Mo. Code Regs. Ann. tit. 10, § 10-6.020
PURPOSE: This rule defines key words and expressions used in Chapters 1 through 6 and provides common reference tables.
PUBLISHER’S NOTE: The secretary of state has determined that publication of the entire text of the material that 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.
(2) Definitions.
(A) All terms beginning with A.
in the emission reduction credit (ERC) program by generating, buying, selling, or trading ERCs.
72.2, a limitation on emissions of sulfur dioxide or nitrogen oxides under the Acid Rain Program under Title IV of the Clean Air Act.
to the word Title pertain to the titles of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990, P.L. 101–549.
uses gas mover equipment.
placed or a landfill that is planned to accept waste in the future.
6. Activity level—Defined as follows:
activity at a source measured in terms of production, use, raw materials input, vehicle miles traveled, or other similar units that have a direct correlation with the economic output of the source and is not affected by changes in the emissions rate (i.e., mass per unit of activity); and
parameter that relates directly or indirectly to the emissions of an air pollution source. Depending on the source category, activity information includes but is not limited to the amount of fuel combusted, raw material processed, product manufactured, or material handled or processed.
pollutant from a source operation is determined as follows:
average rate, in tons per year, at which the source operation or installation actually emitted the pollutant during the previous two- (2-) year period and which represents normal operation. A different time period for averaging may be used if the director determines it to be more representative. Actual emissions shall be calculated using actual operating hours, production rates, and types of materials processed, stored, or combusted during the selected time period;
allowable emissions for a source operation or installation are equivalent to the actual emissions of the source operation or installation; and
not begun normal operations on the particular date, actual emissions shall equal the potential emissions of the source operation or installation on that date.
the purpose of bonding two (2) surfaces together other than by mechanical means. For the purpose of 10 CSR 10-5.330, an adhesive is considered a surface coating.
9. Administrator—Defined as follows:
of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) or the administrator’s duly authorized representative; and
Region VII, EPA.
adsorption system is adsorbing and not desorbing.
which interferes with the protection, preservation, management, or enjoyment of the visitor’s visual experience of a Class I area, which is an area designated as Class I in 10 CSR 10-6.060(11)(A). This determination must be made on a case-bycase basis taking into account the geographic extent, intensity, duration, frequency, and time of visibility impairments and how these factors correlate with the times of visitor use of the Class I area and the frequency and timing of natural conditions that reduce visibility.
Any installation that produces, reworks, or repairs in any amount any commercial, civil, or military aerospace vehicle or component.
processed part, assembly of parts, or completed unit, with the exception of electronic components, of any aircraft.
emission units subject to emission reduction requirements or limitations under Title IV of the Act.
state whose air quality may be affected by the permit, permit modification, or permit renewal; or is within fifty (50) miles of a source subject to permitting under Title V of the Act.
reduction requirements or limitations under Title IV of the Act.
equipment which removes, reduces, or renders less obnoxious air contaminants discharged into the ambient air.
vapor or any combination of them.
emission of air contaminants whether privately or publicly owned or operated.
including any physical, chemical, biological, radioactive (including source material, special nuclear material, and byproduct material) substance, or matter which is emitted into or otherwise enters the ambient air. Such term includes any precursors to the formation of any air pollutant, to the extent the administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), or the administrator’s duly authorized representative has identified such precursor(s) for the particular purpose for which the term air pollutant is used.
(1) or more air contaminants in quantities, of characteristics, and of a duration which directly and approximately cause or contribute to injury to human, plant, or animal life or health, or to property or which unreasonably interfere with the enjoyment of life or use of property.
episode known as an air pollution alert is that condition when the concentration of air contaminants reaches the level at which the first stage control actions are to begin.
the National Weather Service entitled Air Stagnation Advisory, which is used to warn air pollution control agencies that stagnant atmospheric conditions are expected which could cause increased concentrations of air contaminants near the ground.
director or the administrator of the number of NOx allowances to be initially credited to a NOx budget unit or an allocation set-aside.
using the maximum rated capacity of the installation (unless the source is subject to enforceable permit conditions which limit the operating rate or hours of operation, or both) and the most stringent of the following:
control rule including those with a future compliance date; or
alternate person who is authorized by the owners or operators of the unit to represent and legally bind each owner and operator in matters pertaining to the Emissions Banking and Trading Program or any other trading program in place of the authorized account representative.
to buildings, to which the general public has access.
life.
anodes for use in a primary aluminum reduction installation.
if the federal action must be supported by a conformity determination.
implementation plan (SIP)—The portion (or portions) of the SIP or most recent revision thereof, which has been approved under section 110(k) of the Act, a federal implementation plan promulgated under section 110(c) of the Act, or a plan promulgated or approved pursuant to section 301(d) of the Act (tribal implementation plan) and which implements the relevant requirements of the Act.
the Act:
implementation plan approved or promulgated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency through rulemaking under Title I of the Act that implements the relevant requirements, including any revisions to that plan promulgated in 40 CFR 52;
issued pursuant to regulations approved or promulgated through rulemaking under Title I, including part C or D of the Act;
Act, including section 111(d);
of the Act, including any requirement concerning accident prevention under section 112(r)(7);
under Title IV of the Act or the regulations promulgated under it;
504(b) or section 114(a)(3) of the Act;
incineration under section 129 of the Act;
commercial products under section 183(e) of the Act;
section 183(f) of the Act;
air pollution from outer continental shelf sources under section 328 of the Act;
promulgated to protect stratospheric ozone under Title VI of the Act, unless the administrator has determined that these requirements need not be contained in a Title V permit;
increment or visibility requirement under part C of Title I of the Act, but only as it would apply to temporary sources permitted pursuant to section 504(e); and
643.190, RSMo, of the Missouri Air Conservation Law and rules adopted under them.
state of Missouri, as specified.
by the commission.
crocidolite, amosite, anthophyllite, tremolite, and actinolite.
or removal of asbestos-containing materials, in or from a building, or air contaminant source; or preparation of friable asbestos-containing material prior to demolition.
product which contains more than one percent (1%) asbestos.
contractual or otherwise, conducts asbestos abatement projects at a location other than his/her own place of business.
