. The other
requirements for the workplan are
discussed later in this preamble. This
documentation requirement is at
§ 257.103(f)(1)(iv)(A).
Consistent with the proposal, the
costs or the inconvenience of existing
capacity will not be considered as part
of determining whether the facility
qualifies for this alternative. As
discussed in unit IV, EPA lacks the
authority to include such considerations
in this regulation. See USWAG, 901
F.3d at 448–449.
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Need to continue using the CCR
surface impoundment. EPA proposed
that the owner or operator must
demonstrate that CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams must continue to be
managed in the CCR surface
impoundment due to the technical
infeasibility of alternative capacity
being available sooner than November
30, 2020.
EPA received one comment about the
inclusion of this requirement, on the
grounds that the word feasibility could
be construed to permit the consideration
of cost. According to the commenter,
one dictionary defines the word
feasibility to mean ‘‘not possible to do
easily or conveniently; impracticable,’’
and criticized EPA for failing to include
a regulatory definition of feasibility. As
an initial matter, EPA notes that other
dictionaries define feasible to mean
‘‘capable of being done or carried out’’
(Merriam website (https://
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/
feasible)) and ‘‘possible to do and likely
to be successful’’ (Cambridge English
Dictionary (https://
dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/
english/feasible)). EPA also disagrees
that the proposed rule was unclear on
whether cost could be considered as
part of this determination. EPA
proposed explicit language that clearly
stated that costs were not relevant.
Nevertheless, to avoid any potential
ambiguity EPA will include regulatory
definitions of technically feasible and
technically infeasible. Specifically, the
final rule defines technically feasible to
mean ‘‘possible to do in a way that
would likely be successful,’’ and
technically infeasible to mean ‘‘not
possible to do in a way that would
likely be successful.’’ These definitions
clearly exclude those circumstances in
which a facility could have completed
construction but chose not to do so in
order to save money, while capturing
the full range of force majeure situations
in which circumstances beyond a
facility’s control cause delays. For
example, this definition would allow a
facility to obtain an extension in
response to delays in obtaining a permit
as a result of State furloughs or resulting
from the COVID–19 public health
emergency. However, it would not allow
a facility to obtain an extension where
the delays were caused by
mismanagement or could be overcome
by the expenditure of additional
resources; for example, where the
facility delayed ordering geomembrane,
and as a consequence it arrived too
close to the end of the construction
season.
EPA received no other substantive
comments raising concern about the
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inclusion of this criterion. Therefore,
EPA is finalizing this requirement with
one minor revision to the regulatory
text. As discussed in unit V.B.3, the
deadline to cease receipt of waste is
now April 11, 2021, so the deadline in
§ 257.103(f)(1)(ii) will be updated
accordingly.
Documentation requirements of need
to continue using the CCR surface
impoundment. This line of evidence
must include an analysis of the adverse
impact to plant operations if the CCR
surface impoundment in question were
to no longer be available for use.
EPA received comments stating that
EPA failed to identify any evidence that
the lack of capacity alternative closure
provision is necessary. They stated that
EPA claimed that the 2015 CCR Rule
would cause potentially significant
disruptions to plant operations and thus
the provision of electricity to customers;
however, EPA failed to identify any
evidence of such risks or identify a
single power plant in the country that
would be at risk of shutdown if its nonCCR wastestreams could no longer be
disposed of in the CCR surface
impoundments.
Other commenters stated that the
inclusion of an analysis of the adverse
impact to plant operations if the CCR
surface impoundment in question were
to no longer be available for use is a
very important factor in the evaluation
of a facility’s extension request. They
stated that the rulemaking record makes
clear that their ability to continue
providing power to the public could be
impacted if facilities are unable to use
these surface impoundments (for CCR
and/or non-CCR waste management)
before they have time to develop
alternative disposal capacity.
EPA disagrees that there is no
evidence that power plants could be
affected if they were forced to
prematurely stop using their CCR
surface impoundments before
alternative capacity is available. The
rulemaking record contains submissions
from numerous utilities documenting
the potential effects of such premature
closures. Moreover, EPA proposed to
require facilities to include an analysis
of the adverse impact to plant
operations if the CCR surface
impoundment in question were to no
longer be available for use. Therefore,
each individual demonstration would
include the evidence of the adverse
impact to each plant’s operations, which
is the exact evidence the commenters
assert is lacking. EPA continues to
believe that an analysis of the adverse
impact to plant operations if the CCR
surface impoundment were to no longer
be available for use is directly relevant
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to the question of whether the facility
actually needs to continue using the
unit. As a consequence, EPA is retaining
this requirement in the final rule
without revision.
This documentation requirement has
been incorporated into section one of
the workplan. The other requirements
for the workplan are discussed later in
this preamble. This documentation
requirement is represented in
§ 257.103(f)(1)(iv)(A).
Compliance certification and
documentation requirements. In the
proposal, EPA discussed compliance in
three separate places in the regulatory
text but only one section in the
preamble. In the regulatory text EPA
required a certificate of compliance, a
narrative compliance strategy and that
the owner or operator remain in
compliance with the applicable
requirements of subpart D of part 257 at
all times. Furthermore, the proposed
fourth line of evidence of the
§ 257.103(f)(1) demonstration reiterated
the requirement for a narrative
compliance strategy for the CCR surface
impoundment. The preamble laid out
some specific information that EPA
believed was critical to determine if the
facility was in compliance. EPA
proposed that the compliance strategy
must discuss the most recent
groundwater monitoring data results,
the statistical analyses conducted to
obtain the results, and the next steps for
the groundwater monitoring. EPA also
proposed that if the unit has exceeded
any of the Appendix IV groundwater
protection standards, the owner or
operator must provide a copy of any
assessment of corrective measures
conducted to date. The current
regulations require facilities to conduct
an assessment of corrective measures
followed by selection of a remedy as
soon as is feasible, and thus do not
permit waiting to implement a remedy
until initiation of closure of the unit. As
such, if the facility is in the process of
remedy selection, a thorough discussion
of the evaluation of possible remedies
for corrective action must be included
in the compliance strategy. The
proposal also stated that the facility’s
publicly accessible CCR internet site
must be completely up-to-date and
contain all the necessary postings.
Several commenters agreed that
compliance with the CCR rule should be
a prerequisite to obtain approval for an
alternative closure deadline. Others
disagreed stating that being in
compliance with the CCR rule should
not be a prerequisite. EPA continues to
believe that compliance should be a
prerequisite.
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Some commenters expressed concern
that some facilities acting in good faith
could be found non-compliant by EPA.
Specifically, USWAG raised concerns
that since the rule is self-implementing
and some regulatory text lacks
specificity and/or may be ambiguous,
there could be differences in opinion on
what constitutes compliance. Therefore,
USWAG believes that differences in
interpretation should be discussed
during EPA’s review process and any
non-compliance issues be addressed as
part of a facility’s completion of its
demonstration. Talen Energy echoed
this sentiment stating that there should
be a mechanism in place to assist
facilities to come into compliance after
the alternative closure extension was
granted. Finally, USWAG commented
that past non-compliance that has been
corrected should not penalize a facility
in their demonstration process and that,
therefore, the compliance status should
be as of the date of the demonstration’s
submission. These comments are also
addressed in unit V.C.5 since these
comments discuss the process in which
to resolve any possible questions of
compliance.
Some commenters stated that EPA has
known that facilities are violating the
groundwater monitoring requirements
because the use of intrawell statistical
analysis violates the plain language of
the CCR rule and is therefore
impermissible. They also raised other
allegations of non-compliance such as
violations of location restrictions, noncompliant liner determinations,
violations of annual inspection
requirements and various groundwater
monitoring requirements or associated
posting requirements. The commenters
went on to say that EPA’s failure to
evaluate existing non-compliance with
the CCR rule increases the risk to health
and the environment and that the Part
A proposal does not effectively require
owners and operators receiving
extensions to comply fully with the CCR
rule. Finally, some commenters stated
that since the alternative closure
extensions fail to address noncompliance, the extensions are arbitrary
and capricious and fail to meet the
RCRA protectiveness standard.
EPA does not agree that intrawell
statistical analysis is per se prohibited
by the CCR regulations. The regulations
at § 257.93(f) and (g) establish the
allowable statistical approaches and the
performance standards that must be
met. There are some circumstances in
which intra-well comparison can meet
these requirements. Additional
information about these approaches may
be found in the Unified Guidance,
which EPA relied upon, as well as 40
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CFR 258, in crafting these regulations
(see 80 FR 21402). The Unified
Guidance at page 1–4 contains
procedures for both the intrawell and
interwell methods: ‘‘Groundwater
detection monitoring involves either a
comparison between different
monitoring stations (i.e., downgradient
compliance wells vs. upgradient wells)
or a contrast between past and present
data within a given station (i.e.,
intrawell comparisons).’’ The Unified
Guidance further identifies specific
circumstances in which intrawell
comparison may be the preferred
method, for example; evidence of spatial
variation should drive the selection of
an intrawell statistical approach if
observed among wells known to be
uncontaminated (e.g., among a group of
upgradient background locations) (page
5–6). The Unified Guidance says
intrawell comparison can also be used
when the groundwater flow gradient is
uncertain or unstable (page 8–3). EPA
has also found that unique
hydrogeological conditions at some sites
preclude meaningful interwell
comparison—for example where the
uppermost aquifer is spatially limited
and is absent upgradient of the CCR
unit. Therefore, simply using intrawell
analysis does not mean a facility is out
of compliance.
However, if a facility is using
intrawell analysis in an inappropriate
scenario, the facility would be out of
compliance with the CCR rule. For
example, see the Unified Guidance at
page 5–6: ‘‘Intrawell background
measurements should be selected from
the available historical samples at each
compliance well and should include
only those observations thought to be
uncontaminated.’’
EPA continues to believe that
requiring facilities to document
compliance with the subpart D of part
257 requirements is an important part of
the demonstration. Compliance with the
rule provides some guarantee that the
risks at the facility are properly
managed and adequately mitigated. For
example, if a facility has placed or
constructed groundwater monitoring
wells incorrectly it is quite possible that
contamination could go undetected. By
contrast, if a facility is properly
pursuing corrective action remedies and
their wells have been properly placed
and constructed, EPA expects the
overall risk at the facility will be
appropriately managed. Consequently,
this determination provides critical
support for a decision to allow
continued operation of the unlined
impoundment. This means that EPA
must be able to affirmatively conclude
that the facility meets this criterion
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53543
prior to authorizing any continued
operation of the unlined impoundment.
It also means that EPA cannot grant
facilities additional time to cure any
noncompliance. However, EPA’s
determination will be prospective only;
accordingly, EPA is only interested in
the state of a facility’s current
compliance rather than any instances of
historic non-compliance.
In response to commenters who
requested that EPA provide greater
specificity about what constitutes a
complete submission, EPA has revised
the proposal to identify specific
documents that facilities must provide
to demonstrate their current compliance
with the requirements of part 257. These
documents should already exist because
they are required to have been
developed under the existing
regulations.
First, EPA will review a facility’s
current compliance with the
requirements governing groundwater
monitoring systems. In order to conduct
this review, the Agency will need copies
of the following documents: (1) Map(s)
of groundwater monitoring well
locations (these maps should identify
the CCR units as well); (2) Well
construction diagrams and drilling logs
for all groundwater monitoring wells;
(3) Maps that characterize the direction
of groundwater flow accounting for
seasonal variation; (4) Constituent
concentrations, summarized in table
form, at each groundwater monitoring
well monitored during each sampling
event; and (5) Description of site
hydrogeology including stratigraphic
cross-sections.
Second, EPA will also require and
examine a facility’s corrective action
documentation, structural stability
documents and other pertinent
compliance information. A facility must
submit the following documentation:
The corrective measures assessment
required at § 257.96, progress reports on
remedy selection and design; the report
of final remedy selection required at
§ 257.97(a); the most recent structural
stability assessment required at
§ 257.73(d), and; the most recent safety
factor assessment required at
§ 257.73(e). EPA’s intention to review
these items was discussed in the
proposed rule when discussing the
types of information to be included in
the facility’s compliance strategy. See
FR 84 65955–56. EPA will document the
results of its review and that record will
be available for public comment with
the rest of the alternative closure
demonstration materials, consistent
with the procedures applicable to this
review discussed in unit V.C.5.
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Therefore, based on comments, EPA
has decided that the certification of
compliance and the requirement to
remain in compliance with the
regulations are necessary in this final
rule. This approach will prevent noncompliant unlined surface
impoundments from operating for an
extended period of time into the future.
Requiring that only compliant surface
impoundments can be approved for an
alternative closure deadline provides
additional support for EPA’s conclusion
that this final rule meeting the statutory
standard.
In light of the requirement to submit
the specific compliance documentation
noted above, EPA is not including the
proposed compliance narrative that was
proposed as the fourth line of evidence
for a demonstration, in the final rule.
The compliance certification and
documentation requirements are
represented in § 257.103(f)(1)(iv)(B). The
requirement to remain in compliance
with RCRA subpart D is represented in
§ 257.103(f)(1)(viii).
Workplan Criteria. EPA proposed
owner or operators submit a detailed
workplan explaining how alternative
capacity is being developed and the
amount of time required. EPA proposed
to require the submission of a workplan
that contains four elements: (1) A
narrative discussion of the steps and
process that remain necessary to
complete development of alternative
capacity for the wastestream(s); (2) a
visual timeline depicting the remaining
steps needed to obtain alternative
capacity; (3) a discussion of the timeline
and the processes that occur during
each step; and (4) a discussion of the
steps already taken to achieve
alternative capacity, including what
steps have been completed and what
steps remain. EPA sought comment on
whether the proposed elements of the
workplan were sufficient or if more
evidence was necessary in order for EPA
to determine the correct amount of time
the facility will need to obtain
alternative capacity.
EPA received several comments that
the proposed workplan elements should
provide EPA with ample information to
issue a decision on the extension
request. They further stated that the
information would allow EPA to
determine whether the demonstration
represented the shortest technically
feasible amount of time required for the
facility to cease receipt of the waste and
to complete the development of
alternative disposal capacity.
EPA agrees with the commenters that
the elements proposed in the workplan
provide the necessary information and
are sufficient for its intended purpose.
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Therefore, EPA is finalizing the
proposed workplan elements without
revision from the proposal at
§ 257.103(f)(1)(iv)(A).
Workplan Documentation
As previously mentioned, EPA
proposed the workplan containing four
sections. Below is a detailed discussion
of what EPA proposed for each section
to contain.
Section One: The narrative discussion
of the workplan was designed to explain
precisely how alternative capacity will
be developed, along with an explanation
as to why that method was chosen. EPA
has not required the owner or operator
to choose any particular means of
obtaining alternative capacity, such as
building a new disposal unit,
construction of a wastewater treatment
facility, converting to dry handling, etc.
However, EPA is requiring that the
narrative describe each option that was
considered, the timeframe under which
each could be implemented, and why
the facility selected the option that it
did. The discussion must include an indepth analysis of the site and any sitespecific conditions that led to the
decision to implement the selected
alternative capacity. Inclusion of visuals
such as a facility map, facility process
flow diagram, the design of the new
capacity, etc. would be beneficial to any
discussion on the new capacity and of
the facility as a whole. The narrative
must also provide a detailed
explanation and justification for the
amount of time being requested and
how it is the fastest feasible time to
complete the development of the
alternative capacity.
Section Two: The second section of
the workplan is a visual timeline, such
as a Gantt chart, depicting the necessary
steps required to obtain the alternative
capacity discussed in the narrative. The
visual timeline must clearly indicate
how each phase and the steps within
that phase interact with or are
dependent on each other and the other
phases. It must also include any
possible overlap of the steps and phases
that can be completed concurrently.
This timeline must show the total time
needed to obtain the alternative capacity
and how long each phase and step is
expected to take. Such phases must at
a minimum include: Engineering and
design, contractor selection, equipment
fabrication and delivery, construction,
and start up and implementation.
Within each phase, the time to complete
each step must also be broken out. For
example, if the engineering and design
phase is 4 months, the following steps
to complete the phase should be shown:
Site selection and survey, design of the
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impoundment, process flow diagram
edits, and piping design then the time
each of those steps take should be
represented on the timeline. This level
of detail is expected for each phase and
each step of each phase in obtaining the
alternative capacity. The timeline also
acts as a visual assistant to the third
section of the work plan, a narrative of
the timeline.
Section Three: The third section for
the workplan is a detailed narrative of
the schedule and the timeline
discussing all the necessary phases and
steps in the workplan, in addition to the
overall timeframe that will be required
to obtain capacity and cease receipt of
waste. This section of the workplan
must discuss why the length of time for
each phase and step is needed,
including a discussion of the tasks that
occur during the specific stage of
obtaining alternative capacity. It must
also discuss the tasks that occur during
each of the steps within the phase. For
example, rather than simply stating an
individual step as ‘‘order and
fabrication of impoundment liner,’’ this
section is required to explain what
material must be ordered, where the
fabrication takes place, and how long it
takes to fabricate and deliver the new
liner material. The workplan must
explain why each phase and step shown
on the chart must happen in the order
it is occurring and include a
justification for the overall length of the
phase. Other major discussion items
required on the overall time of the
schedule include anticipated worker
schedule, and any anticipated areas for
which the schedule could slip. The
anticipated areas of delays could
include items outside of the facility’s
control, such as severe weather events
or delays in fabrication of materials. For
example, if the facility is commonly
impacted by hurricanes or flooding, the
discussion should indicate what
month(s) of the schedule that is most
likely to disrupt. The schedule must
also indicate the time limiting factors in
completing the plan, such as having to
take boilers off-line or if a certain step
can only happen during a specific time
of year. This overall discussion of the
schedule assists EPA in understanding
why the time requested is accurate.
Section Four: The fourth section of
the workplan contains a narrative of the
steps the facility has already taken to
initiate closure and develop alternative
capacity for CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams. This section must discuss
all of the steps taken, starting from
when the owner or operator initiated the
design phase all the way up to the
current steps occurring while the
workplan is being drafted. In addition,
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this discussion must indicate where the
facility currently is on the timeline and
the processes that are currently being
undertaken at the facility to develop
alternative capacity. This section of the
workplan and the level of detail
required is necessary for EPA to
determine whether the submitted
schedule for obtaining alternative
capacity is accurate.
Comments on workplan
documentation requirements. EPA
received several comments from utilities
stating concerns that the level of detail
proposed to be included in the
workplan is unnecessary and in some
areas excessive. Some utilities viewed
the workplan as overly burdensome and
some parts as unnecessary. Some
commenters found the proposed
narrative discussion of the workplan
invasive of the utility’s decision-making
process. They further commented that
EPA should respect the facility’s
business decisions and that this
information could show that the facility
is taking cost into consideration. The
commenters stated that the discussion
should focus on how the facility
selected the most appropriate
technically feasible alternative capacity
for the site, even though it may not be
theoretically the fastest feasible to
implement. They stated that the work
plan should only focus on the
engineering and construction elements
of obtaining alternative capacity rather
than being concerned with reasons for
why the capacity was selected. These
commenters additionally stated that this
type of discussion and many of the work
plan elements would contain
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
related to why a particular approach for
developing alternative capacity was
selected and therefore requested the
opportunity to be able designate and
withhold the CBI from the posting on
their publicly accessible CCR internet
site.
EPA disagrees with the comments that
the workplan requirements are invasive
of the utility’s decision-making process
and should only focus on engineering
and construction. While the workplan
should provide engineering and
construction information to explain how
long the alternative capacity will take to
develop; it is equally important for EPA
to understand why that method of
alternative capacity was selected. EPA
recognizes there are several factors that
go into selecting the method for
alternative capacity, and that the
decision is not solely based on whether
the method is theoretically the fastest
feasible to implement. Many of those
factors are based on what can be
technically implemented based on site-
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specific conditions at the facility, and
how the facility plans on maintaining
compliance with various state and
federal regulations. These are the factors
the facility should focus on in their
discussion. EPA understands that not
every method of alternative capacity is
a viable option for a given facility, but
the facility will need to explain to EPA
how and what site-specific factors
affected the selection of the option
chosen, or that led the facility to
eliminate particular options from
consideration. Accordingly, EPA
continues to believe that these workplan
elements are necessary in order to fully
understand the effort to obtain
alternative capacity and maintain
compliance for the facility as a whole.
EPA understands that some of the
pieces of the workplan may be
considered CBI. However, utilities must
have a CBI free version of the workplan
that they are able to post to their
publicly accessible CCR internet site
and to be put out for public comment.
EPA has revised the regulations to
specify that when a workplan contains
some CBI, utilities must submit both the
CBI-free version of the workplan and a
full version of the workplan that
contains the CBI. All information
submitted to EPA pursuant to the
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for which a claim of
confidentiality is made is safeguarded
according to Agency policies set forth in
40 CFR part 2, subpart B.
For the reasons described above, EPA
is finalizing the requirements on the
workplan as described above with
minor clarifying modifications. As
previously discussed, EPA is
incorporating the documentation
requirements for the lack of alternative
capacity on or off-site and the need to
continue using the CCR surface
impoundment into section one of the
workplan. Thus, the first section of the
workplan must include the discussion
on the lack of alternative capacity on or
off-site for each wastestream, the
technical infeasibility of alternative
capacity being available prior to April
11, 2021, as well as the narrative
discussed above in section one (the
discussion of how the alternative
capacity will be developed and the
discussion of how the capacity was
selected).
The other change that EPA is making
from proposed to final is in section
three, the narrative discussion of the
timeline. EPA will not require the
inclusion of anticipated areas of where
the schedule could slip. EPA is not
taking final action on this requirement
because it is not critical information for
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53545
EPA to evaluate and issue a
determination on the demonstration.
The workplan documentation
requirements are at
§ 257.103(f)(1)(iv)(A).
Maximum Time Allowed. EPA
proposed that a maximum of 5 years
from the USWAG mandate could be
granted under this alternative closure
provision; therefore, no extension
would extend past October 15, 2023.
EPA selected 5 years in the proposal
since it is currently the time allowed
under § 257.103(a).
EPA received comments that
extensions should not be limited to
October 15, 2023. Commenters stated
that a maximum time is unnecessary
because the facility is required to submit
a workplan showing the time they need,
and EPA should accept that as the time
that is needed. Therefore, the
commenters asserted, establishing a
maximum amount of time sooner than
a facility demonstrates is technically
feasible requires the impossible. They
claimed that the data used in the rule
making record does not support limiting
the extension to no later than October
15, 2023 and is two years shorter than
the current deadline in §§ 257.103(a)
and (b) of October 31, 2025.
Commenters stated that if EPA does
establish a maximum amount of time,
then EPA should establish the time that
is currently allowed which is October
31, 2025.
Environmental groups stated that the
maximum amount of time, until October
15, 2023, is not protective of human
health and the environment because it
delays the closure of the CCR surface
impoundments.
EPA disagrees with these
commenters. EPA believes there should
be a maximum amount of time for the
alternative closure provision, if only to
ensure that facilities understand that
operation of the unit may not continue
indefinitely. With one exception, EPA
believes that the proposed date of
October 15, 2023 is a reasonable
deadline for all facilities to achieve.
EPA did not receive and does not have
any evidence that facilities will require
until October 2025 to complete
development of alternative capacity.
Accordingly, EPA does not believe
facilities need the same five-year
deadline in § 257.103(a). Additionally,
this deadline will encourage facilities to
move expeditiously.
EPA received several comments from
industry stakeholders stating that the
eligible unlined CCR surface
impoundments triggered into closure
due to the USWAG decision could need
more time than other unlined surface
impoundments to develop alternative
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capacity. Data submitted by several
owners and operators of eligible unlined
CCR surface impoundments showed
that the fastest they could cease receipt
of all wastes extends into 2024.
After reviewing these comments and
the data submitted by utility companies,
EPA agrees that it is possible that some
eligible unlined CCR surface
impoundments that were forced into
closure unexpectedly by the USWAG
decision could need additional time
beyond October 15, 2023 to complete
the development of alternative capacity.
Therefore, in this final rule EPA is
providing that eligible unlined CCR
surface impoundments can request an
alternative compliance deadline no later
than October 15, 2024. This does not
mean that all eligible unlined CCR
surface impoundments can continue to
operate until October 15, 2024; each
unit must still cease receipt of waste as
soon as feasible, and may only have the
amount of time they can demonstrate is
genuinely necessary. A facility claiming
to have an eligible unlined CCR surface
impoundment and requesting time
beyond October 15, 2023 must
demonstrate that they were not forced
into closure for any reason other than
the USWAG decision. This maximum
timeframe is represented in
§ 257.103(f)(1)(vi).
Extensions of Alternative Compliance
Deadlines. EPA proposed to allow a
facility to request an extension to a
deadline approved under the sitespecific alternative under
§ 257.103(f)(1). If at any point a facility
becomes aware that they cannot meet
the approved alternative deadline, they
would need to notify EPA or the
Participating State Director as soon as
possible. Depending on the nature and
severity of the event, additional time
may be granted provided it would not
extend past October 15, 2023. EPA
proposed that the facility must submit
updated demonstration materials to EPA
or the Participating State Director with
a detailed discussion of why an
extension is necessary. The owner or
operator must also discuss the measures
taken to limit the additional amount of
time needed. An explanation of any
problems that caused this delay would
be further discussed in the semi-annual
progress report as described in the next
section.
EPA received no comments regarding
this provision in the proposal.
Therefore, EPA is finalizing this
provision without substantive revision.
EPA will not grant an extension longer
than the maximum amount of time
allowed either October 15, 2023 or
October 15, 2024. This provision is
represented in § 257.103(f)(1)(vii).
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(b) Semi-Annual Progress Report
To provide transparency to the public,
EPA proposed to require posting of
semi-annual progress reports on the
facility’s publicly accessible CCR
internet site. The proposed reports
would contain two main sections: (1)
Discussion on progress toward obtaining
alternative capacity and (2) discussion
of any planned operational changes at
the facility. EPA believed that since
these units could be operating and
receiving waste for a few additional
years, it would be important to keep
EPA and the public aware of the
facility’s progress on obtaining
alternative capacity and if facilities are
on track to meet their new alternative
compliance deadline. Currently in
§ 257.103(c) there is the requirement for
annual progress reports for the units
that have certified for alternative
deadlines under § 257.103(a) and (b).
EPA believed that for the site-specific
alternative deadline, semi-annual rather
than annual progress reports are more
appropriate. The time allowed under
this new alternative closure provision,
will vary site to site and could be
shorter than the deadline alternative
granted for § 257.103(a) and (b).
Therefore, EPA proposed a new semiannual progress report requirement for
the units that successfully demonstrate
and are approved for the site-specific
alternative to cease receipt of waste
deadline.
EPA proposed for the semi-annual
progress report to heavily rely on the
workplan and the timeline submitted
with the workplan. The first section of
the report would discuss the progress
the facility has made since the previous
report or since approval of the
alternative compliance deadline if it is
the first report. It would be required to
discuss the following: (1) The current
stage of obtaining alternative capacity in
reference to the timeline required in the
workplan; (2) whether the owner or
operator is on schedule for obtaining
alternative capacity; (3) any problems
encountered and a description of the
actions taken to resolve the problems;
and (4) the goals and major milestones
to be achieved for the next 6 months.
EPA proposed the second section of
the progress reports would discuss any
planned operational changes at the
facility. It is possible while the facility
is working to achieve alternative
capacity, a decision is made to either
permanently shut down the plant or
switch to an alternate fuel source such
as natural gas or biomass. Any such
decisions or other changes that could
impact the schedule or closure would be
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indicated in this section of the semiannual progress report.
EPA proposed that the semi-annual
reports be completed and placed in the
facility’s operating record and posted on
the facility’s publicly accessible CCR
internet site on April 1st and October
1st of each year until the alternative
compliance deadline. The first report
would be due on whichever posting
deadline is soonest after approval of the
alternative compliance deadline by
EPA.
EPA sought comment regarding
whether a facility that is fully on
schedule or ahead of schedule with
their approved timeline and had no
significant problems or changes in
operational status, should be afforded a
relaxation of the reporting requirements
in the first two subsections of the first
section. This would allow a report for a
facility on schedule or ahead of
schedule to be significantly more
condensed than the full reporting
requirements.
EPA received comments from
industry stating that facilities should be
focusing on obtaining alternative
capacity rather than completing
progress reports. Furthermore, they
support that if a facility is on or ahead
of schedule for developing alternative
capacity, they should be able to
complete a condensed version of the
semi-annual progress reports. Industry
additionally commented that the
progress reports should be annual for
facilities with an alternative deadline
longer than two years past the deadlines
in § 257.101(a) and (b). Industry groups
additionally commented that they do
not oppose the semi-annual submission
dates of April 1 and October 1, with the
first submission being due on whichever
posting deadline is soonest after
approval of the alternative compliance
deadline. However, they did indicate
that a facility should not have to
complete a report until they have a
minimum of six months of progress
from approval to report.
EPA agrees with the commenters that
facilities should be focusing on
obtaining alternative capacity. However,
it is also important to update EPA or the
Participating State Director on their
progress for obtaining alternative
capacity. EPA disagrees that the
progress reports should be annual for
the facilities with a longer alternative
deadline. Facilities with a longer
deadline have more progress to make
and therefore may have a greater change
of experiencing delays. Frequent
progress reports are all the more useful
in these circumstances. EPA further
agrees that it is important that the first
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report be properly timed so that the
facility has progress to report.
EPA received comments from
environmental groups supporting the
progress reports. They commented that
there should be the additional
requirement of certifying the facility is
in compliance with all other aspects of
the CCR rule in each progress report.
EPA has decided that additional
certifications of compliance would not
provide any added benefit. The final
rule already requires the facility to
remain in compliance with all the
requirements of this subpart as a
condition of the extension, and
expressly provides that failure to do so
will result in automatic revocation of
the extension. Moreover, as previously
discussed, EPA is requiring a more indepth compliance certification in the
demonstration in order to obtain
approval. Finally, under the existing
regulations the facility is required to
post several items throughout the year
including the annual groundwater
monitoring and corrective action report,
notifications for changes in groundwater
monitoring, and semiannual reports on
selection of remedy. EPA considers that
the combination of all these
requirements is more than sufficient to
ensure a facility remains in compliance
without the need for a further
certification.
After reviewing the public comments
EPA believes it is important to maintain
public transparency and for facilities to
focus on completing the development of
alternative disposal capacity. Therefore,
EPA is finalizing the requirement for
progress reports to be completed on a
semi-annual basis and to allow those
facilities that are on or ahead of
schedule to complete a condensed
progress report. As such EPA is
finalizing the semi-annual progress
report requirements with only the
revision that facilities on or ahead of
schedule may complete a condensed
and more streamlined progress report.
Facilities on or ahead of schedule, in
relation to their approved timeline, will
need to complete only the first two
subsections within the first section.
Therefore, the first section of the reports
will only need to contain: (1) The
current stage of obtaining alternative
capacity in reference to the timeline
required in the workplan; (2) whether
the owner or operator is on schedule for
obtaining alternative capacity.
All facilities must still complete the
second section of the progress reports,
discussing any planned operational
changes of the facility. If there is
nothing for the facility to report in this
section, then the facility should simply
state ‘‘No planned operational changes’’.
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The semi-annual progress reports are
to be completed on April 30 and
October 31 of each year for the duration
of the approved alternative initiation of
closure deadline. EPA has selected these
months because they correlate to when
the facility was supposed to cease
receipt of waste. Therefore, the facility
should have at least six months of
progress to report since applying for an
alternative compliance deadline. The
facility then has 30 days to place the
report in their operating record and to
their publicly accessible CCR internet
site. The requirements for the semiannual progress reports are shown in
§ 257.103(f)(1)(x).
4. Requirements for Permanent
Cessation of Coal-Fired Boiler(s) by a
Date Certain (§ 257.103(f)(2))
In the December 2, 2019 proposal EPA
proposed to adopt a comparable version
of § 257.103(b). This proposed provision
allows facilities permanently ceasing
operation of coal-fired boiler(s) to
continue to receive both CCR and/or
non-CCR wastestreams, upon a showing
of a continued need to use the surface
impoundment due to lack of capacity.
Consistent with the existing provision
§ 257.103(b), EPA proposed to provide
that an increase in costs or the
inconvenience of existing capacity
would not support qualification under
this section. A further requirement EPA
proposed, that is not in § 257.103(b), is
a risk mitigation plan, in which the
owner or operator would describe how
the facility planned to mitigate any
potential risks from the continued
operation of the CCR surface
impoundment. This proposal would
have allowed the unit to continue
receiving CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams, provided the facility
completed closure of the unit by the
dates specified: October 17, 2023 or
October 17, 2028 for surface
impoundments 40 acres and smaller or
more than 40 acres, respectively. In
contrast to the provision under
§ 257.103(f)(1), the owner or operator
does not need to develop alternative
capacity because of the impending
closure of the coal-fired boiler. Since the
coal-fired boiler will shortly cease
power generation, it would be illogical
to require these facilities to construct
new capacity to manage CCR and nonCCR wastestreams. Additionally, the
groundwater monitoring and corrective
action requirements remain in place.
EPA proposed that facilities would need
to submit a demonstration to EPA or the
Participating State Director for approval.
The majority of the proposed
demonstration requirements are
generally the same as are currently
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required under § 257.103(b), including
the annual progress report and other
recordkeeping requirements. The
demonstration and criteria are described
below.
EPA received comments requesting
clarification on whether a facility could
use the provision if they are converting
their boilers to natural gas or a different
fuel source. EPA believes facilities that
are converting their boilers to natural
gas or a different fuel source (non-coal)
are eligible for the provision.
(a) Criteria and Documentation
EPA proposed that in order to obtain
the § 257.103(f)(2) extension, the owner
or operator needs to meet and maintain
all of the following criteria: (1) That no
alternative disposal capacity is available
on or off-site, (2) the facility must
submit a risk mitigation plan to show
that potential risks to human health and
the environment from the continued
operation of the CCR surface
impoundment have been adequately
mitigated, (3) the facility is in
compliance with all other requirements
of this subpart and, (4) closure of the
impoundment will be completed within
the dates specified: October 17, 2023 or
October 17, 2028 for surface
impoundments 40 acres or smaller or
more than 40 acres, respectively. As
discussed in more detail below, EPA is
adopting the same criteria in the final
rule without significant revision.
Further discussion on each criterion is
below.
No alternative capacity on or off-site.
The first line of evidence EPA proposed
is the same that was required in
§ 257.103(b) and § 257.103(f)(1). The
owner or operator must demonstrate the
lack of alternative capacity available on
or off-site.
EPA received no substantive
comments on the inclusion of this
requirement. Therefore, EPA has
included this provision in the final rule
without revision.
Documentation requirements of no
alternative capacity on or off-site. The
first demonstration requirement is to
show that the facility does not have any
other disposal capacity available either
on or off-site. Consistent with the
proposal, the fact that a potential
alternative result in an increase in cost
or inconvenience is not sufficient to
meet this requirement. This requirement
is the same as the requirement as
described previously for the
demonstration requirements in
§ 257.103(f)(1). This documentation
requirement is represented in
§ 257.103(f)(2)(v)(A).
Risk mitigation plan. The second line
of evidence EPA proposed to include in
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this demonstration was a risk mitigation
plan. This proposed requirement was
not previously required under
§ 257.103(b). EPA added this
requirement in the proposal to address
the potential risks of continued
operation of the CCR surface
impoundment while the facility moves
towards closure of their coal-fired
boiler(s), to be consistent with the
court’s holding in USWAG that RCRA
requires EPA to set minimum criteria for
sanitary landfills that prevent harm to
either human health or the
environment. 42 U.S.C. 6944(a). 901
F.3d at 430.
EPA received comments stating that
the provision violates RCRA because it
relies on owners and operators to
submit a risk mitigation plan. They
explained that this requirement violates
the RCRA protectiveness standard
because it acknowledges that there is
risk present from the unit and RCRA is
structured to prevent risk. Therefore, a
risk mitigation plan admits that there is
risk to human health and the
environment and makes the unit an
open dump.
EPA disagrees with the suggestion
that reliance on the submission of a risk
mitigation plan violates RCRA. Contrary
to the commenter’s view, section
4004(a) does not require the elimination
of all risk. Rather the provision
expressly contemplates the potential for
there to be some risk, requiring EPA to
determine there ‘‘is no reasonable
probability of adverse effects.’’ 42 U.S.C.
6944(a). Or in other words, EPA must
determine that the facility’s solid waste
management present only reasonable
risks, which EPA has long interpreted to
be risks ranging from 1 × 10¥4 and 1 ×
10¥6. Submission of the plan as part of
the package for EPA approval will allow
the agency to ensure that risks at the
facility remain within these acceptable
levels.
Some groups commented that
facilities should not be required to
submit a risk mitigation plan for
approval in their demonstration,
especially for the surface
impoundments closing due to the
USWAG decision. They believe that
eligible unlined CCR surface
impoundments do not pose a potential
risk to human health or the environment
and should not be required to prepare
a plan to mitigate potential risks that do
not exist. They view this requirement as
an unnecessary paperwork burden.
EPA disagrees that the risk mitigation
plan is unnecessary, even for units
closing in response to the USWAG
decision. Although it is true these units
may not be currently leaking, that
means only that they are not currently
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causing harm. But that does not mean
that they do not pose any risk nor that
continued operation of the unit
necessarily meets the section 4004(a)
standard. See, 901 F.3d at 427–430. As
the court noted, ‘‘It is inadequate under
RCRA for the EPA to conclude that a
major category of impoundments that
the Agency’s own data show are prone
to leak pose ‘no reasonable probability
of adverse effects on health or the
environment,’ 42 U.S.C. 6944(a), simply
because they do not already leak.’’ Id.
The risk mitigation plan will provide
critical information to address the risks
of continued operation of the unit, prior
to the initiation of unit closure. This
will provide a significant supplement to
the Agency’s qualitative assessment that
the risks of continued operation will be
outweighed by the risk mitigation from
the expedited closure of the unit.
For example, for units that are not
leaking the facility could begin
identification of remedial technologies
that would potentially be appropriate
based on site data, including
groundwater chemistry, groundwater
elevation and flow rates, and the
presence of surface water features that
would influence rate and direction of
contamination movement in the event of
a leak. Gathering this information and
beginning an assessment of technology
options if a leak should occur will
expedite any corrective action that
subsequently becomes necessary. The
plan could also address any interim
measures that the facility would take to
remediate contamination or to achieve
source control in the event of a leak,
which was one issue that the court
faulted EPA for failing to adequately
consider. By expediting the cleanup,
EPA will also ensure that facility
addresses the risk during the expedited
closure.
EPA has concluded that the risk
mitigation plan is a necessary
requirement for this demonstration.
Therefore, EPA is finalizing that
facilities will be required to submit a
risk mitigation plan as part of their
demonstration.
Risk mitigation plan documentation.
EPA proposed that the risk mitigation
plan explain actions the facility may
take to mitigate any potential risks to
human health or the environment from
the CCR surface impoundment. EPA
also sought comment on whether the
owner or operator should be required to
submit a more in-depth site-specific risk
assessment of the CCR surface
impoundment as part of their plan to
mitigate the risk from continued
operation of the unit.
EPA received comments from
industry groups that they view the
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information requested to be included in
the plan redundant of information
required in other reports and therefore
find the risk mitigation plan as an
unnecessary paperwork burden. They
contend that all the information
requested is already being compiled by
the facility in other reports, so it is
readily available on the publicly
accessible CCR internet sites and
additionally must demonstrate that the
facility is in compliance with the other
parts of the CCR rule. Therefore, the
commenter finds this requirement
redundant. These groups commented
further stating that if EPA decides to
finalize the risk mitigation plan, the
suggested requirements for the risk
mitigation plan are sufficient and a
more in-depth risk analysis is not
necessary.
EPA also received comments from the
National Ground Water Association on
what should be included in the risk
mitigation plan. They provided a list of
12 items that they viewed as important
to include in the plan. EPA found that
all of the suggested items from the
National Ground Water Association
were already included in the items
proposed or in other reports required by
the CCR rule.
EPA disagrees that this plan is merely
an unnecessary paperwork burden for
the reasons discussed previously.
Facilities in full compliance with all
aspects of the regulations that have not
initiated corrective action can still
develop a plan that will expedite the
implementation of corrective action, in
the event it become necessary. EPA
considers this to provide a substantial
complement to the record supporting
continued operation of the unit.
In response to the comments,
requesting greater specificity about what
would constitute an adequate
submission, the final rule requires that
the risk mitigation plan include three
pieces of information. First, a discussion
of any physical or chemical measures a
facility can take to limit any future
releases to groundwater during
operation. This might include
stabilization of waste prior to
disposition in the impoundment or
adjusting the pH of the impoundment
waters to minimize solubility of
contaminants. This discussion should
take into account the potential impacts
of these measures on Appendix IV
constituents.
Second, a discussion of the surface
impoundment’s groundwater
monitoring data and any found
exceedances; the delineation of the
plume (if necessary based on the
groundwater monitoring data);
identification of any nearby receptors
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that might be exposed, to current or
future groundwater contamination; and
how such exposures could be promptly
mitigated.
And finally, a plan to expedite and
maintain the containment of any
contaminant plume that is either
present or identified during continued
operation of the unit. The purpose of
this plan is to demonstrate that a plume
can be fully contained and to define
how this could be accomplished in the
most accelerated timeframe feasible to
prevent further spread and eliminate
any potential for exposures. This plan
will be based on relevant site data,
which may include groundwater
chemistry, the variability of local
hydrogeology, groundwater elevation
and flow rates, and the presence of any
surface water features that would
influence rate and direction of
contamination movement. For example,
based on the rate and direction of
groundwater flow and potential for
diffusion of the plume, this plan could
identify the design and spacing of
extraction wells necessary to prevent
further downgradient migration of
contaminated groundwater.
If additional mitigation measures are
necessary to ensure the statutory
standard is met, EPA will require those
as a condition of granting the extension.
The risk mitigation plan documentation
requirement is at § 257.103(f)(2)(v)(B).
Compliance certification and
narrative. EPA proposed that the owner
or operator must certify that it remains
in compliance with all other
requirements of this subpart including
corrective action. EPA is finalizing the
same compliance certification and
documentation as that in § 257.103(f)(1).
The compliance documentation
requirement is at § 257.103(f)(2)(v)(C).
The requirement to remain in
compliance with subpart D is
represented in § 257.103(f)(2)(vi).
Maximum time to complete closure.
EPA proposed that the facility must
complete closure of the CCR surface
impoundment, and the coal-fired boiler
must cease operation no later than
October 17, 2023 for surface
impoundments 40 acres or smaller and
October 17, 2028 for surface
impoundments larger than 40 acres.
These are the same deadlines as
required in § 257.103(b).
EPA received comments from
environmental groups stating that since
EPA does not establish a set deadline for
these units to cease receipt of waste and
initiate closure the provision is
unlawful. Some further elaborated that
this provision would delay the initiation
and completion of closure of these units
for several years. These commenters
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further stated that developing
alternative disposal capacity is not as
complex as the proposed rule made it
seem and believe that it is possible for
facilities to obtain alternative capacity
in a few weeks and therefore cease
receipt of waste much earlier. The
commenters additionally stated that
EPA did not provide rationale for why
this provision is protective of human
health and the environment.
Industry groups commented that this
provision provides important
environmental benefits by requiring
closure far earlier than would be
otherwise required. They agree that the
expedited closure of these units
addresses the USWAG court decision by
addressing the potential risks from
unlined CCR surface impoundments
during closure. A few utility companies
commented that the deadlines for
closure should not depend on the size
of the CCR surface impoundment.
Rather all CCR surface impoundments
should be eligible for the October 2028
deadline. They also explained that
having the size distinction has no
environmental benefit because it forces
facilities to develop new disposal
capacity. They acknowledged EPA’s
rationale that smaller surface
impoundments are able to close faster
but contended that smaller surface
impoundments represent smaller risk.
One utility company stated that the CCR
surface impoundment may be less than
40 acres, but the site has unique
characteristics that makes closure more
complex and the surface impoundment
is of unusual shape causing the closure
time to be just as long as a larger surface
impoundment. Another utility company
commented that if a facility had
multiple surface impoundments under
40 acres, they should be able to
aggregate the acreage of the surface
impoundments to qualify for the later
deadline of 2028. One other utility
commented that the deadlines should be
delayed a few years because the original
deadlines were established in 2015 for
§ 257.103(b), therefore there was more
time to complete closure under the
original provision. One other utility
commented that it is possible that they
may be directed to cease their coal fired
boiler in 2023 or 2024 which would
make the alternative closure provision
unusable for them.
Several commenters misunderstood
EPA’s proposal and commented that
this provision significantly delays
closure by allowing facilities to operate
their CCR surface impoundments until
2028. The proposed regulation does not
authorize continued operation until
2023 or 2028; rather it requires the
completion of closure by those dates.
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These represent substantially more
expedited time frames to complete
closure of the unit, and in order to meet
those timeframes facilities will need to
stop receiving waste into the unit much
sooner than those dates. In order to meet
these timeframes, EPA expects that
many facilities closing pursuant to this
provision will need to cease receiving
CCR and non-CCR wastestreams sooner
than they would under the maximum
amount of time in the site-specific
alternative closure provision in
§ 257.103(f)(1). Consequently, the
overall risk will be lower. As a
consequence, EPA decided that it was
not necessary to specify a particular
deadline by which facilities must cease
receiving waste into the unit. As a
practical matter the length of time the
unit can continue to operate will
necessarily be limited by the amount of
time needed to ensure that all closure
activities are completed by the deadline.
Instead the provision provides facilities
with the flexibility to determine
precisely when they will need to stop
operation in order to achieve expedited
closure deadlines.
EPA is not modifying the proposed
closure deadlines to allow the extended
operation of units 40 acres and smaller.
As explained in the proposed rule, EPA
relied upon a risk-risk tradeoff to
support this provision. Specifically,
EPA acknowledged there could be
greater risk in the short term because
this provision allows a longer period for
unlined impoundments to operate;
however, over the long-term EPA
estimated that the risks would be lower
because the final closure of the unit will
be expedited. Under the commenters’
suggested approaches there is nothing
against which to balance the risks from
the extended operation of the unit. The
commenters provided no data to
support their contentions or on which
EPA could rely to model the risks
associated with allowing impoundments
less than 40 acres to continue to operate
for the amount of time they are
proposing. EPA proposed multiple
options for facilities to address the
variety of circumstances presented by
these kinds of sites. Not all of them will
be appropriate for every site. This
provision was designed to address a
very specific set of circumstances in
which a facility knows it will be closing
by a date certain and as a consequence
can expedite its closure of the unit.
Finally, EPA disagrees that there would
be no environmental benefit in the
provision as structured. There is a
significant environmental benefit in
requiring the expedited closure of
unlined surface impoundments, and in
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requiring facilities to expedite corrective
action. As the record from the 2015 rule
and the results of the groundwater
monitoring data from numerous
facilities demonstrate, operation of these
units presents significant risks.
The commenters did not provide a
compelling argument for changing the
deadlines from the proposal. Therefore,
EPA is finalizing the deadlines as
proposed.
Maximum Time Documentation. EPA
did not receive substantive comments
on the documentation necessary to
demonstrate that the deadlines will be
met. EPA is finalizing that in the
demonstration submitted for approval
the facility will need to specify and
justify the date by which they intend to
cease receipt of waste into the unit. If
the amount of time the facility is
seeking to operate the unit is
disproportionate to the amount of time
needed for closure of the unit, such that
it appears unlikely the facility could
meet the closure deadlines, EPA will
deny the request. Additionally, facilities
are required to amend their closure plan
whenever there is a change in the
operation of the CCR unit that would
substantially affect the written closure
plan or before or after closure actives
have commenced as required by
§ 257.102(b)(3). As such, a facility
should update their closure plan when
applying for this extension. The
documentation requirements for
meeting the time requirements are
represented § 257.103(f)(2)(iv)(D)
(b) Annual Closure Progress Reports
EPA proposed maintaining the annual
progress report requirement that is
currently required under § 257.103(b).
EPA proposed that the owner or
operator must prepare an annual
progress report documenting the
continued lack of alternative capacity
and the progress towards the closure of
the CCR surface impoundment.
EPA received no substantive
comments concerning this requirement
in the documentation for a site-specific
alternative for cessation of coal-fired
boiler(s).
EPA concluded from the lack of
comments, to finalize the requirement.
Therefore, owners or operators must
prepare and place an annual progress
report documenting the continued lack
of alternative capacity and the progress
towards the closure of the CCR surface
impoundment. This progress report
must include any delays in the
anticipated cease receipt of waste date
and closure completion date that was
submitted in the demonstration
materials. This requirement is found in
§ 257.103(f)(2)(x) of the regulation.
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5. Procedures for Approval and Denial
of Alternative Compliance Deadlines
EPA proposed to require that the
demonstrations for an alternative
compliance deadline under
§ 257.103(f)(1) (‘‘development of
alternative capacity infeasible’’) or
under § 257.103(f)(2) (‘‘permanent
cessation of coal-fired boiler(s) by a date
certain’’) be submitted to EPA or the
Participating State Director for approval
no later than two months prior to the
facility’s deadline to cease receiving
waste. EPA believed that two months
should normally provide sufficient time
for EPA to evaluate the request and
complete its review process. Although
two months prior to the current
deadline is the latest date to submit a
request, EPA encouraged submissions at
the earliest point at which the facility
knows further time to complete its
arrangements is needed.
EPA proposed that upon receiving the
demonstration for an alternative
compliance deadline, EPA or the
Participating State Director would
evaluate the demonstration and could
ask for additional information to
complete its review and/or discuss the
demonstration with the facility.
Submission of a complete
demonstration would toll the facility’s
deadline to cease receipt of waste until
issuance of a final decision. This
ensures that a facility that has submitted
a package in good faith would not be
penalized by any inadvertent
administrative delays. However, EPA
proposed that incomplete submissions
would not toll the facility’s deadline.
EPA proposed that when the owner or
operator submits the demonstration to
EPA or the Participating State Director
for approval, the owner or operator must
prepare and place into the facility’s
operating record and on their publicly
accessible CCR internet site a
notification that the facility has applied
for a site-specific alternative deadline to
cease receipt of waste. EPA would then
post a proposed decision to grant or
deny the request in whole or in part on
EPA’s website for public notice and
comment. EPA proposed that the public
will have 15 days to comment on the
proposed decision. If the demonstration
is particularly complex, EPA would
provide a longer comment period of 20
to 30 days. EPA proposed that it would
evaluate the comments, amend its
decision if appropriate, and post the
final decision on the demonstrations on
EPA’s website. EPA proposed that the
agency would finalize the decision on
the alternative compliance deadline no
later than 4 months after receiving a
complete demonstration. If no
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substantive comments are received on a
proposed decision, EPA proposed that it
would become effective 5 days from the
close of the comment period.
Alternatively, EPA proposed that if a
facility develops or identifies the
necessary alternative capacity prior to
approval from EPA, then the facility
should notify EPA and withdraw their
demonstration. Lastly, EPA proposed
that the facility must post an approved
or denied demonstration and the
alternative compliance deadline
decision on the facility’s publicly
accessible CCR internet site. EPA sought
comment on whether a Participating
State Director (i.e., a state director with
an approved State CCR Permit Program)
should also have the authority to grant
approvals.
EPA received numerous comments on
the time frames in the proposed process.
Some commenters stated that the
proposed demonstration deadlines of
May 15, 2020 for the cessation of boiler
alternative and June 30, 2020 for the
lack of alternative capacity are
unreasonable. Specifically, these
commenters were concerned that as a
final rule will not be issued before May
2020 it will be impossible to comply
with the May 15, 2020 deadline. They
further stated that there should be an
option for submitting the
demonstrations for the cessation of
boiler alternative later and not on a set
date. A facility may not know they will
be shutting down their coal fired boilers
until later but will still be able to meet
the compliance deadlines in the
proposed provision for that alternative.
They further stated that it will take
facilities three months to successfully
compile all the required elements for
the demonstration. Therefore, the
commenters believe that EPA needs to
factor in this three-month timeframe
prior to the deadline to submit the
demonstrations to EPA (which was
proposed to be two months prior to the
deadline to cease receipt of waste). They
additionally state that facilities should
be able to switch between the two
alternative deadline extensions. A
facility should be able to submit an
initial demonstration and receive
approval for an extension under lack of
capacity and then at a later date should
be able to submit a demonstration and
switch to a cessation of boiler extension
if it is shutting down its coal-fired
boilers and can achieve the deadlines.
Additionally, it should be able to switch
from a cessation of boiler extension to
a lack of capacity demonstration if it is
no longer going to be shutting down
their boilers. These commenters also
stated that the demonstration
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submission deadlines should be flexible
enough to allow facilities to transition
between the extensions provided in
§ 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2).
EPA also received comments on the
tolling of the deadline to cease receipt
of waste while the demonstration for an
alternative deadline is under review. All
commenters supported the proposal that
tolling of the deadline only occurs after
a demonstration is determined to be
complete. However, some commenters
requested that EPA revise the proposed
regulatory text to clearly provide what
will constitute a complete
demonstration to avoid any
misunderstandings. Several commenters
raised concern that, as the proposed
regulations were drafted, a facility could
get a free four-month extension during
the tolling of the deadline after a
complete demonstration is received.
According to these commenters, a
facility could submit a complete
demonstration despite having the ability
to cease receipt of waste and continue
to operate while it is being reviewed
because the demonstration completion
determination does not depend on
showing infeasibility.
Some commenters believe that the
proposed review period is overly
ambitious and requested that EPA
clarify that after four months and no
final determination is made, that the
deadline continues to toll for the
facility.
EPA also received comments on
issues relating to the situations in which
an extension request is denied by EPA.
