Non-Hazardous Secondary Material Standards; Response to Petition, 71761-71775 [2023-22878]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
NAAQS in the majority of the
nonattainment areas nationwide for the
2015 ozone NAAQS. This final action
treats all of the identified States with
reclassified Moderate nonattainment
areas consistently, in making findings of
failure to submit required SIPs.
The Administrator finds that this is a
matter on which national uniformity is
desirable to take advantage of the D.C.
Circuit’s administrative law expertise
and facilitate the orderly development
of the basic law under the CAA. The
Administrator also finds that
consolidated review of this action in the
D.C. Circuit will avoid piecemeal
litigation in the regional circuits, further
judicial economy, and eliminate the risk
of inconsistent results for different
States. The Administrator also finds that
a nationally consistent approach to the
CAA’s mandate concerning
reclassification of areas that fail to attain
the 2015 ozone NAAQS constitutes the
best use of agency resources. The
Administrator is publishing his finding
that this action is based on a
determination of nationwide scope or
effect in the Federal Register as part of
this final action.
For these reasons, this final action is
nationally applicable or, alternatively,
the Administrator is exercising the
complete discretion afforded to him by
the CAA and finds that this final action
is based on a determination of
nationwide scope or effect for purposes
of CAA section 307(b)(1) and is
publishing that finding in the Federal
Register. Under section 307(b)(1) of the
CAA, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit by December 18,
2023.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedures,
Air pollution control, Approval and
promulgation of implementation plans,
Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Joseph Goffman,
Principal Deputy Assistant Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2023–22987 Filed 10–17–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 241
[EPA–HQ–OLEM–2020–0550; FRL–7815–
01–OLEM]
RIN 2050–AH13
Non-Hazardous Secondary Material
Standards; Response to Petition
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency is finalizing its denial of a
rulemaking petition from American
Forest and Paper Association et al.
requesting amendments to the NonHazardous Secondary Materials
regulations, initially promulgated on
March 21, 2011, and amended on
February 7, 2013, February 8, 2016, and
February 7, 2018, under the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act. These
regulations establish standards and
procedures for identifying whether nonhazardous secondary materials are solid
wastes when legitimately used as fuels
or ingredients in combustion units. The
petition requested the following
amendments: Change the legitimacy
criterion for comparison of
contaminants in the non-hazardous
secondary material against those in the
traditional fuel the unit is designed to
burn from mandatory to ‘‘should
consider’’; remove associated designed
to burn and other limitations for
creosote-treated railroad ties; and revise
the definition of ‘‘paper recycling
residuals’’ to remove the limit on nonfiber materials in paper recycling
residuals that can be burned as a nonwaste fuel. The Environmental
Protection Agency proposed to deny the
petition on January 28, 2022. After
review of the public comments, the
Agency is finalizing its denial of the
requested amendments. In addition to
denying this rulemaking petition, the
Agency is revising the definition of
paper recycling residuals to limit the
impact non-fiber materials may have on
the heat value of paper recycling
residuals in order for them to be
considered a non-waste fuel.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
December 18, 2023.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–HQ–OLEM–2020–0550. 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
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
71761
Information 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:
Patrick Wise, Office of Resource
Conservation and Recovery, Materials
Recovery and Waste Management
Division (MC 5303P), Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20460;
telephone number: 202–566–0520;
email address: wise.patrick@epa.gov.
The
following outline is provided to aid in
locating information in this preamble.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
Used in This Proposed Rule
B. What is the statutory authority for this
proposed rule?
C. Does this proposed rule apply to me?
II. Background
A. History of Non-Hazardous Secondary
Materials Rulemaking
B. Summary of This Action
C. Summary of the Petitioners’ Requested
Changes
D. Background on Creosote-Treated
Railroad Ties
III. EPA Response to Petitioners’ Requested
Changes
IV. Effect of This Rule on Other Programs
V. State Authority
A. Relationship to State Programs
B. State Adoption of the Rulemaking
VI. Costs and Benefits
VII. Children’s Health
VIII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
To Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
71762
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
I. General Information
A. List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
Used in This Rule
AAR Association of American Railroads
AF&PA American Forest and Paper
Association
ASLRRA American Short Line and Regional
Railroad Association
AWC American Wood Council
Btu British thermal unit
CAA Clean Air Act
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CISWI Commercial and Industrial Solid
Waste Incinerator
CTRT Creosote-treated railroad ties
EPA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
FR Federal Register
HAP Hazardous air pollutants
ISRI Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries
MACT Maximum achievable control
technology
NAICS North American Industrial
Classification System
NHSM Non-hazardous secondary material
OMB Office of Management and Budget
PRR Paper recycling residuals
RCRA Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act
RIN Regulatory information number
SO2 Sulfur dioxide
SVOC Semi-volatile organic compound
TWC Treated Wood Council
U.S.C. United States Code
B. What is the statutory authority for
this final rule?
The Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA or ‘‘the Agency’’) is finalizing its
denial of the requested revisions in the
American Forest and Paper Association
(AF&PA) petition 1 and is making
regulatory revisions to the definition of
paper recycling residuals under the
authority of sections 2002(a)(1) and
1004(27) of the Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act (RCRA), as amended,
42 U.S.C. 6912(a)(1) and 6903(27).
Section 129(a)(1)(D) of the Clean Air Act
(CAA) directs the EPA to establish
standards for Commercial and Industrial
Solid Waste Incinerators (CISWI), which
burn solid waste. Section 129(g)(6) of
the CAA provides that the term ‘‘solid
waste’’ is to be established by the EPA
under RCRA (42 U.S.C. 7429(g)(6)).
Section 2002(a)(1) of RCRA authorizes
the Agency to promulgate regulations as
are necessary to carry out its functions
under the Act. The statutory definition
of ‘‘solid waste’’ is stated in RCRA
section 1004(27).
C. Does this final rule apply to me?
Categories and entities potentially
affected by this action, either directly or
indirectly, include, but may not be
limited to the following:
GENERATORS AND POTENTIAL USERS a OF CATEGORICAL NON-WASTE FUELS
NAICS b
Primary industry category or subcategory
Utilities .................................................................................................................................................................................................
Manufacturing ......................................................................................................................................................................................
Wood Product Manufacturing ..............................................................................................................................................................
Sawmills ...............................................................................................................................................................................................
Wood Preservation (includes railroad tie creosote treating) ...............................................................................................................
Paper Manufacturing ...........................................................................................................................................................................
Cement Manufacturing ........................................................................................................................................................................
Rail Transportation (includes line haul and short line) ........................................................................................................................
Scenic and Sightseeing Transportation, Land (Includes: railroad, scenic and sightseeing) ..............................................................
Port and Harbor Operations (Used railroad ties) ................................................................................................................................
Landscaping Services ..........................................................................................................................................................................
Solid Waste Collection .........................................................................................................................................................................
Solid Waste Landfill .............................................................................................................................................................................
Solid Waste Combustors and Incinerators ..........................................................................................................................................
Marinas ................................................................................................................................................................................................
a Includes:
221
31, 32, 33
321
321113
321114
322
32731
482
487110
488310
561730
562111
562212
562213
713930
Major Source Boilers, Area Source Boilers, and Solid Waste Incinerators.
American Industrial Classification System.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
b NAICS—North
This table is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
for readers regarding entities potentially
impacted by this action. This table lists
examples of the types of entities which
the EPA is aware of that could
potentially be affected by this action.
Other types of entities not listed could
also be affected. To determine whether
your facility, company, business,
organization, etc., is affected by this
action, you should examine the
applicability criteria in this rule. If you
have any questions regarding the
applicability of this action to a
particular entity, consult the person
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section.
II. Background
The non-hazardous secondary
materials (NHSM) regulations establish
standards and procedures for
identifying when non-hazardous
secondary materials burned in
combustion units are solid wastes. The
RCRA statute defines ‘‘solid waste’’ as
‘‘any garbage, refuse, sludge from a
waste treatment plant, water supply
treatment plant, or air pollution control
facility and other discarded material
. . . resulting from industrial,
commercial, mining, and agricultural
operations, and from community
activities.’’ (RCRA section 1004(27)
(emphasis added)). The key concept is
that of ‘‘discard’’ and, in fact, this
definition hinges on the meaning of the
phrase ‘‘other discarded material,’’ since
this term encompasses all other
examples provided in the definition.
The meaning of ‘‘solid waste,’’ as
defined under RCRA, is of particular
importance as it relates to section 129 of
the CAA. If a material or any portion
thereof is a solid waste under RCRA, a
combustion unit burning it is required
to meet the CAA section 129 emission
standards for solid waste incineration
units (NRDC v. EPA, 489 F.3d 1250,
1258). If the material is not a solid
waste, combustion units are required to
meet the CAA section 112 emission
standards. CAA section 129 further
states that the term ‘‘solid waste’’ shall
have the meaning ‘‘established by the
Administrator pursuant to the Solid
Waste Disposal Act’’ (42 U.S.C.
1 Petition for Rulemaking to Amend the
Legitimacy Criteria in 40 CFR part 241,—The
Categorical Non-Waste Fuels Classification Criteria
for Creosote Treated Railroad Ties and Other
Treated Railroads Ties, and the Definition of Paper
Recycling Residuals, December 7, 2018, available in
docket (EPA–HQ–OLEM–2020–0550).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
A. History of the Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials Rulemaking
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
7429(g)(6)). The Solid Waste Disposal
Act, as amended, is commonly referred
to as RCRA.
The Agency first solicited comments
on how the RCRA definition of solid
waste should apply to NHSMs when
used as fuels or ingredients in
combustion units in an advance notice
of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM),
which was published in the Federal
Register on January 2, 2009 (74 FR 41).
The EPA then published an NHSM
proposed rule on June 4, 2010 (75 FR
31844), which the EPA finalized on
March 21, 2011 (76 FR 15456).
In the March 21, 2011 rule, the EPA
finalized standards and procedures to be
used to identify whether NHSMs are
solid wastes when used as fuels or
ingredients in combustion units.
‘‘Secondary material’’ was defined for
the purposes of that rulemaking as any
material that is not the primary product
of a manufacturing or commercial
process, and can include post-consumer
material, off-specification commercial
chemical products or manufacturing
chemical intermediates, post-industrial
material, and scrap (codified at 40 CFR
241.2). ‘‘Non-hazardous secondary
material’’ is a secondary material that,
when discarded, would not be
identified as a hazardous waste under
40 CFR part 261 (codified at 40 CFR
241.2). Traditional fuels, including
historically managed traditional fuels
(e.g., coal, oil, natural gas) and
‘‘alternative’’ traditional fuels (e.g.,
clean cellulosic biomass), are not
secondary materials and thus are not
solid wastes under the rule unless
discarded (codified at 40 CFR 241.2).
A key concept included in the March
21, 2011 rule is that NHSMs used as
non-waste fuels in combustion units
regulated under CAA section 112 must
meet the legitimacy criteria specified in
40 CFR 241.3(d)(1); otherwise, NHSMs
must be combusted in incinerator units
regulated under CAA section 129.
Application of the legitimacy criteria
helps ensure that the fuel product is
being legitimately and beneficially used
and not simply being discarded through
combustion. To meet the legitimacy
criteria, the NHSM must be managed as
a valuable commodity, have a
meaningful heating value and be used as
a fuel in a combustion unit that recovers
energy, and contain contaminants or
groups of contaminants at concentration
levels comparable to (or lower than)
those in traditional fuels which the
combustion unit is designed to burn.
The NHSM legitimacy criteria have been
in place since 2011 and were upheld by
the D.C. Circuit Court in Solvay v. EPA.
608 Fed. Appx. 10 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (45
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
ELR 20107 Nos. 11–1189, (D.C. Cir., 06/
03/2015)).
Based on these criteria, the March 21,
2011 rule identified the following
NHSMs as not being solid wastes:
• The NHSM that meets the
legitimacy criteria and is used as a fuel
and that remains within the control of
the generator (whether at the site of
generation or another site the generator
has control over) (40 CFR 241.3(b)(1));
• The NHSM that meets the
legitimacy criteria and is used as an
ingredient in a combustion unit
(whether by the generator or outside the
control of the generator) (40 CFR
241.3(b)(3));
• Discarded NHSM that has been
sufficiently processed to produce a fuel
or ingredient that meets the legitimacy
criteria (40 CFR 241.3(b)(4)); or
• On a case-by-case petition basis,
NHSM that has been determined to have
been handled outside the control of the
generator, has not been discarded and is
indistinguishable in all relevant aspects
from a fuel product, and meets the
legitimacy criteria (40 CFR 241.3(c)).
In 2013, the EPA amended the NHSM
rules to ‘‘clarify several provisions in
order to implement the non-hazardous
secondary materials rule as the Agency
originally intended.’’ 2 While the 2013
final rule did not contain any provisions
specific to creosote-treated railroad ties
(CTRT), the EPA noted that AF&PA and
the American Wood Council submitted
a letter with supporting information on
December 6, 2012, seeking a categorical
non-waste determination for CTRT
combusted in any unit.3 The EPA
discussed at the time that the Agency
was reviewing the petition and also
asked petitioners to provide additional
information regarding CTRT, including
industry sectors that burn CTRT; types
of combustion units; types of traditional
fuels that could otherwise be burned in
these combustion units; extent of use of
CTRT in non-industrial boilers; and
laboratory analyses of CTRT for the
contaminants, as defined under 40 CFR
241.2, known to be significant
components of creosote, such as
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. The
EPA also provided notice that, assuming
the additional information supported
the petitioners’ representations, the
Agency intended to propose a
categorical non-waste fuel
determination for CTRT.
On February 8, 2016 (81 FR 6687), the
EPA published final NHSM rule
2 Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste
Incineration Units: Reconsideration and Final
Amendments; Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
That Are Solid Waste; Final Rule. 78 FR 9112,
February 7, 2013.
3 78 FR 9173, February 7, 2013.
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
71763
amendments that provided a categorical
non-waste fuel determination for CTRT
that undergo, at a minimum, metal
removal and shredding or grinding and
are used as fuel in units designed to
burn both biomass and fuel oil as part
of normal operations and not solely as
part of start-up or shut-down
operations.4 In addition, the final rule
included a special provision for units at
major source pulp and paper mills or
power producers subject to 40 CFR part
63, subpart DDDDD that were designed
to burn biomass and fuel oil as part of
normal operations, but are modified
(e.g., oil delivery mechanisms are
removed) in order to use natural gas
instead of fuel oil. These units may
continue to combust the CTRT as
product fuel if the following conditions
are met: (A) CTRT must be burned in an
existing (i.e., commenced construction
prior to April 14, 2014) stoker, bubbling
bed, fluidized bed, or hybrid suspension
grate boilers; and (B) CTRT can
comprise no more than 40 percent of the
fuel that is used on an annual heat input
basis.
A similar categorical non-waste fuel
determination approach was applied to
creosote-borate and mixtures of creosote
and certain non-creosote treated railroad
ties (i.e., other treated railroad ties, or
OTRT) in the February 7, 2018 NHSM
rule amendments.5
B. Summary of This Action
This action consists of two parts.
First, the Agency is finalizing its
response to a rulemaking petition (‘‘the
petition’’) requesting amendments to the
NHSM regulations, initially
promulgated on March 21, 2011, and
amended on February 7, 2013, February
8, 2016, and February 7, 2018 under
RCRA. Second, the Agency is finalizing
a revised definition of PRR. These two
parts of this action are separate and
distinct, and each part operates
independently from the other.
In addition, within the first part (in
which the Agency is finalizing its
response to the petition), the Agency
intends that each of the individual
components of the petition and EPA’s
responses to those components, are also
severable.
C. Summary of the Petitioners’
Requested Changes
The petition was received on
December 7, 2018; petitioners included
AF&PA, the Association of American
Railroads (AAR), Treated Wood Council
(TWC), American Short Line and
Regional Railroad Association
4 81
5 83
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
FR 6723, February 8, 2016.
FR 5318–19, February 7, 2018.
18OCR1
71764
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
(ASLRRA), and American Wood
Council (AWC). The petition requested
the following amendments to the NHSM
regulations: (1) Change from mandatory
to ‘‘should consider’’ the legitimacy
criterion for comparison of
contaminants in the NHSM to the
traditional fuel the unit is designed to
burn found at 40 CFR 241.3(d)(1)(iii); (2)
remove associated designed to burn and
other limitations for creosote-treated
railroad ties found at 40 CFR
241.4(a)(7)–(10); and (3) revise the
definition of paper recycling residuals
that can be burned as non-waste fuel
found at 40 CFR 241.2 to remove the
limit on non-fiber materials. In issuing
this petition denial, the EPA has
considered and addressed each of the
issues raised in the petition throughout
this notice. Arguments raised in pages
13–16 of the petition regarding the
contaminant comparison criteria are
addressed in Section III.A. of the
preamble; arguments raised on pages
16–17 of the petition regarding CTRT
storage times are addressed in Section
III.C. of the preamble; arguments raised
in pages 18–20 of the petition regarding
environmental benefits of removing
restrictions on the combustion of CTRT
are addressed in Sections III.A and III.B
of the preamble; arguments raised in
pages 20–22 of the petition regarding
the definition of paper recycling
residuals are addressed in Section III.D
of the preamble.
D. Background on Creosote-Treated
Railroad Ties
CTRT are still produced in large
numbers today, and roughly 10–20
million railroad ties are removed from
service each year in the U.S.6 After
railroad ties are removed from service,
they may be stored for varying periods
of time before being transferred for
sorting/processing. Based on
information provided by industry,7 the
processing of the railroad ties into fuel
by the reclamation/processing
companies involves several steps (metal
removal, shredding, screening, etc.),
which have already been described in
the proposed petition response. Once
the processing of CTRT is complete, the
CTRT are sold directly to the end-use
combustor for energy recovery, where
they are typically combusted within a
few days or weeks of receipt.
Use of CTRT as an alternative fuel has
both positive and negative
environmental implications.
Combusting CTRT for energy recovery
6 2018 Railroad Tie Survey, Association of
American Railroads, available in the docket EPA–
HQ–OLEM–2020–0550.
7 AFPA Rail Tie Petition Request December 6,
2012, EPA–HQ–RCRA–2013–0110–0002.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
may reduce fossil fuel use,8 increase the
heat value of the fuel mix, improve the
combustion temperature and
conditions,9 and divert waste ties from
landfill. However, CTRT has elevated
levels of various contaminants when
compared to coal (76 FR 15483, March
21, 2011), fuel oil, and biomass (81 FR
6687, February 8, 2016). Thus, the 2016
NHSM non-waste determination is
limited to CTRT that are used as fuel in
specific types of units where CTRT have
contaminants at levels comparable to or
lower than the traditional fuel that
combustion units are designed to burn.
In addition, in the January 28, 2022
proposed petition response, the EPA
discussed potential problems associated
with processing CTRT for use as fuel
and requested public comment on the
frequency and severity of such issues.
Grinding CTRT can create dust that may
blow onto neighboring properties.
Processing CTRT into fuel can also be
associated with other, more-generalized
issues like excess noise from grinding,
loud night-time operations, and the
smell of creosote.
However, Tribal, State, and local
governments have authority under their
solid waste and water programs, as well
as local ordinances, to address any
citizen complaints associated with the
management and processing of CTRT
prior to their use as a non-waste fuel,
including problems associated with
dust, excess noise, and runoff. In most
cases, CTRT remain solid waste until
processed to produce a non-waste fuel
per 40 CFR 241.3(b)(4) and thus remain
under such solid waste regulatory
authority. In addition, a Federal nonwaste determination under 40 CFR part
241 does not affect a State’s authority to
regulate a non-hazardous secondary
material as a solid waste under the
State’s RCRA Subtitle D solid waste
management program.
It should also be noted that
environmental concerns associated with
processing and management may impact
a material’s classification as a non-waste
fuel. In order to fulfill the ‘‘valuable
commodity’’ legitimacy criterion
required of NHSM burned as fuel (40
8 While creosote is a coal derivative, because the
creosote has already been used once as a
preservative on railway ties, burning those ties still
may reduce the need for burning of fossil fuels.
9 In addition, Freeman et al., 2000 indicates that
co-firing CTRT with coal at 10% the annual heating
value may reduce emissions of certain pollutants.
However, that study is very limited and cannot be
extrapolated to the use of CTRT as a fuel in general.
Little is known about impacts of variability in CTRT
or coal composition and how these would impact
emissions for any given combustor design or control
device configuration. For more information, see
Creosote Treated Railroad Ties and Coal Co-firing
Technical Support Document, available in the
docket, EPA–HQ–OLEM–2020–0550–0004.
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
CFR 241.3(d)(1)(i)), the material must be
‘‘managed in a manner consistent with
the analogous fuel or otherwise be
adequately contained to prevent releases
to the environment.’’ Likewise, when no
analogous fuel exists, the material must
be ‘‘adequately contained so as to
prevent releases to the environment.’’
The EPA requested public comment
on the potential health and
environmental risks associated with
managing and processing CTRT prior to
combustion and potential approaches to
addressing these issues, but the Agency
received no public input on these
matters. Absent sufficient information
surrounding these issues and
considering the existing authority of
State and local governments to address
many of these issues, the EPA is
declining to take further action on this
issue at this time.
