Md. Code Regs. 26.11.09.08 - Control of NO[x] Emissions for Major Stationary Sources
A. Applicability.
(1) This regulation applies to a person who
owns or operates an installation that causes emissions of
NOx and is located at premises that have total potential
to emit:
(a) 25 tons or more per year of
NOx and is located in Baltimore City, or Anne Arundel,
Baltimore, Calvert, Carroll, Cecil, Charles, Frederick, Harford, Howard,
Montgomery, or Prince George's counties; or
(b) 100 tons or more per year of
NOx and is located in Allegany, Caroline, Dorchester,
Garrett, Kent, Queen Anne's, St. Mary's, Somerset, Talbot, Washington,
Wicomico, or Worcester counties.
(2) Except as otherwise indicated, the
emissions standards and requirements in this regulation apply at all
times.
B. General
Requirements and Conditions.
(1) Emission
Standards and Requirements.
(a) A person who
owns or operates an installation that causes NOx
emissions subject to this regulation is in compliance with this regulation if
the person establishes compliance with the emissions standards in §B(1)(c) of
this regulation.
(b) Any other
person subject to this regulation shall comply with the applicable source
specific requirements in §§C-J of this regulation.
(c) Emission Standards in Pounds of
NOx per Million Btu of heat input.
Fuel | Tangential- Fired | Wall-Fired |
Gas only | 0.20 | 0.20 |
Gas/Oil | 0.25 | 0.25 |
Coal (dry bottom) | 0.38 | 0.38 |
Coal (wet bottom) | 1.00 | 1.00 |
(2) Demonstration of Compliance.
(a) A person subject to a
NOx emission standard in this regulation shall
demonstrate compliance as follows:
(i) For
installations equipped with a CEM, compliance with the
NOx emissions standards in this regulation shall be
established using CEM data; or
(ii)
For all other installations, compliance with the NOx
emissions standards in this regulation shall be established by stack tests
using Method 07 of the test methods referenced in COMAR
26.11.01.04C(1)
or other test methods approved by the Department and the EPA.
(b) CEMs shall be certified in
accordance with 40 CFR Part 60, Appendix B, or Part 75, Appendix A.
(c) CEMs shall meet the quality assurance
criteria in 40 CFR Part 60, Appendix F, or, for sources subject to Title IV of
the Clean Air Act (Acid Rain), the quality assurance criteria in 40 CFR Part
75, Appendix B.
(d) Except as
otherwise established by the Department and approved by the EPA, for a person
who establishes compliance with the NOx emissions
standards in this regulation using a CEM, compliance shall be determined as
30-day rolling averages.
(e) For a
person who establishes compliance using a stack test, compliance shall be
determined as averages of the stack test duration.
(3) Alternative Standard.
(a) A person who is subject to a source
specific NOx emission standard under this regulation may
propose an alternative standard for approval by the Department. Approval by the
EPA is also required for an alternative standard approved by the
Department.
(b) A person who
proposes an alternative emission standard for approval shall provide the
following information to the Department:
(i)
Uncontrolled NOx emissions for the installation
established with a CEM, or stack tests obtained during steady state
operation;
(ii) Stack tests or
other data from an existing similar installation demonstrating that the
applicable standard cannot be met;
(iii) Identification of all proposed
combustion modifications, fuel conversions, or other equipment or process
modifications proposed for implementation to meet the alternative standard;
and
(iv) Equipment vendor costs
from other facilities and other information that demonstrates, to the
satisfaction of the Department, that the cost of complying with the emission
standard in this regulation is unreasonable as compared to the cost of meeting
an alternative standard.
(4) Emissions Averaging.
(a) Instead of meeting the source specific
emission standards set forth in §§C-F of this regulation, a person who owns or
operates more than one installation subject to this regulation may achieve
compliance by meeting an overall source or system-wide
NOx emission reduction that is equivalent to or greater
than the NOx emission reduction that would be achieved
if each individual installation complied with applicable
requirements.
(b) A person who
proposes to comply with this regulation by averaging the emissions of two or
more installations (separate stacks) shall submit a proposal to the Department
for approval.
(c) Any proposal for
emissions averaging approved by the Department is not an acceptable means of
compliance until the proposal is also approved by the EPA as a revision to the
State Implementation Plan (SIP).
