Mo. Code Regs. Ann. tit. 10, § 10-2.205
PURPOSE: This rule will reduce volatile organic compound emissions from aerospace manufacture and/or rework facilities located in the Kansas City ozone maintenance area. This rule is required to comply with the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990.
PUBLISHER’S NOTE: The secretary of state has determined that the publication of the entire text of the material which is incorporated by reference as a portion of this rule would be unduly cumbersome or expensive. This material as incorporated by reference in this rule shall be maintained by the agency at its headquarters and shall be made available to the public for inspection and copying at no more than the actual cost of reproduction. This note applies only to the reference material. The entire text of the rule is printed here.
(1) Applicability.
(2) Definitions.
compound,” apply and are hereby incorporated by reference in this rule, as published by the Office of Federal Register. Copies can be obtained from the U.S. Publishing Office Bookstore, 710 N. Capitol Street NW, Washington, DC 20401. This rule does not incorporate any subsequent amendments or additions. The following two (2) definitions, as defined below, shall be used for this rule:
mold surface to prevent the mold piece from sticking to the mold as it is removed, or to an aerospace component for purposes of creating a form-in-place seal; and
A semi-solid material that is used to aerodynamically smooth exterior vehicle surfaces or fill cavities such as bolt hole accesses, excluding materials that can be classified as a sealant.
(DC) electrical circuit on an assembled aircraft once electrical power is connected, including interior passenger and cargo areas, wheel wells, and tail sections.
for purposes of corrosion prevention, environmental protection, and function fluid resistance. More than one (1) layer of identical coating formulation may be applied to the vehicle or component.
(3) General Provisions.
(A) No person shall cause, permit, or allow the emissions of VOC from the coating of aerospace vehicles or components to exceed—
liter) of coating, excluding water and exempt solvents delivered to a coating applicator that applies primers. For general aviation rework facilities, the VOC limitation shall be 4.5 pounds per gallon of coating, excluding water and exempt solvents, delivered to a coating applicator that applies primers;
liter) of coating, excluding water and exempt solvents, delivered to a coating applicator that applies topcoats (including self-priming topcoats). For general aviation rework facilities, the VOC limit shall be 4.5 pounds per gallon (540 grams per liter) of coating, excluding water and exempt solvents, delivered to a coating applicator that applies topcoats (including self-priming topcoats);
Table I expressed in pounds per gallon of coating, excluding water and exempt solvents delivered to a coating applicator that applies specialty coatings; Specific to the Kansas City Metropolitan Area
liter) of coating, excluding water and exempt solvents, delivered to a coating applicator that applies Type I chemical milling maskant; and
liter) of coating, excluding water and exempt solvents, delivered to a coating applicator that applies Type II chemical milling maskants.
(B) The emission limitations in subsection (3)(A) of this rule shall be achieved by—
technology where each and every coating meets the specified applicable limitation expressed in pounds of VOC per gallon of coating, excluding water and exempt solvents, stated in subsection (3)(A) of this rule;
technology where the monthly volumeweighted average VOC content of each specified coating type meets the specified applicable limitation expressed in pounds of VOC per gallon of coating, excluding water and exempt solvents, stated in subsection (3)(A) of this rule; averaging is not allowed for specialty coatings, and averaging is not allowed between primers, topcoats (including selfpriming topcoats), Type I milling maskants, and Type II milling maskants or any combination of the above coating categories; or
limited to incineration, carbon adsorption and condensation, with a capture system approved by the director, provided that the owner or operator demonstrates, in accordance with subsection (5)(C), that the control system has a VOC reduction efficiency of eighty-one percent (81%) or greater.
(C) Each owner or operator of an aerospace manufacturing and/or rework operation shall apply all non-exempt primers and topcoats using one (1) or more of the application techniques specified below—
that achieve emission reductions equivalent to HVLP or electrostatic spray application methods, as determined by the director.
(E) Each owner or operator of an aerospace manufacturing and/or rework operation shall comply with the following housekeeping requirements for any affected cleaning operation, unless the cleaning solvent used is an aqueous solvent, low vapor pressure hydrocarbon-based cleaning solvent, or contains less than one percent (1%) VOC by weight. Hazardous waste under regulation 10 CSR 25-4.261 that is subject to the hazardous waste generators standards of 10 CSR 25- 5.262 or the solvent wipe conditional exclusion requirements of 40 CFR 261.4(a)(26) or (b)(18), as incorporated in 10 CSR 25-4.261, is exempt from the requirements of paragraphs (3)(E)1. through (3)(E)3. below:
other absorbent applicators used for cleaning shall be placed in bags or other closed containers upon completing their use. These bags and containers must be kept closed at all times except when depositing or removing these materials from the container. The bags and containers used must be of such a design so as to contain the vapors of the cleaning solvent. Cotton-tipped swabs used for very small cleaning operations are exempt from this requirement;
except semi-aqueous solvent cleaners, used in aerospace cleaning operations shall be stored in closed containers; and
solvent to or from enclosed systems, vats, waste containers, and other cleaning operation equipment that hold or store fresh or spent cleaning solvents shall be conducted in such a manner that spills are minimized.
