Illinois Administrative Code
Title 35 - ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
Part 204 - PREVENTION OF SIGNIFICANT DETERIORATION
Subpart B - DEFINITIONS
Section 204.350 - Dispersion Technique
Universal Citation: 35 IL Admin Code ยง 204.350
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) "Dispersion technique" means any technique that attempts to affect the concentration of a pollutant in the ambient air by:
1) Using the portion of a stack that exceeds
good engineering practice stack height;
2) Varying the rate of emission of a
pollutant according to atmospheric conditions or ambient concentrations of that
pollutant; or
3) Increasing final
exhaust gas plume rise by:
A) Manipulating
source process parameters, exhaust gas parameters, or stack
parameters;
B) Combining exhaust
gases from several existing stacks into one stack; or
C) Other selective handling of exhaust gas
streams so as to increase the exhaust gas plume rise.
b) "Dispersion technique" does not include:
1) The reheating of a gas stream,
following use of a pollution control system, for the purpose of returning the
gas to the temperature at which it was originally discharged from the
stationary source generating the gas stream;
2) The merging of exhaust gas streams when:
A) The source owner or operator demonstrates
that the stationary source was originally designed and constructed with such
merged gas streams;
B) After July
8, 1985, the merging is part of a change in operation at the stationary source
that includes the installation of pollution controls and is accompanied by a
net reduction in the allowable emissions of a pollutant. This exclusion from
the definition of dispersion techniques shall apply only to the emission
limitation for the pollutant affected by the change in operation; or
C) Before July 8, 1985, such merging was part
of a change in operation at the stationary source that included the
installation of emissions control equipment or was carried out for sound
economic or engineering reasons. When there was an increase in the emission
limitation or, in the event that no emission limitation was in existence prior
to the merging, an increase in the quantity of pollutants actually emitted
prior to the merging, the Agency shall presume that merging was significantly
motivated by an intent to gain emissions credit for greater dispersion. Absent
a demonstration by the source owner or operator that merging was not
significantly motivated by such intent, the Agency shall deny credit for the
effects of such merging in calculating the allowable emissions for the
source;
3) Smoke
management in agricultural or silvicultural prescribed burning
programs;
4) Episodic restrictions
on residential wood burning and open burning; or
5) Techniques under subsection (a)(3) that
increase final exhaust gas plume rise when the resulting allowable emissions of
SO2 from the stationary source do not exceed 5,000
tpy.
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