III. EPA Response to Petitioners’
Requested Changes
This action is based on the petition
and its supporting materials, the
Agency’s review and evaluation of this
information, information submitted by
other stakeholders, and relevant
information compiled by the Agency.
All materials and information that form
the basis for this decision are available
in the public docket supporting this
action. The petition’s arguments and
supporting information, in addition to
other public comments received, are
summarized and discussed below,
followed by the Agency’s response.
A. Request To Change the Contaminant
Comparison Criterion From Mandatory
to ‘‘Should Consider’’
1. Petitioners’ Request
40 CFR 241.3(d)(1)(iii) currently states
that, ‘‘The non-hazardous secondary
material must contain contaminants or
groups of contaminants at levels
comparable in concentration to or less
than those in traditional fuel(s) that the
combustion unit is designed to burn’’
(emphasis added). Petitioners requested
the following revision in the regulatory
language: ‘‘Persons should consider
whether the non-hazardous secondary
material contains contaminants or
groups of contaminants at levels
comparable in concentration to or lower
than those in traditional fuel(s) that the
combustion unit is capable of burning
. . . The factor in this paragraph does
not have to be met for the nonhazardous secondary material to be
considered a non-waste fuel’’ (emphasis
added).
Petitioners’ rationale for this
suggested change focused on a July 7,
2017 decision by the U.S. Court of
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit that rejected
mandatory compliance with the
contaminant comparison criterion
portion of the legitimacy test in the
context of the RCRA rules defining
‘‘solid wastes’’ under RCRA’s Subtitle C
hazardous waste program (‘‘DSW rule’’).
American Petroleum Institute v.
Environmental Protection Agency, 862
F.3d 50 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (‘‘API’’).
Petitioners argued that, in light of the
Court’s DSW rule decision, the
continued mandatory use of the
contaminant comparison criterion in the
NHSM rule, including limiting railroad
tie non-waste fuel classifications to
certain types of combustion units, can
no longer be justified.
Petitioners referenced preamble
language the EPA used in the 2015 DSW
final rule regarding the contaminant
comparison criterion and said that
‘‘[t]his language is consistent with the
Identification of Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials that are Solid
Wastes final rule (76 FR 15456, March
21, 2011)’’ (80 FR 1727, January 13,
2015). From this preamble language
petitioners concluded that the EPA has
acknowledged the equivalence of the
contaminant comparison factors in the
two rules (i.e., Factor 4 in the DSW rule
and third legitimacy criterion in the
NHSM rule).
In 2017, the API Court invalidated the
fourth factor in the DSW rule, finding
that ‘‘[n]ever in the rulemaking does
EPA make out why a product that fails
those criteria is likely to be discarded in
any legitimate sense of the term.’’ 862
F.3d at 62. Petitioners say that the Court
also challenged the EPA’s ‘‘bare
assertion that high levels of hazardous
constituents . . . could indicate
discard,’’ and noted that the
contaminant comparison at issue was
‘‘not a reasonable tool for distinguishing
products from wastes.’’ Id at 60, 63
(internal quotes omitted).
Petitioners argued that the API
holding, with its critique of the EPA’s
application of this element of the
definition of legitimate recycling in the
DSW rule, applies with equal force to
the NHSM legitimacy criteria set forth at
40 CFR 241.3(d). See id at 63. Therefore,
petitioners alleged that, based on the
reasoning and holding in API, the
contaminant comparison criterion
currently contained in the NHSM rule’s
legitimacy criteria and the
corresponding NHSM rules for railroad
ties treated with creosote and other
wood preservatives can no longer be
used as mandatory elements to
determine whether a secondary material
is discarded or not.
Furthermore, petitioners asserted that
the EPA has recognized that the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
contaminant comparison should not be
a determining factor for whether a
material is being discarded. In its 2016
Rule on Additions to List of Categorical
Non-Waste Fuels, the EPA expressly
noted that ‘‘CTRTs do not become
wastes solely because of the switch to
natural gas’’ (81 FR 6687, 6731,
February 8, 2016). In that rule, the EPA
reasoned that facilities that have
demonstrated the ability to burn fuel oil
and biomass should not be penalized for
switching to natural gas, a fuel that
creates less air pollution. In addition,
petitioners stated that the EPA properly
determined that resinated wood should
qualify as a categorical non-waste fuel
under the NHSM rule, despite expressly
recognizing that this material ‘‘may not
meet the regulatory contaminant
legitimacy criteria in every situation’’
(78 FR 9112, 9156, February 7, 2013).
Petitioners claimed that this prior EPA
precedent is fully consistent with the
Court’s decision in API and underscores
the need to eliminate the contaminant
comparison as a mandatory factor in the
NHSM rule’s legitimacy criteria
generally, and as a condition as applied
to individual NHSMs.
2. Public Comment
Commenters continued to argue that
the 2017 API decision is applicable to
the NHSM contaminant comparison
criterion, iterating similar positions
taken in the original petition. In
particular, commenters contended that
the sole statutory definition of ‘‘solid
waste’’ in RCRA means that the
contaminant comparison test must be
applied identically for hazardous and
non-hazardous materials. Because the
test was invalidated for hazardous
secondary material in the 2017 API
decision, they argued the contaminant
comparison criterion should also be
eliminated as a mandatory criterion for
non-hazardous secondary material being
burned as a non-waste fuel. Commenters
likewise stated that a non-mandatory
standard should be permissible for
materials that are not hazardous when
discarded if a non-mandatory test is
allowable for materials that are
hazardous when discarded. Commenters
also stated that combustion units would
still be regulated by CAA section 112
standards if the contaminant
comparison test was not mandatory.
3. EPA Response
The argument that the 2017 API
decision invalidates the contaminant
comparison criterion for the NHSM
program fails because the contaminant
standards in each rule were established
for different purposes and in different
contexts.
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
71765
The DSW rule establishes standards
for legitimate recycling of hazardous
secondary materials into products (not
fuels). The exclusions in the DSW rule
address reclamation, and specifically
omit burning for energy recovery.
Unlike NHSMs, hazardous secondary
materials that are burned for energy
recovery are always solid waste,10
unless the material is a commercial
chemical product that is itself a fuel.11
Combustion is an inherently destructive
process, even when energy is recovered,
and unlike other types of recycling,
there is no final product to consider in
determining the impact of elevated
hazardous constituents. The
contaminant comparison in 40 CFR
260.43(b) compares hazardous
constituents in the product of the
recycling process to the corresponding
constituents in the analogous product
made from virgin material. While 40
CFR 260.43(b) specifies that this factor
‘‘does not have to be met for the
recycling to be considered legitimate,’’
the regulation also explains that ‘‘[i]n
evaluating the extent to which this
factor is met and in determining
whether a process that does not meet
this factor is still legitimate, persons can
consider exposure from toxics in the
product, the bioavailability of the toxics
in the product and other relevant
considerations.’’ In other words, the
definition of legitimate recycling in 40
CFR 260.43, as it relates to hazardous
constituents, focuses on the effect those
hazardous constituents have on the risks
posed by the product of recycling.
In contrast, the NHSM rule was
established solely to determine whether
an NHSM that is combusted as a fuel or
an ingredient is a waste or a non-waste
for purposes of applying appropriate
emission standards under CAA section
129 or CAA section 112. Without the
contaminant criterion, an NHSM could
contain contaminant levels that are
significantly higher than the traditional
fuel(s) they are meant to replace and
still be considered a non-waste fuel. So,
for example, if CTRT-derived pellets
could be marketed to any wood-burning
boiler, such as those sometimes used in
10 The EPA notes that the statutory objectives
associated with designating a solid waste as
discarded warrant different implementation
strategies depending on the context. See Utility Air
Regulatory Group v. EPA, 573 U.S. 302, 320 (2014)
(finding that statutory terms, even those that are
defined in the statute, ‘‘may take on distinct
characters from association with distinct statutory
objects calling for different implementation
strategies’’).
11 See 40 CFR 261.2(c)(2), RCRA section 3004(q);
Natural Resources Defense Council v. EPA, 755
F.3d 1010 (June 27, 2014)) and Sierra Club v. EPA,
755 F.3d 968.
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
71766
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
schools,12 then those boilers would be
burning a material with higher levels of
contaminants than the clean wood they
were designed to burn, potentially
exposing the children in those schools
with wood-burning boilers to
unexpected air pollutants. Burning is an
inherently destructive process, even if
there is energy recovery. Thus, through
the NHSM rules, the Agency evaluates
whether burning an NHSM for energy
recovery also has the effect of destroying
contaminants that would not otherwise
be present in the corresponding
traditional fuel, indicating discard is
occurring. The presence of higher levels
of contaminants underscores the
appropriateness of applying CAA
section 129 standards to the combustion
of the material in question, as these
standards are more appropriate for
wastes, which are likely to contain more
contaminants than traditional fuels.
NHSM standards for categorical nonwastes also differ significantly from the
DSW rule because the NHSM standards
allow consideration of ‘‘other relevant
factors’’ in determining whether the
contaminant comparison criterion is
met (see 40 CFR 241.4(b)(5)(ii)). Thus,
the NHSM standards already provide
flexibility to meet the contaminant
comparison criterion, where
appropriate. The API Court’s rejection of
the mandatory contaminant comparison
for hazardous wastes in the DSW rule
turned, in large part, on what the Court
viewed as a rigid and severe standard.
The Court felt that the requirement ‘‘sets
the bar at the contaminant level of the
analogue without regard to whether any
incremental contaminants are
significant in terms of health and
environmental risks.’’ 862 F.3d 50, 60
(D.C. Cir. 2017). However, the Court
went on to commend an exception to
that test in which a recycler could
satisfy this legitimacy criterion with
evidence of ‘‘lack of exposure from
toxics in the product, lack of the
bioavailability of toxins in the product,
or other relevant considerations which
show that the recycled product does not
contain levels of hazardous constituents
that pose a significant human health or
environmental risk.’’ Id. (quoting 40
CFR 260.43(a)(4)(iii) (2016)). Ultimately,
the Court found the exception to be
insufficient ‘‘due to the draconian
character of the procedures.’’ Id. at 61.
That is, if a recycler failed to satisfy any
step in the exception process, an
otherwise legitimate product would be
12 See,
for example, Biomass Boilers in Public
Schools and Buildings, https://vecan.net/iniatives/
biomass-boilers-public-schools-buildings/, and
Wood Pellet Heating for Schools https://
www.maineenergysystems.com/wood-pelletheating-for-schools/, both retrieved 06/20/2023.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
considered to be hazardous waste. The
NHSM regulations avoid these problems
by allowing the Agency to consider
‘‘other relevant factors,’’ which offers
flexibility without the ‘‘draconian’’
procedures of the 2015 DSW rule.
Petitioners recognize this fact by noting
that the EPA has already applied such
flexibility when the Agency originally
promulgated 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii),
which recognized the fact that CTRT
burned as fuel in certain units at major
source pulp and paper mills or power
producers which were constructed prior
to April 14, 2014 and burn CTRT as less
than 40% of its fuel source would be
considered non-waste fuel, even if those
units have been modified to burn
natural gas. Likewise, the Agency
previously exercised this flexibility in
establishing the categorical non-waste
listing for resinated wood; however, that
context differed in that the EPA
determined that the management of
resinated wood prior to combustion as
a fuel is equivalent to the management
of resinated wood being used as a raw
material. As such, the Agency
concluded that, though resinated wood
may not fulfill the legitimacy criteria in
all cases, ‘‘resinated wood that is used
as fuel represents an integral component
of the wood manufacturing process and,
as such, is not being discarded when
burned as fuel.’’ The use of resinated
wood as a fuel is integrated into the
wood production process in such a way
that the relevant manufacturing
facilities would have to be significantly
re-engineered if they could not use
resinated wood for its fuel value (78 FR
9155, February 7, 2013). In contrast,
units that burn CTRT are far removed
from the CTRT production process, and
are also able to burn other types of fuels,
so the Agency maintains that the more
stringent provisions in the categorical
non-waste listing for CTRT (as
compared to that for resinated wood) are
appropriate. The EPA also notes that the
Agency has not reopened or requested
comment on this provision, but cites it
as a demonstration that the Agency can
and has used flexibility to address casespecific circumstances where
appropriate.
Commenters imply that the existence
of such flexibility requires the EPA to
disregard relative contaminant levels
when comparing NHSMs to traditional
fuels because of other implications
related to a material’s waste status.
However, any ‘‘other relevant factors’’
considered in making a waste
determination must be relevant to the
core question of whether the material is
a solid waste when combusted. Some
commenters seem to propose looking to
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
greenhouse gas emissions and landfill
capacity as ‘‘other relevant factors,’’ but
neither of these topics dictate whether
the particular material in question is
combusted as a waste. The extent to
which a particular disposal practice of
NHSM does or does not release
greenhouse gases or consume landfill
capacity once discarded does not impact
whether the NHSM is discarded when
combusted.
Finally, in response to comments
arguing that CAA section 112 standards
would still apply to units combusting
NHSM with significantly elevated levels
of contaminants when compared to
traditional fuels, the EPA does not agree
that these elevated levels of
contaminants would be addressed by
the CAA section 112 standards, which
were intended for units that burn nonwaste fuel. Emission standards for
dioxins, SO2, NOX, etc. for non-major
sources are addressed under the CAA
section 129 standards but are not
addressed by area source boiler
standards under CAA section 112,
which require only tune-ups. Therefore,
for all of the reasons stated above, the
API decision does not directly apply
because the context of burning NHSM
differs fundamentally from hazardous
waste recycling (which, to reiterate,
does not include burning for energy
recovery).
To end, we also note that the NHSM
legitimacy criteria have been in place
since 2011 and were upheld by the D.C.
Circuit Court in Solvay v. EPA. 608 Fed.
Appx. 10 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (45 ELR 20107
Nos. 11–1189, (D.C. Cir., 06/03/2015)).
A substantive change to the
contaminant comparison criterion
would allow NHSM generators to
‘‘consider’’ significantly higher levels of
contaminants in their NHSM-derived
fuel, without any threshold or
indication of when such a consideration
might result in an NHSM being a solid
waste. Such a substantive change would
also create regulatory uncertainty for the
combustion units that burn this material
and rely on an accurate non-waste
determination for their CAA regulatory
applicability determinations. The
Agency is, therefore, denying the
petitioners’ request regarding the
contaminant comparison criterion.
B. Request To Remove Associated
Designed To Burn and Other Limitations
for Creosote-Treated Railroad Ties
1. Petitioners’ Request
As discussed above, 40 CFR
241.3(d)(1)(iii) states that ‘‘[t]he nonhazardous secondary material must
contain contaminants or groups of
contaminants at levels comparable in
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
concentration to or less than those in
the traditional fuel(s) that the
combustion unit is designed to burn
. . .’’ (emphasis added). As currently
applied, the petitioners believe the
designed to burn criterion means that
the exact same railroad tie is considered
a solid waste when burned in one unit,
but a non-waste fuel when burned in
another—depending solely on the type
of fuel the boilers are designed to
combust. The petition stated that the
EPA has acknowledged the character of
the NHSM does not change depending
on the design of the boiler it goes to, and
has offered no rationale for how the
existence of a fuel oil nozzle in a boiler
(i.e., a boiler originally designed to burn
fuel oil, but later retrofitted to burn
natural gas) informs the question of
whether CTRT are being legitimately
used as fuel, or in fact are simply being
discarded in a hypothetical ‘‘sham
recycling’’ operation. Accordingly, the
petition requested that the EPA remove
the limitations in the CTRT categorical
non-waste listing that are related to
boiler design (i.e., 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(i)
and (ii)).
In addition, petitioners argued, the
EPA has imposed other restrictions
unrelated to the characteristics of the
NHSM itself—including a requirement
that the facility in question must have
been built before April 2014 and that
the amount of NHSM combusted in that
facility may not exceed 40% of the total
fuel mix in a given year. Petitioners
claimed that, in adding these various
requirements regarding the
characteristics of the combustion unit,
the characteristics of the material and
the motivation of the recycler are
essentially rendered irrelevant to the
determination of whether the material is
a solid waste. Petitioners contend that
this is contrary to RCRA case law and
an arbitrary and unreasonable basis on
which to decide whether the material is,
in fact, being discarded or legitimately
used as fuel.
Petitioners indicated that, as the
agency charged with environmental
protection, the EPA should encourage
the widespread use of CTRT and other
similarly situated NHSM as fuel, rather
than restrict that use and condemn
valuable fuel sources to landfills.
Furthermore, petitioners stated that the
regulatory revisions requested in the
petition promote environmental
sustainability, consistent with the EPA’s
Waste Management Hierarchy, eliminate
undue and burdensome regulation, and
reduce costs associated with such
regulatory burdens.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
2. Public Comment
Petitioners, through their comments,
continued to argue for the removal of
the associated designed to burn and
other limitations for CTRT combusted as
fuels.
These commenters stated that the
EPA’s regulation of CTRT is neither
reasonable nor appropriate according to
the Administrative Procedures Act.
Commenters expanded upon this point
by explaining that two identical CTRT
removed from service would be
regulated differently if one were burned
in a boiler designed to burn biomass and
fuel oil and the other in a unit designed
to burn biomass and natural gas.
Commenters further noted that if a
boiler designed to burn biomass and
fuel oil was built before 2014 and
converted from fuel oil to natural gas,
that boiler would be able to burn CTRT
as a non-waste fuel, while a new boiler
designed to burn biomass and natural
gas would not. Commenters also noted
that the EPA has declared resinated
wood and coal refuse to be non-waste
fuels, even though resinated wood
contains elevated formaldehyde levels
compared to virgin biomass and coal
refuse could be combusted in boilers not
designed to burn coal. This decision by
the EPA allows resinated wood and coal
refuse to be combusted in any boiler,
while CTRT combustion must follow
additional conditions to be burned as a
non-waste fuel only in specific boilers
as designated in 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7).
One commenter also argued that, if a
unit meets its permit requirements and
the contaminant comparison criterion is
met, the designed to burn qualification
should be irrelevant, and that the CAA
directs the EPA to focus on emissions
from the combustion of fuels rather than
on the nature of the fuel combusted.
3. EPA Response
Regarding petitioners’ claim that the
same NHSM is treated differently in
different units, such a claim ignores the
underlying premise of the NHSM rules.
As explained in the program’s original
March 21, 2011 rulemaking (76 FR
15455), the NHSM program exists to
determine whether an NHSM that is
combusted is a waste or a non-waste for
purposes of applying appropriate
emission standards under CAA section
129 or CAA section 112 to the unit
burning the NHSM. An NHSM that is
burned in a unit that is designed to burn
a comparable traditional fuel is, because
of that comparability, a non-waste fuel.
When an NHSM is burned in a unit that
is not designed to burn a comparable
traditional fuel (e.g., that is designed to
burn fuel with lower levels of
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
71767
contaminants than found in the NHSM),
that combustion is acting as a means of
destroying those elevated contaminants
and therefore is more appropriately
regulated as solid waste incineration.
Thus, it is entirely appropriate that an
NHSM would be considered a nonwaste fuel when burned in a unit
designed to burn a comparable
traditional fuel, and a solid waste when
burned in a unit that is not designed to
burn a comparable traditional fuel.
Contaminants or groups of contaminants
in the NHSM must occur at levels
comparable to or lower than those in the
traditional fuel the unit is designed to
burn. As the Agency determined when
it established the categorical non-waste
listing for CTRT (81 FR 6687, February
8, 2016), under 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(i),
each unit must be designed to burn both
biomass and fuel oil, since contaminant
levels in CTRT (e.g., SVOCs) are
considerably higher than in biomass
alone. Without the designed to burn
criterion, contaminant levels could be
compared to any traditional fuel or
combination of traditional fuels,
resulting in a unit burning contaminants
under the boiler provisions in CAA
section 112 that the unit would
otherwise never have been eligible to
handle.13 The EPA has not reopened or
requested comment on the contaminant
concentrations of a CTRT in this action
and continues to rely on the
determination made in the original
CTRT categorical non-waste listing (81
FR 6687, February 8, 2016).
It should be noted that as a result of
the 2013 NHSM rule, the regulations
already provide considerable flexibility
in implementing the designed to burn
criterion. Persons making contaminant
level comparisons may choose any
traditional fuel that is physically
capable of being burned, or is actually
burned, in the particular type of boiler,
whether or not the combustion unit is
permitted to burn that traditional fuel.
Broad groups of similar traditional fuels
may be used when comparing
contaminant levels (e.g., coal, biomass,
fuel oil, and natural gas). The regulatory
language in 40 CFR part 241 makes it
clear that a unit is considered designed
to burn a traditional fuel if it can burn
the fuel, regardless of whether it has
burned, or is permitted to burn, such a
fuel.
Petitioners suggest replacing language
in the CTRT rules regarding which units
are ‘‘designed to burn’’ CTRT with units
‘‘operating in compliance with all
13 This issue would be a concern even under the
petitioners’ requested change to make the
contaminant comparison criterion ‘‘to be
considered’’ rather than mandatory.
