Mich. Admin. Code R. 336.1116 - Definitions; P
Rule 116. As used in these rules:
(a) "Packaging rotogravure printing" means
rotogravure printing upon a substrate that, in subsequent operations, is formed
into a packaging product or label, or both.
(b) "Paint manufacturing" means the grinding
or mixing of a combination of pigments, resins, and liquids to produce a
surface coating as listed in standard industrial classification code
2851.
(c) "Particulate matter"
means any air contaminant existing as a finely divided liquid or solid, other
than uncombined water, as measured by a reference test specified in
R 336.2004(5) or by
an equivalent or alternative method.
(d) "Perchloroethylene dry cleaning
equipment" means equipment utilized in the cleaning of fabrics for which
perchloroethylene (tetrachloroethylene) is the predominant cleaning
medium.
(e) "Performance test"
means the taking of a source sample at a stationary source, employing
department-approved methods, to determine either of the following:
(i) Compliance with the department's rules,
orders, or emission limitations.
(ii) Compliance with the conditions of a
permit to install or renewable operating permit.
(f) "Permit to install" means a permit issued
by the department authorizing the construction, installation, relocation, or
alteration of any process, fuel-burning, refuse-burning, or control equipment
in accordance with approved plans and specifications.
(g) "Permit to operate" means a permit issued
by the department authorizing the use of any process, fuel-burning,
refuse-burning, or control equipment for the period indicated after it has been
demonstrated that it can be operated in compliance with these rules. The
requirement to obtain a permit to operate was removed from these rules
effective July 26, 1995. Permits to operate issued before that date remain in
effect and legally enforceable unless they are voided pursuant to
R
336.1201(6).
(h) "Person" means any of the following:
(i) An individual person.
(ii) Trustee.
(iii) Court-appointed
representative.
(iv)
Syndicate.
(v)
Association.
(vi)
Partnership.
(vii) Firm.
(viii) Club.
(ix) Company.
(x) Corporation.
(xi) Business trust.
(xii) Institution.
(xiii) Agency.
(xiv) Government corporation.
(xv) Municipal corporation.
(xvi) City.
(xvii) County.
(xviii) Municipality.
(xix) District.
(xx) Other political subdivision, department,
bureau, agency, or instrumentality of federal, state, or local
government.
(xxi) Other entity
recognized by law as the subject of rights and duties.
(i) "Petroleum" means the crude oil removed
from the earth and the oils derived from tar sands, shale, and coal
gasification or liquefaction.
(j)
"Petroleum refinery" means any facility engaged in producing gasoline,
kerosene, distillate fuel oils, residual fuel oils, lubricants, or other
products through distillation of petroleum or through redistillation, cracking,
or the reforming of unfinished petroleum derivatives.
(k) "PM-10" means particulate matter that has
an aerodynamic diameter less than or equal to a nominal 10 micrometers, as
measured by a reference test specified in 40 C.F.R. part 51, appendix
M, adopted by reference in
R
336.1902. PM-10 emissions shall include gaseous
emissions from a source or activity which condense to form particulate matter
at ambient temperatures. Such condensable particulate matter shall be accounted
for in applicability determinations and in establishing emissions limitations
for PM-10.
(l) "PM 2.5" means
particulate matter that has an aerodynamic diameter less than or equal to a
nominal 2.5 micrometers, as measured by a reference test specified in 40 C.F.R.
part 51, appendix M, adopted by reference in
R
336.1902. PM 2.5 emissions shall include gaseous
emissions from a source or activity that condense to form particulate matter at
ambient temperatures. Such condensable particulate matter shall be accounted
for in applicability determinations and in establishing emissions limitations
for PM 2.5.
(m) "Potential
emissions" means those emissions expected to occur without control equipment,
unless this control equipment is, aside from air pollution control
requirements, vital to production of the normal product of the source or to its
normal operation. Annual potential emissions shall be based on the maximum
annual-rated capacity of the source, unless the source is subject to
enforceable permit conditions or enforceable orders that limit the operating
rate or the hours of operation, or both. Enforceable agreements or permit
conditions on the type or amount of materials combusted or processed shall be
used in determining the potential emission rate of a source.