Law enacted in 1986 (P.L. 99–519).
encapsulate, enclose, or remove at least one hundred sixty (160) square feet, two hundred sixty (260) linear feet, or thirtyfive (35) cubic feet of regulated asbestos-containing materials (RACM) from buildings and other air contaminant sources, or to demolish buildings and other air contaminant sources containing the previously mentioned quantities of RACM.
asphalt to an absorbent surface such as a previously untreated surface.
surface treatment used to waterproof and improve the texture of an absorbent surface or a nonabsorbent surface such as asphalt or concrete.
is authorized by the owners or operators of the unit to represent and legally bind each owner and operator in matters pertaining to the Emissions Banking and Trading Program or any other budget trading program.
adhesive, including glass bonding adhesive, used at an automobile or light-duty truck assembly coating installation, applied for the purpose of bonding two (2) motor vehicle surfaces together without regard to the substrates involved.
multicomponent coating, used at an automobile or light-duty truck assembly coating installation, applied to a cargo bed after the application of topcoat and outside of the topcoat operation to provide additional durability and chip resistance.
used at an automobile or light-duty truck assembly coating installation, applied into the cavities of the motor vehicle primarily for the purpose of enhancing corrosion protection.
used at an automobile or light-duty truck assembly coating installation, applied to selected motor vehicle surfaces primarily for the purpose of reducing the sound of road noise in the passenger compartment.
material—A fluid, used at an automobile or light-duty truck assembly coating installation, applied to coat a gasket or replace and perform the same function as a gasket. Automobile and light-duty truck gasket/gasket-sealing material includes room temperature vulcanization seal material.
primer—A primer, used at an automobile or light-duty truck assembly coating installation, applied to windshield or other glass, or to body openings, to prepare the glass or body opening for the application of glass bonding adhesives or the installation of adhesive bonded glass. Automobile and light-duty truck glass bonding primer includes glass bonding/ cleaning primers that perform both functions (cleaning and priming of the windshield or other glass or body openings) prior to the application of adhesive or the installation of adhesive bonded glass.
compound—A protective lubricating material, used at an automobile or light-duty truck assembly coating installation, applied to motor vehicle hubs and hinges.
viscosity material, used at an automobile or light-duty truck assembly coating installation, generally, but not always, applied in the paint shop after the body has received an electrodeposition primer coating and before the application of subsequent coatings (e.g., primer-surfacer). Such materials are also referred to as sealant, sealant primer, or caulk.
coating—A coating, used at an automobile or light-duty truck assembly coating installation outside of the primer-surfacer and topcoat operations, applied to the trunk interior to provide chip protection.
coating, used at an automobile or light-duty truck assembly coating installation, applied to the undercarriage or firewall to prevent corrosion and/or provide chip protection.
adhesive—An adhesive, used at an automobile or light-duty truck assembly coating installation, applied to weatherstripping material for the purpose of bonding the weatherstrip material to the surface of the motor vehicle.
hourly NOx emission rate as recorded by approved monitoring systems.
(B) All terms beginning with B.
plan to directly correlate emissions of the nonattainment pollutant in the nonattainment area with ambient air quality data pertaining to the pollutant. From the base year, projections are made to determine when the area will attain and maintain the national ambient air quality standards.
constructs as well as those portions of the intrastate area which are not part of a nonattainment area and which would receive an air quality impact equal to or greater than one microgram per cubic meter (1 µg/m3) annual average (established by modeling) for each pollutant for which an installation receives a permit under 10 CSR 10-6.060(8) and for which increments have been established in 10 CSR 10-6.060(11)(A). Each of these areas are references to the standard United States Geological Survey (USGS) County-Township-Range-Section system. The smallest unit of area for which a baseline date will be set is one (1) section (one (1) square mile).
level which exists at locations of anticipated maximum air quality impact or increment consumption within a baseline area at the time of the applicable baseline date, minus any contribution from installations, modifications, and major modifications subject to 10 CSR 10-6.060(8) or subject to 40 CFR 52.21 on which construction commenced on or after January 6, 1975, for sulfur dioxide and particulate matter, and February 8, 1988, for nitrogen dioxide. The baseline concentration shall include contributions from—
on the applicable baseline date; and
modifications which commenced construction before January 6, 1975, but were not in operation by the applicable baseline date.
first complete application after August 7, 1977, for sulfur dioxide and particulate matter, and February 8, 1988, for nitrogen dioxide for a permit to construct and operate an installation subject to 10 CSR 10-6.060(8) or subject to 40 CFR 52.21.
of the following criteria, but are not part 70 installations:
in an amount greater than the de minimis levels. The fugitive emissions of an installation shall not be considered unless the installation belongs to one (1) of the source categories listed in subsection (3)(B) of this rule; or
Environmental Protection Agency administrator has deferred a decision on whether the installation would be subject to part 70:
requirement under section 111 of the Act, including area sources subject to a standard, limitation, or other requirement under section 111 of the Act; or
under section 112 of the Act, except that a source is not required to obtain a permit solely because it is subject to rules or requirements under section 112(r) of the Act, including area sources subject to a standard or other requirement under section 112 of the Act, except that an area source is not required to obtain a permit solely because it is subject to regulations or requirements under section 112(r) of the Act.
