Mo. Code Regs. Ann. tit. 10, § 10-2.230
PURPOSE: This regulation restricts volatile organic compound emissions from industrial surface coating operations.
Editor’s Note: The secretary of state has determined that the publication of this rule in its entirety would be unduly cumbersome or expensive. The entire text of the material referenced has been filed with the secretary of state. This material may be found at the Office of the Secretary of State or at the headquarters of the agency and is available to any interested person at a cost established by state law.
(1) Applicability.
(C) This regulation is not applicable to the following:
biles and trucks, if production is less than thirty-five (35) vehicles per day;
rial, building, and installation maintenance operations;
mance testing, and quality control of coatings and surface coated products;
40 CFR 59 subpart C or E;
coatings to buildings, building components, and stationary structures;
aerospace vehicles or components at an aerospace manufacture or rework facility that—
and/or aerospace specific exemptions of 10 CSR 10-2.205; or
because the installation’s potential to emit VOCs from aerospace surface coating and cleaning is twenty-five (25) tons per year or less;
subject to 40 CFR 59 subpart D;
requirements of 10 CSR 10-2.290 or 10 CSR 10-2.340;
cles used for internal company operations including, but not limited to, work stands; scaffolding; jigs; tooling; dollies; tow bars; aircraft ground support equipment; portable equipment used for maintenance, testing, fabrication, or repair; toolboxes; storage bins; shelving; and other manufacturing or warehouse support items;
less than 0.17 pounds of VOC per gallon of coating (less water and exempt compounds) as applied;
primers, and sealant primers that are supplied by the manufacturer or supplier in containers with a net volume of sixteen (16) fluid ounces or less, or a net weight of one (1) pound or less, except plastic cement welding adhesives and contact adhesives;
by the manufacturer or supplier in containers with a net volume of one (1) gallon or less;
primers, sealant primers, surface preparation, and cleanup solvents used in the following operations:
the adhesive is labeled for tire repair only;
of aerospace or undersea-based weapon systems components;
used in the manufacture of medical devices or in the manufacture of medical equipment; and
which adhesives are used to bond clear, polyester acetate laminate to wood with lamination equipment installed prior to July 1, 1992; and
meet the following criteria:
itary equipment used for national defense;
to the successful operation of the military equipment; and
ification or contract and a substitution of coatings is not allowed.
(2) Definitions.
(2) surfaces together other than by mechanical means.
(I) Contact adhesive—A contact adhesive does not include rubber cements that are primarily intended for use on paper substrates. Contact adhesive also does not include vulcanizing fluids that are designed and labeled for tire repair only. A contact adhesive is an adhesive that—
surfaces to be bonded together;
surfaces are placed in contact with each other;
impossible, or difficult, to reposition after both adhesive-coated surfaces are placed in contact with each other; and
clamping of surfaces after the adhesive-coated surfaces have been brought together using sufficient momentary pressure to establish full contact between both surfaces.
(M) Extreme performance coating—A coating used on a metal or plastic surface where the coated surface is, in its intended use, subject to the following:
tic, or acidic agents, chemicals, chemical fumes, chemical mixtures, or solutions;
excess of two hundred fifty degrees Fahrenheit (250 °F); or
mechanical wear and repeated scrubbing with industrial grade solvents, cleansers, or scouring agents.
(Z) Transfer Efficiency (TE)—Ratio of the amount of coating solids transferred onto a product to the total of coating solids used. In any surface coating operation, TE is the ratio
(2/28/19)* JOHN R. ASHCROFT Specific to the Kansas City Metropolitan Area
of solids in a coating that adhere on a target surface to the total solids used in the process for coating the target surface.
(3) General Provisions. No person shall emit to the atmosphere any VOC from any industrial surface coating operation in excess of the amount allowed in subsections (3)(A) and (3)(B) of this rule. The following emission limits and compliance dates apply to all application areas, flash-off areas, and ovens used in an affected industrial surface coating operation.
Note 1—The emission limit associated with the latest compliance date for each surface coating process supersedes interim emission limits associated with earlier compliance dates. Note 2—A formal commitment submitted to and received by the director prior to 12/31/88 to construct or modify the truck topcoat surface coating operation no later than 12/31/90 to meet the provisions of 10 CSR 10-6.070 or 40 CFR 60 Subpart MM, whichever is more stringent, may be substituted for this emission limitation. The emission limit specified by the rules referenced in this note is 12.3 lbs. VOC per gallon of solids applied.