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
71768
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
applicable permits.’’ However, the
NHSM rules are used to determine
which CAA permits are applicable to a
unit combusting NHSM, making the
suggested reference to ‘‘applicable
permits’’ circular and meaningless.
In regard to petitioners’ comments on
the EPA’s decision to include in the
non-waste determination CTRT burned
as fuel in units at major source pulp and
paper mills or power producers subject
to 40 CFR part 63, subpart DDDDD that
had been originally designed to burn
biomass and fuel oil, but had switched
to natural gas (see 40 CFR
241.4(a)(7)(ii)), the EPA once again
notes that the Agency neither reopened
nor took comment on this provision.
The EPA notes that the petition only
raised the issue of the requirements that
limit the non-waste determination for 40
CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii) to CTRT combusted
in facilities that had been built before
April 2014 in amounts that do not
exceed 40% in the context of their
opposition to any requirements under
the non-waste determination that are
related to the combustion unit.14 As
discussed above, petitioners’ claim
ignores the underlying premise of the
NHSM rules. As explained in the
program’s original March 21, 2011
rulemaking (76 FR 15455), the NHSM
program exists to determine whether an
NHSM that is combusted is a waste or
a non-waste for purposes of applying
appropriate emission standards under
CAA section 129 or CAA section 112 to
the unit burning the NHSM. Thus, in
general, restrictions related to ensuring
that an NHSM is burned in a unit that
was designed to burn a comparable fuel
in order to be considered a non-waste
fuel under the CAA are entirely
appropriate, because it is the ‘‘designed
to burn’’ criteria that help ensure that
the NHSM is burned in units that would
otherwise burn comparable traditional
fuels (and therefore the NHSM is not
being burned simply as a means of
destroying contamination). The EPA
need not reconsider the specific
requirements in 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii)
beyond the ‘‘designed to burn’’
provision that was discussed in detail in
the petition. No challenge to the 40 CFR
241.4(a)(7)(ii) regulation was filed and
the time period to challenge that rule
has long passed under the judicial
review provision of RCRA section 7006,
which requires such challenges to be
filed within 90 days of the rule’s
14 AF&PA
et al., Petition for Rulemaking to
Amend the Legitimacy Criteria in 40 CFR part
241,—The Categorical Non-Waste Fuels
Classification Criteria for Creosote Treated Railroad
Ties and Other Treated Railroads Ties, and the
Definition of Paper Recycling Residuals, December
7, 2018, page 16.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
promulgation. The opportunity to
petition the Agency for changes to any
RCRA rule is always available to
members of the public (as is the current
case), but such petitions are evaluated
typically based on new information
identified by petitioners (as well as
information identified by the Agency,
and those commenting on a proposed
Agency action) as the basis for the
requested changes to a regulation. No
such information was provided in the
petition specific to this provision.
Instead, Petitioners simply provide a
general assertion that the provision is an
‘‘arbitrary and unreasonable basis on
which to decide whether the material is,
in fact, being discarded or legitimately
used as fuel.’’ 15 In the future, if a
member of the public were to petition
the EPA to reconsider the specific
requirements in 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii)
beyond the ‘‘designed to burn’’
provision, the EPA would develop a
separate regulatory action that considers
all possible regulatory options for this
categorical non-waste determination,
including the option of sunsetting the
provision at 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii) and
leaving the requirements of 40 CFR
241.4(a)(7)(i) in place, including the
‘‘designed to burn’’ criteria.
However, this provision does
demonstrate that the EPA can and has
used the Agency’s authority to consider
‘‘other relevant factors’’ in making a
categorical non-waste fuel
determination in cases where one of the
legitimacy criteria is not met (see 40
CFR 241.4(b)(5)(ii)). It is important to
recognize that the provisions of 40 CFR
241.4(a)(7)(ii) were proposed, based on
the information available to the Agency
at the time, to apply to boilers that were
existing at the time the rule was
promulgated to avoid penalizing the
units originally designed to burn both
biomass and fuel oil that switched to
cleaner-burning fuel.16 Facilities
constructed after that point would fall
under the main provision found at 40
CFR 241.4(a)(7)(i) and would be able to
take the existing regulations under
consideration when deciding their
operations. Thus, the conditions
imposed on CTRT combusted in natural
gas-fired units under 40 CFR
241.4(a)(7)(ii) are part of the relevant
factors the EPA used to determine
15 AF&PA et al., Petition for Rulemaking to
Amend the Legitimacy Criteria in 40 CFR part
241,—The Categorical Non-Waste Fuels
Classification Criteria for Creosote Treated Railroad
Ties and Other Treated Railroads Ties, and the
Definition of Paper Recycling Residuals, December
7, 2018, page 16.
16 81 FR 6724, February 8, 2016.
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
whether discard has occurred (see 81 FR
6724–25, February 8, 2016).
Commenters claim that the
environmental implications of not
combusting CTRT, such as a potential
increase in landfilling of CTRT and
subsequent increase in greenhouse gas
emission from the landfilled CTRT,
obligate the EPA to withdraw designed
to burn criteria from the categorical nonwaste listing for CTRT due to ‘‘other
relevant factors.’’ However, any ‘‘other
relevant factors’’ considered in weighing
a categorical non-waste listing must be
relevant to the core question of whether
the material is a solid waste when
combusted. Some commenters propose
looking to greenhouse gas emissions and
landfill capacity as ‘‘other relevant
factors,’’ but neither of these topics
dictate whether the particular material
in question is combusted as a waste;
therefore, both considerations are
outside the scope of this Petition Denial.
The ‘‘other relevant factors’’ must still
be applied in the context of determining
whether a material is a waste or not.
Ignoring designed to burn and other
criteria would violate the fundamental
principles of solid waste identification
legitimacy criteria codified in the
NHSM regulations and upheld by the
D.C. Circuit Court, as noted at 87 FR
4536, 4542 (January 28, 2022). The
extent to which a particular disposal
practice of NHSM does or does not
release greenhouse gases or consume
landfill capacity does not impact
whether the NHSM is discarded when
combusted.
The petitioners’ comments also cite
two examples of NHSMs—resinated
wood and coal refuse—that do not have
designed to burn and existing boiler
conditions associated with the
categorical determination (see 40 CFR
241.4(a)(2) and (3)). The EPA has
responded to a similar comment on the
2016 NHSM rule (see 81 FR 6731,
February 8, 2016), noting how, unlike
CTRT, resinated wood’s use as a fuel
was integrated into the production
process and that resinated wood
production facilities were specifically
designed to utilize the material for its
fuel value (for more, see section III.A.3
(above) and 76 FR 15500, March 21,
2011). As for coal refuse, data available
suggest that this material is used in a
small selection of coal refuse plants and
as a secondary fuel at some additional
bituminous coal combusting electric
power plants (76 FR 80486, December
23, 2011). Further, the coal refuse is
limited to legacy pile coal, which are
processed in the same manner as
currently generated coal refuse (a
traditional fuel) and exhibit similar
contaminant content. These situations
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
are very dissimilar to the case of CTRT
combusted in a biomass boiler that
would otherwise burn clean biomass
because CTRT contain contaminants (in
particular, PAHs) at levels multiple
magnitudes higher than clean biomass
(81 FR 6717, February 8, 2016).17 Thus,
both these categorical non-waste
determinations take into account the
specific types of materials and
combustion units involved and the
reasoning cannot be extrapolated to all
combustion units that might burn CTRT,
absent the designed to burn criteria.
The designed to burn criterion is
fundamental to the NHSM program
since it is the primary mechanism for
identifying which traditional fuel
should be used as the basis of
determining whether contaminant levels
in the NHSM are comparable to or less
than the traditional fuel(s) being
replaced. Without the designed to burn
criterion, CTRT could be combusted in
any biomass-only boiler, including
biomass boilers that are area sources
under the CAA. These boilers would
likely have higher HAP emissions when
burning CTRT rather than biomass
because these contaminants are present
in greater concentrations in CTRT as
generated. As previously noted,
emission standards for dioxins, SO2,
NOX, etc. for non-major sources are
addressed under the CAA section 129
standards but are not addressed by area
source boiler standards under CAA
section 112 which require only tuneups. The Agency is therefore denying
petitioners’ request regarding the
designed to burn criterion. See section
III.A above for a discussion on the
contaminant comparison criterion.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
C. Preamble Discussion of Storage
Times for Railroad Ties
1. Petitioners’ Request
In addition to the requested regulatory
changes, the petition raised an issue
related to railroad tie storage timeframes
as it impacts NHSM eligibility as
discussed in the 2016 NHSM rule. In the
preamble to that rule, the EPA discussed
its presumption that storage of CTRT for
long periods of time (e.g., a year or
longer) without an end-use
determination is not ‘‘reasonable,’’ and
indicates that the material has been
discarded. Petitioners interpreted this
preamble language to establish a brightline limit of one year for CTRT
accumulation in the railroad right-ofway, and asserted that this perceived
17 For more information, see the Summary of
Public Comments and Responses for the Proposed
Response to the Petition to Revise the NonHazardous Secondary Material Standard, located in
the docket EPA–HQ–OLEM–2020–0550.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
time limit is incompatible with the
realities of railroad operations. That is,
unlike discrete facilities from which
valuable secondary materials are easily
reclaimed, the railroad right-of-way
extends over thousands of miles across
the United States. Petitioners said that
many locations where CTRT are
removed are not readily accessible
except by rail, and tie pickup interrupts
freight and passenger train service and
competes with safety-related operations
such as track maintenance and
inspection. Train service and safety are
regulated by the Surface Transportation
Board and Federal Railroad
Administration, respectively. Petitioners
indicated that, due in part to those
agencies’ requirements, service and
safety must take precedence over tie
recovery. Petitioners asserted that these
challenges make it unrealistic to collect
used CTRT within one year of removal
from service—but for reasons
completely unrelated to the
determination of whether CTRT are
managed as a ‘‘valuable commodity’’
under the NHSM framework. Petitioners
also noted that the EPA has recognized
that ‘‘the reasonable timeframe for
storage may vary by industry’’ (81 FR
6725, February 8, 2016). In the context
of railroad tie management, petitioners
asserted that three or more years is a
reasonable timeframe for storage of
removed CTRT in the right-of-way.
2. Public Comment
Comments relating to the perceived
one-year limit on CTRT accumulation in
the right-of-way largely reiterated the
arguments presented in the original
petition.
One comment argued that the
economic value of removed CTRT
indicates that the CTRT are not
discarded. This commenter claimed that
the sale or transfer of CTRT to a third
party invalidates claims of discard, even
if final disposition and party of sale
have not been determined prior to
removal. Thus, they claimed,
accumulated CTRT are valuable and
therefore not discarded under the plain
language meaning of the word.
Likewise, multiple commenters
argued that railroad operational realities
make the perceived one-year storage
time limit infeasible for safety and
logistical reasons. Commenters claimed
that a one-year time limit for CTRT in
the right-of-way would be unworkable
due to remote rail locations and
prioritization of safety requirements and
maintenance activities over removal of
accumulated CTRT.
Finally, one commenter interpreted
the EPA’s preamble language from the
2016 NHSM rule to indicate that CTRT
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
71769
cannot be considered discarded until at
least one year after removal from
service. Their comment claimed that the
lack of an explicit statement that CTRT
are discarded immediately upon
removal in the 2016 rule indicates that
the EPA cannot now reasonably
conclude that discard may occur
sometime less than one year after tie
removal.
3. EPA Response
Storage time of unprocessed CTRT in
the right-of-way has little impact for the
purposes of determining whether the
CTRT can qualify as a non-waste fuel
under the Federal NHSM regulations.
The EPA believes that petitioners’
recurring comments surrounding storage
times and discard originates from a
misunderstanding of the 2016 rule’s
preamble language. Therefore, this
section of the preamble—which relies
upon the rationale provided in the 2016
rule—explains why the EPA is denying
petitioners’ three-year fixed storage
timeframe consideration and addresses
petitioners’ misunderstanding of this
issue by elaborating how and why
accumulation timeframes in the right-ofway do not affect CTRT’s eligibility to
be combusted as non-waste fuel under
the NHSM program.
First and foremost, qualification of
CTRT as a non-waste fuel under the
categorical non-waste determination at
40 CFR 241.4(a)(7) does not consider
storage times. Granted, when the EPA
considers a petition for a categorical
non-waste listing under 40 CFR
241.4(b), reasonable storage timeframes
are required as a component of the
‘‘managed as a valuable commodity’’
legitimacy criterion. However, once the
determination has been made that the
petition for a non-waste categorical
listing meets this requirement, future
demonstration of those reasonable
storage timeframes is not required.
Indeed, this is a major incentive for
requesting a categorical non-waste fuel
determination; qualifying operators that
meet the provisions of the categorical
listing (in this case, at 40 CFR
241.4(a)(7)) enjoy streamlined
management (e.g., do not need to make
a site-specific demonstration that the
NHSM meets the legitimacy criteria)
because it has already been
demonstrated—through the process of
establishing the categorical
determination—that the NHSM in
question meets the program
requirements. Thus, entities managing
CTRT under the categorical listing are
not required to document the CTRT’s
storage timeframes and are not limited
by a bright-line restriction of one year of
accumulation in the right-of-way. (It
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
71770
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
should be noted, however, that
extended lengths of storage of CTRT in
the right-of-way could constitute
disposal under State solid waste
regulations, making the CTRT subject to
State solid waste management
requirements.)
Should an operator wish to combust
CTRT as a non-waste fuel under the
NHSM program outside the confines of
the categorical determination at 40 CFR
241.4(a)(7), storage time for CTRT in the
right-of-way is still unlikely to have a
meaningful impact on the material’s
eligibility. In this scenario, the operator
could choose to employ the selfdetermination process outlined in 40
CFR 241.3(b)(4) for NHSM that are
discarded but subsequently processed
and meet the legitimacy criteria at 40
CFR 241.3(d)(1). As noted in the
February 8, 2016 rule’s preamble, the
amount of time for industry to
determine value and end use of CTRT
(whether sent to a landfill, used as fuel,
or another non-fuel purpose) sometimes
exceeds one year (81 FR 6725).
Generally speaking, however, long
periods of time without determining
end use can be indicative of discard,
though there is no bright-line time
period which triggers a discard
determination. The fact that CTRT
removed from service sometimes sit for
extended periods—regardless of
whether that period is more than or less
than a year—indicates that they should
be viewed critically when determining
discard status. Further, it is the EPA’s
understanding (according to the
descriptions provided in both the
petition and public comments) that it is
standard industry practice to transfer
CTRT to a reclaimer or other third party.
These CTRT would be considered
discarded until processed into a nonwaste fuel, since NHSMs that are
transferred off-site for reclamation and
reuse as a fuel are considered discarded
and must be processed and meet the
legitimacy criteria. The assertion that
the CTRT are a valuable commodity in
a robust market does not change the fact
that the CTRT have been discarded.
NHSMs may have value in the
marketplace and still be solid wastes
until processed.
It should be noted that discarded
NHSM may be subject to Tribal, State,
and local solid waste requirements,
regardless of their intended future use
as a non-waste fuel under the Federal
NHSM program. Though the designation
of discard may be functionally
irrelevant for CTRT that are
subsequently processed and verified to
meet the legitimacy criteria for nonwaste fuels, CTRT that are determined
to be solid waste would still be subject
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
to all relevant solid waste regulations.
Indeed, the EPA explicitly addressed
this issue at 40 CFR 241.3(b)(4), which
states that until the discarded nonhazardous secondary material is
processed to produce a non-waste fuel
or ingredient, the discarded nonhazardous secondary material is
considered a solid waste and would be
subject to all appropriate Federal, State,
and local requirements.
Thus, a designation of discard does
not preclude using the NHSM as a nonwaste fuel, so long as the processing
requirement and legitimacy criteria are
met. Crucially, the relevant regulations
at 40 CFR 241.3(b)(4) go on to stipulate
that the legitimacy criteria apply after
the non-hazardous secondary material is
processed to produce a fuel or
ingredient product. Consideration of
reasonable timeframes would therefore
look to the period of storage following
processing (e.g., grinding CTRT to resize
the material and removing metal
contaminants such as rail spikes), which
the EPA understands to usually be
short. Moreover, the EPA has not
established a bright-line limit on
reasonable storage times and has
previously explicitly stated that what
constitutes a reasonable timeframe for
storage will vary by industry (see, e.g.,
76 FR 15520, March 21, 2011).
Accordingly, CTRT could be combusted
as a non-waste fuel after being stored for
more than one year, so long as storage
of the processed CTRT is limited to
reasonable timeframes.
Thus, the EPA believes that previous
dialogue between the Agency,
petitioners, and commenters on
timeframes for storage of CTRT in the
right-of-way has little, if any, practical
effect on the combustion of CTRT as
non-waste fuel under the Federal NHSM
program. Accordingly, the EPA is
denying petitioners’ request to establish
a rigid three-year timeframe for rail tie
storage in the right-of-way, and instead
the Agency will maintain the existing
standard to allow for flexibility and has
provided the preceding explanation in
an attempt to resolve petitioners’
misunderstanding.
Finally, it should be noted that other
laws or regulations may still apply to
CTRT placed in the right of way. CTRT
stored in the right of way could be
considered discarded and would in
such cases be subject to all relevant
Federal, Tribal, State, and local solid
waste requirements. These regulations
may vary by location, and State solid
waste designations are not required to
match those of the Federal rules.
Broader issues associated with the
accumulation of CTRT in the right of
way would fall under the jurisdiction of
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
these regulations. Additionally, some
States (e.g., California, New York) have
specific laws or regulations for creosote
and/or products treated with creosote.
D. Request To Amend the Definition of
‘‘Paper Recycling Residuals’’
1. Petitioners’ Request
Petitioners also requested that the
EPA revise the definition of ‘‘paper
recycling residuals’’ (PRR) to amend the
description and remove the definitional
condition that PRR that ‘‘contain more
than small amounts of non-fiber
materials . . . are not paper recycling
residuals’’ (40 CFR 241.2, emphasis
added). Petitioners believed that this
condition is overly vague and directly at
odds with the Court’s decision in API.
Petitioners requested that the second
sentence in the definition precluding
materials that contain ‘‘more than small
amounts of non-fiber materials’’ from
qualifying as PRR should be removed.
They argued that this condition suggests
that the list of non-fiber materials
identified in the definition are somehow
viewed as contaminants in PRR. But, as
discussed above, petitioners argue that
in vacating the contaminant comparison
criterion in the DSW rule, the D.C.
Circuit made clear that the mere
presence of some contaminants in a
material destined for legitimate
recycling is not the basis for finding that
the material has been ‘‘discarded’’ and
thus subject to regulation as a solid
waste.
In addition to arguing that this
condition is inconsistent with the D.C.
Circuit’s holding in API, the petitioners
believe that the ‘‘small amount’’
limitation is overly vague. While
members of the regulated community
affirm that they have used good faith
efforts in determining that PRR burned
as fuel meet this condition, they also
note that ‘‘a statute which either forbids
or requires the doing of an act so vague
that men of common intelligence must
necessarily guess at its meaning and
differ as to its applications, violates the
first essential of due process of law.’’
FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 567
U.S. at 239, 253 (2012) (internal citation
omitted). According to petitioners, the
‘‘small amount’’ criterion in the
definition of PRR falls squarely within
this ‘‘impermissibly vague’’ infirmity
and should be removed from the
definition to help ensure that ‘‘those
enforcing the law do not act in an
arbitrary or discriminatory way.’’ FCC,
567 U.S. at 253 (internal citation
omitted).
Furthermore, petitioners argue that
the current definition describing PRR as
‘‘composed primarily of wet strength
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
and short wood fibers’’ is not correct, as
the re-pulping of recovered fibers can
result in a variety of strengths and sizes
of fibers in PRR, so the current
limitation to ‘‘wet strength and short
wood fibers’’ is unnecessarily
restrictive. Some residuals from
recycling paper, paperboard and
corrugated containers are composed of
fibers other than wet strength fibers or
short-wood fibers, but nonetheless
cannot be used to make new paper or
paper products and therefore are burned
for their energy value.
In January 2022, the EPA proposed to
deny this request, and in the same
notice proposed an amended definition
of PRR. This new definition replaced
the less-specific ‘‘small amounts’’
language restricting PRR non-fiber
content with more specific language that
would have limited the amount of nonfiber content to 2% or less, by weight.18
The revised definition in the proposed
rule also adopted descriptive changes
requested in the petition to more
accurately reflect the nature of PRR.
2. Public Comment on EPA’s Proposed
Definition of PRR
One commenter argued that a nonfiber limit for paper recycling residuals
was not necessary, reiterating a similar
assertion presented in the original
petition. The commenter stated that
environmental and health risks from
burning PRR containing non-fiber
material would already be covered
under CAA permit conditions, and thus
adding a non-fiber limit to PRR would
be redundant.
Two commenters stated that the
EPA’s proposed change to the definition
of paper recycling residuals
incorporating a limit of 2% by weight of
non-fiber materials was an
inappropriate application of an Institute
of Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI)
industry standard. The commenters
explained that the 2% ISRI figure
referred to the limit on prohibitive
materials for ‘‘furnish’’ (i.e., incoming
mixed paper to be recycled), not to the
outgoing paper recycling residuals
created by the recycling process.