(F) Each owner or operator of an aerospace manufacturing and/or rework operation utilizing hand-wipe cleaning operations excluding the cleaning of spray gun equipment performed in accordance with subsection (3)(G) shall comply with one (1) of the following:
are classified as an aqueous solvent and/or a low vapor pressure hydrocarbon-based cleaning solvent; or
have a composite vapor pressure of forty-five (45) mmHg or less at twenty degrees Celsius (20 °C).
utilizing one (1) or more of the following techniques:
within an enclosed system that is closed at all times except when inserting or removing the spray gun. If leaks in the system are found, repairs shall be made as soon as practicable, but no later than fifteen (15) days after the leak was found. If the leak is not repaired by the fifteenth day after detection, the cleaning solvent shall be removed and the enclosed cleaner shall be shut down until the leak is repaired or its use is permanently discontinued;
guns by placing cleaning solvent in the pressure pot and forcing it through the gun with the atomizing cap in place. No atomizing air is to be used. The cleaning solvent from the spray gun shall be directed into a vat, drum, or other waste container that is closed when not in use;
Clean spray guns by disassembling and cleaning the components by hand in a vat, which shall remain closed at all times except when in use. Alternatively, the components may be soaked in a vat, which shall remain closed during the soaking period and when not inserting or removing components; and
by forcing the cleaning solvent through the gun and directing the resulting atomized spray into a waste container that is fitted with a device designed to capture the atomized cleaning solvent emissions.
(I) The following activities are exempt from this section:
trodeposition of paints;
cleaning and coating of composite parts or components that become part of an aerospace vehicle or component as well as composite tooling that comes in contact with such composite parts or components prior to cure;
except for cleaning and topcoating of completed assemblies;
cies;
and assemblies not critical to the vehicle’s structural integrity or flight performance;
space vehicles designed to travel beyond the limit of the earth’s atmosphere, including but not limited to satellites, space stations, and the space shuttle;
cialty coatings, cleaning solvents, chemical milling maskants, and strippers containing VOC at concentrations less than 0.1 percent for carcinogens or 1.0 percent for noncarcinogens;
and Department of Defense classified coatings;
aerospace vehicles and components; and
ponents if the holder of the Federal Aviation Administration design approval, or the holder’s licensee, is not actively manufacturing the aircraft or aircraft components.
(K) The following situations are exempt from the requirements of subsections (3)(D) and (3)(E) of this rule:
the use of an airbrush or an extension on the spray gun to properly reach limited access spaces;
ing;
tain fillers that adversely affect atomization with HVLP spray guns and that cannot be applied by any of the application methods specified in subsection (3)(C) of this rule;
mally have dried film thickness of less than 0.0013 centimeter (0.0005 in.) and that cannot be applied by any of the application methods specified in subsection (3)(C) of this rule;
ods for stenciling, lettering, and other identification markings;
cation methods; and
(L) The following cleaning operations are exempt from the requirements of subsection (3)(F) of this rule:
assembly, installation, maintenance, or testing of components of breathing oxygen systems that are exposed to the breathing oxygen;
assembly, installation, maintenance, or testing of parts, subassemblies, or assemblies that are exposed to strong oxidizers or reducers (e.g., nitrogen tetroxide, liquid oxygen, or hydrazine);
to adhesive bonding;
assemblies containing electronic parts;
port equipment fluid systems that are exposed to the fluid including air-to-air heat exchangers and hydraulic fluid systems;
confined spaces;
ing optics, and thermal control surfaces;
bly, installation, and maintenance of upholstery, curtains, carpet, and other textile materials used in the interior of the aircraft;
materials used in honeycomb cores during the manufacture or maintenance of these cores, and cleaning of the completed cores used in the manufacture or maintenance of aerospace vehicles or components;
polycarbonate, or glass substrates;
ed with research and development, quality control, and laboratory testing;
flammable liquids, conducted within five feet (5') of energized electrical systems; and
essential uses in 40 CFR 82.4 for which the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has allocated essential use allowances or exemptions. (4) Reporting and Record Keeping.
(B) Record Keeping Requirements.
aerospace manufacture and/or rework operation that applies coatings listed in subsection (3)(A) of this rule shall—
in use with category and VOC content as applied;
on a monthly basis; and
ume-weighted average VOC content for each coating type included in averaging for coating operations that achieve compliance through coating averaging under paragraph (3)(B)2. of this rule.
aerospace manufacture and/or rework operation that uses cleaning solvents subject to this rule shall—
corresponding water contents for aqueous and semi-aqueous hand-wipe cleaning solvents;
solvents in use with their respective vapor pressure or, for blended solvents, VOC composite vapor pressure for all vapor pressure compliant hand-wipe cleaning solvents. This list shall include the monthly amount of each applicable solvent used; and
hand-wipe cleaning processes for all cleaning solvents with a vapor pressure greater than forty-five (45) mmHg used in exempt handwipe cleaning operations. This list shall include the monthly amount of each applicable solvent used.
period of five (5) years and made available to the department upon request.
(5) Test Methods.
formulation data and the results of the Method 24 analysis, compliance is determined by the results from the Method 24 analysis. For waterborne (water-reducible) coatings, manufacturer’s supplied data alone can be used to determine the VOC content of each formulation.
(B) An owner or operator of an aerospace manufacture and/or rework operation shall determine compliance for cleaning solvents using the following:
vents manufacturers’ supplied data shall be used to determine the water content; or
required in subsection (3)(F) of this rule, manufacturers’ supplied data or standard engineering reference texts or other equivalent methods shall be used to determine the vapor pressure or VOC composite vapor pressure for blended cleaning solvents.
AUTHORITY: section 643.050, RSMo 2016.* Original rule filed Aug. 4, 2000, effective March 30, 2001. Amended: Filed June 21, 2018, effective March 30, 2019.
*Original authority: 643.050, RSMo 1965, amended 1972, 1992, 1993, 1995, 2011.