Some commenters claimed that EPA did
not discuss what would occur if a
facility’s request was denied. These
commenters state that EPA needs to
establish a uniform timeframe for those
facilities whose complete demonstration
request is denied by EPA to cease
receipt of waste and initiate closure.
They explained that as the deadline for
this facility is tolling, it would be
unreasonable for EPA to expect that the
facility can immediately cease receipt of
waste. They believe that this timeframe
should not be less than six months as
that was the timeframe originally
established in the CCR rule.
Industry groups supported the
proposal that a Participating State
Director should have the authority to
grant extensions in an approved state
program.
Additionally, several groups
commented that the public comment
period on the demonstrations is too
short for the public to be able to review,
evaluate, and provide meaningful input
on the decision. These commenters also
raised concern that EPA fails to define
what it considers a substantive versus
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non-substantive comment and makes no
provision to consider comments
received after this 15-day window.
These commenters claimed that this
short period fails to provide 30-day
notice and does not give interested
parties sufficient time to consider EPA’s
decision, or to collect and submit
written data, views, or arguments, and
therefore violates RCRA and the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
EPA is adopting procedures that
largely track the procedures laid out in
the proposed rule.
(a) Deadline for Submissions
Demonstrations for an alternative
compliance deadline under
§ 257.103(f)(1) (development of
alternative capacity infeasible) must be
submitted to EPA for approval no later
than November 30, 2020. This deadline
should provide EPA with sufficient time
to review the submission and determine
whether it is complete prior to the April
11, 2021 deadline to cease receipt of
waste. Moreover, this submission
deadline is more than adequate for
facilities to compile the necessary
documentation, even assuming the
commenters are correct that it would
take three months to compile all the
necessary documents. Although
November 30, 2020 is the latest date to
submit a request, EPA encourages
submissions at the earliest point at
which the facility knows further time to
complete its arrangements is needed.
This requirement is found at
§ 257.103(f)(3)(i)(A).
An owner or operator that seeks an
extension to an approved alternative
closure deadline must submit a new
demonstration to EPA within fourteen
days of determining that they no longer
will meet the approved cease receipt of
waste deadline. This requirement is
found at § 257.103(f)(3)(i)(B).
Requests for additional time to
operate a CCR surface impoundment
under § 257.103(f)(2) (‘‘permanent
cessation of coal-fired boiler(s) by a date
certain’’) must be submitted to EPA for
approval no later than November 30,
2020. EPA has received numerous
submissions from utilities stating that
the decision to shut down a boiler is not
reached quickly and can require
approvals from (or at least coordination
with) state regulatory officials, among
others. EPA, therefore, expects that
facilities know now (or will decide
shortly) whether they will seek to rely
upon these provisions. This requirement
is found at § 257.103(f)(3)(i)(C).
EPA also received comments from
Luminant Generating Company LLC
(EPA–HQ–OLEM–2019–0172–0098)
requesting clarification on whether an
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53551
owner or operator may apply to use both
§ 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2) at one site for
different impoundments based on sitespecific constraints. The commenter
stated this would apply, for example, to
a facility that has determined it will
retire its coal-fired boilers by October
17, 2028, but has multiple small
impoundments (40 acres or less) that
would be retrofitted by October 15,
2023, under § 257.103(f)(1) and one
large impoundment (larger than 40
acres) that would close by October 17,
2028, under § 257.103(f)(2). If the
smaller impoundments were subject to
the closure deadlines provided under
§ 257.103(f)(2) for cessation of coal fired
boilers, the ponds would be required to
close (not retrofit) by October 17, 2023.
EPA agrees with the commenter and
believes that this situation is possible.
EPA will allow an owner or operator to
apply for both alternative deadlines if
they can demonstrate that it is
necessary. This explanation must be
incorporated into the narrative required
at § 257.103(f)(1)(iv)(A). The facility
should submit the application for each
alternative together as one application.
EPA strongly discourages a facility to
submit applications for both
§ 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2) if they do not
intend to use both provisions.
The proposal did not clearly indicate
whether a facility that had been
approved under one extension provision
could seek to subsequently obtain
approval to operate under an alternative
extension. EPA agrees that if the facility
meets the criteria for either extension,
there is no reason that they should be
precluded from seeking to change the
alternative under which they operate.
The procedures for this are described in
more detail below.
(b) EPA Review and Decision
Upon receiving the demonstration for
an alternative compliance deadline,
EPA will evaluate the demonstration to
determine whether it is complete. EPA
may request additional, clarifying
information to complete its review and/
or discuss the demonstration with the
facility. Submission of a demonstration
will toll the facility’s deadline to cease
receipt of waste until issuance of one of
the decisions described below. This
ensures that a facility that has submitted
a package in good faith is not penalized
by any inadvertent administrative
delays. EPA is committed to processing
submissions as expeditiously as
possible.
Consistent with the proposed rule,
submissions that EPA determines to be
incomplete will be rejected without
further process, at which point any
tolling of the facility’s deadline will
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end. (EPA anticipates that the question
of tolling for incomplete submissions
should not generally arise, as the agency
anticipates making these determinations
before April 11, 2021.) No commenter
disagreed that this was appropriate. As
described in more detail below,
incomplete submissions include both
the situation in which the submission
does not include all of the required
material, and the situation in which
EPA is unable to determine from the
submission whether the facility or the
unit meets the criteria for the extension.
EPA received several comments on its
proposal that submission of a complete
application would toll a facility’s
deadline. Some commenters raised
concern that the review period is overly
ambitious and requested that EPA
clarify that if, after four months, no final
determination has been made, the
deadline would continue to be tolled for
the facility. These commenters also
requested that EPA revise the proposed
regulatory text to clearly provide what
will constitute a complete
demonstration to avoid any
misunderstandings. Other commenters
raised concern that as a consequence of
the decision to toll deadlines during the
review period, and because, in their
view, the proposed process would not
weed out non-compliant facilities, the
four-month time frame effectively
creates a four-month extension for all
facilities.
EPA agrees that the time frames are
ambitious but continues to believe that
they can be met. As discussed in more
detail below, the Agency has limited the
issues to be resolved during this
process, and, as requested by
commenters, has amended the proposed
regulation to specify in detail the
information needed for a submission to
be considered complete. Consequently,
EPA anticipates it will be able to make
most decisions without further requests
for information. Nevertheless, to avoid
penalizing a facility that has submitted
a demonstration in good faith, the final
rule provides that the deadline to cease
receipt of waste will be tolled until the
Agency determines that the submission
is incomplete or reaches a final decision
on whether the facility meets the criteria
for the extension, even if it takes longer
than four months. EPA disagrees that
this will in essence grant all submitters
a de facto four-month extension. The
new deadline for submission is over
four months in advance of the deadline
to cease receipt of waste, and EPA
anticipates being able to evaluate
submissions prior to this deadline.
Once the owner or operator submits
the demonstration to EPA for approval,
the owner or operator must place a copy
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into the facility’s operating record and
on its publicly accessible CCR internet
site. EPA will also post who has
submitted a demonstration on EPA’s
website. After reviewing the
submission, EPA will either post a
determination that the submission is
incomplete on EPA’s website or a
proposed decision to grant or to deny
the request in whole or in part on
www.regulations.gov for public notice
and comment.
Consistent with the proposal, the
public will have at least 15 days to
comment on the proposed decision. If
the demonstration is particularly
complex, EPA would provide a longer
comment period of 20 to 30 days. EPA
will evaluate the comments received
and amend its decision as warranted.
EPA will post all decisions on its
website, in the relevant docket and
notify the facility. EPA proposed that
decisions would become automatically
effective 5 days from the close of the
comment period if EPA received no
substantive comments. EPA is not
finalizing this approach because it
would be too difficult to implement.
EPA acknowledges that the public
comment periods are short but disagrees
with the suggestion that they will be too
short to be meaningful. EPA is requiring
facilities to post all submissions on their
publicly accessible CCR internet site at
the same time they submit them to EPA.
The public can start their review at the
same time as EPA and begin to gather
information and prepare their
comments. In most cases, the issues to
be resolved will be limited largely to
whether the deadlines proposed to
complete all activities are supported by
the available information, and whether
the facility remains in compliance with
the regulations. EPA disagrees with the
proposition that a 15- to 30-day
comment period violates either section
7004(b) of RCRA or the APA. This
process is not a rulemaking, but an
informal adjudication. Such
adjudications do not typically include
an opportunity for public comment and
therefore the provision of a 15 to 30-day
comment period meets the mandate in
RCRA section 7004(b) to promote public
participation. Moreover, the APA
imposes neither a requirement to
provide an opportunity for public
comment nor any minimum time for a
comment period for such procedures.
Finally, EPA notes that the same
commenters requesting longer comment
periods have also raised concern that
the process grants facilities too much
additional time to continue operating.
EPA is also interested in not granting
undue amounts of additional time for
facilities to continue operating and is
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expediting all aspects of this process,
including the comment period.
EPA will post all final decisions on
EPA’s website and in the appropriate
docket. The decision will specify the
facility’s deadline to cease receipt of
waste; for example, a decision rejecting
a submission as incomplete prior to
April 11, 2021 will specify that the
deadline remains April 11, 2021. The
facility must post, along with a copy of
its demonstration, the Agency’s final
decision on the facility’s publicly
accessible CCR internet site. EPA
intends to reach a final decision no later
than four months after receiving a
complete demonstration. If at any point
in this process, a facility no longer
needs an extension—e.g., because it has
completed construction of alternative
capacity prior to approval from EPA—
the facility must notify EPA and
withdraw its demonstration.
Some commenters raised concern that
EPA had neglected to propose the
procedures associated with denial of
extension requests and requested that
EPA elaborate on these procedures in
the final rule. EPA disagrees that the
procedures in the proposed rule apply
exclusively to situations in which EPA
grants the request. While EPA
anticipates there will be several possible
responses to a request for an extension,
the procedures associated with each are
the same procedures that were outlined
in the proposal.
One possible outcome is that EPA will
grant the requested extension. In this
case the procedure will follow the
process outlined in the proposed rule
and discussed above. EPA will post a
proposed decision on
www.regulations.gov for at least a 15day comment period and will
subsequently publish its final decision
on EPA’s website and in the relevant
docket.
Another potential outcome is that no
extension is granted. Some commenters
requested that if EPA denies a request,
the facility be granted an additional six
months in which to continue receiving
waste. EPA envisions that the
circumstances under which a request is
entirely denied will be limited and
disagrees that it would be appropriate to
universally grant a further six months in
these situations. The most likely
situation in which an extension is not
granted will be where EPA rejects the
submission as incomplete or determines
that one or more of the criteria for the
extension have not been met. In neither
situation would authorizing additional
time for the facility to operate be
warranted.
As explained previously, EPA will
reject incomplete submissions without
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further process. This could include
situations in which EPA cannot
determine from the submission whether
the criteria have been met (e.g., the
submitted information does not clearly
address whether the downgradient
monitoring system has been installed at
the waste boundary or whether
alternative capacity is available). No
commenter disagreed that this was
appropriate, and EPA continues to
believe that in the absence of any
showing that all regulatory criteria have
been met no additional time could—and
should—be authorized.
Another possibility is that EPA will
propose to deny the application on the
grounds that one or more of the criteria
have not been met. For example, EPA
may determine that the amount of time
that the facility requested to complete
the construction of the alternative
capacity is not supported by the record.
In this case all of the procedures
described previously with respect to
approvals will apply. And in this
circumstance the amount of time that
will be granted to the facility will be
determined by the factual record that
has been developed through this
process. Whatever additional amount of
time is determined to be appropriate
based on the factual record before the
agency at the time—which may be
none—will necessarily be more
appropriate than the commenter’s
proposed six-month period. For
example, if a facility requests two
additional years of operation and EPA
determines that the submission only
supports one year of continued
operation, a six-month timeframe would
be too short. Similarly, in some
situations the facts may demonstrate
that six months is too long. As another
example, EPA may determine
alternative capacity exists and can be
feasibly utilized. EPA recognizes that
the mere fact that disposal capacity
exists somewhere does not necessarily
constitute feasibility for purposes of this
analysis. Nevertheless, there may be
instances where disposal capacity is
available off-site and within a
reasonable distance. In this
circumstance, as well, a six-month
period of continued operation would be
equally inappropriate.
Some commenters raised the
argument that because part 257 is selfimplementing and because certain
regulatory provisions might be viewed
as ambiguous, there could be differences
in opinion on what constitutes
compliance. These commenters felt that
differences in interpretation should be
discussed during EPA’s review process
and corrected as warranted as part of a
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facility’s completion of its
demonstration.
EPA is establishing an expedited
process to resolve requests for
continued operation under § 257.103; in
order to meet these time frames EPA has
limited the issues to be resolved in this
proceeding. Thus, under the two new
alternatives in § 257.103, in many cases
one of the primary issues to be resolved
will be whether the facility is in
compliance with the regulations.
Although EPA does not agree that the
regulations are ambiguous, EPA may be
able to engage in a limited amount of
discussion with a facility before the
submission deadline. To address
concerns raised by commenters that the
tolling period would grant de facto
extensions for all facilities, such
discussions would need to occur before
the deadline for final submission of the
request to avoid extending the tolling
period. In addition, as explained
previously, documentation that a
facility remains in compliance with the
requirements of subpart D provides
critical support for a decision to allow
continued operation of the unlined
impoundment. This means that EPA
must be able to affirmatively conclude
that the facility meets this criterion
prior to authorizing any continued
operation of the unlined impoundment.
As a consequence, any opportunity to
correct the demonstration is limited to
the period before the deadline for
submission. Given that the final rule has
been published well in advance of the
deadline to cease receipt of waste,
facilities will have sufficient time to
raise these issues to the Agency in
advance of submitting their application.
Finally, note that any determinations
made in evaluating compliance aspects
of submitted demonstrations will be
made solely for the purpose of
determining whether an extension of the
deadline to cease receipt of waste is
warranted. In making these
determinations the Agency generally
expects to consider and rely on the
information in a submission,
information contained in submitted
comments to a proposed decision and
any other information the Agency has at
the time of the determination. These
determinations may not be applicable or
relevant in any other context. Should
the facility’s compliance status be
considered outside of this context in the
future, the Agency may reach a contrary
conclusion based, for example, on new
information or information that was not
considered as part of this process.
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(c) Transferring Between Site-Specific
Alternatives (§ 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2))
In the December 2019 proposal, EPA
proposed that a facility could not utilize
both the short-term extension
§ 257.103(e) and the site-specific longer
extensions § 257.103(f). However, in the
proposal EPA did not discuss whether
a facility could switch between the sitespecific extensions. Several comments
discussed this issue explaining the
importance of being able to switch
between the lack of alternative capacity
extension in § 257.103(f)(1) and the
cessation of coal-fired boiler(s) in
§ 257.103(f)(2) and vice versa.
Several of these commenters stated
that it is possible for a utility to
determine that they will shut down
their coal-fired boiler(s) after being
approved under § 257.103(f)(1) and still
be able to meet the deadlines under
§ 257.103(f)(2). They continued on to
state that were this to happen a facility
should be able to subsequently make the
demonstration and switch extensions.
Commenters also pointed out that
allowing facilities to switch from
§ 257.103(f)(1) to § 257.103(f)(2) would
expedite the closure of the CCR surface
impoundment in question and also
reduce the overall risk, consistent with
subtitle D protectiveness standard.
These commenters additionally stated
that the opposite is also possible where
a facility will learn that they are unable
to retire their coal-fired boilers and will
need to develop alternative capacity. As
such a facility should be able to make
the demonstration and switch
extensions. Therefore, EPA should
provide a process for owners and
operators to exercise this flexibility.
EPA agrees with the commenters that
a situation may arise where a facility
needs to change course due to
unexpected business decisions and that
there should be a process for a facility
to switch between the site-specific
alternative closure provisions.
Therefore, EPA is adding regulations at
§ 257.103(f)(4) to allow the transfer
between site-specific alternatives. The
process of obtaining approval will be
the same as it would be under the initial
application for approval.
6. Conforming Amendments to
§ 257.103(a), (b), (c) and (d)
To conform with the new provisions
for CCR surface impoundments, EPA
proposed a series of amendments to the
§ 257.103 introductory paragraph and at
§ 257.103(a), (b), and (c). Additionally,
EPA proposed amending § 257.103(a)
and (b) to only be applicable to CCR
landfills.
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(a) Amendments to § 257.103(a) and (b)
EPA proposed to revise the
introductory paragraph to § 257.103 to
add the phrase ‘‘and/or non-CCR
wastestreams’’ and to add references to
the proposed new paragraphs (e) and (f)
to § 257.103 for the short-term
alternative and the alternative
compliance deadlines respectively. EPA
also proposed conforming revisions to
§ 257.103(a) and (b) to reflect the
proposed alternative closure deadlines
for surface impoundments. The current
§ 257.103(a) and (b) apply to both CCR
landfills and CCR surface
impoundments undergoing closure
under § 257.101 that need additional
time to find alternative capacity for only
CCR wastestreams. To be consistent
with the proposals, EPA proposed
amending § 257.103(a) and (b) to only
apply to CCR landfills.
Consistent with the decisions
discussed previously, EPA has decided
to finalize the proposed conforming
amendments to § 257.103(a) and (b) so
that those provisions only apply to CCR
landfills. In addition, to address the
concerns that proposed revisions to the
introductory paragraph could be read to
authorize all units to receive non-CCR
wastestreams, EPA is revising the
introductory paragraph to § 257.103 to
provide that the owner or operator may
continue to receive the waste specified
in paragraphs (a), (b) or (f).
Additionally, the references to
§ 257.101(a) and (b)(1) are being
removed from § 257.103(a) and (b), as
those sections apply only to CCR surface
impoundments. EPA is also revising the
term ‘‘CCR unit’’ to ‘‘CCR landfill’’ to
ensure clarity that § 257.103(a) and (b)
apply only to CCR landfills.
(b) Amendments to § 257.103(c) and (d)
In the December 2, 2019 proposal,
EPA proposed to amend § 257.103(c) to
make conforming changes to the
notification requirements. When EPA
amended the cease receipt of waste date
in the July 2018 rule in § 257.101(a) and
(b)(1), EPA neglected to make the
conforming changes to the notification
requirements in § 257.103(c). EPA
proposed to amend § 257.103(c)(1) by
adding new paragraphs (i) through (iii)
for CCR units closing pursuant to
§ 257.101(a), (b)(1), and (d),
respectively. Each respective
subparagraph then requires the owner or
operator to prepare the notification no
later than the cease receipt of waste date
according to § 257.101(a), (b)(1), and (d).
The current text of § 257.103(c)(1)
requires the owner or operator to
prepare a notification within six months
of becoming subject to closure pursuant
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to § 257.101(a), (b)(1), or (d). In light of
the USWAG decision and the revisions
adopted in this rule, this language no
longer makes sense.
EPA received very few comments
related to this section. Most comments
stated generic support or disagreement
for amending § 257.103(a) and (b) to
only apply to landfills. There were no
specific comments on the proposed
modifications to the regulatory text in
§ 257.103(c).
In the December 2, 2019 proposal EPA
did not make the correct conforming
changes to § 257.103(c). EPA did not
need to add the new notification
deadlines for the units closing pursuant
to § 257.101(a) and (b)(1) because of the
restructuring of § 257.103(a) and (b). As
§ 257.103(a) and (b) will now only apply
to CCR landfills, § 257.103(c) only needs
to contain the notification date
associated with CCR landfills closing
pursuant to § 257.101(d). Therefore,
EPA will not be finalizing the proposed
amendments to § 257.103(c)(1) by
adding new paragraphs (i), (ii), and (iii).
Rather, EPA is amending the regulatory
text of § 257.103(c)(1) by removing the
citations for § 257.101(a) and (b)(1). This
amendment to the regulatory text
clarifies the notification requirements
for § 257.103(a) and (b). Additionally,
EPA is replacing the term ‘‘CCR unit’’
with ‘‘CCR landfill’’ throughout
§ 257.103(c) to add clarity that the
provision only applies to CCR landfills.
This change is represented in
§ 257.103(c).
EPA is also replacing the term ‘‘CCR
unit’’ with ‘‘CCR landfill’’ in
§ 257.103(d). EPA did not propose this
amendment however EPA believes it
adds further clarity to the regulation.
This change is represented in
§ 257.103(d).
VI. What final action is EPA taking on
the August 14, 2019 proposal?
A. Revisions to the Annual Groundwater
Monitoring and Corrective Action
Report Requirements
Currently, § 257.90(e) requires owners
and operators of CCR units to prepare an
annual groundwater monitoring and
corrective action report (‘‘annual
report’’). This annual report must
document the status of the groundwater
monitoring and corrective action
program for the CCR unit, summarize
key actions completed, describe any
problems encountered, discuss actions
to resolve the problems, and project key
activities for the upcoming year. The
CCR regulations also specify the
minimum information that must be
included in the annual report. For
example, one of the current
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requirements is to provide all the
monitoring data obtained under the
groundwater monitoring and corrective
action program for the year covered by
the report. The CCR regulations further
require the owner or operator to include
a data summary in the report with
information such as the number of
groundwater samples that were
collected for analysis for each
background and downgradient well, the
dates the samples were collected, and
whether the samples were required by
the detection monitoring or assessment
monitoring programs. See,
§ 257.90(e)(3). Except for certain
inactive CCR surface impoundments,
owners and operators must prepare the
initial annual report no later than
January 31, 2018 and post the report to
its publicly accessible CCR internet site
within 30 days of preparing the report.
See, §§ 257.90(e) and 257.107(d). For
eligible inactive CCR surface
impoundments,40 the deadline to
prepare the initial annual report is
August 1, 2019. See, § 257.100(e)(5)(ii).
The Agency reviewed the annual
reports available on facilities’ publicly
accessible CCR internet sites that were
due by January 31, 2018 and January 31,
2019 and observed that some facilities
did not provide groundwater monitoring
data in formats that were clear and easy
for the public to understand. EPA found
instances where it was difficult to
determine whether the analytical results
corresponded to background or
downgradient wells, whether the CCR
unit was operating under the detection
or assessment monitoring program,
when the assessment monitoring
program was initiated for the CCR unit,
or whether the facility had initiated
corrective action for the unit. In
addition, several facilities only provided
hundreds or thousands of pages of
laboratory printouts of the data, making
it difficult for the public and other
stakeholders to put the results into
context within the overall groundwater
monitoring program.
The purpose of requiring posting of
the annual reports is to allow the public,
states and EPA to easily see and
understand the groundwater monitoring
data. To accomplish this purpose, the
Agency is finalizing one revision to the
annual groundwater monitoring and
corrective action reporting requirements
and providing more explanation of
another revision included in the
preamble of the August 2019 proposed
rule. See 84 FR 40365–40366.
40 For more information on eligible inactive CCR
surface impoundments, see the preamble to the
direct final rule published on August 5, 2016 (81
FR 51802).
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First, EPA is amending § 257.90 by
adding new paragraph (e)(6) requiring a
summary to be included at the
beginning of the annual report. EPA
received many comments on this
proposal, most of which were
supportive of the addition of the
proposed provisions at § 257.90(e)(6).
Environmental groups and most
private citizens who commented
supported the inclusion of an upfront
summary because a summary would be
helpful for the public to understand the
reports. They also said the summaries
should include and not misrepresent or
gloss over the conclusions based on the
data. Specifically Earthjustice et al.
commented that proper oversight and
enforcement of the CCR regulations can
only happen if owners and operators
include a clear summary of the status of
groundwater monitoring and corrective
action, each statistically significant
increase (SSI) over background levels
(for Appendix III constituents) or
groundwater protection standards (for
Appendix IV constituents). They further
commented that the report should
include the dates when assessment
monitoring was initiated, when an
assessment of corrective measures was
initiated, when an assessment of
corrective measures was completed, and
when a remedy was selected, where
applicable. Earthjustice et al. also
commented that clear summaries of all
groundwater monitoring data are
necessary, not just the data associated
with an SSI.
Multiple states commented on this
issue. The Alabama Department of
Environmental Management commented
that the report should include whether
a facility began or ended the reporting
cycle in detection or assessment
monitoring (as well as provide the dates
for the transition), and specify if and
when a facility has moved to the
corrective action stage of the
groundwater monitoring program. The
Virginia Department of Environmental
Quality also supported the minimum set
of requirements included in the
proposal.
Many industry stakeholder and
electric utility commenters supported
the inclusion of an upfront summary
setting forth certain information to help
readers understand the data contained
in the report and to provide more
specificity and transparency as to what
the report contains. Some industry
group commenters did not support
repeating information in the annual
reports that is already required by the
groundwater sampling and analysis plan
at § 257.93. Some industry commenters
wanted clarification that these
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requirements would not apply
retroactively to past annual reports.
In light of these comments, the
Agency is finalizing the new
requirements at § 257.90(e)(6). This new
provision establishes a minimum set of
requirements to be addressed in the
summary discussion of the status of the
groundwater monitoring and corrective
action programs for the CCR unit at the
beginning of the annual report (e.g., as
part of the report’s executive summary).
The minimum requirements for this
summary include stating whether the
CCR unit was operating pursuant to the
detection monitoring program under
§ 257.94 or the assessment monitoring
program under § 257.95; identifying
those constituents and the
corresponding wells, if any, for which
the facility had determined that there is
a statistically significant increase over
background levels for constituents listed
in Appendix III (or if operating under
the assessment monitoring program,
constituents in Appendix IV that were
detected at statistically significant levels
above the groundwater protection
standard); the date when the assessment
monitoring program was initiated for
the CCR unit; and a description and the
dates of any corrective measures
initiated or completed, including the
remedy, during the annual reporting
period. These requirements will only
apply to future annual reports, starting
with the next report completed after the
effective date of this final rule. EPA
believes the elements finalized are
sufficient to give a snapshot of the
groundwater monitoring and corrective
action activities in the previous year but
are not repetitive with other rule
requirements.
Second, the Agency solicited
comment on whether to amend § 257.90
to require the groundwater monitoring
analytical results and related
information to be presented in a
standardized format, such as multiple
tables, in the annual report. Possible
examples of standard formats are
available for review in the docket of the
August 2019 proposal.41 The Agency
also requested comment on formats that
could be used.
Information about the groundwater
wells was proposed to include the
following data elements: Well
identification number, sampling date,
latitude and longitude in decimal
degrees, groundwater elevation
including well depth to groundwater
and total depth of groundwater, and
41 See EPA memorandum titled ‘‘Annual
Groundwater Monitoring Report Data Examples’’;
dated July 1, 2019. (EPA–HQ–OLEM–2018–0524–
0013)
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53555
whether the groundwater well is
upgradient or downgradient of the CCR
unit. This information is already
collected and reported in the
groundwater sampling and analysis plan
under § 257.93 and so the information is
readily available to the facility.
Sample information was proposed to
be provided in a table that contains
fields including sampling date,
sampling time, sampling phase (i.e.,
background, detection monitoring,
assessment monitoring, corrective
action), whether the groundwater well is
upgradient or downgradient of the CCR
unit, and analytical methods listed
separately for every method used to
analyze the constituent concentrations.
Data for Appendix III to part 257—
Constituents for Detection Monitoring
was proposed to contain concentrations
in milligrams per liter (unless otherwise
specified) of the following: Boron,
calcium, chloride, fluoride, pH
(standard units), sulfate, and total
dissolved solids (TDS). Data for
Appendix IV to part 257—Constituents
for Assessment Monitoring was
proposed to contain concentrations in
milligrams per liter (unless otherwise
specified) of the following: Antimony,
arsenic, barium, beryllium, cadmium,
chromium, cobalt, lead, lithium,
mercury, molybdenum, radium 226–228
combined (pCi/L), selenium, and
thallium. It was proposed that each
constituent concentration identify the
detection limit for the analytical method
used with data qualifiers specified for
non-detect samples.
EPA believed that a required
standardized format would increase
transparency and enable the general
public, as well as Federal, state, and
local officials, to more easily understand
the groundwater monitoring data and
thus plan for and evaluate the
appropriate next steps to protect public
health and the environment.
The Agency received many comments
on the groundwater monitoring data
standardized format. In general,
environmental organizations and
citizens supported the inclusion of data
in a standardized format for ease of
understanding and for the reasons
included in the proposal. Many
commenters requested the data to be
presented in a machine-readable and
preferably spreadsheet format. Some
commenters, including Earthjustice,
said EPA should require elements
beyond those included in the proposal
to satisfy the RCRA section 4004
protectiveness standard, and include the
location of the groundwater well,
groundwater elevation, and whether
each well is upgradient, downgradient,
sidegradient, or something else. These
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comments also said that access to the
full data set should be included without
having to wade through thousands of
pages of laboratory reports to provide
the public, state and Federal agencies
with an opportunity to independently
evaluate the data. Some commenters
recommended that a summary of
historical detections would also be
helpful, especially if groundwater
protection standards are established
based on background concentrations at
a given site.
While state commenters were
generally supportive of requiring
groundwater monitoring analytical
results in a standardized format, the
Agency received comment from only
two states on this issue. Alabama
Department of Environmental
Management supported the requirement
that groundwater analytical results for
each sampling event be summarized,
preferably in tabular format, for ease of
the reader. The state found it has been
extremely difficult, even for a trained
individual, to review groundwater
monitoring reports given the complex
nature of the sites and the magnitude of
data being presented. The state
recommended a summary of historical
detections would also be helpful,
especially if groundwater protection
standards are established based on
background concentrations at a given
site. The Virginia Department of
Environmental Quality (VDEQ)
generally supported the inclusion of a
minimum set of requirements in a
summary of the groundwater monitoring
and corrective action programs.
However, VDEQ stated that the
standardized format and elements
should only be a minimum standard so
that states may require additional
elements or information in state
reporting without requiring separate
reports to be generated.
Overall, industry commenters did not
support the addition of standardized
formats for groundwater monitoring
data and analytical results. Industry
commenters did support EPA’s desire to
make information decipherable to the
public but believe the regulations
should maintain flexibility for states
and for facilities to determine how best
to present the data. Some said a
standardized format could be
problematic in that certain facilities may
not be able to display site-specific well
networks sufficiently to meet the
requirements of the CCR regulations.
Other industry commenters said EPA
should not require additional
information beyond what is currently
required by § 257.90(e) for the annual
reports. Many industry commenters
expressed concern about requiring
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information about groundwater wells
including latitude and longitude of the
wells in decimal degrees. These
commenters said such information
poses a security concern for the facility.
They believe that providing a map of the
monitoring wells is sufficient to be in
compliance with the CCR regulations.
After considering the comments, EPA
is not finalizing a requirement for
owners and operators of CCR units to
present groundwater monitoring
analytical results in a standardized
format. EPA is not convinced that such
a requirement is necessary to serve the
purposes of ensuring greater
transparency. The Agency is also
concerned about prescribing a
standardized format which may not be
consistent with existing state reporting
requirements, especially given that only
two states provided comments on this
issue. The new requirement for a
summary will ensure that the critical
information is presented up front in the
report, where it can be readily accessed
by the public. EPA believes the current
groundwater monitoring requirements
of § 257.90 are sufficient as a minimum
set of criteria to show the groundwater
monitoring activities of the previous
year. EPA also agrees with the
commenters that allowing states the
flexibility in requiring certain data
elements and formats because of the use
of certain software or what is required
by the state regulations for consistency
is important. Additionally, EPA is
maintaining flexibility for facilities to
report groundwater monitoring data in
ways that are publicly accessible for all
stakeholders. If, however, it becomes
clear that the summaries are insufficient
to ensure that the annual reports
provide the public with useful
information EPA will revisit this issue.
In this regard, it should be noted,
however, that the annual reports should
not only contain thousands of pages of
groundwater monitoring data directly
from the laboratory. Many commenters
said this data is difficult to sift through,
even for trained environmental
specialists. That format is not easy to
understand for the public, either. Data
should be presented in a way that
clearly communicates the required
information to the general public in
order to ensure proper oversight and
enforcement of the CCR regulations by
the public, states, and Federal agencies.
The data could be presented in a tabular
format, include historical detections, or
include elements in the proposal that
are not being finalized in this action.
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B. Revisions to the Publicly Accessible
CCR Internet Site Requirements
In the 2015 CCR rule, pursuant to
RCRA section 7004(b)(2), the Agency
promulgated a requirement for owners
and operators of any CCR unit to
establish and maintain a publicly
accessible internet site, titled ‘‘CCR Rule
Compliance Data and Information.’’
Section 7004(b)(3) directs EPA to
provide for, encourage, and assist
‘‘[p]ublic participation in the
development, revision, implementation,
and enforcement of any regulation,
guideline, information, or program
under this chapter.’’ To achieve these
ends, internet postings are required for
various elements identified in the
following sections of the CCR
regulations: Location restrictions; design
criteria; operating criteria; groundwater
monitoring and corrective action; and
closure and post closure care.
Consistent with the statutory directive,
the websites are important to make the
notices and relevant information
required by the regulations available to
the public in a manner that will
encourage and assist public
participation in the implementation of
the regulations. This means, for
example, that the posted documents
must be clearly identifiable as
documents, reports, demonstrations,
etc., to those attempting to access them.
The internet is a widely accessible and
effective means for gathering and
disseminating information to the public
and the states.
EPA has observed that some of the
publicly accessible internet sites that
owners and operators of CCR facilities
have established in response to the CCR
regulations, fail to make the posted
documents publicly accessible. For
example, a number of publicly
accessible CCR internet sites require
either some sort of registration whereby
personal information identifying the
user must be provided before members
of the public are granted ‘‘access’’ to the
website. Other websites require a user to
submit a request for each document
individually and the requested
document is subsequently emailed to
the user. Still other websites have been
designed such that the posted
documents cannot be downloaded or
printed from the website. EPA does not
consider these kinds of practices to be
consistent with the requirement that the
information be made publicly available.
EPA acknowledges that the current
regulation does not define the term
‘‘publicly available,’’ or contain detailed
requirements that such websites must
meet, nor are the practices described
above explicitly prohibited. To avoid
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any further confusion, EPA proposed to
amend the current regulation to clearly
specify that facilities must ensure that
all information required to be on the
websites must be made available to any
member of the public, including
through printing and downloading,
without any requirement that the public
wait to be ‘‘approved’’, or provide
information in order to access the
website.
States, industry and environmental
groups submitted comments that agreed
with this proposal. Specifically, the
states of Alabama and Virginia
commented that they agreed with this
proposed requirement. Earthjustice,
Arizona Electric Power Cooperative
Incorporated, the American Public
Power Association, Labadie
Environmental Organization, Sierra
Club and the Blue Ridge Environmental
Defense Fund also submitted comments
stating that they agreed with the
proposed requirement to make
information and documents on the
publicly accessible CCR internet site
immediately accessible (including
downloading and printing). One
commenter said that EPA should not
completely prohibit registration features
on CCR websites because those features
can alert the companies that users are
having trouble accessing the data and
allows the facility to contact those
individuals to assist them. The Agency
believes that requiring some sort of
mechanism for users to contact the
facility if there are issues with accessing
the information on the site is a more
effective mechanism to address those
types of problems. Another company
commented that EPA should not view
these security approaches as
inappropriately limiting access to
utilities’ publicly available CCR sites, as
they are needed to protect the security
interests of the utilities. This commenter
did not provide details on how or why
these practices are needed to address
security concerns. In the absence of any
explanation of the commenter’s
concerns and given that the vast
majority of publicly accessible CCR
internet sites do not require registration
or permission to access the information,
EPA does not believe this is enough
justification to limit or restrict access to
the information. Therefore, EPA is
finalizing this revision to the regulations
as proposed.
Another issue EPA has noticed is that
the internet addresses for many of the
publicly accessible CCR internet sites
have changed; for some sites, more than
once. It is very difficult for the public,
states, and EPA to access the
information required to be posted on
these websites if the URLs change
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without notice. In response, the Agency
proposed to amend the regulations to
require that facilities notify EPA within
14 days of changing their publicly
accessible CCR internet site address, to
allow EPA to update the Agency’s
website with the correct URL address.
Commenters generally agreed with this
requirement and one commenter
suggested that facilities also notify the
state director when the URL for the
facility’s website changes. EPA agrees
with this suggestion and is finalizing the
requirement that when a facility
changes the URL for its publicly
accessible CCR internet site, they must
notify EPA and the state director within
14 days of the new website address.
Another issue EPA has noted is that
when there is a question or problem
with a publicly accessible CCR internet
site, such as a broken link or a
document that will not download, it can
be difficult to reach the appropriate
contact at the facility in order to gain
access to the information. Therefore, the
Agency requested comment on whether
each publicly accessible CCR internet
site should be required to have a
mechanism (e.g., a ‘‘contact us’’
electronic form on the CCR website) for
the public to contact the facility about
issues of information accessibility.
Commenters generally agreed with the
idea of having some way for the public
to easily contact the correct person to
report problems with the website. One
commenter said that EPA should require
owners and operators to post a contact
email address rather than a contact
form. Several commenters suggested
that the specific mechanism for the
public to bring issues of information
accessibility to the facility should be left
up to the facility. EPA agrees that some
sort of ‘‘contact us’’ mechanism is
warranted; for example this could
include either a ‘‘contact us’’ form much
like the one EPA uses on the EPA CCR
website or an email address for a
specific contact at the facility who can
address issues related to the
accessibility on the website. The Agency
is adding this requirement to the
regulations in § 257.107(a).
One commenter also mentioned that
even though § 257.107(c) requires that
the information posted to the website
must be made available to the public for
at least five years, some documents are
being removed from the websites after
they are posted. EPA would like to
reiterate that the regulations require that
posted documents remain on the
websites for at least five years. Section
257.107(c). If the documents are revised
or updated, the original documents
must still remain on the website. The
same requirement exists if a unit is
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closed or consolidated with another
unit; the original documents that were
required for that unit must remain on
the website for at least five years.
VII. Rationale for 30-Day Effective Date
The effective date of this rule is 30
days after publication in the Federal
Register. The Administrative Procedure
Act (APA) provides that publication of
a substantive rule shall be made not less
than 30 days before its effective date
and that this provision applies in the
absence of a specific statutory provision
establishing an effective date. See 5
U.S.C. 553(d) and 559. EPA has
determined there is no specific
provision of RCRA addressing the
effective date of regulations that would
apply here, and thus the APA’s 30-day
effective date applies.
EPA has previously interpreted
section 4004(c) of RCRA to generally
establish a six-month effective date for
rules issued under subtitle D. See 80 FR
37988, 37990 (July 2, 2015). After
further consideration, EPA interprets
section 4004(c) to establish an effective
date solely for the regulations that were
required to be promulgated under
subsection (a). Section 4004(c) is silent
as to subsequent revisions to those
regulations; EPA therefore believes
section 4004(c) is ambiguous.
Section 4004(c) states that the
prohibition in subsection (b) shall take
effect six months after promulgation of
regulations under subsection (a).
Subsection (a), in turn provides that
‘‘[n]ot later than one year after October
21, 1976 . . . [EPA] shall promulgate
regulations containing criteria for
determining which facilities shall be
classified as sanitary landfills and
which shall be classified as open dumps
within the meaning of this chapter.’’ As
noted, section 4004(c) is silent as to
revisions to those regulations.
In response to Congress’s mandate in
section 4004(a), EPA promulgated
regulations on September 13, 1979. 44
FR 53438. EPA interprets section
4004(c) to establish an effective date
applicable only to that action, and not
to future regulations the Agency might
issue under this section. In the absence
of a specific statutory provision
establishing an effective date for this
rule, APA section 553(d) applies.
EPA considers that its interpretation
is reasonable because there is no
indication in RCRA or its legislative
history that Congress intended for the
agency to have less discretion under
RCRA subtitle D than it would have
under the APA to establish a suitable
effective date for subsequent rules
issued under section 4004(c). Consistent
with EPA’s interpretation of the express
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language of section 4004, EPA interprets
statements in the legislative history,
explaining that section 4004(c) provides
that the effective date is to be 6 months
after the date of promulgation of
regulations, as referring to the initial set
of regulations required by Congress to
be promulgated not later than 1 year
after October 21, 1976. These statements
do not mandate a 6 month effective date
for every regulatory action that EPA
takes under this section. This rule
contains specific, targeted revisions to
the 2015 rule and the legislative history
regarding section 4004 speaks only to
these initial 1976 mandated regulations.
This reading allows the Agency to
establish an effective date appropriate
for the nature of the regulation
promulgated, which is what EPA
believes Congress intended. EPA further
considers that the minimum 30-day
effective date under the APA is
reasonable in this circumstance where
none of the provisions being finalized
require an extended period of time for
regulated entities to comply.
VIII. State CCR Programs
A. Effect on This Final Rule on States
With Approved CCR Programs
This final rule has impacts on states
with an approved program. The effects
depend on whether the state has
received approval for the provisions that
have been amended in this rule. As of
this final rule, EPA has granted
approvals to the states of Oklahoma and
Georgia.
On June 28, 2018, EPA granted
Oklahoma full program approval.
However, on April 15, 2020, the U.S.
District Court for the District of
Columbia vacated part of that approval.
Waterkeeper Alliance Inc. v. Wheeler,
No. 18–02230, 2020 WL 1873564
(D.D.C. Apr. 15, 2020). Specifically, the
court vacated those portions of the
Oklahoma program approval that
mirrored those portions of the federal
program that had been vacated by the
D.C. Circuit in USWAG—i.e., the
provisions that allowed unlined
impoundments to continue to operate
until they leak; the provisions that
treated ‘‘clay-lined’’ units as lined units;
and the provisions that excluded legacy
units. As a consequence, the federal
requirements that correspond to those
provisions will now apply in Oklahoma.
Two of these provisions have been
revised in this rulemaking, and those
revisions will take effect in Oklahoma
because these federal requirements
continue to operate. These are the
revisions to 40 CFR 257.101(a) and
section 257.71(a)(1)(i).
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However, Oklahoma was granted
approval for § 257.103, and their
regulations continue to operate without
change in lieu of the federal program. In
essence this means that the revisions
promulgated in this rule making will
not take effect in Oklahoma until such
time as Oklahoma revises the program
to adopt them. However, Oklahoma
must revise its CCR regulations within
three years of any revisions to the
federal regulations that are more
stringent, in order to maintain their
program approval. See, RCRA section
4005(d)(1)(D)(i)(II). EPA determined that
parts of the amendments to § 257.103
are more stringent than the previous
regulations. The modifications that
allow the continued disposal of nonCCR wastestreams are arguably less
stringent; however, the maximum
amount of time allowed under the new
provisions in § 257.103 is less than that
allowed under the previous regulations
and therefore these revisions are
considered to be more stringent.
The same is true with respect to the
amendments to the annual groundwater
monitoring and corrective action report
and to the publicly accessible CCR
internet sites requirements in §§ 257.90
and 257.107. EPA considers these
revisions to be more stringent because
they impose new substantive
requirements. However, because the
state provisions that correspond to these
federal requirements have been
approved the federal revisions will not
take effect unless the state adopts the
revisions.
To maintain their program approval,
Oklahoma will have to update its state
CCR regulations and submit the
modified portions for EPA approval.
The process for approving Oklahoma’s
modifications is the same as for the
initial program approval: EPA will
propose to approve or deny the program
modification and hold a public hearing
during the comment period. EPA will
then issue the final program
determination within 180 days of
determining that the state’s submission
is complete.
Similarly, Georgia did not apply for
approval of four provisions in their
permit program; as a consequence, the
federal requirements that correspond to
those four provisions continue to apply
in Georgia. Two of these four provisions
have been revised in this rulemaking,
and those revisions will take effect in
Georgia because these federal
requirements continue to operate. These
are the revisions to §§ 257.101(a) and
257.71(a)(1)(i). For the same reason, the
state is not required to modify these
parts of their program within the three
years in order to maintain program
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approval. However, Georgia was granted
approval for §§ 257.90, 257.103,
257.107, and because the state
regulations operate in lieu of the federal
regulations the revisions made to these
provisions in this rule will not take
effect in Georgia unless the state amends
its regulations to adopt them.
As discussed above, because the
amended provisions are more stringent
than the previous regulations, Georgia
will need to amend its regulations to
incorporate the new timeframes within
three years of the effective date of this
final rule and submit a program
modification to EPA for approval.
IX. Economic Impacts of This Action
A. Introduction
EPA estimated the costs and benefits
of this action in a Regulatory Impact
Analysis (RIA), which is available in the
docket for this action. The RIA estimates
the incremental costs and cost savings
attributable to the provisions of this
action against the baseline costs and
practices in place as a result of the 2015
CCR final rule, and the 2018 CCR Phase
One final rule.
EPA updated the 2015 CCR final rule
baseline to account for the 2018 Phase
One final rule and also to account for
two developments. These are the
availability of publicly accessible
universe data and the effect of the 2018
court decisions. These updates increase
the baseline costs estimated for the CCR
program against which the RIA
estimates the incremental effects of this
final rulemaking action.
The RIA estimates that the net
annualized impact of this final
regulation will be annual cost savings of
$26.1 million at 7 percent or an
estimated annualized net cost savings of
$16.7 million per year when
discounting at 3 percent. This action is
not considered an economically
significant action under Executive Order
12866.
B. Affected Universe
This final rulemaking action affects
coal fired electric utility plants
(assigned to the utility sector North
American Industry Classification
System (NAICS) code 22). The rule is
estimated to potentially impact 523
surface impoundments at 229 facilities.
C. Costs, Cost Savings, and Benefits of
the Final Rule
The costs attributable to this final rule
arise from the reporting and
documentation that must be completed
by regulated entities and submitted to
EPA in order to qualify for some of the
closure deadline extension provisions of
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the rule as well as other reporting
requirements related to the annual
groundwater monitoring and corrective
action reports, publicly accessible CCR
internet sites, and the closure of CCR
units. These costs are estimated to
amount to an annualized $0.2 million
per year when discounting at 7 percent
and an annualized $0.02 million per
year when discounting at 3 percent.
The cost savings attributable to this
final rule include cost savings from
extending the deadlines by which units
must cease receiving waste and initiate
closure. Cost savings also follow from
the avoided cost of new unit
construction for CCR units associated
with qualified coal fired boilers which
are closing by 2023 or 2028. Overall, the
final rule is expected to result in net
cost savings of an annualized $26.1
million when discounting at 7 percent
or an estimated annualized net cost
savings of $16.7 million per year when
discounting at 3 percent.
The RIA accompanying the 2015 CCR
Rule monetized 11 categories of benefits
attributable to the national minimum
criteria. EPA expects to retain the vast
majority of these monetized benefits
under the provisions of the Part A rule.
Some benefit categories, such as
reduced future CCR impoundment
releases, are unaffected by the
provisions of the Part A rule. Other
benefit categories, such as reduced
groundwater contamination and other
human health and environmental
benefits should be largely retained
because EPA is requiring units that take
advantage of the alternative closure
provisions in § 257.103(f)(1) and
§ 257.103(f)(2) to certify to EPA that
they are in full compliance with the
2015 CCR rule. Units unable to make
this certification must instead close by
the earliest possible date, which EPA
identifies as April 11, 2021. A
discussion of the impact to each
category of monetized benefits is
available in Section 3.4 of the Part A
RIA.
X. Statutory and Executive Order (E.O.)
Reviews
Additional information about these
statutes and Executive Orders can be
found at https://www2.epa.gov/lawsregulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This is a significant regulatory action
that was submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review because it raises novel legal or
policy issues. Any changes made in
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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
available in the docket and is
summarized in section IX of this
preamble.
B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
Costs
This action is considered an
Executive Order 13771 deregulatory
action. Details on the estimated costs of
this final rule can be found in EPA’s
analysis of the potential costs and
benefits associated with this action.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
The information collection activities
in this final rule have been submitted
for approval to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
the PRA. The Information Collection
Request (ICR) document that EPA
prepared has been assigned EPA ICR
number 1189.32. You can find a copy of
the ICR in the docket for this rule, and
it is briefly summarized here.
The information to be collected as a
part of this rule includes
demonstrations that must be made to
EPA by owners and operators of units
that seek to obtain a § 257.103(f)(1)
extension. These demonstrations will
show that the unit in question meets the
necessary criteria to receive the
extension. Units that operate under this
extension will also be required to
publish semi-annual progress reports on
their publicly accessible CCR internet
sites to keep EPA and the public
appraised of their progress and any
operational changes at the facility.
Similarly, units that seek to obtain a
§ 257.103(f)(2) extension must
demonstrate to EPA that they meet the
necessary criteria to receive the
extension. The criteria are generally the
same as the criteria for § 257.103(f)(1)
with the addition of a risk mitigation
plan. Units that obtain an extension
under § 257.103(f)(2) must publish
annual progress reports on their
publicly accessible CCR internet sites.
Information to be collected also
include the addition of a summary at
the beginning of the required annual
groundwater monitoring and corrective
action reports. These summaries will
make the information in the reports
more easily accessible to the public.
EPA is also revising the requirements
for publicly accessible CCR internet
sites to ensure that all information
required to be on the websites be made
available to any member of the public in
multiple formats, in a timely way, and
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not requiring any information be
submitted in exchange for access.
Respondents/affected entities: Coalfired electric utility plants that will be
affected by the rule.
Respondent’s obligation to respond:
The recordkeeping, notification, and
posting are mandatory as part of the
minimum national criteria being
promulgated under Sections 1008, 4004,
and 4005(a) of RCRA.
Estimated number of respondents:
299.
Frequency of response: The frequency
of response varies.
Total estimated burden: EPA
estimates the total annual burden to
respondents to be an increase in burden
of approximately 9,820 hours from the
currently approved burden. Burden is
defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
Total estimated cost: $722,000 (per
year), includes $0 annualized capital or
operation & maintenance costs.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number. The OMB control
numbers for EPA’s regulations in 40
CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA. In making this
determination, EPA believes that the
impact of concern is any significant
adverse economic impact on small
entities, and that an agency may certify
that a rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities if the rule
relieves regulatory burden, has no net
burden or otherwise has a positive
economic effect on the small entities
subject to the rule. The rule is estimated
to potentially impact 77 facilities that
are considered small.
This action is expected to result in net
cost savings of an annualized $26.1
million per year. These cost savings will
accrue to all regulated entities. We have
therefore concluded that this action will
relieve regulatory burden for all directly
regulated small entities.
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate of $100 million or
more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C.
1531–1538, and does not significantly or
uniquely affect small governments. This
action imposes no enforceable duty on
any state, local or tribal governments or
the private sector.
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F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial
direct effects on the states, on the
relationship between the national
government and the states, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action does not have tribal
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13175. For the ‘‘Final Rule:
Hazardous and Solid Waste
Management System; Disposal of Coal
Combustion Residuals from Electric
Utilities’’ published April 17, 2015 (80
FR 21302), EPA identified three of the
414 coal-fired electric utility plants (in
operation as of 2012) as being located on
tribal lands. However, this action does
not impose substantial direct
compliance costs or otherwise have a
substantial direct effect on one or more
Indian tribes, to the best of EPA’s
knowledge. Neither will it have
substantial direct effects on the
relationship between the federal
government and Indian tribes, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
government and Indian tribes. Thus,
Executive Order 13175 does not apply
to this action.
H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risk and Safety Risks
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13045 because it is not
economically significant as defined in
Executive Order 12866, and because
EPA does not believe 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 the
document titled ‘‘Human and Ecological
Risk Assessment of Coal Combustion
Residuals,’’ which is available in the
docket for the final rule as docket item
EPA–HQ–RCRA–2009–0640–11993.
As ordered by E.O. 13045 Section 1–
101(a), for the ‘‘Final Rule: Hazardous
and Solid Waste Management System;
Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals
from Electric Utilities’’ published April
17, 2015 (80 FR 21302), EPA identified
and assessed environmental health risks
and safety risks that may
disproportionately affect children in the
revised risk assessment. The results of
the screening assessment found that
risks fell below the criteria when
wetting and run-on/runoff controls
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required by the rule are considered.
Under the full probabilistic analysis,
composite liners required by the rule for
new waste management units showed
the ability to reduce the 90th percentile
child cancer and non-cancer risks for
the groundwater to drinking water
pathway to well below EPA’s criteria.
Additionally, the groundwater
monitoring and corrective action
required by the rule reduced risks from
current waste management units. This
action does not adversely affect these
requirements and EPA believes that this
rule will be protective of children’s
health.
I. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Use
This action is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ because it is not likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution or use of energy.
For the 2015 CCR rule, EPA analyzed
the potential impact on electricity prices
relative to the ‘‘in excess of one
percent’’ threshold. Using the Integrated
Planning Model (IPM), EPA concluded
that the 2015 CCR Rule may increase the
weighted average nationwide wholesale
price of electricity between 0.18 percent
and 0.19 percent in the years 2020 and
2030, respectively. As the proposed rule
represents a cost savings rule relative to
the 2015 CCR rule, this analysis
concludes that any potential impact on
wholesale electricity prices will be
lower than the potential impact
estimated of the 2015 CCR rule;
therefore, this proposed rule is not
expected to meet the criteria of a
‘‘significant adverse effect’’ on the
electricity markets as defined by
Executive Order 13211.
J. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
K. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
EPA believes that this action does not
have disproportionately high and
adverse human health or environmental
effects on minority populations, lowincome populations and/or indigenous
peoples, as specified in Executive Order
12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
The documentation for this decision is
contained in EPA’s Regulatory Impact
Analysis (RIA) for the CCR rule which
is available in the docket for the 2015
CCR final rule as docket item EPA–HQ–
RCRA–2009–0640–12034.