6. Batch—Defined as follows:
fountain solution that is prepared and used without alteration until completely used or removed from the printing process. This term may apply to solutions prepared in either discrete batches or solutions that are continuously blended with automatic mixing units; and
involving the bulk movement of material through sequential manufacturing steps, typically not characterized as steady state.
incinerator that is designed such that neither waste charging nor ash removal can occur during combustion.
limitation (including a visible emission limit) based on the maximum degree of reduction for each pollutant which would be emitted from any proposed installation or major modification which the director on a case-by-case basis, taking into account energy, environmental and economic impacts, and other costs, determines is achievable for the installation or major modification through application of production processes or available methods, systems, and techniques, including fuel cleaning or treatment or innovative fuel combustion techniques for control of the pollutant. In no event shall application of BACT result in emissions of any pollutant which would exceed the emissions allowed by any applicable emissions control regulation, including New Source Performance Standards established in 10 CSR 10-6.070 and 40 CFR 60 and National Emissions Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants established in 10 CSR 10-6.080 and 40 CFR 61. If the director determines that technological or economic limitations on the application of measurement methodology to a particular source operation would make the imposition of an emission limitation infeasible, a design, equipment, work practice, operational standard, or combination of these may be prescribed instead to require the application of BACT. This standard, to the degree possible, shall set forth the emission reduction achievable by implementation of the design, equipment, work practice, or operation and shall provide for compliance by means which achieve equivalent results.
and their products, including vaccines, cultures, etc., intended for use in diagnosing, immunizing, or treating humans or animals or in research pertaining thereto.
blood, including but not limited to blood plasma, platelets, red or white blood corpuscles, and other derived licensed products, such as interferon, etc.
and limited to blood; dialysate, amniotic, cerebrospinal, synovial, pleural, peritoneal, and pericardial fluids; and semen and vaginal secretions.
device used to produce heat and to transfer heat to recirculating water, steam, or other medium.
facility that receives gasoline by pipeline, ship or barge, or cargo tank and subsequently loads the gasoline into gasoline cargo tanks for transport to gasoline dispensing facilities, and has a gasoline throughput of less than twenty thousand (20,000) gallons per day. Gasoline throughput shall be the maximum calculated design throughput as may be limited by compliance with an enforceable condition under federal, state, or local law.
facility that receives gasoline by pipeline, ship or barge, or delivery tank and has a gasoline throughput of twenty thousand (20,000) gallons per day or greater. Gasoline throughput shall be the maximum calculated design throughput as may be limited by compliance with an enforceable condition under federal, state, or local law.
and state holidays, that a facility is open to the public.
(C) All terms beginning with C.
or other pollutants generated by a process that is directed to a control device.
adsorbent material (for example, activated carbon, aluminum, silica gel); an inlet and outlet for exhaust gases; and a system to regenerate the saturated adsorbent. The carbon adsorption system must provide for the proper disposal or reuse of all volatile organic compounds adsorbed.
to allow combustion to occur at a lower temperature.
that—
quality standard (NAAQS) at a location in a nonattainment or maintenance area which would otherwise not be in violation of the standard during the future period in question if the federal action were not taken; or
foreseeable actions, to a new violation of a NAAQS at a location in a nonattainment or maintenance area in a manner that would increase the frequency or severity of the new violation.
indirect emissions—Emissions that would not otherwise occur in the absence of the federal action.
charcoal by controlled burning (pyrolysis) of wood. Retorts and furnaces used for charcoal production are not charcoal kilns.
from the production or use of antineoplastic agents used for the purpose of stopping or reversing the growth of malignant cells.
using any article, machine, equipment, process, or method which, when used, would conceal an emission that would otherwise constitute a violation of an applicable standard or requirement. That concealment includes but is not limited to the use of gaseous adjutants to achieve compliance with a visible emissions standard, and the piecemeal carrying out of an operation to avoid coverage by a standard that applies only to operations larger than a specific size.
concentrated animal feeding operation with a capacity of seven thousand (7,000) animal units or more and corresponding to the following number of animals by species listed below: Class IA concentrated animal feeding operation 7,000 animal unit equivalents
Animal species Beef cow, feeder, veal calf, cow/calf pair, and dairy heifer Horses Mature dairy cows Swine weighing > 55 lbs. Swine weighing < 55 lbs. Ducks with a wet handling system Ducks without a wet handling system Sheep, lambs, and meat and dairy goats Chicken laying hens, pullets, and broilers with a wet handling system Chicken laying hens without a wet handling system Turkeys in grow-out phase Chicken broilers and pullets, and turkey poults in brood phase, all without a wet handling system
also refer to Act.
product components, tools, equipment, or general work areas during production, repair, maintenance, or servicing, including but not limited to spray gun cleaning, spray booth cleaning, large and small manufactured component cleaning, parts cleaning, equipment cleaning, line cleaning, floor cleaning, and tank cleaning, at sources with emission units.
printing ink and debris from the surfaces of the printing press and its parts. Cleaning solutions include but are not limited to blanket wash, roller wash, metering roller cleaner, plate cleaner, impression cylinder washes, and rubber rejuvenators.
which finished cement is manufactured by milling and grinding.
in place so that it will not allow leakage or spilling of the contents.
longer being placed and in which no additional wastes will be placed without first filing a notification of modification as prescribed under 40 CFR 60.7(a)(4). Once a notification of modification has been filed, and additional solid waste is placed in the landfill, the landfill is no longer closed.
