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NESHAP for Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Source Categories (40 CFR part 63, subpart XXXXXX) (Final Rule)

OMB: 2060-0622

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SUPPORTING STATEMENT

NATIONAL EMISSION STANDARDS FOR HAZARDOUS AIR POLLUTANTS (NESHAP) FOR NINE METAL FABRICATION AND FINISHING AREA SOURCES (40 CFR Part 63, Subpart XXXXXX) (Final Rule)


PART A

1.0 Identification of the Information Collection

(a) Title and Number of the Information Collection.

“National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) for Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories (40 CFR part 63, subpart XXXXXX).” This is a new information collection request (ICR), and the EPA tracking number is 2298.02, and the OMB Control Number is 2060-NEW.

(b) Short Characterization.

This ICR covers information collection requirements in the final area source rule for Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories (40 CFR part 63, subpart XXXXXX).

The potential respondents are owners or operators of any existing or new metal fabrication and finishing facility that is an area source of hazardous air pollutants (HAP) emissions and uses or has the potential to emit metal fabrication or finishing metal HAP (MFHAP), defined to be the compounds of cadmium, chromium, lead, manganese, and nickel, or any of these metals in the elemental form with the exception of lead. There are an estimated 5,800 facilities subject to the NESHAP for the Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories. The affected sources consist of several types of metal fabrication and finishing processes, including any abrasive blasting, metalworking (which includes machining, and dry grinding and dry polishing with machines), spray painting, and welding operations that use or have potential to emit any MFHAP. Existing area source metal fabrication and finishing facilities are currently well-controlled in terms of metal air toxics emissions as a result of State and national standards, permitting requirements, OSHA workplace standards, and/or management practices already taken by the industry to reduce air toxics.

Abrasive Blasting Owners or operators of completely enclosed and unvented blast chambers are required to comply with the following management and pollution prevention practices: (1) Minimize dust or PM generation, as a surrogate for MFHAP, during emptying of the enclosure; and (2) Operate equipment according to manufacturer's instructions. Owners or operators of abrasive blasting operations performed in vented enclosures are required to perform blasting within an enclosure designed to prevent visible PM emissions, as a surrogate for MFHAP, from occurring from the process. Owners or operators of abrasive blasting operations blasting substrates of greater than 8 feet in any dimension are required to comply with the following four management and pollution prevention practices to minimize MFHAP emissions from the processes: (1) switch from high PM-emitting blast media (e.g., sand) to low PM-emitting blast media (e.g., crushed glass, specular hematite, steel shot, aluminum oxide), whenever practicable; (2) do not re-use the blast media unless contaminants (i.e., any material other than the base metal, such as paint residue) have been removed by filtration or screening so that the abrasive material conforms to its original size and makeup; (3) enclose abrasive material storage areas and holding bins, seal chutes and conveyors transporting abrasive materials; and (4) operate all equipment according to manufacturer's instructions.

Machining Owners or operators of machining operations are required to comply with the following management and pollution prevention practices to minimize dust generation in the workplace: (1) As practicable, take measures necessary to minimize excess dust in the surrounding area to reduce PM emissions; and (2) Operate equipment according to manufacturer's instructions.

Dry Grinding and Dry Polishing with Machines Owners or operators of dry grinding and dry polishing with machines operations are required to capture PM emissions, as a surrogate for MFHAP, and vent the exhaust to a cartridge, fabric, or HEPA filter, and to comply with the following management and pollution prevention practices: (1) As practicable, take measures necessary to minimize excess dust in the surrounding area to reduce PM emissions; and (2) Operate equipment according to manufacturer's instructions.

Spray Painting Owners or operators of spray painting operations of objects less than or equal to 15 feet (except for those at fabricated structural metal facilities) would be required to comply with a requirement for spray booths and spray booth filters. Owners or operators of all spray painting operations using or having potential to emit MFHAP would be required to comply with an equipment standard to require low-emitting and pollution preventing spray gun technology and management practices of spray gun cleaning and spray painter training. All affected spray-applied paints would be applied with a high-volume, low-pressure (HVLP) spray gun, electrostatic application, or airless spray gun. All affected paint spray gun cleaning would be required to be done so that an atomized mist or spray of gun cleaning solvent and paint residue is not created outside of a container that collects used gun cleaning solvent. All workers that perform affected spray painting are to be certified as having completed classroom and hands-on training in the proper selection, mixing, and application of paints, or the equivalent. This spray painting portion of the proposed rule would only apply to those spray painting operations that have the potential to emit MFHAP; other spray painting operations are not affected spray painting sources in this rule and would not need to comply with this part of the rule.