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EPA’s risk assessment did not
separately evaluate either minority or
low-income populations. However, to
evaluate the demographic
characteristics of communities that may
be affected by the CCR rule, the RIA for
the 2015 CCR Rule compares the
demographic characteristics of
populations surrounding coal-fired
electric utility plants with broader
population data for two geographic
areas: (1) One-mile radius from CCR
management units (i.e., landfills and
impoundments) likely to be affected by
groundwater releases from both landfills
and impoundments; and (2) watershed
catchment areas downstream of surface
impoundments that receive surface
water run-off and releases from CCR
impoundments and are at risk of being
contaminated from CCR impoundment
discharges (e.g., unintentional
overflows, structural failures, and
intentional periodic discharges).
For the population as a whole 24.8
percent belong to a minority group and
11.3 percent falls below the Federal
Poverty Level. For the population living
within one mile of plants with surface
impoundments 16.1 percent belong to a
minority group and 13.2 percent live
below the Federal Poverty Level. These
minority and low-income populations
are not disproportionately high
compared to the general population.
The percentage of minority residents of
the entire population living within the
catchment areas downstream of surface
impoundments is disproportionately
high relative to the general population,
i.e., 28.7 percent, versus 24.8 percent for
the national population. Also, the
percentage of the population within the
catchment areas of surface
impoundments that is below the Federal
Poverty Level is disproportionately high
compared with the general population,
i.e., 18.6 percent versus 11.3 percent
nationally.
L. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and
EPA will submit a rule report to each
House of the Congress and to the
Comptroller General of the United
States. This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’
as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 257
Environmental protection, Beneficial
use, Coal combustion products, Coal
combustion residuals, Coal combustion
waste, Disposal, Hazardous waste,
Landfill, Surface impoundment.
Andrew Wheeler,
Administrator.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, EPA amends title 40, chapter
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I, of the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
■
PART 257—CRITERIA FOR
CLASSIFICATION OF SOLID WASTE
DISPOSAL FACILITIES AND
PRACTICES
§ 257.90
1. The authority citation for part 257
is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6907(a)(3), 6912(a)(1),
6944, 6945(a) and (d); 33 U.S.C. 1345(d) and
(e).
2. Amend § 257.53 by adding
definitions in alphabetical order for
‘‘Eligible unlined CCR surface
impoundment,’’ ‘‘Technically feasible,’’
and ‘‘Technically infeasible’’ to read as
follows:
■
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Eligible unlined CCR surface
impoundment means an existing CCR
surface impoundment that meets all of
the following conditions:
(1) The owner or operator has
documented that the CCR unit is in
compliance with the location
restrictions specified under §§ 257.60
through 257.64;
(2) The owner or operator has
documented that the CCR unit is in
compliance with the periodic safety
factor assessment requirements under
§ 257.73(e) and (f); and
(3) No constituent listed in Appendix
IV to this part has been detected at a
statistically significant level exceeding a
groundwater protection standard
defined under § 257.95(h).
*
*
*
*
*
Technically feasible means possible to
do in a way that would likely be
successful.
Technically infeasible means not
possible to do in a way that would
likely be successful.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 257.71 by removing and
reserving paragraph (a)(1)(i) and
revising paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (ii).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 257.71 Liner design criteria for existing
CCR surface impoundments.
(a) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) The owner or operator of the CCR
unit determines that the CCR unit is not
constructed with a liner that meets the
requirements of paragraph (a)(1)(ii) or
(iii) of this section; or
(ii) The owner or operator of the CCR
unit fails to document whether the CCR
unit was constructed with a liner that
meets the requirements of paragraph
(a)(1)(ii) or (iii) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
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Applicability.
*
■
§ 257.53
4. Amend § 257.90 by adding
paragraph (e)(6) to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(6) A section at the beginning of the
annual report that provides an overview
of the current status of groundwater
monitoring and corrective action
programs for the CCR unit. At a
minimum, the summary must specify all
of the following:
(i) At the start of the current annual
reporting period, whether the CCR unit
was operating under the detection
monitoring program in § 257.94 or the
assessment monitoring program in
§ 257.95;
(ii) At the end of the current annual
reporting period, whether the CCR unit
was operating under the detection
monitoring program in § 257.94 or the
assessment monitoring program in
§ 257.95;
(iii) If it was determined that there
was a statistically significant increase
over background for one or more
constituents listed in appendix III to
this part pursuant to § 257.94(e):
(A) Identify those constituents listed
in appendix III to this part and the
names of the monitoring wells
associated with such an increase; and
(B) Provide the date when the
assessment monitoring program was
initiated for the CCR unit.
(iv) If it was determined that there
was a statistically significant level above
the groundwater protection standard for
one or more constituents listed in
appendix IV to this part pursuant to
§ 257.95(g) include all of the following:
(A) Identify those constituents listed
in appendix IV to this part and the
names of the monitoring wells
associated with such an increase;
(B) Provide the date when the
assessment of corrective measures was
initiated for the CCR unit;
(C) Provide the date when the public
meeting was held for the assessment of
corrective measures for the CCR unit;
and
(D) Provide the date when the
assessment of corrective measures was
completed for the CCR unit.
(v) Whether a remedy was selected
pursuant to § 257.97 during the current
annual reporting period, and if so, the
date of remedy selection; and
(vi) Whether remedial activities were
initiated or are ongoing pursuant to
§ 257.98 during the current annual
reporting period.
*
*
*
*
*
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§ 257.91
53561
[Amended]
5. Amend § 257.91 by removing and
reserving paragraph (d)(2).
■ 6. Amend § 257.95 by revising
paragraph (g)(5) to read as follows:
■
§ 257.95
Assessment monitoring program.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(5) The owner or operator must
prepare a notification stating that an
assessment of corrective measures has
been initiated.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Amend § 257.101 by revising
paragraphs (a)(1) and (b)(1)(i) to read as
follows:
§ 257.101
Closure or retrofit of CCR units.
(a) * * *
(1) Except as provided by paragraph
(a)(3) of this section, as soon as
technically feasible, but not later than
April 11, 2021, an owner or operator of
an existing unlined CCR surface
impoundment must cease placing CCR
and non-CCR wastestreams into such
CCR surface impoundment and either
retrofit or close the CCR unit in
accordance with the requirements of
§ 257.102.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1)(i) Location standard under
§ 257.60. Except as provided by
paragraph (b)(4) of this section, the
owner or operator of an existing CCR
surface impoundment that has not
demonstrated compliance with the
location standard specified in
§ 257.60(a) must cease placing CCR and
non-CCR wastestreams into such CCR
unit as soon as technically feasible, but
no later than April 11, 2021, and close
the CCR unit in accordance with the
requirements of § 257.102.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. Revise § 257.103 to read as follows:
§ 257.103 Alternative closure
requirements.
The owner or operator of a CCR
landfill, CCR surface impoundment, or
any lateral expansion of a CCR unit that
is subject to closure pursuant to
§ 257.101(a), (b)(1), or (d) may
nevertheless continue to receive the
wastes specified in either paragraph (a),
(b), (f)(1), or (f)(2) of this section in the
unit provided the owner or operator
meets all of the requirements contained
in the respective paragraph.
(a) CCR landfills—(1) No alternative
CCR disposal capacity. Notwithstanding
the provisions of § 257.101(d), a CCR
landfill may continue to recieve CCR if
the owner or operator of the CCR
landfill certifies that the CCR must
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continue to be managed in that CCR
landfill due to the absence of alternative
disposal capacity both on and off-site of
the facility. To qualify under this
paragraph, the owner or operator of the
CCR landfill must document that all of
the following conditions have been met:
(i) No alternative disposal capacity is
available on or off-site. An increase in
costs or the inconvenience of existing
capacity is not sufficient to support
qualification under this section;
(ii) The owner or operator has made,
and continues to make, efforts to obtain
additional capacity. Qualification under
this paragraph (a) lasts only as long as
no alternative capacity is available.
Once alternative capacity is identified,
the owner or operator must arrange to
use such capacity as soon as feasible;
(iii) The owner or operator must
remain in compliance with all other
requirements of this subpart, including
the requirement to conduct any
necessary corrective action; and
(iv) The owner or operator must
prepare the annual progress report
specified in paragraph (c) of this section
documenting the continued lack of
alternative capacity and the progress
towards the development of alternative
CCR disposal capacity.
(2) Once alternative capacity is
available, the CCR landfill must cease
receiving CCR and initiate closure
following the timeframes in
§ 257.102(e).
(3) If no alternative capacity is
identified within five years after the
initial certification, the CCR landfill
must cease receiving CCR and close in
accordance with the timeframes in
§ 257.102(e) and (f).
(b) CCR landfills—(1) Permanent
cessation of a coal-fired boiler(s) by a
date certain. Notwithstanding the
provisions of § 257.101(d), a CCR
landfill may continue to receive CCR if
the owner or operator certifies that the
facility will cease operation of the coalfired boilers within the timeframe
specified in paragraph (b)(4) of this
section, but in the interim period (prior
to closure of the coal-fired boiler), the
facility must continue to use the CCR
landfill due to the absence of alternative
disposal capacity both on and off-site of
the facility. To qualify under this
paragraph, the owner or operator of the
CCR landfill must document that all of
the following conditions have been met:
(i) No alternative disposal capacity is
available on or off-site. An increase in
costs or the inconvenience of existing
capacity is not sufficient to support
qualification under this section.
(ii) The owner or operator must
remain in compliance with all other
requirements of this subpart, including
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the requirement to conduct any
necessary corrective action; and
(iii) The owner or operator must
prepare the annual progress report
specified in paragraph (c) of this section
documenting the continued lack of
alternative capacity and the progress
towards the closure of the coal-fired
boiler.
(2)–(3) [Reserved]
(4) For a CCR landfill, the coal-fired
boiler must cease operation, and the
CCR landfill must complete closure no
later than April 19, 2021.
(c) Required notices and progress
reports for CCR landfills. An owner or
operator of a CCR landfill that closes in
accordance with paragraph (a) or (b) of
this section must complete the notices
and progress reports specified in
paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this
section.
(1) Within six months of becoming
subject to closure pursuant to
§ 257.101(d), the owner or operator must
prepare and place in the facility’s
operating record a notification of intent
to comply with the alternative closure
requirements of this section. The
notification must describe why the CCR
landfill qualifies for the alternative
closure provisions under either
paragraph (a) or (b) of this section, in
addition to providing the
documentation and certifications
required by paragraph (a) or (b) of this
section.
(2) The owner or operator must
prepare the periodic progress reports
required by paragraph (a)(1)(iv) or
(b)(1)(iii) of this section, in addition to
describing any problems encountered
and a description of the actions taken to
resolve the problems. The annual
progress reports must be completed
according to the following schedule:
(i) The first annual progress report
must be prepared no later than 13
months after completing the notification
of intent to comply with the alternative
closure requirements required by
paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
(ii) The second annual progress report
must be prepared no later than 12
months after completing the first annual
progress report. Subsequent annual
progress reports must be prepared
within 12 months of completing the
previous annual progress report.
(iii) The owner or operator has
completed the progress reports specified
in this paragraph (c)(2) when the reports
are placed in the facility’s operating
record as required by § 257.105(i)(11).
(3) An owner or operator of a CCR
landfill must also prepare the
notification of intent to close a CCR
landfill as required by § 257.102(g).
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(d) CCR landfill recordkeeping. The
owner or operator of the CCR landfill
must comply with the recordkeeping
requirements specified in § 257.105(i),
the notification requirements specified
in § 257.106(i), and the internet
requirements specified in § 257.107(i).
(e) [Reserved]
(f) Site-specific alternative deadlines
to initiate closure of CCR surface
impoundments. Notwithstanding the
provisions of § 257.101(a) and (b)(1), a
CCR surface impoundment may
continue to receive the waste specified
in paragraph (f)(1) or (2) of this section,
provided the owner or operator submits
a demonstration that the criteria in
either paragraph (f)(1) or (2) of this
section have been met. The
demonstration must be submitted to the
Administrator or the Participating State
Director no later than the relevant
deadline in paragraph (f)(3) of this
section. The Administrator or the
Participating State Director will act on
the submission in accordance with the
procedures in paragraph (f)(3) of this
section.
(1) Development of alternative
capacity is technically infeasible.
Notwithstanding the provisions of
§ 257.101(a) and (b)(1), a CCR surface
impoundment may continue to receive
the waste specified in paragraph
(f)(1)(ii)(A) or (B) of this section,
provided the owner or operator
demonstrates the wastestream(s) must
continue to be managed in that CCR
surface impoundment because it was
technically infeasible to complete the
measures necessary to provide
alternative disposal capacity on or offsite of the facility by April 11, 2021. To
obtain approval under this paragraph all
of the following criteria must be met:
(i) No alternative disposal capacity is
available on or off-site. An increase in
costs or the inconvenience of existing
capacity is not sufficient to support
qualification under this section;
(ii)(A) For units closing pursuant to
§ 257.101(a) and (b)(1)(i), CCR and/or
non-CCR wastestreams must continue to
be managed in that CCR surface
impoundment because it was
technically infeasible to complete the
measures necessary to obtain alternative
disposal capacity either on or off-site of
the facility by April 11, 2021.
(B) For units closing pursuant to
§ 257.101(b)(1)(ii), CCR must continue
to be managed in that CCR surface
impoundment because it was
technically infeasible to complete the
measures necessary to obtain alternative
disposal capacity either on or off-site of
the facility by April 11, 2021.
(iii) The facility is in compliance with
all of the requirements of this subpart.
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(iv) The owner or operator of the CCR
surface impoundment must submit
documentation that the criteria in
paragraphs (f)(1)(i) through (iii) of this
section have been met by submitting to
the Administrator or the Participating
State Director all of the following:
(A) To demonstrate that the criteria in
paragraphs (f)(1)(i) and (ii) of this
section have been met the owner or
operator must submit a workplan that
contains all of the following elements:
(1) A written narrative discussing the
options considered both on and off-site
to obtain alternative capacity for each
CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams, the
technical infeasibility of obtaining
alternative capacity prior to April 11,
2021, and the option selected and
justification for the alternative capacity
selected. The narrative must also
include all of the following:
(i) An in-depth analysis of the site and
any site-specific conditions that led to
the decision to select the alternative
capacity being developed;
(ii) An analysis of the adverse impact
to plant operations if the CCR surface
impoundment in question were to no
longer be available for use; and
(iii) A detailed explanation and
justification for the amount of time
being requested and how it is the fastest
technically feasible time to complete the
development of the alternative capacity;
(2) A detailed schedule of the fastest
technically feasible time to complete the
measures necessary for alternative
capacity to be available including a
visual timeline representation. The
visual timeline must clearly show all of
the following:
(i) How each phase and the steps
within that phase interact with or are
dependent on each other and the other
phases;
(ii) All of the steps and phases that
can be completed concurrently;
(iii) The total time needed to obtain
the alternative capacity and how long
each phase and step within each phase
will take; and
(iv) At a minimum, the following
phases: Engineering and design,
contractor selection, equipment
fabrication and delivery, construction,
and start up and implementation.;
(3) A narrative discussion of the
schedule and visual timeline
representation, which must discuss all
of the following:
(i) Why the length of time for each
phase and step is needed and a
discussion of the tasks that occur during
the specific step;
(ii) Why each phase and step shown
on the chart must happen in the order
it is occurring;
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(iii) The tasks that occur during each
of the steps within the phase; and
(iv) Anticipated worker schedules;
and
(4) A narrative discussion of the
progress the owner or operator has made
to obtain alternative capacity for the
CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams. The
narrative must discuss all the steps
taken, starting from when the owner or
operator initiated the design phase up to
the steps occurring when the
demonstration is being compiled. It
must discuss where the facility
currently is on the timeline and the
efforts that are currently being
undertaken to develop alternative
capacity.
(B) To demonstrate that the criteria in
paragraph (f)(1)(iii) of this section have
been met, the owner or operator must
submit all of the following:
(1) A certification signed by the owner
or operator that the facility is in
compliance with all of the requirements
of this subpart;
(2) Visual representation of
hydrogeologic information at and
around the CCR unit(s) that supports the
design, construction and installation of
the groundwater monitoring system.
This includes all of the following:
(i) Map(s) of groundwater monitoring
well locations in relation to the CCR
unit(s);
(ii) Well construction diagrams and
drilling logs for all groundwater
monitoring wells; and
(iii) Maps that characterize the
direction of groundwater flow
accounting for seasonal variations;
(3) Constituent concentrations,
summarized in table form, at each
groundwater monitoring well monitored
during each sampling event;
(4) A description of site hydrogeology
including stratigraphic cross-sections;
(5) Any corrective measures
assessment conducted as required at
§ 257.96;
(6) Any progress reports on corrective
action remedy selection and design and
the report of final remedy selection
required at § 257.97(a);
(7) The most recent structural stability
assessment required at § 257.73(d); and
(8) The most recent safety factor
assessment required at § 257.73(e).
(v) As soon as alternative capacity for
any CCR or non-CCR wastestream is
available, the CCR surface
impoundment must cease receiving that
CCR or non-CCR wastestream. Once the
CCR surface impoundment ceases
receipt of all CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams, the CCR surface
impoundment must initiate closure
following the timeframes in § 257.102(e)
and (f).
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53563
(vi) Maximum time frames. All CCR
surface impoundments covered by this
section must cease receiving waste by
the deadlines specified in paragraphs
(f)(1)(vi)(A) and (B) of this section and
close in accordance with the timeframes
in § 257.102(e) and (f).
(A) Except as provided by paragraph
(f)(1)(vi)(B) of this section, no later than
October 15, 2023.
(B) An eligible unlined CCR surface
impoundment must cease receiving CCR
and/or non-CCR wastestreams no later
than October 15, 2024. In order to
continue to operate until October 15,
2024, the owner or operator must
demonstrate that the unit meets the
definition of an eligible unlined CCR
surface impoundment.
(vii) An owner or operator may seek
additional time beyond the time granted
in the initial approval by making the
showing in paragraphs (f)(1)(i) through
(iv) of this section, provided that no
facility may be granted time to operate
the impoundment beyond the maximum
allowable time frames provided in
§ 257.103(f)(1)(vi).
(viii) The owner or operator at all
times bears responsibility for
demonstrating qualification under this
section. Failure to remain in compliance
with any of the requirements of this
subpart will result in the automatic loss
of authorization under this section.
(ix) The owner or operator must:
(A) Upon submission of the
demonstration to the Administrator or
the Participating State Director, prepare
and place in the facility’s operating
record a notification that it has
submitted the demonstration, along
with a copy of the demonstration. An
owner or operator that claims CBI in the
demonstration may post a redacted
version of the demonstration to its
publicly accessible CCR internet site
provided that it contains sufficient
detail so that the public can
meaningfully comment on the
demonstration.
(B) Upon receipt of a decision
pursuant to paragraph (f)(3) of this
section, must prepare and place in the
facility’s operating record a copy of the
decision.
(C) If an extension of an approved
deadline pursuant to paragraph
(f)(1)(vii) of this section has been
requested, place a copy of the request
submitted to the Administrator or the
Participating State Director in the
facility’s operating record.
(x) The owner or operator must
prepare semi-annual progress reports.
The semi-annual progress reports must
contain all of the following elements:
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(A) Discussion of the progress made to
date in obtaining alternative capacity,
including:
(1) Discussion of the current stage of
obtaining the capacity in reference to
the timeline required under paragraph
(f)(1)(iv)(A) of this section;
(2) Discussion of whether the owner
or operator is on schedule for obtaining
alternative capacity;
(3) If the owner or operator is not on
or ahead of schedule for obtaining
alternative capacity, the following must
be included:
(i) Discussion of any problems
encountered, and a description of the
actions taken or planned to resolve the
problems and get back on schedule; and
(ii) Discussion of the goals for the next
six months and major milestones to be
achieved for obtaining alternative
capacity; and
(B) Discussion of any planned
operational changes at the facility.
(xi) The progress reports must be
completed according to the following
schedule:
(A) The semi-annual progress reports
must be prepared no later than April 30
and October 31 of each year for the
duration of the alternative cease receipt
of waste deadline.
(B) The first semi-annual progress
report must be prepared by whichever
date, April 30 or October 31, is soonest
after receiving approval from the
Administrator or the Participating State
Director; and
(C) The owner or operator has
completed the progress reports specified
in paragraph (f)(1)(x) of this section
when the reports have been placed in
the facility’s operating record as
required by § 257.105(i)(17).
(xii) The owner or operator must
prepare the notification of intent to
close a CCR surface impoundment as
required by § 257.102(g).
(xiii) The owner or operator must
comply with the recordkeeping
requirements specified in § 257.105(i),
the notification requirements specified
in § 257.106(i), and the internet posting
requirements in § 257.107(i).
(2) Permanent cessation of a coalfired boiler(s) by a date certain.
Notwithstanding the provisions of
§ 257.101(a), and (b)(1), a CCR surface
impoundment may continue to receive
CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams if
the facility will cease operation of the
coal-fired boiler(s) and complete closure
of the impoundment within the
timeframes specified in paragraph
(f)(2)(iv) of this section, but in the
interim period (prior to closure of the
coal-fired boiler), the facility must
continue to use the CCR surface
impoundment due to the absence of
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alternative disposal capacity both on
and off-site of the facility. To qualify
under this paragraph all of the following
criteria must be met:
(i) No alternative disposal capacity is
available on or off-site. An increase in
costs or the inconvenience of existing
capacity is not sufficient to support
qualification under this section.
(ii) Potential risks to human health
and the environment from the
continued operation of the CCR surface
impoundment have been adequately
mitigated;
(iii) The facility is in compliance with
all other requirements of this subpart,
including the requirement to conduct
any necessary corrective action; and
(iv) The coal-fired boilers must cease
operation and closure of the
impoundment must be completed
within the following timeframes:
(A) For a CCR surface impoundment
that is 40 acres or smaller, the coal-fired
boiler(s) must cease operation and the
CCR surface impoundment must
complete closure no later than October
17, 2023.
(B) For a CCR surface impoundment
that is larger than 40 acres, the coalfired boiler(s) must cease operation, and
the CCR surface impoundment must
complete closure no later than October
17, 2028.
(v) The owner or operator of the CCR
surface impoundment must submit the
following documentation that the
criteria in paragraphs (f)(2)(i) through
(iv) of this section have been met as
specified in paragraphs (f)(2)(v)(A)
through (D) of this section.
(A) To demonstrate that the criteria in
paragraph (f)(2)(i) of this section have
been met the owner or operator must
submit a narrative that explains the
options considered to obtain alternative
capacity for CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams both on and off-site.
(B) To demonstrate that the criteria in
paragraph (f)(2)(ii) of this section have
been met the owner or operator must
submit a risk mitigation plan describing
the measures that will be taken to
expedite any required corrective action,
and that contains all of the following
elements:
(1) A discussion of any physical or
chemical measures a facility can take to
limit any future releases to groundwater
during operation.
(2) A discussion of the surface
impoundment’s groundwater
monitoring data and any found
exceedances; the delineation of the
plume (if necessary based on the
groundwater monitoring data);
identification of any nearby receptors
that might be exposed to current or
future groundwater contamination; and
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how such exposures could be promptly
mitigated.
(3) A plan to expedite and maintain
the containment of any contaminant
plume that is either present or identified
during continued operation of the unit.
(C) To demonstrate that the criteria in
paragraph (f)(2)(iii) of this section have
been met, the owner or operator must
submit all of the following:
(1) A certification signed by the owner
or operator that the facility is in
compliance with all of the requirements
of this subpart;
(2) Visual representation of
hydrogeologic information at and
around the CCR unit(s) that supports the
design, construction and installation of
the groundwater monitoring system.
This includes all of the following:
(i) Map(s) of groundwater monitoring
well locations in relation to the CCR
unit;
(ii) Well construction diagrams and
drilling logs for all groundwater
monitoring wells; and
(iii) Maps that characterize the
direction of groundwater flow
accounting for seasonal variations;
(3) Constituent concentrations,
summarized in table form, at each
groundwater monitoring well monitored
during each sampling event;
(4) Description of site hydrogeology
including stratigraphic cross-sections;
(5) Any corrective measures
assessment required at § 257.96;
(6) Any progress reports on remedy
selection and design and the report of
final remedy selection required at
§ 257.97(a);
(7) The most recent structural stability
assessment required at § 257.73(d); and
(8) The most recent safety factor
assessment required at § 257.73(e).
(D) To demonstrate that the criteria in
paragraph (f)(2)(iv) of this section have
been met, the owner or operator must
submit the closure plan required by
§ 257.102(b) and a narrative that
specifies and justifies the date by which
they intend to cease receipt of waste
into the unit in order to meet the closure
deadlines.
(vi) The owner or operator at all times
bears responsibility for demonstrating
qualification for authorization under
this section. Failure to remain in
compliance with any of the
requirements of this subpart will result
in the automatic loss of authorization
under this section.
(vii) The owner or operator must
comply with the recordkeeping
requirements specified in § 257.105(i),
the notification requirements specified
in § 257.106(i), and the internet posting
requirements in § 257.107(i).
(viii) Upon submission of the
demonstration to the Administrator or
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the Participating State Director the
owner or operator must prepare and
place in the facility’s operating record
and on its publicly accessible CCR
internet site a notification that is has
submitted a demonstration along with a
copy of the demonstration.
(ix) Upon receipt of a decision
pursuant to paragraph (f)(3) of this
section, the owner or operator must
place a copy of the decision in the
facility’s operating record and on the
facility’s publicly accessible CCR
internet site.
(x) The owner or operator must
prepare an annual progress report
documenting the continued lack of
alternative capacity and the progress
towards the closure of the CCR surface
impoundment. The owner or operator
has completed the progress report when
the report has been placed in the
facility’s operating record as required by
§ 257.105(i)(20).
(3) Process to Obtain Authorization.
(i) Deadlines for Submission. (A) The
owner or operator must submit the
demonstration required under
paragraph (f)(1)(iv) of this section, for an
alternative cease receipt of waste
deadline for a CCR surface
impoundment pursuant to paragraph
(f)(1) of this section, to the
Administrator or the Participating State
Director for approval no later than
November 30, 2020.
(B) An owner or operator may seek
additional time beyond the time granted
in the initial approval, in accordance
with paragraph (f)(1)(vii) of this section,
by submitting a new demonstration, as
required under paragraph (f)(1)(iv) of
this section, to the Administrator or the
Participating State Director for approval,
no later than fourteen days from
determining that the cease receipt of
waste deadline will not be met.
(C) The owner or operator must
submit the demonstration required
under paragraph (f)(2)(v) of this section
to the Administrator for approval no
later than November 30, 2020.
(ii) EPA will evaluate the
demonstration and may request
additional information to complete its
review. Submission of a complete
demonstration will toll the facility’s
deadline to cease receipt of waste until
issuance of a decision under paragraph
(f)(3)(iv) of this section. Incomplete
submissions will not toll the facility’s
deadline and will be rejected without
further process. All decisions issued
under this paragraph or paragraph
(f)(3)(iv) of this section will contain the
facility’s deadline to cease receipt of
waste.
(iii) EPA will publish its proposed
decision on a complete demonstration
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18:14 Aug 27, 2020
Jkt 250001
in a docket on www.regulations.gov for
a 15-day comment period. If the
demonstration is particularly complex,
EPA will provide a comment period of
20 to 30 days.
(iv) After consideration of the
comments, EPA will issue its decision
on the alternative compliance deadline
within four months of receiving a
complete demonstration.
(4) Transferring between site-specific
alternatives. An owner or operator
authorized to continue operating a CCR
surface impoundment under this section
may at any time request authorization to
continue operating the impoundment
pursuant to another paragraph of
subsection (f), by submitting the
information in paragraph (f)(4)(i) or (ii)
of this section.
(i) Transfer from § 257.103(f)(1) to
§ 257.103(f)(2). The owner or operator of
a surface impoundment authorized to
operate pursuant to paragraph (f)(1) of
this section may request authorization
to instead operate the surface
impoundment in accordance with the
requirements of paragraph (f)(2) of this
section, by submitting a new
demonstration that meets the
requirements of paragraph (f)(2)(v) of
this section to the Administrator or the
Participating State Director. EPA will
approve the request only upon
determining that the criteria at
paragraphs (f)(2)(i) through (iv) have
been met.
(ii) Transfer from § 257.103(f)(2) to
§ 257.103(f)(1). The owner or operator of
a surface impoundment authorized to
operate pursuant to paragraph (f)(2) of
this section may request authorization
to instead operate the surface
impoundment in accordance with the
requirements of paragraph (f)(1) of this
section, by submitting a new
demonstration that meets the
requirements of paragraph (f)(1)(iv) of
this section to the Administrator or the
Participating State Director. EPA will
approve the request only upon
determining that the criteria at
paragraphs (f)(1)(i) through (iii) and (vi)
of this section have been met.
(iii) The procedures in paragraph
(f)(3) of this section will apply to all
requests for transfer under this
paragraph.
■ 9. Amend § 257.105 by adding
paragraphs (i)(14) through (20) to read
as follows:
§ 257.105
Recordkeeping requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(14) The notification of intent to
comply with the site-specific alternative
to initiation of closure due to
development of alternative capacity
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
53565
infeasible as required by
§ 257.103(f)(1)(ix)(A).
(15) The approved or denied
demonstration for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to
development of alternative capacity
infeasible as required by
§ 257.103(f)(1)(ix)(B).
(16) The notification for requesting
additional time to the alternative cease
receipt of waste deadline as required by
§ 257.103(f)(1)(ix)(C).
(17) The semi-annual progress reports
for the site-specific alternative to
initiation of closure due to development
of alternative capacity infeasible as
required by § 257.103(f)(1)(xi).
(18) The notification of intent to
comply with the site-specific alternative
to initiation of closure due to permanent
cessation of a coal-fired boiler(s) by a
date certain as required by
§ 257.103(f)(2)(viii).
(19) The approved or denied
demonstration for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to
permanent cessation of a coal-fired
boiler(s) by a date certain as required by
§ 257.103(f)(2)(ix).
(20) The annual progress report for
the site-specific alternative to initiation
of closure due to permanent cessation of
a coal-fired boiler(s) by a date certain as
required by § 257.103(f)(2)(x).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Amend § 257.106 by adding
paragraphs (i)(14) through (20).
§ 257.106
Notification requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(14) Provide the notification of intent
to comply with the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to
development of alternative capacity
infeasible as specified under
§ 257.105(i)(14).
(15) Provide the approved or denied
demonstration for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to
development of alternative capacity
infeasible as required by as specified
under § 257.105(i)(15).
(16) Provide the notification for
requesting additional time to the
alternative cease receipt of waste
deadline as required by § 257.105(i)(16).
(17) The semi-annual progress reports
for the site-specific alternative to
initiation of closure due to development
of alternative capacity infeasible as
specified under § 257.105(i)(17).
(18) Provide the notification of intent
to comply with the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to
permanent cessation of a coal-fired
boiler(s) by a date certain as specified
under § 257.105(i)(18).
E:\FR\FM\28AUR2.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 168 / Friday, August 28, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
(19) Provide the approved or denied
demonstration for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to
permanent cessation of a coal-fired
boiler(s) by a date certain as required by
§ 257.105(i)(19).
(20) The annual progress report for
the site-specific alternative to initiation
of closure due to permanent cessation of
a coal-fired boiler(s) by a date certain as
required by § 257.105(i)(20).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Amend § 257.107 by revising
paragraph (a) and adding paragraphs
(i)(14) through (20) to read as follows:
§ 257.107 Publicly accessible internet site
requirements.
(a) Each owner or operator of a CCR
unit subject to the requirements of this
subpart must maintain a publicly
accessible internet site (CCR website)
containing the information specified in
this section. The owner or operator’s
website must be titled ‘‘CCR Rule
Compliance Data and Information.’’ The
website must ensure that all information
required to be posted is immediately
available to anyone visiting the site,
without requiring any prerequisite, such
as registration or a requirement to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:14 Aug 27, 2020
Jkt 250001
submit a document request. All required
information must be clearly identifiable
and must be able to be immediately
printed and downloaded by anyone
accessing the site. If the owner/operator
changes the web address (i.e., Uniform
Resource Locator (URL)) at any point,
they must notify EPA via the ‘‘contact
us’’ form on EPA’s CCR website and the
state director within 14 days of making
the change. The facility’s CCR website
must also have a ‘‘contact us’’ form or
a specific email address posted on the
website for the public to use to submit
questions and issues relating to the
availability of information on the
website.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(14) The notification of intent to
comply with the site-specific alternative
to initiation of closure due to
development of alternative capacity
infeasible as specified under
§ 257.105(i)(14).
(15) The approved or denied
demonstration for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to
development of alternative capacity
infeasible as required by as specified
under § 257.105(i)(15).
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
(16) The notification for requesting
additional time to the alternative cease
receipt of waste deadline as required by
§ 257.105(i)(16).
(17) The semi-annual progress reports
for the site-specific alternative to
initiation of closure due to development
of alternative capacity infeasible as
specified under § 257.105(i)(17).
(18) The notification of intent to
comply with the site-specific alternative
to initiation of closure due to permanent
cessation of a coal-fired boiler(s) by a
date certain as specified under
§ 257.105(i)(18).
(19) The approved or denied
demonstration for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to
permanent cessation of a coal-fired
boiler(s) by a date certain as required by
§ 257.105(i)(19).
(20) The annual progress report for
the site-specific alternative to initiation
of closure due to permanent cessation of
a coal-fired boiler(s) by a date certain as
required by § 257.105(i)(20).
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2020–16872 Filed 8–27–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
E:\FR\FM\28AUR2.SGM
28AUR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 168 (Friday, August 28, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 53516-53566]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-16872]
[[Page 53515]]
Vol. 85
Friday,
No. 168
August 28, 2020
Part IV
Environmental Protection Agency
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
40 CFR Part 257
Hazardous and Solid Waste Management System: Disposal of Coal
Combustion Residuals From Electric Utilities; A Holistic Approach to
Closure Part A: Deadline To Initiate Closure; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 168 / Friday, August 28, 2020 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 53516]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 257
[EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172 and EPA-HQ-OLEM-2018-0524; FRL-10013-20-OLEM]
RIN 2050-AH10
Hazardous and Solid Waste Management System: Disposal of Coal
Combustion Residuals From Electric Utilities; A Holistic Approach to
Closure Part A: Deadline To Initiate Closure
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On April 17, 2015, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or
the Agency) promulgated national minimum criteria for existing and new
coal combustion residuals (CCR) landfills and existing and new CCR
surface impoundments. On August 21, 2018, the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the D.C. Circuit issued its opinion in the case of Utility Solid Waste
Activities Group v. EPA, 901 F.3d 414 (per curiam) (USWAG). This rule
finalizes regulations, proposed on December 2, 2019, to implement the
court's vacatur of the 2015 provisions. The court vacated provisions
that allowed unlined impoundments to continue receiving coal ash unless
they leak, and classified ``clay-lined'' impoundments as lined, thereby
allowing such units to operate indefinitely. In addition, EPA is
establishing a revised date by which unlined surface impoundments must
cease receiving waste and initiate closure, following its
reconsideration of those dates in light of the USWAG decision. Lastly,
EPA is finalizing amendments proposed on August 14, 2019, to the
requirements for the annual groundwater monitoring and corrective
action report and the requirements for the publicly accessible CCR
internet sites.
DATES: This final rule is effective on September 28, 2020.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established two dockets for this action under Docket
ID No. EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172 and EPA-HQ-OLEM-2018-0524. All documents
in the docket are listed on the https://www.regulations.gov website.
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, is not placed on the internet
and will be publicly available only in hard copy form. Publicly
available docket materials are available electronically through https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information concerning this final
rule, contact Kirsten Hillyer, Materials Recovery and Waste Management
Division, Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery, Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, MC: 5304P, Washington,
DC 20460; telephone number: (703) 347-0369; email address:
[email protected]. For more information on this rulemaking,
please visit https://www.epa.gov/coalash.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of the Regulatory Action
B. Summary of the Major Provisions of the Regulatory Action
C. Costs and Benefits
II. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
B. What action is the Agency taking?
C. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?
D. What are the incremental costs and benefits of this action?
III. Background
A. The ``2015 CCR Rule''
B. The 2018 USWAG Decision
C. The July 30, 2018 Final Rule and the 2019 Waterkeeper
Decision
D. Public Participation With Respect to the August 2019 and
December 2019 Proposed Rules
IV. Statutory Authority
V. What final action is EPA taking on the December 2, 2019 proposal?
A. Revisions to Sec. 257.71 To Implement the 2018 USWAG
Decision
B. Revisions to Sec. 257.101 as a Result of EPA's
Reconsideration
1. EPA's Reconsideration of the October 31, 2020 Deadline
2. Approaches To Identify Alternative Capacity
3. Establishing the Revised Deadline for Affected Units To
Cease Receipt of Waste
C. Revisions to the Alternative Closure Standards (Sec.
257.103)
1. Short Term Alternative To Cease Receipt of Waste Deadline
(Sec. 257.103(e))
2. Issues Applicable to Both Sec. 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2)
3. Requirements for Development of Alternative Capacity
Infeasible (Sec. 257.103(f)(1))
4. Requirements for Permanent Cessation of Coal-Fired Boiler(s)
by a Date Certain (Sec. 257.103(f)(2))
5. Procedures for Approval and Denial of Alternative Compliance
Deadlines
6. Conforming Amendments to Sec. 257.103(a), (b), (c) and (d)
VI. What final action is EPA taking on the August 14, 2019 proposal?
A. Revisions to the Annual Groundwater Monitoring and Corrective
Action Report Requirements
B. Revisions to the Publicly Accessible CCR internet Site
Requirements
VII. Rationale for 30-Day Effective Date
VIII. State CCR Programs
A. Effect on This Final Rule on States With Approved CCR
Programs
IX. Economic Impacts of This Action
A. Introduction
B. Affected Universe
C. Costs and Cost Savings of the Final Rule
X. Statutory and Executive Order (E.O.) Reviews
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose of the Regulatory Action
This rule takes final action on the proposed rule published on
December 2, 2019 (84 FR 65941), as well as two issues included in the
proposal issued on August 14, 2019 (84 FR 40353). This unit of the
preamble summarizes public participation activities associated with
both proposed rules. EPA is publishing this final rule to revise
portions of the federal CCR regulations in title 40 of the Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 257 so that they accurately reflect the
regulations as they now stand in light of the D.C. Circuit's 2018
decision in USWAG, which vacated portions of EPA's 2015 final rule
promulgating national minimum criteria for existing and new CCR
landfills and existing and new CCR surface impoundments. Specifically,
the D.C. Circuit vacated (1) the provisions of the 2015 rule that
permitted unlined impoundments to continue receiving coal ash unless
they leak (see 40 CFR 257.101(a)); and (2) the provisions of the 2015
rule that classified ``clay-lined'' impoundments as lined (see 40 CFR
257.71(a)(1)(i)).
In addition, this final rule addresses the October 31, 2020
deadline in Sec. Sec. 257.101(a) and (b)(1)(i), by which CCR surface
impoundments must cease receipt of waste; in a separate case, these
regulatory provisions were remanded back to EPA by the D.C. Circuit for
further reconsideration in light of USWAG. See Waterkeeper Alliance
Inc. v. EPA, No. 18-1289 (D.C. Cir. 2019).
Lastly, EPA is finalizing amendments to the regulations in order to
address certain issues concerning publicly accessible internet sites,
and groundwater monitoring and corrective action annual reports that
have arisen since the April 17, 2015 publication of the CCR rule. These
amendments were proposed in a separate August 14, 2019 proposal. 84 FR
40353.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions of the Regulatory Action
In this action, EPA is finalizing five amendments to the part 257
regulations. First, EPA is finalizing a change to the classification of
compacted-soil lined or
[[Page 53517]]
``clay-lined'' surface impoundments from ``lined'' to ``unlined'' under
Sec. 257.71(a)(1)(i). This merely reflects the vacatur ordered in the
USWAG decision.
Second, EPA is finalizing revisions to the initiation of closure
deadlines for unlined CCR surface impoundments, and for units that
failed the aquifer location restriction, found in Sec. Sec. 257.101(a)
and (b)(1). These revisions address the USWAG decisions with respect to
all unlined and ``clay-lined'' impoundments, as well as revisions to
the provisions that were remanded to the Agency for further
reconsideration by the court in the Waterkeeper case. Specifically, EPA
is finalizing a new deadline of April 11, 2021, for CCR units to cease
receipt of waste and initiate closure because the unit either (1) is an
unlined or formerly ``clay-lined'' CCR surface impoundment (Sec.
257.101(a)) or (2) failed the aquifer location standard (Sec.
257.101(b)(1)).
Third, EPA is finalizing revisions to the alternative closure
provisions, Sec. 257.103. These revisions will grant facilities
additional time to develop alternative capacity to manage their
wastestreams (both CCR and/or non-CCR), to achieve cease receipt of
waste and initiate closure of their CCR surface impoundments. Table 1
below summarizes the deadlines finalized in this action.
Lastly, EPA is finalizing two of the proposed amendments from the
August 2019 rule: The addition of an executive summary to the annual
groundwater monitoring and corrective action reports; and the amended
requirements to the publicly accessible CCR internet sites.
Table 1--New Cease Receipt of Waste and Completion of Closure Deadlines
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regulatory citations for CCR surface
impoundments Deadline date
------------------------------------------------------------------------
New cease receipt of waste deadline for No later than April 11, 2021.
unlined and formerly ``clay-lined''
surface impoundments (Sec.
257.101(a)(1)).
New cease receipt of waste deadline for No later than April 11, 2021.
surface impoundments that failed the
minimum depth to aquifer location
standard (Sec. 257.101(b)(1)(i)).
New site-specific alternative to No later than October 15, 2023
initiation of closure due to lack of (maximum of 5 years after
capacity (Sec. 257.103(f)(1)). USWAG decision mandate date).
For eligible unlined CCR
surface impoundment: No later
than October 15, 2024.
New site-specific alternative to Completion of Closure:
initiation of closure due to permanent No later than October
cessation of a coal-fired boiler(s) by 17, 2023 for surface
a date certain (Sec. 257.103(f)(2)). impoundments 40 acres or
smaller.
No later than October
17, 2028 for surface
impoundments larger than 40
acres.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Costs and Benefits
Several developments have changed the estimated costs of the CCR
program since the publication of the final rule in 2015. First,
reporting data show that the affected universe of surface impoundments
is composed of more unlined units and more leaking surface impoundments
than were modeled in the 2015 Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA). The
affected universe of impoundments is therefore incurring higher closure
costs sooner, which increases the overall cost of the program. Second,
the D.C. Circuit vacated provisions of the rule that allowed certain
classes of surface impoundments to continue operating until they
leaked. This decision forces these units to close sooner than they were
modeled to close in the 2015 RIA. This also increases the overall cost
of the CCR program. This cost increase is estimated and shown in the
RIA. This increase in costs is attributable solely to the existing
provisions of the 2015 CCR rule. Overall, the provisions of this final
rule decrease costs by extending certain existing compliance deadlines.
The final rule is therefore considered a cost savings rule. This action
is expected to result in an estimated annualized net cost savings of
$26.1 million per year when discounting at 7 percent. It is also
expected to have a modest impact on a subset of the benefits monetized
in the RIA accompanying the 2015 CCR Rule. Further information on the
economic effects of this action can be found in unit IX of this
preamble and the RIA.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ US EPA. ``Regulatory Impact Analysis, Hazardous and Solid
Waste Management System: Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals from
Electric Utilities; A Holistic Approach to Closure Part A: Deadline
to Initiate Closure''. July 2020.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
This final rule applies to all CCR generated by electric utilities
and independent power producers that fall within the North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS) code 221112 and may affect the
following entities: Electric utility facilities and independent power
producers that fall under the NAICS code 221112. This discussion is not
intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a guide for readers
regarding entities likely to be regulated by this action. This
discussion lists the types of entities that EPA is now aware could
potentially be regulated by this action. Other types of entities not
described here could also be regulated. To determine whether your
entity is regulated by this action, you should carefully examine the
applicability criteria found in Sec. 257.50 of title 40 of the Code of
Federal Regulations. If you have questions regarding the applicability
of this action to a particular entity, consult the person listed in the
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
B. What action is the Agency taking?
EPA is revising certain provisions of the CCR regulations at 40 CFR
part 257 in response to the decisions issued by the D.C. Circuit on
August 21, 2018, in Utility Solid Waste Activities Group v. EPA 901
F.3d 414 (D.C. Cir.), and on March 13, 2019, in Waterkeeper Alliance
Inc. v. EPA, No. 18-1289 (D.C. Cir.). In addition, the Agency is also
finalizing two of the proposed amendments from the August 14, 2019
rulemaking that are not related to the USWAG and Waterkeeper decisions.
This final rule addresses the USWAG decision's vacatur of the
provisions in the 2015 rule that permitted unlined impoundments to
continue receiving waste unless they leak, 40 CFR 257.101(a), and that
classified ``clay-lined'' impoundments as lined, thereby allowing such
units to operate, 40 CFR 257.71(a)(1)(i). The USWAG decision also
vacated the exemption from the
[[Page 53518]]
2015 rule for inactive surface impoundments at inactive power plants,
also known as legacy units, which will be addressed in a subsequent
advanced notice of proposed rulemaking.
This final rule also addresses the date by which unlined CCR
surface impoundments and CCR units that failed the aquifer location
standard must cease receiving waste and initiate closure, which the
D.C. Circuit remanded to EPA on March 13, 2019 in the Waterkeeper case.
EPA is finalizing amendments to the alternative closure provisions,
40 CFR 257.103. EPA is amending the existing provisions (40 CFR
257.103(a) and (b)) to only apply to CCR landfills. EPA is establishing
new alternative closure provisions, 40 CFR 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2),
for which a facility must submit a demonstration to EPA for approval to
continue operating a CCR surface impoundment. These new alternative
closure provisions do not amend the implementation schedules of
groundwater monitoring and corrective action, as they remain unchanged.
The new alternative closure provisions will grant facilities additional
time to cease receipt of waste and initiate closure.
EPA is finalizing amendments to the regulations from the August
2019 proposal, addressing certain issues raised by stakeholders. EPA is
amending the annual groundwater monitoring and corrective action report
to include an executive summary. Additionally, EPA is finalizing
amendments to the publicly accessible CCR internet sites requirements
to ensure that they are truly accessible by the public.
EPA intends that the provisions of this rule be severable. In the
event that any individual provision or part of this rule is
invalidated, EPA intends that this would not render the entire rule
invalid, and that any individual provisions that can continue to
operate will be left in place.
C. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?
These regulations are established under the authority of sections
1008(a), 2002(a), 4004, and 4005(a) and (d) of the Solid Waste Disposal
Act of 1970, as amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
of 1976 (RCRA), the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984
(HSWA), and the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation (WIIN)
Act of 2016, 42 U.S.C. 6907(a), 6912(a), 6944, and 6945(a) and (d).
D. What are the incremental costs and benefits of this action?
This action is expected to result in an estimated annualized net
cost savings of $26.1 million per year when discounting at 7 percent or
an estimated annualized net cost savings of $16.7 million per year when
discounting at 3 percent. It is also expected to have a modest impact
on a subset of the benefits monetized in the RIA accompanying the 2015
CCR Rule. Further information on the economic effects of this action
can be found in unit IX of this preamble.
III. Background
A. The ``2015 CCR Rule''
On April 17, 2015, EPA finalized national minimum criteria for the
disposal of CCR as a solid waste under Subtitle D of RCRA. 80 FR 21302.
The Agency refers to the April 17, 2015 rule as the ``2015 CCR Rule''
in this preamble. CCR are generated from the combustion of coal by
electric utilities and independent power producers for the generation
of electricity. CCR include fly ash, bottom ash, boiler slag, and flue
gas desulfurization materials and are commonly referred to as coal ash.
The CCR regulations are codified in subpart D of part 257 of title 40
of the CFR.
The 2015 CCR Rule regulated existing and new CCR landfills and
existing and new CCR surface impoundments, as well as all lateral
expansions of these CCR units. The federal national minimum criteria
consist of location restrictions (siting limitations), design and
operating criteria, groundwater monitoring and corrective action
requirements, and closure and post-closure care requirements. In
addition, the 2015 CCR Rule put in place recordkeeping, notification,
and internet posting provisions that require owners and operators of
CCR units to maintain a publicly accessible internet site of rule
compliance information. The 2015 CCR Rule does not regulate CCR that
are beneficially used. It established a definition of ``beneficial use
of CCR'' to distinguish between beneficial use and disposal.
Of particular relevance to this action, the 2015 CCR Rule required
that any existing unlined CCR surface impoundment that causes
groundwater concentrations to exceed a groundwater protection standard
must stop receiving waste (CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams) within six
months of making such exceedance determination. This would also trigger
the requirement to initiate either unit retrofit or closure
activities.\2\ See Sec. 257.101(a)(1) at 80 FR 21490 (April 17, 2015).
In the 2015 CCR Rule, the term ``unlined'' CCR surface impoundment
included any unit not constructed with one of the following types of
liners: (1) A composite liner; (2) an alternative composite liner; or
(3) a liner consisting of a minimum of two feet of compacted soil with
a hydraulic conductivity of no more than 1 x 10-7
centimeters per second. Lined CCR surface impoundments (as defined in
the CCR regulations) that impact groundwater above the specified
groundwater protection standard are not required to close and could
continue to operate while corrective action is performed, and the
source of the leak is addressed.
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\2\ Certain units may be eligible for the alternative closure
procedures specified in Sec. 257.103, which would change the date
by which the unit must stop receiving waste.
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The 2015 CCR Rule was challenged by several parties, including a
coalition of regulated entities and a coalition of environmental
organizations (``Environmental Petitioners''). See USWAG v. EPA, 901
F.3d 414 (D.C. Cir. 2018). The Environmental Petitioners raised two
challenges \3\ that are relevant to this final rule. First, they
challenged the provision that allowed existing, unlined CCR surface
impoundments to continue to operate until they cause groundwater
contamination. See Sec. 257.101(a)(1) at 80 FR 21490 (April 17, 2015).
They contended that EPA failed to show how continued operation of
unlined impoundments met RCRA's baseline requirement that any solid
waste disposal site pose ``no reasonable probability of adverse effects
on health or the environment.'' See 42 U.S.C. 6944(a). The
Environmental Petitioners also challenged the provisions that allowed
impoundments lined with two feet of clay (i.e., compacted soil) to
continue operating even when they leak, requiring only that they
remediate the resulting contamination. The petitioners pointed to
record evidence that ``clay-lined'' units are likely to leak and
contended that EPA's approach ``authorizes an endless cycle of spills
and clean-ups'' in violation of RCRA.
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\3\ Environmental Petitioners also challenged the provisions
exempting inactive surface impoundments at inactive power plants
from regulation. The Court ruled for the Petitioners on these
claims, vacating these provisions and remanding to EPA. However, in
contrast to the other provisions addressed in this rule, additional
rulemaking is necessary to effectuate the Court's order, as the
Court's vacatur alone did not subject these units to regulation.
This aspect of the decision will be addressed in a subsequent
proposal.
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B. The 2018 USWAG Decision
The D.C. Circuit issued the USWAG decision on August 21, 2018. The
Court
[[Page 53519]]
upheld most of the 2015 CCR Rule but ruled for the Environmental
Petitioners on the two claims discussed in unit III.A of this preamble.
The Court held that EPA acted ``arbitrarily and capriciously and
contrary to RCRA'' in failing to require the closure of unlined surface
impoundments and in classifying so-called ``clay-lined'' impoundments
as lined, based on the record supporting the rule. 901 F.3d at 431-432.
The Court ordered that ``the Final Rule be vacated and remanded with
respect to the provisions that permit unlined impoundments to continue
receiving coal ash unless they leak, Sec. 257.101(a), [and] classify
`clay-lined' impoundments as lined, see 40 CFR 257.71(a)(1)(i).'' Id.
The Court issued the mandate for this decision on October 15, 2018.
Therefore, part of this final rulemaking action updates the regulations
to reflect the provisions that the Court vacated.
C. The July 30, 2018 Final Rule and the 2019 Waterkeeper Decision
EPA issued a final rule on July 30, 2018, amending several parts of
the CCR federal regulations (83 FR 36435). First, the rule extended the
deadlines for two categories of CCR surface impoundments to cease
receipt of waste and to initiate closure when closing for cause: (1)
Unlined CCR surface impoundments with an exceedance of a groundwater
protection standard for any constituent listed on Appendix IV to part
257; \4\ and (2) CCR surface impoundments that failed to meet the
location criteria in Sec. 257.60(a) (requiring either a minimum of
five feet between the unit base and the uppermost aquifer or a
demonstration that there will not be an intermittent, recurring, or
sustained hydraulic connection between any portion of the base of the
unit and the uppermost aquifer). These deadlines were extended until
October 31, 2020, and were codified in Sec. 257.101(a)(1) and
(b)(1)(i).
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\4\ A groundwater protection standard (GWPS) is established
using the methods specified in Sec. 257.95(h). For constituents
with a maximum contaminant level (MCL), the GWPS is the MCL for that
constituent. For the constituents that do not have an established
MCL, the GWPS is the health-based level EPA established in the July
30, 2018 rule. If the background level is higher than the MCL or the
health-based level, then background should be used as the GWPS.
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Second, the rule established alternative risk-based groundwater
protection standards for the four constituents without a maximum
contaminant level (MCL) that are listed on Appendix IV to part 257. The
four constituents are cobalt, lead, lithium, and molybdenum, and the
alternative standards were codified in Sec. 257.95(h)(2).
Third, the rule established procedures allowing for the suspension
of groundwater monitoring requirements, provided that it can be
demonstrated that there is no potential for migration of any CCR
constituent listed in Appendices III and IV of part 257 from the CCR
unit to the uppermost aquifer during the active life of the unit and
the post-closure care period. See Sec. 257.90(g).