Animal unit equivalent 1.0
0.5 0.7 2.5 Number of animals 7,000
3,500 4,900 17,500 70,000 35,000
210,000
70,000
210,000
574,000
385,000
875,000 closed landfill.
applied in a thin layer to a surface. Such materials include but are not limited to paints, topcoats, varnishes, sealers, stains, washcoats, basecoats, inks, and temporary protective coatings. Inks not included in the coating definition are—
printing operations regulated under 10 CSR 10-5.340 and 10 CSR 10-5.442; and
printing operations regulated under 10 CSR 10-2.290 and 10 CSR 10-2.340.
surface coating.
which include a coating applicator, flash-off area, and oven where a surface coating is applied, dried, or cured, or a combination of these.
remains after the coating is dried or cured; solids content is determined using data from EPA Method 24 or an alternative or equivalent method.
and/or medical/infectious waste with other fuels or wastes and subject to an enforceable requirement limiting the unit to combusting a fuel feed stream, ten percent (10%) or less of the weight of which is comprised, in aggregate, of hospital waste and medical/infectious waste as measured on a calendarquarter basis. For purposes of this definition, pathological waste, chemotherapeutic waste, and low-level radioactive waste are considered other wastes when calculating the percentage of hospital waste and medical/infectious waste combusted.
that contains and/or uses liquid solvent, into which parts are placed to remove soils from the surfaces of the parts or to dry the parts. Cleaning machines that contain and use heated nonboiling solvent to clean the parts are classified as cold cleaning machines.
fired device that is comprised of a compressor, a combustor, and a turbine and in which the flue gas resulting from the combustion of fuel in the combustor passes through the turbine, rotating the turbine.
source construction or major modification, the owner or operator has all necessary preconstruction approvals or permits and—
of actual on-site construction of the source, to be completed within a reasonable time; or
obligations, which cannot be canceled or modified without substantial loss to the owner or operator, to undertake a program of actual construction of the source to be completed within a reasonable time.
pollution control equipment or process equipment.
incinerator (HMIWI)—An HMIWI which offers incineration services for hospital/medical/infectious waste generated offsite by firms unrelated to the firm that owns the HMIWI.
generated by stores, offices, restaurants, warehouses, and other nonmanufacturing activities, excluding residential and industrial wastes.
Commission established pursuant to 643.040, RSMo.
from two (2) or more NOx units are exhausted.
or the administrator, that is required to report a NOx budget source’s or a NOx budget unit’s compliance or noncompliance with stated requirements and that is signed by the NOx authorized account representative in accordance with 10 CSR 10-6.360.
booth coating that meets the emission limits as specified.
vapors by removing their latent heats of vaporization including but not limited to shell and tube, coil, surface, or contact condensers.
secret methods of manufacture or production, trade secrets, and other information possessed by a business that, under existing legal concepts, the business has a right to preserve as confidential and to limit its use by not disclosing it to others in order that the business may obtain or retain business advantages it derives from its rights in the information.
after an applicability analysis is completed) that a federal action conforms to the applicable implementation plan and meets the requirements of rule 10 CSR 10-6.300.
applicability analysis through the conformity determination that is used to demonstrate that the federal action conforms to the requirements of rule 10 CSR 10-6.300.
reduce evaporation losses of volatile organic compounds by limiting the amount of air admitted to, or vapors released from, the vapor space of a closed storage vessel.
10-6.060(9), fabricate, erect, or install—
of stationary sources which is located within a contiguous area and under common control and which emits or has the potential to emit ten (10) tons per year of any hazardous air pollutant (HAP) or twenty-five (25) tons per year of any combination of HAPs; or
which in and of itself emits or has the potential to emit ten (10) tons per year of any HAP or twenty-five (25) tons per year of any combination of HAPs.
or installing a source operation. Construction shall include installation of building supports and foundations, laying of underground pipe work, building of permanent storage structures, and other construction activities related to the source operation.
monitoring system for continuously measuring and recording the emissions of a pollutant from an affected facility.
erator (HMIWI)—An HMIWI that is designed to allow waste charging and ash removal during combustion.
equipment required to continuously measure and record the opacity of emissions within a stack or duct. COMS consists of sample interface, analyzer, and data recorder components and usually includes, at a minimum, transmissometers, transmissometer control equipment, and data transmission, acquisition, and recording equipment.
recording an instantaneous data value at least once every fifteen (15) minutes.
43. Contractor—Defined as follows:
company who shall implement the decentralized motor vehicle emissions inspection program as specified in 643.300–643.355, RSMo, and the state contracted company who shall implement the acceptance test procedure; and
contractual or otherwise, conducts projects or provides services.
quantity of a pollutant that is emitted to the air. The device may destroy or secure the pollutant for subsequent recovery. Includes but is not limited to incinerators, carbon adsorbers, and condensers.
released by a control device and the pollution introduced to the control device, expressed as a fraction.
46. Control period—Defined as follows:
6.310, the interval of time for which the collection and control system has been operated; and
of a calendar year and ending on September 30 of the same calendar year.
control devices used to reduce emissions to the atmosphere.
and control systems are required as a result of the nonmethane organic compounds emission rate. The landfill is considered controlled if a collection and control system design plan is submitted in compliance with the applicable rule.
the parts are loaded continuously.
which there is established a National Ambient Air Quality Standard at 40 CFR 50.
liquefied by blending with volatile organic compound liquid diluents.
(D) All terms beginning with D.
beginning at midnight local time, or beginning at a time consistent with a facility’s operating schedule.
nonaqueous solvents are used to clean and remove soils from metal surfaces.
equal to the rates listed in subsection (3)(A) of this rule.
or removing of any load-supporting structural member or portion of a structure together with any related handling operation.