(d) A person who proposes to average
emissions to comply with this regulation shall:
(i) Have the capability to continuously
monitor NOx emissions for each installation to be
included in the emissions averaging; and
(ii) Demonstrate to the Department that on
each day of operation the total plant or system-wide NOx
emissions are equal to or less than the NOx emissions
that would be discharged if each installation met the applicable emission
standard in this regulation.
(5) Operator Training.
(a) For purposes of this regulation, the
equipment operator to be trained may be the person who maintains the equipment
and makes the necessary adjustments for efficient operation.
(b) The operator training course sponsored by
the Department shall include an in-house training course that is approved by
the Department.
C. Requirements for Fuel-Burning Equipment
with a Rated Heat Input Capacity of 250 Million Btu Per Hour or Greater.
(1) A person who owns or operates
fuel-burning equipment with a rated heat input capacity of 250 Million Btu per
hour or greater shall equip each installation with combustion modifications or
other technologies to meet the NOx emission rates in
§C(2) of this regulation.
(2) The
maximum NOx emission rates as pounds of
NOx per Million Btu per hour are:
(a) 0.45 for tangentially coal fired units
located at an electric generating facility (excluding high heat release
units);
(b) 0.50 for wall coal
fired units located at an electric generating facility (excluding high heat
release units);
(c) 0.30 for oil
fired or gas/oil fired units located at an electric generating
facility;
(d) 0.70 for coal fired
cyclone fuel burning equipment located at an electric generating facility from
May 1 through September 30 of each year and 1.5 during the period October 1
through April 30 of each year;
(e)
0.70 for a tangentially coal fired high heat release unit located at an
electric generating facility;
(f)
0.80 for a wall coal fired high heat release unit located at an electric
generating facility; and
(g) 0.6
for coal fired cell burners at an electric generating facility.
(h) 0.70 for fuel burning equipment stacks at
a non-electric generating facility during the period May 1 through September 30
of each year and 0.99 during the period October 1 through April 30 of each
year.
(3) A person who
owns or operates fuel burning equipment with a rated heat input capacity of 250
Million Btu per hour or greater shall install, operate, calibrate, and maintain
a certified NOx CEM or an alternative
NOx monitoring method approved by the Department and the
EPA on each installation.
D. Requirements for Fuel-Burning Equipment
with a Rated Heat Input Capacity of Less than 250 Million Btu Per Hour and
Greater than 100 Million Btu Per Hour.
(1)
Equipment Specifications and Standards.
(a) A
person who owns or operates coal fired fuel-burning equipment with a rated heat
input capacity of less than 250 Million Btu per hour and greater than 100
Million Btu per hour shall install and operate in accordance with the
manufacturer's specifications, combustion modifications, or other technologies
to meet an emission rate of 0.65 pounds of NOx per
Million Btu per hour.
(b) All other
fuel burning equipment with a rated heat input capacity of less than 250
Million Btu per hour and greater than 100 Million Btu per hour shall meet the
NOx emission rates set forth in §B(1)(c) of this
regulation.
(2)
Exceptions. The requirements in §D(1) of this regulation do not apply to a
space heater as defined in Regulation .01B of this chapter or to fuel-burning
equipment subject to §G of this regulation.
E. Requirements for Fuel-Burning Equipment
with a Rated Heat Input Capacity of 100 Million Btu Per Hour or Less. A person
who owns or operates fuel-burning equipment with a rated heat input capacity of
100 Million Btu per hour or less shall:
(1)
Submit to the Department an identification of each affected installation, the
rated heat input capacity of each installation, and the type of fuel burned in
each;
(2) Perform a combustion
analysis for each installation at least once each year and optimize combustion
based on the analysis;
(3) Maintain
the results of the combustion analysis at the site for at least 2 years and
make this data available to the Department and the EPA upon request;
(4) Once every 3 years, require each operator
of the installation to attend operator training programs on combustion
optimization that are sponsored by the Department, the EPA, or equipment
vendors; and
(5) Prepare and
maintain a record of training program attendance for each operator at the site,
and make these records available to the Department upon request.