Finally, the rule amended the federal CCR regulations to allow a
Participating State Director (or EPA where EPA is the permitting
authority) to issue certifications in lieu of requiring a certification
from a Professional Engineer. The 2015 CCR Rule required technical
demonstrations, when made by the owner or operator, to be certified by
a qualified Professional Engineer in order to provide verification of
the facility's technical judgments and to otherwise ensure that the
provisions of the rule were properly applied. In 2015, states were
unable to apply to EPA for approval to operate a permit program to
implement the CCR rule. The situation changed with the passage of the
Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation (WIIN) Act in 2016,
which offers the opportunity for state oversight under an approved
permit program. The 2018 amendments to the certification requirements
reflect the new authority provided by the WIIN Act.
The July 2018 final rule was challenged by Waterkeeper Alliance,
who also requested an expedited review of the October 31, 2020,
deadline. See Waterkeeper Alliance Inc, et al v. EPA, No. 18-1289 (D.C.
Cir. 2018) (Waterkeeper decision). On March 13, 2019, the Court granted
EPA's request to remand the July 2018 rule, ``to allow the agency to
reconsider that rule in light of th[e] court's decision in [USWAG].''
The December 2, 2019 proposed rule reflected EPA's reconsideration of
one of the remanded issues contained in the July 2018 rule:
Reconsideration of the current deadline of October 31, 2020, for
unlined surface impoundments to cease receiving waste. 84 FR 65944. The
Agency also stated in the December 2, 2019, proposal that EPA would
address its reconsideration of other aspects (e.g., the adopted
alternative risk-based groundwater protection standards for cobalt,
lead, lithium, and molybdenum) of the July 2018 rule in subsequent
rulemaking actions. Id.
D. Public Participation With Respect to the August 2019 and December
2019 Proposed Rules
This rule takes final action on the proposed rule published on
December 2, 2019 (84 FR 65941), as well as two issues included in the
proposal issued on August 14, 2019 (84 FR 40353). This unit of the
preamble summarizes public participation activities associated with
both proposed rules.
EPA conducted two public hearings to provide the public with the
opportunity to present views or information concerning the August 14,
2019 proposal. The first was an in-person public hearing in Arlington,
Virginia on October 2, 2019. A total of 41 people provided oral
testimony at the hearing; a transcript of the hearing proceedings is
available in the proposed rule docket.\5\ The second was held on
October 10, 2019 as a virtual public hearing using an internet-based
software platform. The platform allowed hearing participants to provide
oral testimony using a microphone and speakers connected to their
computers or using a phone. It provided the ability for any person to
listen to the public hearing via their computer. A total of 52 people
provided oral testimony during the virtual hearing and another 147
people participated by listening. The transcript for the virtual public
hearing is available in the proposed rule docket.\6\
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\5\ See docket items EPA-HQ-OLEM-2018-0524-0046 through -0050.
\6\ See docket items EPA-HQ-OLEM-2018-0524-0333 through -0335.
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The Agency received approximately 130,000 comments, of which nearly
300 were unique, from members of the public on the August 2019 proposed
rule. Commenters included individual electric utilities and independent
power producers, national trade associations, state agencies, public
interest and environmental groups, and entities involved with the
beneficial use of CCR. All public comment letters submitted in response
to the proposal can be found in the proposed rule docket, Docket ID
EPA-HQ-OLEM-2018-0524. For those elements included in the August 14,
2019 proposed rule that EPA is finalizing in this action (see unit V of
this preamble), EPA's responses to public comments are either addressed
in this preamble or the response to comment document available in the
docket to this final rule.
EPA also conducted one public hearing to provide the public with
the opportunity to present views or information concerning the December
2, 2019 proposed rule. On January 7, 2020, the Agency conducted a
virtual public
[[Page 53520]]
hearing using an internet-based software platform that allowed hearing
participants to provide oral testimony using a microphone and speakers
connected to their computers or using a phone. This platform also
provided an opportunity for any person to listen to the public hearing
via their computer. A total of 37 people provided oral testimony during
the virtual hearing and over 40 other people participated by listening.
The transcript for the virtual public hearing is available in the
proposed rule docket.\7\
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\7\ See docket items EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0041 and 0042.
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The Agency received over 67,200 comments, of which nearly 150 were
unique, comments from members of the public on the December 2019
proposed rule. Commenters included individual electric utilities and
independent power producers, national trade associations, state
agencies, and public interest and environmental groups. All public
comment letters submitted in response to the proposal can be found in
the proposed rule docket, Docket ID EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172. EPA's
responses to comments on the proposed rule are either addressed in this
preamble or the response to comment document available in the docket to
this final rule.
IV. Statutory Authority
RCRA section 1008(a) authorizes EPA to publish ``suggested
guidelines for solid waste management.'' 42 U.S.C. 6907(a). RCRA
defines solid waste management as ``the systematic administration of
activities which provide for the collection, source separation,
storage, transportation, transfer, processing, treatment, and disposal
of solid waste.'' 42 U.S.C. 6903(28).
Pursuant to section 1008(a)(3), the guidelines are to include the
minimum criteria to be used by the states to define the solid waste
management practices that constitute the open dumping of solid waste or
hazardous waste and are prohibited as ``open dumping'' under section
4005. Only those requirements promulgated under the authority of
section 1008(a)(3) are enforceable under section 7002 of RCRA.
RCRA section 4004(a) generally requires EPA to promulgate
regulations containing criteria for determining which facilities shall
be classified as sanitary landfills (and therefore not ``open dumps'').
The statute directs that, ``at a minimum, the criteria are to ensure
that units are classified as sanitary landfills only if there is no
reasonable probability of adverse effects on health or the environment
from disposal of solid wastes at such facility.'' 42 U.S.C. 6944(a).
RCRA section 4005(a), entitled ``Closing or upgrading of existing
open dumps,'' generally establishes the key implementation and
enforcement provisions applicable to EPA regulations issued under
sections 1008(a) and 4004(a). Specifically, this section prohibits any
solid waste management practices or disposal of solid waste that does
not comply with EPA regulations issued under RCRA section 1008(a) and
4004(a). 42 U.S.C. 6944(a). See also 42 U.S.C. 6903(14) (definition of
``open dump''). This prohibition takes effect ``upon promulgation'' of
any rules issued under section 1008(a)(3) and is enforceable through a
citizen suit brought pursuant to section 7002. As a general matter,
this means that facilities must be in compliance with any EPA rules
issued under this section no later than the effective date of such
rules, or be subject to a citizen suit for ``open dumping.'' See 42
U.S.C. 6945. RCRA section 4005 also directs that open dumps, i.e.,
facilities out of compliance with EPA's criteria, must be ``closed or
upgraded.'' Id.
RCRA section 7004 lays out specific requirements relating to public
participation in regulatory actions under RCRA. Subsection (b) provides
that ``[p]ublic participation in the . . . implementation, and
enforcement of any regulation under this chapter shall be provided for,
encouraged, and assisted by the Administrator.'' 42 U.S.C. 6974(b).
Comments on EPA Authority. Several commenters stated that RCRA
section 4004(a) allows EPA to take into account non-risk
considerations, citing EPA statements in the preamble to the 1991 final
rule for municipal solid waste landfills (MSWLF).\8\ Specifically,
these commenters cited to EPA statements that the term ``reasonable''
``has been read in other contexts to imply a balancing of competing
factors,'' and that the ``use of the word `probability' in `no
reasonable probability' implies the discretion to impose requirements
that are less certain to eliminate a perceived health or environmental
threat than standards that are `necessary to protect human health and
the environment,' thus allowing for the consideration of other factors
such as cost.'' (quoting 56 FR 50978, 50983 (October 9, 1991)). A
number of other commenters, however, stated that EPA lacked the
authority to consider costs in establishing any regulation under RCRA
section 4004(a), citing EPA's prior statements in the 2015 CCR Rule and
to the recent D.C. Circuit opinion in USWAG v. EPA.
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\8\ 56 FR 50978 (October 9, 1991).
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EPA disagrees that RCRA section 4004(a) allows EPA to take into
account non-risk considerations. The commenters have misunderstood the
discussion in the MSWLF preambles. The cited statements reflect EPA's
interpretation of the combined authority under both RCRA sections
4010(c) and 4004(a), rather than an interpretation of section 4004(a)
standing alone. 56 FR 50983-50984. As EPA has previously explained, the
Agency cannot rely on section 4010(c) to issue regulations applicable
to CCR facilities. See 80 FR 21333-21334 (April 17, 2015).
By contrast, EPA has consistently interpreted the mandate in
section 4004(a), standing alone, not to authorize consideration of
costs or any other factor unrelated to the protection of human health
and the environment. EPA did not consider costs in establishing the
original part 257 regulations, noting in the 1979 preamble that ``[t]he
Act does not call for a balancing of the costs of disposal against the
``value'' of ground-water resources.'' 44 FR 53447 (September 13,
1979). Similarly, EPA explained in the 2015 CCR Rule ``that Congress
did not authorize the consideration of costs in establishing minimum
national standards under RCRA section 4004(a).'' 80 FR 21406. See also,
80 FR 21363, 21432; 83 FR 11597 (March 15, 2018). As several commenters
noted, the D.C. Circuit upheld this interpretation, concluding that
``[u]nder any reasonable reading of RCRA there is no textual commitment
of authority to the EPA to consider costs in the open dump standards.''
901 F.3d at 448-449 (D.C. Cir. 2018). Accordingly, EPA has not
considered cost in developing any provision of this final rule.\9\
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\9\ Although EPA did not consider costs in developing this rule,
if the Agency had considered costs, the final rule would not have
been different. Based on the estimates developed for the RIA, this
rule is expected to largely result in cost savings.
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Another commenter stated that EPA lacks the statutory authority to
impose a mandatory closure requirement for non-CCR wastestreams,
arguing that imposing deadlines under the CCR Rule for wastestreams
that are subject to different deadlines under the ELG rule runs afoul
of RCRA section 1006(a)--the anti-duplication provision. The commenter
argued that the proposal to ban or greatly restrict the receipt of the
wastewater at unlined surface impoundments is a duplicative and
inconsistent--and thus prohibited--additional regulatory layer on top
of the existing NPDES requirements applicable to those same
impoundments.
[[Page 53521]]
According to the commenter, under the proposed ELG regulations, up to
10 percent of bottom ash transport water piping and equipment volume
can be discharged per day until December 31, 2023. Companies subject to
the ELG requirements will need to permit, design, and construct a
recycling system for the bottom ash sluice waters, a new CCR or non-CCR
wastewater pond, or convert to dry handling--essentially the same
solutions that must be pursued for compliance under the CCR rules. Yet
the deadlines for doing so do not align.
The commenter provided a specific example to demonstrate his
concern: One of the Ohio Valley Electric Corporation (OVEC) plants is
currently sluicing fly ash to a surface impoundment that is subject to
the CCR rule. Because that impoundment meets the CCR siting criteria
and has monitored no statistically significant increases above
background concentrations for any of the CCR parameters, that plant has
anticipated continuing to operate the impoundment through no later than
December 31, 2023, consistent with the ELG regulations. The proposed
CCR rule, with its August 31, 2020, deadline to discontinue sluicing of
fly ash to surface impoundments, effectively eliminates up to three
years that OVEC had anticipated using to engineer, design, procure,
construct and begin operation of the new infrastructure needed to
comply with the ELG rule. The CCR rule and the ELG rule must be aligned
so that the timeline for discontinuing placement of CCR into a fly ash
surface impoundment is consistent with the timeline that that source
has for completing dry fly ash conversion under the final ELG rules
applicable to this wastestream.
RCRA section 1006(a) does not bar EPA from imposing requirements
under one of the listed statutes and RCRA on the same units and waste
streams, unless those requirements are inconsistent with a requirement
in one of the statutes. 42 U.S.C. 6906(a). This is clear from the
second sentence, which provides that ``such integration shall be
effected only to the extent that it can be done in a manner consistent
with the goals and policies expressed in this chapter and in the other
acts referred to in this subsection.'' Id. Numerous courts have upheld
this interpretation. See, Ecological Rights Foundation v. Pacific Gas &
Electric Co., 874 F.3d 1083, 1095 (9th Cir., 2017) (``RCRA's anti-
duplication provision does not bar RCRA's application unless that
application contradicts a specific mandate imposed under the CWA (or
another statute listed in RCRA section 1006(a))''); Goldfarb v. Mayor
and City Council of Baltimore, 791 F.3d 500 510 (4th Cir. 2015) (The
CWA must require something fundamentally at odds with what RCRA would
otherwise require to be ``inconsistent'' under 1006(a)); Edison
Electric Institute v. EPA, 996 F.2d 326, 337 (D.C. Cir.1993) (rejecting
``generalized claim'' that EPA action was barred under section 1006(a)
because it interfered with ``the primary purpose'' of the Atomic Energy
Act); U.S. v. E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., Inc., 341 F.Supp.2d 215,
236 (W.D. N.Y. 2004) (approving EPA action as ``not inconsistent''
under RCRA where CERCLA's heightened standard would not be met by
release of hazardous substance). The commenter has identified no
requirement in the Clean Water Act that is inconsistent with EPA's
proposal.
Instead, the commenter argues that the deadlines under the two
rules are inconsistent and wholly duplicative. EPA disagrees with both
claims. First, the deadlines for the two rules are in fact consistent.
To support its claim, the commenter focused exclusively on the proposed
date of August 2020, by which facilities must cease receipt of waste
into the unit. But EPA also proposed to establish a process by which a
facility that needs to continue receiving waste into the unit can do
so, by demonstrating that it was not feasible to meet the deadline. See
Sec. 257.103(f). Under that proposal, a facility can continue to
operate a unit until 2023 if it can demonstrate that that amount of
time is necessary to complete its construction of alternative capacity.
Neither are the ELG and CCR proposals duplicative. The CCR
requirements are designed to protect groundwater, while the ELG
requirements are designed to protect surface waters.
Finally, one commenter stated their belief that EPA was required to
have consulted with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) under the
Endangered Species Act as part of developing this final rule.
EPA disagrees with the suggestion that consultation was required as
part of developing this rule. Under the existing regulations, all CCR
units must comply with 40 CFR 257.3-2. 40 CFR 257.52(b). That
regulation, which was developed after consultation with FWS, requires
facilities not to cause or contribute to the taking of any endangered
or threatened species of plant or wildlife, and not to result in the
destruction or adverse modification of critical habitat. This
obligation is not modified or affected in any way by this final rule.
The commenter has presented no facts that convince EPA that re-
initiation is warranted by this rule.
V. What final action is EPA taking on the December 2, 2019 proposal?
A. Revisions to Sec. 257.71 To Implement the 2018 USWAG Decision
As discussed in unit III.B of this preamble, the D.C. Circuit found
in USWAG that the rulemaking record did not support the conclusion that
the 2015 CCR Rule would adequately address the adverse effects posed by
clay-lined (or compacted soil-lined) CCR surface impoundments.
Therefore, the Court vacated the provision that treated ``clay-lined''
surface impoundments differently than unlined impoundments, with the
result that such impoundments are now required to be either retrofitted
or closed.\10\ The affected provision was codified in Sec.
257.71(a)(1)(i), which stated that a unit with a liner consisting of a
minimum of two feet of compacted soil with a hydraulic conductivity of
no more than 1 x 10-7 centimeters per second was considered
to be lined. In the December 2, 2019 proposed rule, EPA proposed to
remove Sec. 257.71(a)(1)(i) from the CFR. 84 FR 65944. The Agency also
proposed two conforming revisions to Sec. 257.71(a)(3) that were
necessary to properly implement the removal of Sec. 257.71(a)(1)(i).
Id.
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\10\ On March 3, 2020, the Agency proposed to allow a limited
number of facilities to continue using alternate liners (i.e., liner
systems that would otherwise be considered to be unlined systems
under the CCR regulations) at existing CCR surface impoundments if
the facility can demonstrate to EPA or a Participating State
Director that the unit would not adversely affect groundwater, human
health, or the environment. 85 FR 12456.
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In this action, EPA is finalizing these proposed changes to Sec.
257.71(a)(1) and (a)(3). Specifically, the Agency is removing Sec.
257.71(a)(1)(i) from the CFR to reflect its vacatur as a result of the
2018 USWAG decision. In addition, EPA is revising Sec. 257.71(a)(3) by
removing two cross-references to Sec. 257.71(a)(1)(i) that are no
longer appropriate given that paragraph (a)(1)(i) has been removed. See
revised Sec. 257.71(a)(3)(i) and (ii).
B. Revisions to Sec. 257.101 as a Result of EPA's Reconsideration
When the 2015 CCR Rule was finalized, Sec. 257.101 required
certain existing CCR surface impoundments to close.\11\ This included:
(1) Unlined CCR
[[Page 53522]]
surface impoundments whose groundwater monitoring shows an exceedance
of a groundwater protection standard (Sec. 257.101(a)(1)); (2) CCR
surface impoundments that do not comply with one or more of the
location (siting) criteria (Sec. 257.101(b)(1)); and (3) CCR surface
impoundments that are not designed and operated to achieve minimum
factors of safety, which are a component of the structural integrity
criteria (Sec. 257.101(b)(2)). In each of these situations, the 2015
CCR Rule specified that the owner or operator of the CCR unit must
cease placing CCR and non-CCR wastestreams into the unit and initiate
closure activities (or retrofit the unit under certain circumstances)
within a certain period of time after making the relevant
determination.
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\11\ Section 257.101 also requires certain existing CCR
landfills and new CCR surface impoundments to close. However, those
provisions are not discussed in this preamble section because those
CCR units were not affected by the 2018 USWAG decision.
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The D.C. Circuit found in the USWAG decision that EPA acted
``arbitrarily and capriciously and contrary to RCRA'' in failing to
require the closure of all unlined CCR surface impoundments and ordered
that ``the Final Rule be vacated and remanded with respect to the
provisions that permit unlined impoundments to continue receiving coal
ash unless they leak.'' See 901 F.3d at 449. This court-vacated
provision is codified in Sec. 257.101(a). The USWAG decision did not
affect the codified deadlines to cease receipt of waste and initiate
closure. These deadlines remained for existing CCR surface impoundments
that do not comply with one or more of the location criteria under
Sec. 257.101(b)(1), as well as for those impoundments that are not
designed and operated to achieve minimum factors of safety under Sec.
257.101(b)(2).
The Agency explained in the December 2, 2019 proposed rule that EPA
interprets the USWAG decision as only partially vacating Sec.
257.101(a). Specifically, the Agency explained that only the following
phrase in Sec. 257.101(a)(1) was vacated by the Court: ``if at any
time after October 19, 2015, an owner or operator of an existing
unlined CCR surface impoundment determines in any sampling event that
the concentrations of one or more constituents listed in Appendix IV of
this part are detected at statistically significant levels above the
groundwater protection standard established under Sec. 257.95(h) for
such CCR unit''. 84 FR 65944-45. The proposal discussed that a vacatur
of the entire provision under Sec. 257.101(a) would remove the
requirement for unlined CCR surface impoundments to close, which would
be inconsistent with the holding that it was arbitrary and capricious
for EPA not to have required unlined CCR surface impoundments to close.
In response to the December 2, 2019 proposed rule, EPA received no
comments opposing the Agency's interpretation of the effect of the
USWAG decision on Sec. 257.101(a). Therefore, and as EPA discussed in
the proposed rule, the vacatur of this phrase from Sec. 257.101(a)(1)
results in a requirement that owners and operators must cease placement
of both CCR and non-CCR wastestreams into unlined CCR surface
impoundments and initiate the closure of such units no later than
October 31, 2020. This requirement also applied to both impoundments
that were formally considered to be ``clay-lined,'' and unlined
impoundments that are inactive.
The October 31, 2020 deadline was established in a final rule
published on July 30, 2018 (83 FR 36435). The December 2, 2019 proposal
discussed that the July 30, 2018 final rule had not yet been challenged
when the court issued its USWAG decision on August 21, 2018. As
discussed in the proposed rule, the Waterkeeper Alliance subsequently
challenged the July 30, 2018 final rule and requested expedited review
of the October 31, 2020 deadline. In response, EPA requested a remand
of the July 30, 2018 final rule, which the court granted on March 13,
2019 ``to allow the agency to reconsider that rule in light of this
court's decision in [USWAG].''
1. EPA's Reconsideration of the October 31, 2020 Deadline
The December 2, 2019 proposed rule reflects EPA's reconsideration
of the deadline of October 31, 2020 for unlined CCR surface
impoundments to cease receiving CCR and non-CCR wastestreams and
initiate closure or retrofit activities.\12\ As explained in the
proposed rule, the USWAG decision faulted EPA for failing to fully
estimate the risks associated with the continued operation (and
potential leakage) of unlined impoundments and for failing to address
the risks from allowing these units to continue to operate until they
leak. The court held that RCRA requires the Agency to determine that
such risks would be acceptable under the Sec. 4004(a) standard in
order to authorize the continued operation of such units. In the
absence of such an assessment, the court vacated the provision that
allowed for the continued operation of unlined impoundments. 901 F.3d
at 430. For the reasons discussed in the proposed rule, the Agency was
unable to develop a nationwide risk assessment of continued operation
of these unlined CCR surface impoundments. 84 FR 65945.
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\12\ As stated in the proposed rule, EPA will address its
reconsideration of other aspects of the July 30, 2018, final rule in
subsequent rulemaking actions. 84 FR 65944.
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EPA further explained in the December 2, 2019 proposal that many
utilities could not immediately cease the placement of CCR and non-CCR
wastestreams into their surface impoundments without causing
potentially significant disruptions to plant operations, and thus the
provision of electricity to their customers. This is because there is
no additional capacity to manage these wastes elsewhere. To support
this conclusion, EPA pointed to the information laid out in several
industry filings to the Waterkeeper court. The Waterkeeper court also
recognized this, declining to vacate the July 2018 Rule partly because
``EPA and the intervenors have shown that the consequences of vacatur
would be disruptive.'' No. 18-1289, Order at 1.
To address these competing considerations in a manner consistent
with the statute and the D.C. Circuit's decisions, EPA proposed to
require that facilities cease placement of all wastes (both CCR and
non-CCR) into impoundments as soon as technically feasible. 84 FR
65945. The proposal explained that such a requirement would meet the
RCRA Sec. 4004(a) standard because it requires the facility to do what
is possible in the shortest achievable time. Similar to the concept
behind a force majeure provision, EPA cannot impose protective measures
under this provision that are not technically feasible for any facility
to implement. See USWAG at 448; Hughey v. JMS Development Corp, 78 F.3d
1523 (11th Cir. 1996); Cherry-Burrell Corp v. United States, 367 F.2d
669 (8th Cir. 1966). The proposal further concluded that requiring
facilities to expedite the initiation of closure of unlined CCR surface
impoundments is consistent with the court's finding that further
evidence is needed to permit such units to continue to operate. See
USWAG, 901 F.3d at 429-430. The proposal explained that EPA lacked the
evidence to support the continued operation of such units on a national
level and it did not anticipate being able to develop such information
in the near-term.
2. Approaches To Identify Alternative Capacity
EPA proposed to determine technical feasibility based on the steps
that owners and operators need to take to obtain alternative disposal
capacity. Six approaches, and the timeframes needed to implement them,
were evaluated. 84 FR 65945-51. The evaluation relied principally on
information contained in
[[Page 53523]]
the declarations submitted with the Waterkeeper briefs, as well as CCR
rule compliance information posted on facilities' publicly accessible
CCR internet sites (e.g., written retrofit plans required by Sec.
257.102(k)(2)). The proposed rule discussed each technology approach
and the Agency's analysis of the average time needed to implement it.
This included the entire process to obtain alternative capacity, from
the start of the project to its completion, including the general
project phases of planning and design, procurement, permitting, and
construction, commissioning. Using the average timeframe for each of
the six approaches was intended to capture some of the variability due
to site-specific circumstances and to provide for an accurate national
benchmark. The six technology approaches presented in the proposed rule
and the estimated average time necessary to develop each technology
approach are shown in Table 2.
Table 2--Summary of Proposed Technology Approaches
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alternative capacity technology Average time (months)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conversion to dry handling................ 36.
Non-CCR wastewater basin.................. 21.
Wastewater treatment facility............. 16 to 21.
New CCR surface impoundment............... 27.
Retrofit of a CCR surface impoundment..... 31.5 (large unit retrofits).
4 to 12 (small unit
retrofits).
Multiple technology system................ 21 to 36.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) Specific Comments on Individual Alternative Capacity Technologies
and Average Time Estimates
This preamble unit summarizes the data and information considered
for each of the six technology approaches in the proposed rule; the
comments received in response to the use of these data and information;
and the Agency's response to comments on these approaches. Several
commenters submitted actual project timeframes for completed or ongoing
efforts to obtain alternative capacity. The Agency evaluated each
submission according to the procedures described in this unit of the
preamble. In most cases, this project information was used in the final
rule alternative capacity analysis.
In general, EPA considered submissions that described completed
projects or portions of completed projects to be the most persuasive
and reliable. These submissions reflect projects that were in fact
completed within the reported timeframe and therefore provided some
guarantee that other facilities can replicate those timeframes. As
these projects were initiated before the USWAG decision, it is likely
that they do not represent expedited timeframes. EPA therefore
considered them to be outer bounds of the amount of time necessary to
complete these projects.
The second most reliable category of information came from
submissions in which the commenter provided a detailed narrative
description and project schedule, explaining all phases of the project.
Submissions that fell into this category generally provided sufficient
information to allow the Agency to determine whether the estimated
timeframes were reasonable and consistent with those timeframes
presented in submissions from commenters describing completed projects.
In some cases, EPA discounted some portions of the estimated time where
it appeared that the amount of time substantially exceeded the time
presented in other submissions or were based on factors unique to that
site that are unlikely to be relevant to other facilities nationwide.
EPA calculated these adjustments by examining the project schedule and
determining whether the task in question overlapped with other tasks.
If the discounted task did not overlap with other activities, the
Agency reduced the project schedule by the length of time of the task.
However, when the task in question partially overlapped with another
activity, EPA only reduced the time duration by the amount that did not
overlap with a non-discounted task. EPA also reduced some portions of
estimates if, based on other submissions, EPA determined that the
commenter had assumed that a phase of a project was sequential when in
fact it could be completed at the same time as another phase of the
project. In this final rule, EPA used the information from both of
these categories of submissions to calculate the deadline to cease
receipt of waste.
EPA did not use provided information when a project timeline did
not include all phases of the project, or when the project timeline was
presented with insufficient detail to evaluate it. EPA also excluded
estimates that appeared to be outliers when compared to other
estimates. As EPA explained in the proposal, outliers should not extend
the deadline for all facilities to cease receipt of waste, because such
action would not be consistent with ensuring that this transition
occurs as quickly as technically feasible. Rather, such situations are
more appropriately accounted for and addressed, if necessary, under the
alternative closure process in Sec. 257.103.
Conversion to dry handling. The first technology approach EPA
considered in the proposed rule was conversion to dry handling of CCR.
Some facilities use wet sluicing (e.g., water) to convey CCR from the
boiler to a CCR surface impoundment. In the context of this rulemaking,
a conversion from wet sluicing to another means of CCR ash conveyance
(e.g., mechanical) would allow the facility to cease use of the unlined
CCR surface impoundment once the conversion is complete (assuming, in
this example, that no other wastestreams are also directed to the
unlined impoundment). EPA proposed that the average amount of time
needed to implement the conversion to dry handling is 36 months,
although the proposed rule presented information that times ranged from
36 to 48 months. 84 FR 65946. The Agency also recognized that some
facilities may need new capacity to dispose of the CCR after a
conversion to dry handling is complete, such as a CCR landfill. EPA
stated that it did not have information on the time needed to construct
a new landfill and therefore the time needed to obtain such capacity
was not included in the proposed 36-month timeframe. The proposed rule
solicited information on whether landfills are being constructed for
alternative capacity in conjunction with dry handling system
conversions and, if so, the timeframes to put in place such capacity.
84 FR 65947.
In response, several commenters stated that CCR landfills are
constructed as part of the conversion to dry handling and that the time
required to construct and permit these landfills is significant. These
commenters argued, therefore, that EPA should include the time required
to obtain capacity for a CCR landfill in its calculation of the time it
takes a facility to convert to dry handling. These commenters provided
information on seven examples from Delaware, Kentucky, Missouri, and
South Carolina showing that the process from initial application to
operational permit issuance of a CCR landfill had taken approximately
three to five years. The commenters further explained that construction
of three of these new CCR landfills was done as part of the process of
converting to dry handling. However, none of the landfill construction
information provided by the commenters included integrated project
schedules showing both the construction of the landfill and the dry ash
handling conversion, which could proceed simultaneously.
[[Page 53524]]
The Agency disagrees that the final rule approach should include
the time to construct a CCR landfill in its calculation of the time it
takes a facility to convert to dry handling. After further
consideration, EPA views a combined dry ash handling conversion and new
CCR landfill construction project to be more analogous to a multiple
technology system, which is discussed in the ``Multiple technology
system'' section of this preamble. In this instance, the multiple
technology system would consist of a dry handling conversion project
and a separate disposal capacity project. The Agency is taking this
position in the final rule because some dry handling conversion
projects do not involve the need to obtain disposal capacity for dry
CCR, while other conversions do. EPA also notes that it did not receive
any integrated project schedules showing the construction of the
landfill and the dry ash handling conversion.
EPA also received new project information regarding conversions to
dry handling of CCR from Cleco Corporate Holdings LLC (Cleco) and DTE
Energy.\13\ The information provided by each is briefly summarized
below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See docket items EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0085 and 0094,
respectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cleco submitted detailed project information and projections for
dry ash conversion projects at two different Cleco plants in Louisiana.
The first was for the installation of a submerged flight conveyor for
bottom ash removal at its Dolet Hills Power Plant (Dolet Hills). A
submerged flight conveyor is a type of mechanical ash handling system
that collects bottom ash that has fallen from the bottom of the boiler
into a water-filled trough.\14\ Currently at Dolet Hills, bottom ash is
wet sluiced to one of two 33-acre unlined CCR surface impoundments. The
commenter stated that prior to the USWAG decision, these bottom ash
impoundments were not subject to closure for cause. The commenter's
project timeline shows that it will take approximately 44.5 months to
complete the bottom ash handling conversion. Cleco's comments do not
indicate where the bottom ash will be managed after the conversion, but
EPA notes that Cleco currently operates a CCR landfill at Dolet Hills
for the disposal of fly ash and scrubber sludge. The commenter's
conversion project timeline includes approximately nine months for the
task of ``joint owner & board approval'' and another five months for a
budgetary study. The commenter explains that the coal-fired boiler at
Dolet Hills is jointly owned and this time is needed to engage in
substantial discussions with and reach concurrence with the joint
owners. The commenter further stated that the time allotted for
discussions and decision-making with joint owners is based on its
experience in reaching consensus with joint owners on the EPA air
rulemaking titled the Mercury and Air Toxic Standards rule.\15\ The
commenter's project timeline also included three months to seek an
alternative liner determination pursuant to a proposed process under
consideration by the Agency in a separate rulemaking.\16\ However, this
17 months (3 + 5 + 9 months) reflected in Cleco's timeline only
partially overlaps with the planning and initial design phase of the
project, which increased the amount of time estimated to complete the
total project.
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\14\ For additional information on bottom ash handling systems,
see USEPA, 2019. ``Supplemental Technical Development Document for
Proposed Revisions to the Effluent Limitations Guidelines and
Standards for the Steam Electric Power Generating Point Source
Category''. EPA-821-R-19-009 (November).
\15\ 77 FR 9304 (February 16, 2012).
\16\ 85 FR 12456 (March 3, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The second bottom ash dry conversion project described by Cleco was
for the installation of a submerged grind conveyor, another type of
mechanical ash handling system, for bottom ash removal at its
Rodemacher Power Plant. Currently, bottom ash is wet sluiced to a 43-
acre unlined CCR surface impoundment. The commenter stated that prior
to the USWAG decision, the bottom ash impoundment was not subject to
closure for cause. The commenter's project timeline shows that it will
take approximately 45 months to complete the bottom ash handling
conversion. Cleco's comments do not indicate where the bottom ash will
be managed after the conversion nor if disposal capacity is needed for
generated bottom ash. Similar to the timeline for Dolet Hills, Cleco's
conversion project timeline includes approximately 17 months for
obtaining joint owner and board approval, conducting the budgetary
study, and seeking an alternative liner demonstration.
After evaluating the new information provided by Cleco, EPA is
using this information in its final rule calculation of the amount of
time needed to convert to dry handling because this commenter provided
a detailed narrative description and project schedule explaining all
phases of the project that allowed EPA to evaluate the reasonableness
of the estimate. However, after reviewing the commenter's project
schedule, the Agency is adjusting the dry handling conversion
timeframes used in the capacity analysis for the reasons discussed
below. As discussed earlier, this commenter explains that the project
schedule includes approximately nine months for the task of joint owner
and board approval, five months for a budgetary study, and three months
to seek an alternative liner determination (a total of 17 months).
However, these actions would only partially overlap with the planning
and initial design phase of the project. As EPA explained elsewhere in
this preamble, the goal of the Agency's alternative capacity analysis
is to identify capacity that can be obtained in the shortest feasible
time. A schedule based on a protracted lengthy decision-making process
is not consistent with this goal. Moreover, the length of time it takes
to make a decision is within the facility's (or multiple co-owner's)
control and can be expedited as necessary. For similar reasons EPA is
not accounting for time taken for the facility to seek a variance under
the proposed alternative liner determination provisions. Developing the
materials for that process is largely within the facility's control and
can therefore be undertaken simultaneously with other measures.
Therefore, EPA is eliminating the time to seek an alternative liner
determination (three months) and additionally reducing by eight months
the upfront 14 months allocated for joint owner and board approval and
the budgetary study. This action would retain six months for the
planning and initial design phase of the project, which is the same
amount of time identified for this phase at proposal. Thus, for
purposes of the final rule alternative capacity analysis EPA will use
an adjusted estimate of 33.5 months (44.5 minus 11 months) to complete
the dry conversion at the Dolet Hills facility and an adjusted estimate
of 34 months (45 minus 11 months) to complete the dry conversion at the
Rodemacher facility. In addition, the Agency is using the Cleco data
points in lieu of the information considered in the proposed rule
because it is a more comprehensive analysis of a dry ash handling
conversion project. Table 3 in unit V.B.3.a of this preamble shows the
information used in the final rule alternative capacity analysis for
this technology approach.
DTE Energy submitted comments describing an ongoing dry fly ash
handling conversion project of four boilers at its Monroe Power Plant
(Monroe) in Michigan. The commenter states that one CCR surface
[[Page 53525]]
impoundment currently receives wet sluiced fly ash and that prior to
the USWAG decision, this 331-acre impoundment was not subject to
closure for cause. The commenter's narrative description of the
timeline estimates that the dry fly ash conversion project will take at
least 57 months until the dry ash handling systems are operational and
wet sluicing of ash can end. Monroe currently operates a CCR landfill.
The commenter explained that the conversion construction schedule has
been designed to coincide with already scheduled periodic unit outages
and has been coordinated with the Midwest Independent System Operator
so as to maintain grid stability and electrical reliability.\17\ The
commenter stated that for plants such as Monroe that have multiple
generating units, outages for those units are seldom concurrent.
Therefore, the commenter explained that the schedule for the dry ash
handling conversions are coordinated into a series of sequential
generating unit outages that adds to the required time to install and
start up the systems.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) defines an
Independent System Operator as an independent, federally regulated
entity established to coordinate regional transmission in a non-
discriminatory manner and ensure the safety and reliability of the
electric system.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering the comments submitted by DTE Energy, EPA is not
using its project information in the final rule calculation of the
amount of time needed to convert all four of its boilers to dry fly ash
handling. DTE Energy explained in its comments that two of its boiler
units currently have a dual ash handling system that allows fly ash
generated from these boilers to be handled dry or wet. The commenter
further explained that a portion of the fly ash generated from these
two boilers is transported dry (e.g., collected fly ash is conveyed to
storage silos using air pressure) and sold for beneficial use, while
the remaining portion of fly ash not sold for beneficial use is wet
sluiced to its unlined CCR surface impoundment. The commenter further
explained that fly ash generated by the other two boilers is currently
wet sluiced to the same impoundment. As explained earlier, the project
timeline to convert all four boilers to dry handling is estimated to
take 57 months; however, the commenter does not explain why closure of
the unlined surface impoundment could not be initiated sooner than 57
months given that two boilers are already currently configured to dry
handle fly ash. Nor is the project timeline sufficiently detailed for
the Agency to discern whether alternative capacity could be obtained
sooner than projected.
Non-CCR wastestream basins. The second technology approach for
alternative capacity proposed by the Agency was construction of a new
wastewater basin for non-CCR wastestreams. A new wastewater basin could
be needed in a situation where one or more non-CCR wastestreams are
managed in an existing unlined CCR surface impoundment subject to
closure. EPA proposed that the average amount of time needed to
construct a new basin for non-CCR wastestreams was 21 months, but also
explained that available data showed that permitting of the unit can
greatly impact the amount of time needed to complete the new capacity.
The data in the proposal showed new capacity could be obtained in a
range of 18 to 41 months. EPA further explained that when removing the
variable permitting component from consideration, the average time to
plan and design, procure, and construct and commission the new basin
was 21 months. 84 FR 65947.
In response to the proposed rule, several commenters stated that
obtaining permits is a necessary component of the process to construct
a non-CCR wastestream basin and provided examples of the types of
permits, licenses or approvals that may be needed. These commenters
argued that EPA must include some time for obtaining permits for this
alternative capacity method. The Agency also received new project
information from several entities regarding construction of a new
wastewater basin for non-CCR wastestreams. However, these projects were
done as part of a larger multiple technology system effort. These
multiple technology system projects included the construction of non-
CCR wastewater basins or storage in conjunction with either dry ash
handling conversions or development of other alternative capacity at
the New Madrid Power Plant, Thomas Hill Energy Center, Salt River
Project, and the Boswell Energy Center. Those project descriptions are
not included in the capacity analysis for non-CCR wastestream basins,
but are discussed in the ``Multiple technology systems'' section of
this preamble. The Agency did not receive any new project information
from commenters documenting the time needed to construct a new non-CCR
wastewater basin when such project was not part of a multiple
technology system.
After considering comments, EPA is adjusting the approach used in
the proposed rule to determine the time needed to obtain alternative
capacity with a non-CCR wastewater basin. Several commenters were
critical of the proposed approach because it removed permitting
timeframes considerations from the estimation. The Agency agrees with
commenters that obtaining a permit (e.g., the time needed to modify a
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit) is a necessary
component to putting in place a new non-CCR wastewater capacity. EPA
re-evaluated the project schedule associated with the high-end estimate
of 41 months considered in the proposed rule. This review determined
that the design and permitting phase of the project--18 months of the
project duration--includes environmental reviews required under the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). As noted in the submission,
the NEPA review process ``can take up to a year or longer depending on
the level of review'' required. The Agency also reviewed other
documents associated with the NEPA review for this non-CCR wastewater
basin and found that the process well exceeded a year to complete.\18\
But because the majority of facilities are not subject to NEPA, EPA
considers this situation to be an outlier that is more appropriately
accounted for and, if necessary, addressed under the alternative
closure process in Sec. 257.103. Because the NEPA review process
overlaps with other project tasks, such as detailed engineering design
and preparing permit applications, EPA adjusted the estimate to remove
12 of the 18 months associated with the NEPA review process, rather
than deleting the entire 18 months. The resulting six-month time frame
is consistent with the estimate provided by other facilities for the
engineering design phase. Therefore, for purposes of the final rule
alternative capacity analysis EPA will use an adjusted estimate of 29
months (41 minus 12 months) to complete the construction of the non-CCR
wastewater basin.
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\18\ 83 FR 54162 (October 26, 2018). ``Shawnee Fossil Plant Coal
Combustion Residual Management; Issuance of Record of Decision.''
The draft Environmental Impact Statement was released on June 8,
2017, and the final Record of Decision was published on October 26,
2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA is using the estimate to construct a new non-CCR wastewater
basin provided by Southern Company in the final rule alternative
capacity analysis. This information was considered in the proposed rule
and describes a project estimated to take 18 months. Table 3 in unit
V.B.3.a of this preamble shows the information used in the final rule
alternative capacity analysis for this approach.
[[Page 53526]]
Wastewater treatment facility. The third technology approach
considered by EPA at proposal was to build a new wastewater treatment
facility (or system) for CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams. A wastewater
treatment system can take different forms, as explained in the proposed
rule. For example, a chemical precipitation wastewater treatment system
is a system where chemicals are added to the wastewater to alter the
physical state of dissolved and suspended solids to facilitate settling
and removal of solids. Other systems, such as settling ponds, are
designed to remove particulates from wastewater by means of gravity.
EPA proposed that the average amount of time needed to construct a
wastewater treatment system is 16 to 21 months based on information
obtained for a related rulemaking for the Steam Electric Power
Generating Effluent Guidelines and Standards (Steam Electric ELG). The
Agency also presented an example of a concrete treatment tank system
being considered by an electricity producer that estimated the time to
obtain alternative capacity to be 27 months. 84 FR 65948.
In response to the proposed rule, several commenters stated that
information available in the rulemaking docket estimates significantly
longer timeframes to obtain capacity with a wastewater treatment system
than EPA's proposed time. These commenters pointed to information in
the docket from Arizona Public Service stating that it will require
approximately 27 months to complete construction of the wastewater
treatment facility.\19\ The commenters also identified new information
contained in a comment by Southern Company in the Steam Electric
rulemaking docket, stating that a complex wastewater treatment project
at a plant with over 50 wastestreams can take up to 52 months to
implement.\20\ The commenters further stated that EPA's proposal fails
to consider the time needed to obtain or modify National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permits, which is a crucial aspect
of the process of constructing and implementing a wastewater treatment
facility. Therefore, these commenters argued that the Agency should
include the time required to obtain or modify NPDES permits in its
calculation of the time it takes to implement a wastewater treatment
facility as a method of alternative capacity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See docket item EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0008.
\20\ See docket item EPA-HQ-OW-2009-0819-8457.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Agency also received new project information from several
entities regarding construction of a new wastewater treatment facility.
However, these projects were done as part of a larger multiple
technology system effort. These multiple technology system projects
included the construction of wastewater treatment capacity in
conjunction with either dry ash handling conversions or other
alternative capacity additions at the New Madrid Power Plant, Thomas
Hill Energy Center, and the Leland Olds Station. Those projects are not
included in the wastewater treatment system analysis and are discussed
in the ``Multiple technology systems'' section of this preamble.
As discussed earlier for the approach for non-CCR waste basins, the
Agency agrees with commenters that obtaining or modifying a NPDES
permit is a necessary component to establishing new capacity with a
wastewater treatment facility. To better capture the range of times
needed to obtain or modify a NPDES permit, the final rule is
supplementing the Steam Electric ELG information used at proposal with
the project information from Arizona Public Service, which shows
alternative capacity will be in place within approximately 26
months.\21\ In addition, the Steam Electric ELG timeframes were
presented as ranging from 16 to 21 months in the proposed rule. For
reasons discussed in unit V.B.3 of this preamble, the Agency is
representing this information as a mean of the range (i.e., 18.5
months) so as to not overrepresent this information relative to other
data. However, EPA is not including in the alternative capacity
calculation the information characterized as a ``complex wastewater
treatment project at a plant with over 50 wastestreams'' that can take
up to 52 months to implement (these comments were also submitted as
comments in response to a separate Steam Electric ELG proposed rule).
This information is not being included in the calculation because the
Agency was unable to determine whether this project at an unspecified
facility involved unique or unusually complex site-specific
circumstances that would be better addressed through the alternative
closure provisions discussed in unit V.C of this preamble. Table 3 in
unit V.B.3.a of this preamble shows the information used in the final
rule alternative capacity analysis for this technology approach.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ EPA re-examined the APS schedule to complete construction
of the wastewater treatment facility and determined that the project
would take 26 months versus the 27 months presented in the proposed
rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
New CCR surface impoundment. The fourth technology approach
considered by EPA at proposal was to build a new CCR surface
impoundment to replace the impoundment subject to closure for cause.
Such a unit could be used for CCR alone or could also be used to manage
non-CCR wastestreams. EPA proposed that the average length of time
needed to build a new CCR surface impoundment is 27 months. 84 FR
65949. As explained in the proposed rule, this average time was
developed from available information submitted by three facilities--
Xcel Energy, Arizona Public Service, and Southern Company.\22\ The
proposed 27-month average was comprised of six months for planning and
design, six months for permitting (though the preamble presented a
range of six to 18 months and acknowledged that the permitting phase
can take longer than this range), 14 months for material procurement
and construction, and one month for capacity commissioning.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ See docket items EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0007, 0008, and
0011, respectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to the proposed rule, several commenters stated that
EPA must fully consider the additional time required to apply for and
obtain the necessary permits when estimating the timeframe for
constructing a new CCR surface impoundment. These commenters argued
that EPA inappropriately selected the low end of the range needed for
permitting (i.e., six months), despite the record showing that it is
not a rare occurrence when more time is needed for permitting. These
commenters stated that the timeframes must also account for the time
needed to install a groundwater monitoring system for the new
impoundment given that the federal CCR regulations require that the new
impoundment must be in compliance with groundwater monitoring
requirements prior to initial receipt of CCR. These CCR requirements
include, for example, installing the groundwater monitoring system and
developing a groundwater sampling and analysis program.
EPA also received new project information regarding the
construction of new CCR surface impoundments from a number of
companies, including Xcel Energy (Xcel), Great River Energy (Great
River), and CPS Energy.\23\ The information provided by each is briefly
summarized below.
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\23\ See docket items EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0067, 0076, and
0070, respectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Xcel submitted detailed project information for a new CCR surface
impoundment that is currently under
[[Page 53527]]
construction to replace an existing 18-acre CCR surface impoundment.
That impoundment is used for the temporary storage of bottom ash prior
to its excavation and beneficial use or disposal elsewhere. The
commenter explained that the existing impoundment at the Sherburne
County Generating Plant (Sherburne) in Minnesota is currently
considered unlined pursuant to the CCR regulations and that the unit
was not subject to closure for cause until the 2018 USWAG decision. At
proposal, EPA relied on information provided by Xcel in an earlier
submission specific to this new CCR surface impoundment. Xcel stated in
its comments that even with the benefit of work completed prior to the
USWAG decision, it does not anticipate that alternative capacity (the
new impoundment) will be available until mid-October 2020. The
commenter explained that EPA's time estimate at proposal for the new
Sherburne impoundment did not include already completed essential tasks
related to the new impoundment, including an assessment of options for
alternative capacity, and preliminary design, permitting and project
planning. Xcel further explained that the actual timeline since project
initiation in January 2014 to completion in October 2020 would not be
consistent with the standard in the proposed rule to obtain alternative
capacity ``as soon as technically feasible,'' because there has not
been a continuous and sustained effort to obtain the alternative
capacity. Therefore, Xcel reconstructed the activities completed prior
to the USWAG decision and developed a hypothetical project schedule
reflecting a project start date of October 15, 2018 (i.e., the USWAG
mandate). The commenter stated that expedited durations were used where
feasible and provided examples. The commenter further stated that
constructing the new CCR surface impoundment would take a minimum of 34
months, which would equate to mid-August 2021 under this hypothetical
schedule. Xcel's comments included a narrative description explaining
all phases of the entire project and a detailed project schedule, both
for the actual and hypothetical cases.
Great River submitted detailed project information for a new CCR
surface impoundment at its Coal Creek Station in North Dakota. The
commenter stated that the new 66-acre impoundment will replace two
existing CCR surface impoundments that receive fly ash, bottom ash, and
flue gas desulfurization materials. The existing impoundments are
approximately 75 and 100 acres in size, according to the closure plans
posted on the plant's CCR compliance website. The commenter also
explained that the two existing surface impoundments were considered
lined units pursuant to the CCR regulations prior to the 2018 USWAG
decision. The commenter further stated that Coal Creek Station
initiated efforts to obtain alternative disposal capacity immediately
following the USWAG decision and that constructing the new CCR surface
impoundment will take approximately 59.5 months. However, the commenter
explained that the future location of the new CCR surface impoundment
is currently occupied by two existing, state-regulated non-CCR surface
impoundments. The commenter further explained that the proposed plan is
for the two non-CCR surface impoundments to be combined into one CCR
surface impoundment, and to expedite availability, construction efforts
will focus on conversion of only one non-CCR surface impoundment at a
time. Great River's comments included a detailed project schedule and a
technical memorandum from its engineering consultant explaining the
steps of the project in detail from start to finish.
CPS Energy submitted information for a new two-acre CCR surface
impoundment at its Calaveras Power Station in Texas. The commenter
stated that the new impoundment will replace two existing CCR surface
impoundments that receive CCR sludge from the air pollution control
equipment. The existing impoundments are each approximately 1.5 acres
in size, according to the closure plan posted on the plant's publicly
accessible CCR internet site. CPS Energy stated in its comments that
constructing the new CCR surface impoundment will take approximately 30
months. While the commenter provided summary information on the amount
of time needed to construct the new unit, neither a detailed narrative
description nor a detailed project schedule explaining all phases of
the project was submitted with the comments.
After evaluating the comments that provided new information, EPA is
including the 34-month timeframe for the Xcel project in its final rule
calculation of the amount of time needed to put in place new CCR
surface impoundment capacity. This commenter provided a detailed
narrative description and project schedule explaining all phases of the
project that allowed EPA to evaluate the reasonableness of the
estimates. EPA is not including, however, the summary information for
the new impoundment planned at Coal Creek Station because of the unique
real estate challenges at the site. As discussed earlier in this
section, construction of the new impoundment cannot commence until one
of the former non-CCR surface impoundments is dewatered and cleaned
out. According to the commenter's project schedule, these tasks are
anticipated to consume at least one of the three construction seasons
dedicated to the construction of the new impoundment. Given that the
facility is located in North Dakota, an area of the country that has
shorter construction seasons, the decision to build the new impoundment
at a site occupied by two state-regulated non-CCR surface impoundments
affects the project duration by at least one year. While the Agency
recognizes that some facilities have legitimate real estate constraints
and limitations, EPA considers these situations to be outliers and more
appropriately accounted for and addressed, if necessary, under the
alternative closure provisions under Sec. 257.103 (see section V.C of
this preamble).
The Agency is also not including the summary information provided
by CPS Energy in the final rule calculation because the commenter did
not provide sufficient detail on its planned alternative capacity
project to allow the Agency to evaluate whether the project could have
been concluded more quickly.
EPA is using the 28-month estimate to construct a new seven-acre
impoundment provided by Arizona Public Service (APS FCPP) for the Four
Corners Power Plant in New Mexico in the final rule alternative
capacity analysis. The APS FCPP information was considered in the
proposed rule and describes the project schedule from start to
completion. EPA has included in its calculations the time required to
obtain necessary permits and to install a groundwater monitoring system
for the new impoundment. The data used in the final rule alternative
capacity analysis represent the amount of time to obtain capacity from
start to completion, including these permitting and regulatory project
elements. Table 3 in unit V.B.3.a of this preamble shows the
information used in the final rule alternative capacity analysis for
this technology approach.
Retrofit of a CCR surface impoundment. The fifth technology
approach considered by EPA at proposal was to retrofit a CCR surface
impoundment to meet the requirements specified in the CCR regulations
for a new impoundment. Such a unit could
[[Page 53528]]
be used for both CCR and non-CCR wastestreams. EPA proposed that the
time to retrofit a large surface impoundment (approximately 50 acres)
was 31.5 months. 84 FR 65950. The 31.5-month timeframe was based on
information provided by Vistra Energy for the Martin Lake Power Plant
(Martin Lake) in Texas.\24\ While the Martin Lake timeline pertains to
a larger retrofit project of four surface impoundments, EPA used it to
determine the time needed to retrofit a single impoundment. The Agency
also proposed that a small CCR surface impoundment could be retrofitted
in four to 12 months. The small impoundment time estimate was based on
information extracted from rule information posted on publicly
accessible CCR internet sites for three facilities (i.e., written
retrofit plans required by Sec. 257.102(k)(2)), including Keystone
Generating Station, Weston Generating Station, and Mount Storm Power
Station.
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\24\ See docket item EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0005.
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In response to the proposed rule, several commenters stated that it
was not appropriate for EPA to discount the need for sequential
retrofitting of impoundments at the Martin Lake facility and use 31.5
months as the average time to retrofit. Given that Vistra Energy's
submission makes clear that retrofitting must occur sequentially in
order for the plant to continue operating and generating electricity
during the retrofit work, the commenters argued that the final rule
should consider the full time to retrofit its impoundments. These
commenters also objected to the proposed rule averaging methodology
stating that EPA both overrepresented the impoundment retrofit
technology approach (i.e., three of the ten data points used to
calculate the proposed 22.5-month average time to obtain alternative
disposal capacity were derived from impoundment retrofit information),
and inappropriately skewed the retrofit time average to small units.
The commenters further contended that approximately 68 percent of CCR
surface impoundments are larger than 10 acres and more weight should be
given to the actual timeframes experienced by facilities in
retrofitting these larger impoundments. These commenters also argued
that the timeframes must account for situations where the waste
boundary of the unit changes during the retrofit to provide the time
needed to install a groundwater monitoring system for the retrofitted
impoundment, given that the federal CCR regulations require that the
impoundment must be in compliance with groundwater monitoring
requirements prior to initial receipt of CCR.