5. Department—Defined as follows:
responsible for oversight of the vehicle emissions inspection and maintenance program required by the 1990 Federal Clean Air Act Amendments; and
Natural Resources, which includes the director thereof, or the person or division or program within the department delegated the authority to render the decision, order, determination, finding, or other action that is subject to review by the commission. PO Box 176, Jefferson City, MO 65102.
and 10 CSR 10-6.310, the maximum amount of solid waste the landfill can accept, as indicated in terms of volume or mass in the most recent operating or construction permit issued by the county or state agency responsible for regulating the landfill, plus any in-place waste not accounted for in the most recent permit. If the owner or operator chooses to convert the design capacity from volume to mass or from mass to volume to demonstrate its design capacity is less than two and one-half (2.5) million megagrams or two and one-half (2.5) million cubic meters, the calculation must include a site-specific density, which must be recalculated annually.
authorized by the owner or operator of an affected source and of all affected units at the source, as evidenced by a certificate of representation submitted in accordance with 40 CFR 72, subpart B, to represent and legally bind each owner and operator, as a matter of federal law, in matters pertaining to the Acid Rain Program. Whenever the term responsible official is used in 40 CFR 70, 10 CSR 10-6.065, or in any other regulations implementing Title V of the Act, it shall be deemed to refer to the designated representative with regard to all matters under the Acid Rain Program.
four- (4-) stroke engine in which liquid fuel is injected into the combustion chamber and ignited when the air charge has been compressed to a temperature sufficiently high for autoignition.
in which an electronic output device transfers variable data, in the form of an image, from a computer to a variety of substrates. Digital printing methods include but are not limited to inkjet printing, electrophotographic printing, dye sublimation printing, thermal wax printing, and solid ink printing.
or its precursors that are caused or initiated by the federal action and originate in a nonattainment or maintenance area and occur at the same time and place as the action and are reasonably foreseeable.
Missouri Department of Natural Resources, or a designated representative, to carry out the duties as described in section 643.060, RSMo.
12. Dispersion technique—
a pollutant in the ambient air by—
engineering practice stack height;
to atmospheric conditions or ambient concentrations of that pollutant; or
by manipulating source process parameters, exhaust gas parameters, stack parameters, or combining exhaust gases from several existing stacks into one (1) stack; or other selective handling of exhaust gas streams so as to increase the exhaust gas plume rise; and
B. This definition does not include—
pollution control system, for the purpose of returning the gas to the temperature at which it was originally discharged from the installation generating the gas stream;
(II) The merging of exhaust gas streams where—
that the installation was originally designed and constructed with the merged gas streams;
in operation at the installation that includes the installation of emissions control equipment and is accompanied by a net reduction in the allowable emissions of a pollutant. This exclusion from the definition of dispersion technique shall apply only to the emission limitation for the pollutant affected by a change in operation; or
a change in operation at the installation that included the installation of emissions control equipment or was carried out for sound economic or engineering reasons. Where there was an increase in the emission limitation or in the event that no emission limitation was in existence prior to the merging, the director shall presume that merging was significantly motivated by an intent to gain emissions credit for greater dispersion. Without a demonstration by the source owner or operator that merging was not significantly motivated by that intent, the director shall deny credit for the effects of merging in calculating the allowable emissions for the source;
prescribed burning programs;
and open burning; or
which increase final exhaust gas plume rise where the resulting allowable emissions of sulfur dioxide from the installation do not exceed five thousand (5,000) tons per year.
(1) or more feed stream(s) into two (2) or more exit streams, each exit stream having component concentration different from those in the feed stream(s). The separation is achieved by the redistribution of the components between the liquidand vapor-phase as they approach equilibrium within the distillation unit.
operations occur, including all associated internals (such as trays or packing) and accessories (such as reboiler, condenser, vacuum pump, stream jet, etc.), plus any associated recovery system.
permitting authority offers public participation or affected state review.
hundred ten- (13–110-) gallon capacity.
(E) All terms beginning with E.
boiler or turbine that serves an electrical generator with the potential to use more than fifty percent (50%) of the usable energy from the boiler or turbine to generate electricity.
resistant waterborne primer on exterior and interior surfaces that provides thorough coverage of recessed areas. It is a dip coating method that uses an electrical field to apply or deposit the conductive coating onto the part. The object being painted acts as an electrode that is oppositely charged from the particles of paint in the dip tank.
assembly, including but not limited to circuit board assemblies, printed wire assemblies, printed circuit boards, soldered joints, ground wires, bus bars, and associated electronic component manufacturing equipment such as screens and filters.
nature that develops suddenly, unexpectedly, and demands immediate action.
or indirectly, into the atmosphere of one (1) or more air contaminants.
6. Emission data—
or other characteristics (related to air quality) of any air contaminant which—
emissions unit was authorized to emit; or
(II), or (III) of this rule;
and the nature of the emissions unit necessary to identify the emission units including a description of the device, equipment, or operation constituting the emissions unit; and
required to be reported under any rules of the commission.
location, type of source, type and quantity of pollutant emitted, as well as other parameters of the emissions.
condition, or consent agreement which limits the quantity, rate, or concentration of emissions on a continuous basis, including any requirement which limits the level of opacity, prescribes equipment, sets fuel specifications, or prescribes operation or maintenance procedures for an installation to assure continuous emission reduction.
allowable emissions defined in a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-approved revision to the applicable implementation plan for a certain date for the purpose of meeting reasonable further progress milestones or attainment or maintenance demonstrations, for any criteria pollutant or its precursors, specifically allocated by the applicable implementation plan to mobile sources, to any stationary source or class of stationary sources, to any federal action or class of action, to any class of area sources, or to any subcategory of the emissions inventory. The allocation system must be specific enough to assure meeting the criteria of section 176(c)(1)(B) of the Clean Air Act. An emissions budget may be expressed in terms of an annual period, a daily period, or other period established in the applicable implementation plan.