Applying this standard to paper
recycling residuals would therefore not
be an appropriate application of the
standard.
Several commenters also argued that
any numeric limit on non-fiber material
would be difficult for facilities to meet.
This is due, in part, to the lack of a
18 This standard was derived from the 2021 ISRI
Scrap Specifications Circular, which sets an
industry standard for ‘‘furnish’’ i.e., the paper
materials being fed into the paper recycling process.
The Circular sets a standard allowing no more than
2% non-fiber content in furnish.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
standard test method for measuring the
non-fiber content of PRR. Furthermore,
one commenter noted that the 2%
numeric standard itself could not have
been met under typical conditions: PRR
typically have more than 2% non-fiber
content, albeit this amount also varies
by mill.
Rather than the 2% by weight
threshold for non-fiber materials
proposed, one commenter suggested
that a meaningful heating value would
be a more appropriate standard.
Commenters argued that heating value
is central in distinguishing an NHSM
that is combusted as a legitimate fuel
from an NHSM combusted for discard,
and a heating value standard would
thus be a more appropriate standard for
managing the concern that non-fiber
material does not provide for energy
recovery. The commenter also noted,
contrary to the EPA’s statement in the
proposed rule, that non-fiber materials
like waxes, adhesives, and plastics
actually raise the heating value of PRR.
This means that PRR with higher
amounts of non-fiber material may have
higher heating values. The commenter
then suggested that the definition of
PRR should be modified to state that
PRR may be considered a non-waste fuel
if the meaningful heating value of the
materials is preserved. As a specific
numerical alternative, the commenter
also suggested that a value of greater
than or equal to 6,300 Btu/lb on a dry
basis, either annually or over a longterm average basis, would be an
appropriate heating value standard.
Commentors set this value using AF&PA
member data and EPA Boiler MACT
database data. Commenters stated that
the value was chosen to be at the low
end of the range of data available, rather
than the midpoint of the range, to
ensure that the numeric standard would
be attainable.
One commenter agreed with the EPA
that the current definition of PRR in 40
CFR 241.2 (‘‘the secondary material
generated from the recycling of paper,
paperboard and corrugated containers
composed primarily of wet strength and
short wood fibers’’) was too limiting and
should be changed. However, the
commenter argued that the EPA’s
proposed change to ‘‘the secondary
material generated from the recycling of
paper, paperboard and corrugated
containers composed primarily of fibers
that are too small or weak to be used to
make new paper and paperboard
products’’ (emphasis added) was also
too limiting. The commenter suggested
that the definition be rewritten to read
‘‘the secondary material generated from
the recycling of paper, paperboard and
corrugated containers that includes
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
71771
fibers generally too small or weak to be
used to make new paper and paperboard
products’’ (emphasis added). The
commenter argued that, while mill
equipment extracts most of the fiber that
can be made into paper and paperboard,
some longer and stronger fibers can
evade the process and end up in the
PRR. The commenter also noted that
mills have an economic incentive to
capture the valuable fibers to make them
into new products instead of
combusting these fibers for energy
recovery.
3. EPA Response
The EPA disagrees with the
petitioner’s original arguments,
reiterated in comments, for removing
language limiting the amount of nonfiber materials in PRR burned as a nonwaste fuel. The reasoning for not
including the non-fiber materials as PRR
was not focused on discard due to
contaminants present, but rather,
discard due to lack of heating value and
not contributing to energy recovery. In
the April 14, 2014 proposed rule, the
EPA requested, but did not receive,
information regarding the percent of
non-fiber materials commonly present
in PRR and their heating value (79 FR
21017). Lacking information to the
contrary, the Agency determined that
PRR with higher amounts of non-fiber
materials would likely have a lower
heating value. Combustion of materials
with low heating values is typically
considered discard. PRR already have a
relatively low heating value (as fired,
average 3,700 Btu/lb on a wet basis),19
so the Agency reasoned that large
amounts of non-fiber materials would
lower the heating value of the material,
further raising the question of burning
as discard.
However, in the January 2022
proposed rule, the EPA sought to set a
numerical threshold for non-fiber
materials content, rather than prohibit
them entirely or rely on the term ‘‘small
amounts.’’ As indicated above,
information on such threshold amounts
of non-fiber materials was not received
from industry prior to publication of the
January 2022 proposed rule, and a
review of current scientific studies also
did not reveal specific amounts. As an
alternative, although not directly used
for PRR as fuels, the Scrap
Specifications Circular (2021); Institute
of Scrap Recycling Industries
Guidelines for Paper Stock identifies a
2% prohibitive material content limit
for mixed paper stock used for re19 81
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
FR 6716, February 8, 2016.
18OCR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
71772
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
pulping paper.20 In the circular,
prohibitive material is material which
by its presence, in excess of the amount
allowed, will make the furnish unusable
as the grade specified, as well as any
materials that may be damaging to
equipment. In evaluating the grades of
paper identified in the circular, the
maximum allowance of prohibitive
materials in mixed paper (which
consists of all paper and paperboard of
various qualities not limited to the type
of fiber content) is 2%. The Agency
previously concluded that this
prohibitive material measure could
provide an analogous measure for nonfiber materials contained within PRR.
Accordingly, the EPA proposed to set a
maximum non-fiber content standard
for PRR of 2% by weight.
However, information provided to the
Agency in comments on the January
2022 proposed rule provided new
information previously unavailable to
the Agency. Commenters’ data indicates
that many of the constituents of nonfiber content in PRR are more likely to
raise the heating value of PRR.
Commenters also argued that the ISRI
standard for non-fiber content of paper
recycling inputs would be inappropriate
to apply to material outputs from the
paper recycling process and claimed
that the difficulty of complying with the
proposed standard could lead paper
recycling mills to dispose of PRR in
landfills instead.
Accordingly, the EPA is replacing the
proposed 2% by weight standard with a
performance-based threshold to address
the heating value concerns and
associated consideration of potential
discard. Requiring PRR combusted
under the categorical non-waste listing
at 40 CFR 241.4(a)(6) to have a
minimum heating value is intended to
prevent residuals with poor heating
value from being used as a fuel in a
combustion unit, as this use case would
constitute disposal rather than use as a
legitimate fuel.
The Agency maintains that residuals
from processes such as mixed paper
waste recycling with significant
quantities of non-fiber materials (e.g.,
clays, starches) could be considered to
be a solid waste fuel when combusted
when those materials lack meaningful
heating value.21 Under the amended
definition of PRR, the determination of
non-waste fuel status would depend
more directly on the heating value of the
material stream in question, but could
still be deemed waste if non-fiber
20 ISRI Scrap Specifications Circular (2021), page
34; https://www.scrap2.org/specs/.
21 81 FR 6718, February 8, 2016.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
content drives down heating value
below the minimum threshold.22
This unique heating value threshold
for PRR is appropriate and consistent
with previous Agency statements
regarding the use of PRR as non-waste
fuel for energy recovery. The EPA
maintains that unique heating value
expectations are appropriate for PRR
because the boilers that combust this
material are specifically designed to
cost-effectively recover energy from it
(see 79 FR 21018–9, April 14, 2014).
Data received in comments corroborate
that the selected threshold would
ensure low heating value PRR are not
discarded under the guise of fuel
combustion, while also being achievable
for the limited number of mills that
currently combust this material.
Furthermore, the definition of PRR as
‘‘composed of primarily wet strength
and short wood fibers’’ was based on
previously submitted industry
information (81 FR 6721, February 8,
2016). However, based on the
information submitted in this petition,
the Agency agrees that the reference to
‘‘primarily wet strength and short wood
fibers’’ is too limiting and inadvertently
excludes fibers of different strength and
size that may provide heating value.
Nevertheless, the commenter’s
suggestion to further change the EPA’s
revised language in the January 28,
2022, proposal from ‘‘composed
primarily of fibers that are too small or
weak to be used to make new paper and
paperboard products’’ (emphasis added)
to ‘‘that includes fibers generally too
small or weak to be used to make new
paper and paperboard products’’
(emphasis added) is not an acceptable
change. This commenter-proposed
language would not be a specific enough
definition to provide assurance that
non-fiber material in PRR would be
minimized when PRR are combusted as
fuel. Commenters argue that the EPA’s
proposed definition is ‘‘unnecessarily
limiting,’’ but a definition that upholds
the integrity of PRR is necessary to
ensure that non-fiber material is not
overloaded and labelled as PRR, which
could show an indication of discard
rather than use as a legitimate fuel.
Therefore, we are finalizing the proposal
to change the language to ‘‘fibers that
are too small or weak to be used to make
new paper and paperboard products.’’
22 The EPA recognizes that plastic films, foam and
waxes could increase the heating value of a
recycling residual stream. While no upper boundary
on the heat content of PRR is being established, the
EPA notes that the definition of PRR including the
term ‘‘composed primarily of fibers’’ would prevent
application of the PRR definition to materials that
are composed mostly of plastics, foams and waxes
removed during the recycling of recovered paper,
paperboard and corrugated containers.
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Accordingly, the Agency finalizes the
revised definition of PRR as set out in
the amendatory section at the end of
this document.
IV. Effect of This Action on Other
Programs
The primary action of this final
rulemaking is to revise the definition of
Paper Recycling Residuals in the NHSM
regulations at 40 CFR 241.2.
Accordingly, this action affects other
programs only insofar as they rely on
the definitions outlined in part 241. In
particular, Clean Air Act permitting
regulations refer to the RCRA definition
of solid waste in determining whether a
combustion unit is a solid waste
incinerator or an industrial furnace for
permitting purposes. Thus, the changes
to the definition of PRR implemented by
this rule apply to CAA permitting
nationwide (i.e., do not depend upon
State adoption).
In order to qualify as a categorical
non-waste fuel under 40 CFR 241.4(a)
and thereby be combusted in a unit not
permitted to incinerate solid waste
under the CAA, a material would have
to meet the relevant definition in 40
CFR 241.2 and fulfill any additional
requirements listed in the relevant
categorical non-waste listing at 241.4.
Additionally, though the NHSM
regulations do not include specific
record-keeping requirements, the CAA
regulations at 40 CFR 60.2175(v) (for
new sources) or 40 CFR 60.2740(u) (for
existing sources) require that units
combusting materials designated as
categorical non-waste fuels under the
NHSM program must keep records
demonstrating that the material is a
listed non-waste fuel under 40 CFR
241.4(a). In order to fulfill that
requirement, the material would have to
meet the definition of the categorical
non-waste (at § 241.2) as well as any
additional requirements included in the
NHSM listing itself (at § 241.4(a)).
Under the current RCRA and CAA
regulations, as implemented through
Title V permits, an operator combusting
a material as a categorical non-waste
fuel must show that the material meets
the definition of the categorical nonwaste listing they are claiming. Based
on the revised definition of Paper
Recycling Residuals, the relevant CAA
permitting authority may require the
operator to document the fact that the
PRR’s heating value is above the
definitional threshold of 6,300 Btu/lb on
a dry basis. Given the fact the operator
must know fuel value of the PRR for
proper operation of the boiler, such a
potential permit condition is expected
to have a negligible burden. The exact
nature and frequency of the sampling
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
performed to document the fact that the
PRR meet the revised definition in 40
CFR 241.2 will vary according to
numerous site-specific factors and
therefore is best left to the discretion of
the relevant permitting authority. It
should also be noted that the definition
of PRR refers to ‘‘secondary material
generated from the recycling of paper,
paperboard and corrugated containers,’’
so inclusion of materials that are not
part of the usual paper, paperboard, or
corrugated container recycling processes
is definitionally disallowed.
Beyond amending the definition of
PRR, this action does not change the
effect of the NHSM regulations on other
programs as described in the March 21,
2011 NHSM final rule (76 FR 15456), as
amended on February 7, 2013 (78 FR
9138), February 8, 2016 (81 FR 6688)
and February 7, 2018 (83 FR 5317).
Refer to section VIII of the preamble to
the March 21, 2011 NHSM final rule for
the discussion on the effect of the
NHSM rule on other programs.
V. State Authority
A. Relationship to State Programs
This action and change to the
definition of PRR does not change the
relationship to State programs as
described in the March 21, 2011 NHSM
final rule. Refer to section IX of the
preamble to the March 21, 2011 NHSM
final rule for the discussion on State
authority including, ‘‘Applicability of
State Solid Waste Definitions and
Beneficial Use Determinations’’ and
‘‘Clarifications on the Relationship to
State Programs.’’ The Agency, however,
would like to reiterate that this rule (like
the March 21, 2011 and the February 7,
2013 final rules) is not intended to
interfere with a State’s program
authority over the general management
of solid waste.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
B. State Adoption of the Rulemaking
No Federal approval procedures for
State adoption of this final rule are
included in this rulemaking action
under RCRA subtitle D. While states are
not required to adopt regulations
promulgated under RCRA subtitle D,
some states incorporate Federal
regulations by reference or have specific
State statutory requirements that their
State program can be no more stringent
than the Federal regulations. In those
cases, the EPA anticipates that, if
required by State law, the changes being
made in this document will be
incorporated (or possibly adopted by
authorized State air programs)
consistent with the State’s laws and
administrative procedures.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
VI. Costs and Benefits
This action is definitional in nature,
and any costs or benefits accrue to the
corresponding Clean Air Act rules. In
accordance with the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
Circular A–4 requirement that the EPA
analyze the costs and benefits of
regulations, the EPA prepared a
regulatory impact analysis document for
this action that examines the scope of
indirect impacts.
VII. Children’s Environmental Health
Executive Order 13045 requires that
economically significant rules that may
impact children’s environmental health
are evaluated against possible
alternatives. Though this rule is not
economically significant and its impacts
are not expected to affect children’s
environmental health, the Agency still
considers potential environmental
health effects on children under EPA’s
2021 Policy on Children’s Health.
Children’s environmental health
refers to the effect of environmental
exposure during early life: from
conception, infancy, early childhood,
and adolescence through until 21 years
of age. EPA’s policy is informed by the
scientific understanding that children
may be at greater risk to environmental
contaminants than adults due to
differences in behavior and biology and
that the effects of early life exposures
may also arise in adulthood or in later
generations.
However, EPA does not believe the
environmental health or safety risks
addressed by this action present a risk
to children. Because this rule does not
change existing conditions, no
environmental health impacts are
expected to arise from this rulemaking.
The change to the definition of PRR
would not affect the overall risk to
anyone, including children, posed by
boiler emissions. This is because the
overall level of emissions, or the
emissions mix from boilers, are not
expected to change significantly because
of the change in definition of PRR.
In the event of any unforeseen
changes to air emissions, the EPA does
not believe this change would
disproportionately impact children. A
demographic analysis of the populace
living near major source boilers found
that the percentage of the population in
these areas that are children is generally
the same as the national average (see
‘‘Assessment of the Potential Costs,
Benefits, and Other Impacts for the
Final Rule’’ in the docket). Further,
boilers at paper recycling mills that
combust PRR as non-waste fuel remain
subject to the appropriate standards
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
71773
established under CAA section 112.
Thus, even in the event of a change in
air emissions due to this rule, any
potential health impacts would not be
expected to disproportionately affect
children. Additionally, this rule is
definitional in nature, so any
considerations of risk related to
combustion units’ CAA permits should
be accounted for in the relevant CAA
rulemakings that established those
permitting programs.
VIII. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Additional information about these
statutes and Executive Orders can be
found at https://www.epa.gov/lawsregulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 14094: Modernizing Regulatory
Review
This action is a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ as defined in Executive Order
12866, as amended by Executive Order
14094, because it may raise legal or
policy issues for which centralized
review would meaningfully further the
President’s priorities or the principles
set forth in the Executive Order.
Accordingly, EPA submitted this action
to OMB for Executive Order 12866
review. Documentation of any changes
made in response to the Executive Order
12866 review is available in the docket.
The EPA prepared an economic analysis
of the potential impacts associated with
this action. This analysis, ‘‘Assessment
of the Potential Costs, Benefits, and
Other Impacts for the Final Rule’’ is also
available in the docket.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose any new
information collection burden under the
PRA as this action only changes the
definition of PRR for the purposes of the
NHSM regulations. There are no new
recordkeeping or reporting requirements
with this definitional change. OMB has
previously approved the information
collection activities contained in the
existing regulations and has assigned
OMB control number 2050–0205.
C. 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, the EPA concludes that
the impact of concern for this rule is any
significant adverse economic impact on
small entities and that the agency is
certifying that this rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
71774
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
because the rule has no net burden on
the small entities subject to the rule.
Because the petition denial maintains
the status quo, there is no impact to any
entity, including to any small entity,
from the petition denial. In addition, the
revision to the definition of PRR will
reduce regulatory uncertainty associated
with these materials and help increase
management efficiency for all pulp and
paper mills with units that combust
PRR, including mills that meet the
definition of small entity without
requiring a change in operations. We
have therefore concluded that this
action has no net burden on the small
entities subject to the rule.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does
not significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. The costs involved in this
action are imposed only by participation
in a voluntary Federal program. UMRA
generally excludes from the definition
of ‘‘Federal intergovernmental mandate’’
duties that arise from participation in a
voluntary Federal program. Affected
entities are not required to manage the
final additional NHSMs as non-waste
fuels.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action does not have Tribal
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13175. It will neither impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
Tribal governments, nor preempt Tribal
law. Potential aspects associated with
the categorical non-waste fuel
determinations under this final rule may
invoke minor indirect Tribal
implications to the extent that entities
generating or consolidating these
NHSMs on Tribal lands could be
affected. However, any impacts are
expected to be negligible. Thus,
Executive Order 13175 does not apply
to this action.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
Executive Order 13045 directs Federal
agencies to include an evaluation of the
health and safety effects of the planned
regulation on children in Federal health
and safety standards and explain why
the regulation is preferable to
potentially effective and reasonably
feasible alternatives. This action is not
subject to Executive Order 13045
because it is not a significant regulatory
action under section 3(f)(1) of Executive
Order 12866, and because the EPA does
not believe the environmental health or
safety risks addressed by this action
present a disproportionate risk to
children. The change to the definition of
PRR would not affect the overall risk to
children posed by boiler emissions. This
is because the overall level of emissions,
or the emissions mix from boilers, are
not expected to change significantly
because of the change in definition of
PRR, and because boilers at paper
recycling mills that combust PRR as
non-waste fuel remain subject to the
appropriate standards established under
CAA section 112.
However, the EPA’s Policy on
Children’s Health applies to this action.
Information on how the Policy was
applied is available under ‘‘Children’s
Environmental Health’’ in Section VII of
this preamble.
H. 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.
The selected NHSMs affected by this
proposed action would not be generated
in quantities sufficient to significantly
(adversely or positively) impact the
supply, distribution, or use of energy at
the national level. Even if 100% of the
available PRR were converted to energy
(an unlikely best-case scenario), that
would translate to a potential increase
of only 0.002% to 0.003% in the
national energy supply, and these
effects would be localized at recycling
paper mills.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This action involves technical
standards. Therefore, the EPA
conducted a search to identify
potentially applicable voluntary
consensus standards. However, the
Agency identified no such standards
and none were brought to its attention
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
in comments. Therefore, the EPA has
decided to use the 6,300 Btu/lb dry
basis minimum standard for PRR
heating value.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629,
February 16, 1994) directs Federal
agencies, to the greatest extent
practicable and permitted by law, to
make environmental justice part of their
mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations (people of color and/or
indigenous peoples) and low-income
populations.
The EPA believes that the human
health or environmental conditions that
exist prior to this action result in or
have the potential to result in
disproportionate and adverse human
health or environmental effects on
communities with environmental justice
concerns. Both landfills and boilers are
generally more likely to be located in
disadvantaged communities, so
transporting and managing NHSMs
(whether for disposal at a landfill or
combustion as a non-waste fuel in a
boiler) is likely to have environmental
health effects on these communities.23
The EPA believes that this action is
not likely to change existing
disproportionate and adverse effects on
communities with environmental justice
concerns. This is because the overall
level of emissions, or the emissions mix
from boilers, are not expected to change
significantly because of the change in
definition of PRR, and because boilers at
paper recycling mills that combust PRR
as non-waste fuel remain subject to the
protective standards established under
CAA section 112. Further, this RCRA
action alone does not directly require
any change in the management of these
materials. Thus, any potential materials
management changes stimulated by this
action, and corresponding impacts to
minority and low-income communities,
are considered to be indirect impacts,
and would only occur in conjunction
with the corresponding CAA rules.
23 For more information on the environmental
justice analysis, see the March 21, 2011 NHSM final
rule (76 FR 15455) and U.S. EPA, Office of Resource
Conservation and Recovery, Summary of
Environmental Justice Impacts for the NonHazardous Secondary Material (NHSM) Rule, the
2010 Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste
Incinerator (CISWI) Standards, the 2010 Major
Source Boiler NESHAP and the 2010 Area Source
Boiler NESHAP, February 2011, docket number
EPA–HQ–RCRA–2008–0329–1834.
