Section 225.130 Definitions
The following definitions apply for the purposes of this
Part. Unless otherwise defined in this Section or a different meaning for a
term is clear from its context, the terms used in this Part have the meanings
specified in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 211.
"Agency" means
the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. [415 ILCS 5/3.105]
"Averaging
demonstration" means, with regard to Subpart B of this Part, a
demonstration of compliance that is based on the combined performance of EGUs
at two or more sources.
"Base Emission Rate"
means, for a group of EGUs subject to emission standards for NOx and
SO2 pursuant to Section 225.233, the average emission rate of NOx
or SO2 from the EGUs, in pounds per million Btu heat input, for
calendar years 2003 through 2005 (or, for seasonal NOx, the 2003
through 2005 ozone seasons), as determined from the data collected and quality
assured by the USEPA, pursuant to the 40 CFR 72 and 96 federal Acid Rain and NOx
Budget Trading Programs, for the emissions and heat input of that group of
EGUs.
"Board" means
the Illinois Pollution Control Board. [415 ILCS 5/3.130]
"Boiler" means an
enclosed fossil or other fuel-fired combustion device used to produce heat and
to transfer heat to recirculating water, steam, or other medium.
"Bottoming-cycle
cogeneration unit" means a cogeneration unit in which the energy
input to the unit is first used to produce useful thermal energy and at least
some of the reject heat from the useful thermal energy application or process
is then used for electricity production.
"CAIR authorized account
representative" means, for the purpose of general accounts, a responsible
natural person who is authorized, in accordance with 40 CFR 96, subparts BB,
FF, BBB, FFF, BBBB, and FFFF to transfer and otherwise dispose of CAIR NOx,
SO2, and NOx Ozone Season allowances, as applicable, held
in the CAIR NOx, SO2, and NOx Ozone Season
general account, and for the purpose of a CAIR NOx compliance
account, a CAIR SO2 compliance account, or a CAIR NOx
Ozone Season compliance account, the CAIR designated representative of the
source.
"CAIR designated
representative" means, for a CAIR NOx source, a CAIR SO2
source, and a CAIR NOx Ozone Season source and each CAIR NOx
unit, CAIR SO2 unit and CAIR NOx Ozone Season unit at the
source, the natural person who is authorized by the owners and operators of the
source and all such units at the source, in accordance with 40 CFR 96, subparts
BB, FF, BBB, FFF, BBBB, and FFFF as applicable, to represent and legally bind
each owner and operator in matters pertaining to the CAIR NOx Annual
Trading Program, CAIR SO2 Trading Program, and CAIR NOx
Ozone Season Trading Program, as applicable. For any unit that is subject to
one or more of the following programs: CAIR NOx Annual Trading
Program, CAIR SO2 Trading Program, CAIR NOx Ozone Season
Trading Program, or the federal Acid Rain Program, the designated representative
for the unit must be the same natural person for all programs applicable to the
unit.
"Coal"
means any solid fuel classified as anthracite, bituminous, subbituminous, or
lignite by the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) Standard
Specification for Classification of Coals by Rank D388-77, 90, 91, 95, 98a, or
99 (Reapproved 2004).
"Coal-derived
fuel" means any fuel (whether in a solid, liquid or gaseous state)
produced by the mechanical, thermal, or chemical processing of coal.
"Coal-fired" means:
For purposes of Subpart B, or for
purposes of allocating allowances under Sections 225.435, 225.445, 225.535, and
225.545, combusting any amount of coal or coal-derived fuel, alone or in
combination with any amount of any other fuel, during a specified year;
Except as provided above,
combusting any amount of coal or coal-derived fuel, alone or in combination
with any amount of any other fuel.
"Cogeneration unit"
means, for the purposes of Subparts C, D, and E, a stationary, fossil
fuel-fired boiler or a stationary, fossil fuel-fired combustion turbine of
which both of the following conditions are true:
It uses equipment to produce
electricity and useful thermal energy for industrial, commercial, heating, or
cooling purposes through the sequential use of energy; and
It produces either of the
following during the 12-month period beginning on the date the unit first
produces electricity and during any subsequent calendar year after that in
which the unit first produces electricity:
For a topping-cycle cogeneration
unit, both of the following:
Useful thermal energy not less
than five percent of total energy output; and
Useful power that, when added to
one-half of useful thermal energy produced, is not less than 42.5 percent of
total energy input, if useful thermal energy produced is 15 percent or more of
total energy output, or not less than 45 percent of total energy input if
useful thermal energy produced is less than 15 percent of total energy output;
or
For a bottoming-cycle cogeneration
unit, useful power not less than 45 percent of total energy input.