5.381, tests performed on a vehicle in order to evaluate whether the vehicle’s emissions control components are present and properly functioning.
of 10 CSR 10-6.110 and is either a—
elements for current reporting year; or
and emissions from the last full emissions report.
that emits or has the potential to emit any regulated air pollutant or any pollutant listed under section 112(b) of the Act. This term is not meant to alter or affect the definition of the term unit for the purposes of Title IV of the Act.
and varnish, having vehicles similar to those used for varnish, but also containing pigments.
maintains a relatively constant limited peak temperature generally using a limited supply of combustion air. An enclosed flare is considered an enclosed combustor.
perform any operation and includes any item attached to it to assist in the operation.
compounds from pumps, valves, flanges, or other equipment used to transfer or apply finishing materials or organic solvents.
analyzing for an air pollutant that has been demonstrated to the director’s satisfaction to have a consistent and quantitatively known relationship to the reference method under specific conditions.
membrane—A prefabricated single sheet of elastomeric material composed of ethylene propylene diene monomer and that is applied to a building roof in the field using one (1) layer of membrane material.
requirements of any applicable emission control regulation.
20. Excessive concentration—
pollutant concentrations from stack height exceeding that defined in subparagraph (2)(G)7.B. of this rule, an excessive concentration is a maximum ground-level concentration due to emissions from a stack due in whole or part to downwash, wakes, or eddy effects produced by nearby structures or nearby terrain features which are at least forty percent (40%) in excess of the maximum concentration experienced in the absence of the downwash, wakes, or eddy effects, and that contributes to a total concentration due to emissions from all installations that is greater than an ambient air quality standard. For installations subject to the prevention of significant deterioration program as set forth in 10 CSR 10-6.060(8), an excessive concentration means a maximum ground-level concentration due to emissions from a stack due to the same conditions as mentioned previously and is greater than a prevention of significant deterioration increment. The allowable emission rate to be used in making demonstrations under this definition shall be prescribed by the new source performance regulation as referenced by 10 CSR 10-6.070 for the source category unless the owner or operator demonstrates that this emission rate is infeasible. Where demonstrations are approved by the director, an alternative emission rate shall be established in consultation with the source owner or operator;
for increases in stack heights up to the heights established under subparagraph (2)(G)7.B. of this rule, an excessive concentration is either—
whole or part to downwash, wakes, or eddy effects as provided in subparagraph (2)(E)20.A. of this rule, except that the emission rate used shall be the applicable emission limitation (or, in the absence of this limit, the actual emission rate); or
the stack, as determined by the director; and
1979, for a stack height determined under subparagraph (2) (G)7.B. of this rule where the director requires the use of a field study of fluid model to verify good engineering practice stack height, for installations seeking stack height credit after November 9, 1984, based on the aerodynamic influence of cooling towers, and for installations seeking stack height credit after December 31, 1970, based on the aerodynamic influence of structures not represented adequately by the equations in subparagraph (2)(G)7.B. of this rule, a maximum ground-level concentration due in whole or part to downwash, wakes, or eddy effects that is at least forty percent (40%) in excess of the maximum concentration experienced in the absence of downwash, wakes, or eddy effects.
contrivance, or installation that is existing, installed, or under construction in the Kansas City metropolitan area on September 25, 1968 (Buchanan County, January 21, 1970), in the St. Louis metropolitan area on March 24, 1967 (Franklin County, January 18, 1972), in the Springfield metropolitan area on September 24, 1971, and in the outstate Missouri area on February 24, 1971, except that if equipment, machine, device, article, contrivance, or installation subsequently is altered, repaired, or rebuilt at a cost of fifty percent (50%) or more of its replacement cost exclusive of routine maintenance, it shall no longer be existing but shall be considered new as defined in this regulation. The cost of installing equipment designed principally for the purpose of air pollution control is not to be considered a cost of altering, repairing, or rebuilding existing equipment for the purpose of this definition.
(F) All terms beginning with F.
purchasing, maintaining, and operating the HMIWI or the owner’s or operator’s representative responsible for the management of the HMIWI. Alternative titles may include director of facilities or vice president of support services.
instrumentality of the federal government.
which are enforceable by the administrator, including those requirements developed pursuant to 40 CFR 55, 60, 61, and 63; requirements within any applicable state implementation plan; requirements in operating permits issued pursuant to 40 CFR 70 or 71, unless specifically designated as nonfederally enforceable; and any permit requirements established pursuant to 40 CFR 52.10, 52.21, or 55, or under regulations approved pursuant to 40 CFR 51, subpart I, including operating permits issued under a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-approved program that is incorporated into the state implementation plan and expressly requires adherence to any permit issued under such program.
by the permitting authority that has completed all review procedures as required in 40 CFR 70.7 and 70.8.
furniture industry.
finishing material is applied to a substrate and is subsequently air-dried, cured in an oven, or cured by radiation.
furnace in which materials are burned but does not mean the combustion chamber of an incinerator.
a boiler occupied by the flame envelope.
shroud.
and the oven.
or the performance of a graphic arts operation, to flexible packaging. The printing processes used for flexible package printing are rotogravure and flexography. The printing of shrink-wrap labels or wrappers conducted on or in-line with a flexible package printing press is flexible package printing. The printing of self-adhesive labels is not flexible package printing.
the shape of which can be readily changed. Flexible packaging includes but is not limited to bags, pouches, liners, and wraps utilizing paper, plastic, film, aluminum foil, metalized or coated paper or film, or any combination of these materials.
designs, and pictures to a substrate by means of a roll printing technique in which the pattern to be applied is raised above the printing roll and the image carrier is made of rubber or other elastomeric materials.
solid, liquid, or gaseous fuel derived from such material.
of fossil fuel, alone or in combination with any other fuel, where fossil fuel is projected to comprise more than fifty percent (50%) of the annual heat input.
contains more than one percent (1%), as determined by either the method specified in appendix E, section 1 Polarized Light Microscopy in 40 CFR 61, subpart M or EPA/600/R-93/116 Method for the Determination of Asbestos in Bulk Building Materials, asbestos that, when dry, may be crumbled, pulverized, or reduced to powder by hand pressure.
to good engineering practice could not pass through a stack, chimney, vent, or other functionally equivalent opening.