F. Requirements for Space Heaters.
(1) A person who owns or operates a space
heater as defined in Regulation .01B of this chapter shall:
(a) Submit to the Department a list of each
affected installation on the premises and the types of fuel used in each
installation;
(b) Develop an
operating and maintenance plan to minimize NOx emissions
based on the recommendations of equipment vendors and other information
including the source's operating and maintenance experience;
(c) Implement the operating and maintenance
plan and maintain the plan at the premises for review upon request by the
Department;
(d) Require
installation operators to attend in-State operator training programs once every
3 years on combustion optimization that are sponsored by the Department, the
EPA, or equipment vendors; and
(e)
Prepare and maintain a record of training program attendance for each operator
at the site and make these records available to the Department upon
request.
(2) A person
who owns or operates an installation that no longer qualifies as a space heater
shall inform the Department not later than 60 days after the date when the
fuel-burning equipment did not qualify, and shall meet the applicable
fuel-burning equipment RACT requirement in this regulation.
G. Requirements for Fuel-Burning
Equipment with a Capacity Factor of 15 Percent or Less, and Combustion Turbines
with a Capacity Factor Greater than 15 Percent.
(1) A person who owns or operates
fuel-burning equipment with a capacity factor (as defined in 40 CFR Part 72.2)
of 15 percent or less shall:
(a) Provide
certification of the capacity factor of the equipment to the Department in
writing;
(b) For fuel-burning
equipment that operates more than 500 hours during a calendar year, perform a
combustion analysis and optimize combustion at least once annually;
(c) Maintain the results of the combustion
analysis at the site for at least 2 years and make these results available to
the Department and the EPA upon request;
(d) Require each operator of an installation,
except combustion turbines, to attend operator training programs at least once
every 3 years, on combustion optimization that are sponsored by the Department,
the EPA, or equipment vendors; and
(e) Maintain a record of training program
attendance for each operator at the site, and make these records available to
the Department upon request.
(2) A person who owns or operates a
combustion turbine with a capacity factor greater than 15 percent shall meet an
hourly average NOx emission rate of not more than 42 ppm
when burning gas or 65 ppm when burning fuel oil (dry volume at 15 percent
oxygen) or meet applicable Prevention of Significant Deterioration limits,
whichever is more restrictive.
I.
[(H)] Requirements for Glass Melting Furnaces.
(1) A person who owns or operates a glass
melting furnace shall optimize combustion by performing daily oxygen tests and
maintaining excess oxygen at 4.5 percent or less.
(2) Records on the daily oxygen tests shall
be maintained on site for at least 2 years and made available to the Department
upon request.
J. [(I)]
Requirements for Industrial Furnaces and Other Miscellaneous Installations that
Cause Emissions of NOx. A person who owns or operates
any installation other than fuel-burning equipment that causes
NOx emissions shall:
(1) Maintain good operating practices as
recommended by the equipment vendor to minimize NOx
emissions;
(2) Prepare and
implement a written in-house training program for all operators of these
installations that include instruction on good operating and maintenance
practices for the particular installation;
(3) Maintain and make available to the
Department, upon request, the written in-house operator training
program;
(4) Burn only gas in each
installation, where gas is available, during the period May 1 through September
30 of each year; and
(5) Maintain
operator training attendance records for each operator at the site for at least
2 years and make these records available to the Department upon
request.
K. [(J)]
Reporting Requirements.
(1) When
demonstration of compliance with the NOx emission
standards in this regulation is based on CEM data, quarterly emission reports
shall be submitted to the Department on or before the thirtieth day of the
month following the end of each calendar quarter.
(2) When compliance with this regulation is
demonstrated by a stack test, the results of the stack tests required by this
regulation shall be submitted to the Department within 45 days after completion
of the test.
(3) A person subject
to this regulation shall maintain annual fuel use records on site for not less
than 3 years, and make these records available to the Department upon
request.
Notes
Regulation .08 amended effective June 20, 1994 (21:12 Md. R. 1063); May 8, 1995 (22:9 Md. R. 648); October 18, 1999 (26:21 Md. R. 1631); September 18, 2000 (27:18 Md. R. 1665); November 11, 2002 (29:22 Md. R. 1724)
Regulation .08A amended effective November 24, 2003 (30:23 Md. R. 1653)
Regulation .08C amended effective March 3, 2014 (41:4 Md. R. 306)
Regulation .08 amended effective 42:14 Md. R. 884, eff.
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