"Combined cycle system"
means a system comprised of one or more combustion turbines, heat recovery
steam generators, and steam turbines configured to improve overall efficiency
of electricity generation or steam production.
"Combustion turbine"
means:
An enclosed device comprising a
compressor, a combustor, and a turbine and in which the flue gas resulting from
the combustion of fuel in the combustor passes through the turbine, rotating
the turbine; and
If the enclosed device described
in the above paragraph of this definition is combined cycle, any associated duct
burner, heat recovery steam generator and steam turbine.
"Commence commercial
operation" means, for the purposes of Subpart B of this Part, with regard
to an EGU that serves a generator, to have begun to produce steam, gas, or
other heated medium used to generate electricity for sale or use, including
test generation. Such date must remain the unit's date of commencement of
operation even if the EGU is subsequently modified, reconstructed or repowered.
For the purposes of Subparts C, D and E, "commence commercial operation"
is as defined in Section 225.150.
"Commence construction"
means, for the purposes of Section 225.460(f), 225.470, 225.560(f), and
225.570, that the owner or owner's designee has obtained all necessary
preconstruction approvals (e.g., zoning) or permits and either has:
Begun, or caused to begin, a
continuous program of actual on-site construction of the source, to be
completed within a reasonable time; or
Entered into binding agreements
or contractual obligations, which cannot be cancelled or modified without
substantial loss to the owner or operator, to undertake a program of actual
construction of the source to be completed within a reasonable time.
For purposes of
this definition:
"Construction"
shall be determined as any physical change or change in the method of
operation, including but not limited to fabrication, erection, installation,
demolition, or modification of projects eligible for CASA allowances, as set
forth in Sections 225.460 and 225.560.
"A reasonable time"
shall be determined considering but not limited to the following factors: the
nature and size of the project, the extent of design engineering, the amount of
off-site preparation, whether equipment can be fabricated or can be purchased,
when the project begins (considering both the seasonal nature of the
construction activity and the existence of other projects competing for
construction labor at the same time, the place of the environmental permit in
the sequence of corporate and overall governmental approval), and the nature of
the project sponsor (e.g., private, public, regulated).
"Commence
operation", for purposes of Subparts C, D and E, means:
To have begun any mechanical,
chemical, or electronic process, including, for the purpose of a unit, start-up
of a unit's combustion chamber, except as provided in 40 CFR 96.105, 96.205, or
96.305, as incorporated by reference in Section 225.140.
For a unit that undergoes a
physical change (other than replacement of the unit by a unit at the same
source) after the date the unit commences operation as set forth in the first
paragraph of this definition, such date will remain the date of commencement of
operation of the unit, which will continue to be treated as the same unit.
For a unit that is replaced by a
unit at the same source (e.g., repowered), after the date the unit commences
operation as set forth in the first paragraph of this definition, such date
will remain the replaced unit's date of commencement of operation, and the
replacement unit will be treated as a separate unit with a separate date for
commencement of operation as set forth in this definition as appropriate.
"Common stack" means a
single flue through which emissions from two or more units are exhausted.
"Compliance account"
means:
For the purposes of Subparts D and
E, a CAIR NOx Allowance Tracking System account, established by
USEPA for a CAIR NOx source or CAIR NOx Ozone Season
source pursuant to 40 CFR 96, subparts FF and FFFF in which any CAIR NOx
allowance or CAIR NOx Ozone Season allowance allocations for the
CAIR NOx units or CAIR NOx Ozone Season units at the
source are initially recorded and in which are held any CAIR NOx or
CAIR NOx Ozone Season allowances available for use for a control
period in order to meet the source's CAIR NOx or CAIR NOx
Ozone Season emissions limitations in accordance with Sections 225.410 and
225.510, and 40 CFR 96.154 and 96.354, as incorporated by reference in Section
225.140. CAIR NOx allowances may not be used for compliance with
the CAIR NOx Ozone Season Trading Program and CAIR NOx
Ozone Season allowances may not be used for compliance with the CAIR NOx
Annual Trading Program; or
For the purposes of Subpart C, a
"compliance account" means a CAIR SO2 compliance account,
established by the USEPA for a CAIR SO2 source pursuant to 40 CFR
96, subpart FFF, in which any SO2 units at the source are initially
recorded and in which are held any SO2 allowances available for use
for a control period in order to meet the source's CAIR SO2
emissions limitations in accordance with Section 225.310 and 40 CFR 96.254, as
incorporated by reference in Section 225.140.
