Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 9, September 27, 2024
(a)
Applicability. The provisions of this section apply to the
control of air pollutant emissions from containers for which section
261.1082(b) references the use of this section for such air emission
control.
(b) General requirements.
(1) The remanufacturer or other person that
stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall control air pollutant
emissions from each container subject to this section in accordance with the
following requirements, as applicable to the container.
(i) For a container having a design capacity
greater than 0.1 cubic meters (m3) and less than or
equal to 0.46 m3, the remanufacturer or other person
that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall control air
pollutant emissions from the container in accordance with the Container Level 1
standards specified in paragraph (c) of this section.
(ii) For a container having a design capacity
greater than 0.46 m3 that is not in light material
service, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous
secondary material shall control air pollutant emissions from the container in
accordance with the Container Level 1 standards specified in paragraph (c) of
this section.
(iii) For a container
having a design capacity greater than 0.46 m3 that
is in light material service, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or
treats the hazardous secondary material shall control air pollutant emissions
from the container in accordance with the Container Level 2 standards specified
in paragraph (d) of this section.
(2) [Reserved]
(c) Container Level 1 standards.
(1) A container using Container Level 1
controls is one of the following:
(i) A
container that meets the applicable U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT)
regulations on packaging hazardous materials for transportation as specified in
paragraph (f) of this section.
(ii)
A container equipped with a cover and closure devices that form a continuous
barrier over the container openings such that when the cover and closure
devices are secured in the closed position there are no visible holes, gaps, or
other open spaces into the interior of the container. The cover may be a
separate cover installed on the container (e.g., a lid on a drum or a suitably
secured tarp on a roll-off box) or may be an integral part of the container
structural design (e.g., a "portable tank" or bulk cargo container equipped
with a screw-type cap).
(iii) An
open-top container in which an organic-vapor suppressing barrier is placed on
or over the hazardous secondary material in the container such that no
hazardous secondary material is exposed to the atmosphere. One example of such
a barrier is application of a suitable organic-vapor suppressing
foam.
(2) A container
used to meet the requirements of paragraph (c)(1)(ii) or (iii) of this section
shall be equipped with covers and closure devices, as applicable to the
container, that are composed of suitable materials to minimize exposure of the
hazardous secondary material to the atmosphere and to maintain the equipment
integrity, for as long as the container is in service. Factors to be considered
in selecting the materials of construction and designing the cover and closure
devices shall include: Organic vapor permeability; the effects of contact with
the hazardous secondary material or its vapor managed in the container; the
effects of outdoor exposure of the closure device or cover material to wind,
moisture, and sunlight; and the operating practices for which the container is
intended to be used.
(3) Whenever
a hazardous secondary material is in a container using Container Level 1
controls, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the
hazardous secondary material shall install all covers and closure devices for
the container, as applicable to the container, and secure and maintain each
closure device in the closed position except as follows:
(i) Opening of a closure device or cover is
allowed for the purpose of adding hazardous secondary material or other
material to the container as follows:
(A) In
the case when the container is filled to the intended final level in one
continuous operation, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats
the hazardous secondary material shall promptly secure the closure devices in
the closed position and install the covers, as applicable to the container,
upon conclusion of the filling operation.
(B) In the case when discrete quantities or
batches of material intermittently are added to the container over a period of
time, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous
secondary material shall promptly secure the closure devices in the closed
position and install covers, as applicable to the container, upon either the
container being filled to the intended final level; the completion of a batch
loading after which no additional material will be added to the container
within fifteen (15) minutes; the person performing the loading operation
leaving the immediate vicinity of the container; or the shutdown of the process
generating the hazardous secondary material being added to the container,
whichever condition occurs first.
(ii) Opening of a closure device or cover is
allowed for the purpose of removing hazardous secondary material from the
container as follows:
(A) For the purpose of
meeting the requirements of this section, an empty hazardous secondary material
container may be open to the atmosphere at any time (i.e., covers and closure
devices on such a container are not required to be secured in the closed
position).
(B) In the case when
discrete quantities or batches of material are removed from the container, but
the container is not an empty hazardous secondary material container, the
remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary
material shall promptly secure the closure devices in the closed position and
install covers, as applicable to the container, upon the completion of a batch
removal after which no additional material will be removed from the container
within fifteen (15) minutes or the person performing the unloading operation
leaves the immediate vicinity of the container, whichever condition occurs
first.
(iii) Opening of
a closure device or cover is allowed when access inside the container is needed
to perform routine activities other than transfer of hazardous secondary
material. Examples of such activities include those times when a worker needs
to open a port to measure the depth of or sample the material in the container,
or when a worker needs to open a manhole hatch to access equipment inside the
container. Following completion of the activity, the remanufacturer or other
person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall promptly
secure the closure device in the closed position or reinstall the cover, as
applicable to the container.
