Current through August 26, 2024
(1) APPLICABILITY
AND DESIGNATION OF AFFECTED FACILITY.
(a) The
affected facility to which this section applies is each calciner and dryer at a
mineral processing plant. Feed and product conveyors are not considered part of
the affected facility. For the brick and related clay products industry, only
the calcining and drying of raw materials prior to firing of the brick are
covered.
(b) An affected facility
that is subject to s.
NR 440.525, Metallic Mineral Processing Plants, is not
subject to this section. Also, the following processes and process units used
at mineral processing plants are not subject to this section: vertical shaft
kilns in the magnesium compounds industry; the chlorination oxidation process
in the titanium dioxide industry; coating kilns, mixers and aerators in the
roofing granules industry; and tunnel kilns, tunnel dryers, apron dryers, and
grinding equipment that also dries the process material used in any of the 17
mineral industries as defined in sub. (2) (e).
(c) The owner or operator of any facility
under par. (a) that commences construction, modification or reconstruction
after April 23, 1986, is subject to this section.
(2) DEFINITIONS. All terms not defined in
this section have the meanings given in s.
NR 440.02. In this section:
(a) "Calciner" means the equipment used to
remove combined (chemically bound) water and/or gases from mineral material
through direct or indirect heating. This definition includes expansion furnaces
and multiple hearth furnaces.
(b)
"Control device" means the air pollution control equipment used to reduce
particulate matter emissions released to the atmosphere from one or more
affected facilities.
(c) "Dryer"
means the equipment used to remove uncombined (free) water from mineral
material through direct or indirect heating.
(d) "Installed in series" means a calciner
and dryer installed such that the exhaust gases from one flow through the other
and then the combined exhaust gases are discharged to the atmosphere.
(e) "Mineral processing plant" means any
facility that processes or produces any of the following minerals, their
concentrates or any mixture of which the majority (> 50%) is any of the
following minerals or a combination of these minerals: alumina, ball clay,
bentonite, diatomite, feldspar, fire clay, fuller's earth, gypsum, industrial
sand, kaolin, lightweight aggregate, magnesium compounds, perlite, roofing
granules, talc, titanium dioxide, and vermiculite.
(3) STANDARDS FOR PARTICULATE MATTER. Each
owner or operator of any affected facility that is subject to this section
shall comply with the emission limitations in this subsection on and after the
date on which the initial performance test required by s. NR 440.08i
scompleted, but not later than 180 days after the initial startup, whichever
date comes first. No emissions may be discharged into the atmosphere from any
affected facility that does both of the following:
(a) Contains particulate matter in excess of
0.092 gram per dry standard cubic meter (g/dscm) (0.040 grain per dry standard
cubic foot (gr/dscf)) for calciners and for calciners and dryers installed in
series and in excess of 0.057 g/dscm (0.025 gr/dscf) for dryers.
(b) Exhibits greater than 10% opacity, unless
the emissions are discharged from an affected facility using a wet scrubbing
control device.
(4)
RECONSTRUCTION. The cost of replacement of equipment subject to high
temperatures and abrasion on processing equipment may not be considered in
calculating either the "fixed capital cost of the new components" or the"fixed
capital cost that would be required to construct a comparable new facility"
under s.
NR 440.15. Calciner and dryer equipment subject to high
temperatures and abrasion are: end seals, flights and refractory
lining.
(5) MONITORING OF EMISSIONS
AND OPERATIONS.
(a) With the exception of the
process units described in pars. (b), (c) and (d), the owner or operator of an
affected facility subject to this section who uses a dry control device to
comply with the mass emission standard shall install, calibrate, maintain and
operate a continuous monitoring system to measure and record the opacity of
emissions discharged into the atmosphere from the control device.