(n) "Potential to emit" means the maximum
capacity of a stationary source to emit an air contaminant under its physical
and operational design. Any physical or operational limit on the capacity of
the stationary source to emit an air contaminant, including air pollution
control equipment and restrictions on the hours of operation or the type or
amount of material combusted, stored, or processed, shall be treated as part of
its design only if the limit, or the effect it would have on emissions, is
legally enforceable. Secondary emissions shall not count in determining the
"potential to emit" of a stationary source. For hazardous air pollutants that
have been listed pursuant to Section 112(b) of the clean air act, quantifiable
fugitive emissions shall be included in determining the potential to emit of
any stationary source. For all other air contaminants, quantifiable fugitive
emissions shall be included in determining the "potential to emit" of a
stationary source only if the stationary source belongs to 1 of the following
categories:
(i) Coal cleaning plants that
have thermal dryers.
(ii) Kraft
pulp mills.
(iii) Portland cement
plants.
(iv) Primary zinc
smelters.
(v) Iron and steel
mills.
(vi) Primary aluminum ore
reduction plants.
(vii) Primary
copper smelters.
(viii) Municipal
incinerators capable of charging more than 50 tons of refuse per day.
(ix) Hydrofluoric, sulfuric, or nitric acid
plants.
(x) Petroleum
refineries.
(xi) Lime
plants.
(xii) Phosphate rock
processing plants.
(xiii) Coke oven
batteries.
(xiv) Sulfur recovery
plants.
(xv) Carbon black plants
that have a furnace process.
(xvi)
Primary lead smelters.
(xvii) Fuel
conversion plants.
(xviii)
Sintering plants.
(xix) Secondary
metal production plants.
(xx)
Chemical process plants. The term chemical process plant does not include
ethanol production facilities that produce ethanol by natural fermentation
included in North American industrial classification system codes 325193 or
312140.
(xxi) Fossil fuel boilers
(or combination thereof) totaling more than 250,000,000 Btu per hour heat
input.
(xxii) Petroleum storage and
transfer units that have a total storage capacity of more than 300,000 barrels
or petroleum storage vessels that have a capacity of more than 40,000
gallons.
(xxiii) Taconite ore
processing plants.
(xxiv)
Glass-fiber processing plants.
(xxv) Charcoal production plants.
(xxvi) Fossil fuel-fired steam electric
plants of more than 250,000,000 Btu per hour heat input.
(xxvii) Asphalt concrete plants.
(xxviii) Secondary lead smelters and
refineries.
(xxix) Sewage treatment
plants.
(xxx) Phosphate fertilizer
plants.
(xxxi) Ferroalloy
production plants.
(xxxii) Grain
elevators.
(xxxiii) Stationary gas
turbines.
(xxxiv) Stationary
sources that are subject to the federal national emission standards for
hazardous air pollutants for the following materials:
(A) Asbestos.
(B) Beryllium.
(C) Mercury.
(D) Vinyl chloride.
(o) "PPM" means parts per million,
by volume.
(p) "Printed interior
panel" means a panel that has its grain or natural surface obscured by fillers
and basecoats and upon which a simulated grain or decorative pattern is
printed.
(q) "Process" means an
action, operation, or a series of actions or operations at a source that emits
or has the potential to emit an air contaminant. Examples of a "process"
include any of the following:
(i) A physical
change of a material.
(ii) A
chemical change of a material.
(iii) The combustion of fuel, refuse, or
waste material.
(iv) The storage of
a material.
(v) The handling of a
material.
(r) "Process
equipment" means all equipment, devices, and auxiliary components, including
air pollution control equipment, stacks, and other emission points, used in a
process.
(s) "Process unit
turnaround" means the scheduled shutdown of a refinery process unit for the
purpose of inspection or maintenance of the unit.
(t) "Production equipment exhaust system"
means a device for collecting and removing, from the immediate area, fugitive
air contaminants from any process equipment.
(u) "Psia" means pounds per square inch
absolute.
(v) "Publication
rotogravure printing" means rotogravure printing upon a substrate that is
subsequently formed into any of the following:
(i) Book.
(ii) Magazine.
(iii) Catalogue.
(iv) Brochure.
(v) Directory.
(vi) Newspaper.
(vii) Supplement.
(viii) Other type of printed
material.
(w) "Pushing
operation," with respect to coke ovens, means the movement of the coke from a
coke oven into the coke-receiving car.
(x) "Pushside," with respect to a coke oven,
means that side of the coke oven that is adjacent to the pushing
machine.
Notes
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