Utah Admin. Code R315-260-31 - Standards and Criteria for Exclusion from Classification as a Solid Waste
(a) The Director may grant requests for
exclusion from classifying as a solid waste those materials that are
accumulated speculatively without sufficient amounts being recycled if the
applicant demonstrates that sufficient amounts of the material will be recycled
or transferred for recycling in the following year. If exclusion is granted, it
is valid only for the following year, but can be renewed, on an annual basis,
by filing a new application. The Director's decision will be based on the
following criteria:
(1) The manner in which
the material is expected to be recycled, when the material is expected to be
recycled, and whether this expected disposition is likely to occur, for
example, because of past practice, market factors, the nature of the material,
or contractual arrangements for recycling;
(2) The reason that the applicant has
accumulated the material for one or more years without recycling 75 percent of
the volume accumulated at the beginning of the year;
(3) The quantity of material already
accumulated and the quantity expected to be generated and accumulated before
the material is recycled;
(4) The
extent to which the material is handled to minimize loss; and
(5) Other relevant
factors.
(b) The Director
may grant requests for exclusion from classifying as a solid waste those
materials that are reclaimed and then reused as feedstock within the original
production process in which the materials were generated if the reclamation
operation is an essential part of the production process. This determination
will be based on the following criteria:
(1)
How economically viable the production process would be if it were to use
virgin materials, rather than reclaimed materials;
(2) The extent to which the material is
handled before reclamation to minimize loss;
(3) The time periods between generating the
material and its reclamation, and between reclamation and return to the
original primary production process;
(4) The location of the reclamation operation
in relation to the production process;
(5) Whether the reclaimed material is used
for the purpose for which it was originally produced when it is returned to the
original process, and whether it is returned to the process in substantially
its original form;
(6) Whether the
person who generates the material also reclaims it; and
(7) Other relevant factors.
(c) The Director may grant
requests for exclusion from classifying as a solid waste those hazardous
secondary materials that have been partially reclaimed, but must be reclaimed
further before recovery is completed, if the partial reclamation has produced a
commodity-like material. A determination that a partially-reclaimed material
for which the change in classification is sought is commodity like will be
based on whether the hazardous secondary material is legitimately recycled as
specified in Section
R315-260-43
and on whether all of the following decision criteria are satisfied:
(1) Whether the degree of partial reclamation
the material has undergone is substantial as demonstrated by using a partial
reclamation process other than the process that generated the hazardous
waste;
(2) Whether the partially
reclaimed material has sufficient economic value that it will be purchased for
further reclamation;
(3) Whether
the partially-reclaimed material is a viable substitute for a product or
intermediate produced from virgin or raw materials which is used in subsequent
production steps;
(4) Whether there
is a market for the partially-reclaimed material as demonstrated by known
customer(s) who are further reclaiming the material, e.g., records of sales
and/or contracts and evidence of subsequent use, such as bills of lading;
and
(5) Whether the
partially-reclaimed material is handled to minimize loss.
Notes
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