Welding Owners or operators of welding operations would be required to minimize or reduce welding fume or PM emissions, as a surrogate for MFHAP, by implementing management and pollution prevention practices as practicable, while concurrently maintaining the required welding quality through the application of sound welding engineering judgment. The welding portion of this rule would only apply to those welding operations that have the potential to emit MFHAP; other welding operations are not affected sources in this rule and would not need to comply with this part of the proposed rule. There are many different welding processes commonly used in the metal fabrication and finishing industry, thus there is no one “best” method that can be specified to reduce welding fumes. Management and pollution prevention practices may include use of PM capture and control devices to collect the welding fume, as a surrogate for MFHAP, with operation of the capture and control devices according to the manufacturer’s instructions.

Compliance, Monitoring, Reporting, and Recordkeeping New requirements for existing area sources include one-time notifications, annual compliance certifications (which include annual reports of exceedences if any have occurred.) Records to demonstrate regulatory compliance are also required. Affected facilities would be exempt from Title V permitting requirements, except where an affected facility is required to obtain a Title V permit for reasons other than this final rule.

Some affected sources (welding at facilities using >2,000 lb/yr of MFHAP-containing welding rod, and abrasive blasting performed outdoors or in vented enclosures without controls) must perform regular visual determinations of fugitive emissions using EPA Method 22. Daily Method 22 testing is required initially, with a graduated schedule that allows for reduction in the frequency of tests from daily to weekly to monthly to quarterly over time as long as no visible emissions are detected. If visible emissions are detected, corrective action may be required to eliminate the emissions, along with a return to daily Method 22 testing. Welding affected sources for which visible emissions are repeatedly detected may be required to perform Method 9 tests for emissions opacity. The method 9 tests are performed on a graduated schedule, similar to that for the Method 22 tests. Method 9 tests showing opacity in excess of 20 percent will require the facility to prepare and implement a Site Specific Welding Emissions Management Plan (SWMP), and submit a notification of exceedence of 20% opacity.

The information collection requirements for existing and new sources in the Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories are listed in Attachment 1.

2.0 Need For and Use of the Collection

(a) Need/Authority for the Collection.

Section 112 of the Clean Air Act (CAA) requires EPA to establish NESHAP for both major and area sources of HAP that are listed for regulation under CAA section 112(c). An area source is a stationary source that is not a major source (i.e., an area source does not emit and does not have the potential to emit more than 10 tons per year [tpy] of any single HAP and more than 25 tpy of any combination of HAP). Requirements for area sources in CAA sections 112(c)(3) and 112(k) direct EPA to (1) identify at least 30 air toxics that present the greatest potential health threat in the largest number of urban areas and (2) to identify sufficient area source categories to ensure that sources representing 90 percent or more of the emissions of the 30 “listed” HAP are subject to regulation. EPA implements these requirements through the Integrated Urban Air Toxics Strategy (64 FR 38715, July 19, 1999). EPA added Metal Fabrication and Finishing to the Integrated Urban Air Toxics Strategy area source category list on November 22, 2002 (67 FR 70427.) The initial listing of the Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories was based on emissions of cadmium, chromium, lead, manganese, and nickel. Each of these HAP metals is on the list of 30 HAP identified in the 1999 strategy.

Under CAA section 112(d)(5), EPA may elect to promulgate HAP standards for area sources based on the use of generally available control technology (GACT) or management practices used by the sources. EPA can consider costs and economic impacts in determining GACT, which is particularly important when developing regulations for source categories that may have few establishments and many small businesses, or when determining whether additional control is needed for sources that are already well-controlled as a result of other air emissions standards.

Certain records and reports are necessary for the Administrator to confirm the compliance status of area sources, identify any new or reconstructed sources subject to the standards, and confirm that the standards are being achieved on a continuous basis. These recordkeeping and reporting requirements are specifically authorized by section 114 of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7414) and set out in the part 63 NESHAP General Provisions. The recordkeeping and reporting requirements for title V permits are contained in 40 CFR 70.6 and 40 CFR 71.6. Under parts 63 and 70 or 71, the owner or operator must keep each record for 5 years following the date of each occurrence, measurement, maintenance, corrective action, report, or record.

