Md. Code Regs. 26.11.09.04 - Prohibition of Certain New Fuel-Burning Equipment
A. Areas I, II, V, and VI. The following
apply in Areas I, II, V, and VI:
(1) A person
may not construct fuel-burning equipment designed for use of residual fuel oil
in which any individual furnace has a rated heat input of less than 13 million
Btu (13.7 gigajoules) per hour. Residual oil may not be used at any time in any
of this fuel-burning equipment having a rated heat input of less than 13
million Btu (13.7 gigajoules) per hour.
(2) Except as provided in §C, of this
regulation:
(a) A person may not construct
solid fuel-burning equipment that has a rated heat input of less than 13
million Btu (13.7 gigajoules) per hour.
(b) A solid fuel may not be used at any time
in any fuel-burning equipment constructed after January 17, 1972, having a
rated heat input of less than 13 million Btu (13.7 gigajoules) per
hour.
(3) A person may
not construct fuel-burning equipment fitted with a rotary cup burner or replace
a burner with a rotary cup burner.
B. Areas III and IV. The following apply in
Areas III and IV:
(1) A person may not
construct fuel-burning equipment designed for use of residual fuel oil in which
any individual furnace has a heat input of less than 13 million Btu (13.7
gigajoules) per hour. Residual fuel oil may not be used at any time in any such
furnace having a heat input rate of less than 13 million Btu (13.7 gigajoules)
per hour.
(2) Except as provided in
§C, of this regulation:
(a) A person may not
construct solid fuel-burning equipment that has a rated heat input of less than
35 million Btu (37 gigajoules) per hour.
(b) A solid fuel may not be used at any time
in any fuel-burning equipment constructed after January 17, 1972 having a rated
heat input of less than 35 million Btu (37 gigajoules) per hour.
(3) A person may not construct
fuel-burning equipment designed to burn fuel oil with a rotary cup burner or
replace a burner on fuel-burning equipment with a rotary cup burner.
C. Exceptions.
(1) Fuel-Burning Equipment on Ships and
Biomass Fuel-Burning Equipment.
(a) New
fuel-burning equipment on ships is exempt from §§A(1) and B(1) of this
regulation.
(b) The provisions of
§§A and B of this regulation do not apply to fuel-burning equipment installed
after May 1, 2014 that burns only biomass fuels.
(2) General. The Department may grant an
exception to the prohibitions in §A(2) or §B(2), of this regulation, if the
Department determines that:
(a) There will be
no violation of ambient air quality standards or Prevention of Significant
Deterioration (PSD) requirements;
(b) There will be no violation of applicable
emission standards;
(c) There is
minimum potential for creation of a nuisance; and
(d) There is reasonable assurance of fuel
quality control.
(3)
Application.
(a) A person may request
exception under this section by submitting an application in writing.
(b) The application shall include the
following information:
(i) Description of the
proposed construction or modification, including the type and manufacturer of
the fuel-burning equipment, fuel specifications, expected annual fuel
consumption, type and manufacturer of any control equipment, and stack
height.
(ii) A contour map of the
area (such as a U.S.G.S. 7.5 minute quadrangle map), a drawing of the property
lines, the distance to the closest building not owned by the applicant, and a
description of the surrounding area including major terrain features and
building heights within 500 meters of the proposed construction.
(iii) Any other information requested by the
Department.
(4) Action on an Application. Within 30 days
after receipt of a completed application, the Department will either deny the
request for an exception or notify the applicant of its determination to
proceed.
(5) Opportunity for Public
Comment.
(a) Within 10 days after
notification by the Department of a determination to proceed with the
application for an exception, the applicant shall notify the public by
prominent advertisement in at least one newspaper of general circulation in the
area affected.
(b) The
advertisement shall be at the expense of the applicant, in a format approved by
the Department, and shall include a brief summary of the nature of the proposed
source and a statement that an exception has been requested to allow the use of
solid fuel, a statement that the public has 30 days to comment on the request
for an exception after the advertisement publication date, the place where the
relevant documents may be inspected, the name of a person to contact for
further information, and the address to which the comments may be
sent.
(6) Denial or
Approval of an Application.
(a) Within 60
days after the comment period, the Department will issue its final
determination in the form of an order.
(b) The Department will deny an application
for an exception if it determines that the proposed use of solid fuel will not
satisfy the criteria in §C(2), of this regulation. The Department will specify
the reasons for the denial.
(c) If
the application is approved, the order will specify any reasonable conditions
or special control measures to be taken by the source to minimize
emissions.
Notes
Regulations.04 amended effective April 16, 1984 (11:5 Md. R. 463)
Regulation .04A, B amended as an emergency provision effective February 4, 2009 (36:5 Md. R. 420); amended permanently effective June 15, 2009 (36:12 Md. R. 839)
Regulation .04C amended effective 41:8 Md. R. 474, eff.
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.