"Control
period" means:
For the CAIR SO2 and NOx
Annual Trading Programs in Subparts C and D, the period beginning January 1 of
a calendar year, except as provided in Sections 225.310(d)(3) and 225.410(d)(3),
and ending on December 31 of the same year, inclusive; or
For the CAIR NOx Ozone
Season Trading Program in Subpart E, the period beginning May 1 of a calendar
year, except as provided in Section 225.510(d)(3), and ending on September 30
of the same year, inclusive.
"Electric generating unit"
or "EGU" means a fossil fuel-fired stationary boiler, combustion
turbine or combined cycle system that serves a generator that has a nameplate
capacity greater than 25 MWe and produces electricity for sale.
"Excepted monitoring
system" means a sorbent trap monitoring system, as defined in this Section.
"Flue"
means a conduit or duct through which gases or other matter is exhausted to the
atmosphere.
"Fossil fuel" means
natural gas, petroleum, coal, or any form of solid, liquid, or gaseous fuel
derived from such material.
"Fossil fuel-fired"
means the combusting of any amount of fossil fuel, alone or in combination with
any other fuel in any calendar year.
"Generator"
means a device that produces electricity.
"Gross
electrical output" means the total electrical output from an EGU before
making any deductions for energy output used in any way related to the
production of energy. For an EGU generating only electricity, the gross
electrical output is the output from the turbine/generator set.
"Heat input" means, for
the purposes of Subparts C, D, and E, a specified period of time, the product
(in mmBtu/hr) of the gross calorific value of the fuel (in Btu/lb) divided by 1,000,000
Btu/mmBtu and multiplied by the fuel feed rate into a combustion device (in lb
of fuel/time), as measured, recorded and reported to USEPA by the CAIR
designated representative and determined by USEPA in accordance with 40 CFR 96,
subpart HH, HHH, or HHHH, if applicable, and excluding the heat derived from
preheated combustion air, recirculated flue gases, or exhaust from other
sources.
"Higher
heating value" or "HHV" means the total heat liberated per mass
of fuel burned (Btu/lb), when fuel and dry air at standard conditions undergo
complete combustion and all resultant products are brought to their standard
states at standard conditions.
"Input
mercury" means the mass of mercury that is contained in the coal combusted
within an EGU.
"Integrated gasification
combined cycle" or "IGCC" means a coal-fired electric utility
steam generating unit that burns a synthetic gas derived from coal in a
combined-cycle gas turbine. No coal is directly burned in the unit during
operation.
"Long-term cold storage"
means the complete shutdown of a unit intended to last for an extended period
of time (at least two calendar years) where notice for long-term cold storage
is provided under 40 CFR 75.61(a)(7).
"Nameplate
capacity" means, starting from the initial installation of a
generator, the maximum electrical generating output (in MWe) that the generator
is capable of producing on a steady-state basis and during continuous operation
(when not restricted by seasonal or other deratings) as of such installation as
specified by the manufacturer of the generator or, starting from the completion
of any subsequent physical change in the generator resulting in an increase in
the maximum electrical generating output (in MWe) that the generator is capable
of producing on a steady-state basis and during continuous operation (when not
restricted by seasonal or other deratings), such increased maximum amount as of
completion as specified by the person conducting the physical change.
"NIST traceable elemental mercury
standards" means either:
1) Compressed
gas cylinders having known concentrations of elemental mercury, which have been
prepared according to the "EPA Traceability Protocol for Assay and
Certification of Gaseous Calibration Standards"; or
2) Calibration
gases having known concentrations of elemental mercury, produced by a generator
that fully meets the performance requirements of the "EPA Traceability
Protocol for Qualification and Certification of Elemental Mercury Gas
Generators, or an interim version of that protocol until such time as a final
protocol is issued."
"NIST traceable source of
oxidized mercury" means a generator that is capable of providing known
concentrations of vapor phase mercuric chloride (HgCl2), and that
fully meets the performance requirements of the "EPA Traceability Protocol
for Qualification and Certification of Oxidized Mercury Gas Generators, or an interim
version of that protocol until such time as a final protocol is issued."
"Oil-fired unit" means a
unit combusting fuel oil for more than 15.0 percent of the annual heat input in
a specified year and not qualifying as coal-fired.
"Output-based emission standard" means, for
the purposes of Subpart B of this Part, a maximum
allowable rate of emissions of mercury per unit of gross electrical output from
an EGU.