The Agency disagrees with commenters that it was inappropriate to
discount the need for sequential retrofitting of Martin Lake's four
impoundments and instead used the time to retrofit a single
impoundment. The Agency is using the Martin Lake information to
determine the time to retrofit a single impoundment. The Martin Lake
circumstances are unique in that the facility plans to retrofit four
impoundments, and each retrofit must occur sequentially because the
facility requires a minimum of three impoundments to be operating at
any one time in order for the plant to operate. To use the Martin Lake
information, the Agency adjusted the total retrofit time so that it is
on the same scale as other facilities (i.e., construction times
normalized for a single impoundment retrofit). The proposed rule
estimated it would take Martin Lake 31.5 months to retrofit a single
impoundment.\25\ EPA continues to believe that the 31.5-month estimate
is appropriate and is using this data point in its final rule
alternative capacity analysis to determine the time needed to retrofit
of a CCR surface impoundment. Finally, the Agency intends for unique
circumstances like Martin Lake to be addressed through the alternative
closure provisions of the final rule.
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\25\ See docket item EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0005. EPA subtracted
off 27 months for the retrofit of the remaining three impoundments
and the six months for contingencies built into the schedule to
obtain 31.5 months to retrofit a single impoundment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA also received new project information regarding the amount of
time needed to retrofit a CCR surface impoundment in comments from
Arizona Electric Power Cooperative (AEPCO). AEPCO submitted project
information for a surface impoundment retrofit project at its Apache
Generating Station in Arizona. The commenter stated that this plant has
four CCR ash impoundments, which also manage non-CCR wastestreams, and
a scrubber sludge impoundment subject to the CCR regulations. The
commenter explained that it will need to retrofit one of the ash
impoundments and the scrubber sludge impoundment before it can cease
placement of CCR in the units at the plant. The existing ash and
scrubber sludge impoundments are approximately 33 acres and 42 acres in
size, respectively, according to the closure plans posted on the
facility's publicly accessible CCR internet site.\26\ The commenter
noted that these existing surface impoundments were not subject to
closure for cause under the CCR regulations prior to the 2018 USWAG
decision. The commenter further explained that after conducting
preliminary design work for evaluating potential alternative capacity,
AEPCO decided to retrofit the existing impoundments, which involves
removal of approximately 900,000 cubic yards of solids from the
existing impoundments. The commenter estimated that it will take
approximately 47 months to complete the retrofit of the scrubber sludge
impoundment and 55 months to retrofit one ash impoundment; however,
both impoundment retrofits, which will be conducted concurrently, must
be completed before the facility can cease using the existing
impoundments. AEPCO must first obtain Board approval of an initial
scoping of the project and initiate project financing activities. The
commenter explained that many electric cooperatives finance large
projects through the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Rural Utilities
Service (RUS) because RUS can offer low-interest federal loans. RUS
funding can require an environmental review under the National
Environmental Policy Act before funds will be released by RUS to the
cooperative. The commenter's project schedule included approximately 16
months for obtaining internal approval of the project, initiating RUS
financing, and completing preliminary design work. AEPCO's comments
included a narrative description explaining all phases of the project
and a detailed project schedule, including an estimate of the impact of
pursuing RUS funding for these retrofits.
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\26\ ``Closure Plan--Revision No. 1, Apache Generating Station,
Arizona Electric Power Cooperative, Inc., Cochise County, Arizona'',
October 13, 2016.
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After evaluating AEPCO's comments, EPA is incorporating the
impoundment retrofit projects at Apache Generating Station into the
final rule alternative capacity analysis. However, the Agency is
adjusting the project timeframes used in the capacity analysis for this
facility for reasons discussed below. As discussed earlier, this
commenter explained that the project schedule includes 16 months for
Board approval activities and initiating a process to obtain lower-cost
financing through the RUS program. The environmental review process
required by RUS can be a lengthy process--longer than a year in some
cases--as noted by this and other
[[Page 53529]]
commenters.\27\ These commenters further explained that borrowers must
wait for the conclusion of RUS's environmental review before taking any
action on projects that could have an environmental impact or otherwise
limit or affect the USDA's final decision.
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\27\ See docket items EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0086 and -0102.
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As EPA explained elsewhere in this preamble, the goal of the
Agency's alternative capacity analysis is to identify capacity that can
be obtained in the shortest feasible time. A schedule based on a
lengthy decision-making and administrative process is not consistent
with this goal, especially when other faster financing options are
available and within the facility's control. The length of time it
takes to make a decision is also within the facility's control and can
be expedited as necessary. Therefore, EPA evaluated the timeline to
determine the extent that the lengthy decision-making and financing
approach impacted the project's schedule. As a result, the Agency is
reducing the initial 16-month decision-making and financing activities
by nine months. This adjustment would retain seven months for the
planning and initial design phase of the project that would occur
within the initial 16-month period. The seven-month period is the same
amount of time identified for this project phase at proposal.
Therefore, for purposes of the final rule alternative capacity analysis
EPA will use an adjusted estimate of 38 months (47 minus nine months)
to complete the retrofit of the scrubber sludge impoundment and 46
months (55 minus nine months) to retrofit one ash impoundment. Finally,
given that the retrofits of the scrubber sludge and ash impoundments
were concurrent activities (i.e., the retrofit construction began at
the same time), EPA views this as one retrofit project and is including
the longer retrofit estimate of 46 months in its alternative capacity
analysis because the impoundment retrofits would be completed within
this 46-month period.
As discussed elsewhere in this preamble, EPA also received comments
that the proposed alternative capacity technology approaches are
missing key components of the project planning process (e.g., the time
needed to obtain required permits). These commenters stated that EPA
must account for any missing components when determining the time
needed to obtain alternative capacity. EPA re-evaluated the information
available in the three retrofit reports for small impoundment retrofits
that supported the proposed rule. Weston Generating Station (Weston)
located in Wisconsin operates two sets of bottom ash dewatering and
settlement basins (each set is approximately three acres in size). The
two sets are operated in parallel thus allowing one set of basins to be
taken offline while the second set remains in use. Thus, only one set
of basins must be in operation in order for the plant to operate. The
schedule provided in its retrofit plan includes time estimates for all
project components, including the phases of planning and design,
procurement, permitting, construction, and capacity commissioning.\28\
This report shows that it will take approximately 12 months to complete
the retrofit of the first series of dewatering and settlement basins
and an additional three months to complete the retrofit construction of
the second series of basins. Weston posted a construction certification
at the end of November 2017 documenting the completion of the retrofit
project \29\ confirming that the actual time needed to complete the
retrofit project was consistent with the project schedule considered by
EPA in the proposed rule. Therefore, EPA continues to believe that 12
months accurately reflects the amount of time the commenter needs to
retrofit a single surface impoundment and is including this data point
in the final rule alternative capacity analysis.
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\28\ See docket item EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0004.
\29\ ``Construction Certification for the Weston Units 3 & 4 Ash
Basins Liner Retrofit, Wisconsin Public Service Corporation, Weston
Generating Station, Rothschild, Wisconsin'', November 29, 2017.
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Regarding the surface impoundment retrofits at Keystone Generating
Station in Pennsylvania and Mount Storm Power Station in West Virginia,
EPA's re-evaluation found that the retrofit reports for both plants
lack information on the phases of planning and design, procurement and
permitting. The Agency was unable to obtain additional information for
these retrofit projects. As a result, EPA is no longer considering
these retrofit reports as part of the final rule alternative capacity
analysis.
Finally, as a result of including new retrofit information from
commenters and of the Agency's re-evaluation of information used in the
proposed rule, two thirds of the data used in final rule alternative
capacity analysis for the impoundment retrofit method is associated
with impoundments greater than ten acres. EPA believes this addresses
the comment that the retrofit alternative capacity analysis was
overrepresented by information from small units under ten acres in
size. Table 3 in unit V.B.3.a of this preamble shows the information
used in the final rule alternative capacity analysis for this
technology approach.
Multiple technology system. The final technology approach
considered in the proposed rule was utilizing a combination of
technologies that together could provide alternative capacity. An
example is a utility that decides to end wet sluicing of bottom ash to
a CCR surface impoundment by making modifications to the boiler so that
the bottom ash can be handled dry, thereby allowing its unlined CCR
surface impoundment to be closed or retrofitted. If, in this example,
the existing unlined impoundment was also used to manage non-CCR
wastestreams, then the utility would also need to obtain alternative
capacity for its non-CCR wastestreams (e.g., a wastewater treatment
system). Thus, the combination of a dry ash handling system and
wastewater treatment system is an example of a multiple technology
system.
EPA proposed that the average amount of time needed to obtain
alternative capacity with a multiple technology system was 21 to 36
months, although the Agency generally lacked detailed information on
the engineering, design and permitting phases of the underlying
projects. In the proposed rule, EPA estimated the time needed for the
engineering and design phase and assumed that permitting occurs
concurrently with other project steps. The Agency also acknowledged in
the proposed rule that the time needed to construct a multiple
technology system is highly dependent on the alternative capacity
approaches selected and that more time may be needed for planning and
design because these systems can be more complex. 84 FR 65950.
In response to the proposed rule, several commenters stated that
permitting considerations were omitted from the proposed timelines
because permitting was assumed to occur concurrently with other project
steps, such as construction. These commenters further stated that this
assumption is not supported by the information in the record which
demonstrates that permitting is a necessary and key component of the
process of developing alternative capacity and that construction work
rarely can proceed until all the necessary permits are obtained.
Therefore, they argued that the final rule should include some time for
obtaining permits. Commenters also stated that the proposed rule
approach does not contemplate multiple technology systems when they
must be
[[Page 53530]]
implemented sequentially. An example presented was for a facility that
implements a dry ash handling conversion; once the large-volume sluice
flows are removed from the impoundment, the facility begins a partial
retrofit within that impoundment footprint for other non-CCR
wastestreams. The commenters explained that this could be the case when
the facility has real estate constraints that prevent construction from
beginning until after the sluice flows are removed. Impoundment closure
could not begin until after the partial retrofit is completed and the
non-CCR wastestreams relocated. Other commenters stated that schedules
based on completed projects, such as those of Duke Energy, did not
provide enough details to understand whether the facility acted as
expeditiously as possible or whether tasks were conducted sequentially
or with some overlap.
EPA also received project information from several entities
regarding multiple technology systems, including from Associated
Electric Cooperative, Inc. (AECI), Minnesota Power, American Electric
Power (AEP), Salt River Project Agricultural Improvement and Power
District (Salt River Project), and Basin Electric Power Cooperative
(Basin Electric).\30\ The information provided by each is briefly
summarized below.
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\30\ See docket items EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0087, 0075, 0077,
0079, and 0069, respectively.
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AECI submitted project timelines and related information for its
two CCR-generating facilities in Missouri: New Madrid Power Plant (New
Madrid) and Thomas Hill Energy Center (Thomas Hill). The commenter
described ongoing efforts at both facilities to put in place new
alternative capacity using multiple technology systems. The commenter
further explained that both facilities are subject to the CCR rules and
the Steam Electric ELG rules. The project timelines provided include
six projects required to comply with the CCR and Steam Electric ELG
rules. The commenter stated that the proposed rule does not account for
several integral steps in the process of obtaining alternative
capacity. For example, they contend that EPA's proposal did not fully
consider the interactive relationship between multiple technology
systems that require iterative engineering design and construction
sequencing to accommodate complex system development and functionality,
such as a new wastewater treatment facility that will discharge into a
non-CCR surface impoundment. The commenter also stated that the
proposal did not fully consider the commissioning and start-up testing
phase for multiple technology systems. The commenter's experience is
that more complex systems with multiple and varying water streams will
take more time to allow for start-up of equipment before becoming fully
operational. For example, elements such as seasonality, varying plant
operating conditions, periodic activities (e.g., boiler washes), and
inconsistent flow rates require extensive post-construction operational
configuring and calibration of pumps, treatment dosing, and effluent
monitoring. In addition, initial design activities, such as feasibility
studies and alternatives analyses, are more complex for multiple
technology systems, which they argued are not properly accounted for in
the proposed rule. The commenter stated that the capacity timelines
must account for the inherent complexities with multiple technology
systems due to the iterative nature of the process.
Of the six projects AECI described, four are underway at the New
Madrid facility, including two separate conversions to dry handling (a
dry light ash handling conversion and a dry boiler slag handling
conversion); construction of a non-CCR wastestream basin for coal pile
runoff and process water; and construction of a new water treatment
facility for other wastestreams. According to information provided by
the commenter, the dry light ash handling conversion was initiated in
April 2015 and is expected to be completed by February 2021, a duration
of approximately 71 months. The dry boiler slag handing conversion,
which includes conversions for two boilers, also began in April 2015
and is estimated to be completed by August 2023, a duration of
approximately 102 months.
The final two projects at the New Madrid facility were initiated in
October 2018 following the USWAG decision. According to information
provided by the commenter, they are planned for completion in November
2021, a duration of approximately 37.5 months. The two projects at the
Thomas Hill facility include plans to construct a wastewater treatment
facility and non-CCR wastestream basins. The specific projects include
constructing a concrete dewatering tank to handle boiler slag
wastewaters, a new coal pile runoff pond, and other process water
ponds. According to information provided by the commenter, these
projects would take approximately 37.5 months to complete.
Minnesota Power also submitted project timelines and related
information for its Boswell Energy Center (Boswell) in Minnesota
describing ongoing efforts to put in place new alternative capacity
using multiple technology systems. The commenter stated that it has two
CCR surface impoundments that are subject to closure for cause. The
first impoundment receives bottom ash and non-CCR wastestreams and the
second impoundment receives flue gas desulfurization (FGD) materials,
as well as bottom ash dredge materials from the first impoundment. The
commenter stated that a multiple technology system for alternative
capacity is being pursued at Boswell that will convert the bottom ash
handling systems for two boilers to dry systems and install an FGD
dewatering system on one of the boiler systems. In addition, a new
wastewater storage unit will be constructed for non-CCR wastestreams.
The commenter stated that completion of these projects will allow CCR
to be managed at its on-site CCR landfill, allowing for the closure of
the two CCR surface impoundments. The project timelines submitted by
the commenter show that both dry handling conversions will be completed
early in 2023, with one conversion taking 40 months to complete and the
other one 52 months. The construction of the non-CCR storage unit is
planned to be finished in 34 months.
The commenter stated that the proposed rule timelines were
deficient in that they did not adequately address the role and extent
to which existing economic regulation requires coordinated decision-
making for electric utility investments. These regulations include
requirements for review and approval of investments to comply with
state and federal environmental requirements, which would apply to the
dry handling conversions being implemented. The commenter explained its
requirements under the Minnesota statute and argued that the proposal
would create an environmental regulatory approach that contradicts the
economic regulatory approach under which Minnesota Power must make its
decisions. The commenter also stated that the proposal did not allow
adequate time for state permitting for dry conversion or solid waste
management, which, they contended, can be the longest and most
uncertain part of the entire dry conversion process. The commenter
explained that construction of conversion activities cannot commence
until the permits for those changes are issued by the appropriate state
or federal regulatory agency. A dry handling conversion will require a
major Title V Permit amendment, due to
[[Page 53531]]
increased air emissions that will result from the conversion from wet
to dry. The commenter also stated that it is projected to take between
nine and 21.5 months to receive final permits, and the commenter
provided a letter from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
indicating that this is a reasonable estimate for its conversion
project.
AEP also submitted project planning information regarding
timeframes to convert to dry bottom ash and fly ash handling and to
develop alternative disposal capacity for non-CCR wastewater streams.
AEP explained its methodology for performing engineering design,
planning and construction of all construction projects, but that it has
not previously converted any of its facilities to a dry bottom ash
handling system, nor has it developed alternative storage or treatment
options for non-CCR wastewater streams. The commenter presented a
typical timeline for obtaining such alternative capacity that indicates
that it could take 62 months to complete a new non-CCR wastestream
basin and 51 months to complete the dry ash handling conversion. These
timeframes appear to be based on a scenario where the non-CCR
wastestream basin would be constructed on top of a closing CCR surface
impoundment. The commenter notes on its timeline that the impoundment
would be closed in phases, so that new alternative disposal capacity
can be built in the existing footprint of the impoundment.
Salt River Project also submitted detailed project information for
a new CCR surface impoundment and non-CCR wastewater impoundment to
replace an existing 330-acre CCR surface impoundment used primarily for
the disposal of flue gas desulfurization materials and other non-CCR
wastestreams. The commenter stated that the existing impoundment at the
Coronado Generating Station in Arizona is currently considered unlined
under the CCR regulations and that the unit was not subject to closure
for cause until the 2018 USWAG decision. The commenter stated that it
immediately began a preliminary analysis of compliance options under
the CCR rule after the USWAG decision and began to evaluate options for
developing alternative disposal capacity. The commenter further
explained that the facility plans to obtain alternative capacity using
a collection of modular surface impoundments for CCR and non-CCR
wastestreams having an aggregate surface area of approximately 100
acres. Salt River Project stated that it selected a staged pond
construction project approach, which will establish initial alternative
capacity for both CCR and non-CCR wastestreams in separate impoundments
and allow additional ponds to be constructed as needed in the future.
Salt River Project stated it will take approximately 55 months to
replace the existing unlined impoundment with the new CCR and non-CCR
impoundments. Salt River Project's comments included a narrative
description explaining all phases of the entire project and a detailed
project schedule.
Basin Electric submitted information for a multiple technology
system involving dry bottom ash conversion and construction of a
process water treatment system at its Leland Olds Station in North
Dakota. The commenter stated that the project took approximately 40
months from start to completion, beginning in January 2016 and ending
in the spring of 2019. While the commenter provided summary information
on the amount of time needed to construct the new unit, neither a
detailed narrative description nor a detailed project schedule
explaining all phases of the project were submitted with the comments.
After evaluating the comments that provided new project
information, EPA is including the information from Thomas Hill, Boswell
Energy Center, Salt River Project, and Leland Olds, as well as an
average time derived from the Duke Energy data described in the
proposed rule (the Duke Energy data are discussed further in the next
paragraph), in its final rule alternative capacity calculation for
multiple technology systems. The Agency is not including the
information for the New Madrid facility in the final rule calculation.
The New Madrid information shows that the engineering design and
procurement phases last approximately three years for each boiler's dry
handling conversion (the timeline calls for two boilers to be converted
sequentially). The commenter did not provide sufficient details for EPA
to understand why these timeframes are substantially longer than other
dry handling conversions. As a result, the Agency attributes these
longer timelines to unique or unusually complex site-specific
circumstances that would be better addressed through the alternative
closure provisions discussed in unit V.C of this preamble.
EPA is also not including the new information provided by AEP in
its final rule alternative capacity calculation for multiple technology
systems. As discussed in its comments, the commenter's estimate of 62
months to obtain alternative capacity is governed by the amount of time
to construct a non-CCR wastestream basin, which in turn cannot be
constructed until real estate becomes available by closing part of a
CCR surface impoundment. While the Agency recognizes that some
facilities may be constrained by available real estate, the commenter
did not provide any design information or site-specific circumstances
supporting this construction approach. EPA has not received information
from the utility sector stating that it will be commonplace and
necessary to build new alternative capacity on top of existing disposal
units that first need to be closed. For these reasons, the Agency is
not using this new information in the final capacity calculation.
The Agency included information submitted by Duke Energy regarding
various multiple technology system projects that have been completed at
nine Duke Energy plants in Indiana, Kentucky and North Carolina at
proposal. The projects varied at each facility, but they generally
involved converting to dry ash handling and construction of non-CCR
wastestream basins and/or wastewater treatment facilities. While the
submission includes detailed information on the time needed to complete
the construction and capacity commissioning phases of the project, less
information is available on the project phases prior to construction,
such as planning and design, procurement, and permitting. However,
because the data reflect completed projects, EPA considers the data are
sufficiently reliable to include in its estimate. The commenter
provides the total time for all project phases to develop alternative
capacity at these nine facilities, which ranged from 30 to 42 months,
including the time to obtain necessary permits. However, the commenter
did not provide specific timeframes for each of the nine facilities,
and because the projects were initiated before the USWAG decision, they
may not represent expedited timeframes. Even though these timeframes
are considered to be the outer bounds of the time necessary to complete
these projects, the Agency considers these timeframes persuasive
because they provide some guarantee that other facilities can replicate
them. Consequently, the Agency is using the average time of the range--
36 months--that it took Duke Energy to obtain alternative capacity.
Nevertheless, because the timeframe for Duke Energy represents nine
facilities, EPA considers this to represent nine data points. When
taken with the data from the four other facilities discussed above, EPA
has 13
[[Page 53532]]
data points to factor into its final alternative capacity calculation.
Regarding commenters stating that the capacity timelines must
account for the inherent complexities with multiple technology systems,
and the permitting of such systems, the Agency believes this issue is
addressed in the final rule by incorporating actual timelines from four
additional multiple technology system projects. Table 3 in unit V.B.3.a
of this preamble shows the information used in the final rule
alternative capacity analysis for this technology approach.
(b) Response to Comments on Other Types of Technology Approaches That
Commenters Believe EPA Should Have Considered
Several commenters stated the proposed rule should have addressed
additional options for obtaining alternative capacity. For each of
these approaches, the commenters argued that alternative capacity could
be obtained faster as compared to EPA's proposed timeframes. First,
commenters stated that the proposed rule should have considered staged
construction. The comments described ``staged construction'' as quickly
building some capacity initially followed by the building of additional
capacity that will be needed for the long term. A second approach
identified by commenters was described as preventing the commingling of
stormwater with non-CCR wastestreams which can allow the faster
development of alternative capacity. The commenters explained that the
quantities of non-CCR wastestreams are magnified because low volume
non-CCR wastestreams generated at the facility are allowed to commingle
with stormwater. Third, commenters stated that the installation of
temporary tanks to manage non-CCR wastes should have been considered in
the proposal. The commenters claimed that an approach using temporary
tanks would allow the facility to avoid siting-related delays typically
associated with in-ground options such as wastewater treatment plants
and impoundments. One of these commenters was a vendor of mobile
wastewater treatment systems, which can support the dewatering of CCR
surface impoundments and the treatment of non-CCR wastestreams. The
commenter stated that such mobile treatment systems are commercially
proven at full-scale, including at utilities, available on demand, and
can be put in place in less time than any of EPA's proposed technology
approaches.
EPA disagrees with commenters that ``staged construction'' should
be considered as an additional alternative capacity approach on par
with the six technology approaches considered. The Agency does not view
staged construction as a separate, standalone technology comparable to
the existing categories, but instead as a technique that could be
employed to expedite a project when feasible. The commenter neither
described how the Agency could incorporate staged construction as a
separate technology into the final rule alternative capacity analysis,
nor identified any source of data or information that could be used.
While the commenter identified an example where staged construction was
used, EPA notes that there are several other examples where this
technique is incorporated in projects supporting the final rule
alternative capacity analysis. This suggests that the final rule
approach already includes elements of staged construction in the
analyses when it was feasible, so it does not merit consideration as a
separate approach. In one example, a utility pursuing construction of a
new CCR surface impoundment selected a ``staged pond construction
project approach, with the first few ponds being constructed for
initial commissioning and remaining ponds constructed as needed for
future use.'' \31\ Another example involved the retrofit of a set of
dewatering and settlement basins subsequently followed by the retrofit
of a second set of basins.\32\ In this example, the facility was able
to cease use of the unlined impoundments after the first set of basins
were retrofitted, which was the time used in the final rule capacity
analysis. A final example of staged construction considered by EPA was
a facility planning to build a new CCR surface impoundment in a
location currently occupied by two existing, state-regulated non-CCR
surface impoundments.\33\ The commenter explained that the plan is for
the two non-CCR surface impoundments to be combined into one CCR
surface impoundment, but to expedite availability, construction efforts
will focus on conversion of only one non-CCR surface impoundment at a
time.
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\31\ See docket item EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0079.
\32\ See docket item EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0004.
\33\ See docket item EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0076.
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EPA disagrees with commenters that preventing the commingling of
stormwater with non-CCR wastestreams would have had a material effect
on the timeframes to obtain alternative capacity. The Agency reviewed
the CCR surface impoundment projects included in the final rule
alternative capacity analysis and available information indicates that
stormwater is not commingled with other wastes. Therefore, the design
and size of the new impoundments were not impacted by commingling of
stormwater.
The Agency agrees with commenters that temporary tanks could serve
as alternative capacity to manage non-CCR wastestreams for either
storage or treatment. EPA also agrees that such storage or treatment
capacity may likely be implemented on a faster timeframe at some
facilities. However, EPA does not have detailed project information
covering the entire process of obtaining alternative capacity through
this method. For some project phases, such as planning and design, EPA
would expect the timeframes to obtain capacity through temporary tanks
to be comparable to the technology approaches considered in the final
rule. For other project phases, such as procurement and construction,
the timeframes to secure alternative capacity may be shorter. Without
such detailed information, EPA cannot include the suggested approach in
its analysis. Under the alternative closure procedures discussed in
unit V.C.3.a of this preamble, the Agency is requiring owners to
evaluate the viability of obtaining temporary storage or treatment
capacity while other permanent capacity is developed.
3. Establishing the Revised Deadline for Affected Units To Cease
Receipt of Waste
For all unlined CCR surface impoundments, EPA proposed to revise
the deadline to cease receipt of waste under Sec. 257.101(a)(1) from
October 31, 2020, to August 31, 2020, based on the Agency's analysis of
the average time needed to obtain alternative disposal capacity. 84 FR
65951. This preamble section explains how EPA calculated the average
length of time needed to obtain alternative disposal capacity, how the
Agency determined the deadline, key changes that EPA is making in
response to comments submitted on the proposed rule, and our responses
to many of the comments received. A full response to comments is
provided in the response to comments document available in the docket
to this rulemaking.
(a) Average Length of Time Needed To Obtain Alternative Disposal
Capacity
EPA proposed that the average length of time needed to obtain
alternative disposal capacity for an unlined CCR surface impoundment
was 22.5 months. 84 FR 65951 (December 2, 2019). The
[[Page 53533]]
Agency calculated this average time by summing the ten estimates for
the six technology approaches shown in Table 2 of this preamble and
dividing by the number of estimates shown in Table 2. The proposal
stated that 22.5 months, although an average, would appear to provide
enough time for a substantial proportion of facilities to put in place
alternative disposal capacity. In addition, EPA explained that 22.5
months would be a sufficient amount of time to retrofit all but the
largest surface impoundments, and smaller surface impoundments with
unique design situations. Id. The proposal stated that these outliers
should not be the basis to extend the time for all facilities beyond
22.5 months because such action would not be consistent with ensuring
that the development of alternative disposal capacity occurs as quickly
as technically feasible; outliers can be accommodated by the proposed
alternative closure provisions.\34\
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\34\ The alternative closure provisions are discussed in section
V.C of this preamble.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule also discussed why the Agency chose to rely on a
single average time (i.e., the average of the average times associated
with the six technology approaches) to establish a single new deadline
to cease receipt of waste. First, the proposal stated that 22.5 months
would provide sufficient (but not excessive) time for a substantial
proportion of facilities, under a variety of approaches. Second, the
proposal explained that some facilities will need less than the average
amount of time to obtain the alternative capacity and some will need
more. Each of the averages summarized in Table 2 reflects ranges of
estimated times to develop alternative capacity, which can vary
depending on site conditions and the specific facility operations. The
Agency explained in the proposal that to reliably determine which
facilities need less time, EPA would need to make individual facility-
specific determinations and that trying to craft individualized time
frames could ultimately result in longer delays in the initiation of
closure for a greater number of facilities than would potentially be
caused by reliance on an overall average that most facilities can meet.
Recognizing that a single deadline is necessarily less precise and
that some facilities may in fact be able to construct alternative
capacity more quickly than EPA's proposed deadline, the Agency also
solicited comment on an alternative approach under which the deadline
would vary according to the technology adopted. For example, a facility
that chose to install a non-CCR wastewater basin would have a different
deadline than a facility that constructed a new wastewater treatment
facility. 84 FR 65951. In this scenario, the timeframes for each
approach could be based on the averages presented in Table 2 of this
preamble. The proposal discussed EPA's concern that this option could
be challenging to implement and to track compliance. In addition, EPA
expressed concern that this approach may not result in measurably
shorter time frames for most facilities, given the range of time
estimates, and could lead to a greater number of variance requests
under the alternative closure provisions. The proposal sought comment
on this approach, including, for example, whether this more complicated
regulatory approach would result in measurably shorter time frames for
most facilities.
Several commenters stated that the Agency's methodology used to
calculate the 22.5-month time frame is flawed. These commenters argued
that EPA did not calculate a true average of the data points used in
the proposal (see Table 2 of this preamble) because the Agency used
more than one data point for a single method when calculating the
average, which had the effect of overrepresenting that method in the
calculated average.\35\ In doing so, the commenters explained that EPA
has skewed the data by overrepresenting certain technology approaches
compared to other approaches with fewer data points, and stated that
EPA did not provide a rationale for giving more weight to certain
technologies. Accordingly, these commenters urged the Agency to
recalculate the average time needed to obtain alternative capacity so
that alternative capacity technologies are equally represented.
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\35\ For example, the ``wastewater treatment facility'',
``retrofit of a CCR surface impoundment'', and ``multiple technology
system'' technology approaches include two, three and two data
points, respectively, while the remaining three approaches each
include one data point.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA agrees that the proposed methodology to calculate the average
time needed to obtain alternative capacity overrepresented certain
technology approaches over others (e.g., the retrofit of a CCR surface
impoundment was overrepresented relative to constructing a new CCR
surface impoundment). In the final rule, each technology approach is
represented by a single average, which is calculated as the arithmetic
mean of the individual data points for the specific technology. Thus,
the final rule methodology ensures that none of the six technologies is
overrepresented compared to another technology.
As discussed in unit V.B.2.a of this preamble, several commenters
stated that the estimated timeframes to obtain alternative capacity
overlooked key project components that must be completed in order to
construct and bring online each of the proposed alternative capacity
approaches. As an example, these commenters explained that the proposed
time estimates fail to account for the time that is actually needed by
regulatory agencies to complete permit reviews and obtain the necessary
permits required for construction of alternative capacity. These
commenters further explained that the proposed time estimates fail to
factor in the additional time needed to accommodate site-specific
circumstances such as plant size, the number of boilers at the plant,
location of the plant, and the number and volume of wastestreams
affected by the conversion.
The Agency also agrees with commenters stating that certain project
components (e.g., time to obtain a permit) were missing from the
calculations for some technology approaches in the proposed rule. In
response to this comment, EPA's final rule calculation relies on
information that covers the entire process of obtaining alternative
capacity, from the start of the project to its completion, including
the general project phases of planning and design, procurement,
permitting, and construction and capacity commissioning. For those data
used in the proposed rule that were missing a project component, the
Agency removed them from the final rule calculation if the missing
information could not be located. An example of where the Agency
removed a data source from the final rule calculation is the surface
impoundment retrofits at Keystone Generating Station in Pennsylvania.
As discussed in the ``Retrofit of a CCR surface impoundment'' section
of the preamble, EPA's re-evaluation of the retrofit report considered
at proposal contained missing components of the project planning
process. Because the Agency was unable to obtain additional information
for this retrofit project, it was not used as part of the final rule
alternative capacity analysis. Individual data handling decisions are
discussed further in unit V.B.2.a of this preamble.
For each of the technology approaches evaluated, Table 3 summarizes
the individual time estimates to obtain such capacity, as well as
average timeframe for each technology. As discussed earlier in unit
V.B.2.a of this preamble, the Agency supplemented the data set used in
the proposed rule with
[[Page 53534]]
additional project timeframes submitted by commenters. These new
timeframes were not simply incorporated into the alternative capacity
analysis. Instead, each submission was examined thoroughly, and, in
some cases, portions of the estimated time were reduced where EPA
determined that those portions were not appropriate for the analysis.
Table 3--Summary of Data Used in Final Rule Alternative Capacity
Analysis
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data used in final
Alternative capacity technology rule analysis Average
(months) (months)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conversion to dry handling........ 33.5, 34............ 33.8
Non-CCR wastestream basin......... 18, 29.............. 23.5
Wastewater treatment facility..... 18.5, 26............ 22.3
New CCR surface impoundment....... 28, 34.............. 31.0
Retrofit of a CCR surface 12, 31.5, 46........ 29.8
impoundment.
Multiple technology system........ 36, 36, 36, 36, 36, 39.1
36, 36, 36, 36,
37.5, 40, 52, 55.
-------------------------------------
Average....................... .................... 29.9
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Deadline To Cease Receipt of Waste for Unlined CCR Surface
Impoundments
EPA proposed to revise the deadline for unlined CCR surface
impoundments under Sec. 257.101(a)(1) from October 31, 2020, to August
31, 2020. 84 FR 65951. The proposed rule explained that this revised
deadline would apply to both CCR and non-CCR wastestreams. The proposal
also explained that the August 31, 2020 deadline was derived by adding
22.5 months (i.e., the average length of time needed to obtain
alternative disposal capacity) to October 15, 2018, which is the date
of the issuance of the court's mandate for the USWAG decision. The
proposal explained that the language of the USWAG decision was clear
that all units that do not have a composite liner or alternative
composite liner (see Sec. 257.71(a)(1)(ii) and (iii)) will be required
to cease receiving waste and close. The proposal further explained
EPA's belief that owners and operators of unlined CCR surface
impoundments would have started preparing to close such units upon
issuance of the mandate on October 15, 2018.
Many commenters criticized EPA's proposal to rely on the date of
the USWAG mandate as the starting point to calculate the deadline for
initiating closure. These commenters argued that the USWAG decision did
not set a new deadline or other requirements regarding the mandatory
closure of CCR surface impoundments. Rather, the USWAG court vacated
the mandatory closure provisions in Sec. 257.101(a) that allowed
unlined surface impoundments to continue to operate even when they are
not leaking, and the relevant provisions in Sec. 257.71(a)(1) for
``clay-lined'' impoundments, based on the rulemaking record before the
court at the time of ruling, which was August 21, 2018. These
commenters also noted that the court did not prohibit the Agency from
developing future regulations that might allow some unlined and ``clay-
lined'' impoundments to continue to operate if EPA determines that
those impoundments do not pose a risk to human health and environment,
but left open this issue for EPA to address in future rulemakings in
response to the court's remand of the case.
Another commenter argued that EPA has issued no formal guidance on
the impact of the USWAG vacatur or how EPA intends to address the court
decision. This commenter stated that the commenter was hesitant to make
significant investments involving advanced engineering design, state
permitting, and equipment procurement before receiving further guidance
on whether and to what extent its ``clay-lined'' impoundments would be
affected. This commenter further stated that regulatory uncertainty
still persists due to ongoing EPA rulemakings and, as a result, the
commenter argued that it was not provided adequate notice required
under administrative law that its ``clay-lined'' impoundments would be
re-classified as ``unlined'' until EPA issued the December 2, 2019
proposed rule. Therefore, the commenter contended that the date of the
USWAG decision is not appropriate. Another commenter further argued
that ``any effort by the Agency to impose a closure deadline with a
start date tied to issuance date of the USWAG mandate would have the
effect of imposing a retroactive legislative regulation that is
impermissible under the RCRA statutory scheme.''
Other commenters stated that EPA's proposal to use the date of the
USWAG mandate (i.e., October 15, 2018) represents an unlawful deadline
extension. With one exception, these commenters argued that the
proposed USWAG starting point provides owners and operators of unlined
CCR surface impoundments with additional time to begin closing
impoundments that they would have otherwise been prepared to close
consistent with the requirements of the 2015 CCR Rule.\36\ These
commenters stated that the one exception would be for CCR surface
impoundments that did not face closure deadlines but will now have to
close following the USWAG decision.
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\36\ The 2015 CCR Rule required owners and operators of an
existing unlined CCR surface impoundment to cease placing CCR and
non-CCR wastestreams into such CCR surface impoundment and either
retrofit or close the CCR unit within six months of making a
determination that the concentrations of one or more constituents
listed in Appendix IV to this part are detected at statistically
significant levels above the groundwater protection standard
established under Sec. 257.95(h).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenters also stated that the proposed deadline of August 31,
2020 represents an unjustified extension of the 2015 CCR Rule
requirements for CCR surface impoundments that leak or fail the aquifer
location restriction, which were the minimum standard necessary to
ensure no reasonable probability of adverse effect on human health and
the environment for these types of CCR units. The commenters further
explained that neither the current proposal nor the July 30, 2018 final
rule \37\ provide any evidence showing that a later deadline (than the
deadlines finalized in the 2015 CCR Rule) meets RCRA's protectiveness
standard. The commenters also argued that the proposed deadline is
inconsistent with the USWAG decision. The commenters stated that the
current
[[Page 53535]]
proposal and the July 30, 2018 final rule are based on impermissible
considerations of cost and ignore evidence of widespread contamination
caused by leaking impoundments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ 83 FR 36435. In this final rule EPA extended the deadline
to October 31, 2020 by which facilities must cease the placement of
waste in CCR units closing for cause in the situations where the
facility has detected a statistically significant increase above a
groundwater protection standard and where the impoundment is unable
to comply with the aquifer location restriction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, these commenters criticized the proposal for failing to
actually require facilities to close as soon as feasible. According to
these commenters, because it would establish a single deadline, the
proposal would effectively grant additional time to units that could in
fact close more quickly. The commenters explained that an industry
average violates RCRA's protectiveness standard by basing regulatory
requirements on what is convenient or most affordable for facilities,
rather than the most expeditious schedule that is technically feasible.
The commenters also stated that the rulemaking record was lacking in
that the proposal did not include a determination about whether the
projects reflected in the industry submissions supporting the
alternative capacity analyses are representative of conditions at CCR
impoundments across the country, whether the projects were completed
expeditiously, or whether the facilities picked among the various
options based on the need for timely compliance with the CCR rule or on
the relative costs of the options.
Finally, many of these commenters stated that the CCR Part A
proposed rule failed to meet the RCRA 4004(a) protectiveness standard
because EPA failed to consider the risks associated with new
groundwater monitoring data, violations of location standards,
extensions of the operating life of unlined surface impoundments and
known compliance issues with groundwater monitoring, annual inspection
and liner requirements.
Other commenters suggested that deadlines be extended a specific
amount of time following the publication of the final rule or to
specific dates. These commenters recommended that the proposed deadline
to cease receipt of waste be pushed back by six months to February
2021. This deadline would provide facilities the time needed to
understand their obligations and comply with the new regulations, the
commenters argued.
The commenters have misunderstood the basis for EPA's proposal. EPA
proposed to start the clock on October 15, 2018 because on that date,
all unlined surface impoundments, including those that are ``clay-
lined,'' were required to cease receipt of waste and initiate closure
no later than October 31, 2020. In other words, EPA's proposal merely
reflected the state of the law as it existed on that date.
The court ordered that ``the final rule be vacated and remanded
with respect to the provisions that permit unlined impoundments to
continue receiving coal ash unless they leak.'' 901 F.3d at 431-432. As
explained in the proposal, EPA interprets the court as having vacated
only the following phrase in Sec. 257.101(a)(1): ``if at any time
after October 19, 2015, an owner or operator of an existing unlined CCR
surface impoundment determines in any sampling event that the
concentrations of one or more constituents listed in Appendix IV of
this part are detected at statistically significant levels above the
groundwater protection standard established under Sec. 257.95(h) for
such CCR unit . . . .'' The court further ordered that ``the Final Rule
be vacated and remanded with respect to the provisions that . . .
classify ``clay-lined'' impoundments as lined, see 40 CFR
257.71(a)(1)(i) . . . .'' Id. Once the mandate issued on October 15,
2018, the vacatur became effective, and with the deletion of those
phrases the regulation in fact required all unlined and ``clay-lined''
CCR surface impoundments to cease receipt of waste no later than
October 31, 2020. It is for this reason that EPA believes facilities
began to plan for closure on that date--a belief confirmed by several
commenters who acknowledged that they began planning to close their
impoundments as of this date.
For the same reason, EPA disagrees that any facility lacked notice
that ``clay-lined'' units would be required to close. And while it is
true that the court did not preclude EPA from developing a record to
support a new rule, any such future actions would be purely
speculative. EPA does not believe that it would be reasonable for
facilities to have relied on the mere potential that EPA might adopt
some other requirement in the future.
EPA also disagrees that its proposal to rely on the date of the
court's mandate would constitute a retroactive application of law. For
a regulation to be retroactive, it must change the prior legal status
or consequences of past behavior. See Landgraf v. USI Film Products,
511 U.S. 244, 269, n.4 (1994) (A rule ``is not made retroactive merely
because it draws upon antecedent facts for its operation.''). Treasure
State Resource Industry Ass'n v. E.P.A., 805 F.3d 300, 305 (D.C. Cir.
2015). By contrast, here EPA has merely relied on a past fact to
support future requirements.
As a result, the Agency is finalizing an amended version of the
approach presented in the proposed rule to determine the deadline for
unlined CCR surface impoundments to cease receipt of waste.
Specifically, the deadline to cease receipt of waste in the final rule
is based on adding the average time to obtain alternative capacity to
October 15, 2018, which is the date of the issuance of the court's
mandate for the USWAG decision. As discussed in unit V.B.3.a of this
preamble, EPA determined the average time to obtain alternative
capacity to be 29.9 months (or 29 months, 27 days). Adding 29.9 months
to October 15, 2018, results in a deadline to cease receipt of waste
and to initiate closure of April 11, 2021, which is the new deadline
being codified in Sec. 257.101(a)(1). This deadline applies to all
unlined CCR surface impoundments, including ``clay-lined''
impoundments. Note that this deadline also applies to any unlined
inactive CCR surface impoundments, pursuant to Sec. 257.100(a), which
provides that all requirements applicable to existing impoundments
apply also to inactive impoundments. An inactive unit is one that has
ceased receipt of CCR. Section 257.53. Although these units have
already ceased receipt of CCR, some facilities continue to use the unit
to manage other non-CCR wastes. Irrespective of whether the unit
continues to receive non-CCR waste or has ceased receipt of all waste,
they must now initiate closure by the new deadline.
EPA acknowledges that it was unable to conduct a new risk
assessment to support this rulemaking in the timeframe that was
available. Nevertheless, this rule is consistent with the decisions
from the D.C. Circuit. As explained previously, EPA considers that
requiring facilities to cease receipt of waste as soon as is
technically feasible necessarily meets the RCRA 4004(a) standard, as
EPA cannot impose more stringent requirements than those that can be
successfully implemented by at least some entities.
Moreover, although the D.C. Circuit determined that EPA lacked the
record to authorize the unlimited operation of unlined CCR surface
impoundments--and consequently mandated their closure--neither the
USWAG nor the Waterkeeper decision addressed the timing of such actions
or what kind of process would be appropriate or necessary. Rather, both
the relevant portion of the 2015 CCR rule and the July 18, 2018 rule
were remanded back to EPA to allow the Agency to determine the further
actions necessary to be consistent with the decision. As part of this
rulemaking, EPA is mandating the closure of all unlined impoundments,
which is fully consistent with the holding in USWAG
[[Page 53536]]
that the closure of these units is warranted based on the record before
the Agency. This rule merely creates an orderly process for ensuring
that this occurs.
EPA further disagrees that the use of an average effectively based
the requirements on what is convenient or that the Agency failed to
evaluate whether the industry estimates represented expeditious time
frames. As discussed previously, EPA expressly recognized that in many
cases the schedules presented did not reflect an expedited timeline and
therefore considered those time frames to reflect the upper bound of
the amount of time necessary to complete construction. EPA also
discounted estimates that were inconsistent with timeframes presented
in submissions from commenters describing completed projects, or were
based on factors unique to that site that are unlikely to be relevant
to other facilities nationwide. EPA also reduced some portions of
estimates to account for overlapping tasks.
EPA also disagrees that the final deadline fails to account for
representative conditions across the country. Approximately 85 percent
of CCR facilities are located in three geographic regions of the U.S.:
The Midwest (41 percent), the Southeast (34 percent), and the Southwest
(10 percent). The facilities represented in the final rule alternative
capacity analysis include multiple facilities in each of these three
geographic regions. The final rule analysis includes facilities located
in regions with shorter construction seasons due to frigid winters
(Minnesota, Wisconsin, North Dakota), as well as regions with the
generally mild winters with longer construction seasons (New Mexico,
Arizona, Texas). The analysis also includes facilities located in
semiarid regions that receive 10 to 20 inches of rain per year (New
Mexico and Arizona), as well as subtropical regions that annually
receive 40 to 60 inches of precipitation (North Carolina, Kentucky,
Louisiana). As a consequence, the data on which EPA relied to develop
the final deadline included data from construction projects located in
a wide range of geographic and climactic conditions. The Agency also
believes the final rule deadline is representative regarding
impoundment size, using surface area acreage of the unit as the
surrogate of size. The facilities represented in the final rule
alternative capacity analysis include a wide range of unit sizes,
including units ranging from less than 10 acres to over 100 acres. As a
whole EPA considers these to be representative of the range of
conditions at CCR surface impoundments across the country.
EPA acknowledges that one approach would have been to calculate a
timeframe based on a single technology method to developing alternative
capacity--e.g., selecting a single ``best'' or fastest approach, such
as converting to dry handling or constructing a wastewater treatment
plant. However, EPA disagrees that this would be appropriate; there are
many technical reasons that a facility might select one approach over
another that have nothing to do with cost or convenience. For example,
the facility might not have sufficient available real estate to
construct the alternative capacity, and so might need to retrofit their
existing surface impoundment so that they can continue to use a single
unit to manage all of their wastes.\38\ Similarly, if a facility is
trying to comply with multiple EPA regulations or moving away from the
commingling of CCR and non-CCR wastestreams, adopting a multiple
technology approach may ultimately result in faster compliance overall,
even if individual components could theoretically be adopted sooner.
Another example could be a facility that sluices bottom ash (or fly
ash) to a zero-discharge unlined impoundment where construction of a
wastewater treatment facility would not be a viable disposal
substitute. In addition, EPA currently lacks the technical record to
determine that mandating the single fastest technology for constructing
alternative capacity can effectively be implemented by all facilities.
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\38\ See docket item EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0005 for an example
of real estate constraints.
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EPA agrees that facilities that can cease receipt of waste more
quickly than April 11, 2021 must do so. To address the concern that the
new deadline would improperly grant more time to facilities that could
close more quickly, EPA has revised the regulation to require that
facilities close their unlined impoundments ``as soon as technically
feasible, but no later than April 11, 2021.'' See Sec. 257.101(a)(1).
EPA further disagrees that the approach in this rule fails to
adequately address the risks. As explained in the proposal, EPA lacked
the data to develop a revised nationwide risk assessment to support
this rulemaking. Although the commenters are correct that facilities
have posted substantial amounts of groundwater monitoring data, as EPA
explained, this information could not be easily or readily incorporated
into a nationwide risk assessment. EPA estimates that it could have
taken as long as one year to develop a revised risk assessment even
assuming the Agency could obtain the necessary data. This would have
further extended this rulemaking process, which EPA had originally
hoped to complete in nine months. A delay in the rulemaking would
effectively grant facilities additional time to continue operating
these units. Ultimately, the approach that the Agency has taken will
result in the initiation of closure--with all the risk reduction that
entails--much sooner.
In addition, EPA considers that the approach taken in this rule
effectively addresses the risk from these facilities. EPA is requiring
facilities to close as soon as it is technically feasible to do so. The
final rule defines technical feasibility to mean ``possible to do in a
way that would likely be successful.'' As EPA has explained, this
standard effectively addresses the risk because it is not possible to
impose more protective measures than those that can actually be
implemented.
As further measures to address the risk from continued operation of
these units, the Agency is requiring all surface impoundments that seek
additional time to be in compliance with all applicable requirements in
40 CFR part 257, subpart D. And for those facilities seeking an
extension under Sec. 257.103(f)(2) the owner or operator must develop
a risk mitigation plan for that surface impoundment. If EPA determines
that further measures are needed to address the risk during its review
of the Sec. 257.103(f)(2) extension request, EPA will require those
measures as a condition of its approval. These provisions are discussed
in more detail in subsequent Units of this preamble.
Finally, EPA believes that the revised deadline of April 11, 2021
to cease placing waste into the impoundment provides facilities with
adequate time to understand and comply with their obligations under the
final rule.
(c) Deadline To Cease Receipt of Waste for CCR Surface Impoundments
That Failed the Aquifer Location Restriction
The proposed rule explained that the October 31, 2020 cease receipt
of waste date applied not only to the unlined leaking CCR surface
impoundments subject to Sec. 257.101(a), but also to the units that
failed the minimum depth to aquifer location restriction standard
subject to Sec. 257.101(b)(1)(i). 84 FR 65951 (December 2, 2019).
Therefore, EPA proposed that the deadline to cease receipt of CCR and
non-CCR wastestreams for these CCR units also be amended to August 31,
2020.
[[Page 53537]]
This proposed rule discussed that the new date was selected based
on the same rationale explained for unlined CCR surface impoundments.
The proposal stated that these units are similarly situated in that
these facilities need additional time to develop alternative capacity
to transition away from their surface impoundments. As previously
discussed, based on the data received from stakeholders, EPA calculated
that the average amount of time to take the necessary steps to cease
placement of waste into a surface impoundment was approximately 22.5
months. In addition, based on the data on facilities' publicly
accessible CCR internet site regarding compliance with the location
restriction standards, the majority of the units that failed the
aquifer location restriction are also unlined and must close under
Sec. 257.101(a). The proposed rule explained that it is therefore
logical to establish the same deadline to cease receipt of waste for
units that failed the minimum depth to aquifer location restriction
standard. The proposal also stated EPA's belief that it is technically
infeasible for a majority of these units to be able to cease receipt of
waste prior to August 31, 2020 due to the lack of alternative
capacities. EPA further raised the concern that requiring the immediate
initiation of closure could disrupt operations at the power plants.
Therefore, EPA proposed the date of August 31, 2020 for the deadline to
cease placement of waste for Sec. 257.101(b)(1)(i) to replace the date
of October 31, 2020, which was established in the July 30, 2018 Final
Rule.
This final rule uses the same approach as for unlined and ``clay-
lined'' units to establish the cease receipt of waste date to April 11,
2021 for CCR surface impoundments that failed to meet the aquifer
location restriction.
(d) Revisions to the Groundwater Monitoring and Corrective Action
Requirements in Sec. 257.91(d) and Sec. 257.95(g)(5)
The CCR regulations require each CCR unit to have its own
groundwater monitoring system, unless the owner or operator chooses to
install a multiunit groundwater monitoring system. If a multiunit
groundwater monitoring system is installed, the CCR regulations state
that the system must be based on the consideration of several factors
that are specified in Sec. 257.91(d)(1). Furthermore, the regulations
currently provide under Sec. 257.91(d)(2) that if a multiunit
groundwater monitoring system includes at least one unlined CCR surface
impoundment, and the concentrations of one or more constituents listed
in Appendix IV to this part are detected at statistically significant
levels above the groundwater protection standard for the multiunit
system, then all unlined CCR surface impoundments comprising the
multiunit groundwater monitoring system are subject to the requirements
under Sec. 257.101(a) to retrofit or close. In addition, under the
assessment monitoring provisions in Sec. 257.95(g), owners and
operators of all CCR units are required to take certain actions when
one or more constituents listed in Appendix IV of part 257 are detected
at statistically significant levels above the groundwater protection
standard. Section 257.95(g)(5) specifies that existing unlined CCR
surface impoundments are subject to the closure requirements under
Sec. 257.101(a) if an assessment of corrective measures is required
under Sec. 257.96. Another requirement of Sec. 257.95(g) is that the
owner and operator must also prepare a notification stating that an
assessment of corrective measures has been initiated.
In the December 2, 2019 rule, the Agency proposed to delete the
multiunit system requirements under Sec. 257.91(d)(2) because the
provision is no longer relevant, as all unlined CCR surface
impoundments are required to retrofit or close. 84 FR 65952. EPA
received no comments on this proposed action and the Agency is
therefore removing and reserving Sec. 257.91(d)(2) in this action. EPA
is also revising Sec. 257.95(g)(5) to remove the requirement
specifying that existing unlined CCR surface impoundments are subject
to the closure requirements under Sec. 257.101(a) if an assessment of
corrective measures is required under Sec. 257.96. The Agency is
finalizing this revision because it is redundant to the requirement
codified in Sec. 257.101(a) for unlined CCR surface impoundments,
which requires all unlined impoundments to close or retrofit. However,
the Agency is retaining the other requirement of Sec. 257.95(g)(5)
that specifies an owner or operator must prepare a notification stating
that an assessment of corrective measures has been initiated.
C. Revisions to the Alternative Closure Standards (Sec. 257.103)
In the December 2, 2019 proposal, EPA proposed three new
alternative closure provisions. As explained in the proposal, these
provisions were intended to create procedures by which a CCR surface
impoundment could obtain additional time to cease the receipt of waste
and initiate closure. The original provisions in the 2015 rule, Sec.
257.103(a) and (b), only allow the continued placement of CCR; both
exclude the placement of non-CCR wastestreams. EPA proposed to allow a
facility to temporarily continue to manage both the CCR and non-CCR
wastestreams currently being managed in the CCR surface impoundment.
EPA proposed three new alternative closure standards: (1) A short term
alternative to initiation of closure (Sec. 257.103(e)), (2) a site-
specific alternative to initiation of closure due to lack of capacity
(Sec. 257.103(f)(1)), and (3) a site-specific alternative to
initiation of closure due to permanent cessation of a coal-fired
boiler(s) by a date certain (Sec. 257.103(f)(2)). As explained in the
proposal, most of these provisions rely on determinations of how
quickly it is feasible for the facility to cease receipt of waste,
rather than a determination that continued operation will result in
acceptable levels of risk. The exception is that the extension under
Sec. 257.103(f)(2) is based on a qualitative risk-risk tradeoff (the
increased risk of continuing to operate the unit is offset by the
decreased risk of the expedited closure) and a site-specific risk
mitigation plan. For all of these, EPA believed it was important to
require facilities to submit demonstrations to EPA for approval. This
was a significant change from the existing provisions which are self-
implementing. Finally, EPA proposed conforming changes to have the
existing alternative closure provisions in the 2015 rule, Sec.
