South Carolina Code of Regulations
Chapter 61 - DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL
Subchapter 61-107 - Solid Waste Management
Subchapter 61-107.12 - Solid Waste Management: Solid Waste Incineration and Solid Waste Pyrolysis Facilities
Part I - Applicability, Definitions, and General Provisions
Universal Citation: SC Code Regs I
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 9, September 27, 2024
A. Applicability.
1. This regulation establishes the
procedures, documentation, and other requirements which must be met for the
proper operation and management of all solid waste incineration facilities,
including all solid waste pyrolysis facilities, and waste-to-energy facilities
burning solid waste used for energy recovery.
2. Facilities incinerating solid waste
generated in the course of normal operations on property under the same
ownership or control as the solid waste incineration facility are exempt from
the requirements of this regulation. This exemption includes industrial boilers
and furnaces that burn industrial by-products generated on-site, or on
properties under the same ownership or control. Air curtain incinerators
burning only yard-trimmings and land-clearing debris generated on-site, or
generated on properties under the same ownership or control, are exempt from
the requirements of this regulation. Air curtain incinerators used for
emergency storm debris management at sites designated by state, county and
municipal government are exempt from the requirements of this
regulation.
3. Industrial boilers
and industrial furnaces that burn Refuse-Derived Fuel (RDF) only, or burn RDF
with a fossil fuel or wood are exempt from the requirements of this
regulation.
4. Facilities that
treat contaminated soils pursuant to other regulations are exempt from the
requirements of this regulation.
5.
Disposal of hazardous waste from conditionally exempt small quantity generators
at solid waste incinerators is prohibited unless the incinerator is permitted
under the South Carolina Hazardous Waste Management Regulations.
6. Government owned and operated incineration
facilities that are used by an agency such as police, customs, agricultural
inspection or a similar law enforcement agency to destroy illegal or prohibited
goods, are exempt from the requirements of this regulation, but must comply
with other applicable federal, state and local requirements.
7. Facilities using air curtain incinerators
that never store more than four hundred cubic yards of clean wood, yard and
land-clearing debris consisting of only untreated natural wood debris,
untreated or unfinished wood waste, or a mixture of these specific waste stream
on site at any given time, are conditionally exempt from the permitting
requirements of this regulation when the conditions of subsections Part II.B.,
C., E., and F. of this regulation are maintained by the facility.
B. Definitions.
1. ''Air curtain incinerator'' means an
incinerator that operates by forcefully projecting a curtain of air across an
open chamber or pit in which burning occurs. Incinerators of this type can be
constructed above or below ground and require a refractory lined chamber or
pit.
2. ''Applicant'' means an
individual, corporation, partnership, business association, or government
entity that applies for the issuance, transfer, or modification of a permit
under this article.
3. ''Ash''
means the solid residue from the incineration of solid waste.
4. ''Closure'' means the discontinuance of
operation by ceasing to accept, treat, store, or dispose of solid waste in a
manner which minimizes the need for further maintenance and protects human
health and the environment.
5.
''Commercial solid waste'' means all types of solid waste generated by stores,
offices, restaurants, warehouses, and other nonmanufacturing activities,
excluding residential and industrial solid wastes.
6. ''Department'' means the South Carolina
Department of Health and Environmental Control.
7. ''Disclosure Statement'' means a sworn
statement or affirmation, the form and content of which shall be determined by
the Department and as required by Code Section
44-96-300.
8. ''Financial assurance mechanism'' means a
mechanism designed to demonstrate that sufficient funds will be available to
meet specific environmental protection needs of solid waste management
facilities. Available financial assurance mechanisms include, but are not
limited to, insurance, trust funds, surety bonds, letters of credit,
certificates of deposit, and financial tests as determined by the Department by
regulation.
9. ''Incineration''
means the use of controlled flame combustion to thermally break down solid,
liquid, or gaseous combustible wastes, producing residue that contains little
or no combustible materials.
10.
''Incinerator'' means any engineered device used in the process of controlled
combustion of waste for the purpose of reducing the volume, and/or reducing or
removing the hazardous potential of the waste charged by destroying combustible
matter leaving the noncombustible ashes, material and/or residue.
11. ''Industrial boiler'' means a boiler that
produces steam, heated air, or other heated fluids for use in a manufacturing
process.
12. ''Industrial furnace''
means any of the following enclosed devices that are integral components of
manufacturing processes and that use controlled flame devices to accomplish
recovery of materials or energy:
a. Cement
kilns;
b. Lime kilns;
c. Aggregate kilns;
d. Phosphate kilns;
e. Coke ovens;
f. Blast furnaces;
g. Smelting, melting and refining furnaces
(including pyrometallurgical devices such as cupolas, reverberator furnaces,
sintering machines, roasters, and foundry furnaces);
h. Titanium dioxide chloride process
oxidation reactors;
i. Methane
reforming furnaces;
j. Pulping
liquor recovery furnaces;
k.