(G) All terms beginning with G.
compressor) used to transport landfill gas through the header system.
is not limited to natural gas, landfill gas, coal-derived gas, refinery gas, and biogas. Blast furnace gas is not considered a gaseous fuel under this definition.
pressure four pounds (4 lbs) per square inch or greater.
which transfers, loads, and/or unloads gasoline, including but not limited to gasoline bulk terminals, bulk plants, and pipeline facilities, that also does not meet the definition of a gasoline dispensing facility.
account that is not a compliance account or an overdraft account.
greater of—
level elevation at the base of the stack;
before January 12, 1979, and for which the owner or operator had obtained all applicable permits or approvals required under 40 CFR 51 and 52, Hg = 2.5H provided the owner or operator produces evidence that this equation was actually relied on in establishing an emission limitation; and for all other stacks, Hg = H + 1.5L Where: Hg = GEP stack height, measured from the ground-level elevation at the base of the stack; H = height of nearby structure(s) measured from the groundlevel elevation at the base of the stack; and L = lesser dimension, height, or projected width of the nearby structure(s). Provided that the director may require the use of a field study or fluid model to verify GEP stack height for the installation; or
approved by the director, which ensures that the emissions from a stack do not result in excessive concentrations of any air pollutant as a result of atmospheric downwash, wakes, or eddy effects created by the source itself, nearby structures, or nearby terrain features.
a violation taking into consideration the risk to human health and the environment posed by the violation and considering the extent of deviation from sections 643.010–643.250, RSMo.
contiguous area under common control that is an undeveloped site.
specified by the manufacturer as the maximum design loaded weight of a single vehicle.
by the mixing of volatile organic compounds and oxides of nitrogen from stationary and mobile pollution sources in the presence of heat and sunlight. Ground-level ozone is a strong oxidizer that negatively affects human health by causing diminished lung function in both healthy individuals and those with pre-existing respiratory problems.
(H) All terms beginning with H.
furnace, or other fuel-burning device in which fuel is manually introduced directly into the combustion chamber.
interfelted lignocellulosic fibers that are consolidated under heat and pressure in a hot press.
fourth inch (1/4") or less in thickness made of individual wood particles that have been coated with a binder and formed into flat sheets by pressure.
in subsection (3)(C) of this rule.
hearing officer of evidence or argument on a petition seeking the commission’s review of an action by the department.
Administrative Hearing Commission.
calorific value of the fuel (in Btu/lb) and the fuel feed rate into a combustion device (in mass of fuel/time), as measured, recorded, and reported to the administrator by the NOx authorized account representative and as determined by the administrator in accordance with the approved process, and does not include the heat derived from preheated combustion air, recirculated flue gases, or exhaust from other sources.
letterpress printing in which the setting of the printing inks requires a heated dryer to evaporate the ink oils. The setting or curing of inks using only radiation (e.g., infrared, ultraviolet light, or electron beam) is not heatset and is classified as nonheatset.
9. Heavy-duty diesel vehicle—A vehicle that—
thousand pounds (10,000 lbs);
property on a public street or highway.
at eight thousand five hundred one pounds (8,501 lbs) gross vehicle weight rating or more.
when the primary chamber reaches and maintains maximum operating temperatures.
per mass of fuel burned in British thermal units (Btu) per pound, when fuel and dry air at standard conditions undergo complete combustion and all resultant products are brought to their standard states at standard conditions. It can be determined by 10 CSR 10-6.040(2) for solid fuels or 10 CSR 10- 6.040(3) for liquid hydrocarbons.
or supervises the day-to-day operation of an HMIWI.
staff, maintains at least six (6) inpatient beds, and where the primary function of the institution is to provide diagnostic and therapeutic patient services and continuous nursing care primarily to human in-patients who are not related and who stay on average in excess of twenty-four (24) hours per admissions. This definition does not include facilities maintained for the sole purpose of providing nursing or convalescent care to human patients who generally are not acutely ill but who require continuing medical supervision.
or HMIWI unit—Any device that combusts any amount of hospital waste and/or medical/infectious waste.
except unused items returned to the manufacturer. The definition of hospital waste does not include human corpses, remains, and anatomical parts that are intended for interment or cremation.
trash, and sanitary waste in septic tanks) derived from households (including but not limited to single and multiple residences, hotels and motels, bunkhouses, ranger stations, crew quarters, campgrounds, picnic grounds, and day-use recreation areas).
(I) All terms beginning with I.
contrivance, structure, or part of a structure used to burn refuse or to process refuse material by burning other than by open burning as defined in this rule.
violation of any standard in any area—To cause a nonattainment area to exceed a standard more often or to cause a violation at a greater concentration than previously existed or would otherwise exist during the future period in question, if the project were not implemented.
pollutant or its precursors—
originate in the same nonattainment or maintenance area but may occur at a different time or place;
maintain control due to a continuing program responsibility of the federal agency, including but not limited to—
by, a proposed facility which is related to increases or other changes in the scale or timing of operations of such facility;
contractors or federal employees;
and similar programs to increase average vehicle occupancy imposed on all employers of a certain size in the locality; or
under lease or temporary permit. For the purposes of this definition, even if a federal licensing, rulemaking, or other approving action is a required initial step for a subsequent activity that causes emissions, such initial steps do not mean that a federal agency can practically control any resulting emissions.
fuel is burned for the primary purpose of producing steam, hot water, or hot air, or other indirect heating of liquids, gases, or solids where, in the course of doing so, the products of combustion do not come into direct contact with process materials.
intended by the manufacturer for use in the installation of wood flooring, carpet, resilient tile, vinyl tile, vinyl-backed carpet, resilient sheet, and roll or artificial grass. Adhesives used to install ceramic tile and perimeter bonded sheet flooring with vinyl backing onto a nonporous substrate, such as flexible vinyl, are excluded from this category.
bacteria) that is capable of being communicated by invasion and multiplication in body tissues and capable of causing disease or adverse health impacts in humans.