(b) In lieu of a continuous opacity
monitoring system, the owner or operator of a ball clay vibrating grate dryer,
a bentonite rotary dryer, a diatomite flash dryer, a diatomite rotary calciner,
a feldspar rotary dryer, a fire clay rotary dryer, an industrial sand fluid bed
dryer, a kaolin rotary calciner, a perlite rotary dryer, a roofing granules
fluid bed dryer, a roofing granules rotary dryer, a talc rotary calciner, a
titanium dioxide spray dryer, a titanium dioxide fluid bed dryer, a vermiculite
fluid bed dryer or a vermiculite rotary dryer who uses a dry control device may
have a certified visible emissions observer measure and record 3 6-minute
averages of the opacity of visible emissions to the atmosphere each day of
operation in accordance with Method 9 of Appendix A of 40 CFR part 60, incorporated by reference in s.
NR 440.17.
(c) The owner or operator of a ball clay
rotary dryer, a diatomite rotary dryer, a feldspar fluid bed dryer, a fuller's
earth rotary dryer, a gypsum rotary dryer, a gypsum flash calciner, a gypsum
kettle calciner, an industrial sand rotary dryer, a kaolin rotary dryer, a
kaolin multiple hearth furnace, a perlite expansion furnace, a talc flash
dryer, a talc rotary dryer, a titanium dioxide direct or indirect rotary dryer
or a vermiculite expansion furnace who uses a dry control device is exempt from
the monitoring requirements of this subsection.
(d) The owner or operator of an affected
facility subject to this section who uses a wet scrubber to comply with the
mass emission standard for any affected facility shall install, calibrate,
maintain and operate monitoring devices that continuously measure and record
the pressure loss of the gas stream through the scrubber and the scrubbing
liquid flow rate to the scrubber. The pressure loss monitoring device shall be
certified by the manufacturer to be accurate within 5% of water column gauge
pressure at the level of operation. The liquid flow rate monitoring device
shall be certified by the manufacturer to be accurate within 5% of design
scrubbing liquid flow rate.
(6) RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.
(a) Records of the measurements required in
sub. (5) shall be retained for at least 2 years.
(b) Each owner or operator who uses a wet
scrubber to comply with sub. (3) shall determine and record once each day, from
the recordings of the monitoring devices in sub. (5) (d), an arithmetic average
over a 2-hour period of both the change in pressure of the gas stream across
the scrubber and the flowrate of the scrubbing liquid.
(c) Each owner or operator shall submit
written reports semiannually of exceedances of control device operating
parameters required to be monitored by sub. (5). For the purpose of these
reports, exceedances are defined as follows:
1. All 6-minute periods during which the
average opacity from dry control devices is greater than 10%; or
2. Any daily 2-hour average of the wet
scrubber pressure drop determined as described in par. (b) that is less than
90% of the average value recorded according to sub. (7) (c) during the most
recent performance test that demonstrated compliance with the particulate
matter standard; or
3. Each daily
wet scrubber liquid flow rate recorded as described in par. (b) that is less
than 80% or greater than 120% of the average value recorded according to sub.
(7) (c) during the most recent performance test that demonstrated compliance
with the particulate matter standard.
(7) TEST METHODS AND PROCEDURES.
(a) In conducting the performance tests
required in s.
NR 440.08, the
owner or operator shall use the following test methods from Appendix A of 40
CFR part 60, incorporated by reference in s.
NR 440.17, or other methods and procedures as specified
in this subsection, except as provided in s.
NR 440.08(2).
(b) The owner or operator shall determine
compliance with the particulate matter standards in sub. (3) as follows:
1. Method 5 shall be used to determine the
particulate matter concentration. The sampling time and volume for each test
run shall be at least 2 hours and 1.70 dscm.
2. Method 9 and the procedures in s.
NR 440.11 shall be used to determine opacity from stack
emissions.
(c) During
the initial performance test of a wet scrubber, the owner or operator shall use
the monitoring devices of sub. (5) (d) to determine the average change in
pressure of the gas stream across the scrubber and the average flowrate of the
scrubber liquid during each of the particulate matter runs. The arithmetic
averages of the 3 runs shall be used as the baseline average values for the
purposes of sub. (6) (c).