(iv)
Opening of a spring-loaded pressure-vacuum relief valve, conservation vent, or
similar type of pressure relief device which vents to the atmosphere is allowed
during normal operations for the purpose of maintaining the internal pressure
of the container in accordance with the container design specifications. The
device shall be designed to operate with no detectable organic emissions when
the device is secured in the closed position. The settings at which the device
opens shall be established such that the device remains in the closed position
whenever the internal pressure of the container is within the internal pressure
operating range determined by the remanufacturer or other persons that stores
or treats the hazardous secondary material based on container manufacturer
recommendations, applicable regulations, fire protection and prevention codes,
standard engineering codes and practices, or other requirements for the safe
handling of flammable, ignitable, explosive, reactive, or hazardous materials.
Examples of normal operating conditions that may require these devices to open
are during those times when the internal pressure of the container exceeds the
internal pressure operating range for the container as a result of loading
operations or diurnal ambient temperature fluctuations.
(v) Opening of a safety device, as defined in
section 261.1081, is allowed at any time conditions require doing so to avoid
an unsafe condition.
(4)
The remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous
secondary material using containers with Container Level 1 controls shall
inspect the containers and their covers and closure devices as follows:
(i) In the case when a hazardous secondary
material already is in the container at the time the remanufacturer or other
person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material first accepts
possession of the container at the facility and the container is not emptied
within twenty-four (24) hours after the container is accepted at the facility
(i.e., is not an empty hazardous secondary material container) the
remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary
material shall visually inspect the container and its cover and closure devices
to check for visible cracks, holes, gaps, or other open spaces into the
interior of the container when the cover and closure devices are secured in the
closed position. The container visual inspection shall be conducted on or
before the date that the container is accepted at the facility (i.e., the date
the container becomes subject to the subpart CC container standards).
(ii) In the case when a container used for
managing hazardous secondary material remains at the facility for a period of
one (1) year or more, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats
the hazardous secondary material shall visually inspect the container and its
cover and closure devices initially and thereafter, at least once every twelve
(12) months, to check for visible cracks, holes, gaps, or other open spaces
into the interior of the container when the cover and closure devices are
secured in the closed position. If a defect is detected, the remanufacturer or
other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall
repair the defect in accordance with the requirements of paragraph (c)(4)(iii)
of this section.
(iii) When a
defect is detected for the container, cover, or closure devices, the
remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary
material shall make first efforts at repair of the defect no later than
twenty-four (24) hours after detection and repair shall be completed as soon as
possible but no later than five (5) calendar days after detection. If repair of
a defect cannot be completed within five (5) calendar days, then the hazardous
secondary material shall be removed from the container and the container shall
not be used to manage hazardous secondary material until the defect is
repaired.
(5) The
remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary
material shall maintain at the facility a copy of the procedure used to
determine that containers with capacity of 0.46 m3
or greater, which do not meet applicable DOT regulations as specified in
paragraph (f) of this section, are not managing hazardous secondary material in
light material service.
(d) Container Level 2 standards.
(1) A container using Container Level 2
controls is one of the following:
(i) A
container that meets the applicable U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT)
regulations on packaging hazardous materials for transportation as specified in
paragraph (f) of this section.
(ii)
A container that operates with no detectable organic emissions as defined in
section 261.1081 and determined in accordance with the procedure specified in
paragraph (g) of this section.
(iii) A container that has been demonstrated
within the preceding twelve (12) months to be vapor-tight by using 40 CFR part
60, appendix A, Method 27 in accordance with the procedure specified in
paragraph (h) of this section.
(2) Transfer of hazardous secondary material
in or out of a container using Container Level 2 controls shall be conducted in
such a manner as to minimize exposure of the hazardous secondary material to
the atmosphere, to the extent practical, considering the physical properties of
the hazardous secondary material and good engineering and safety practices for
handling flammable, ignitable, explosive, reactive, or other hazardous
materials. Examples of container loading procedures that the EPA considers to
meet the requirements of this paragraph include using any one of the following:
a submerged-fill pipe or other submerged-fill method to load liquids into the
container; a vapor-balancing system or a vapor-recovery system to collect and
control the vapors displaced from the container during filling operations; or a
fitted opening in the top of a container through which the hazardous secondary
material is filled and subsequently purging the transfer line before removing
it from the container opening.
(3)
Whenever a hazardous secondary material is in a container using Container Level
2 controls, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the
hazardous secondary material shall install all covers and closure devices for
the container, and secure and maintain each closure device in the closed
position except as follows:
(i) Opening of a
closure device or cover is allowed for the purpose of adding hazardous
secondary material or other material to the container as follows:
(A) In the case when the container is filled
to the intended final level in one continuous operation, the remanufacture or
other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall
promptly secure the closure devices in the closed position and install the
covers, as applicable to the container, upon conclusion of the filling
operation.