257.103(a) and (b), only apply to landfills. The new provisions at
Sec. 257.103(f) would then apply only to CCR surface impoundments.
1. Short Term Alternative Deadline To Cease Receipt of Waste (Sec.
257.103(e))
In the December 2, 2019 proposal, EPA proposed a self-implementing
short term alternative to the cease receipt of waste deadline. This
alternative was designed for those facilities that need only a little
more time to complete development of an alternative capacity
technology. EPA proposed that facilities demonstrate and certify that
additional time is needed for it to be technically feasible to cease
receipt of waste and initiate closure. The provision would have allowed
for no more than a three-month extension from the deadlines in Sec.
257.101(a) and (b)(1)(i). The proposal was an acknowledgement that
events can occur which are completely out of the facility's control,
such as extreme weather or a delay in material fabrication. In essence,
this would have been a limited ``force majeure'' provision. EPA
proposed requirements of the certification mirroring those in
[[Page 53538]]
the current requirements of Sec. 257.103(a). 84 FR 65953. EPA proposed
that the owner or operator would have to certify the following: (1) No
alternative disposal capacity is available on or off-site (an increase
in costs or inconvenience is not sufficient support); (2) the owner or
operator has made and continues to make efforts to obtain additional
capacity; and (3) the owner or operator is (and must remain) in
compliance with all other requirements of part 257. EPA proposed that a
brief narrative of each component of the certification would be
required to explain why a three-month extension is necessary. EPA
proposed that the certification to be placed in the facility's
operating record, placed on the facility's publicly accessible CCR
internet site, and submitted to EPA as a notification of the facility's
intent to comply with the alternative deadline under this provision.
EPA received several comments from environmental groups stating
concerns that EPA's proposal failed to establish strict criteria that
would actually ensure that this extension would only be used in true
``force majeure'' situations. They additionally commented that the
demonstration requirements failed to meet the protectiveness standard
of RCRA Sec. 4004(a) because it allowed facilities to consider costs
or practicable capability.
Industry groups provided comments that supported this proposal on
the grounds that events do happen that are out of the facility's
control, such as extreme weather, that have a high impact on their
construction schedule. They supported this provision being self-
implementing. A few industry groups did comment that the short-term
alternative and the site-specific longer alternatives should not be
mutually exclusive options. They further commented that because the
proposed deadline to cease receipt of waste fell in the middle of
construction season it was unlikely for facilities to be able to
accurately gauge if they could complete development in three months or
if they would need longer depending on the severity of the event.
After evaluating the comments, EPA is not finalizing this
provision. As discussed in unit V.B.3, EPA has recalculated the
deadline by which facilities must cease receipt of waste based on data
received in comments; the new deadline is April 11, 2021. As a
consequence, EPA considers that this proposal is no longer necessary.
In part, the proposal was intended to account for the short interval
between the proposed deadline to cease receipt of waste (August 31,
2020) and the expected promulgation of the final rule (July 2020). Such
an interval would be too short for a facility to accommodate unforeseen
events that impact the construction schedule. This is no longer the
case with the revised deadline. Facilities will have several months
between promulgation of the final rule and the date by which they must
cease receiving waste, and thus should be able to accommodate the
circumstances that would have been addressed by the three-month
extension. As a further consideration, because the final deadline was
calculated with more data than was available for the proposal, EPA has
greater confidence that most facilities will be able to meet the
deadline.
EPA is reserving paragraph (e) of Sec. 257.103, where the short-
term extension was proposed, rather than renumbering the proposed
regulation to avoid confusion.
2. Issues Applicable to Both Sec. 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2)
(a) Scope of Waste That May Continue To Be Managed in the Surface
Impoundment
In the December 2, 2019 proposal EPA proposed to allow facilities
under the new alternative closure provisions to obtain approval to
continue to place CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams. The existing
alternative closure provisions Sec. 257.103(a) and (b) only allow the
continued disposal of CCR. EPA sought comment on whether the proposed
site-specific alternative closure provisions should only apply to non-
CCR wastestreams. Under such an approach, facilities could continue to
dispose of CCR pursuant to the existing provisions Sec. 257.103(a) and
(b). As explained in the proposal, in the record before the Agency many
facilities highlighted that not having capacity for non-CCR
wastestreams is a critical issue that places the operation of the
facility at risk. Evidence suggests that the average time to develop
alternative capacity for non-CCR wastestreams is often the primary
driver of determining a technically feasible timeframe for being able
to initiate the closure of surface impoundments that comingle CCR and
non-CCR wastestreams.
EPA received several comments from industry groups stating that
they believe the existing alternative closure provisions, Sec.
257.103(a) and (b), do not prohibit the continued placement of non-CCR
wastestreams. Some commented that facilities should be able to continue
to use the existing provisions for continued CCR disposal, and only be
required to submit applications under the new provisions if they lack
capacity for both CCR and non-CCR wastestreams or for non-CCR
wastestreams. They claimed that it was burdensome to submit the
demonstrations and they believe the self-implementing extensions are
sufficient for CCR wastestreams.
EPA received comments from environmental groups stating that non-
CCR wastestreams may be subject to hazardous waste regulations when not
co-disposed with CCR in surface impoundments. They argued that owners
and operators must determine whether the non-CCR wastestreams are
listed wastes or whether they exhibit any of the characteristics of a
hazardous waste. They further stated that the December 2019 proposed
rule did not identify what constitutes a non-CCR wastestream nor any
requirements to evaluate different non-CCR wastestreams to determine
whether they contain listed hazardous wastes or display hazardous waste
characteristics. Lastly, they stated EPA must evaluate the full nature
and extent of the risk before allowing disposal of non-CCR wastestreams
without adequate safeguards.
After reviewing the public comments, EPA is maintaining its
proposed approach that the new site-specific alternative closure
provisions will, upon successful demonstration, allow certain CCR
surface impoundments to receive CCR wastestreams, or non-CCR
wastestreams, or a combination of both. No commenter provided any
information rebutting the Agency's conclusion that the need to find
alternative capacity for non-CCR wastestream is often the most critical
factor in determining the amount of time needed to initiate closure of
the unit.
Moreover, if the new provisions applied exclusively to non-CCR
wastestreams there would be two sets of regulatory requirements with
different criteria applicable to the same surface impoundment. This
would create unnecessary complications in implementing and enforcing
the provisions. Nor does it make sense for the more stringent
requirements in the new provisions to apply exclusively to the non-CCR
wastestreams when the vast majority of hazardous constituents are found
in the CCR wastestream. EPA understands the concerns that the
demonstrations require a new effort by the facilities. However, these
considerations are offset by the benefits that come with the enhanced
regulatory oversight of the new provisions and having all wastestreams
managed in the
[[Page 53539]]
disposal unit under a single set of regulatory requirements.
EPA disagrees that the proposed rule should have defined non-CCR
wastestreams. The regulations already define CCR; therefore, a non-CCR
wastestream is any other waste managed in the impoundment. See 40 CFR
257.53 and 261.4(b)(4). EPA agrees that some non-CCR wastestreams are
not Bevill-exempt (e.g., wastes that are not covered by Sec.
261.4(b)(4)) and consequently they remain subject to all requirements
applicable to solid waste, and if they meet the criteria, the
requirements applicable to hazardous waste. This includes the
requirement to determine whether the waste is hazardous based on either
the generator's knowledge or testing. If the waste is hazardous it must
be managed according to the requirements of RCRA subtitle C; when going
to an impoundment, the impoundment must meet subtitle C requirements.
Mixtures of hazardous waste and Bevill exempt wastes are not exempt
unless the only hazardous constituents in the mixture are those that
are found in the Bevill exempt waste. In addition, mixing a hazardous
waste with a Bevill exempt waste may be considered treatment in some
circumstances, which would itself require a permit. However, EPA has no
data to indicate that non-CCR wastestreams are characteristically
hazardous. Given the existing requirements that currently apply to
these wastestreams, EPA disagrees that additional requirements are
needed or should have been proposed. Finally, EPA explains below, in
unit V.2.d, the reasons that these revisions rely primarily on
feasibility rather than risk considerations.
(b) Units Potentially Eligible for Alternative Closure Timeframes
In the December 2, 2019 proposal, EPA discussed several options as
to the CCR surface impoundments that would be eligible for the new
alternative closure provisions. EPA proposed to allow all CCR surface
impoundments to be eligible to submit demonstrations for the new
alternative closure provisions. This included surface impoundments that
failed one or more location restrictions other than the depth to
aquifer location restriction. EPA recognized that these units were not
included in the July 2018 final rule that established the October 31,
2020 deadline to cease receipt of waste, and consequently their
deadline to cease receipt of waste was April 2019. However, EPA
proposed to include them in this new approach to create a consistent
regulatory system. 84 FR 65,953. EPA also sought comment on whether the
proposed site-specific alternatives to initiation of closure provisions
should only apply to the CCR surface impoundments forced into closure
by the USWAG decision (now defined as ``eligible unlined CCR surface
impoundments''--i.e., units that were certified as ``clay-lined'' or
units that are unlined but not leaking, compliant with all location
standards and compliant with structural stability).
Several utility companies provided comments that surface
impoundments closing due to Sec. 257.101(b)(1)(ii) should be able to
apply for the new alternatives. They further stated that those who had
filed a notification of intent to close pursuant to Sec. Sec.
257.103(a) or (b) should be grandfathered into the new alternatives.
Environmental groups stated that this group of units should not be
eligible for the new alternative closure provisions because they should
have initiated closure in April 2019 and because it would violate the
RCRA 4004(a) protectiveness standard.
Industry groups commented that the alternative closure provisions
should not be limited to the eligible unlined CCR surface impoundments.
They elaborated that lack of capacity for CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams is not limited to the facilities recently forced into
closure but most facilities. By contrast, environmental groups stated
that many facilities have been on notice that they would be required to
close and should have prepared for that in advance, and so EPA should
not grant them even further time. However, even these commenters
acknowledged that the surface impoundments that are unlined, not
leaking, and passed all location restrictions were forced into closure
unexpectedly, and so may need additional time to initiate closure.
Consistent with the proposal, under the final rule all CCR surface
impoundments will be subject to the new provisions in Sec. 257.103.
EPA continues to believe there is value in subjecting CCR surface
impoundments to a common regulatory system. A common regulatory system
for CCR surface impoundments requiring the use of Sec. 257.103 will
move these units to initiate closure as quickly as possible and
decrease any confusion to the public. The new alternative closure
provisions will grant facilities no more than the specific amount of
time required for them to cease receipt of waste as fast as technically
feasible. EPA cannot compel facilities to do the impossible; therefore,
these new provisions will ensure facilities cease receipt of waste as
fast as technically feasible.
EPA agrees that the eligible unlined CCR surface impoundments
should be eligible to apply for the new alternative closure provisions.
The owners and operators of these units had no expectation that they
would need to close these units in the near future and so would not
have begun planning for such an event. They may, therefore, need more
time to construct the alternative capacity necessary to allow them to
cease receipt of waste.
However, EPA no longer believes that all surface impoundments
should be eligible to apply for all of the new alternative closure
provisions. Consequently, the final rule provides that only CCR surface
impoundments closing pursuant to Sec. 257.101(a) and Sec.
257.101(b)(1)(i) may apply for the new alternative closure provisions
under Sec. 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2) for CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams. As previously stated, the surface impoundments that
failed a non-aquifer location restriction or multiple location
restrictions were triggered into closure under Sec. 257.101(b)(1)(ii)
and were to initiate closure in April 2019. The only exception would be
for the facilities that posted a notification of intent to close
pursuant to Sec. 257.103(a) or (b) based on a lack of capacity for
only CCR, as those provisions only authorized continued receipt of CCR.
EPA agrees with commenters that no one has presented a factual basis
for allowing these units to commence or resume the receipt of wastes
(i.e., non-CCR wastestreams) two years after they were required to have
ceased. This stands in direct contrast to the units subject to the
October 31, 2020 deadline, which currently are authorized to continue
receiving both CCR and non-CCR wastestreams. Moreover, the purpose of
this rulemaking was to reconsider the closure deadlines in the July
2018 final rule in light of the decision in USWAG. What matters in this
context is how, if at all, EPA should revise the regulatory status quo
based on the direction from the D.C. Circuit. The closure deadlines for
impoundments closing in accordance with Sec. 257.101(b)(1)(ii) were
not affected by either the USWAG decision or the July 2018 rule. EPA
does not intend in this rulemaking to revisit closure provisions that
were unaffected by either of these things, contrary to the commenter
who contended that EPA was relying on the decision and its
reconsideration to provide a clean slate to recalculate all deadlines.
Therefore, this final rule allows CCR surface impoundments closing
due to Sec. 257.101(b)(1)(ii) that have posted a notification pursuant
to Sec. 257.103(a) or (b) to apply to be transitioned to the
[[Page 53540]]
new alternative closure provisions under Sec. 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2)
for CCR wastestreams only.
(c) Transition for Surface Impoundments Operating Under Sec.
257.103(a) and (b)
In the December 2, 2019 proposal, EPA sought comment on how to
transition the facilities that have posted notifications pursuant to
Sec. 257.103(a) or (b) due to forced closure under Sec.
257.101(b)(1)(ii) to the new alternative closure provisions. Several
utility companies commented that these facilities should be
grandfathered into the new provisions without submitting demonstrations
to EPA for approval. These commenters additionally stated that these
units should be allowed to continue to operate for the amount of time
authorized under the existing regulations, which potentially authorize
continued operation for as long as 5 years from the notification date.
They further stated that the demonstration requirements would add
unnecessary burden to the facilities currently closing pursuant to
Sec. 257.103(a) and (b).
EPA acknowledges the concern that the demonstrations will add
burden to the facilities currently operating under Sec. 257.103(a) and
(b). However, the commenters have not provided a compelling rationale
for creating two distinct regulatory frameworks for units that are
essentially identical. There is substantial value in creating a
consistent regulatory framework for all CCR surface impoundments
requiring more time to cease receiving waste. As part of that
framework, EPA has concluded that closer regulatory oversight is
necessary to ensure that facilities initiate closure as soon as
technically feasible. EPA has come to this decision based on an
evaluation of the current status of compliance of the facilities
operating under the self-implementing provisions of Sec. 257.103(a)
and (b). For example, notifications and progress reports on facilities'
publicly accessible CCR internet sites do not contain all of the
information required under Sec. 257.103(a), (b), and (c). Some of
these documents do not include the method by which the facility is
obtaining alternative capacity, the date by which alternative capacity
will be obtained, or a clear demonstration that no other disposal
capacity is available on or off-site.\39\ Based on this record, it is
clear that these provisions require the closer regulatory oversight
that comes with requiring prior EPA approval. Consequently, EPA will
not grandfather in the facilities that have filed notifications and
will require all facilities to submit demonstrations to EPA for
approval under the new site-specific alternative closure provisions in
order to continue operating that surface impoundment.
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\39\ Compiled reports from the facilities utilizing the
alternative closure provisions.
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Any facility that currently has posted on its publicly accessible
CCR internet site a notification to close a CCR surface impoundment
pursuant to Sec. 257.103(a) or (b) must submit a demonstration for EPA
approval that meets the requirements under Sec. 257.103(f)(1) or
(f)(2) in order to continue operating that unit. Therefore, if a
facility has a notification posted and is currently operating under
Sec. 257.103(a) or (b) due to closure under Sec. 257.101(b)(1)(ii)
and does not submit a demonstration to EPA by November 30, 2020, then
the facility must cease the receipt of waste into the unit no later
than April 11, 2021 and initiate closure.
(d) Consistency With Statutory Standard and USWAG
EPA received comments from environmental groups that the December
2, 2019 proposal with the addition of the new alternative closure
provision is inconsistent with the statutory standard and the USWAG
decision. These commenters stated that the alternative closure
provisions allowed unlined CCR surface impoundments to continue to
operate when the USWAG decision mandated that these units present a
risk to human health and the environment and must close. Additionally,
they stated that the new alternative closure provisions do not address
the risks posed by the continued operation of the surface impoundment,
and that as a consequence, the proposed demonstration requirements fail
to meet the RCRA protectiveness standard.
EPA disagrees with commenters that these provisions fail to meet
the statutory standard as interpreted by the court in USWAG. It is true
that EPA was unable to conduct a nationwide risk assessment to document
that all facilities that obtain an extension under one of the
alternative closure provisions will meet the statutory standard;
however, both subsections (f)(1) and (f)(2) include conditions designed
to address the risks. Both provisions require facilities to
affirmatively demonstrate that they are in compliance with all the
requirements of part 257, and therefore meet the baseline level of
acceptable risk. In addition, as explained in more detail below,
subsection (f)(2) requires the submission of a risk mitigation plan as
part as a condition of obtaining the extension.
Moreover, with regard to the extensions pursuant to Sec.
257.103(f)(1), as explained in the proposal, EPA considers that
requiring facilities to cease receipt of waste as quickly as is
feasible necessarily meets the standard in RCRA 4004(a) as it is not
possible under this provision to require more stringent--or more
protective--measures than can be implemented by at least some
facilities. EPA has ensured that the statutory standard has been met by
requiring facilities to affirmatively demonstrate to EPA the
infeasibility of ceasing receipt of waste by April 11, 2021 and by
requiring prior EPA approval of any requested extension, allowing EPA
to ensure that units stop receipt of waste as soon as feasible.
EPA also considers that the provisions authorizing extensions
pursuant to Sec. 257.103(f)(2) meet the statutory standard. Although
facilities are not required to demonstrate that they will cease receipt
of waste as soon as feasible under this section, they will be required
to expedite the closure of the surface impoundment. Not only will this
reduce the risks over the long term, the deadlines will ensure that
continued operation of the unit will be limited. Moreover, as discussed
at greater length in unit V.C.4, EPA is requiring submission of a risk
mitigation plan to address any increased risk from continued operation
of the surface impoundment, which EPA will review as part of
determining whether to grant the extension. If additional measures to
mitigate the risk are necessary to ensure that the statutory standard
is met, EPA will require those as a condition of granting the
extension.
3. Requirements for Development of Alternative Capacity Infeasible
(Sec. 257.103(f)(1))
In the December 2, 2019 proposal, EPA proposed that a facility can
obtain a site-specific deadline to cease receipt of waste by submitting
a demonstration that development of alternative capacity for CCR and/or
non-CCR wastestreams cannot be completed prior to November 30, 2020
(the end date of the short term alternative) to EPA or the
Participating State Director for approval. The owner or operator would
be required to demonstrate that it is not technically feasible to
complete the development/installation of alternative capacity prior to
the deadline to cease receipt of waste. In this demonstration, the
facility would need to present in detail the specifics of the process
they are undertaking to develop alternative capacities for the
necessary CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams to support the claim that
additional time is necessary.
[[Page 53541]]
(a) Criteria and Documentation
In order to obtain the Sec. 257.103(f)(1) extension, EPA proposed
the owner or operator must meet and maintain the criteria listed in the
provision. EPA proposed to require that the demonstration for each
surface impoundment document or provide evidence for all of the
following: (1) That there is no alternative capacity available on or
off-site; (2) That CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams must continue to be
managed in the CCR surface impoundment due to the technical
infeasibility of obtaining alternative capacity prior to the deadline
to cease receipt of waste; as part of this demonstration the facility
was required to include an analysis of the adverse impact to plant
operations if the CCR surface impoundment in question were to no longer
be available for use; (3) a detailed workplan on obtaining alternative
capacity for CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams; and (4) a narrative of
how the owner or operator will continue to maintain compliance with all
other aspects of the CCR rule (including ongoing groundwater monitoring
and corrective action requirements). Additionally, EPA proposed that
this showing must be made for each wastestream that would continue to
be managed in the unit and the owner or operator would be required to
cease receipt of each wastestream when alternative capacity for each
wastestream becomes available. Finally, EPA proposed the time to
develop the alternative capacity could not extend beyond October 15,
2023, and that the owner or operator must remain in compliance with all
the applicable requirements of this subpart.
No alternative capacity on or off-site. The first criterion EPA
proposed is generally the same that is required in Sec.
257.103(a)(1)(i). The owner or operator must demonstrate the lack of
alternative capacity available on or off-site to manage the waste. EPA
also proposed that an increase in costs or inconvenience would not be
sufficient to support qualification under this section.
EPA received no comments opposing the inclusion of this requirement
in the final rule. One commenter, who believed that costs should not be
considered as part of this determination, raised the concern that the
regulatory text would not preclude consideration of cost as part of
this determination. EPA disagrees that the regulatory text is ambiguous
on this point. EPA proposed to include the same provisions currently
found at Sec. 257.103(a) and (b); these provisions were challenged on
the grounds that the regulation precluded the consideration of costs in
making this exact showing. See USWAG, 901 F.3d at 448-449. Therefore,
EPA considers the regulatory text to be clear on this point and is
finalizing the proposed requirement without revision.
Documentation requirements of no alternative capacity on or off-
site. EPA proposed to require facilities to provide documentation that
no alternative capacity exists on or off-site of the facility that
could be used to manage their waste as part of their submission.
EPA received comments from utilities requesting clarification on
the acceptable measures for determining lack of off-site alternative
disposal capacity. For example, the comments contended that if the
facility sluices CCR to their surface impoundment, their off-site
disposal options are significantly limited. However, the disposal
options greatly increase for dry handled CCR and the off-site capacity
evaluation could then be more extensive. EPA received comments from
environmental groups stating that EPA should require the facility to
demonstrate the lack of alternative capacity for each wastestream. Some
commenters also raised concern that some of the proposed regulatory
text could be construed to permit a facility to continue disposing CCR
into surface impoundments, even when there is alternative capacity of
CCR, due to the lack of alternative disposal capacity for the non-CCR
wastestreams. Specifically they pointed to changes to the introductory
language of Sec. 257.103 that they believed would allow owners or
operators of CCR units that are subject to closure to continue
receiving CCR in those units even if alternative disposal capacity for
CCR is available, as long as they demonstrate that they lack
alternative disposal capacity for non-CCR wastestreams.
EPA agrees that the disposal options for sluiced or wet handled CCR
are greatly limited compared to the options available for dry handled
CCR. However as discussed below there are disposal options even for
sluiced or wet handled CCR, and consistent with the proposal the final
rule requires owners or operators to document that no options other
than the CCR surface impoundment are available on or off-site to manage
these wastes.
EPA also agrees that the owner or operator needs to document the
lack of alternative capacity both on and off-site for each wastestream
they wish to continue placing into the CCR surface impoundment after
the April 11, 2021 deadline. As these commenters pointed out, the
justification for continuing to use an unlined or leaking unit based on
a lack of capacity for one waste does not extend to any other waste for
which there is capacity. It was for this reason that EPA proposed to
require documentation of the lack of capacity both on and off-site for
each individual wastestream, and that the facility cease receipt of any
waste for which capacity becomes available. Accordingly, the final rule
requires owners and operators to cease using the CCR surface
impoundment as soon as feasible, to document the lack of both on and
off-site capacity for each individual wastestream, and expressly
requires that as capacity for an individual wastestream becomes
available, owners or operators are required to use that capacity, which
will slowly decrease the amount of waste being disposed in the unit.
EPA has also revised the introductory text at Sec. 257.103 to be
consistent with these provisions. Specifically, the text now states
that the facility may continue only to receive the wastes specified in
either paragraph (a), (b), (f)(1), or (f)(2) in the unit provided the
owner or operator meets all of the requirements contained in the
respective paragraph.
For sluiced CCR and non-CCR wastestreams, EPA expects the owner or
operator to evaluate the viability of other wet temporary storage, such
as tanks, to use in lieu of the CCR surface impoundment while permanent
capacity is developed. Some of these wastestreams can be very large,
and therefore tanks may not be a viable or realistic option to handle
such volumes; however, tanks could be a viable option for small volume
wastestreams. For dry CCR, EPA expects the owner or operator to
evaluate the option of transporting the CCR to landfills. The owner or
operator must provide documentation of this evaluation of on and off-
site capacity for each wastestream. Additionally, the owner or operator
must cease receipt of each wastestream when alternative capacity for
each wastestream becomes available. This documentation requirement has
been incorporated into the requirements of section one of the workplan.
The other requirements for the workplan are discussed later in this
preamble. This documentation requirement is at Sec.
257.103(f)(1)(iv)(A).
Consistent with the proposal, the costs or the inconvenience of
existing capacity will not be considered as part of determining whether
the facility qualifies for this alternative. As discussed in unit IV,
EPA lacks the authority to include such considerations in this
regulation. See USWAG, 901 F.3d at 448-449.
[[Page 53542]]
Need to continue using the CCR surface impoundment. EPA proposed
that the owner or operator must demonstrate that CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams must continue to be managed in the CCR surface impoundment
due to the technical infeasibility of alternative capacity being
available sooner than November 30, 2020.
EPA received one comment about the inclusion of this requirement,
on the grounds that the word feasibility could be construed to permit
the consideration of cost. According to the commenter, one dictionary
defines the word feasibility to mean ``not possible to do easily or
conveniently; impracticable,'' and criticized EPA for failing to
include a regulatory definition of feasibility. As an initial matter,
EPA notes that other dictionaries define feasible to mean ``capable of
being done or carried out'' (Merriam website (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/feasible)) and ``possible to do and likely to be
successful'' (Cambridge English Dictionary (https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/feasible)). EPA also
disagrees that the proposed rule was unclear on whether cost could be
considered as part of this determination. EPA proposed explicit
language that clearly stated that costs were not relevant.
Nevertheless, to avoid any potential ambiguity EPA will include
regulatory definitions of technically feasible and technically
infeasible. Specifically, the final rule defines technically feasible
to mean ``possible to do in a way that would likely be successful,''
and technically infeasible to mean ``not possible to do in a way that
would likely be successful.'' These definitions clearly exclude those
circumstances in which a facility could have completed construction but
chose not to do so in order to save money, while capturing the full
range of force majeure situations in which circumstances beyond a
facility's control cause delays. For example, this definition would
allow a facility to obtain an extension in response to delays in
obtaining a permit as a result of State furloughs or resulting from the
COVID-19 public health emergency. However, it would not allow a
facility to obtain an extension where the delays were caused by
mismanagement or could be overcome by the expenditure of additional
resources; for example, where the facility delayed ordering
geomembrane, and as a consequence it arrived too close to the end of
the construction season.
EPA received no other substantive comments raising concern about
the inclusion of this criterion. Therefore, EPA is finalizing this
requirement with one minor revision to the regulatory text. As
discussed in unit V.B.3, the deadline to cease receipt of waste is now
April 11, 2021, so the deadline in Sec. 257.103(f)(1)(ii) will be
updated accordingly.
Documentation requirements of need to continue using the CCR
surface impoundment. This line of evidence must include an analysis of
the adverse impact to plant operations if the CCR surface impoundment
in question were to no longer be available for use.
EPA received comments stating that EPA failed to identify any
evidence that the lack of capacity alternative closure provision is
necessary. They stated that EPA claimed that the 2015 CCR Rule would
cause potentially significant disruptions to plant operations and thus
the provision of electricity to customers; however, EPA failed to
identify any evidence of such risks or identify a single power plant in
the country that would be at risk of shutdown if its non-CCR
wastestreams could no longer be disposed of in the CCR surface
impoundments.
Other commenters stated that the inclusion of an analysis of the
adverse impact to plant operations if the CCR surface impoundment in
question were to no longer be available for use is a very important
factor in the evaluation of a facility's extension request. They stated
that the rulemaking record makes clear that their ability to continue
providing power to the public could be impacted if facilities are
unable to use these surface impoundments (for CCR and/or non-CCR waste
management) before they have time to develop alternative disposal
capacity.
EPA disagrees that there is no evidence that power plants could be
affected if they were forced to prematurely stop using their CCR
surface impoundments before alternative capacity is available. The
rulemaking record contains submissions from numerous utilities
documenting the potential effects of such premature closures. Moreover,
EPA proposed to require facilities to include an analysis of the
adverse impact to plant operations if the CCR surface impoundment in
question were to no longer be available for use. Therefore, each
individual demonstration would include the evidence of the adverse
impact to each plant's operations, which is the exact evidence the
commenters assert is lacking. EPA continues to believe that an analysis
of the adverse impact to plant operations if the CCR surface
impoundment were to no longer be available for use is directly relevant
to the question of whether the facility actually needs to continue
using the unit. As a consequence, EPA is retaining this requirement in
the final rule without revision.
This documentation requirement has been incorporated into section
one of the workplan. The other requirements for the workplan are
discussed later in this preamble. This documentation requirement is
represented in Sec. 257.103(f)(1)(iv)(A).
Compliance certification and documentation requirements. In the
proposal, EPA discussed compliance in three separate places in the
regulatory text but only one section in the preamble. In the regulatory
text EPA required a certificate of compliance, a narrative compliance
strategy and that the owner or operator remain in compliance with the
applicable requirements of subpart D of part 257 at all times.
Furthermore, the proposed fourth line of evidence of the Sec.
257.103(f)(1) demonstration reiterated the requirement for a narrative
compliance strategy for the CCR surface impoundment. The preamble laid
out some specific information that EPA believed was critical to
determine if the facility was in compliance. EPA proposed that the
compliance strategy must discuss the most recent groundwater monitoring
data results, the statistical analyses conducted to obtain the results,
and the next steps for the groundwater monitoring. EPA also proposed
that if the unit has exceeded any of the Appendix IV groundwater
protection standards, the owner or operator must provide a copy of any
assessment of corrective measures conducted to date. The current
regulations require facilities to conduct an assessment of corrective
measures followed by selection of a remedy as soon as is feasible, and
thus do not permit waiting to implement a remedy until initiation of
closure of the unit. As such, if the facility is in the process of
remedy selection, a thorough discussion of the evaluation of possible
remedies for corrective action must be included in the compliance
strategy. The proposal also stated that the facility's publicly
accessible CCR internet site must be completely up-to-date and contain
all the necessary postings.
Several commenters agreed that compliance with the CCR rule should
be a prerequisite to obtain approval for an alternative closure
deadline. Others disagreed stating that being in compliance with the
CCR rule should not be a prerequisite. EPA continues to believe that
compliance should be a prerequisite.
[[Page 53543]]
Some commenters expressed concern that some facilities acting in
good faith could be found non-compliant by EPA. Specifically, USWAG
raised concerns that since the rule is self-implementing and some
regulatory text lacks specificity and/or may be ambiguous, there could
be differences in opinion on what constitutes compliance. Therefore,
USWAG believes that differences in interpretation should be discussed
during EPA's review process and any non-compliance issues be addressed
as part of a facility's completion of its demonstration. Talen Energy
echoed this sentiment stating that there should be a mechanism in place
to assist facilities to come into compliance after the alternative
closure extension was granted. Finally, USWAG commented that past non-
compliance that has been corrected should not penalize a facility in
their demonstration process and that, therefore, the compliance status
should be as of the date of the demonstration's submission. These
comments are also addressed in unit V.C.5 since these comments discuss
the process in which to resolve any possible questions of compliance.
Some commenters stated that EPA has known that facilities are
violating the groundwater monitoring requirements because the use of
intrawell statistical analysis violates the plain language of the CCR
rule and is therefore impermissible. They also raised other allegations
of non-compliance such as violations of location restrictions, non-
compliant liner determinations, violations of annual inspection
requirements and various groundwater monitoring requirements or
associated posting requirements. The commenters went on to say that
EPA's failure to evaluate existing non-compliance with the CCR rule
increases the risk to health and the environment and that the Part A
proposal does not effectively require owners and operators receiving
extensions to comply fully with the CCR rule. Finally, some commenters
stated that since the alternative closure extensions fail to address
non-compliance, the extensions are arbitrary and capricious and fail to
meet the RCRA protectiveness standard.
EPA does not agree that intrawell statistical analysis is per se
prohibited by the CCR regulations. The regulations at Sec. 257.93(f)
and (g) establish the allowable statistical approaches and the
performance standards that must be met. There are some circumstances in
which intra-well comparison can meet these requirements. Additional
information about these approaches may be found in the Unified
Guidance, which EPA relied upon, as well as 40 CFR 258, in crafting
these regulations (see 80 FR 21402). The Unified Guidance at page 1-4
contains procedures for both the intrawell and interwell methods:
``Groundwater detection monitoring involves either a comparison between
different monitoring stations (i.e., downgradient compliance wells vs.
upgradient wells) or a contrast between past and present data within a
given station (i.e., intrawell comparisons).'' The Unified Guidance
further identifies specific circumstances in which intrawell comparison
may be the preferred method, for example; evidence of spatial variation
should drive the selection of an intrawell statistical approach if
observed among wells known to be uncontaminated (e.g., among a group of
upgradient background locations) (page 5-6). The Unified Guidance says
intrawell comparison can also be used when the groundwater flow
gradient is uncertain or unstable (page 8-3). EPA has also found that
unique hydrogeological conditions at some sites preclude meaningful
interwell comparison--for example where the uppermost aquifer is
spatially limited and is absent upgradient of the CCR unit. Therefore,
simply using intrawell analysis does not mean a facility is out of
compliance.
However, if a facility is using intrawell analysis in an
inappropriate scenario, the facility would be out of compliance with
the CCR rule. For example, see the Unified Guidance at page 5-6:
``Intrawell background measurements should be selected from the
available historical samples at each compliance well and should include
only those observations thought to be uncontaminated.''
EPA continues to believe that requiring facilities to document
compliance with the subpart D of part 257 requirements is an important
part of the demonstration. Compliance with the rule provides some
guarantee that the risks at the facility are properly managed and
adequately mitigated. For example, if a facility has placed or
constructed groundwater monitoring wells incorrectly it is quite
possible that contamination could go undetected. By contrast, if a
facility is properly pursuing corrective action remedies and their
wells have been properly placed and constructed, EPA expects the
overall risk at the facility will be appropriately managed.
Consequently, this determination provides critical support for a
decision to allow continued operation of the unlined impoundment. This
means that EPA must be able to affirmatively conclude that the facility
meets this criterion prior to authorizing any continued operation of
the unlined impoundment. It also means that EPA cannot grant facilities
additional time to cure any noncompliance. However, EPA's determination
will be prospective only; accordingly, EPA is only interested in the
state of a facility's current compliance rather than any instances of
historic non-compliance.
In response to commenters who requested that EPA provide greater
specificity about what constitutes a complete submission, EPA has
revised the proposal to identify specific documents that facilities
must provide to demonstrate their current compliance with the
requirements of part 257. These documents should already exist because
they are required to have been developed under the existing
regulations.
First, EPA will review a facility's current compliance with the
requirements governing groundwater monitoring systems. In order to
conduct this review, the Agency will need copies of the following
documents: (1) Map(s) of groundwater monitoring well locations (these
maps should identify the CCR units as well); (2) Well construction
diagrams and drilling logs for all groundwater monitoring wells; (3)
Maps that characterize the direction of groundwater flow accounting for
seasonal variation; (4) Constituent concentrations, summarized in table
form, at each groundwater monitoring well monitored during each
sampling event; and (5) Description of site hydrogeology including
stratigraphic cross-sections.
Second, EPA will also require and examine a facility's corrective
action documentation, structural stability documents and other
pertinent compliance information. A facility must submit the following
documentation: The corrective measures assessment required at Sec.
257.96, progress reports on remedy selection and design; the report of
final remedy selection required at Sec. 257.97(a); the most recent
structural stability assessment required at Sec. 257.73(d), and; the
most recent safety factor assessment required at Sec. 257.73(e). EPA's
intention to review these items was discussed in the proposed rule when
discussing the types of information to be included in the facility's
compliance strategy. See FR 84 65955-56. EPA will document the results
of its review and that record will be available for public comment with
the rest of the alternative closure demonstration materials, consistent
with the procedures applicable to this review discussed in unit V.C.5.
[[Page 53544]]
Therefore, based on comments, EPA has decided that the
certification of compliance and the requirement to remain in compliance
with the regulations are necessary in this final rule. This approach
will prevent non-compliant unlined surface impoundments from operating
for an extended period of time into the future. Requiring that only
compliant surface impoundments can be approved for an alternative
closure deadline provides additional support for EPA's conclusion that
this final rule meeting the statutory standard.
In light of the requirement to submit the specific compliance
documentation noted above, EPA is not including the proposed compliance
narrative that was proposed as the fourth line of evidence for a
demonstration, in the final rule.
The compliance certification and documentation requirements are
represented in Sec. 257.103(f)(1)(iv)(B). The requirement to remain in
compliance with RCRA subpart D is represented in Sec.
257.103(f)(1)(viii).
Workplan Criteria. EPA proposed owner or operators submit a
detailed workplan explaining how alternative capacity is being
developed and the amount of time required. EPA proposed to require the
submission of a workplan that contains four elements: (1) A narrative
discussion of the steps and process that remain necessary to complete
development of alternative capacity for the wastestream(s); (2) a
visual timeline depicting the remaining steps needed to obtain
alternative capacity; (3) a discussion of the timeline and the
processes that occur during each step; and (4) a discussion of the
steps already taken to achieve alternative capacity, including what
steps have been completed and what steps remain. EPA sought comment on
whether the proposed elements of the workplan were sufficient or if
more evidence was necessary in order for EPA to determine the correct
amount of time the facility will need to obtain alternative capacity.
EPA received several comments that the proposed workplan elements
should provide EPA with ample information to issue a decision on the
extension request. They further stated that the information would allow
EPA to determine whether the demonstration represented the shortest
technically feasible amount of time required for the facility to cease
receipt of the waste and to complete the development of alternative
disposal capacity.
EPA agrees with the commenters that the elements proposed in the
workplan provide the necessary information and are sufficient for its
intended purpose. Therefore, EPA is finalizing the proposed workplan
elements without revision from the proposal at Sec.
257.103(f)(1)(iv)(A).
Workplan Documentation
As previously mentioned, EPA proposed the workplan containing four
sections. Below is a detailed discussion of what EPA proposed for each
section to contain.
Section One: The narrative discussion of the workplan was designed
to explain precisely how alternative capacity will be developed, along
with an explanation as to why that method was chosen. EPA has not
required the owner or operator to choose any particular means of
obtaining alternative capacity, such as building a new disposal unit,
construction of a wastewater treatment facility, converting to dry
handling, etc. However, EPA is requiring that the narrative describe
each option that was considered, the timeframe under which each could
be implemented, and why the facility selected the option that it did.
The discussion must include an in-depth analysis of the site and any
site-specific conditions that led to the decision to implement the
selected alternative capacity. Inclusion of visuals such as a facility
map, facility process flow diagram, the design of the new capacity,
etc. would be beneficial to any discussion on the new capacity and of
the facility as a whole. The narrative must also provide a detailed
explanation and justification for the amount of time being requested
and how it is the fastest feasible time to complete the development of
the alternative capacity.
Section Two: The second section of the workplan is a visual
timeline, such as a Gantt chart, depicting the necessary steps required
to obtain the alternative capacity discussed in the narrative. The
visual timeline must clearly indicate how each phase and the steps
within that phase interact with or are dependent on each other and the
other phases. It must also include any possible overlap of the steps
and phases that can be completed concurrently. This timeline must show
the total time needed to obtain the alternative capacity and how long
each phase and step is expected to take. Such phases must at a minimum
include: Engineering and design, contractor selection, equipment
fabrication and delivery, construction, and start up and
implementation. Within each phase, the time to complete each step must
also be broken out. For example, if the engineering and design phase is
4 months, the following steps to complete the phase should be shown:
Site selection and survey, design of the impoundment, process flow
diagram edits, and piping design then the time each of those steps take
should be represented on the timeline. This level of detail is expected
for each phase and each step of each phase in obtaining the alternative
capacity. The timeline also acts as a visual assistant to the third
section of the work plan, a narrative of the timeline.
Section Three: The third section for the workplan is a detailed
narrative of the schedule and the timeline discussing all the necessary
phases and steps in the workplan, in addition to the overall timeframe
that will be required to obtain capacity and cease receipt of waste.
This section of the workplan must discuss why the length of time for
each phase and step is needed, including a discussion of the tasks that
occur during the specific stage of obtaining alternative capacity. It
must also discuss the tasks that occur during each of the steps within
the phase. For example, rather than simply stating an individual step
as ``order and fabrication of impoundment liner,'' this section is
required to explain what material must be ordered, where the
fabrication takes place, and how long it takes to fabricate and deliver
the new liner material. The workplan must explain why each phase and
step shown on the chart must happen in the order it is occurring and
include a justification for the overall length of the phase. Other
major discussion items required on the overall time of the schedule
include anticipated worker schedule, and any anticipated areas for
which the schedule could slip. The anticipated areas of delays could
include items outside of the facility's control, such as severe weather
events or delays in fabrication of materials. For example, if the
facility is commonly impacted by hurricanes or flooding, the discussion
should indicate what month(s) of the schedule that is most likely to
disrupt. The schedule must also indicate the time limiting factors in
completing the plan, such as having to take boilers off-line or if a
certain step can only happen during a specific time of year. This
overall discussion of the schedule assists EPA in understanding why the
time requested is accurate.
Section Four: The fourth section of the workplan contains a
narrative of the steps the facility has already taken to initiate
closure and develop alternative capacity for CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams. This section must discuss all of the steps taken,
starting from when the owner or operator initiated the design phase all
the way up to the current steps occurring while the workplan is being
drafted. In addition,
[[Page 53545]]
this discussion must indicate where the facility currently is on the
timeline and the processes that are currently being undertaken at the
facility to develop alternative capacity. This section of the workplan
and the level of detail required is necessary for EPA to determine
whether the submitted schedule for obtaining alternative capacity is
accurate.
Comments on workplan documentation requirements. EPA received
several comments from utilities stating concerns that the level of
detail proposed to be included in the workplan is unnecessary and in
some areas excessive. Some utilities viewed the workplan as overly
burdensome and some parts as unnecessary. Some commenters found the
proposed narrative discussion of the workplan invasive of the utility's
decision-making process. They further commented that EPA should respect
the facility's business decisions and that this information could show
that the facility is taking cost into consideration. The commenters
stated that the discussion should focus on how the facility selected
the most appropriate technically feasible alternative capacity for the
site, even though it may not be theoretically the fastest feasible to
implement. They stated that the work plan should only focus on the
engineering and construction elements of obtaining alternative capacity
rather than being concerned with reasons for why the capacity was
selected. These commenters additionally stated that this type of
discussion and many of the work plan elements would contain
Confidential Business Information (CBI) related to why a particular
approach for developing alternative capacity was selected and therefore
requested the opportunity to be able designate and withhold the CBI
from the posting on their publicly accessible CCR internet site.
EPA disagrees with the comments that the workplan requirements are
invasive of the utility's decision-making process and should only focus
on engineering and construction. While the workplan should provide
engineering and construction information to explain how long the
alternative capacity will take to develop; it is equally important for
EPA to understand why that method of alternative capacity was selected.
EPA recognizes there are several factors that go into selecting the
method for alternative capacity, and that the decision is not solely
based on whether the method is theoretically the fastest feasible to
implement. Many of those factors are based on what can be technically
implemented based on site-specific conditions at the facility, and how
the facility plans on maintaining compliance with various state and
federal regulations. These are the factors the facility should focus on
in their discussion. EPA understands that not every method of
alternative capacity is a viable option for a given facility, but the
facility will need to explain to EPA how and what site-specific factors
affected the selection of the option chosen, or that led the facility
to eliminate particular options from consideration. Accordingly, EPA
continues to believe that these workplan elements are necessary in
order to fully understand the effort to obtain alternative capacity and
maintain compliance for the facility as a whole. EPA understands that
some of the pieces of the workplan may be considered CBI. However,
utilities must have a CBI free version of the workplan that they are
able to post to their publicly accessible CCR internet site and to be
put out for public comment. EPA has revised the regulations to specify
that when a workplan contains some CBI, utilities must submit both the
CBI-free version of the workplan and a full version of the workplan
that contains the CBI. All information submitted to EPA pursuant to the
recordkeeping and reporting requirements for which a claim of
confidentiality is made is safeguarded according to Agency policies set
forth in 40 CFR part 2, subpart B.
For the reasons described above, EPA is finalizing the requirements
on the workplan as described above with minor clarifying modifications.
As previously discussed, EPA is incorporating the documentation
requirements for the lack of alternative capacity on or off-site and
the need to continue using the CCR surface impoundment into section one
of the workplan. Thus, the first section of the workplan must include
the discussion on the lack of alternative capacity on or off-site for
each wastestream, the technical infeasibility of alternative capacity
being available prior to April 11, 2021, as well as the narrative
discussed above in section one (the discussion of how the alternative
capacity will be developed and the discussion of how the capacity was
selected).
The other change that EPA is making from proposed to final is in
section three, the narrative discussion of the timeline. EPA will not
require the inclusion of anticipated areas of where the schedule could
slip. EPA is not taking final action on this requirement because it is
not critical information for EPA to evaluate and issue a determination
on the demonstration.
The workplan documentation requirements are at Sec.
257.103(f)(1)(iv)(A).
Maximum Time Allowed. EPA proposed that a maximum of 5 years from
the USWAG mandate could be granted under this alternative closure
provision; therefore, no extension would extend past October 15, 2023.
EPA selected 5 years in the proposal since it is currently the time
allowed under Sec. 257.103(a).
EPA received comments that extensions should not be limited to
October 15, 2023. Commenters stated that a maximum time is unnecessary
because the facility is required to submit a workplan showing the time
they need, and EPA should accept that as the time that is needed.
Therefore, the commenters asserted, establishing a maximum amount of
time sooner than a facility demonstrates is technically feasible
requires the impossible. They claimed that the data used in the rule
making record does not support limiting the extension to no later than
October 15, 2023 and is two years shorter than the current deadline in
Sec. Sec. 257.103(a) and (b) of October 31, 2025. Commenters stated
that if EPA does establish a maximum amount of time, then EPA should
establish the time that is currently allowed which is October 31, 2025.
Environmental groups stated that the maximum amount of time, until
October 15, 2023, is not protective of human health and the environment
because it delays the closure of the CCR surface impoundments.
EPA disagrees with these commenters. EPA believes there should be a
maximum amount of time for the alternative closure provision, if only
to ensure that facilities understand that operation of the unit may not
continue indefinitely. With one exception, EPA believes that the
proposed date of October 15, 2023 is a reasonable deadline for all
facilities to achieve. EPA did not receive and does not have any
evidence that facilities will require until October 2025 to complete
development of alternative capacity. Accordingly, EPA does not believe
facilities need the same five-year deadline in Sec. 257.103(a).
Additionally, this deadline will encourage facilities to move
expeditiously.
EPA received several comments from industry stakeholders stating
that the eligible unlined CCR surface impoundments triggered into
closure due to the USWAG decision could need more time than other
unlined surface impoundments to develop alternative
[[Page 53546]]
capacity. Data submitted by several owners and operators of eligible
unlined CCR surface impoundments showed that the fastest they could
cease receipt of all wastes extends into 2024.
After reviewing these comments and the data submitted by utility
companies, EPA agrees that it is possible that some eligible unlined
CCR surface impoundments that were forced into closure unexpectedly by
the USWAG decision could need additional time beyond October 15, 2023
to complete the development of alternative capacity. Therefore, in this
final rule EPA is providing that eligible unlined CCR surface
impoundments can request an alternative compliance deadline no later
than October 15, 2024. This does not mean that all eligible unlined CCR
surface impoundments can continue to operate until October 15, 2024;
each unit must still cease receipt of waste as soon as feasible, and
may only have the amount of time they can demonstrate is genuinely
necessary. A facility claiming to have an eligible unlined CCR surface
impoundment and requesting time beyond October 15, 2023 must
demonstrate that they were not forced into closure for any reason other
than the USWAG decision. This maximum timeframe is represented in Sec.
257.103(f)(1)(vi).
Extensions of Alternative Compliance Deadlines. EPA proposed to
allow a facility to request an extension to a deadline approved under
the site-specific alternative under Sec. 257.103(f)(1). If at any
point a facility becomes aware that they cannot meet the approved
alternative deadline, they would need to notify EPA or the
Participating State Director as soon as possible. Depending on the
nature and severity of the event, additional time may be granted
provided it would not extend past October 15, 2023. EPA proposed that
the facility must submit updated demonstration materials to EPA or the
Participating State Director with a detailed discussion of why an
extension is necessary. The owner or operator must also discuss the
measures taken to limit the additional amount of time needed. An
explanation of any problems that caused this delay would be further
discussed in the semi-annual progress report as described in the next
section.
EPA received no comments regarding this provision in the proposal.
Therefore, EPA is finalizing this provision without substantive
revision. EPA will not grant an extension longer than the maximum
amount of time allowed either October 15, 2023 or October 15, 2024.
This provision is represented in Sec. 257.103(f)(1)(vii).
(b) Semi-Annual Progress Report
To provide transparency to the public, EPA proposed to require
posting of semi-annual progress reports on the facility's publicly
accessible CCR internet site. The proposed reports would contain two
main sections: (1) Discussion on progress toward obtaining alternative
capacity and (2) discussion of any planned operational changes at the
facility. EPA believed that since these units could be operating and
receiving waste for a few additional years, it would be important to
keep EPA and the public aware of the facility's progress on obtaining
alternative capacity and if facilities are on track to meet their new
alternative compliance deadline. Currently in Sec. 257.103(c) there is
the requirement for annual progress reports for the units that have
certified for alternative deadlines under Sec. 257.103(a) and (b). EPA
believed that for the site-specific alternative deadline, semi-annual
rather than annual progress reports are more appropriate. The time
allowed under this new alternative closure provision, will vary site to
site and could be shorter than the deadline alternative granted for
Sec. 257.103(a) and (b). Therefore, EPA proposed a new semi-annual
progress report requirement for the units that successfully demonstrate
and are approved for the site-specific alternative to cease receipt of
waste deadline.
EPA proposed for the semi-annual progress report to heavily rely on
the workplan and the timeline submitted with the workplan. The first
section of the report would discuss the progress the facility has made
since the previous report or since approval of the alternative
compliance deadline if it is the first report. It would be required to
discuss the following: (1) The current stage of obtaining alternative
capacity in reference to the timeline required in the workplan; (2)
whether the owner or operator is on schedule for obtaining alternative
capacity; (3) any problems encountered and a description of the actions
taken to resolve the problems; and (4) the goals and major milestones
to be achieved for the next 6 months.
EPA proposed the second section of the progress reports would
discuss any planned operational changes at the facility. It is possible
while the facility is working to achieve alternative capacity, a
decision is made to either permanently shut down the plant or switch to
an alternate fuel source such as natural gas or biomass. Any such
decisions or other changes that could impact the schedule or closure
would be indicated in this section of the semi-annual progress report.
EPA proposed that the semi-annual reports be completed and placed
in the facility's operating record and posted on the facility's
publicly accessible CCR internet site on April 1st and October 1st of
each year until the alternative compliance deadline. The first report
would be due on whichever posting deadline is soonest after approval of
the alternative compliance deadline by EPA.
EPA sought comment regarding whether a facility that is fully on
schedule or ahead of schedule with their approved timeline and had no
significant problems or changes in operational status, should be
afforded a relaxation of the reporting requirements in the first two
subsections of the first section. This would allow a report for a
facility on schedule or ahead of schedule to be significantly more
condensed than the full reporting requirements.
EPA received comments from industry stating that facilities should
be focusing on obtaining alternative capacity rather than completing
progress reports. Furthermore, they support that if a facility is on or
ahead of schedule for developing alternative capacity, they should be
able to complete a condensed version of the semi-annual progress
reports. Industry additionally commented that the progress reports
should be annual for facilities with an alternative deadline longer
than two years past the deadlines in Sec. 257.101(a) and (b). Industry
groups additionally commented that they do not oppose the semi-annual
submission dates of April 1 and October 1, with the first submission
being due on whichever posting deadline is soonest after approval of
the alternative compliance deadline. However, they did indicate that a
facility should not have to complete a report until they have a minimum
of six months of progress from approval to report.
EPA agrees with the commenters that facilities should be focusing
on obtaining alternative capacity. However, it is also important to
update EPA or the Participating State Director on their progress for
obtaining alternative capacity. EPA disagrees that the progress reports
should be annual for the facilities with a longer alternative deadline.
Facilities with a longer deadline have more progress to make and
therefore may have a greater change of experiencing delays. Frequent
progress reports are all the more useful in these circumstances. EPA
further agrees that it is important that the first
[[Page 53547]]
report be properly timed so that the facility has progress to report.
EPA received comments from environmental groups supporting the
progress reports. They commented that there should be the additional
requirement of certifying the facility is in compliance with all other
aspects of the CCR rule in each progress report.
EPA has decided that additional certifications of compliance would
not provide any added benefit. The final rule already requires the
facility to remain in compliance with all the requirements of this
subpart as a condition of the extension, and expressly provides that
failure to do so will result in automatic revocation of the extension.
Moreover, as previously discussed, EPA is requiring a more in-depth
compliance certification in the demonstration in order to obtain
approval. Finally, under the existing regulations the facility is
required to post several items throughout the year including the annual
groundwater monitoring and corrective action report, notifications for
changes in groundwater monitoring, and semiannual reports on selection
of remedy. EPA considers that the combination of all these requirements
is more than sufficient to ensure a facility remains in compliance
without the need for a further certification.
After reviewing the public comments EPA believes it is important to
maintain public transparency and for facilities to focus on completing
the development of alternative disposal capacity. Therefore, EPA is
finalizing the requirement for progress reports to be completed on a
semi-annual basis and to allow those facilities that are on or ahead of
schedule to complete a condensed progress report. As such EPA is
finalizing the semi-annual progress report requirements with only the
revision that facilities on or ahead of schedule may complete a
condensed and more streamlined progress report.