(b) Use/Users of the Data.

The information will be used by the delegated authority (State agency, or Regional Administrator if there is no delegated State agency) to ensure that the standards and other requirements are being achieved. Based on review of the recorded information at the site and the reported information, the delegated permitting authority can identify facilities that may not be in compliance and decide which facilities, records, or processes may need inspection.

3.0 Nonduplication, Consultations, and Other Collection Criteria

(a) Nonduplication.

A computer search of EPA’s ongoing ICRs revealed no duplication of information-gathering efforts.

(b) Public Notice Required Prior to ICR Submission to OMB.

Public notice of the ICR was included in the NPRM and will also be included in the Final Rule.

(c) Consultations.

The proposed rule was developed in consultation with individual companies, State agencies, and trade associations. The non-EPA persons consulted on the information collection activities are identified in Table 1.

(d) Effects of Less Frequent Collection.

If the relevant information were collected less frequently, the delegated permitting authority (State or EPA) will not be reasonably assured that a facility is in compliance with the standards.

(e) General Guidelines.

None of the guidelines in 5 CFR 1320.6 are being exceeded.

(f) Confidentiality.

All information submitted to the Agency for which a claim of confidentiality is made will be safeguarded according to the Agency policies set forth in Title 40, Chapter 1, Part 2, Subpart B--Confidentiality of Business Information (see 40 CFR 2; 41 FR 36902, September 1, 1976; amended by 43 FR 39999, September 28, 1978; 43 FR 42251, September 28, 1978; 44 FR 17674, March 23, 1979).

(g) Sensitive Questions.

This section is not applicable because this ICR does not involve matters of a sensitive nature.


TABLE 1. PERSONS CONSULTED ON THE INFORMATION COLLECTION ACTIVITIES

Contact

Organization

Telephone No.

Matt Steinman

Abrasive Blast Systems, Inc.

(770) 938-7263

Pam Lacey

American Gas Association.

[email protected]

(202) 824-7000

Roger E. Ferch

American Institute of Steel Construction

[email protected]

(312) 670-5401

Scott Humphreys

CRSI Concrete Reinforcing Steel Institute [email protected]

(847) 517-1200

Myron Faulk

Empire Abrasive Equipment Co.

(813) 681-6707

Charles H. Hageman

Forging Industry Association

(216) 781-6260

Greg Romanyshyn

Hydraulic Institute [email protected]

(973) 267-9700

Anne Goyer

Industrial Heating Equipment Association

[email protected]

(513) 231-5613

Laura Keller

Stites & Harbison (AISC Lawyer)

[email protected]

(859)226-2378

Dick La Lumondier

National Electrical Manufacturers Association [email protected]

(703) 841-3237

Cory Reynolds

John Deere

(563) 589-6343

Jerry Siko

Lincoln Electric Inc.

(480) 348 2004

James Dale

Metal Powder Industries Federation

[email protected]

(609) 452-7700 ext 105

Pat O’Conner

Kent & O'Connor

[email protected]

Attorney for Steel Tank Institute/Steel Plate Fabricators Association

(202) 223-6222

Harvey R, Castner


Edison Welding Institute

[email protected]

(614) 688-5063


Marc Pasternak

[email protected]

(202) 296-0378



4.0 The Respondents and the Information Requested

(a) Respondents/NAICS Codes.