Combustion devices used in the recovery of sulfur values from spent sulfuric
acid; and,
l. Such other devices as
the Department may determine on a case-by-case basis using one or more of the
following factors:
(1) The design and use of
the device primarily to accomplish recovery of material products;
(2) The use of the device to burn or reduce
raw materials to make a material product;
(3) The use of the device to burn or reduce
secondary materials as effective substitutes for raw materials, in processes
using raw materials as principal feedstocks;
(4) The use of the device to burn or reduce
secondary materials as ingredients in an industrial process to make a material
product;
(5) The use of the device
in common industrial practice to produce a material product; and,
(6) Other factors, as appropriate.
13. ''Industrial solid
waste'' means solid waste generated by manufacturing or industrial processes
that is not a hazardous waste regulated under subtitle C of RCRA. Such waste
may include, but is not limited to, waste resulting from the following
manufacturing processes: Electric power generation; fertilizer/agricultural
chemicals; food and related products/by-products; inorganic chemicals; iron and
steel manufacturing, leather and leather products; nonferrous metals
manufacturing/foundries; organic chemicals; plastics and resins manufacturing;
pulp and paper industry; rubber and miscellaneous plastic products; stone,
glass, clay, and concrete products; textile manufacturing; transportation
equipment; and water treatment. This term does not include mining waste or oil
and gas waste.
14. ''Local
government'' means a county, any municipality located wholly or partly within
the county, and any other political subdivision located wholly or partly within
the county when such political subdivision provides solid waste management
services.
15. ''Medical waste,''
for the purposes of this regulations, means infectious waste as defined in
South Carolina Infectious Waste Management Regulation
61-105.E.
16. ''Permit'' means the process by which the
Department can ensure cognizance of, as well as control over, the management of
solid wastes.
17. ''Putrescible
wastes'' means solid waste that will rapidly decompose with the potential to
cause odor and attract vectors.
18.
''Pyrolysis'' means the chemical decomposition of a material by heat in the
absence of oxygen.
19. ''Recovered
materials'' mean those materials which have known use, reuse, or recycling
potential; can be feasibly used, reused, or recycled; and have been diverted or
removed from the solid waste stream for sale, use, reuse, or recycling, whether
or not requiring subsequent separation and processing. At least seventy-five
percent (75%) by weight of the materials received during the previous calendar
year must be used, reused, recycled, or transferred to a different site for
use, reuse, or recycling in order to qualify as a recovered material.
20. ''Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF),'' for the
purpose of this regulation, means a type of fuel produced from solid waste by
separating some, or all, of the noncombustible from the combustible portions,
shredding and classifying the waste by size. This includes all classes of RDF
including low-density fluff RDF through densified RDF and pelletized
RDF.
21. ''Region'' means a group
of counties in South Carolina which is planning to or has prepared, approved,
and submitted a regional solid waste management plan to the Department pursuant
to Section
44-96-80.
22. ''Residential solid waste'' means solid
waste (including garbage, trash, and sanitary waste from septic tanks) derived
from households (including single and multiple residences.)
23. ''Solid waste'' means any garbage,
refuse, or sludge from a waste treatment facility, water supply plant, or air
pollution control facility and other discarded material, including solid,
liquid, semi-solid, or contained gaseous material resulting from industrial,
commercial, mining, and agricultural operations and from community activities.
This term does not include solid or dissolved material in domestic sewage,
recovered materials, or solid or dissolved materials in irrigation return flows
or industrial discharges which are point sources subject to NPDES permits under
the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, as amended, or the Pollution Control
Act of South Carolina, as amended, or source, special nuclear, or by-product
material as defined by the Atomic Energy Act of 1964, as amended. Also excluded
from this definition are application of fertilizer and animal manure during
normal agricultural operations or refuse as defined and regulated pursuant to
the South Carolina Mining Act, including processed mineral waste, which will
not have a significant adverse impact on the environment.
24. ''Solid waste management'' means the
systematic control of the generation, collection, source separation, storage,
transportation, treatment, recovery, and disposal of solid waste.
25. ''Solid waste management facility'' means
any solid waste disposal area, volume reduction plant, transfer station, or
other facility, the purpose of which is the storage, collection,
transportation, treatment, utilization, processing, recycling, or disposal, or
any combination thereof, of solid waste. The term does not include a recovered
materials processing facility or facilities which use or ship recovered
materials, except that portion of the facilities which is managing solid
waste.
26. ''Special waste'' means
nonresidential and commercial solid wastes, other than regulated hazardous
wastes, that are either difficult or dangerous to handle and require unusual
management, including, but not limited to, those waste contained in Code
Section
44-96-390(A).