"Potential electrical
output capacity" means 33 percent of a unit's maximum design heat input,
expressed in mmBtu/hr divided by 3.413 mmBtu/MWh, and multiplied by 8,760
hr/yr.
"Project sponsor"
means a person or an entity, including but not limited to the owner or operator
of an EGU or a not-for-profit group, that provides the majority of funding for
an energy efficiency and conservation, renewable energy, or clean technology
project as listed in Sections 225.460 and 225.560, unless another person or
entity is designated by a written agreement as the project sponsor for the
purpose of applying for NOx allowances or NOx Ozone
Season allowances from the CASA.
"Rated-energy efficiency"
means the percentage of thermal energy input that is recovered as useable
energy in the form of gross electrical output, useful thermal energy, or both
that is used for heating, cooling, industrial processes, or other beneficial
uses as follows:
For electric generators, rated-energy
efficiency is calculated as one kilowatt hour (3,413 Btu) of electricity
divided by the unit's design heat rate using the higher heating value of the
fuel, and expressed as a percentage.
For combined heat and power
projects, rated-energy efficiency is calculated using the following formula:
REE
|
=
|
((GO + UTE)/HI) ´
100
|
Where:
REE
|
=
|
Rated-energy efficiency, expressed as percentage.
|
GO
|
=
|
Gross electrical output of the system expressed in Btu/hr.
|
UTE
|
=
|
Useful thermal output from the system that is used for
heating, cooling, industrial processes or other beneficial uses, expressed in
Btu/hr.
|
HI
|
=
|
Heat input, based upon the higher heating value of fuel,
in Btu/hr.
|
"Repowered" means, for
the purposes of an EGU, replacement of a coal-fired boiler with one of the
following coal-fired technologies at the same source as the coal-fired boiler:
Atmospheric or
pressurized fluidized bed combustion;
Integrated
gasification combined cycle;
Magnetohydrodynamics;
Direct and
indirect coal-fired turbines;
Integrated
gasification fuel cells; or
As determined by the USEPA in
consultation with the United States Department of Energy, a derivative of one
or more of the technologies under this definition and any other coal-fired
technology capable of controlling multiple combustion emissions simultaneously
with improved boiler or generation efficiency and with significantly greater
waste reduction relative to the performance of technology in widespread
commercial use as of January 1, 2005.
"Rolling 12-month basis"
means, for the purposes of Subpart B of this Part, a determination made on a
monthly basis from the relevant data for a particular calendar month and the
preceding 11 calendar months (total of 12 months of data), with two
exceptions. For determinations involving one EGU, calendar months in which the
EGU does not operate (zero EGU operating hours) must not be included in the
determination, and must be replaced by a preceding month or months in which the
EGU does operate, so that the determination is still based on 12 months of
data. For determinations involving two or more EGUs, calendar months in which
none of the EGUs covered by the determination operates (zero EGU operating
hours) must not be included in the determination, and must be replaced by
preceding months in which at least one of the EGUs covered by the determination
does operate, so that the determination is still based on 12 months of data.
"Sorbent Trap Monitoring
System" means the equipment required by Appendix B of this Part for the
continuous monitoring of Hg emissions, using paired sorbent traps containing
iodated charcoal (IC) or other suitable reagents. This excepted monitoring
system consists of a probe, the paired sorbent traps, an umbilical line,
moisture removal components, an air tight sample pump, a gas flow meter, and an
automated data acquisition and handling system. The monitoring system samples
the stack gas at a rate proportional to the stack gas volumetric flowrate. The
sampling is a batch process. Using the sample volume measured by the gas flow
meter and the results of the analyses of the sorbent traps, the average mercury
concentration in the stack gas for the sampling period is determined in units of
micrograms per dry standard cubic meter (µg/dscm). Mercury mass emissions for
each hour in the sampling period are calculated using the average Hg
concentration for that period, in conjunction with contemporaneous hourly
measurements of the stack gas flow rate, corrected for the stack moisture
content.
"Total energy output"
means, with respect to a cogeneration unit, the sum of useful power and useful
thermal energy produced by the cogeneration unit.
"Useful thermal energy"
means, for the purpose of a cogeneration unit, the thermal energy that is made
available to an industrial or commercial process, excluding any heat contained
in condensate return or makeup water:
Used in a heating application
(e.g., space heating or domestic hot water heating); or
Used in a space cooling
application (e.g., thermal energy used by an absorption chiller).
(Source: Amended at 33 Ill.
Reg. 10427, effective June 26, 2009)