(4) Reporting and Record Keeping.
(A) The owner or operator of a coating line shall keep records detailing specific VOC sources, as necessary to determine compliance. These may include:
used daily;
tion data for each coating on forms provided or approved by the director;
coating, thinning, purging, and equipment cleaning used daily;
and control efficiencies, transfer efficiencies, and coating makeup;
vents reclaimed or discarded daily;
coated daily; and
to determine compliance.
director that these records are adequate for the purposes of this regulation. This will apply for all surface coating industries until the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issues national daily emissions record keeping protocols for specific industrial classifications.
(5) Test Methods. Use the methods in subsections (5)(A)–(C) as applicable and appropriate to determine compliance with section (3) requirements.
(B) For subsection (3)(B)—
be demonstrated with EPA Method 24 as specified in 10 CSR 10-6.030(22) using the one (1)-hour bake. Emission performance is based on the daily volume-weighted average of all coatings used in each industrial surface coating operation as delivered to the coating applicator(s) on a coating line.The daily volume-weighted average (DAVGvw) is calculated by the following formula: n Σ (Ai × Bi) i=l DAVGVW= ________________ C Where: A=daily gal. each coating used (minus water and exempt solvents) in a surface coating operation.
B=lbs. VOC/gal coating (minus water and exempt solvents).
C=total daily gal. coating used (minus water and exempt solvents) in a surface coating operation.
n=number of all coating used in a surface coating operation; or
in subsection (3)(B) may be demonstrated on pounds of VOC per gallon of coating solids basis. The demonstration is made by first converting the emission limit in subsection (3)(B) to pounds of VOC per gallon of coating solids as shown in the following three (3) steps: lbs. VOC per gallon of coating (Emission minus water Limit & exempt solvents from (3)(B)) volume 1) = fraction 7.36 lbs. per gallon (average density of of VOC solvents used to originally establish the emission limit) 2) 1 - Volume fraction Volume fraction = of VOC of solids
lbs. VOC per (Emission gallon of coating Limit minus water from & exempt solvents (3)(B)) lbs. VOC 3) = Volume fraction gallon of of solids coating solids
This value is the new compliance figure. The VOC per gallon of coating solids for each coating used is then determined with EPA Method 24 as specified in 10 CSR 10- 6.030(22) using the one (1)-hour bake. The composite daily volume-weighted average of pounds of VOC per gallon of coating solids as tested for the actual coatings used is compared to the new compliance figure. Source operations on a coating line using coatings with a composite actual daily volume-weighted average value less than or equal to the new compliance figure are in compliance with this regulation.
(C) As an alternative to the methods specified in subsections (5)(A) and (B), compliance with the emission limits specified in subsections (3)(A) and (B) may be demonstrated by the implementation of an emission reduction equivalency compliance plan, which utilizes a daily weighted average of emissions from a single or combination of source operations provided that—
plan are subject to the emission limits of this regulation;
same installation;
each twenty-four (24)-hour period do not exceed the sum of the allowable emissions determined from section (3) for each source operation for the same period;
accomplished in the time intervals allowed in subsection (5)(B);
raw materials, emissions, equipment, or a combination of these, shall be performed prior to initiation of an alternate compliance plan to verify any equivalent emission reductions claimed. Director approval prior to review is necessary for all test methods and procedures to be acceptable for use in the equivalency determination. Failure to gain test method and procedure approval of the director will invalidate the equivalency claim; and
director.
10 CSR 10-2 AUTHORITY: section 643.050, RSMo 2016.* Original rule filed Dec. 15, 1978, effective July 12, 1979. Amended: Filed Oct. 15, 1979, effective March 13, 1980. Amended: Filed March 13, 1980, effective Sept. 12, 1980. Amended: Filed July 1, 1987, effective Dec. 24, 1987. Amended: Filed Aug. 4, 1988, effective Nov. 24, 1988. Amended: Filed June 27, 2018, effective March 30, 2019.
*Original authority: 643.050, RSMo 1965, amended 1972, transferred from 203.050 in 1986, 1992, 1993, 1995, 2011.