Potential respondents under Subpart XXXXXX are owners or operators of any existing or new facility engaged in one or more of the following operations: abrasive blasting, metalworking (which includes machining, and dry grinding and dry polishing with machines), spray painting and coating, and welding. Metal fabrication and finishing facilities are classified under the following nine source categories (listed alphabetically): (1) Electrical and Electronic Equipment Finishing Operations (SIC’s 3699, 3621), (2) Fabricated Metal Products (SIC 3499), (3) Fabricated Plate Work (Boiler Shops) (SIC 3443), (4) Fabricated Structural Metal Manufacturing (SIC 3441), (5) Heating Equipment, except Electric (SIC 3433), (6) Industrial Machinery and Equipment: Finishing Operations (SIC 3531, 3533, 3561), (7) Iron and Steel Forging (3462), (8) Primary Metal Products Manufacturing (SIC 3399), and (9) Valves and Pipe Fittings (SIC 3494) that have operations that can be described by the following 15 NAICS codes (listed in numerical order): 332111, Iron and Steel Forging ; 332117, Powder Metallurgy Part Manufacturing; 332312, Fabricated Structural Metal Manufacturing; 332313, Plate Work Manufacturing; 332410, Power Boiler and Heat Exchanger Manufacturing; 332420, Metal Tank (Heavy Gauge) Manufacturing; 332618, Other Fabricated Wire Product Manufacturing; 332919, Other Metal Valve and Pipe Fitting Manufacturing; 332999, All Other Miscellaneous Fabricated Metal Product Manufacturing; 333120, Construction Machinery Manufacturing; 333132, Oil and Gas Field Machinery and Equipment Manufacturing; 333414, Heating Equipment (except Warm Air Furnaces) Manufacturing; 333911, Pump and Pumping Equipment Manufacturing; 335312, Motor and Generator Manufacturing; 335999, All Other Miscellaneous Electrical Equipment & Component Manufacturing.

There are an estimated 5,800 facilities that will be subject to the NESHAP for the Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories; no new Metal Fabrication and Finishing area sources are expected during the 3­year period of this ICR.

(b) Information Requested.

(i) Data Items, Including Recordkeeping Requirements. Attachment 1, Information Requirements, summarizes the data items, including recordkeeping and reporting requirements, for the Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories.

(ii) Respondent Activities. The respondent activities that will be required by the final rule are identified in Table 2 and are introduced in section 6(a).

5.0 The Information Collected–Agency Activities, Collection Methodology, and Information Management

(a) Agency Activities.

The Agency activities associated with the proposed Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories Rule are provided in Table 3 and are introduced in section 6(c).

(b) Collection Methodology and Management.

Data and records maintained by the respondents are tabulated and published for use in compliance and enforcement programs of the delegated permitting authority. The notifications of compliance status, annual compliance certifications, and reports of exceedences required under the proposed rule are used for problem identification, as a check on source operation and maintenance, and for compliance determinations. EPA is the permitting authority until the State agency is delegated authority to implement the final rule. Therefore, information contained in the reports submitted to the Regional Administrator will be entered into the Air Facility System (AFS), which is operated and maintained by EPA’s Office of Compliance. AFS is EPA’s database for the collection, maintenance, and retrieval of compliance data for approximately 125,000 industrial and government-owned facilities. EPA uses the AFS for tracking air pollution compliance and enforcement by local and state regulatory agencies, EPA regional offices and EPA headquarters. EPA and its delegated authorities can edit, store, retrieve and analyze the data.

(c) Small Entity Flexibility.

The Small Business Administration defines a small entity for the metal fabrication and finishing industry as a firm having no more than 500 to 1,000 employees (depending on the size definition for the affected NAICS code). The only measurable costs attributable to the proposed standards are the costs of visible emissions monitoring and the minimal notification, recordkeeping, and reporting requirements. The proposed standard is estimated to impact a total of 5,800 area source facilities. We estimate that over 5,300 of these facilities are small entities. Our analysis indicates that the proposed rule would not impose a significant adverse impact on any facilities, large or small since these costs are less than 0.1 percent of revenues.

(d) Collection Schedule.

The specific frequency for each information collection activity within this request is shown in Table 2 for the Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories.

6.0 Estimating the Burden and Cost of the Collection

(a) Estimating Respondent Burden.

The annual burden estimates for the final Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories NESHAP are shown in Table 2. These numbers were derived from estimates based on EPA’s experience with other standards. No burden estimates are provided for new area sources because no new facilities are expected to become affected sources during the 3­year period of this ICR.

(b) Estimating Respondent Costs.

The information collection activities for the final Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories NESHAP are presented in Table 2. Because the data are already collected by respondents as part of normal operations, no respondent development costs are associated with the information collection activities.