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 200 / Wednesday, October 18, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
The information supporting this
Executive Order review is contained in
the docket as part of the Assessment of
the Potential Costs, Benefits, and Other
Impacts of the Final Rule.
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and
the EPA will submit a rule report to
each House of the Congress and to the
Comptroller General of the United
States. This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’
as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the EPA amends 40 CFR part
241 as follows:
PART 241—SOLID WASTES USED AS
FUELS OR INGREDIENTS IN
COMBUSTION UNITS
1. The authority citation for part 241
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6903, 6912, 7429.
2. Section 241.2 is amended by
revising the definition of ‘‘Paper
recycling residuals’’ to read as follows:
■
Definitions.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
*
*
*
*
Paper recycling residuals means the
secondary material generated from the
recycling of paper, paperboard and
corrugated containers composed
primarily of fibers that are too small or
weak to be used to make new paper and
paperboard products. Secondary
material from paper recycling processes
with a heating value below 6,300 Btu/
lb on a dry basis due to excessive nonfiber material content (including
polystyrene foam, polyethylene film,
other plastics, waxes, adhesives, dyes
and inks, clays, starches and other
coating and filler material) are not paper
recycling residuals for the purposes of
this definition.
*
*
*
*
*
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Oct 17, 2023
Jkt 262001
[Docket No. 230306–0065; RTID 0648–
XD274]
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Pacific Cod in the
Bering Sea Subarea of the Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area
NMFS is prohibiting directed
fishing for Pacific cod, except for the
Community Development Quota
program (CDQ), in the Bering Sea
subarea of the Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands management area (BSAI). This
action is necessary to prevent exceeding
the non-CDQ allocation of the 2023
Pacific cod total allowable catch (TAC)
in the Bering Sea subarea of the BSAI.
DATES: Effective 1200 hrs, Alaska local
time (A.l.t.), October 16, 2023, through
2400 hrs, A.l.t., December 31, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Krista Milani, 907–581–2062.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS
manages the groundfish fishery in the
BSAI according to the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area (FMP) prepared by
the North Pacific Fishery Management
Council under authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act). Regulations
governing fishing by U.S. vessels in
accordance with the FMP appear at
subpart H of 50 CFR part 600 and 50
CFR part 679.
The non-CDQ allocation of the 2023
Pacific cod TAC in the Bering Sea
subarea of the BSAI is 113,776 metric
tons (mt) as established by the final
2023 and 2024 harvest specifications for
groundfish in the BSAI (88 FR 14926,
March 10, 2023) and correction (88 FR
18258, March 28, 2023). In accordance
with § 679.20(d)(1)(i), the
Administrator, Alaska Region, NMFS,
has determined that the non-CDQ
allocation of the 2023 Pacific cod TAC
in the Bering Sea subarea of the BSAI
will soon be reached. Therefore, the
Regional Administrator is establishing a
directed fishing allowance of 110,976
mt, and is setting aside the remaining
2,800 mt as incidental catch in directed
SUMMARY:
Michael Regan,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2023–22878 Filed 10–17–23; 8:45 am]
50 CFR Part 679
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; closure.
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials, Waste treatment
and disposal.
*
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
AGENCY:
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 241
§ 241.2
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
71775
fishing for other species. In accordance
with § 679.20(d)(1)(iii), the Regional
Administrator finds that this directed
fishing allowance has been reached.
Consequently, NMFS is prohibiting
directed fishing for Pacific cod in the
Bering Sea subarea of the BSAI.
While this closure is effective, the
maximum retainable amounts at 50 CFR
679.20(e) and (f) apply at any time
during a trip.
Classification
NMFS issues this action pursuant to
section 305(d) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act. This action is required by 50 CFR
part 679, which was issued pursuant to
section 304(b), and is exempt from
review under Executive Order 12866.
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), there
is good cause to waive prior notice and
an opportunity for public comment on
this action, as notice and comment
would be impracticable and contrary to
the public interest, as it would prevent
NMFS from responding to the most
recent fisheries data in a timely fashion
and would delay the directed fishing
closure of non-CDQ Pacific cod in the
Bering Sea subarea of the BSAI. NMFS
was unable to publish notice providing
time for public comment because the
most recent, relevant data only became
available as of October 12, 2023.
The Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries, NOAA also finds good cause
to waive the 30-day delay in the
effective date of this action under 5
U.S.C. 553(d)(3). This finding is based
upon the reasons provided above for
waiver of prior notice and opportunity
for public comment.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: October 13, 2023.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–22958 Filed 10–13–23; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 230224–0053; RTID 0648–
XD331]
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Pollock in Statistical
Area 630 in the Gulf of Alaska
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
AGENCY:
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
18OCR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 200 (Wednesday, October 18, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 71761-71775]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-22878]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 241
[EPA-HQ-OLEM-2020-0550; FRL-7815-01-OLEM]
RIN 2050-AH13
Non-Hazardous Secondary Material Standards; Response to Petition
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency is finalizing its denial
of a rulemaking petition from American Forest and Paper Association et
al. requesting amendments to the Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials
regulations, initially promulgated on March 21, 2011, and amended on
February 7, 2013, February 8, 2016, and February 7, 2018, under the
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. These regulations establish
standards and procedures for identifying whether non-hazardous
secondary materials are solid wastes when legitimately used as fuels or
ingredients in combustion units. The petition requested the following
amendments: Change the legitimacy criterion for comparison of
contaminants in the non-hazardous secondary material against those in
the traditional fuel the unit is designed to burn from mandatory to
``should consider''; remove associated designed to burn and other
limitations for creosote-treated railroad ties; and revise the
definition of ``paper recycling residuals'' to remove the limit on non-
fiber materials in paper recycling residuals that can be burned as a
non-waste fuel. The Environmental Protection Agency proposed to deny
the petition on January 28, 2022. After review of the public comments,
the Agency is finalizing its denial of the requested amendments. In
addition to denying this rulemaking petition, the Agency is revising
the definition of paper recycling residuals to limit the impact non-
fiber materials may have on the heat value of paper recycling residuals
in order for them to be considered a non-waste fuel.
DATES: This final rule is effective on December 18, 2023.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OLEM-2020-0550. 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 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: Patrick Wise, Office of Resource
Conservation and Recovery, Materials Recovery and Waste Management
Division (MC 5303P), Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20460; telephone number: 202-566-0520; email
address: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The following outline is provided to aid in
locating information in this preamble.
I. General Information
A. List of Abbreviations and Acronyms Used in This Proposed Rule
B. What is the statutory authority for this proposed rule?
C. Does this proposed rule apply to me?
II. Background
A. History of Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials Rulemaking
B. Summary of This Action
C. Summary of the Petitioners' Requested Changes
D. Background on Creosote-Treated Railroad Ties
III. EPA Response to Petitioners' Requested Changes
IV. Effect of This Rule on Other Programs
V. State Authority
A. Relationship to State Programs
B. State Adoption of the Rulemaking
VI. Costs and Benefits
VII. Children's Health
VIII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act
[[Page 71762]]
I. General Information
A. List of Abbreviations and Acronyms Used in This Rule
AAR Association of American Railroads
AF&PA American Forest and Paper Association
ASLRRA American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association
AWC American Wood Council
Btu British thermal unit
CAA Clean Air Act
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CISWI Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste Incinerator
CTRT Creosote-treated railroad ties
EPA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
FR Federal Register
HAP Hazardous air pollutants
ISRI Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries
MACT Maximum achievable control technology
NAICS North American Industrial Classification System
NHSM Non-hazardous secondary material
OMB Office of Management and Budget
PRR Paper recycling residuals
RCRA Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
RIN Regulatory information number
SO2 Sulfur dioxide
SVOC Semi-volatile organic compound
TWC Treated Wood Council
U.S.C. United States Code
B. What is the statutory authority for this final rule?
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or ``the Agency'') is
finalizing its denial of the requested revisions in the American Forest
and Paper Association (AF&PA) petition \1\ and is making regulatory
revisions to the definition of paper recycling residuals under the
authority of sections 2002(a)(1) and 1004(27) of the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), as amended, 42 U.S.C. 6912(a)(1)
and 6903(27). Section 129(a)(1)(D) of the Clean Air Act (CAA) directs
the EPA to establish standards for Commercial and Industrial Solid
Waste Incinerators (CISWI), which burn solid waste. Section 129(g)(6)
of the CAA provides that the term ``solid waste'' is to be established
by the EPA under RCRA (42 U.S.C. 7429(g)(6)). Section 2002(a)(1) of
RCRA authorizes the Agency to promulgate regulations as are necessary
to carry out its functions under the Act. The statutory definition of
``solid waste'' is stated in RCRA section 1004(27).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Petition for Rulemaking to Amend the Legitimacy Criteria in
40 CFR part 241,--The Categorical Non-Waste Fuels Classification
Criteria for Creosote Treated Railroad Ties and Other Treated
Railroads Ties, and the Definition of Paper Recycling Residuals,
December 7, 2018, available in docket (EPA-HQ-OLEM-2020-0550).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Does this final rule apply to me?
Categories and entities potentially affected by this action, either
directly or indirectly, include, but may not be limited to the
following:
Generators and Potential Users \a\ of Categorical Non-Waste Fuels
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Primary industry category or subcategory NAICS \b\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Utilities............................................... 221
Manufacturing........................................... 31, 32, 33
Wood Product Manufacturing.............................. 321
Sawmills................................................ 321113
Wood Preservation (includes railroad tie creosote 321114
treating)..............................................
Paper Manufacturing..................................... 322
Cement Manufacturing.................................... 32731
Rail Transportation (includes line haul and short line). 482
Scenic and Sightseeing Transportation, Land (Includes: 487110
railroad, scenic and sightseeing)......................
Port and Harbor Operations (Used railroad ties)......... 488310
Landscaping Services.................................... 561730
Solid Waste Collection.................................. 562111
Solid Waste Landfill.................................... 562212
Solid Waste Combustors and Incinerators................. 562213
Marinas................................................. 713930
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Includes: Major Source Boilers, Area Source Boilers, and Solid Waste
Incinerators.
\b\ NAICS--North American Industrial Classification System.
This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a
guide for readers regarding entities potentially impacted by this
action. This table lists examples of the types of entities which the
EPA is aware of that could potentially be affected by this action.
Other types of entities not listed could also be affected. To determine
whether your facility, company, business, organization, etc., is
affected by this action, you should examine the applicability criteria
in this rule. If you have any questions regarding the applicability of
this action to a particular entity, consult the person listed in the
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
II. Background
A. History of the Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials Rulemaking
The non-hazardous secondary materials (NHSM) regulations establish
standards and procedures for identifying when non-hazardous secondary
materials burned in combustion units are solid wastes. The RCRA statute
defines ``solid waste'' as ``any garbage, refuse, sludge from a waste
treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or air pollution control
facility and other discarded material . . . resulting from industrial,
commercial, mining, and agricultural operations, and from community
activities.'' (RCRA section 1004(27) (emphasis added)). The key concept
is that of ``discard'' and, in fact, this definition hinges on the
meaning of the phrase ``other discarded material,'' since this term
encompasses all other examples provided in the definition.
The meaning of ``solid waste,'' as defined under RCRA, is of
particular importance as it relates to section 129 of the CAA. If a
material or any portion thereof is a solid waste under RCRA, a
combustion unit burning it is required to meet the CAA section 129
emission standards for solid waste incineration units (NRDC v. EPA, 489
F.3d 1250, 1258). If the material is not a solid waste, combustion
units are required to meet the CAA section 112 emission standards. CAA
section 129 further states that the term ``solid waste'' shall have the
meaning ``established by the Administrator pursuant to the Solid Waste
Disposal Act'' (42 U.S.C.
[[Page 71763]]
7429(g)(6)). The Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended, is commonly
referred to as RCRA.
The Agency first solicited comments on how the RCRA definition of
solid waste should apply to NHSMs when used as fuels or ingredients in
combustion units in an advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM),
which was published in the Federal Register on January 2, 2009 (74 FR
41). The EPA then published an NHSM proposed rule on June 4, 2010 (75
FR 31844), which the EPA finalized on March 21, 2011 (76 FR 15456).
In the March 21, 2011 rule, the EPA finalized standards and
procedures to be used to identify whether NHSMs are solid wastes when
used as fuels or ingredients in combustion units. ``Secondary
material'' was defined for the purposes of that rulemaking as any
material that is not the primary product of a manufacturing or
commercial process, and can include post-consumer material, off-
specification commercial chemical products or manufacturing chemical
intermediates, post-industrial material, and scrap (codified at 40 CFR
241.2). ``Non-hazardous secondary material'' is a secondary material
that, when discarded, would not be identified as a hazardous waste
under 40 CFR part 261 (codified at 40 CFR 241.2). Traditional fuels,
including historically managed traditional fuels (e.g., coal, oil,
natural gas) and ``alternative'' traditional fuels (e.g., clean
cellulosic biomass), are not secondary materials and thus are not solid
wastes under the rule unless discarded (codified at 40 CFR 241.2).
A key concept included in the March 21, 2011 rule is that NHSMs
used as non-waste fuels in combustion units regulated under CAA section
112 must meet the legitimacy criteria specified in 40 CFR 241.3(d)(1);
otherwise, NHSMs must be combusted in incinerator units regulated under
CAA section 129. Application of the legitimacy criteria helps ensure
that the fuel product is being legitimately and beneficially used and
not simply being discarded through combustion. To meet the legitimacy
criteria, the NHSM must be managed as a valuable commodity, have a
meaningful heating value and be used as a fuel in a combustion unit
that recovers energy, and contain contaminants or groups of
contaminants at concentration levels comparable to (or lower than)
those in traditional fuels which the combustion unit is designed to
burn. The NHSM legitimacy criteria have been in place since 2011 and
were upheld by the D.C. Circuit Court in Solvay v. EPA. 608 Fed. Appx.
10 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (45 ELR 20107 Nos. 11-1189, (D.C. Cir., 06/03/
2015)).
Based on these criteria, the March 21, 2011 rule identified the
following NHSMs as not being solid wastes:
The NHSM that meets the legitimacy criteria and is used as
a fuel and that remains within the control of the generator (whether at
the site of generation or another site the generator has control over)
(40 CFR 241.3(b)(1));
The NHSM that meets the legitimacy criteria and is used as
an ingredient in a combustion unit (whether by the generator or outside
the control of the generator) (40 CFR 241.3(b)(3));
Discarded NHSM that has been sufficiently processed to
produce a fuel or ingredient that meets the legitimacy criteria (40 CFR
241.3(b)(4)); or
On a case-by-case petition basis, NHSM that has been
determined to have been handled outside the control of the generator,
has not been discarded and is indistinguishable in all relevant aspects
from a fuel product, and meets the legitimacy criteria (40 CFR
241.3(c)).
In 2013, the EPA amended the NHSM rules to ``clarify several
provisions in order to implement the non-hazardous secondary materials
rule as the Agency originally intended.'' \2\ While the 2013 final rule
did not contain any provisions specific to creosote-treated railroad
ties (CTRT), the EPA noted that AF&PA and the American Wood Council
submitted a letter with supporting information on December 6, 2012,
seeking a categorical non-waste determination for CTRT combusted in any
unit.\3\ The EPA discussed at the time that the Agency was reviewing
the petition and also asked petitioners to provide additional
information regarding CTRT, including industry sectors that burn CTRT;
types of combustion units; types of traditional fuels that could
otherwise be burned in these combustion units; extent of use of CTRT in
non-industrial boilers; and laboratory analyses of CTRT for the
contaminants, as defined under 40 CFR 241.2, known to be significant
components of creosote, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. The
EPA also provided notice that, assuming the additional information
supported the petitioners' representations, the Agency intended to
propose a categorical non-waste fuel determination for CTRT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste Incineration Units:
Reconsideration and Final Amendments; Non-Hazardous Secondary
Materials That Are Solid Waste; Final Rule. 78 FR 9112, February 7,
2013.
\3\ 78 FR 9173, February 7, 2013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On February 8, 2016 (81 FR 6687), the EPA published final NHSM rule
amendments that provided a categorical non-waste fuel determination for
CTRT that undergo, at a minimum, metal removal and shredding or
grinding and are used as fuel in units designed to burn both biomass
and fuel oil as part of normal operations and not solely as part of
start-up or shut-down operations.\4\ In addition, the final rule
included a special provision for units at major source pulp and paper
mills or power producers subject to 40 CFR part 63, subpart DDDDD that
were designed to burn biomass and fuel oil as part of normal
operations, but are modified (e.g., oil delivery mechanisms are
removed) in order to use natural gas instead of fuel oil. These units
may continue to combust the CTRT as product fuel if the following
conditions are met: (A) CTRT must be burned in an existing (i.e.,
commenced construction prior to April 14, 2014) stoker, bubbling bed,
fluidized bed, or hybrid suspension grate boilers; and (B) CTRT can
comprise no more than 40 percent of the fuel that is used on an annual
heat input basis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 81 FR 6723, February 8, 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A similar categorical non-waste fuel determination approach was
applied to creosote-borate and mixtures of creosote and certain non-
creosote treated railroad ties (i.e., other treated railroad ties, or
OTRT) in the February 7, 2018 NHSM rule amendments.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ 83 FR 5318-19, February 7, 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Summary of This Action
This action consists of two parts. First, the Agency is finalizing
its response to a rulemaking petition (``the petition'') requesting
amendments to the NHSM regulations, initially promulgated on March 21,
2011, and amended on February 7, 2013, February 8, 2016, and February
7, 2018 under RCRA. Second, the Agency is finalizing a revised
definition of PRR. These two parts of this action are separate and
distinct, and each part operates independently from the other.
In addition, within the first part (in which the Agency is
finalizing its response to the petition), the Agency intends that each
of the individual components of the petition and EPA's responses to
those components, are also severable.
C. Summary of the Petitioners' Requested Changes
The petition was received on December 7, 2018; petitioners included
AF&PA, the Association of American Railroads (AAR), Treated Wood
Council (TWC), American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association
[[Page 71764]]
(ASLRRA), and American Wood Council (AWC). The petition requested the
following amendments to the NHSM regulations: (1) Change from mandatory
to ``should consider'' the legitimacy criterion for comparison of
contaminants in the NHSM to the traditional fuel the unit is designed
to burn found at 40 CFR 241.3(d)(1)(iii); (2) remove associated
designed to burn and other limitations for creosote-treated railroad
ties found at 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)-(10); and (3) revise the definition of
paper recycling residuals that can be burned as non-waste fuel found at
40 CFR 241.2 to remove the limit on non-fiber materials. In issuing
this petition denial, the EPA has considered and addressed each of the
issues raised in the petition throughout this notice. Arguments raised
in pages 13-16 of the petition regarding the contaminant comparison
criteria are addressed in Section III.A. of the preamble; arguments
raised on pages 16-17 of the petition regarding CTRT storage times are
addressed in Section III.C. of the preamble; arguments raised in pages
18-20 of the petition regarding environmental benefits of removing
restrictions on the combustion of CTRT are addressed in Sections III.A
and III.B of the preamble; arguments raised in pages 20-22 of the
petition regarding the definition of paper recycling residuals are
addressed in Section III.D of the preamble.
D. Background on Creosote-Treated Railroad Ties
CTRT are still produced in large numbers today, and roughly 10-20
million railroad ties are removed from service each year in the U.S.\6\
After railroad ties are removed from service, they may be stored for
varying periods of time before being transferred for sorting/
processing. Based on information provided by industry,\7\ the
processing of the railroad ties into fuel by the reclamation/processing
companies involves several steps (metal removal, shredding, screening,
etc.), which have already been described in the proposed petition
response. Once the processing of CTRT is complete, the CTRT are sold
directly to the end-use combustor for energy recovery, where they are
typically combusted within a few days or weeks of receipt.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ 2018 Railroad Tie Survey, Association of American Railroads,
available in the docket EPA-HQ-OLEM-2020-0550.
\7\ AFPA Rail Tie Petition Request December 6, 2012, EPA-HQ-
RCRA-2013-0110-0002.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Use of CTRT as an alternative fuel has both positive and negative
environmental implications. Combusting CTRT for energy recovery may
reduce fossil fuel use,\8\ increase the heat value of the fuel mix,
improve the combustion temperature and conditions,\9\ and divert waste
ties from landfill. However, CTRT has elevated levels of various
contaminants when compared to coal (76 FR 15483, March 21, 2011), fuel
oil, and biomass (81 FR 6687, February 8, 2016). Thus, the 2016 NHSM
non-waste determination is limited to CTRT that are used as fuel in
specific types of units where CTRT have contaminants at levels
comparable to or lower than the traditional fuel that combustion units
are designed to burn.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ While creosote is a coal derivative, because the creosote
has already been used once as a preservative on railway ties,
burning those ties still may reduce the need for burning of fossil
fuels.
\9\ In addition, Freeman et al., 2000 indicates that co-firing
CTRT with coal at 10% the annual heating value may reduce emissions
of certain pollutants. However, that study is very limited and
cannot be extrapolated to the use of CTRT as a fuel in general.