Facilities on or ahead of schedule, in relation to their approved
timeline, will need to complete only the first two subsections within
the first section. Therefore, the first section of the reports will
only need to contain: (1) The current stage of obtaining alternative
capacity in reference to the timeline required in the workplan; (2)
whether the owner or operator is on schedule for obtaining alternative
capacity.
All facilities must still complete the second section of the
progress reports, discussing any planned operational changes of the
facility. If there is nothing for the facility to report in this
section, then the facility should simply state ``No planned operational
changes''.
The semi-annual progress reports are to be completed on April 30
and October 31 of each year for the duration of the approved
alternative initiation of closure deadline. EPA has selected these
months because they correlate to when the facility was supposed to
cease receipt of waste. Therefore, the facility should have at least
six months of progress to report since applying for an alternative
compliance deadline. The facility then has 30 days to place the report
in their operating record and to their publicly accessible CCR internet
site. The requirements for the semi-annual progress reports are shown
in Sec. 257.103(f)(1)(x).
4. Requirements for Permanent Cessation of Coal-Fired Boiler(s) by a
Date Certain (Sec. 257.103(f)(2))
In the December 2, 2019 proposal EPA proposed to adopt a comparable
version of Sec. 257.103(b). This proposed provision allows facilities
permanently ceasing operation of coal-fired boiler(s) to continue to
receive both CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams, upon a showing of a
continued need to use the surface impoundment due to lack of capacity.
Consistent with the existing provision Sec. 257.103(b), EPA proposed
to provide that an increase in costs or the inconvenience of existing
capacity would not support qualification under this section. A further
requirement EPA proposed, that is not in Sec. 257.103(b), is a risk
mitigation plan, in which the owner or operator would describe how the
facility planned to mitigate any potential risks from the continued
operation of the CCR surface impoundment. This proposal would have
allowed the unit to continue receiving CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams,
provided the facility completed closure of the unit by the dates
specified: October 17, 2023 or October 17, 2028 for surface
impoundments 40 acres and smaller or more than 40 acres, respectively.
In contrast to the provision under Sec. 257.103(f)(1), the owner or
operator does not need to develop alternative capacity because of the
impending closure of the coal-fired boiler. Since the coal-fired boiler
will shortly cease power generation, it would be illogical to require
these facilities to construct new capacity to manage CCR and non-CCR
wastestreams. Additionally, the groundwater monitoring and corrective
action requirements remain in place. EPA proposed that facilities would
need to submit a demonstration to EPA or the Participating State
Director for approval. The majority of the proposed demonstration
requirements are generally the same as are currently required under
Sec. 257.103(b), including the annual progress report and other
recordkeeping requirements. The demonstration and criteria are
described below.
EPA received comments requesting clarification on whether a
facility could use the provision if they are converting their boilers
to natural gas or a different fuel source. EPA believes facilities that
are converting their boilers to natural gas or a different fuel source
(non-coal) are eligible for the provision.
(a) Criteria and Documentation
EPA proposed that in order to obtain the Sec. 257.103(f)(2)
extension, the owner or operator needs to meet and maintain all of the
following criteria: (1) That no alternative disposal capacity is
available on or off-site, (2) the facility must submit a risk
mitigation plan to show that potential risks to human health and the
environment from the continued operation of the CCR surface impoundment
have been adequately mitigated, (3) the facility is in compliance with
all other requirements of this subpart and, (4) closure of the
impoundment will be completed within the dates specified: October 17,
2023 or October 17, 2028 for surface impoundments 40 acres or smaller
or more than 40 acres, respectively. As discussed in more detail below,
EPA is adopting the same criteria in the final rule without significant
revision. Further discussion on each criterion is below.
No alternative capacity on or off-site. The first line of evidence
EPA proposed is the same that was required in Sec. 257.103(b) and
Sec. 257.103(f)(1). The owner or operator must demonstrate the lack of
alternative capacity available on or off-site.
EPA received no substantive comments on the inclusion of this
requirement. Therefore, EPA has included this provision in the final
rule without revision.
Documentation requirements of no alternative capacity on or off-
site. The first demonstration requirement is to show that the facility
does not have any other disposal capacity available either on or off-
site. Consistent with the proposal, the fact that a potential
alternative result in an increase in cost or inconvenience is not
sufficient to meet this requirement. This requirement is the same as
the requirement as described previously for the demonstration
requirements in Sec. 257.103(f)(1). This documentation requirement is
represented in Sec. 257.103(f)(2)(v)(A).
Risk mitigation plan. The second line of evidence EPA proposed to
include in
[[Page 53548]]
this demonstration was a risk mitigation plan. This proposed
requirement was not previously required under Sec. 257.103(b). EPA
added this requirement in the proposal to address the potential risks
of continued operation of the CCR surface impoundment while the
facility moves towards closure of their coal-fired boiler(s), to be
consistent with the court's holding in USWAG that RCRA requires EPA to
set minimum criteria for sanitary landfills that prevent harm to either
human health or the environment. 42 U.S.C. 6944(a). 901 F.3d at 430.
EPA received comments stating that the provision violates RCRA
because it relies on owners and operators to submit a risk mitigation
plan. They explained that this requirement violates the RCRA
protectiveness standard because it acknowledges that there is risk
present from the unit and RCRA is structured to prevent risk.
Therefore, a risk mitigation plan admits that there is risk to human
health and the environment and makes the unit an open dump.
EPA disagrees with the suggestion that reliance on the submission
of a risk mitigation plan violates RCRA. Contrary to the commenter's
view, section 4004(a) does not require the elimination of all risk.
Rather the provision expressly contemplates the potential for there to
be some risk, requiring EPA to determine there ``is no reasonable
probability of adverse effects.'' 42 U.S.C. 6944(a). Or in other words,
EPA must determine that the facility's solid waste management present
only reasonable risks, which EPA has long interpreted to be risks
ranging from 1 x 10-4 and 1 x 10-6. Submission of
the plan as part of the package for EPA approval will allow the agency
to ensure that risks at the facility remain within these acceptable
levels.
Some groups commented that facilities should not be required to
submit a risk mitigation plan for approval in their demonstration,
especially for the surface impoundments closing due to the USWAG
decision. They believe that eligible unlined CCR surface impoundments
do not pose a potential risk to human health or the environment and
should not be required to prepare a plan to mitigate potential risks
that do not exist. They view this requirement as an unnecessary
paperwork burden.
EPA disagrees that the risk mitigation plan is unnecessary, even
for units closing in response to the USWAG decision. Although it is
true these units may not be currently leaking, that means only that
they are not currently causing harm. But that does not mean that they
do not pose any risk nor that continued operation of the unit
necessarily meets the section 4004(a) standard. See, 901 F.3d at 427-
430. As the court noted, ``It is inadequate under RCRA for the EPA to
conclude that a major category of impoundments that the Agency's own
data show are prone to leak pose `no reasonable probability of adverse
effects on health or the environment,' 42 U.S.C. 6944(a), simply
because they do not already leak.'' Id. The risk mitigation plan will
provide critical information to address the risks of continued
operation of the unit, prior to the initiation of unit closure. This
will provide a significant supplement to the Agency's qualitative
assessment that the risks of continued operation will be outweighed by
the risk mitigation from the expedited closure of the unit.
For example, for units that are not leaking the facility could
begin identification of remedial technologies that would potentially be
appropriate based on site data, including groundwater chemistry,
groundwater elevation and flow rates, and the presence of surface water
features that would influence rate and direction of contamination
movement in the event of a leak. Gathering this information and
beginning an assessment of technology options if a leak should occur
will expedite any corrective action that subsequently becomes
necessary. The plan could also address any interim measures that the
facility would take to remediate contamination or to achieve source
control in the event of a leak, which was one issue that the court
faulted EPA for failing to adequately consider. By expediting the
cleanup, EPA will also ensure that facility addresses the risk during
the expedited closure.
EPA has concluded that the risk mitigation plan is a necessary
requirement for this demonstration. Therefore, EPA is finalizing that
facilities will be required to submit a risk mitigation plan as part of
their demonstration.
Risk mitigation plan documentation. EPA proposed that the risk
mitigation plan explain actions the facility may take to mitigate any
potential risks to human health or the environment from the CCR surface
impoundment. EPA also sought comment on whether the owner or operator
should be required to submit a more in-depth site-specific risk
assessment of the CCR surface impoundment as part of their plan to
mitigate the risk from continued operation of the unit.
EPA received comments from industry groups that they view the
information requested to be included in the plan redundant of
information required in other reports and therefore find the risk
mitigation plan as an unnecessary paperwork burden. They contend that
all the information requested is already being compiled by the facility
in other reports, so it is readily available on the publicly accessible
CCR internet sites and additionally must demonstrate that the facility
is in compliance with the other parts of the CCR rule. Therefore, the
commenter finds this requirement redundant. These groups commented
further stating that if EPA decides to finalize the risk mitigation
plan, the suggested requirements for the risk mitigation plan are
sufficient and a more in-depth risk analysis is not necessary.
EPA also received comments from the National Ground Water
Association on what should be included in the risk mitigation plan.
They provided a list of 12 items that they viewed as important to
include in the plan. EPA found that all of the suggested items from the
National Ground Water Association were already included in the items
proposed or in other reports required by the CCR rule.
EPA disagrees that this plan is merely an unnecessary paperwork
burden for the reasons discussed previously. Facilities in full
compliance with all aspects of the regulations that have not initiated
corrective action can still develop a plan that will expedite the
implementation of corrective action, in the event it become necessary.
EPA considers this to provide a substantial complement to the record
supporting continued operation of the unit.
In response to the comments, requesting greater specificity about
what would constitute an adequate submission, the final rule requires
that the risk mitigation plan include three pieces of information.
First, a discussion of any physical or chemical measures a facility can
take to limit any future releases to groundwater during operation. This
might include stabilization of waste prior to disposition in the
impoundment or adjusting the pH of the impoundment waters to minimize
solubility of contaminants. This discussion should take into account
the potential impacts of these measures on Appendix IV constituents.
Second, a discussion of the surface impoundment's groundwater
monitoring data and any found exceedances; the delineation of the plume
(if necessary based on the groundwater monitoring data); identification
of any nearby receptors
[[Page 53549]]
that might be exposed, to current or future groundwater contamination;
and how such exposures could be promptly mitigated.
And finally, a plan to expedite and maintain the containment of any
contaminant plume that is either present or identified during continued
operation of the unit. The purpose of this plan is to demonstrate that
a plume can be fully contained and to define how this could be
accomplished in the most accelerated timeframe feasible to prevent
further spread and eliminate any potential for exposures. This plan
will be based on relevant site data, which may include groundwater
chemistry, the variability of local hydrogeology, groundwater elevation
and flow rates, and the presence of any surface water features that
would influence rate and direction of contamination movement. For
example, based on the rate and direction of groundwater flow and
potential for diffusion of the plume, this plan could identify the
design and spacing of extraction wells necessary to prevent further
downgradient migration of contaminated groundwater.
If additional mitigation measures are necessary to ensure the
statutory standard is met, EPA will require those as a condition of
granting the extension. The risk mitigation plan documentation
requirement is at Sec. 257.103(f)(2)(v)(B).
Compliance certification and narrative. EPA proposed that the owner
or operator must certify that it remains in compliance with all other
requirements of this subpart including corrective action. EPA is
finalizing the same compliance certification and documentation as that
in Sec. 257.103(f)(1). The compliance documentation requirement is at
Sec. 257.103(f)(2)(v)(C). The requirement to remain in compliance with
subpart D is represented in Sec. 257.103(f)(2)(vi).
Maximum time to complete closure. EPA proposed that the facility
must complete closure of the CCR surface impoundment, and the coal-
fired boiler must cease operation no later than October 17, 2023 for
surface impoundments 40 acres or smaller and October 17, 2028 for
surface impoundments larger than 40 acres. These are the same deadlines
as required in Sec. 257.103(b).
EPA received comments from environmental groups stating that since
EPA does not establish a set deadline for these units to cease receipt
of waste and initiate closure the provision is unlawful. Some further
elaborated that this provision would delay the initiation and
completion of closure of these units for several years. These
commenters further stated that developing alternative disposal capacity
is not as complex as the proposed rule made it seem and believe that it
is possible for facilities to obtain alternative capacity in a few
weeks and therefore cease receipt of waste much earlier. The commenters
additionally stated that EPA did not provide rationale for why this
provision is protective of human health and the environment.
Industry groups commented that this provision provides important
environmental benefits by requiring closure far earlier than would be
otherwise required. They agree that the expedited closure of these
units addresses the USWAG court decision by addressing the potential
risks from unlined CCR surface impoundments during closure. A few
utility companies commented that the deadlines for closure should not
depend on the size of the CCR surface impoundment. Rather all CCR
surface impoundments should be eligible for the October 2028 deadline.
They also explained that having the size distinction has no
environmental benefit because it forces facilities to develop new
disposal capacity. They acknowledged EPA's rationale that smaller
surface impoundments are able to close faster but contended that
smaller surface impoundments represent smaller risk. One utility
company stated that the CCR surface impoundment may be less than 40
acres, but the site has unique characteristics that makes closure more
complex and the surface impoundment is of unusual shape causing the
closure time to be just as long as a larger surface impoundment.
Another utility company commented that if a facility had multiple
surface impoundments under 40 acres, they should be able to aggregate
the acreage of the surface impoundments to qualify for the later
deadline of 2028. One other utility commented that the deadlines should
be delayed a few years because the original deadlines were established
in 2015 for Sec. 257.103(b), therefore there was more time to complete
closure under the original provision. One other utility commented that
it is possible that they may be directed to cease their coal fired
boiler in 2023 or 2024 which would make the alternative closure
provision unusable for them.
Several commenters misunderstood EPA's proposal and commented that
this provision significantly delays closure by allowing facilities to
operate their CCR surface impoundments until 2028. The proposed
regulation does not authorize continued operation until 2023 or 2028;
rather it requires the completion of closure by those dates. These
represent substantially more expedited time frames to complete closure
of the unit, and in order to meet those timeframes facilities will need
to stop receiving waste into the unit much sooner than those dates. In
order to meet these timeframes, EPA expects that many facilities
closing pursuant to this provision will need to cease receiving CCR and
non-CCR wastestreams sooner than they would under the maximum amount of
time in the site-specific alternative closure provision in Sec.
257.103(f)(1). Consequently, the overall risk will be lower. As a
consequence, EPA decided that it was not necessary to specify a
particular deadline by which facilities must cease receiving waste into
the unit. As a practical matter the length of time the unit can
continue to operate will necessarily be limited by the amount of time
needed to ensure that all closure activities are completed by the
deadline. Instead the provision provides facilities with the
flexibility to determine precisely when they will need to stop
operation in order to achieve expedited closure deadlines.
EPA is not modifying the proposed closure deadlines to allow the
extended operation of units 40 acres and smaller. As explained in the
proposed rule, EPA relied upon a risk-risk tradeoff to support this
provision. Specifically, EPA acknowledged there could be greater risk
in the short term because this provision allows a longer period for
unlined impoundments to operate; however, over the long-term EPA
estimated that the risks would be lower because the final closure of
the unit will be expedited. Under the commenters' suggested approaches
there is nothing against which to balance the risks from the extended
operation of the unit. The commenters provided no data to support their
contentions or on which EPA could rely to model the risks associated
with allowing impoundments less than 40 acres to continue to operate
for the amount of time they are proposing. EPA proposed multiple
options for facilities to address the variety of circumstances
presented by these kinds of sites. Not all of them will be appropriate
for every site. This provision was designed to address a very specific
set of circumstances in which a facility knows it will be closing by a
date certain and as a consequence can expedite its closure of the unit.
Finally, EPA disagrees that there would be no environmental benefit in
the provision as structured. There is a significant environmental
benefit in requiring the expedited closure of unlined surface
impoundments, and in
[[Page 53550]]
requiring facilities to expedite corrective action. As the record from
the 2015 rule and the results of the groundwater monitoring data from
numerous facilities demonstrate, operation of these units presents
significant risks.
The commenters did not provide a compelling argument for changing
the deadlines from the proposal. Therefore, EPA is finalizing the
deadlines as proposed.
Maximum Time Documentation. EPA did not receive substantive
comments on the documentation necessary to demonstrate that the
deadlines will be met. EPA is finalizing that in the demonstration
submitted for approval the facility will need to specify and justify
the date by which they intend to cease receipt of waste into the unit.
If the amount of time the facility is seeking to operate the unit is
disproportionate to the amount of time needed for closure of the unit,
such that it appears unlikely the facility could meet the closure
deadlines, EPA will deny the request. Additionally, facilities are
required to amend their closure plan whenever there is a change in the
operation of the CCR unit that would substantially affect the written
closure plan or before or after closure actives have commenced as
required by Sec. 257.102(b)(3). As such, a facility should update
their closure plan when applying for this extension. The documentation
requirements for meeting the time requirements are represented Sec.
257.103(f)(2)(iv)(D)
(b) Annual Closure Progress Reports
EPA proposed maintaining the annual progress report requirement
that is currently required under Sec. 257.103(b). EPA proposed that
the owner or operator must prepare an annual progress report
documenting the continued lack of alternative capacity and the progress
towards the closure of the CCR surface impoundment.
EPA received no substantive comments concerning this requirement in
the documentation for a site-specific alternative for cessation of
coal-fired boiler(s).
EPA concluded from the lack of comments, to finalize the
requirement. Therefore, owners or operators must prepare and place an
annual progress report documenting the continued lack of alternative
capacity and the progress towards the closure of the CCR surface
impoundment. This progress report must include any delays in the
anticipated cease receipt of waste date and closure completion date
that was submitted in the demonstration materials. This requirement is
found in Sec. 257.103(f)(2)(x) of the regulation.
5. Procedures for Approval and Denial of Alternative Compliance
Deadlines
EPA proposed to require that the demonstrations for an alternative
compliance deadline under Sec. 257.103(f)(1) (``development of
alternative capacity infeasible'') or under Sec. 257.103(f)(2)
(``permanent cessation of coal-fired boiler(s) by a date certain'') be
submitted to EPA or the Participating State Director for approval no
later than two months prior to the facility's deadline to cease
receiving waste. EPA believed that two months should normally provide
sufficient time for EPA to evaluate the request and complete its review
process. Although two months prior to the current deadline is the
latest date to submit a request, EPA encouraged submissions at the
earliest point at which the facility knows further time to complete its
arrangements is needed.
EPA proposed that upon receiving the demonstration for an
alternative compliance deadline, EPA or the Participating State
Director would evaluate the demonstration and could ask for additional
information to complete its review and/or discuss the demonstration
with the facility. Submission of a complete demonstration would toll
the facility's deadline to cease receipt of waste until issuance of a
final decision. This ensures that a facility that has submitted a
package in good faith would not be penalized by any inadvertent
administrative delays. However, EPA proposed that incomplete
submissions would not toll the facility's deadline.
EPA proposed that when the owner or operator submits the
demonstration to EPA or the Participating State Director for approval,
the owner or operator must prepare and place into the facility's
operating record and on their publicly accessible CCR internet site a
notification that the facility has applied for a site-specific
alternative deadline to cease receipt of waste. EPA would then post a
proposed decision to grant or deny the request in whole or in part on
EPA's website for public notice and comment. EPA proposed that the
public will have 15 days to comment on the proposed decision. If the
demonstration is particularly complex, EPA would provide a longer
comment period of 20 to 30 days. EPA proposed that it would evaluate
the comments, amend its decision if appropriate, and post the final
decision on the demonstrations on EPA's website. EPA proposed that the
agency would finalize the decision on the alternative compliance
deadline no later than 4 months after receiving a complete
demonstration. If no substantive comments are received on a proposed
decision, EPA proposed that it would become effective 5 days from the
close of the comment period. Alternatively, EPA proposed that if a
facility develops or identifies the necessary alternative capacity
prior to approval from EPA, then the facility should notify EPA and
withdraw their demonstration. Lastly, EPA proposed that the facility
must post an approved or denied demonstration and the alternative
compliance deadline decision on the facility's publicly accessible CCR
internet site. EPA sought comment on whether a Participating State
Director (i.e., a state director with an approved State CCR Permit
Program) should also have the authority to grant approvals.
EPA received numerous comments on the time frames in the proposed
process. Some commenters stated that the proposed demonstration
deadlines of May 15, 2020 for the cessation of boiler alternative and
June 30, 2020 for the lack of alternative capacity are unreasonable.
Specifically, these commenters were concerned that as a final rule will
not be issued before May 2020 it will be impossible to comply with the
May 15, 2020 deadline. They further stated that there should be an
option for submitting the demonstrations for the cessation of boiler
alternative later and not on a set date. A facility may not know they
will be shutting down their coal fired boilers until later but will
still be able to meet the compliance deadlines in the proposed
provision for that alternative. They further stated that it will take
facilities three months to successfully compile all the required
elements for the demonstration. Therefore, the commenters believe that
EPA needs to factor in this three-month timeframe prior to the deadline
to submit the demonstrations to EPA (which was proposed to be two
months prior to the deadline to cease receipt of waste). They
additionally state that facilities should be able to switch between the
two alternative deadline extensions. A facility should be able to
submit an initial demonstration and receive approval for an extension
under lack of capacity and then at a later date should be able to
submit a demonstration and switch to a cessation of boiler extension if
it is shutting down its coal-fired boilers and can achieve the
deadlines. Additionally, it should be able to switch from a cessation
of boiler extension to a lack of capacity demonstration if it is no
longer going to be shutting down their boilers. These commenters also
stated that the demonstration
[[Page 53551]]
submission deadlines should be flexible enough to allow facilities to
transition between the extensions provided in Sec. 257.103(f)(1) and
(f)(2).
EPA also received comments on the tolling of the deadline to cease
receipt of waste while the demonstration for an alternative deadline is
under review. All commenters supported the proposal that tolling of the
deadline only occurs after a demonstration is determined to be
complete. However, some commenters requested that EPA revise the
proposed regulatory text to clearly provide what will constitute a
complete demonstration to avoid any misunderstandings. Several
commenters raised concern that, as the proposed regulations were
drafted, a facility could get a free four-month extension during the
tolling of the deadline after a complete demonstration is received.
According to these commenters, a facility could submit a complete
demonstration despite having the ability to cease receipt of waste and
continue to operate while it is being reviewed because the
demonstration completion determination does not depend on showing
infeasibility.
Some commenters believe that the proposed review period is overly
ambitious and requested that EPA clarify that after four months and no
final determination is made, that the deadline continues to toll for
the facility.
EPA also received comments on issues relating to the situations in
which an extension request is denied by EPA. Some commenters claimed
that EPA did not discuss what would occur if a facility's request was
denied. These commenters state that EPA needs to establish a uniform
timeframe for those facilities whose complete demonstration request is
denied by EPA to cease receipt of waste and initiate closure. They
explained that as the deadline for this facility is tolling, it would
be unreasonable for EPA to expect that the facility can immediately
cease receipt of waste. They believe that this timeframe should not be
less than six months as that was the timeframe originally established
in the CCR rule.
Industry groups supported the proposal that a Participating State
Director should have the authority to grant extensions in an approved
state program.
Additionally, several groups commented that the public comment
period on the demonstrations is too short for the public to be able to
review, evaluate, and provide meaningful input on the decision. These
commenters also raised concern that EPA fails to define what it
considers a substantive versus non-substantive comment and makes no
provision to consider comments received after this 15-day window. These
commenters claimed that this short period fails to provide 30-day
notice and does not give interested parties sufficient time to consider
EPA's decision, or to collect and submit written data, views, or
arguments, and therefore violates RCRA and the Administrative Procedure
Act (APA).
EPA is adopting procedures that largely track the procedures laid
out in the proposed rule.
(a) Deadline for Submissions
Demonstrations for an alternative compliance deadline under Sec.
257.103(f)(1) (development of alternative capacity infeasible) must be
submitted to EPA for approval no later than November 30, 2020. This
deadline should provide EPA with sufficient time to review the
submission and determine whether it is complete prior to the April 11,
2021 deadline to cease receipt of waste. Moreover, this submission
deadline is more than adequate for facilities to compile the necessary
documentation, even assuming the commenters are correct that it would
take three months to compile all the necessary documents. Although
November 30, 2020 is the latest date to submit a request, EPA
encourages submissions at the earliest point at which the facility
knows further time to complete its arrangements is needed. This
requirement is found at Sec. 257.103(f)(3)(i)(A).
An owner or operator that seeks an extension to an approved
alternative closure deadline must submit a new demonstration to EPA
within fourteen days of determining that they no longer will meet the
approved cease receipt of waste deadline. This requirement is found at
Sec. 257.103(f)(3)(i)(B).
Requests for additional time to operate a CCR surface impoundment
under Sec. 257.103(f)(2) (``permanent cessation of coal-fired
boiler(s) by a date certain'') must be submitted to EPA for approval no
later than November 30, 2020. EPA has received numerous submissions
from utilities stating that the decision to shut down a boiler is not
reached quickly and can require approvals from (or at least
coordination with) state regulatory officials, among others. EPA,
therefore, expects that facilities know now (or will decide shortly)
whether they will seek to rely upon these provisions. This requirement
is found at Sec. 257.103(f)(3)(i)(C).
EPA also received comments from Luminant Generating Company LLC
(EPA-HQ-OLEM-2019-0172-0098) requesting clarification on whether an
owner or operator may apply to use both Sec. 257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2)
at one site for different impoundments based on site-specific
constraints. The commenter stated this would apply, for example, to a
facility that has determined it will retire its coal-fired boilers by
October 17, 2028, but has multiple small impoundments (40 acres or
less) that would be retrofitted by October 15, 2023, under Sec.
257.103(f)(1) and one large impoundment (larger than 40 acres) that
would close by October 17, 2028, under Sec. 257.103(f)(2). If the
smaller impoundments were subject to the closure deadlines provided
under Sec. 257.103(f)(2) for cessation of coal fired boilers, the
ponds would be required to close (not retrofit) by October 17, 2023.
EPA agrees with the commenter and believes that this situation is
possible. EPA will allow an owner or operator to apply for both
alternative deadlines if they can demonstrate that it is necessary.
This explanation must be incorporated into the narrative required at
Sec. 257.103(f)(1)(iv)(A). The facility should submit the application
for each alternative together as one application. EPA strongly
discourages a facility to submit applications for both Sec.
257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2) if they do not intend to use both provisions.
The proposal did not clearly indicate whether a facility that had
been approved under one extension provision could seek to subsequently
obtain approval to operate under an alternative extension. EPA agrees
that if the facility meets the criteria for either extension, there is
no reason that they should be precluded from seeking to change the
alternative under which they operate. The procedures for this are
described in more detail below.
(b) EPA Review and Decision
Upon receiving the demonstration for an alternative compliance
deadline, EPA will evaluate the demonstration to determine whether it
is complete. EPA may request additional, clarifying information to
complete its review and/or discuss the demonstration with the facility.
Submission of a demonstration will toll the facility's deadline to
cease receipt of waste until issuance of one of the decisions described
below. This ensures that a facility that has submitted a package in
good faith is not penalized by any inadvertent administrative delays.
EPA is committed to processing submissions as expeditiously as
possible.
Consistent with the proposed rule, submissions that EPA determines
to be incomplete will be rejected without further process, at which
point any tolling of the facility's deadline will
[[Page 53552]]
end. (EPA anticipates that the question of tolling for incomplete
submissions should not generally arise, as the agency anticipates
making these determinations before April 11, 2021.) No commenter
disagreed that this was appropriate. As described in more detail below,
incomplete submissions include both the situation in which the
submission does not include all of the required material, and the
situation in which EPA is unable to determine from the submission
whether the facility or the unit meets the criteria for the extension.
EPA received several comments on its proposal that submission of a
complete application would toll a facility's deadline. Some commenters
raised concern that the review period is overly ambitious and requested
that EPA clarify that if, after four months, no final determination has
been made, the deadline would continue to be tolled for the facility.
These commenters also requested that EPA revise the proposed regulatory
text to clearly provide what will constitute a complete demonstration
to avoid any misunderstandings. Other commenters raised concern that as
a consequence of the decision to toll deadlines during the review
period, and because, in their view, the proposed process would not weed
out non-compliant facilities, the four-month time frame effectively
creates a four-month extension for all facilities.
EPA agrees that the time frames are ambitious but continues to
believe that they can be met. As discussed in more detail below, the
Agency has limited the issues to be resolved during this process, and,
as requested by commenters, has amended the proposed regulation to
specify in detail the information needed for a submission to be
considered complete. Consequently, EPA anticipates it will be able to
make most decisions without further requests for information.
Nevertheless, to avoid penalizing a facility that has submitted a
demonstration in good faith, the final rule provides that the deadline
to cease receipt of waste will be tolled until the Agency determines
that the submission is incomplete or reaches a final decision on
whether the facility meets the criteria for the extension, even if it
takes longer than four months. EPA disagrees that this will in essence
grant all submitters a de facto four-month extension. The new deadline
for submission is over four months in advance of the deadline to cease
receipt of waste, and EPA anticipates being able to evaluate
submissions prior to this deadline.
Once the owner or operator submits the demonstration to EPA for
approval, the owner or operator must place a copy into the facility's
operating record and on its publicly accessible CCR internet site. EPA
will also post who has submitted a demonstration on EPA's website.
After reviewing the submission, EPA will either post a determination
that the submission is incomplete on EPA's website or a proposed
decision to grant or to deny the request in whole or in part on
www.regulations.gov for public notice and comment.
Consistent with the proposal, the public will have at least 15 days
to comment on the proposed decision. If the demonstration is
particularly complex, EPA would provide a longer comment period of 20
to 30 days. EPA will evaluate the comments received and amend its
decision as warranted. EPA will post all decisions on its website, in
the relevant docket and notify the facility. EPA proposed that
decisions would become automatically effective 5 days from the close of
the comment period if EPA received no substantive comments. EPA is not
finalizing this approach because it would be too difficult to
implement.
EPA acknowledges that the public comment periods are short but
disagrees with the suggestion that they will be too short to be
meaningful. EPA is requiring facilities to post all submissions on
their publicly accessible CCR internet site at the same time they
submit them to EPA. The public can start their review at the same time
as EPA and begin to gather information and prepare their comments. In
most cases, the issues to be resolved will be limited largely to
whether the deadlines proposed to complete all activities are supported
by the available information, and whether the facility remains in
compliance with the regulations. EPA disagrees with the proposition
that a 15- to 30-day comment period violates either section 7004(b) of
RCRA or the APA. This process is not a rulemaking, but an informal
adjudication. Such adjudications do not typically include an
opportunity for public comment and therefore the provision of a 15 to
30-day comment period meets the mandate in RCRA section 7004(b) to
promote public participation. Moreover, the APA imposes neither a
requirement to provide an opportunity for public comment nor any
minimum time for a comment period for such procedures. Finally, EPA
notes that the same commenters requesting longer comment periods have
also raised concern that the process grants facilities too much
additional time to continue operating. EPA is also interested in not
granting undue amounts of additional time for facilities to continue
operating and is expediting all aspects of this process, including the
comment period.
EPA will post all final decisions on EPA's website and in the
appropriate docket. The decision will specify the facility's deadline
to cease receipt of waste; for example, a decision rejecting a
submission as incomplete prior to April 11, 2021 will specify that the
deadline remains April 11, 2021. The facility must post, along with a
copy of its demonstration, the Agency's final decision on the
facility's publicly accessible CCR internet site. EPA intends to reach
a final decision no later than four months after receiving a complete
demonstration. If at any point in this process, a facility no longer
needs an extension--e.g., because it has completed construction of
alternative capacity prior to approval from EPA--the facility must
notify EPA and withdraw its demonstration.
Some commenters raised concern that EPA had neglected to propose
the procedures associated with denial of extension requests and
requested that EPA elaborate on these procedures in the final rule. EPA
disagrees that the procedures in the proposed rule apply exclusively to
situations in which EPA grants the request. While EPA anticipates there
will be several possible responses to a request for an extension, the
procedures associated with each are the same procedures that were
outlined in the proposal.
One possible outcome is that EPA will grant the requested
extension. In this case the procedure will follow the process outlined
in the proposed rule and discussed above. EPA will post a proposed
decision on www.regulations.gov for at least a 15-day comment period
and will subsequently publish its final decision on EPA's website and
in the relevant docket.
Another potential outcome is that no extension is granted. Some
commenters requested that if EPA denies a request, the facility be
granted an additional six months in which to continue receiving waste.
EPA envisions that the circumstances under which a request is entirely
denied will be limited and disagrees that it would be appropriate to
universally grant a further six months in these situations. The most
likely situation in which an extension is not granted will be where EPA
rejects the submission as incomplete or determines that one or more of
the criteria for the extension have not been met. In neither situation
would authorizing additional time for the facility to operate be
warranted.
As explained previously, EPA will reject incomplete submissions
without
[[Page 53553]]
further process. This could include situations in which EPA cannot
determine from the submission whether the criteria have been met (e.g.,
the submitted information does not clearly address whether the
downgradient monitoring system has been installed at the waste boundary
or whether alternative capacity is available). No commenter disagreed
that this was appropriate, and EPA continues to believe that in the
absence of any showing that all regulatory criteria have been met no
additional time could--and should--be authorized.
Another possibility is that EPA will propose to deny the
application on the grounds that one or more of the criteria have not
been met. For example, EPA may determine that the amount of time that
the facility requested to complete the construction of the alternative
capacity is not supported by the record. In this case all of the
procedures described previously with respect to approvals will apply.
And in this circumstance the amount of time that will be granted to the
facility will be determined by the factual record that has been
developed through this process. Whatever additional amount of time is
determined to be appropriate based on the factual record before the
agency at the time--which may be none--will necessarily be more
appropriate than the commenter's proposed six-month period. For
example, if a facility requests two additional years of operation and
EPA determines that the submission only supports one year of continued
operation, a six-month timeframe would be too short. Similarly, in some
situations the facts may demonstrate that six months is too long. As
another example, EPA may determine alternative capacity exists and can
be feasibly utilized. EPA recognizes that the mere fact that disposal
capacity exists somewhere does not necessarily constitute feasibility
for purposes of this analysis. Nevertheless, there may be instances
where disposal capacity is available off-site and within a reasonable
distance. In this circumstance, as well, a six-month period of
continued operation would be equally inappropriate.
Some commenters raised the argument that because part 257 is self-
implementing and because certain regulatory provisions might be viewed
as ambiguous, there could be differences in opinion on what constitutes
compliance. These commenters felt that differences in interpretation
should be discussed during EPA's review process and corrected as
warranted as part of a facility's completion of its demonstration.
EPA is establishing an expedited process to resolve requests for
continued operation under Sec. 257.103; in order to meet these time
frames EPA has limited the issues to be resolved in this proceeding.
Thus, under the two new alternatives in Sec. 257.103, in many cases
one of the primary issues to be resolved will be whether the facility
is in compliance with the regulations. Although EPA does not agree that
the regulations are ambiguous, EPA may be able to engage in a limited
amount of discussion with a facility before the submission deadline. To
address concerns raised by commenters that the tolling period would
grant de facto extensions for all facilities, such discussions would
need to occur before the deadline for final submission of the request
to avoid extending the tolling period. In addition, as explained
previously, documentation that a facility remains in compliance with
the requirements of subpart D provides critical support for a decision
to allow continued operation of the unlined impoundment. This means
that EPA must be able to affirmatively conclude that the facility meets
this criterion prior to authorizing any continued operation of the
unlined impoundment. As a consequence, any opportunity to correct the
demonstration is limited to the period before the deadline for
submission. Given that the final rule has been published well in
advance of the deadline to cease receipt of waste, facilities will have
sufficient time to raise these issues to the Agency in advance of
submitting their application.
Finally, note that any determinations made in evaluating compliance
aspects of submitted demonstrations will be made solely for the purpose
of determining whether an extension of the deadline to cease receipt of
waste is warranted. In making these determinations the Agency generally
expects to consider and rely on the information in a submission,
information contained in submitted comments to a proposed decision and
any other information the Agency has at the time of the determination.
These determinations may not be applicable or relevant in any other
context. Should the facility's compliance status be considered outside
of this context in the future, the Agency may reach a contrary
conclusion based, for example, on new information or information that
was not considered as part of this process.
(c) Transferring Between Site-Specific Alternatives (Sec.
257.103(f)(1) and (f)(2))
In the December 2019 proposal, EPA proposed that a facility could
not utilize both the short-term extension Sec. 257.103(e) and the
site-specific longer extensions Sec. 257.103(f). However, in the
proposal EPA did not discuss whether a facility could switch between
the site-specific extensions. Several comments discussed this issue
explaining the importance of being able to switch between the lack of
alternative capacity extension in Sec. 257.103(f)(1) and the cessation
of coal-fired boiler(s) in Sec. 257.103(f)(2) and vice versa.
Several of these commenters stated that it is possible for a
utility to determine that they will shut down their coal-fired
boiler(s) after being approved under Sec. 257.103(f)(1) and still be
able to meet the deadlines under Sec. 257.103(f)(2). They continued on
to state that were this to happen a facility should be able to
subsequently make the demonstration and switch extensions. Commenters
also pointed out that allowing facilities to switch from Sec.
257.103(f)(1) to Sec. 257.103(f)(2) would expedite the closure of the
CCR surface impoundment in question and also reduce the overall risk,
consistent with subtitle D protectiveness standard.
These commenters additionally stated that the opposite is also
possible where a facility will learn that they are unable to retire
their coal-fired boilers and will need to develop alternative capacity.
As such a facility should be able to make the demonstration and switch
extensions. Therefore, EPA should provide a process for owners and
operators to exercise this flexibility.
EPA agrees with the commenters that a situation may arise where a
facility needs to change course due to unexpected business decisions
and that there should be a process for a facility to switch between the
site-specific alternative closure provisions. Therefore, EPA is adding
regulations at Sec. 257.103(f)(4) to allow the transfer between site-
specific alternatives. The process of obtaining approval will be the
same as it would be under the initial application for approval.
6. Conforming Amendments to Sec. 257.103(a), (b), (c) and (d)
To conform with the new provisions for CCR surface impoundments,
EPA proposed a series of amendments to the Sec. 257.103 introductory
paragraph and at Sec. 257.103(a), (b), and (c). Additionally, EPA
proposed amending Sec. 257.103(a) and (b) to only be applicable to CCR
landfills.
[[Page 53554]]
(a) Amendments to Sec. 257.103(a) and (b)
EPA proposed to revise the introductory paragraph to Sec. 257.103
to add the phrase ``and/or non-CCR wastestreams'' and to add references
to the proposed new paragraphs (e) and (f) to Sec. 257.103 for the
short-term alternative and the alternative compliance deadlines
respectively. EPA also proposed conforming revisions to Sec.
257.103(a) and (b) to reflect the proposed alternative closure
deadlines for surface impoundments. The current Sec. 257.103(a) and
(b) apply to both CCR landfills and CCR surface impoundments undergoing
closure under Sec. 257.101 that need additional time to find
alternative capacity for only CCR wastestreams. To be consistent with
the proposals, EPA proposed amending Sec. 257.103(a) and (b) to only
apply to CCR landfills.
Consistent with the decisions discussed previously, EPA has decided
to finalize the proposed conforming amendments to Sec. 257.103(a) and
(b) so that those provisions only apply to CCR landfills. In addition,
to address the concerns that proposed revisions to the introductory
paragraph could be read to authorize all units to receive non-CCR
wastestreams, EPA is revising the introductory paragraph to Sec.
257.103 to provide that the owner or operator may continue to receive
the waste specified in paragraphs (a), (b) or (f). Additionally, the
references to Sec. 257.101(a) and (b)(1) are being removed from Sec.
257.103(a) and (b), as those sections apply only to CCR surface
impoundments. EPA is also revising the term ``CCR unit'' to ``CCR
landfill'' to ensure clarity that Sec. 257.103(a) and (b) apply only
to CCR landfills.
(b) Amendments to Sec. 257.103(c) and (d)
In the December 2, 2019 proposal, EPA proposed to amend Sec.
257.103(c) to make conforming changes to the notification requirements.
When EPA amended the cease receipt of waste date in the July 2018 rule
in Sec. 257.101(a) and (b)(1), EPA neglected to make the conforming
changes to the notification requirements in Sec. 257.103(c). EPA
proposed to amend Sec. 257.103(c)(1) by adding new paragraphs (i)
through (iii) for CCR units closing pursuant to Sec. 257.101(a),
(b)(1), and (d), respectively. Each respective subparagraph then
requires the owner or operator to prepare the notification no later
than the cease receipt of waste date according to Sec. 257.101(a),
(b)(1), and (d). The current text of Sec. 257.103(c)(1) requires the
owner or operator to prepare a notification within six months of
becoming subject to closure pursuant to Sec. 257.101(a), (b)(1), or
(d). In light of the USWAG decision and the revisions adopted in this
rule, this language no longer makes sense.
EPA received very few comments related to this section. Most
comments stated generic support or disagreement for amending Sec.
257.103(a) and (b) to only apply to landfills. There were no specific
comments on the proposed modifications to the regulatory text in Sec.
257.103(c).
In the December 2, 2019 proposal EPA did not make the correct
conforming changes to Sec. 257.103(c). EPA did not need to add the new
notification deadlines for the units closing pursuant to Sec.
257.101(a) and (b)(1) because of the restructuring of Sec. 257.103(a)
and (b). As Sec. 257.103(a) and (b) will now only apply to CCR
landfills, Sec. 257.103(c) only needs to contain the notification date
associated with CCR landfills closing pursuant to Sec. 257.101(d).
Therefore, EPA will not be finalizing the proposed amendments to Sec.
257.103(c)(1) by adding new paragraphs (i), (ii), and (iii). Rather,
EPA is amending the regulatory text of Sec. 257.103(c)(1) by removing
the citations for Sec. 257.101(a) and (b)(1). This amendment to the
regulatory text clarifies the notification requirements for Sec.
257.103(a) and (b). Additionally, EPA is replacing the term ``CCR
unit'' with ``CCR landfill'' throughout Sec. 257.103(c) to add clarity
that the provision only applies to CCR landfills. This change is
represented in Sec. 257.103(c).
EPA is also replacing the term ``CCR unit'' with ``CCR landfill''
in Sec. 257.103(d). EPA did not propose this amendment however EPA
believes it adds further clarity to the regulation. This change is
represented in Sec. 257.103(d).
VI. What final action is EPA taking on the August 14, 2019 proposal?
A. Revisions to the Annual Groundwater Monitoring and Corrective Action
Report Requirements
Currently, Sec. 257.90(e) requires owners and operators of CCR
units to prepare an annual groundwater monitoring and corrective action
report (``annual report''). This annual report must document the status
of the groundwater monitoring and corrective action program for the CCR
unit, summarize key actions completed, describe any problems
encountered, discuss actions to resolve the problems, and project key
activities for the upcoming year. The CCR regulations also specify the
minimum information that must be included in the annual report. For
example, one of the current requirements is to provide all the
monitoring data obtained under the groundwater monitoring and
corrective action program for the year covered by the report. The CCR
regulations further require the owner or operator to include a data
summary in the report with information such as the number of
groundwater samples that were collected for analysis for each
background and downgradient well, the dates the samples were collected,
and whether the samples were required by the detection monitoring or
assessment monitoring programs. See, Sec. 257.90(e)(3). Except for
certain inactive CCR surface impoundments, owners and operators must
prepare the initial annual report no later than January 31, 2018 and
post the report to its publicly accessible CCR internet site within 30
days of preparing the report. See, Sec. Sec. 257.90(e) and 257.107(d).
For eligible inactive CCR surface impoundments,\40\ the deadline to
prepare the initial annual report is August 1, 2019. See, Sec.
257.100(e)(5)(ii).
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\40\ For more information on eligible inactive CCR surface
impoundments, see the preamble to the direct final rule published on
August 5, 2016 (81 FR 51802).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Agency reviewed the annual reports available on facilities'
publicly accessible CCR internet sites that were due by January 31,
2018 and January 31, 2019 and observed that some facilities did not
provide groundwater monitoring data in formats that were clear and easy
for the public to understand. EPA found instances where it was
difficult to determine whether the analytical results corresponded to
background or downgradient wells, whether the CCR unit was operating
under the detection or assessment monitoring program, when the
assessment monitoring program was initiated for the CCR unit, or
whether the facility had initiated corrective action for the unit. In
addition, several facilities only provided hundreds or thousands of
pages of laboratory printouts of the data, making it difficult for the
public and other stakeholders to put the results into context within
the overall groundwater monitoring program.
The purpose of requiring posting of the annual reports is to allow
the public, states and EPA to easily see and understand the groundwater
monitoring data. To accomplish this purpose, the Agency is finalizing
one revision to the annual groundwater monitoring and corrective action
reporting requirements and providing more explanation of another
revision included in the preamble of the August 2019 proposed rule. See
84 FR 40365-40366.
[[Page 53555]]
First, EPA is amending Sec. 257.90 by adding new paragraph (e)(6)
requiring a summary to be included at the beginning of the annual
report. EPA received many comments on this proposal, most of which were
supportive of the addition of the proposed provisions at Sec.
257.90(e)(6).
Environmental groups and most private citizens who commented
supported the inclusion of an upfront summary because a summary would
be helpful for the public to understand the reports. They also said the
summaries should include and not misrepresent or gloss over the
conclusions based on the data. Specifically Earthjustice et al.
commented that proper oversight and enforcement of the CCR regulations
can only happen if owners and operators include a clear summary of the
status of groundwater monitoring and corrective action, each
statistically significant increase (SSI) over background levels (for
Appendix III constituents) or groundwater protection standards (for
Appendix IV constituents). They further commented that the report
should include the dates when assessment monitoring was initiated, when
an assessment of corrective measures was initiated, when an assessment
of corrective measures was completed, and when a remedy was selected,
where applicable. Earthjustice et al. also commented that clear
summaries of all groundwater monitoring data are necessary, not just
the data associated with an SSI.
Multiple states commented on this issue. The Alabama Department of
Environmental Management commented that the report should include
whether a facility began or ended the reporting cycle in detection or
assessment monitoring (as well as provide the dates for the
transition), and specify if and when a facility has moved to the
corrective action stage of the groundwater monitoring program. The
Virginia Department of Environmental Quality also supported the minimum
set of requirements included in the proposal.
Many industry stakeholder and electric utility commenters supported
the inclusion of an upfront summary setting forth certain information
to help readers understand the data contained in the report and to
provide more specificity and transparency as to what the report
contains. Some industry group commenters did not support repeating
information in the annual reports that is already required by the
groundwater sampling and analysis plan at Sec. 257.93. Some industry
commenters wanted clarification that these requirements would not apply
retroactively to past annual reports.
In light of these comments, the Agency is finalizing the new
requirements at Sec. 257.90(e)(6). This new provision establishes a
minimum set of requirements to be addressed in the summary discussion
of the status of the groundwater monitoring and corrective action
programs for the CCR unit at the beginning of the annual report (e.g.,
as part of the report's executive summary). The minimum requirements
for this summary include stating whether the CCR unit was operating
pursuant to the detection monitoring program under Sec. 257.94 or the
assessment monitoring program under Sec. 257.95; identifying those
constituents and the corresponding wells, if any, for which the
facility had determined that there is a statistically significant
increase over background levels for constituents listed in Appendix III
(or if operating under the assessment monitoring program, constituents
in Appendix IV that were detected at statistically significant levels
above the groundwater protection standard); the date when the
assessment monitoring program was initiated for the CCR unit; and a
description and the dates of any corrective measures initiated or
completed, including the remedy, during the annual reporting period.
These requirements will only apply to future annual reports, starting
with the next report completed after the effective date of this final
rule. EPA believes the elements finalized are sufficient to give a
snapshot of the groundwater monitoring and corrective action activities
in the previous year but are not repetitive with other rule
requirements.
Second, the Agency solicited comment on whether to amend Sec.
257.90 to require the groundwater monitoring analytical results and
related information to be presented in a standardized format, such as
multiple tables, in the annual report. Possible examples of standard
formats are available for review in the docket of the August 2019
proposal.\41\ The Agency also requested comment on formats that could
be used.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ See EPA memorandum titled ``Annual Groundwater Monitoring
Report Data Examples''; dated July 1, 2019. (EPA-HQ-OLEM-2018-0524-
0013)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Information about the groundwater wells was proposed to include the
following data elements: Well identification number, sampling date,
latitude and longitude in decimal degrees, groundwater elevation
including well depth to groundwater and total depth of groundwater, and
whether the groundwater well is upgradient or downgradient of the CCR
unit. This information is already collected and reported in the
groundwater sampling and analysis plan under Sec. 257.93 and so the
information is readily available to the facility.
Sample information was proposed to be provided in a table that
contains fields including sampling date, sampling time, sampling phase
(i.e., background, detection monitoring, assessment monitoring,
corrective action), whether the groundwater well is upgradient or
downgradient of the CCR unit, and analytical methods listed separately
for every method used to analyze the constituent concentrations. Data
for Appendix III to part 257--Constituents for Detection Monitoring was
proposed to contain concentrations in milligrams per liter (unless
otherwise specified) of the following: Boron, calcium, chloride,
fluoride, pH (standard units), sulfate, and total dissolved solids
(TDS). Data for Appendix IV to part 257--Constituents for Assessment
Monitoring was proposed to contain concentrations in milligrams per
liter (unless otherwise specified) of the following: Antimony, arsenic,
barium, beryllium, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, lead, lithium, mercury,
molybdenum, radium 226-228 combined (pCi/L), selenium, and thallium. It
was proposed that each constituent concentration identify the detection
limit for the analytical method used with data qualifiers specified for
non-detect samples.
EPA believed that a required standardized format would increase
transparency and enable the general public, as well as Federal, state,
and local officials, to more easily understand the groundwater
monitoring data and thus plan for and evaluate the appropriate next
steps to protect public health and the environment.
The Agency received many comments on the groundwater monitoring
data standardized format. In general, environmental organizations and
citizens supported the inclusion of data in a standardized format for
ease of understanding and for the reasons included in the proposal.
Many commenters requested the data to be presented in a machine-
readable and preferably spreadsheet format. Some commenters, including
Earthjustice, said EPA should require elements beyond those included in
the proposal to satisfy the RCRA section 4004 protectiveness standard,
and include the location of the groundwater well, groundwater
elevation, and whether each well is upgradient, downgradient,
sidegradient, or something else. These
[[Page 53556]]
comments also said that access to the full data set should be included
without having to wade through thousands of pages of laboratory reports
to provide the public, state and Federal agencies with an opportunity
to independently evaluate the data. Some commenters recommended that a
summary of historical detections would also be helpful, especially if
groundwater protection standards are established based on background
concentrations at a given site.
While state commenters were generally supportive of requiring
groundwater monitoring analytical results in a standardized format, the
Agency received comment from only two states on this issue. Alabama
Department of Environmental Management supported the requirement that
groundwater analytical results for each sampling event be summarized,
preferably in tabular format, for ease of the reader. The state found
it has been extremely difficult, even for a trained individual, to
review groundwater monitoring reports given the complex nature of the
sites and the magnitude of data being presented. The state recommended
a summary of historical detections would also be helpful, especially if
groundwater protection standards are established based on background
concentrations at a given site. The Virginia Department of
Environmental Quality (VDEQ) generally supported the inclusion of a
minimum set of requirements in a summary of the groundwater monitoring
and corrective action programs. However, VDEQ stated that the
standardized format and elements should only be a minimum standard so
that states may require additional elements or information in state
reporting without requiring separate reports to be generated.
Overall, industry commenters did not support the addition of
standardized formats for groundwater monitoring data and analytical
results. Industry commenters did support EPA's desire to make
information decipherable to the public but believe the regulations
should maintain flexibility for states and for facilities to determine
how best to present the data. Some said a standardized format could be
problematic in that certain facilities may not be able to display site-
specific well networks sufficiently to meet the requirements of the CCR
regulations. Other industry commenters said EPA should not require
additional information beyond what is currently required by Sec.
257.90(e) for the annual reports. Many industry commenters expressed
concern about requiring information about groundwater wells including
latitude and longitude of the wells in decimal degrees. These
commenters said such information poses a security concern for the
facility. They believe that providing a map of the monitoring wells is
sufficient to be in compliance with the CCR regulations.
After considering the comments, EPA is not finalizing a requirement
for owners and operators of CCR units to present groundwater monitoring
analytical results in a standardized format. EPA is not convinced that
such a requirement is necessary to serve the purposes of ensuring
greater transparency. The Agency is also concerned about prescribing a
standardized format which may not be consistent with existing state
reporting requirements, especially given that only two states provided
comments on this issue. The new requirement for a summary will ensure
that the critical information is presented up front in the report,
where it can be readily accessed by the public. EPA believes the
current groundwater monitoring requirements of Sec. 257.90 are
sufficient as a minimum set of criteria to show the groundwater
monitoring activities of the previous year. EPA also agrees with the
commenters that allowing states the flexibility in requiring certain
data elements and formats because of the use of certain software or
what is required by the state regulations for consistency is important.
Additionally, EPA is maintaining flexibility for facilities to report
groundwater monitoring data in ways that are publicly accessible for
all stakeholders. If, however, it becomes clear that the summaries are
insufficient to ensure that the annual reports provide the public with
useful information EPA will revisit this issue.
In this regard, it should be noted, however, that the annual
reports should not only contain thousands of pages of groundwater
monitoring data directly from the laboratory. Many commenters said this
data is difficult to sift through, even for trained environmental
specialists. That format is not easy to understand for the public,
either. Data should be presented in a way that clearly communicates the
required information to the general public in order to ensure proper
oversight and enforcement of the CCR regulations by the public, states,
and Federal agencies. The data could be presented in a tabular format,
include historical detections, or include elements in the proposal that
are not being finalized in this action.