(i) Estimating Labor Costs. Labor rates and associated costs are based on Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data. Technical, management, and clerical average hourly rates for private industry workers were taken from the United States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, June 2007, “Table 2. National Compensation Survey: Occupational Wages in the United States” available at http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ocs/sp/ncbl0910.pdf . Wages for technical labor are based on "Production occupations: Miscellaneous Assemblers & Fabricators" with a total compensation of $15.08/hour. Wages for management labor are taken from "Production occupations: First-line supervisors/managers of production and operating workers" with a total compensation of $22.99/hour. Wages for clerical labor are based on "Office and administrative support occupations: File clerks" with a total compensation of $12.25/hour. These rates represent salaries plus fringe benefits and do not include the cost of overhead. An overhead rate of 110 percent is used to account for these costs. The fully-burdened hourly wage rates used to represent respondent labor costs are: technical at $31.67, management at $48.28, and clerical at $25.73.

(ii) Estimating Capital and Operations and Maintenance (O&M) Costs. There are no capital costs associated with the information collection requirements of the final Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories NESHAP. The final rule will not require affected facilities to purchase monitoring systems or conduct performance testing. There are no O&M costs associated with the final Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories NESHAP because existing facilities are already in compliance with the requirements of the proposed NESHAP. Capital and O&M costs were not estimated for new sources because no new sources are expected during the next 3-year period.

(iii) Annualizing Capital Costs. For the final Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories NESHAP, there are no annualized capital costs.

(c) Estimating Agency Burden and Cost.

Because the information collection requirements were developed as an incidental part of standards development, no costs can be attributed to the development of the information collection requirements. Because reporting and recordkeeping requirements on the part of the respondents are required under the operating permits rules in 40 CFR part 70 or part 71 and the part 63 NESHAP General Provisions, no operational costs will be incurred by the Federal Government. Publication and distribution of the information are part of the Compliance Data System, with the result that no Federal costs can be directly attributed to the ICR. Examination of records to be maintained by the respondents will occur incidentally as part of the periodic inspection of sources that is part of EPA’s overall compliance and enforcement program, and, therefore, is not attributable to the ICR. The only costs that the Federal government will incur are user costs associated with the analysis of the reported information, as presented in Table 3.

The Agency labor rates are from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) 2006 General Schedule which excludes locality rates of pay. These rates can be obtained from Salary Table 2006-GS available on the OPM website, http://www.opm.gov/oca/06tables/html/gs_h.asp. The government employee labor rates are $14.35/hour for clerical (GS-6, Step 3), $26.53 for technical (GS-12, Step 1), and $35.75/hr for management (GS-13, Step 5). These rates were increased by 60 percent to include fringe benefits and overhead. The fully-burdened wage rates used to represent Agency labor costs are: clerical at $22.96; technical at $42.45, and management at $57.20.

(d) Estimating the Respondent Universe and Total Burden and Costs.

There are an estimated 5,800 existing facilities that will be subject to the Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories Area Source NESHAP. No new sources are expected during the next 3 years. Consequently, the average annual number of metal fabrication and finishing facilities during the 3-year period of this ICR is 1,933.

For the final Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories NESHAP, the components of the total annual responses attributable to this ICR are one-time initial notifications for the 5,800 facilities that will be subject to the rule.

The number of total annual responses for subpart XXXXXX is estimated as: 1,933 (1,933 annual average respondents × 1 notifications.)

(e) Bottom Line Burden Hours and Cost Tables.

(i) Respondent tally. The bottom line respondent burden hours and costs, presented in Table 2 are calculated by adding person-hours per year down each column for technical, managerial, and clerical staff, and by adding down the cost column. The average annual burden for the recordkeeping and reporting requirements in subpart XXXXXX for the 5,800 existing facilities that subject to the Nine Metal Fabrication and Finishing Area Source Categories Area Source NESHAP is 20,566 person-hours, with an annual average cost of $655,501 and annualized capital costs of $0.

(ii) The Agency tally. The average annual Federal Government cost is $92,038 for 2,223 hours for subpart XXXXXX. The bottom line Agency burden hours and costs presented in Table 3 are calculated by adding person-hours per year down each column for technical, managerial, and clerical staff, and by adding down the cost column.

(iii) Variations in the annual bottom line. This section does not apply since no significant variation is anticipated.

(f) Reasons for Change in Burden.

The burden included in this Final Rule ICR results from new national emission standards for control of hazardous air pollutants for nine metal fabrication and finishing area source categories: (1) Electrical and Electronic Equipment Finishing Operations; (2) Fabricated Metal Products; (3) Fabricated Plate Work (Boiler Shops); (4) Fabricated Structural Metal Manufacturing; (5) Heating Equipment, except Electric; (6) Industrial Machinery and Equipment Finishing Operations; (7) Iron and Steel Forging; (8) Primary Metal Products Manufacturing; and (9) Valves and Pipe Fittings. This final rule establishes emission standards in the form of management practices and equipment standards for new and existing operations of dry abrasive blasting, machining, dry grinding and dry polishing with machines, spray painting and other spray coating, and welding operations.