(B) In the case when
discrete quantities or batches of material intermittently are added to the
container over a period of time, the remanufacturer or other person that stores
or treats the hazardous secondary material shall promptly secure the closure
devices in the closed position and install covers, as applicable to the
container, upon either the container being filled to the intended final level;
the completion of a batch loading after which no additional material will be
added to the container within fifteen (15) minutes; the person performing the
loading operation leaving the immediate vicinity of the container; or the
shutdown of the process generating the material being added to the container,
whichever condition occurs first.
(ii) Opening of a closure device or cover is
allowed for the purpose of removing hazardous secondary material from the
container as follows:
(A) For the purpose of
meeting the requirements of this section, an empty hazardous secondary material
container may be open to the atmosphere at any time (i.e., covers and closure
devices are not required to be secured in the closed position on an empty
container).
(B) In the case when
discrete quantities or batches of material are removed from the container, but
the container is not an empty hazardous secondary materials container, the
remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary
material shall promptly secure the closure devices in the closed position and
install covers, as applicable to the container, upon the completion of a batch
removal after which no additional material will be removed from the container
within fifteen (15) minutes or the person performing the unloading operation
leaves the immediate vicinity of the container, whichever condition occurs
first.
(iii) Opening of
a closure device or cover is allowed when access inside the container is needed
to perform routine activities other than transfer of hazardous secondary
material. Examples of such activities include those times when a worker needs
to open a port to measure the depth of or sample the material in the container,
or when a worker needs to open a manhole hatch to access equipment inside the
container. Following completion of the activity, the remanufacturer or other
person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall promptly
secure the closure device in the closed position or reinstall the cover, as
applicable to the container.
(iv)
Opening of a spring-loaded, pressure-vacuum relief valve, conservation vent, or
similar type of pressure relief device which vents to the atmosphere is allowed
during normal operations for the purpose of maintaining the internal pressure
of the container in accordance with the container design specifications. The
device shall be designed to operate with no detectable organic emission when
the device is secured in the closed position. The settings at which the device
opens shall be established such that the device remains in the closed position
whenever the internal pressure of the container is within the internal pressure
operating range determined by the remanufacturer or other person that stores or
treats the hazardous secondary material based on container manufacturer
recommendations, applicable regulations, fire protection and prevention codes,
standard engineering codes and practices, or other requirements for the safe
handling of flammable, ignitable, explosive, reactive, or hazardous materials.
Examples of normal operating conditions that may require these devices to open
are during those times when the internal pressure of the container exceeds the
internal pressure operating range for the container as a result of loading
operations or diurnal ambient temperature fluctuations.
(v) Opening of a safety device, as defined in
section 261.1081, is allowed at any time conditions require doing so to avoid
an unsafe condition.
(4)
The remanufacture or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary
material using containers with Container Level 2 controls shall inspect the
containers and their covers and closure devices as follows:
(i) In the case when a hazardous secondary
material already is in the container at the time the remanufacturer or other
person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material first accepts
possession of the container at the facility and the container is not emptied
within twenty-four (24) hours after the container is accepted at the facility
(i.e., is not an empty hazardous secondary material container), the
remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary
material shall visually inspect the container and its cover and closure devices
to check for visible cracks, holes, gaps, or other open spaces into the
interior of the container when the cover and closure devices are secured in the
closed position. The container visual inspection shall be conducted on or
before the date that the container is accepted at the facility (i.e., the date
the container becomes subject to the subpart CC container standards).
(ii) In the case when a container used for
managing hazardous secondary material remains at the facility for a period of
one (1) year or more, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats
the hazardous secondary material shall visually inspect the container and its
cover and closure devices initially and thereafter, at least once every twelve
(12) months, to check for visible cracks, holes, gaps, or other open spaces
into the interior of the container when the cover and closure devices are
secured in the closed position. If a defect is detected, the remanufacturer or
other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall
repair the defect in accordance with the requirements of paragraph (d)(4)(iii)
of this section.
(iii) When a
defect is detected for the container, cover, or closure devices, the
remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary
material shall make first efforts at repair of the defect no later than
twenty-four (24) hours after detection, and repair shall be completed as soon
as possible but no later than five (5) calendar days after detection. If repair
of a defect cannot be completed within five (5) calendar days, then the
hazardous secondary material shall be removed from the container and the
container shall not be used to manage hazardous secondary material until the
defect is repaired.
(e) Container Level 3 standards.