B. Revisions to the Publicly Accessible CCR Internet Site Requirements
In the 2015 CCR rule, pursuant to RCRA section 7004(b)(2), the
Agency promulgated a requirement for owners and operators of any CCR
unit to establish and maintain a publicly accessible internet site,
titled ``CCR Rule Compliance Data and Information.'' Section 7004(b)(3)
directs EPA to provide for, encourage, and assist ``[p]ublic
participation in the development, revision, implementation, and
enforcement of any regulation, guideline, information, or program under
this chapter.'' To achieve these ends, internet postings are required
for various elements identified in the following sections of the CCR
regulations: Location restrictions; design criteria; operating
criteria; groundwater monitoring and corrective action; and closure and
post closure care. Consistent with the statutory directive, the
websites are important to make the notices and relevant information
required by the regulations available to the public in a manner that
will encourage and assist public participation in the implementation of
the regulations. This means, for example, that the posted documents
must be clearly identifiable as documents, reports, demonstrations,
etc., to those attempting to access them. The internet is a widely
accessible and effective means for gathering and disseminating
information to the public and the states.
EPA has observed that some of the publicly accessible internet
sites that owners and operators of CCR facilities have established in
response to the CCR regulations, fail to make the posted documents
publicly accessible. For example, a number of publicly accessible CCR
internet sites require either some sort of registration whereby
personal information identifying the user must be provided before
members of the public are granted ``access'' to the website. Other
websites require a user to submit a request for each document
individually and the requested document is subsequently emailed to the
user. Still other websites have been designed such that the posted
documents cannot be downloaded or printed from the website. EPA does
not consider these kinds of practices to be consistent with the
requirement that the information be made publicly available. EPA
acknowledges that the current regulation does not define the term
``publicly available,'' or contain detailed requirements that such
websites must meet, nor are the practices described above explicitly
prohibited. To avoid
[[Page 53557]]
any further confusion, EPA proposed to amend the current regulation to
clearly specify that facilities must ensure that all information
required to be on the websites must be made available to any member of
the public, including through printing and downloading, without any
requirement that the public wait to be ``approved'', or provide
information in order to access the website.
States, industry and environmental groups submitted comments that
agreed with this proposal. Specifically, the states of Alabama and
Virginia commented that they agreed with this proposed requirement.
Earthjustice, Arizona Electric Power Cooperative Incorporated, the
American Public Power Association, Labadie Environmental Organization,
Sierra Club and the Blue Ridge Environmental Defense Fund also
submitted comments stating that they agreed with the proposed
requirement to make information and documents on the publicly
accessible CCR internet site immediately accessible (including
downloading and printing). One commenter said that EPA should not
completely prohibit registration features on CCR websites because those
features can alert the companies that users are having trouble
accessing the data and allows the facility to contact those individuals
to assist them. The Agency believes that requiring some sort of
mechanism for users to contact the facility if there are issues with
accessing the information on the site is a more effective mechanism to
address those types of problems. Another company commented that EPA
should not view these security approaches as inappropriately limiting
access to utilities' publicly available CCR sites, as they are needed
to protect the security interests of the utilities. This commenter did
not provide details on how or why these practices are needed to address
security concerns. In the absence of any explanation of the commenter's
concerns and given that the vast majority of publicly accessible CCR
internet sites do not require registration or permission to access the
information, EPA does not believe this is enough justification to limit
or restrict access to the information. Therefore, EPA is finalizing
this revision to the regulations as proposed.
Another issue EPA has noticed is that the internet addresses for
many of the publicly accessible CCR internet sites have changed; for
some sites, more than once. It is very difficult for the public,
states, and EPA to access the information required to be posted on
these websites if the URLs change without notice. In response, the
Agency proposed to amend the regulations to require that facilities
notify EPA within 14 days of changing their publicly accessible CCR
internet site address, to allow EPA to update the Agency's website with
the correct URL address. Commenters generally agreed with this
requirement and one commenter suggested that facilities also notify the
state director when the URL for the facility's website changes. EPA
agrees with this suggestion and is finalizing the requirement that when
a facility changes the URL for its publicly accessible CCR internet
site, they must notify EPA and the state director within 14 days of the
new website address.
Another issue EPA has noted is that when there is a question or
problem with a publicly accessible CCR internet site, such as a broken
link or a document that will not download, it can be difficult to reach
the appropriate contact at the facility in order to gain access to the
information. Therefore, the Agency requested comment on whether each
publicly accessible CCR internet site should be required to have a
mechanism (e.g., a ``contact us'' electronic form on the CCR website)
for the public to contact the facility about issues of information
accessibility. Commenters generally agreed with the idea of having some
way for the public to easily contact the correct person to report
problems with the website. One commenter said that EPA should require
owners and operators to post a contact email address rather than a
contact form. Several commenters suggested that the specific mechanism
for the public to bring issues of information accessibility to the
facility should be left up to the facility. EPA agrees that some sort
of ``contact us'' mechanism is warranted; for example this could
include either a ``contact us'' form much like the one EPA uses on the
EPA CCR website or an email address for a specific contact at the
facility who can address issues related to the accessibility on the
website. The Agency is adding this requirement to the regulations in
Sec. 257.107(a).
One commenter also mentioned that even though Sec. 257.107(c)
requires that the information posted to the website must be made
available to the public for at least five years, some documents are
being removed from the websites after they are posted. EPA would like
to reiterate that the regulations require that posted documents remain
on the websites for at least five years. Section 257.107(c). If the
documents are revised or updated, the original documents must still
remain on the website. The same requirement exists if a unit is closed
or consolidated with another unit; the original documents that were
required for that unit must remain on the website for at least five
years.
VII. Rationale for 30-Day Effective Date
The effective date of this rule is 30 days after publication in the
Federal Register. The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) provides that
publication of a substantive rule shall be made not less than 30 days
before its effective date and that this provision applies in the
absence of a specific statutory provision establishing an effective
date. See 5 U.S.C. 553(d) and 559. EPA has determined there is no
specific provision of RCRA addressing the effective date of regulations
that would apply here, and thus the APA's 30-day effective date
applies.
EPA has previously interpreted section 4004(c) of RCRA to generally
establish a six-month effective date for rules issued under subtitle D.
See 80 FR 37988, 37990 (July 2, 2015). After further consideration, EPA
interprets section 4004(c) to establish an effective date solely for
the regulations that were required to be promulgated under subsection
(a). Section 4004(c) is silent as to subsequent revisions to those
regulations; EPA therefore believes section 4004(c) is ambiguous.
Section 4004(c) states that the prohibition in subsection (b) shall
take effect six months after promulgation of regulations under
subsection (a). Subsection (a), in turn provides that ``[n]ot later
than one year after October 21, 1976 . . . [EPA] shall promulgate
regulations containing criteria for determining which facilities shall
be classified as sanitary landfills and which shall be classified as
open dumps within the meaning of this chapter.'' As noted, section
4004(c) is silent as to revisions to those regulations.
In response to Congress's mandate in section 4004(a), EPA
promulgated regulations on September 13, 1979. 44 FR 53438. EPA
interprets section 4004(c) to establish an effective date applicable
only to that action, and not to future regulations the Agency might
issue under this section. In the absence of a specific statutory
provision establishing an effective date for this rule, APA section
553(d) applies.
EPA considers that its interpretation is reasonable because there
is no indication in RCRA or its legislative history that Congress
intended for the agency to have less discretion under RCRA subtitle D
than it would have under the APA to establish a suitable effective date
for subsequent rules issued under section 4004(c). Consistent with
EPA's interpretation of the express
[[Page 53558]]
language of section 4004, EPA interprets statements in the legislative
history, explaining that section 4004(c) provides that the effective
date is to be 6 months after the date of promulgation of regulations,
as referring to the initial set of regulations required by Congress to
be promulgated not later than 1 year after October 21, 1976. These
statements do not mandate a 6 month effective date for every regulatory
action that EPA takes under this section. This rule contains specific,
targeted revisions to the 2015 rule and the legislative history
regarding section 4004 speaks only to these initial 1976 mandated
regulations.
This reading allows the Agency to establish an effective date
appropriate for the nature of the regulation promulgated, which is what
EPA believes Congress intended. EPA further considers that the minimum
30-day effective date under the APA is reasonable in this circumstance
where none of the provisions being finalized require an extended period
of time for regulated entities to comply.
VIII. State CCR Programs
A. Effect on This Final Rule on States With Approved CCR Programs
This final rule has impacts on states with an approved program. The
effects depend on whether the state has received approval for the
provisions that have been amended in this rule. As of this final rule,
EPA has granted approvals to the states of Oklahoma and Georgia.
On June 28, 2018, EPA granted Oklahoma full program approval.
However, on April 15, 2020, the U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia vacated part of that approval. Waterkeeper Alliance Inc. v.
Wheeler, No. 18-02230, 2020 WL 1873564 (D.D.C. Apr. 15, 2020).
Specifically, the court vacated those portions of the Oklahoma program
approval that mirrored those portions of the federal program that had
been vacated by the D.C. Circuit in USWAG--i.e., the provisions that
allowed unlined impoundments to continue to operate until they leak;
the provisions that treated ``clay-lined'' units as lined units; and
the provisions that excluded legacy units. As a consequence, the
federal requirements that correspond to those provisions will now apply
in Oklahoma. Two of these provisions have been revised in this
rulemaking, and those revisions will take effect in Oklahoma because
these federal requirements continue to operate. These are the revisions
to 40 CFR 257.101(a) and section 257.71(a)(1)(i).
However, Oklahoma was granted approval for Sec. 257.103, and their
regulations continue to operate without change in lieu of the federal
program. In essence this means that the revisions promulgated in this
rule making will not take effect in Oklahoma until such time as
Oklahoma revises the program to adopt them. However, Oklahoma must
revise its CCR regulations within three years of any revisions to the
federal regulations that are more stringent, in order to maintain their
program approval. See, RCRA section 4005(d)(1)(D)(i)(II). EPA
determined that parts of the amendments to Sec. 257.103 are more
stringent than the previous regulations. The modifications that allow
the continued disposal of non-CCR wastestreams are arguably less
stringent; however, the maximum amount of time allowed under the new
provisions in Sec. 257.103 is less than that allowed under the
previous regulations and therefore these revisions are considered to be
more stringent.
The same is true with respect to the amendments to the annual
groundwater monitoring and corrective action report and to the publicly
accessible CCR internet sites requirements in Sec. Sec. 257.90 and
257.107. EPA considers these revisions to be more stringent because
they impose new substantive requirements. However, because the state
provisions that correspond to these federal requirements have been
approved the federal revisions will not take effect unless the state
adopts the revisions.
To maintain their program approval, Oklahoma will have to update
its state CCR regulations and submit the modified portions for EPA
approval. The process for approving Oklahoma's modifications is the
same as for the initial program approval: EPA will propose to approve
or deny the program modification and hold a public hearing during the
comment period. EPA will then issue the final program determination
within 180 days of determining that the state's submission is complete.
Similarly, Georgia did not apply for approval of four provisions in
their permit program; as a consequence, the federal requirements that
correspond to those four provisions continue to apply in Georgia. Two
of these four provisions have been revised in this rulemaking, and
those revisions will take effect in Georgia because these federal
requirements continue to operate. These are the revisions to Sec. Sec.
257.101(a) and 257.71(a)(1)(i). For the same reason, the state is not
required to modify these parts of their program within the three years
in order to maintain program approval. However, Georgia was granted
approval for Sec. Sec. 257.90, 257.103, 257.107, and because the state
regulations operate in lieu of the federal regulations the revisions
made to these provisions in this rule will not take effect in Georgia
unless the state amends its regulations to adopt them.
As discussed above, because the amended provisions are more
stringent than the previous regulations, Georgia will need to amend its
regulations to incorporate the new timeframes within three years of the
effective date of this final rule and submit a program modification to
EPA for approval.
IX. Economic Impacts of This Action
A. Introduction
EPA estimated the costs and benefits of this action in a Regulatory
Impact Analysis (RIA), which is available in the docket for this
action. The RIA estimates the incremental costs and cost savings
attributable to the provisions of this action against the baseline
costs and practices in place as a result of the 2015 CCR final rule,
and the 2018 CCR Phase One final rule.
EPA updated the 2015 CCR final rule baseline to account for the
2018 Phase One final rule and also to account for two developments.
These are the availability of publicly accessible universe data and the
effect of the 2018 court decisions. These updates increase the baseline
costs estimated for the CCR program against which the RIA estimates the
incremental effects of this final rulemaking action.
The RIA estimates that the net annualized impact of this final
regulation will be annual cost savings of $26.1 million at 7 percent or
an estimated annualized net cost savings of $16.7 million per year when
discounting at 3 percent. This action is not considered an economically
significant action under Executive Order 12866.
B. Affected Universe
This final rulemaking action affects coal fired electric utility
plants (assigned to the utility sector North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) code 22). The rule is estimated to
potentially impact 523 surface impoundments at 229 facilities.
C. Costs, Cost Savings, and Benefits of the Final Rule
The costs attributable to this final rule arise from the reporting
and documentation that must be completed by regulated entities and
submitted to EPA in order to qualify for some of the closure deadline
extension provisions of
[[Page 53559]]
the rule as well as other reporting requirements related to the annual
groundwater monitoring and corrective action reports, publicly
accessible CCR internet sites, and the closure of CCR units. These
costs are estimated to amount to an annualized $0.2 million per year
when discounting at 7 percent and an annualized $0.02 million per year
when discounting at 3 percent.
The cost savings attributable to this final rule include cost
savings from extending the deadlines by which units must cease
receiving waste and initiate closure. Cost savings also follow from the
avoided cost of new unit construction for CCR units associated with
qualified coal fired boilers which are closing by 2023 or 2028.
Overall, the final rule is expected to result in net cost savings of an
annualized $26.1 million when discounting at 7 percent or an estimated
annualized net cost savings of $16.7 million per year when discounting
at 3 percent.
The RIA accompanying the 2015 CCR Rule monetized 11 categories of
benefits attributable to the national minimum criteria. EPA expects to
retain the vast majority of these monetized benefits under the
provisions of the Part A rule. Some benefit categories, such as reduced
future CCR impoundment releases, are unaffected by the provisions of
the Part A rule. Other benefit categories, such as reduced groundwater
contamination and other human health and environmental benefits should
be largely retained because EPA is requiring units that take advantage
of the alternative closure provisions in Sec. 257.103(f)(1) and Sec.
257.103(f)(2) to certify to EPA that they are in full compliance with
the 2015 CCR rule. Units unable to make this certification must instead
close by the earliest possible date, which EPA identifies as April 11,
2021. A discussion of the impact to each category of monetized benefits
is available in Section 3.4 of the Part A RIA.
X. Statutory and Executive Order (E.O.) Reviews
Additional information about these statutes and Executive Orders
can be found at https://www2.epa.gov/laws-regulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This is a significant regulatory action that was submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review because it raises
novel legal or policy issues. 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 available in the docket and is summarized in
section IX of this preamble.
B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs
This action is considered an Executive Order 13771 deregulatory
action. Details on the estimated costs of this final rule can be found
in EPA's analysis of the potential costs and benefits associated with
this action.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
The information collection activities in this final rule have been
submitted for approval to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
under the PRA. The Information Collection Request (ICR) document that
EPA prepared has been assigned EPA ICR number 1189.32. You can find a
copy of the ICR in the docket for this rule, and it is briefly
summarized here.
The information to be collected as a part of this rule includes
demonstrations that must be made to EPA by owners and operators of
units that seek to obtain a Sec. 257.103(f)(1) extension. These
demonstrations will show that the unit in question meets the necessary
criteria to receive the extension. Units that operate under this
extension will also be required to publish semi-annual progress reports
on their publicly accessible CCR internet sites to keep EPA and the
public appraised of their progress and any operational changes at the
facility. Similarly, units that seek to obtain a Sec. 257.103(f)(2)
extension must demonstrate to EPA that they meet the necessary criteria
to receive the extension. The criteria are generally the same as the
criteria for Sec. 257.103(f)(1) with the addition of a risk mitigation
plan. Units that obtain an extension under Sec. 257.103(f)(2) must
publish annual progress reports on their publicly accessible CCR
internet sites.
Information to be collected also include the addition of a summary
at the beginning of the required annual groundwater monitoring and
corrective action reports. These summaries will make the information in
the reports more easily accessible to the public.
EPA is also revising the requirements for publicly accessible CCR
internet sites to ensure that all information required to be on the
websites be made available to any member of the public in multiple
formats, in a timely way, and not requiring any information be
submitted in exchange for access.
Respondents/affected entities: Coal-fired electric utility plants
that will be affected by the rule.
Respondent's obligation to respond: The recordkeeping,
notification, and posting are mandatory as part of the minimum national
criteria being promulgated under Sections 1008, 4004, and 4005(a) of
RCRA.
Estimated number of respondents: 299.
Frequency of response: The frequency of response varies.
Total estimated burden: EPA estimates the total annual burden to
respondents to be an increase in burden of approximately 9,820 hours
from the currently approved burden. Burden is defined at 5 CFR
1320.3(b).
Total estimated cost: $722,000 (per year), includes $0 annualized
capital or operation & maintenance costs.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control numbers for EPA's
regulations in 40 CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. In
making this determination, EPA believes that the impact of concern is
any significant adverse economic impact on small entities, and that an
agency may certify that a rule will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities if the rule relieves
regulatory burden, has no net burden or otherwise has a positive
economic effect on the small entities subject to the rule. The rule is
estimated to potentially impact 77 facilities that are considered
small.
This action is expected to result in net cost savings of an
annualized $26.1 million per year. These cost savings will accrue to
all regulated entities. We have therefore concluded that this action
will relieve regulatory burden for all directly regulated small
entities.
E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded mandate of $100 million
or more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not
significantly or uniquely affect small governments. This action imposes
no enforceable duty on any state, local or tribal governments or the
private sector.
[[Page 53560]]
F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have
substantial direct effects on the states, on the relationship between
the national government and the states, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal implications as specified in
Executive Order 13175. For the ``Final Rule: Hazardous and Solid Waste
Management System; Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals from Electric
Utilities'' published April 17, 2015 (80 FR 21302), EPA identified
three of the 414 coal-fired electric utility plants (in operation as of
2012) as being located on tribal lands. However, this action does not
impose substantial direct compliance costs or otherwise have a
substantial direct effect on one or more Indian tribes, to the best of
EPA's knowledge. Neither will it have substantial direct effects on the
relationship between the federal government and Indian tribes, or on
the distribution of power and responsibilities between the Federal
government and Indian tribes. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not
apply to this action.
H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risk and Safety Risks
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13045 because it is
not economically significant as defined in Executive Order 12866, and
because EPA does not believe 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
the document titled ``Human and Ecological Risk Assessment of Coal
Combustion Residuals,'' which is available in the docket for the final
rule as docket item EPA-HQ-RCRA-2009-0640-11993.
As ordered by E.O. 13045 Section 1-101(a), for the ``Final Rule:
Hazardous and Solid Waste Management System; Disposal of Coal
Combustion Residuals from Electric Utilities'' published April 17, 2015
(80 FR 21302), EPA identified and assessed environmental health risks
and safety risks that may disproportionately affect children in the
revised risk assessment. The results of the screening assessment found
that risks fell below the criteria when wetting and run-on/runoff
controls required by the rule are considered. Under the full
probabilistic analysis, composite liners required by the rule for new
waste management units showed the ability to reduce the 90th percentile
child cancer and non-cancer risks for the groundwater to drinking water
pathway to well below EPA's criteria. Additionally, the groundwater
monitoring and corrective action required by the rule reduced risks
from current waste management units. This action does not adversely
affect these requirements and EPA believes that this rule will be
protective of children's health.
I. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution or Use
This action is not a ``significant energy action'' because it is
not likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution or use of energy. For the 2015 CCR rule, EPA analyzed the
potential impact on electricity prices relative to the ``in excess of
one percent'' threshold. Using the Integrated Planning Model (IPM), EPA
concluded that the 2015 CCR Rule may increase the weighted average
nationwide wholesale price of electricity between 0.18 percent and 0.19
percent in the years 2020 and 2030, respectively. As the proposed rule
represents a cost savings rule relative to the 2015 CCR rule, this
analysis concludes that any potential impact on wholesale electricity
prices will be lower than the potential impact estimated of the 2015
CCR rule; therefore, this proposed rule is not expected to meet the
criteria of a ``significant adverse effect'' on the electricity markets
as defined by Executive Order 13211.
J. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
K. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
EPA believes that this action does not have disproportionately high
and adverse human health or environmental effects on minority
populations, low-income populations and/or indigenous peoples, as
specified in Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994). The
documentation for this decision is contained in EPA's Regulatory Impact
Analysis (RIA) for the CCR rule which is available in the docket for
the 2015 CCR final rule as docket item EPA-HQ-RCRA-2009-0640-12034.
EPA's risk assessment did not separately evaluate either minority
or low-income populations. However, to evaluate the demographic
characteristics of communities that may be affected by the CCR rule,
the RIA for the 2015 CCR Rule compares the demographic characteristics
of populations surrounding coal-fired electric utility plants with
broader population data for two geographic areas: (1) One-mile radius
from CCR management units (i.e., landfills and impoundments) likely to
be affected by groundwater releases from both landfills and
impoundments; and (2) watershed catchment areas downstream of surface
impoundments that receive surface water run-off and releases from CCR
impoundments and are at risk of being contaminated from CCR impoundment
discharges (e.g., unintentional overflows, structural failures, and
intentional periodic discharges).
For the population as a whole 24.8 percent belong to a minority
group and 11.3 percent falls below the Federal Poverty Level. For the
population living within one mile of plants with surface impoundments
16.1 percent belong to a minority group and 13.2 percent live below the
Federal Poverty Level. These minority and low-income populations are
not disproportionately high compared to the general population. The
percentage of minority residents of the entire population living within
the catchment areas downstream of surface impoundments is
disproportionately high relative to the general population, i.e., 28.7
percent, versus 24.8 percent for the national population. Also, the
percentage of the population within the catchment areas of surface
impoundments that is below the Federal Poverty Level is
disproportionately high compared with the general population, i.e.,
18.6 percent versus 11.3 percent nationally.
L. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and EPA will submit a rule
report to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of
the United States. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5
U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 257
Environmental protection, Beneficial use, Coal combustion products,
Coal combustion residuals, Coal combustion waste, Disposal, Hazardous
waste, Landfill, Surface impoundment.
Andrew Wheeler,
Administrator.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, EPA amends title 40,
chapter
[[Page 53561]]
I, of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 257--CRITERIA FOR CLASSIFICATION OF SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL
FACILITIES AND PRACTICES
0
1. The authority citation for part 257 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6907(a)(3), 6912(a)(1), 6944, 6945(a) and
(d); 33 U.S.C. 1345(d) and (e).
0
2. Amend Sec. 257.53 by adding definitions in alphabetical order for
``Eligible unlined CCR surface impoundment,'' ``Technically feasible,''
and ``Technically infeasible'' to read as follows:
Sec. 257.53 Definitions.
* * * * *
Eligible unlined CCR surface impoundment means an existing CCR
surface impoundment that meets all of the following conditions:
(1) The owner or operator has documented that the CCR unit is in
compliance with the location restrictions specified under Sec. Sec.
257.60 through 257.64;
(2) The owner or operator has documented that the CCR unit is in
compliance with the periodic safety factor assessment requirements
under Sec. 257.73(e) and (f); and
(3) No constituent listed in Appendix IV to this part has been
detected at a statistically significant level exceeding a groundwater
protection standard defined under Sec. 257.95(h).
* * * * *
Technically feasible means possible to do in a way that would
likely be successful.
Technically infeasible means not possible to do in a way that would
likely be successful.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 257.71 by removing and reserving paragraph (a)(1)(i) and
revising paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (ii).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 257.71 Liner design criteria for existing CCR surface
impoundments.
(a) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) The owner or operator of the CCR unit determines that the CCR
unit is not constructed with a liner that meets the requirements of
paragraph (a)(1)(ii) or (iii) of this section; or
(ii) The owner or operator of the CCR unit fails to document
whether the CCR unit was constructed with a liner that meets the
requirements of paragraph (a)(1)(ii) or (iii) of this section.
* * * * *
0
4. Amend Sec. 257.90 by adding paragraph (e)(6) to read as follows:
Sec. 257.90 Applicability.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(6) A section at the beginning of the annual report that provides
an overview of the current status of groundwater monitoring and
corrective action programs for the CCR unit. At a minimum, the summary
must specify all of the following:
(i) At the start of the current annual reporting period, whether
the CCR unit was operating under the detection monitoring program in
Sec. 257.94 or the assessment monitoring program in Sec. 257.95;
(ii) At the end of the current annual reporting period, whether the
CCR unit was operating under the detection monitoring program in Sec.
257.94 or the assessment monitoring program in Sec. 257.95;
(iii) If it was determined that there was a statistically
significant increase over background for one or more constituents
listed in appendix III to this part pursuant to Sec. 257.94(e):
(A) Identify those constituents listed in appendix III to this part
and the names of the monitoring wells associated with such an increase;
and
(B) Provide the date when the assessment monitoring program was
initiated for the CCR unit.
(iv) If it was determined that there was a statistically
significant level above the groundwater protection standard for one or
more constituents listed in appendix IV to this part pursuant to Sec.
257.95(g) include all of the following:
(A) Identify those constituents listed in appendix IV to this part
and the names of the monitoring wells associated with such an increase;
(B) Provide the date when the assessment of corrective measures was
initiated for the CCR unit;
(C) Provide the date when the public meeting was held for the
assessment of corrective measures for the CCR unit; and
(D) Provide the date when the assessment of corrective measures was
completed for the CCR unit.
(v) Whether a remedy was selected pursuant to Sec. 257.97 during
the current annual reporting period, and if so, the date of remedy
selection; and
(vi) Whether remedial activities were initiated or are ongoing
pursuant to Sec. 257.98 during the current annual reporting period.
* * * * *
Sec. 257.91 [Amended]
0
5. Amend Sec. 257.91 by removing and reserving paragraph (d)(2).
0
6. Amend Sec. 257.95 by revising paragraph (g)(5) to read as follows:
Sec. 257.95 Assessment monitoring program.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(5) The owner or operator must prepare a notification stating that
an assessment of corrective measures has been initiated.
* * * * *
0
7. Amend Sec. 257.101 by revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (b)(1)(i) to
read as follows:
Sec. 257.101 Closure or retrofit of CCR units.
(a) * * *
(1) Except as provided by paragraph (a)(3) of this section, as soon
as technically feasible, but not later than April 11, 2021, an owner or
operator of an existing unlined CCR surface impoundment must cease
placing CCR and non-CCR wastestreams into such CCR surface impoundment
and either retrofit or close the CCR unit in accordance with the
requirements of Sec. 257.102.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1)(i) Location standard under Sec. 257.60. Except as provided by
paragraph (b)(4) of this section, the owner or operator of an existing
CCR surface impoundment that has not demonstrated compliance with the
location standard specified in Sec. 257.60(a) must cease placing CCR
and non-CCR wastestreams into such CCR unit as soon as technically
feasible, but no later than April 11, 2021, and close the CCR unit in
accordance with the requirements of Sec. 257.102.
* * * * *
0
8. Revise Sec. 257.103 to read as follows:
Sec. 257.103 Alternative closure requirements.
The owner or operator of a CCR landfill, CCR surface impoundment,
or any lateral expansion of a CCR unit that is subject to closure
pursuant to Sec. 257.101(a), (b)(1), or (d) may nevertheless continue
to receive the wastes specified in either paragraph (a), (b), (f)(1),
or (f)(2) of this section in the unit provided the owner or operator
meets all of the requirements contained in the respective paragraph.
(a) CCR landfills--(1) No alternative CCR disposal capacity.
Notwithstanding the provisions of Sec. 257.101(d), a CCR landfill may
continue to recieve CCR if the owner or operator of the CCR landfill
certifies that the CCR must
[[Page 53562]]
continue to be managed in that CCR landfill due to the absence of
alternative disposal capacity both on and off-site of the facility. To
qualify under this paragraph, the owner or operator of the CCR landfill
must document that all of the following conditions have been met:
(i) No alternative disposal capacity is available on or off-site.
An increase in costs or the inconvenience of existing capacity is not
sufficient to support qualification under this section;
(ii) The owner or operator has made, and continues to make, efforts
to obtain additional capacity. Qualification under this paragraph (a)
lasts only as long as no alternative capacity is available. Once
alternative capacity is identified, the owner or operator must arrange
to use such capacity as soon as feasible;
(iii) The owner or operator must remain in compliance with all
other requirements of this subpart, including the requirement to
conduct any necessary corrective action; and
(iv) The owner or operator must prepare the annual progress report
specified in paragraph (c) of this section documenting the continued
lack of alternative capacity and the progress towards the development
of alternative CCR disposal capacity.
(2) Once alternative capacity is available, the CCR landfill must
cease receiving CCR and initiate closure following the timeframes in
Sec. 257.102(e).
(3) If no alternative capacity is identified within five years
after the initial certification, the CCR landfill must cease receiving
CCR and close in accordance with the timeframes in Sec. 257.102(e) and
(f).
(b) CCR landfills--(1) Permanent cessation of a coal-fired
boiler(s) by a date certain. Notwithstanding the provisions of Sec.
257.101(d), a CCR landfill may continue to receive CCR if the owner or
operator certifies that the facility will cease operation of the coal-
fired boilers within the timeframe specified in paragraph (b)(4) of
this section, but in the interim period (prior to closure of the coal-
fired boiler), the facility must continue to use the CCR landfill due
to the absence of alternative disposal capacity both on and off-site of
the facility. To qualify under this paragraph, the owner or operator of
the CCR landfill must document that all of the following conditions
have been met:
(i) No alternative disposal capacity is available on or off-site.
An increase in costs or the inconvenience of existing capacity is not
sufficient to support qualification under this section.
(ii) The owner or operator must remain in compliance with all other
requirements of this subpart, including the requirement to conduct any
necessary corrective action; and
(iii) The owner or operator must prepare the annual progress report
specified in paragraph (c) of this section documenting the continued
lack of alternative capacity and the progress towards the closure of
the coal-fired boiler.
(2)-(3) [Reserved]
(4) For a CCR landfill, the coal-fired boiler must cease operation,
and the CCR landfill must complete closure no later than April 19,
2021.
(c) Required notices and progress reports for CCR landfills. An
owner or operator of a CCR landfill that closes in accordance with
paragraph (a) or (b) of this section must complete the notices and
progress reports specified in paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this
section.
(1) Within six months of becoming subject to closure pursuant to
Sec. 257.101(d), the owner or operator must prepare and place in the
facility's operating record a notification of intent to comply with the
alternative closure requirements of this section. The notification must
describe why the CCR landfill qualifies for the alternative closure
provisions under either paragraph (a) or (b) of this section, in
addition to providing the documentation and certifications required by
paragraph (a) or (b) of this section.
(2) The owner or operator must prepare the periodic progress
reports required by paragraph (a)(1)(iv) or (b)(1)(iii) of this
section, in addition to describing any problems encountered and a
description of the actions taken to resolve the problems. The annual
progress reports must be completed according to the following schedule:
(i) The first annual progress report must be prepared no later than
13 months after completing the notification of intent to comply with
the alternative closure requirements required by paragraph (c)(1) of
this section.
(ii) The second annual progress report must be prepared no later
than 12 months after completing the first annual progress report.
Subsequent annual progress reports must be prepared within 12 months of
completing the previous annual progress report.
(iii) The owner or operator has completed the progress reports
specified in this paragraph (c)(2) when the reports are placed in the
facility's operating record as required by Sec. 257.105(i)(11).
(3) An owner or operator of a CCR landfill must also prepare the
notification of intent to close a CCR landfill as required by Sec.
257.102(g).
(d) CCR landfill recordkeeping. The owner or operator of the CCR
landfill must comply with the recordkeeping requirements specified in
Sec. 257.105(i), the notification requirements specified in Sec.
257.106(i), and the internet requirements specified in Sec.
257.107(i).
(e) [Reserved]
(f) Site-specific alternative deadlines to initiate closure of CCR
surface impoundments. Notwithstanding the provisions of Sec.
257.101(a) and (b)(1), a CCR surface impoundment may continue to
receive the waste specified in paragraph (f)(1) or (2) of this section,
provided the owner or operator submits a demonstration that the
criteria in either paragraph (f)(1) or (2) of this section have been
met. The demonstration must be submitted to the Administrator or the
Participating State Director no later than the relevant deadline in
paragraph (f)(3) of this section. The Administrator or the
Participating State Director will act on the submission in accordance
with the procedures in paragraph (f)(3) of this section.
(1) Development of alternative capacity is technically infeasible.
Notwithstanding the provisions of Sec. 257.101(a) and (b)(1), a CCR
surface impoundment may continue to receive the waste specified in
paragraph (f)(1)(ii)(A) or (B) of this section, provided the owner or
operator demonstrates the wastestream(s) must continue to be managed in
that CCR surface impoundment because it was technically infeasible to
complete the measures necessary to provide alternative disposal
capacity on or off-site of the facility by April 11, 2021. To obtain
approval under this paragraph all of the following criteria must be
met:
(i) No alternative disposal capacity is available on or off-site.
An increase in costs or the inconvenience of existing capacity is not
sufficient to support qualification under this section;
(ii)(A) For units closing pursuant to Sec. 257.101(a) and
(b)(1)(i), CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams must continue to be managed
in that CCR surface impoundment because it was technically infeasible
to complete the measures necessary to obtain alternative disposal
capacity either on or off-site of the facility by April 11, 2021.
(B) For units closing pursuant to Sec. 257.101(b)(1)(ii), CCR must
continue to be managed in that CCR surface impoundment because it was
technically infeasible to complete the measures necessary to obtain
alternative disposal capacity either on or off-site of the facility by
April 11, 2021.
(iii) The facility is in compliance with all of the requirements of
this subpart.
[[Page 53563]]
(iv) The owner or operator of the CCR surface impoundment must
submit documentation that the criteria in paragraphs (f)(1)(i) through
(iii) of this section have been met by submitting to the Administrator
or the Participating State Director all of the following:
(A) To demonstrate that the criteria in paragraphs (f)(1)(i) and
(ii) of this section have been met the owner or operator must submit a
workplan that contains all of the following elements:
(1) A written narrative discussing the options considered both on
and off-site to obtain alternative capacity for each CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams, the technical infeasibility of obtaining alternative
capacity prior to April 11, 2021, and the option selected and
justification for the alternative capacity selected. The narrative must
also include all of the following:
(i) An in-depth analysis of the site and any site-specific
conditions that led to the decision to select the alternative capacity
being developed;
(ii) An analysis of the adverse impact to plant operations if the
CCR surface impoundment in question were to no longer be available for
use; and
(iii) A detailed explanation and justification for the amount of
time being requested and how it is the fastest technically feasible
time to complete the development of the alternative capacity;
(2) A detailed schedule of the fastest technically feasible time to
complete the measures necessary for alternative capacity to be
available including a visual timeline representation. The visual
timeline must clearly show all of the following:
(i) How each phase and the steps within that phase interact with or
are dependent on each other and the other phases;
(ii) All of the steps and phases that can be completed
concurrently;
(iii) The total time needed to obtain the alternative capacity and
how long each phase and step within each phase will take; and
(iv) At a minimum, the following phases: Engineering and design,
contractor selection, equipment fabrication and delivery, construction,
and start up and implementation.;
(3) A narrative discussion of the schedule and visual timeline
representation, which must discuss all of the following:
(i) Why the length of time for each phase and step is needed and a
discussion of the tasks that occur during the specific step;
(ii) Why each phase and step shown on the chart must happen in the
order it is occurring;
(iii) The tasks that occur during each of the steps within the
phase; and
(iv) Anticipated worker schedules; and
(4) A narrative discussion of the progress the owner or operator
has made to obtain alternative capacity for the CCR and/or non-CCR
wastestreams. The narrative must discuss all the steps taken, starting
from when the owner or operator initiated the design phase up to the
steps occurring when the demonstration is being compiled. It must
discuss where the facility currently is on the timeline and the efforts
that are currently being undertaken to develop alternative capacity.
(B) To demonstrate that the criteria in paragraph (f)(1)(iii) of
this section have been met, the owner or operator must submit all of
the following:
(1) A certification signed by the owner or operator that the
facility is in compliance with all of the requirements of this subpart;
(2) Visual representation of hydrogeologic information at and
around the CCR unit(s) that supports the design, construction and
installation of the groundwater monitoring system. This includes all of
the following:
(i) Map(s) of groundwater monitoring well locations in relation to
the CCR unit(s);
(ii) Well construction diagrams and drilling logs for all
groundwater monitoring wells; and
(iii) Maps that characterize the direction of groundwater flow
accounting for seasonal variations;
(3) Constituent concentrations, summarized in table form, at each
groundwater monitoring well monitored during each sampling event;
(4) A description of site hydrogeology including stratigraphic
cross-sections;
(5) Any corrective measures assessment conducted as required at
Sec. 257.96;
(6) Any progress reports on corrective action remedy selection and
design and the report of final remedy selection required at Sec.
257.97(a);
(7) The most recent structural stability assessment required at
Sec. 257.73(d); and
(8) The most recent safety factor assessment required at Sec.
257.73(e).
(v) As soon as alternative capacity for any CCR or non-CCR
wastestream is available, the CCR surface impoundment must cease
receiving that CCR or non-CCR wastestream. Once the CCR surface
impoundment ceases receipt of all CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams, the
CCR surface impoundment must initiate closure following the timeframes
in Sec. 257.102(e) and (f).
(vi) Maximum time frames. All CCR surface impoundments covered by
this section must cease receiving waste by the deadlines specified in
paragraphs (f)(1)(vi)(A) and (B) of this section and close in
accordance with the timeframes in Sec. 257.102(e) and (f).
(A) Except as provided by paragraph (f)(1)(vi)(B) of this section,
no later than October 15, 2023.
(B) An eligible unlined CCR surface impoundment must cease
receiving CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams no later than October 15,
2024. In order to continue to operate until October 15, 2024, the owner
or operator must demonstrate that the unit meets the definition of an
eligible unlined CCR surface impoundment.
(vii) An owner or operator may seek additional time beyond the time
granted in the initial approval by making the showing in paragraphs
(f)(1)(i) through (iv) of this section, provided that no facility may
be granted time to operate the impoundment beyond the maximum allowable
time frames provided in Sec. 257.103(f)(1)(vi).
(viii) The owner or operator at all times bears responsibility for
demonstrating qualification under this section. Failure to remain in
compliance with any of the requirements of this subpart will result in
the automatic loss of authorization under this section.
(ix) The owner or operator must:
(A) Upon submission of the demonstration to the Administrator or
the Participating State Director, prepare and place in the facility's
operating record a notification that it has submitted the
demonstration, along with a copy of the demonstration. An owner or
operator that claims CBI in the demonstration may post a redacted
version of the demonstration to its publicly accessible CCR internet
site provided that it contains sufficient detail so that the public can
meaningfully comment on the demonstration.
(B) Upon receipt of a decision pursuant to paragraph (f)(3) of this
section, must prepare and place in the facility's operating record a
copy of the decision.
(C) If an extension of an approved deadline pursuant to paragraph
(f)(1)(vii) of this section has been requested, place a copy of the
request submitted to the Administrator or the Participating State
Director in the facility's operating record.
(x) The owner or operator must prepare semi-annual progress
reports. The semi-annual progress reports must contain all of the
following elements:
[[Page 53564]]
(A) Discussion of the progress made to date in obtaining
alternative capacity, including:
(1) Discussion of the current stage of obtaining the capacity in
reference to the timeline required under paragraph (f)(1)(iv)(A) of
this section;
(2) Discussion of whether the owner or operator is on schedule for
obtaining alternative capacity;
(3) If the owner or operator is not on or ahead of schedule for
obtaining alternative capacity, the following must be included:
(i) Discussion of any problems encountered, and a description of
the actions taken or planned to resolve the problems and get back on
schedule; and
(ii) Discussion of the goals for the next six months and major
milestones to be achieved for obtaining alternative capacity; and
(B) Discussion of any planned operational changes at the facility.
(xi) The progress reports must be completed according to the
following schedule:
(A) The semi-annual progress reports must be prepared no later than
April 30 and October 31 of each year for the duration of the
alternative cease receipt of waste deadline.
(B) The first semi-annual progress report must be prepared by
whichever date, April 30 or October 31, is soonest after receiving
approval from the Administrator or the Participating State Director;
and
(C) The owner or operator has completed the progress reports
specified in paragraph (f)(1)(x) of this section when the reports have
been placed in the facility's operating record as required by Sec.
257.105(i)(17).
(xii) The owner or operator must prepare the notification of intent
to close a CCR surface impoundment as required by Sec. 257.102(g).
(xiii) The owner or operator must comply with the recordkeeping
requirements specified in Sec. 257.105(i), the notification
requirements specified in Sec. 257.106(i), and the internet posting
requirements in Sec. 257.107(i).
(2) Permanent cessation of a coal-fired boiler(s) by a date
certain. Notwithstanding the provisions of Sec. 257.101(a), and
(b)(1), a CCR surface impoundment may continue to receive CCR and/or
non-CCR wastestreams if the facility will cease operation of the coal-
fired boiler(s) and complete closure of the impoundment within the
timeframes specified in paragraph (f)(2)(iv) of this section, but in
the interim period (prior to closure of the coal-fired boiler), the
facility must continue to use the CCR surface impoundment due to the
absence of alternative disposal capacity both on and off-site of the
facility. To qualify under this paragraph all of the following criteria
must be met:
(i) No alternative disposal capacity is available on or off-site.
An increase in costs or the inconvenience of existing capacity is not
sufficient to support qualification under this section.
(ii) Potential risks to human health and the environment from the
continued operation of the CCR surface impoundment have been adequately
mitigated;
(iii) The facility is in compliance with all other requirements of
this subpart, including the requirement to conduct any necessary
corrective action; and
(iv) The coal-fired boilers must cease operation and closure of the
impoundment must be completed within the following timeframes:
(A) For a CCR surface impoundment that is 40 acres or smaller, the
coal-fired boiler(s) must cease operation and the CCR surface
impoundment must complete closure no later than October 17, 2023.
(B) For a CCR surface impoundment that is larger than 40 acres, the
coal-fired boiler(s) must cease operation, and the CCR surface
impoundment must complete closure no later than October 17, 2028.
(v) The owner or operator of the CCR surface impoundment must
submit the following documentation that the criteria in paragraphs
(f)(2)(i) through (iv) of this section have been met as specified in
paragraphs (f)(2)(v)(A) through (D) of this section.
(A) To demonstrate that the criteria in paragraph (f)(2)(i) of this
section have been met the owner or operator must submit a narrative
that explains the options considered to obtain alternative capacity for
CCR and/or non-CCR wastestreams both on and off-site.
(B) To demonstrate that the criteria in paragraph (f)(2)(ii) of
this section have been met the owner or operator must submit a risk
mitigation plan describing the measures that will be taken to expedite
any required corrective action, and that contains all of the following
elements:
(1) A discussion of any physical or chemical measures a facility
can take to limit any future releases to groundwater during operation.
(2) A discussion of the surface impoundment's groundwater
monitoring data and any found exceedances; the delineation of the plume
(if necessary based on the groundwater monitoring data); identification
of any nearby receptors that might be exposed to current or future
groundwater contamination; and how such exposures could be promptly
mitigated.
(3) A plan to expedite and maintain the containment of any
contaminant plume that is either present or identified during continued
operation of the unit.
(C) To demonstrate that the criteria in paragraph (f)(2)(iii) of
this section have been met, the owner or operator must submit all of
the following:
(1) A certification signed by the owner or operator that the
facility is in compliance with all of the requirements of this subpart;
(2) Visual representation of hydrogeologic information at and
around the CCR unit(s) that supports the design, construction and
installation of the groundwater monitoring system. This includes all of
the following:
(i) Map(s) of groundwater monitoring well locations in relation to
the CCR unit;
(ii) Well construction diagrams and drilling logs for all
groundwater monitoring wells; and
(iii) Maps that characterize the direction of groundwater flow
accounting for seasonal variations;
(3) Constituent concentrations, summarized in table form, at each
groundwater monitoring well monitored during each sampling event;
(4) Description of site hydrogeology including stratigraphic cross-
sections;
(5) Any corrective measures assessment required at Sec. 257.96;
(6) Any progress reports on remedy selection and design and the
report of final remedy selection required at Sec. 257.97(a);
(7) The most recent structural stability assessment required at
Sec. 257.73(d); and
(8) The most recent safety factor assessment required at Sec.
257.73(e).
(D) To demonstrate that the criteria in paragraph (f)(2)(iv) of
this section have been met, the owner or operator must submit the
closure plan required by Sec. 257.102(b) and a narrative that
specifies and justifies the date by which they intend to cease receipt
of waste into the unit in order to meet the closure deadlines.
(vi) The owner or operator at all times bears responsibility for
demonstrating qualification for authorization under this section.
Failure to remain in compliance with any of the requirements of this
subpart will result in the automatic loss of authorization under this
section.
(vii) The owner or operator must comply with the recordkeeping
requirements specified in Sec. 257.105(i), the notification
requirements specified in Sec. 257.106(i), and the internet posting
requirements in Sec. 257.107(i).
(viii) Upon submission of the demonstration to the Administrator or
[[Page 53565]]
the Participating State Director the owner or operator must prepare and
place in the facility's operating record and on its publicly accessible
CCR internet site a notification that is has submitted a demonstration
along with a copy of the demonstration.
(ix) Upon receipt of a decision pursuant to paragraph (f)(3) of
this section, the owner or operator must place a copy of the decision
in the facility's operating record and on the facility's publicly
accessible CCR internet site.
(x) The owner or operator must prepare an annual progress report
documenting the continued lack of alternative capacity and the progress
towards the closure of the CCR surface impoundment. The owner or
operator has completed the progress report when the report has been
placed in the facility's operating record as required by Sec.
257.105(i)(20).
(3) Process to Obtain Authorization. (i) Deadlines for Submission.
(A) The owner or operator must submit the demonstration required under
paragraph (f)(1)(iv) of this section, for an alternative cease receipt
of waste deadline for a CCR surface impoundment pursuant to paragraph
(f)(1) of this section, to the Administrator or the Participating State
Director for approval no later than November 30, 2020.
(B) An owner or operator may seek additional time beyond the time
granted in the initial approval, in accordance with paragraph
(f)(1)(vii) of this section, by submitting a new demonstration, as
required under paragraph (f)(1)(iv) of this section, to the
Administrator or the Participating State Director for approval, no
later than fourteen days from determining that the cease receipt of
waste deadline will not be met.
(C) The owner or operator must submit the demonstration required
under paragraph (f)(2)(v) of this section to the Administrator for
approval no later than November 30, 2020.
(ii) EPA will evaluate the demonstration and may request additional
information to complete its review. Submission of a complete
demonstration will toll the facility's deadline to cease receipt of
waste until issuance of a decision under paragraph (f)(3)(iv) of this
section. Incomplete submissions will not toll the facility's deadline
and will be rejected without further process. All decisions issued
under this paragraph or paragraph (f)(3)(iv) of this section will
contain the facility's deadline to cease receipt of waste.
(iii) EPA will publish its proposed decision on a complete
demonstration in a docket on www.regulations.gov for a 15-day comment
period. If the demonstration is particularly complex, EPA will provide
a comment period of 20 to 30 days.
(iv) After consideration of the comments, EPA will issue its
decision on the alternative compliance deadline within four months of
receiving a complete demonstration.
(4) Transferring between site-specific alternatives. An owner or
operator authorized to continue operating a CCR surface impoundment
under this section may at any time request authorization to continue
operating the impoundment pursuant to another paragraph of subsection
(f), by submitting the information in paragraph (f)(4)(i) or (ii) of
this section.
(i) Transfer from Sec. 257.103(f)(1) to Sec. 257.103(f)(2). The
owner or operator of a surface impoundment authorized to operate
pursuant to paragraph (f)(1) of this section may request authorization
to instead operate the surface impoundment in accordance with the
requirements of paragraph (f)(2) of this section, by submitting a new
demonstration that meets the requirements of paragraph (f)(2)(v) of
this section to the Administrator or the Participating State Director.
EPA will approve the request only upon determining that the criteria at
paragraphs (f)(2)(i) through (iv) have been met.
(ii) Transfer from Sec. 257.103(f)(2) to Sec. 257.103(f)(1). The
owner or operator of a surface impoundment authorized to operate
pursuant to paragraph (f)(2) of this section may request authorization
to instead operate the surface impoundment in accordance with the
requirements of paragraph (f)(1) of this section, by submitting a new
demonstration that meets the requirements of paragraph (f)(1)(iv) of
this section to the Administrator or the Participating State Director.
EPA will approve the request only upon determining that the criteria at
paragraphs (f)(1)(i) through (iii) and (vi) of this section have been
met.
(iii) The procedures in paragraph (f)(3) of this section will apply
to all requests for transfer under this paragraph.
0
9. Amend Sec. 257.105 by adding paragraphs (i)(14) through (20) to
read as follows:
Sec. 257.105 Recordkeeping requirements.
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(14) The notification of intent to comply with the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to development of alternative
capacity infeasible as required by Sec. 257.103(f)(1)(ix)(A).
(15) The approved or denied demonstration for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to development of alternative
capacity infeasible as required by Sec. 257.103(f)(1)(ix)(B).
(16) The notification for requesting additional time to the
alternative cease receipt of waste deadline as required by Sec.
257.103(f)(1)(ix)(C).
(17) The semi-annual progress reports for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to development of alternative
capacity infeasible as required by Sec. 257.103(f)(1)(xi).
(18) The notification of intent to comply with the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to permanent cessation of a
coal-fired boiler(s) by a date certain as required by Sec.
257.103(f)(2)(viii).
(19) The approved or denied demonstration for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to permanent cessation of a
coal-fired boiler(s) by a date certain as required by Sec.
257.103(f)(2)(ix).
(20) The annual progress report for the site-specific alternative
to initiation of closure due to permanent cessation of a coal-fired
boiler(s) by a date certain as required by Sec. 257.103(f)(2)(x).
* * * * *
0
10. Amend Sec. 257.106 by adding paragraphs (i)(14) through (20).
Sec. 257.106 Notification requirements.
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(14) Provide the notification of intent to comply with the site-
specific alternative to initiation of closure due to development of
alternative capacity infeasible as specified under Sec.
257.105(i)(14).
(15) Provide the approved or denied demonstration for the site-
specific alternative to initiation of closure due to development of
alternative capacity infeasible as required by as specified under Sec.
257.105(i)(15).
(16) Provide the notification for requesting additional time to the
alternative cease receipt of waste deadline as required by Sec.
257.105(i)(16).
(17) The semi-annual progress reports for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to development of alternative
capacity infeasible as specified under Sec. 257.105(i)(17).
(18) Provide the notification of intent to comply with the site-
specific alternative to initiation of closure due to permanent
cessation of a coal-fired boiler(s) by a date certain as specified
under Sec. 257.105(i)(18).
[[Page 53566]]
(19) Provide the approved or denied demonstration for the site-
specific alternative to initiation of closure due to permanent
cessation of a coal-fired boiler(s) by a date certain as required by
Sec. 257.105(i)(19).
(20) The annual progress report for the site-specific alternative
to initiation of closure due to permanent cessation of a coal-fired
boiler(s) by a date certain as required by Sec. 257.105(i)(20).
* * * * *
0
11. Amend Sec. 257.107 by revising paragraph (a) and adding paragraphs
(i)(14) through (20) to read as follows:
Sec. 257.107 Publicly accessible internet site requirements.
(a) Each owner or operator of a CCR unit subject to the
requirements of this subpart must maintain a publicly accessible
internet site (CCR website) containing the information specified in
this section. The owner or operator's website must be titled ``CCR Rule
Compliance Data and Information.'' The website must ensure that all
information required to be posted is immediately available to anyone
visiting the site, without requiring any prerequisite, such as
registration or a requirement to submit a document request. All
required information must be clearly identifiable and must be able to
be immediately printed and downloaded by anyone accessing the site. If
the owner/operator changes the web address (i.e., Uniform Resource
Locator (URL)) at any point, they must notify EPA via the ``contact
us'' form on EPA's CCR website and the state director within 14 days of
making the change. The facility's CCR website must also have a
``contact us'' form or a specific email address posted on the website
for the public to use to submit questions and issues relating to the
availability of information on the website.
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(14) The notification of intent to comply with the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to development of alternative
capacity infeasible as specified under Sec. 257.105(i)(14).
(15) The approved or denied demonstration for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to development of alternative
capacity infeasible as required by as specified under Sec.
257.105(i)(15).
(16) The notification for requesting additional time to the
alternative cease receipt of waste deadline as required by Sec.
257.105(i)(16).
(17) The semi-annual progress reports for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to development of alternative
capacity infeasible as specified under Sec. 257.105(i)(17).
(18) The notification of intent to comply with the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to permanent cessation of a
coal-fired boiler(s) by a date certain as specified under Sec.
257.105(i)(18).
(19) The approved or denied demonstration for the site-specific
alternative to initiation of closure due to permanent cessation of a
coal-fired boiler(s) by a date certain as required by Sec.
257.105(i)(19).
(20) The annual progress report for the site-specific alternative
to initiation of closure due to permanent cessation of a coal-fired
boiler(s) by a date certain as required by Sec. 257.105(i)(20).
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2020-16872 Filed 8-27-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P