(g) Burden Statement

The annual public reporting and recordkeeping burden for this collection of information is estimated to average 11 hours per response

Burden means the total time, effort, or financial resources expended by persons to generate, maintain, retain, or disclose or provide information to or for a Federal agency. This includes the time needed to review instructions; develop, acquire, install, and utilize technology and systems for the purposes of collecting, validating, and verifying information, processing and maintaining information, and disclosing and providing information; adjust the existing ways to comply with any previously applicable instructions and requirements; train personnel to be able to respond to a collection of information; search data sources; complete and review the collection of information; and transmit or otherwise disclose the information.

An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control numbers for EPA’s regulations in 40 CFR part 63 are listed in 40 CFR part 9.

To comment on the Agency's need for this information, the accuracy of the provided burden estimates, and any suggested methods for minimizing respondent burden, including the use of automated collection techniques, EPA has established a public docket for this ICR under Docket ID Number EPA-HQ-OAR-2006-0306, which is available for online viewing at www.regulations.gov, or in person viewing at the Air and Radiation Docket in the EPA Docket Center (EPA/DC), EPA West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C. The EPA Docket Center Public Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays. The telephone number for the Reading Room is (202) 566-1744, and the telephone number for the Air and Radiation Docket is (202) 566-1742. An electronic version of the public docket is available at www.regulations.gov. This site can be used to submit or view public comments, access the index listing of the contents of the public docket, and to access those documents in the public docket that are available electronically. When in the system, select “search,” then key in the Docket ID Number identified above. Also, you can send comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20503, Attention: Desk Officer for EPA. Please include the EPA Docket ID Number EPA-HQ-OAR-2006-0306 and OMB Control Number 2060-NEW in any correspondence.

PART B

This section is not applicable because statistical methods are not used in data collection associated with the proposed rule.

ATTACHMENT 1. INFORMATION REQUIREMENTS--NESHAP FOR METAL FABRICATION & FINISHING AREA SOURCES

Requirement

Citation for existing sources

Citation for new sources

General Provisions citation

Monitoring

N/A

N/A

N/A

Notifications




Notification of applicability

§63.11519(a)(1)

§63.11519(a)(1)

40 CFR 63.9(a)(2)

Notification of construction/reconstruction

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.9(b)(5)

Notification of special compliance requirements

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.9(d)

Notification of performance test

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.9(e)

Notification of opacity/VE observations

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.9(f)

Additional CMS notifications

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.9(g)

Notification of compliance status

§63. 11519(a)(2)

§63. 11519(a)(2)

40 CFR 63.9(h)

Notification of changes in information

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.9(j)

Plans




Site-Specific Welding Emissions Mgmt. Plan

§63. 11516(f)(7)(ii)

§63. 11516(f)(7)(ii)

N/A

SSM plan

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.6(e)(3)

Performance test plan

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.7(c)(2)

CMS quality control plan

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.8(d)

CMS performance evaluation test plan

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.8(e)(3)

Records




Records of notifications

§63. 11519 (c)(1)(i)

§63. 11519 (c)(1)(i)

40 CFR 63.10

Records that demonstrate continuous compliance

§63. 11519 (c)(1)&(4)-(15)

§63. 11519 (c)(1)&(4)-(15)

40 CFR 63.10

Monitoring/inspection information

§63. 11519 (c)(2)&(3)

§63. 11519 (c)( 2)&(3)

40 CFR 63.10

Reports




Reports of exceedences

§63. 11519 (b)(8)

§63. 11519 (b)(8)

N/A

Semiannual monitoring reports

N/A

N/A

N/A

Initial/repeat performance tests

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.7(e)(1) /40 CFR63.6(h)(7)

Quality assurance test plan

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.7(c)

CMS performance evaluation/report

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.8(e)(5)

SSM reports

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.6(e)(3)

Excess emissions reports

N/A

N/A

40 CFR 63.10(e)(3)

Annual compliance certifications

§63. 11519 (b)(1)

§63. 11519 (b)(1)

N/A


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