(1) A container using Container Level 3
controls is one of the following:
(i) A
container that is vented directly through a closed-vent system to a control
device in accordance with the requirements of paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of this
section.
(ii) A container that is
vented inside an enclosure which is exhausted through a closed-vent system to a
control device in accordance with the requirements of paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and
(ii) of this section.
(2) The remanufacturer or other person that
stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall meet the following
requirements, as applicable to the type of air emission control equipment
selected by the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the
hazardous secondary material:
(i) The
container enclosure shall be designed and operated in accordance with the
criteria for a permanent total enclosure as specified in "Procedure T-Criteria
for and Verification of a Permanent or Temporary Total Enclosure" under
40
CFR 52.741, appendix B. The enclosure may
have permanent or temporary openings to allow worker access; passage of
containers through the enclosure by conveyor or other mechanical means; entry
of permanent mechanical or electrical equipment; or direct airflow into the
enclosure. The remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the
hazardous secondary material shall perform the verification procedure for the
enclosure as specified in Section 5.0 to "Procedure T-Criteria for and
Verification of a Permanent or Temporary Total Enclosure" initially when the
enclosure is first installed and, thereafter, annually.
(ii) The closed-vent system and control
device shall be designed and operated in accordance with the requirements of
section 261.1087.
(3)
Safety devices, as defined in section 261.1081, may be installed and operated
as necessary on any container, enclosure, closed-vent system, or control device
used to comply with the requirements of paragraph (e)(1) of this
section.
(4) Remanufacturers or
other persons that store or treat the hazardous secondary material using
Container Level 3 controls in accordance with the provisions of this subpart
shall inspect and monitor the closed-vent systems and control devices as
specified in section 261.1087.
(5)
Remanufacturers or other persons that store or treat the hazardous secondary
material that use Container Level 3 controls in accordance with the provisions
of this subpart shall prepare and maintain the records specified in section
261.1089(d).
(6) Transfer of
hazardous secondary material in or out of a container using Container Level 3
controls shall be conducted in such a manner as to minimize exposure of the
hazardous secondary material to the atmosphere, to the extent practical,
considering the physical properties of the hazardous secondary material and
good engineering and safety practices for handling flammable, ignitable,
explosive, reactive, or other hazardous materials. Examples of container
loading procedures that the EPA considers to meet the requirements of this
paragraph include using any one of the following: a submerged-fill pipe or
other submerged-fill method to load liquids into the container; a
vapor-balancing system or a vapor-recovery system to collect and control the
vapors displaced from the container during filling operations; or a fitted
opening in the top of a container through which the hazardous secondary
material is filled and subsequently purging the transfer line before removing
it from the container opening.
(f) For the purpose of compliance with
paragraph (c)(1)(i) or (d)(1)(i) of this section, containers shall be used that
meet the applicable DOT regulations on packaging hazardous materials for
transportation as follows:
(1) The container
meets the applicable requirements specified in 49 CFR part 178 or part
179.
(2) Hazardous secondary
material is managed in the container in accordance with the applicable
requirements specified in 49 CFR part 107, subpart B and 49 CFR parts 172, 173,
and 180.
(3) For the purpose of
complying with this subpart, no exceptions to the 49 CFR part 178 or part 179
regulations are allowed.
(g) To determine compliance with the no
detectable organic emissions requirement of paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this
section, the procedure specified in section 261.1083(d) shall be used.
(1) Each potential leak interface (i.e., a
location where organic vapor leakage could occur) on the container, its cover,
and associated closure devices, as applicable to the container, shall be
checked. Potential leak interfaces that are associated with containers include,
but are not limited to: the interface of the cover rim and the container wall;
the periphery of any opening on the container or container cover and its
associated closure device; and the sealing seat interface on a spring-loaded
pressure-relief valve.
(2) The test
shall be performed when the container is filled with a material having a
volatile organic concentration representative of the range of volatile organic
concentrations for the hazardous secondary materials expected to be managed in
this type of container. During the test, the container cover and closure
devices shall be secured in the closed position.
(h) Procedure for determining a container to
be vapor-tight using Method 27 of 40 CFR part 60, appendix A for the purpose of
complying with paragraph (d)(1)(iii) of this section.
(1) The test shall be performed in accordance
with Method 27 of 40 CFR part 60, appendix A of this chapter.
(2) A pressure measurement device shall be
used that has a precision of [PLUSMN]2.5 mm water and that is capable of
measuring above the pressure at which the container is to be tested for vapor
tightness.
(3) If the test results
determined by Method 27 indicate that the container sustains a pressure change
less than or equal to 750 Pascals within five (5) minutes after it is
pressurized to a minimum of 4,500 Pascals, then the container is determined to
be vapor-tight.