Little is known about impacts of variability in CTRT or coal
composition and how these would impact emissions for any given
combustor design or control device configuration. For more
information, see Creosote Treated Railroad Ties and Coal Co-firing
Technical Support Document, available in the docket, EPA-HQ-OLEM-
2020-0550-0004.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, in the January 28, 2022 proposed petition response,
the EPA discussed potential problems associated with processing CTRT
for use as fuel and requested public comment on the frequency and
severity of such issues. Grinding CTRT can create dust that may blow
onto neighboring properties. Processing CTRT into fuel can also be
associated with other, more-generalized issues like excess noise from
grinding, loud night-time operations, and the smell of creosote.
However, Tribal, State, and local governments have authority under
their solid waste and water programs, as well as local ordinances, to
address any citizen complaints associated with the management and
processing of CTRT prior to their use as a non-waste fuel, including
problems associated with dust, excess noise, and runoff. In most cases,
CTRT remain solid waste until processed to produce a non-waste fuel per
40 CFR 241.3(b)(4) and thus remain under such solid waste regulatory
authority. In addition, a Federal non-waste determination under 40 CFR
part 241 does not affect a State's authority to regulate a non-
hazardous secondary material as a solid waste under the State's RCRA
Subtitle D solid waste management program.
It should also be noted that environmental concerns associated with
processing and management may impact a material's classification as a
non-waste fuel. In order to fulfill the ``valuable commodity''
legitimacy criterion required of NHSM burned as fuel (40 CFR
241.3(d)(1)(i)), the material must be ``managed in a manner consistent
with the analogous fuel or otherwise be adequately contained to prevent
releases to the environment.'' Likewise, when no analogous fuel exists,
the material must be ``adequately contained so as to prevent releases
to the environment.''
The EPA requested public comment on the potential health and
environmental risks associated with managing and processing CTRT prior
to combustion and potential approaches to addressing these issues, but
the Agency received no public input on these matters. Absent sufficient
information surrounding these issues and considering the existing
authority of State and local governments to address many of these
issues, the EPA is declining to take further action on this issue at
this time.
III. EPA Response to Petitioners' Requested Changes
This action is based on the petition and its supporting materials,
the Agency's review and evaluation of this information, information
submitted by other stakeholders, and relevant information compiled by
the Agency. All materials and information that form the basis for this
decision are available in the public docket supporting this action. The
petition's arguments and supporting information, in addition to other
public comments received, are summarized and discussed below, followed
by the Agency's response.
A. Request To Change the Contaminant Comparison Criterion From
Mandatory to ``Should Consider''
1. Petitioners' Request
40 CFR 241.3(d)(1)(iii) currently states that, ``The non-hazardous
secondary material must contain contaminants or groups of contaminants
at levels comparable in concentration to or less than those in
traditional fuel(s) that the combustion unit is designed to burn''
(emphasis added). Petitioners requested the following revision in the
regulatory language: ``Persons should consider whether the non-
hazardous secondary material contains contaminants or groups of
contaminants at levels comparable in concentration to or lower than
those in traditional fuel(s) that the combustion unit is capable of
burning . . . The factor in this paragraph does not have to be met for
the non-hazardous secondary material to be considered a non-waste
fuel'' (emphasis added).
Petitioners' rationale for this suggested change focused on a July
7, 2017 decision by the U.S. Court of
[[Page 71765]]
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit that rejected mandatory compliance with
the contaminant comparison criterion portion of the legitimacy test in
the context of the RCRA rules defining ``solid wastes'' under RCRA's
Subtitle C hazardous waste program (``DSW rule''). American Petroleum
Institute v. Environmental Protection Agency, 862 F.3d 50 (D.C. Cir.
2017) (``API''). Petitioners argued that, in light of the Court's DSW
rule decision, the continued mandatory use of the contaminant
comparison criterion in the NHSM rule, including limiting railroad tie
non-waste fuel classifications to certain types of combustion units,
can no longer be justified.
Petitioners referenced preamble language the EPA used in the 2015
DSW final rule regarding the contaminant comparison criterion and said
that ``[t]his language is consistent with the Identification of Non-
Hazardous Secondary Materials that are Solid Wastes final rule (76 FR
15456, March 21, 2011)'' (80 FR 1727, January 13, 2015). From this
preamble language petitioners concluded that the EPA has acknowledged
the equivalence of the contaminant comparison factors in the two rules
(i.e., Factor 4 in the DSW rule and third legitimacy criterion in the
NHSM rule).
In 2017, the API Court invalidated the fourth factor in the DSW
rule, finding that ``[n]ever in the rulemaking does EPA make out why a
product that fails those criteria is likely to be discarded in any
legitimate sense of the term.'' 862 F.3d at 62. Petitioners say that
the Court also challenged the EPA's ``bare assertion that high levels
of hazardous constituents . . . could indicate discard,'' and noted
that the contaminant comparison at issue was ``not a reasonable tool
for distinguishing products from wastes.'' Id at 60, 63 (internal
quotes omitted).
Petitioners argued that the API holding, with its critique of the
EPA's application of this element of the definition of legitimate
recycling in the DSW rule, applies with equal force to the NHSM
legitimacy criteria set forth at 40 CFR 241.3(d). See id at 63.
Therefore, petitioners alleged that, based on the reasoning and holding
in API, the contaminant comparison criterion currently contained in the
NHSM rule's legitimacy criteria and the corresponding NHSM rules for
railroad ties treated with creosote and other wood preservatives can no
longer be used as mandatory elements to determine whether a secondary
material is discarded or not.
Furthermore, petitioners asserted that the EPA has recognized that
the contaminant comparison should not be a determining factor for
whether a material is being discarded. In its 2016 Rule on Additions to
List of Categorical Non-Waste Fuels, the EPA expressly noted that
``CTRTs do not become wastes solely because of the switch to natural
gas'' (81 FR 6687, 6731, February 8, 2016). In that rule, the EPA
reasoned that facilities that have demonstrated the ability to burn
fuel oil and biomass should not be penalized for switching to natural
gas, a fuel that creates less air pollution. In addition, petitioners
stated that the EPA properly determined that resinated wood should
qualify as a categorical non-waste fuel under the NHSM rule, despite
expressly recognizing that this material ``may not meet the regulatory
contaminant legitimacy criteria in every situation'' (78 FR 9112, 9156,
February 7, 2013). Petitioners claimed that this prior EPA precedent is
fully consistent with the Court's decision in API and underscores the
need to eliminate the contaminant comparison as a mandatory factor in
the NHSM rule's legitimacy criteria generally, and as a condition as
applied to individual NHSMs.
2. Public Comment
Commenters continued to argue that the 2017 API decision is
applicable to the NHSM contaminant comparison criterion, iterating
similar positions taken in the original petition. In particular,
commenters contended that the sole statutory definition of ``solid
waste'' in RCRA means that the contaminant comparison test must be
applied identically for hazardous and non-hazardous materials. Because
the test was invalidated for hazardous secondary material in the 2017
API decision, they argued the contaminant comparison criterion should
also be eliminated as a mandatory criterion for non-hazardous secondary
material being burned as a non-waste fuel. Commenters likewise stated
that a non-mandatory standard should be permissible for materials that
are not hazardous when discarded if a non-mandatory test is allowable
for materials that are hazardous when discarded. Commenters also stated
that combustion units would still be regulated by CAA section 112
standards if the contaminant comparison test was not mandatory.
3. EPA Response
The argument that the 2017 API decision invalidates the contaminant
comparison criterion for the NHSM program fails because the contaminant
standards in each rule were established for different purposes and in
different contexts.
The DSW rule establishes standards for legitimate recycling of
hazardous secondary materials into products (not fuels). The exclusions
in the DSW rule address reclamation, and specifically omit burning for
energy recovery. Unlike NHSMs, hazardous secondary materials that are
burned for energy recovery are always solid waste,\10\ unless the
material is a commercial chemical product that is itself a fuel.\11\
Combustion is an inherently destructive process, even when energy is
recovered, and unlike other types of recycling, there is no final
product to consider in determining the impact of elevated hazardous
constituents. The contaminant comparison in 40 CFR 260.43(b) compares
hazardous constituents in the product of the recycling process to the
corresponding constituents in the analogous product made from virgin
material. While 40 CFR 260.43(b) specifies that this factor ``does not
have to be met for the recycling to be considered legitimate,'' the
regulation also explains that ``[i]n evaluating the extent to which
this factor is met and in determining whether a process that does not
meet this factor is still legitimate, persons can consider exposure
from toxics in the product, the bioavailability of the toxics in the
product and other relevant considerations.'' In other words, the
definition of legitimate recycling in 40 CFR 260.43, as it relates to
hazardous constituents, focuses on the effect those hazardous
constituents have on the risks posed by the product of recycling.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ The EPA notes that the statutory objectives associated with
designating a solid waste as discarded warrant different
implementation strategies depending on the context. See Utility Air
Regulatory Group v. EPA, 573 U.S. 302, 320 (2014) (finding that
statutory terms, even those that are defined in the statute, ``may
take on distinct characters from association with distinct statutory
objects calling for different implementation strategies'').
\11\ See 40 CFR 261.2(c)(2), RCRA section 3004(q); Natural
Resources Defense Council v. EPA, 755 F.3d 1010 (June 27, 2014)) and
Sierra Club v. EPA, 755 F.3d 968.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In contrast, the NHSM rule was established solely to determine
whether an NHSM that is combusted as a fuel or an ingredient is a waste
or a non-waste for purposes of applying appropriate emission standards
under CAA section 129 or CAA section 112. Without the contaminant
criterion, an NHSM could contain contaminant levels that are
significantly higher than the traditional fuel(s) they are meant to
replace and still be considered a non-waste fuel. So, for example, if
CTRT-derived pellets could be marketed to any wood-burning boiler, such
as those sometimes used in
[[Page 71766]]
schools,\12\ then those boilers would be burning a material with higher
levels of contaminants than the clean wood they were designed to burn,
potentially exposing the children in those schools with wood-burning
boilers to unexpected air pollutants. Burning is an inherently
destructive process, even if there is energy recovery. Thus, through
the NHSM rules, the Agency evaluates whether burning an NHSM for energy
recovery also has the effect of destroying contaminants that would not
otherwise be present in the corresponding traditional fuel, indicating
discard is occurring. The presence of higher levels of contaminants
underscores the appropriateness of applying CAA section 129 standards
to the combustion of the material in question, as these standards are
more appropriate for wastes, which are likely to contain more
contaminants than traditional fuels.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See, for example, Biomass Boilers in Public Schools and
Buildings, https://vecan.net/iniatives/biomass-boilers-public-schools-buildings/, and Wood Pellet Heating for Schools https://www.maineenergysystems.com/wood-pellet-heating-for-schools/, both
retrieved 06/20/2023.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NHSM standards for categorical non-wastes also differ significantly
from the DSW rule because the NHSM standards allow consideration of
``other relevant factors'' in determining whether the contaminant
comparison criterion is met (see 40 CFR 241.4(b)(5)(ii)). Thus, the
NHSM standards already provide flexibility to meet the contaminant
comparison criterion, where appropriate. The API Court's rejection of
the mandatory contaminant comparison for hazardous wastes in the DSW
rule turned, in large part, on what the Court viewed as a rigid and
severe standard. The Court felt that the requirement ``sets the bar at
the contaminant level of the analogue without regard to whether any
incremental contaminants are significant in terms of health and
environmental risks.'' 862 F.3d 50, 60 (D.C. Cir. 2017). However, the
Court went on to commend an exception to that test in which a recycler
could satisfy this legitimacy criterion with evidence of ``lack of
exposure from toxics in the product, lack of the bioavailability of
toxins in the product, or other relevant considerations which show that
the recycled product does not contain levels of hazardous constituents
that pose a significant human health or environmental risk.'' Id.
(quoting 40 CFR 260.43(a)(4)(iii) (2016)). Ultimately, the Court found
the exception to be insufficient ``due to the draconian character of
the procedures.'' Id. at 61. That is, if a recycler failed to satisfy
any step in the exception process, an otherwise legitimate product
would be considered to be hazardous waste. The NHSM regulations avoid
these problems by allowing the Agency to consider ``other relevant
factors,'' which offers flexibility without the ``draconian''
procedures of the 2015 DSW rule. Petitioners recognize this fact by
noting that the EPA has already applied such flexibility when the
Agency originally promulgated 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii), which recognized
the fact that CTRT burned as fuel in certain units at major source pulp
and paper mills or power producers which were constructed prior to
April 14, 2014 and burn CTRT as less than 40% of its fuel source would
be considered non-waste fuel, even if those units have been modified to
burn natural gas. Likewise, the Agency previously exercised this
flexibility in establishing the categorical non-waste listing for
resinated wood; however, that context differed in that the EPA
determined that the management of resinated wood prior to combustion as
a fuel is equivalent to the management of resinated wood being used as
a raw material. As such, the Agency concluded that, though resinated
wood may not fulfill the legitimacy criteria in all cases, ``resinated
wood that is used as fuel represents an integral component of the wood
manufacturing process and, as such, is not being discarded when burned
as fuel.'' The use of resinated wood as a fuel is integrated into the
wood production process in such a way that the relevant manufacturing
facilities would have to be significantly re-engineered if they could
not use resinated wood for its fuel value (78 FR 9155, February 7,
2013). In contrast, units that burn CTRT are far removed from the CTRT
production process, and are also able to burn other types of fuels, so
the Agency maintains that the more stringent provisions in the
categorical non-waste listing for CTRT (as compared to that for
resinated wood) are appropriate. The EPA also notes that the Agency has
not reopened or requested comment on this provision, but cites it as a
demonstration that the Agency can and has used flexibility to address
case-specific circumstances where appropriate.
Commenters imply that the existence of such flexibility requires
the EPA to disregard relative contaminant levels when comparing NHSMs
to traditional fuels because of other implications related to a
material's waste status. However, any ``other relevant factors''
considered in making a waste determination must be relevant to the core
question of whether the material is a solid waste when combusted. Some
commenters seem to propose looking to greenhouse gas emissions and
landfill capacity as ``other relevant factors,'' but neither of these
topics dictate whether the particular material in question is combusted
as a waste. The extent to which a particular disposal practice of NHSM
does or does not release greenhouse gases or consume landfill capacity
once discarded does not impact whether the NHSM is discarded when
combusted.
Finally, in response to comments arguing that CAA section 112
standards would still apply to units combusting NHSM with significantly
elevated levels of contaminants when compared to traditional fuels, the
EPA does not agree that these elevated levels of contaminants would be
addressed by the CAA section 112 standards, which were intended for
units that burn non-waste fuel. Emission standards for dioxins,
SO2, NOX, etc. for non-major sources are
addressed under the CAA section 129 standards but are not addressed by
area source boiler standards under CAA section 112, which require only
tune-ups. Therefore, for all of the reasons stated above, the API
decision does not directly apply because the context of burning NHSM
differs fundamentally from hazardous waste recycling (which, to
reiterate, does not include burning for energy recovery).
To end, we also note that the NHSM legitimacy criteria have been in
place since 2011 and were upheld by the D.C. Circuit Court in Solvay v.
EPA. 608 Fed. Appx. 10 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (45 ELR 20107 Nos. 11-1189,
(D.C. Cir., 06/03/2015)). A substantive change to the contaminant
comparison criterion would allow NHSM generators to ``consider''
significantly higher levels of contaminants in their NHSM-derived fuel,
without any threshold or indication of when such a consideration might
result in an NHSM being a solid waste. Such a substantive change would
also create regulatory uncertainty for the combustion units that burn
this material and rely on an accurate non-waste determination for their
CAA regulatory applicability determinations. The Agency is, therefore,
denying the petitioners' request regarding the contaminant comparison
criterion.
B. Request To Remove Associated Designed To Burn and Other Limitations
for Creosote-Treated Railroad Ties
1. Petitioners' Request
As discussed above, 40 CFR 241.3(d)(1)(iii) states that ``[t]he
non-hazardous secondary material must contain contaminants or groups of
contaminants at levels comparable in
[[Page 71767]]
concentration to or less than those in the traditional fuel(s) that the
combustion unit is designed to burn . . .'' (emphasis added). As
currently applied, the petitioners believe the designed to burn
criterion means that the exact same railroad tie is considered a solid
waste when burned in one unit, but a non-waste fuel when burned in
another--depending solely on the type of fuel the boilers are designed
to combust. The petition stated that the EPA has acknowledged the
character of the NHSM does not change depending on the design of the
boiler it goes to, and has offered no rationale for how the existence
of a fuel oil nozzle in a boiler (i.e., a boiler originally designed to
burn fuel oil, but later retrofitted to burn natural gas) informs the
question of whether CTRT are being legitimately used as fuel, or in
fact are simply being discarded in a hypothetical ``sham recycling''
operation. Accordingly, the petition requested that the EPA remove the
limitations in the CTRT categorical non-waste listing that are related
to boiler design (i.e., 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(i) and (ii)).
In addition, petitioners argued, the EPA has imposed other
restrictions unrelated to the characteristics of the NHSM itself--
including a requirement that the facility in question must have been
built before April 2014 and that the amount of NHSM combusted in that
facility may not exceed 40% of the total fuel mix in a given year.
Petitioners claimed that, in adding these various requirements
regarding the characteristics of the combustion unit, the
characteristics of the material and the motivation of the recycler are
essentially rendered irrelevant to the determination of whether the
material is a solid waste. Petitioners contend that this is contrary to
RCRA case law and an arbitrary and unreasonable basis on which to
decide whether the material is, in fact, being discarded or
legitimately used as fuel.
Petitioners indicated that, as the agency charged with
environmental protection, the EPA should encourage the widespread use
of CTRT and other similarly situated NHSM as fuel, rather than restrict
that use and condemn valuable fuel sources to landfills. Furthermore,
petitioners stated that the regulatory revisions requested in the
petition promote environmental sustainability, consistent with the
EPA's Waste Management Hierarchy, eliminate undue and burdensome
regulation, and reduce costs associated with such regulatory burdens.
2. Public Comment
Petitioners, through their comments, continued to argue for the
removal of the associated designed to burn and other limitations for
CTRT combusted as fuels.
These commenters stated that the EPA's regulation of CTRT is
neither reasonable nor appropriate according to the Administrative
Procedures Act. Commenters expanded upon this point by explaining that
two identical CTRT removed from service would be regulated differently
if one were burned in a boiler designed to burn biomass and fuel oil
and the other in a unit designed to burn biomass and natural gas.
Commenters further noted that if a boiler designed to burn biomass and
fuel oil was built before 2014 and converted from fuel oil to natural
gas, that boiler would be able to burn CTRT as a non-waste fuel, while
a new boiler designed to burn biomass and natural gas would not.
Commenters also noted that the EPA has declared resinated wood and coal
refuse to be non-waste fuels, even though resinated wood contains
elevated formaldehyde levels compared to virgin biomass and coal refuse
could be combusted in boilers not designed to burn coal. This decision
by the EPA allows resinated wood and coal refuse to be combusted in any
boiler, while CTRT combustion must follow additional conditions to be
burned as a non-waste fuel only in specific boilers as designated in 40
CFR 241.4(a)(7).
One commenter also argued that, if a unit meets its permit
requirements and the contaminant comparison criterion is met, the
designed to burn qualification should be irrelevant, and that the CAA
directs the EPA to focus on emissions from the combustion of fuels
rather than on the nature of the fuel combusted.
3. EPA Response
Regarding petitioners' claim that the same NHSM is treated
differently in different units, such a claim ignores the underlying
premise of the NHSM rules. As explained in the program's original March
21, 2011 rulemaking (76 FR 15455), the NHSM program exists to determine
whether an NHSM that is combusted is a waste or a non-waste for
purposes of applying appropriate emission standards under CAA section
129 or CAA section 112 to the unit burning the NHSM. An NHSM that is
burned in a unit that is designed to burn a comparable traditional fuel
is, because of that comparability, a non-waste fuel. When an NHSM is
burned in a unit that is not designed to burn a comparable traditional
fuel (e.g., that is designed to burn fuel with lower levels of
contaminants than found in the NHSM), that combustion is acting as a
means of destroying those elevated contaminants and therefore is more
appropriately regulated as solid waste incineration. Thus, it is
entirely appropriate that an NHSM would be considered a non-waste fuel
when burned in a unit designed to burn a comparable traditional fuel,
and a solid waste when burned in a unit that is not designed to burn a
comparable traditional fuel. Contaminants or groups of contaminants in
the NHSM must occur at levels comparable to or lower than those in the
traditional fuel the unit is designed to burn. As the Agency determined
when it established the categorical non-waste listing for CTRT (81 FR
6687, February 8, 2016), under 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(i), each unit must be
designed to burn both biomass and fuel oil, since contaminant levels in
CTRT (e.g., SVOCs) are considerably higher than in biomass alone.