27. ''Vector'' means a carrier that is
capable of transmitting a pathogen from one organism to another including, but
not limited to, flies and other insects, rodents, birds, and vermin.
28. ''Waste-to-energy facility,'' for the
purposes of this regulation, means a facility that uses an enclosed device
using controlled combustion to thermally break down solid, liquid, or gaseous
combustible solid waste to an ash residue that contains little or no
combustible material and that produces electricity, steam, or other energy as a
result. The term does not include facilities that primarily burn fuels other
than solid waste even if such facilities also burn some solid waste as a fuel
supplement. The term also does not include facilities that burn vegetative,
agricultural, or silvicultural wastes, clean dry wood, methane or other
landfill gas, wood fuel derived from construction or demolition debris, or
waste tires, alone or in combination with fossil fuels.''
29. "Waters of the United States" means:
a. All waters which are currently used, were
used in the past, or may be susceptible to use in interstate or foreign
commerce, including all waters which are subject to the ebb and flow of the
tide;
b. All interstate waters,
including interstate wetlands;
c.
All other waters such as intrastate lakes, rivers, streams (including
intermittent streams), mudflats, sand flats, wetlands, sloughs, prairie
potholes, wet meadows, playa lakes, or natural ponds that the use, degradation,
or destruction of which would affect or could affect interstate or foreign
commerce including any such waters:
(1) Which
are or could be used by interstate or foreign travelers for recreational or
other purposes;
(2) From which fish
or shellfish are or could be taken and sold in interstate or foreign commerce;
or
(3) Which are used or could be
used for industrial purposes by industries in interstate commerce;
d. All impoundments of waters
otherwise defined as Waters of the United States under this
definition;
e. Tributaries of
waters identified in paragraph a through paragraph f of this
definition;
f. The territorial
sea;
g. Wetlands adjacent to waters
(other than waters that are themselves wetlands) identified in paragraph a
through paragraph f of this definition; and,
h. Waste treatment systems, including
treatment ponds or lagoons designed to meet the requirements of the Clean Water
Act, are not waters of the United States.
C. General Provisions.
1. No permit to construct a new solid waste
incineration facility may be issued by the Department unless the proposed
facility is consistent with the local or regional solid waste management plan
and the state solid waste management plan. Consistency determinations shall be
made in accordance with the state and county or regional solid waste management
plans in effect on the date that a complete application is received by the
Department. This subsection must not apply to industrial facilities managing
solid waste generated in the course of normal operations on property under the
same ownership or control as the waste management facility. However, these
facilities shall be consistent with the applicable local zoning and land use
ordinances, if any, provided that the industrial facility is not a commercial
solid waste management facility. Prior to the issuance of a permit for a new or
expanded facility, the Department shall approve an allowable capacity based on
the local or regional solid waste management plan, the facility's design
capacity, and the following criteria:
a. No
solid waste incineration facility with a daily capacity in excess of six
hundred (600) tons shall be permitted within the State.
b. No solid waste incineration facility with
a daily capacity in excess of one hundred (100) tons shall be permitted to be
sited within three (3) miles of another such facility.
2. The siting, design, construction,
operation, closure, and post-closure activities of new or expanding solid waste
incineration facilities shall conform to the standards set forth in this
regulation, the facility's permit and in R.61-107.17. Solid Waste
Management: Demonstration of Need.
3. A permit obtained from the Department
pursuant to these regulations, or an exemption from permitting pursuant to
these regulations, does not exempt the incineration facility from the necessity
of obtaining other Department required permits (e.g. air quality, water
pollution control).
4. No person
owning or operating an incineration facility shall cause, suffer, allow, or
permit the handling of regulated hazardous wastes or regulated infectious
wastes at the incineration facility, unless the facility is specifically
permitted for such wastes.
5. The
Department shall require a disclosure statement from the permit applicant in
accordance with Code Section
44-96-300.
Local governments and regions comprised of local governments are exempt from
this requirement. The Department may accept one (1) disclosure statement for
multiple facility permit applicants.
6. A permit shall be required for each site
or facility although the Department may include one or more different types of
facilities in a single permit if the facilities are co-located on the same
site.
7. Construction of an
incinerator shall not be initiated until all required approvals are
obtained.
8. The permittee of a
solid waste incineration facility shall notify the Department prior to transfer
of ownership or operation of the facility during its operating life or during
the post-closure care period. The Department will approve a reissuance of the
permit to the new owner provided that the facility is in compliance and the new
owner agrees in writing to assume responsibility in accordance with these
regulations. The Department must receive a disclosure statement and proof of
financial assurance for the new permittee before a permit can be reissued.
9. Facilities that have a valid
Department permit for managing hazardous or infectious waste, may request to be
exempted from certain portions of this regulation.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. South Carolina may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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