Without the designed to burn criterion, contaminant levels could be
compared to any traditional fuel or combination of traditional fuels,
resulting in a unit burning contaminants under the boiler provisions in
CAA section 112 that the unit would otherwise never have been eligible
to handle.\13\ The EPA has not reopened or requested comment on the
contaminant concentrations of a CTRT in this action and continues to
rely on the determination made in the original CTRT categorical non-
waste listing (81 FR 6687, February 8, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ This issue would be a concern even under the petitioners'
requested change to make the contaminant comparison criterion ``to
be considered'' rather than mandatory.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It should be noted that as a result of the 2013 NHSM rule, the
regulations already provide considerable flexibility in implementing
the designed to burn criterion. Persons making contaminant level
comparisons may choose any traditional fuel that is physically capable
of being burned, or is actually burned, in the particular type of
boiler, whether or not the combustion unit is permitted to burn that
traditional fuel. Broad groups of similar traditional fuels may be used
when comparing contaminant levels (e.g., coal, biomass, fuel oil, and
natural gas). The regulatory language in 40 CFR part 241 makes it clear
that a unit is considered designed to burn a traditional fuel if it can
burn the fuel, regardless of whether it has burned, or is permitted to
burn, such a fuel.
Petitioners suggest replacing language in the CTRT rules regarding
which units are ``designed to burn'' CTRT with units ``operating in
compliance with all
[[Page 71768]]
applicable permits.'' However, the NHSM rules are used to determine
which CAA permits are applicable to a unit combusting NHSM, making the
suggested reference to ``applicable permits'' circular and meaningless.
In regard to petitioners' comments on the EPA's decision to include
in the non-waste determination CTRT burned as fuel in units at major
source pulp and paper mills or power producers subject to 40 CFR part
63, subpart DDDDD that had been originally designed to burn biomass and
fuel oil, but had switched to natural gas (see 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii)),
the EPA once again notes that the Agency neither reopened nor took
comment on this provision. The EPA notes that the petition only raised
the issue of the requirements that limit the non-waste determination
for 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii) to CTRT combusted in facilities that had
been built before April 2014 in amounts that do not exceed 40% in the
context of their opposition to any requirements under the non-waste
determination that are related to the combustion unit.\14\ As discussed
above, petitioners' claim ignores the underlying premise of the NHSM
rules. As explained in the program's original March 21, 2011 rulemaking
(76 FR 15455), the NHSM program exists to determine whether an NHSM
that is combusted is a waste or a non-waste for purposes of applying
appropriate emission standards under CAA section 129 or CAA section 112
to the unit burning the NHSM. Thus, in general, restrictions related to
ensuring that an NHSM is burned in a unit that was designed to burn a
comparable fuel in order to be considered a non-waste fuel under the
CAA are entirely appropriate, because it is the ``designed to burn''
criteria that help ensure that the NHSM is burned in units that would
otherwise burn comparable traditional fuels (and therefore the NHSM is
not being burned simply as a means of destroying contamination). The
EPA need not reconsider the specific requirements in 40 CFR
241.4(a)(7)(ii) beyond the ``designed to burn'' provision that was
discussed in detail in the petition. No challenge to the 40 CFR
241.4(a)(7)(ii) regulation was filed and the time period to challenge
that rule has long passed under the judicial review provision of RCRA
section 7006, which requires such challenges to be filed within 90 days
of the rule's promulgation. The opportunity to petition the Agency for
changes to any RCRA rule is always available to members of the public
(as is the current case), but such petitions are evaluated typically
based on new information identified by petitioners (as well as
information identified by the Agency, and those commenting on a
proposed Agency action) as the basis for the requested changes to a
regulation. No such information was provided in the petition specific
to this provision. Instead, Petitioners simply provide a general
assertion that the provision is an ``arbitrary and unreasonable basis
on which to decide whether the material is, in fact, being discarded or
legitimately used as fuel.'' \15\ In the future, if a member of the
public were to petition the EPA to reconsider the specific requirements
in 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii) beyond the ``designed to burn'' provision,
the EPA would develop a separate regulatory action that considers all
possible regulatory options for this categorical non-waste
determination, including the option of sunsetting the provision at 40
CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii) and leaving the requirements of 40 CFR
241.4(a)(7)(i) in place, including the ``designed to burn'' criteria.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ AF&PA et al., Petition for Rulemaking to Amend the
Legitimacy Criteria in 40 CFR part 241,--The Categorical Non-Waste
Fuels Classification Criteria for Creosote Treated Railroad Ties and
Other Treated Railroads Ties, and the Definition of Paper Recycling
Residuals, December 7, 2018, page 16.
\15\ AF&PA et al., Petition for Rulemaking to Amend the
Legitimacy Criteria in 40 CFR part 241,--The Categorical Non-Waste
Fuels Classification Criteria for Creosote Treated Railroad Ties and
Other Treated Railroads Ties, and the Definition of Paper Recycling
Residuals, December 7, 2018, page 16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, this provision does demonstrate that the EPA can and has
used the Agency's authority to consider ``other relevant factors'' in
making a categorical non-waste fuel determination in cases where one of
the legitimacy criteria is not met (see 40 CFR 241.4(b)(5)(ii)). It is
important to recognize that the provisions of 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii)
were proposed, based on the information available to the Agency at the
time, to apply to boilers that were existing at the time the rule was
promulgated to avoid penalizing the units originally designed to burn
both biomass and fuel oil that switched to cleaner-burning fuel.\16\
Facilities constructed after that point would fall under the main
provision found at 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(i) and would be able to take the
existing regulations under consideration when deciding their
operations. Thus, the conditions imposed on CTRT combusted in natural
gas-fired units under 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)(ii) are part of the relevant
factors the EPA used to determine whether discard has occurred (see 81
FR 6724-25, February 8, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ 81 FR 6724, February 8, 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters claim that the environmental implications of not
combusting CTRT, such as a potential increase in landfilling of CTRT
and subsequent increase in greenhouse gas emission from the landfilled
CTRT, obligate the EPA to withdraw designed to burn criteria from the
categorical non-waste listing for CTRT due to ``other relevant
factors.'' However, any ``other relevant factors'' considered in
weighing a categorical non-waste listing must be relevant to the core
question of whether the material is a solid waste when combusted. Some
commenters propose looking to greenhouse gas emissions and landfill
capacity as ``other relevant factors,'' but neither of these topics
dictate whether the particular material in question is combusted as a
waste; therefore, both considerations are outside the scope of this
Petition Denial. The ``other relevant factors'' must still be applied
in the context of determining whether a material is a waste or not.
Ignoring designed to burn and other criteria would violate the
fundamental principles of solid waste identification legitimacy
criteria codified in the NHSM regulations and upheld by the D.C.
Circuit Court, as noted at 87 FR 4536, 4542 (January 28, 2022). The
extent to which a particular disposal practice of NHSM does or does not
release greenhouse gases or consume landfill capacity does not impact
whether the NHSM is discarded when combusted.
The petitioners' comments also cite two examples of NHSMs--
resinated wood and coal refuse--that do not have designed to burn and
existing boiler conditions associated with the categorical
determination (see 40 CFR 241.4(a)(2) and (3)). The EPA has responded
to a similar comment on the 2016 NHSM rule (see 81 FR 6731, February 8,
2016), noting how, unlike CTRT, resinated wood's use as a fuel was
integrated into the production process and that resinated wood
production facilities were specifically designed to utilize the
material for its fuel value (for more, see section III.A.3 (above) and
76 FR 15500, March 21, 2011). As for coal refuse, data available
suggest that this material is used in a small selection of coal refuse
plants and as a secondary fuel at some additional bituminous coal
combusting electric power plants (76 FR 80486, December 23, 2011).
Further, the coal refuse is limited to legacy pile coal, which are
processed in the same manner as currently generated coal refuse (a
traditional fuel) and exhibit similar contaminant content. These
situations
[[Page 71769]]
are very dissimilar to the case of CTRT combusted in a biomass boiler
that would otherwise burn clean biomass because CTRT contain
contaminants (in particular, PAHs) at levels multiple magnitudes higher
than clean biomass (81 FR 6717, February 8, 2016).\17\ Thus, both these
categorical non-waste determinations take into account the specific
types of materials and combustion units involved and the reasoning
cannot be extrapolated to all combustion units that might burn CTRT,
absent the designed to burn criteria.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ For more information, see the Summary of Public Comments
and Responses for the Proposed Response to the Petition to Revise
the Non-Hazardous Secondary Material Standard, located in the docket
EPA-HQ-OLEM-2020-0550.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The designed to burn criterion is fundamental to the NHSM program
since it is the primary mechanism for identifying which traditional
fuel should be used as the basis of determining whether contaminant
levels in the NHSM are comparable to or less than the traditional
fuel(s) being replaced. Without the designed to burn criterion, CTRT
could be combusted in any biomass-only boiler, including biomass
boilers that are area sources under the CAA. These boilers would likely
have higher HAP emissions when burning CTRT rather than biomass because
these contaminants are present in greater concentrations in CTRT as
generated. As previously noted, emission standards for dioxins,
SO2, NOX, etc. for non-major sources are
addressed under the CAA section 129 standards but are not addressed by
area source boiler standards under CAA section 112 which require only
tune-ups. The Agency is therefore denying petitioners' request
regarding the designed to burn criterion. See section III.A above for a
discussion on the contaminant comparison criterion.
C. Preamble Discussion of Storage Times for Railroad Ties
1. Petitioners' Request
In addition to the requested regulatory changes, the petition
raised an issue related to railroad tie storage timeframes as it
impacts NHSM eligibility as discussed in the 2016 NHSM rule. In the
preamble to that rule, the EPA discussed its presumption that storage
of CTRT for long periods of time (e.g., a year or longer) without an
end-use determination is not ``reasonable,'' and indicates that the
material has been discarded. Petitioners interpreted this preamble
language to establish a bright-line limit of one year for CTRT
accumulation in the railroad right-of-way, and asserted that this
perceived time limit is incompatible with the realities of railroad
operations. That is, unlike discrete facilities from which valuable
secondary materials are easily reclaimed, the railroad right-of-way
extends over thousands of miles across the United States. Petitioners
said that many locations where CTRT are removed are not readily
accessible except by rail, and tie pickup interrupts freight and
passenger train service and competes with safety[hyphen]related
operations such as track maintenance and inspection. Train service and
safety are regulated by the Surface Transportation Board and Federal
Railroad Administration, respectively. Petitioners indicated that, due
in part to those agencies' requirements, service and safety must take
precedence over tie recovery. Petitioners asserted that these
challenges make it unrealistic to collect used CTRT within one year of
removal from service--but for reasons completely unrelated to the
determination of whether CTRT are managed as a ``valuable commodity''
under the NHSM framework. Petitioners also noted that the EPA has
recognized that ``the reasonable timeframe for storage may vary by
industry'' (81 FR 6725, February 8, 2016). In the context of railroad
tie management, petitioners asserted that three or more years is a
reasonable timeframe for storage of removed CTRT in the right-of-way.
2. Public Comment
Comments relating to the perceived one-year limit on CTRT
accumulation in the right-of-way largely reiterated the arguments
presented in the original petition.
One comment argued that the economic value of removed CTRT
indicates that the CTRT are not discarded. This commenter claimed that
the sale or transfer of CTRT to a third party invalidates claims of
discard, even if final disposition and party of sale have not been
determined prior to removal. Thus, they claimed, accumulated CTRT are
valuable and therefore not discarded under the plain language meaning
of the word.
Likewise, multiple commenters argued that railroad operational
realities make the perceived one-year storage time limit infeasible for
safety and logistical reasons. Commenters claimed that a one-year time
limit for CTRT in the right-of-way would be unworkable due to remote
rail locations and prioritization of safety requirements and
maintenance activities over removal of accumulated CTRT.
Finally, one commenter interpreted the EPA's preamble language from
the 2016 NHSM rule to indicate that CTRT cannot be considered discarded
until at least one year after removal from service. Their comment
claimed that the lack of an explicit statement that CTRT are discarded
immediately upon removal in the 2016 rule indicates that the EPA cannot
now reasonably conclude that discard may occur sometime less than one
year after tie removal.
3. EPA Response
Storage time of unprocessed CTRT in the right-of-way has little
impact for the purposes of determining whether the CTRT can qualify as
a non-waste fuel under the Federal NHSM regulations. The EPA believes
that petitioners' recurring comments surrounding storage times and
discard originates from a misunderstanding of the 2016 rule's preamble
language. Therefore, this section of the preamble--which relies upon
the rationale provided in the 2016 rule--explains why the EPA is
denying petitioners' three-year fixed storage timeframe consideration
and addresses petitioners' misunderstanding of this issue by
elaborating how and why accumulation timeframes in the right-of-way do
not affect CTRT's eligibility to be combusted as non-waste fuel under
the NHSM program.
First and foremost, qualification of CTRT as a non-waste fuel under
the categorical non-waste determination at 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7) does not
consider storage times. Granted, when the EPA considers a petition for
a categorical non-waste listing under 40 CFR 241.4(b), reasonable
storage timeframes are required as a component of the ``managed as a
valuable commodity'' legitimacy criterion. However, once the
determination has been made that the petition for a non-waste
categorical listing meets this requirement, future demonstration of
those reasonable storage timeframes is not required. Indeed, this is a
major incentive for requesting a categorical non-waste fuel
determination; qualifying operators that meet the provisions of the
categorical listing (in this case, at 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7)) enjoy
streamlined management (e.g., do not need to make a site-specific
demonstration that the NHSM meets the legitimacy criteria) because it
has already been demonstrated--through the process of establishing the
categorical determination--that the NHSM in question meets the program
requirements. Thus, entities managing CTRT under the categorical
listing are not required to document the CTRT's storage timeframes and
are not limited by a bright-line restriction of one year of
accumulation in the right-of-way. (It
[[Page 71770]]
should be noted, however, that extended lengths of storage of CTRT in
the right-of-way could constitute disposal under State solid waste
regulations, making the CTRT subject to State solid waste management
requirements.)
Should an operator wish to combust CTRT as a non-waste fuel under
the NHSM program outside the confines of the categorical determination
at 40 CFR 241.4(a)(7), storage time for CTRT in the right-of-way is
still unlikely to have a meaningful impact on the material's
eligibility. In this scenario, the operator could choose to employ the
self-determination process outlined in 40 CFR 241.3(b)(4) for NHSM that
are discarded but subsequently processed and meet the legitimacy
criteria at 40 CFR 241.3(d)(1). As noted in the February 8, 2016 rule's
preamble, the amount of time for industry to determine value and end
use of CTRT (whether sent to a landfill, used as fuel, or another non-
fuel purpose) sometimes exceeds one year (81 FR 6725). Generally
speaking, however, long periods of time without determining end use can
be indicative of discard, though there is no bright-line time period
which triggers a discard determination. The fact that CTRT removed from
service sometimes sit for extended periods--regardless of whether that
period is more than or less than a year--indicates that they should be
viewed critically when determining discard status. Further, it is the
EPA's understanding (according to the descriptions provided in both the
petition and public comments) that it is standard industry practice to
transfer CTRT to a reclaimer or other third party. These CTRT would be
considered discarded until processed into a non-waste fuel, since NHSMs
that are transferred off-site for reclamation and reuse as a fuel are
considered discarded and must be processed and meet the legitimacy
criteria. The assertion that the CTRT are a valuable commodity in a
robust market does not change the fact that the CTRT have been
discarded. NHSMs may have value in the marketplace and still be solid
wastes until processed.
It should be noted that discarded NHSM may be subject to Tribal,
State, and local solid waste requirements, regardless of their intended
future use as a non-waste fuel under the Federal NHSM program. Though
the designation of discard may be functionally irrelevant for CTRT that
are subsequently processed and verified to meet the legitimacy criteria
for non-waste fuels, CTRT that are determined to be solid waste would
still be subject to all relevant solid waste regulations. Indeed, the
EPA explicitly addressed this issue at 40 CFR 241.3(b)(4), which states
that until the discarded non-hazardous secondary material is processed
to produce a non-waste fuel or ingredient, the discarded non-hazardous
secondary material is considered a solid waste and would be subject to
all appropriate Federal, State, and local requirements.
Thus, a designation of discard does not preclude using the NHSM as
a non-waste fuel, so long as the processing requirement and legitimacy
criteria are met. Crucially, the relevant regulations at 40 CFR
241.3(b)(4) go on to stipulate that the legitimacy criteria apply after
the non-hazardous secondary material is processed to produce a fuel or
ingredient product. Consideration of reasonable timeframes would
therefore look to the period of storage following processing (e.g.,
grinding CTRT to resize the material and removing metal contaminants
such as rail spikes), which the EPA understands to usually be short.
Moreover, the EPA has not established a bright-line limit on reasonable
storage times and has previously explicitly stated that what
constitutes a reasonable timeframe for storage will vary by industry
(see, e.g., 76 FR 15520, March 21, 2011). Accordingly, CTRT could be
combusted as a non-waste fuel after being stored for more than one
year, so long as storage of the processed CTRT is limited to reasonable
timeframes.
Thus, the EPA believes that previous dialogue between the Agency,
petitioners, and commenters on timeframes for storage of CTRT in the
right-of-way has little, if any, practical effect on the combustion of
CTRT as non-waste fuel under the Federal NHSM program. Accordingly, the
EPA is denying petitioners' request to establish a rigid three-year
timeframe for rail tie storage in the right-of-way, and instead the
Agency will maintain the existing standard to allow for flexibility and
has provided the preceding explanation in an attempt to resolve
petitioners' misunderstanding.
Finally, it should be noted that other laws or regulations may
still apply to CTRT placed in the right of way. CTRT stored in the
right of way could be considered discarded and would in such cases be
subject to all relevant Federal, Tribal, State, and local solid waste
requirements. These regulations may vary by location, and State solid
waste designations are not required to match those of the Federal
rules. Broader issues associated with the accumulation of CTRT in the
right of way would fall under the jurisdiction of these regulations.
Additionally, some States (e.g., California, New York) have specific
laws or regulations for creosote and/or products treated with creosote.
D. Request To Amend the Definition of ``Paper Recycling Residuals''
1. Petitioners' Request
Petitioners also requested that the EPA revise the definition of
``paper recycling residuals'' (PRR) to amend the description and remove
the definitional condition that PRR that ``contain more than small
amounts of non-fiber materials . . . are not paper recycling
residuals'' (40 CFR 241.2, emphasis added). Petitioners believed that
this condition is overly vague and directly at odds with the Court's
decision in API.
Petitioners requested that the second sentence in the definition
precluding materials that contain ``more than small amounts of non-
fiber materials'' from qualifying as PRR should be removed. They argued
that this condition suggests that the list of non-fiber materials
identified in the definition are somehow viewed as contaminants in PRR.
But, as discussed above, petitioners argue that in vacating the
contaminant comparison criterion in the DSW rule, the D.C. Circuit made
clear that the mere presence of some contaminants in a material
destined for legitimate recycling is not the basis for finding that the
material has been ``discarded'' and thus subject to regulation as a
solid waste.
In addition to arguing that this condition is inconsistent with the
D.C. Circuit's holding in API, the petitioners believe that the ``small
amount'' limitation is overly vague. While members of the regulated
community affirm that they have used good faith efforts in determining
that PRR burned as fuel meet this condition, they also note that ``a
statute which either forbids or requires the doing of an act so vague
that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning
and differ as to its applications, violates the first essential of due
process of law.'' FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 567 U.S. at
239, 253 (2012) (internal citation omitted). According to petitioners,
the ``small amount'' criterion in the definition of PRR falls squarely
within this ``impermissibly vague'' infirmity and should be removed
from the definition to help ensure that ``those enforcing the law do
not act in an arbitrary or discriminatory way.'' FCC, 567 U.S. at 253
(internal citation omitted).
Furthermore, petitioners argue that the current definition
describing PRR as ``composed primarily of wet strength
[[Page 71771]]
and short wood fibers'' is not correct, as the re-pulping of recovered
fibers can result in a variety of strengths and sizes of fibers in PRR,
so the current limitation to ``wet strength and short wood fibers'' is
unnecessarily restrictive. Some residuals from recycling paper,
paperboard and corrugated containers are composed of fibers other than
wet strength fibers or short-wood fibers, but nonetheless cannot be
used to make new paper or paper products and therefore are burned for
their energy value.
In January 2022, the EPA proposed to deny this request, and in the
same notice proposed an amended definition of PRR. This new definition
replaced the less-specific ``small amounts'' language restricting PRR
non-fiber content with more specific language that would have limited
the amount of non-fiber content to 2% or less, by weight.\18\ The
revised definition in the proposed rule also adopted descriptive
changes requested in the petition to more accurately reflect the nature
of PRR.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ This standard was derived from the 2021 ISRI Scrap
Specifications Circular, which sets an industry standard for
``furnish'' i.e., the paper materials being fed into the paper
recycling process. The Circular sets a standard allowing no more
than 2% non-fiber content in furnish.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Public Comment on EPA's Proposed Definition of PRR
One commenter argued that a non-fiber limit for paper recycling
residuals was not necessary, reiterating a similar assertion presented
in the original petition. The commenter stated that environmental and
health risks from burning PRR containing non-fiber material would
already be covered under CAA permit conditions, and thus adding a non-
fiber limit to PRR would be redundant.
Two commenters stated that the EPA's proposed change to the
definition of paper recycling residuals incorporating a limit of 2% by
weight of non-fiber materials was an inappropriate application of an
Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI) industry standard. The
commenters explained that the 2% ISRI figure referred to the limit on
prohibitive materials for ``furnish'' (i.e., incoming mixed paper to be
recycled), not to the outgoing paper recycling residuals created by the
recycling process. Applying this standard to paper recycling residuals
would therefore not be an appropriate application of the standard.
Several commenters also argued that any numeric limit on non-fiber
material would be difficult for facilities to meet. This is due, in
part, to the lack of a standard test method for measuring the non-fiber
content of PRR. Furthermore, one commenter noted that the 2% numeric
standard itself could not have been met under typical conditions: PRR
typically have more than 2% non-fiber content, albeit this amount also
varies by mill.
Rather than the 2% by weight threshold for non-fiber materials
proposed, one commenter suggested that a meaningful heating value would
be a more appropriate standard. Commenters argued that heating value is
central in distinguishing an NHSM that is combusted as a legitimate
fuel from an NHSM combusted for discard, and a heating value standard
would thus be a more appropriate standard for managing the concern that
non-fiber material does not provide for energy recovery. The commenter
also noted, contrary to the EPA's statement in the proposed rule, that
non-fiber materials like waxes, adhesives, and plastics actually raise
the heating value of PRR. This means that PRR with higher amounts of
non-fiber material may have higher heating values. The commenter then
suggested that the definition of PRR should be modified to state that
PRR may be considered a non-waste fuel if the meaningful heating value
of the materials is preserved. As a specific numerical alternative, the
commenter also suggested that a value of greater than or equal to 6,300
Btu/lb on a dry basis, either annually or over a long-term average
basis, would be an appropriate heating value standard. Commentors set
this value using AF&PA member data and EPA Boiler MACT database data.
Commenters stated that the value was chosen to be at the low end of the
range of data available, rather than the midpoint of the range, to
ensure that the numeric standard would be attainable.
One commenter agreed with the EPA that the current definition of
PRR in 40 CFR 241.2 (``the secondary material generated from the
recycling of paper, paperboard and corrugated containers composed
primarily of wet strength and short wood fibers'') was too limiting and
should be changed. However, the commenter argued that the EPA's
proposed change to ``the secondary material generated from the
recycling of paper, paperboard and corrugated containers composed
primarily of fibers that are too small or weak to be used to make new
paper and paperboard products'' (emphasis added) was also too limiting.
The commenter suggested that the definition be rewritten to read ``the
secondary material generated from the recycling of paper, paperboard
and corrugated containers that includes fibers generally too small or
weak to be used to make new paper and paperboard products'' (emphasis
added). The commenter argued that, while mill equipment extracts most
of the fiber that can be made into paper and paperboard, some longer
and stronger fibers can evade the process and end up in the PRR. The
commenter also noted that mills have an economic incentive to capture
the valuable fibers to make them into new products instead of
combusting these fibers for energy recovery.
3. EPA Response
The EPA disagrees with the petitioner's original arguments,
reiterated in comments, for removing language limiting the amount of
non-fiber materials in PRR burned as a non-waste fuel. The reasoning
for not including the non-fiber materials as PRR was not focused on
discard due to contaminants present, but rather, discard due to lack of
heating value and not contributing to energy recovery. In the April 14,
2014 proposed rule, the EPA requested, but did not receive, information
regarding the percent of non-fiber materials commonly present in PRR
and their heating value (79 FR 21017). Lacking information to the
contrary, the Agency determined that PRR with higher amounts of non-
fiber materials would likely have a lower heating value. Combustion of
materials with low heating values is typically considered discard. PRR
already have a relatively low heating value (as fired, average 3,700
Btu/lb on a wet basis),\19\ so the Agency reasoned that large amounts
of non-fiber materials would lower the heating value of the material,
further raising the question of burning as discard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ 81 FR 6716, February 8, 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, in the January 2022 proposed rule, the EPA sought to set a
numerical threshold for non-fiber materials content, rather than
prohibit them entirely or rely on the term ``small amounts.'' As
indicated above, information on such threshold amounts of non-fiber
materials was not received from industry prior to publication of the
January 2022 proposed rule, and a review of current scientific studies
also did not reveal specific amounts. As an alternative, although not
directly used for PRR as fuels, the Scrap Specifications Circular
(2021); Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries Guidelines for Paper
Stock identifies a 2% prohibitive material content limit for mixed
paper stock used for re-
[[Page 71772]]
pulping paper.\20\ In the circular, prohibitive material is material
which by its presence, in excess of the amount allowed, will make the
furnish unusable as the grade specified, as well as any materials that
may be damaging to equipment. In evaluating the grades of paper
identified in the circular, the maximum allowance of prohibitive
materials in mixed paper (which consists of all paper and paperboard of
various qualities not limited to the type of fiber content) is 2%. The
Agency previously concluded that this prohibitive material measure
could provide an analogous measure for non-fiber materials contained
within PRR. Accordingly, the EPA proposed to set a maximum non-fiber
content standard for PRR of 2% by weight.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ ISRI Scrap Specifications Circular (2021), page 34; https://www.scrap2.org/specs/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, information provided to the Agency in comments on the
January 2022 proposed rule provided new information previously
unavailable to the Agency. Commenters' data indicates that many of the
constituents of non-fiber content in PRR are more likely to raise the
heating value of PRR. Commenters also argued that the ISRI standard for
non-fiber content of paper recycling inputs would be inappropriate to
apply to material outputs from the paper recycling process and claimed
that the difficulty of complying with the proposed standard could lead
paper recycling mills to dispose of PRR in landfills instead.
Accordingly, the EPA is replacing the proposed 2% by weight
standard with a performance-based threshold to address the heating
value concerns and associated consideration of potential discard.
Requiring PRR combusted under the categorical non-waste listing at 40
CFR 241.4(a)(6) to have a minimum heating value is intended to prevent
residuals with poor heating value from being used as a fuel in a
combustion unit, as this use case would constitute disposal rather than
use as a legitimate fuel.
The Agency maintains that residuals from processes such as mixed
paper waste recycling with significant quantities of non-fiber
materials (e.g., clays, starches) could be considered to be a solid
waste fuel when combusted when those materials lack meaningful heating
value.\21\ Under the amended definition of PRR, the determination of
non-waste fuel status would depend more directly on the heating value
of the material stream in question, but could still be deemed waste if
non-fiber content drives down heating value below the minimum
threshold.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ 81 FR 6718, February 8, 2016.
\22\ The EPA recognizes that plastic films, foam and waxes could
increase the heating value of a recycling residual stream. While no
upper boundary on the heat content of PRR is being established, the
EPA notes that the definition of PRR including the term ``composed
primarily of fibers'' would prevent application of the PRR
definition to materials that are composed mostly of plastics, foams
and waxes removed during the recycling of recovered paper,
paperboard and corrugated containers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This unique heating value threshold for PRR is appropriate and
consistent with previous Agency statements regarding the use of PRR as
non-waste fuel for energy recovery. The EPA maintains that unique
heating value expectations are appropriate for PRR because the boilers
that combust this material are specifically designed to cost-
effectively recover energy from it (see 79 FR 21018-9, April 14, 2014).
Data received in comments corroborate that the selected threshold would
ensure low heating value PRR are not discarded under the guise of fuel
combustion, while also being achievable for the limited number of mills
that currently combust this material.
Furthermore, the definition of PRR as ``composed of primarily wet
strength and short wood fibers'' was based on previously submitted
industry information (81 FR 6721, February 8, 2016). However, based on
the information submitted in this petition, the Agency agrees that the
reference to ``primarily wet strength and short wood fibers'' is too
limiting and inadvertently excludes fibers of different strength and
size that may provide heating value. Nevertheless, the commenter's
suggestion to further change the EPA's revised language in the January
28, 2022, proposal from ``composed primarily of fibers that are too
small or weak to be used to make new paper and paperboard products''
(emphasis added) to ``that includes fibers generally too small or weak
to be used to make new paper and paperboard products'' (emphasis added)
is not an acceptable change. This commenter-proposed language would not
be a specific enough definition to provide assurance that non-fiber
material in PRR would be minimized when PRR are combusted as fuel.
Commenters argue that the EPA's proposed definition is ``unnecessarily
limiting,'' but a definition that upholds the integrity of PRR is
necessary to ensure that non-fiber material is not overloaded and
labelled as PRR, which could show an indication of discard rather than
use as a legitimate fuel. Therefore, we are finalizing the proposal to
change the language to ``fibers that are too small or weak to be used
to make new paper and paperboard products.''
Accordingly, the Agency finalizes the revised definition of PRR as
set out in the amendatory section at the end of this document.
IV. Effect of This Action on Other Programs
The primary action of this final rulemaking is to revise the
definition of Paper Recycling Residuals in the NHSM regulations at 40
CFR 241.2. Accordingly, this action affects other programs only insofar
as they rely on the definitions outlined in part 241. In particular,
Clean Air Act permitting regulations refer to the RCRA definition of
solid waste in determining whether a combustion unit is a solid waste
incinerator or an industrial furnace for permitting purposes. Thus, the
changes to the definition of PRR implemented by this rule apply to CAA
permitting nationwide (i.e., do not depend upon State adoption).
In order to qualify as a categorical non-waste fuel under 40 CFR
241.4(a) and thereby be combusted in a unit not permitted to incinerate
solid waste under the CAA, a material would have to meet the relevant
definition in 40 CFR 241.2 and fulfill any additional requirements
listed in the relevant categorical non-waste listing at 241.4.
Additionally, though the NHSM regulations do not include specific
record-keeping requirements, the CAA regulations at 40 CFR 60.2175(v)
(for new sources) or 40 CFR 60.2740(u) (for existing sources) require
that units combusting materials designated as categorical non-waste
fuels under the NHSM program must keep records demonstrating that the
material is a listed non-waste fuel under 40 CFR 241.4(a). In order to
fulfill that requirement, the material would have to meet the
definition of the categorical non-waste (at Sec. 241.2) as well as any
additional requirements included in the NHSM listing itself (at Sec.
241.4(a)). Under the current RCRA and CAA regulations, as implemented
through Title V permits, an operator combusting a material as a
categorical non-waste fuel must show that the material meets the
definition of the categorical non-waste listing they are claiming.
Based on the revised definition of Paper Recycling Residuals, the
relevant CAA permitting authority may require the operator to document
the fact that the PRR's heating value is above the definitional
threshold of 6,300 Btu/lb on a dry basis. Given the fact the operator
must know fuel value of the PRR for proper operation of the boiler,
such a potential permit condition is expected to have a negligible
burden. The exact nature and frequency of the sampling
[[Page 71773]]
performed to document the fact that the PRR meet the revised definition
in 40 CFR 241.2 will vary according to numerous site-specific factors
and therefore is best left to the discretion of the relevant permitting
authority. It should also be noted that the definition of PRR refers to
``secondary material generated from the recycling of paper, paperboard
and corrugated containers,'' so inclusion of materials that are not
part of the usual paper, paperboard, or corrugated container recycling
processes is definitionally disallowed.
Beyond amending the definition of PRR, this action does not change
the effect of the NHSM regulations on other programs as described in
the March 21, 2011 NHSM final rule (76 FR 15456), as amended on
February 7, 2013 (78 FR 9138), February 8, 2016 (81 FR 6688) and
February 7, 2018 (83 FR 5317). Refer to section VIII of the preamble to
the March 21, 2011 NHSM final rule for the discussion on the effect of
the NHSM rule on other programs.
V. State Authority
A. Relationship to State Programs
This action and change to the definition of PRR does not change the
relationship to State programs as described in the March 21, 2011 NHSM
final rule. Refer to section IX of the preamble to the March 21, 2011
NHSM final rule for the discussion on State authority including,
``Applicability of State Solid Waste Definitions and Beneficial Use
Determinations'' and ``Clarifications on the Relationship to State
Programs.'' The Agency, however, would like to reiterate that this rule
(like the March 21, 2011 and the February 7, 2013 final rules) is not
intended to interfere with a State's program authority over the general
management of solid waste.
B. State Adoption of the Rulemaking
No Federal approval procedures for State adoption of this final
rule are included in this rulemaking action under RCRA subtitle D.
While states are not required to adopt regulations promulgated under
RCRA subtitle D, some states incorporate Federal regulations by
reference or have specific State statutory requirements that their
State program can be no more stringent than the Federal regulations. In
those cases, the EPA anticipates that, if required by State law, the
changes being made in this document will be incorporated (or possibly
adopted by authorized State air programs) consistent with the State's
laws and administrative procedures.
VI. Costs and Benefits
This action is definitional in nature, and any costs or benefits
accrue to the corresponding Clean Air Act rules. In accordance with the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-4 requirement that the
EPA analyze the costs and benefits of regulations, the EPA prepared a
regulatory impact analysis document for this action that examines the
scope of indirect impacts.
VII. Children's Environmental Health
Executive Order 13045 requires that economically significant rules
that may impact children's environmental health are evaluated against
possible alternatives. Though this rule is not economically significant
and its impacts are not expected to affect children's environmental
health, the Agency still considers potential environmental health
effects on children under EPA's 2021 Policy on Children's Health.
Children's environmental health refers to the effect of
environmental exposure during early life: from conception, infancy,
early childhood, and adolescence through until 21 years of age. EPA's
policy is informed by the scientific understanding that children may be
at greater risk to environmental contaminants than adults due to
differences in behavior and biology and that the effects of early life
exposures may also arise in adulthood or in later generations.
However, EPA does not believe the environmental health or safety
risks addressed by this action present a risk to children. Because this
rule does not change existing conditions, no environmental health
impacts are expected to arise from this rulemaking. The change to the
definition of PRR would not affect the overall risk to anyone,
including children, posed by boiler emissions. This is because the
overall level of emissions, or the emissions mix from boilers, are not
expected to change significantly because of the change in definition of
PRR.
In the event of any unforeseen changes to air emissions, the EPA
does not believe this change would disproportionately impact children.
A demographic analysis of the populace living near major source boilers
found that the percentage of the population in these areas that are
children is generally the same as the national average (see
``Assessment of the Potential Costs, Benefits, and Other Impacts for
the Final Rule'' in the docket). Further, boilers at paper recycling
mills that combust PRR as non-waste fuel remain subject to the
appropriate standards established under CAA section 112. Thus, even in
the event of a change in air emissions due to this rule, any potential
health impacts would not be expected to disproportionately affect
children. Additionally, this rule is definitional in nature, so any
considerations of risk related to combustion units' CAA permits should
be accounted for in the relevant CAA rulemakings that established those
permitting programs.
VIII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Additional information about these statutes and Executive Orders
can be found at https://www.epa.gov/laws-regulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 14094: Modernizing Regulatory Review
This action is a ``significant regulatory action'' as defined in
Executive Order 12866, as amended by Executive Order 14094, because it
may raise legal or policy issues for which centralized review would
meaningfully further the President's priorities or the principles set
forth in the Executive Order. Accordingly, EPA submitted this action to
OMB for Executive Order 12866 review. Documentation of any changes made
in response to the Executive Order 12866 review is available in the
docket. The EPA prepared an economic analysis of the potential impacts
associated with this action. This analysis, ``Assessment of the
Potential Costs, Benefits, and Other Impacts for the Final Rule'' is
also available in the docket.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose any new information collection burden
under the PRA as this action only changes the definition of PRR for the
purposes of the NHSM regulations. There are no new recordkeeping or
reporting requirements with this definitional change. OMB has
previously approved the information collection activities contained in
the existing regulations and has assigned OMB control number 2050-0205.
C. 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, the EPA concludes that the impact of concern
for this rule is any significant adverse economic impact on small
entities and that the agency is certifying that this rule will not have
a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
[[Page 71774]]
because the rule has no net burden on the small entities subject to the
rule. Because the petition denial maintains the status quo, there is no
impact to any entity, including to any small entity, from the petition
denial. In addition, the revision to the definition of PRR will reduce
regulatory uncertainty associated with these materials and help
increase management efficiency for all pulp and paper mills with units
that combust PRR, including mills that meet the definition of small
entity without requiring a change in operations. We have therefore
concluded that this action has no net burden on the small entities
subject to the rule.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments. The costs involved in this action are imposed only
by participation in a voluntary Federal program. UMRA generally
excludes from the definition of ``Federal intergovernmental mandate''
duties that arise from participation in a voluntary Federal program.
Affected entities are not required to manage the final additional NHSMs
as non-waste fuels.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have
substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship between
the national government and the States, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action does not have Tribal implications as specified in
Executive Order 13175. It will neither impose substantial direct
compliance costs on Tribal governments, nor preempt Tribal law.
Potential aspects associated with the categorical non-waste fuel
determinations under this final rule may invoke minor indirect Tribal
implications to the extent that entities generating or consolidating
these NHSMs on Tribal lands could be affected. However, any impacts are
expected to be negligible. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not apply
to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
Executive Order 13045 directs Federal agencies to include an
evaluation of the health and safety effects of the planned regulation
on children in Federal health and safety standards and explain why the
regulation is preferable to potentially effective and reasonably
feasible alternatives. This action is not subject to Executive Order
13045 because it is not a significant regulatory action under section
3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866, and because the EPA does not believe
the environmental health or safety risks addressed by this action
present a disproportionate risk to children. The change to the
definition of PRR would not affect the overall risk to children posed
by boiler emissions. This is because the overall level of emissions, or
the emissions mix from boilers, are not expected to change
significantly because of the change in definition of PRR, and because
boilers at paper recycling mills that combust PRR as non-waste fuel
remain subject to the appropriate standards established under CAA
section 112.
However, the EPA's Policy on Children's Health applies to this
action. Information on how the Policy was applied is available under
``Children's Environmental Health'' in Section VII of this preamble.
H. 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. The selected NHSMs affected by this
proposed action would not be generated in quantities sufficient to
significantly (adversely or positively) impact the supply,
distribution, or use of energy at the national level. Even if 100% of
the available PRR were converted to energy (an unlikely best-case
scenario), that would translate to a potential increase of only 0.002%
to 0.003% in the national energy supply, and these effects would be
localized at recycling paper mills.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This action involves technical standards. Therefore, the EPA
conducted a search to identify potentially applicable voluntary
consensus standards. However, the Agency identified no such standards
and none were brought to its attention in comments. Therefore, the EPA
has decided to use the 6,300 Btu/lb dry basis minimum standard for PRR
heating value.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994) directs
Federal agencies, to the greatest extent practicable and permitted by
law, to make environmental justice part of their mission by identifying
and addressing, as appropriate, disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects of their programs, policies, and
activities on minority populations (people of color and/or indigenous
peoples) and low-income populations.
The EPA believes that the human health or environmental conditions
that exist prior to this action result in or have the potential to
result in disproportionate and adverse human health or environmental
effects on communities with environmental justice concerns. Both
landfills and boilers are generally more likely to be located in
disadvantaged communities, so transporting and managing NHSMs (whether
for disposal at a landfill or combustion as a non-waste fuel in a
boiler) is likely to have environmental health effects on these
communities.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ For more information on the environmental justice analysis,
see the March 21, 2011 NHSM final rule (76 FR 15455) and U.S. EPA,
Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery, Summary of
Environmental Justice Impacts for the Non-Hazardous Secondary
Material (NHSM) Rule, the 2010 Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste
Incinerator (CISWI) Standards, the 2010 Major Source Boiler NESHAP
and the 2010 Area Source Boiler NESHAP, February 2011, docket number
EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0329-1834.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The EPA believes that this action is not likely to change existing
disproportionate and adverse effects on communities with environmental
justice concerns. This is because the overall level of emissions, or
the emissions mix from boilers, are not expected to change
significantly because of the change in definition of PRR, and because
boilers at paper recycling mills that combust PRR as non-waste fuel
remain subject to the protective standards established under CAA
section 112. Further, this RCRA action alone does not directly require
any change in the management of these materials. Thus, any potential
materials management changes stimulated by this action, and
corresponding impacts to minority and low-income communities, are
considered to be indirect impacts, and would only occur in conjunction
with the corresponding CAA rules.
[[Page 71775]]
The information supporting this Executive Order review is contained
in the docket as part of the Assessment of the Potential Costs,
Benefits, and Other Impacts of the Final Rule.
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, and the EPA will submit a rule
report to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of
the United States. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5
U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 241
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Non-Hazardous
Secondary Materials, Waste treatment and disposal.
Michael Regan,
Administrator.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the EPA amends 40 CFR
part 241 as follows:
PART 241--SOLID WASTES USED AS FUELS OR INGREDIENTS IN COMBUSTION
UNITS
0
1. The authority citation for part 241 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6903, 6912, 7429.
0
2. Section 241.2 is amended by revising the definition of ``Paper
recycling residuals'' to read as follows:
Sec. 241.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Paper recycling residuals means the secondary material generated
from the recycling of paper, paperboard and corrugated containers
composed primarily of fibers that are too small or weak to be used to
make new paper and paperboard products. Secondary material from paper
recycling processes with a heating value below 6,300 Btu/lb on a dry
basis due to excessive non-fiber material content (including
polystyrene foam, polyethylene film, other plastics, waxes, adhesives,
dyes and inks, clays, starches and other coating and filler material)
are not paper recycling residuals for the purposes of this definition.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2023-22878 Filed 10-17-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P