10-5.381, an emissions inspection consisting of the inspection series that occurs the first time a vehicle is inspected in a compliance cycle.
including related equipment, of dispensing gasoline fuel into a newly assembled motor vehicle equipped with onboard refueling vapor recovery (ORVR) at an automobile assembly plant while the vehicle is still being assembled on the assembly line. Newly assembled motor vehicles being fueled on the assembly line shall be equipped with ORVR and have fuel tanks that have never before contained gasoline fuel.
coating and any additives such as thinning solvents to make up the ink material that is applied to a substrate.
pollution control that has not been adequately demonstrated in practice but would have a substantial likelihood of achieving greater continuous emission reduction than any control system in current practice or of achieving at least comparable reductions at lower cost in terms of energy, economics, or nonair quality environmental impacts.
which the only applicable requirement would be to list the requirement in an operating permit application under 10 CSR 10-6.065 and is either of the following:
the installation do not exceed that of the de minimis levels; and
exempt or excluded from construction permit review under 10 CSR 10-6.060.
that result in fugitive emissions, that belong to the same industrial grouping (that have the same two- (2-) digit code as described in the Standard Industrial Classification Manual, 1987), and any marine vessels while docked at the installation, located on one (1) or more contiguous or adjacent properties and under the control of the same person (or persons under common control).
at organizations, societies, or corporations including but not limited to schools, hospitals, sanitariums, and prisons.
located inside the perimeter of the landfill waste. A perimeter well located outside the landfill waste is not an interior well.
become basic state installations based on their potential to emit by accepting the imposition of voluntarily agreed to federally enforceable limitations on the type of materials combusted or processed, operating rates, hours of operation, or emission rates more stringent than those otherwise required by rule or regulation.
incinerator (HMIWI)—An HMIWI that is designed to allow waste charging, but not ash removal, during combustion.
power, produced by heat and/or pressure developed in the engine cylinder(s) by burning a mixture of fuel and air, is subsequently converted to mechanical work by means of one (1) or more pistons.
tank which rests upon or is floated upon the volatile organic compound liquid being contained and which is equipped with a sliding seal(s) to close the space between the edge of the covers and tank shell.
(J) All terms beginning with J.
components such as the floors, ceilings, walls, windows, doors, stairs, bathrooms, kitchens, etc. in nonmanufacturing areas.
cycle operated no more than ten (10) hours in any consecutive twenty-four (24) hours and no more than fifty (50) hours in any consecutive seven (7) days.
(K) All terms beginning with K.
comprised of Jackson, Cass, Clay, Platte, Ray, and Buchanan counties.
(L) All terms beginning with L.
or more layers of material.
wastes are placed for permanent disposal, and that is not a land application unit, surface impoundment, injection well, or waste pile as those terms are defined under 40 CFR 257.2.
waste burning capacity is more than five hundred pounds (500 lbs) per hour, or a continuous or intermittent HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is more than five hundred pounds (500 lbs) per hour, or a batch HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is more than four thousand pounds (4,000 lbs) per day. The following are not large HMIWI: a continuous or intermittent HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is less than or equal to five hundred pounds (500 lbs) per hour; or a batch HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is less than or equal to four thousand pounds (4,000 lbs) per day.
boundaries of an existing municipal solid waste landfill. A lateral expansion is not a modification unless it results in an increase in the design capacity of the landfill.
spark-ignited (SI) engine with greater than four percent (4%) oxygen in the engine exhaust.
image area is raised relative to the nonimage area, and the ink is transferred to the substrate directly from the image surface.
that has met the licensing requirements as specified and been licensed to offer vehicle emissions inspection services on behalf of the department.
met the licensing requirements as specified and been licensed to conduct vehicle emissions inspections on behalf of the department.
unit participation power sales agreement under which a utility or industrial customer reserves, or is entitled to receive, a specified amount or percentage of nameplate capacity and associated energy from any specified unit and pays its proportional amount of such unit’s total costs, pursuant to a contract—
years, including contracts that permit an election for early termination; or
years or seventy percent (70%) of the economic useful life of the unit determined as of the time the unit is built, with option rights to purchase or release some portion of the nameplate capacity and associated energy generated by the unit at the end of the period.
eight thousand five hundred pounds (8,500 lbs) gross weight or less, and which has a basic vehicle frontal area of forty-five (45) square feet or less, which is—
property or is a derivation of such a vehicle;
has a capacity of more than twelve (12) persons; or
off-highway operation and use.
car derivative capable of seating twelve (12) passengers or less that is rated at six thousand pounds (6,000 lbs) gross vehicle weight rating or less.
VOC with a vapor pressure greater than 0.3 kilopascals (kPa) at twenty degrees Celsius (20°C).
service—A component shall be considered in such service if it contacts a process fluid containing ten percent (10%) or greater light-liquid VOC by weight.
not limited to distillate oil, residual oil, waste oil, and process liquids.
of localized impacts on a scale smaller than the entire nonattainment or maintenance area, including, for example, congested roadways on a federal facility, which uses an air quality dispersion model (e.g., Industrial Source Complex Model or Emission and Dispersion Model System) to determine the effects of emissions on air quality.
contains radioactive nuclides emitting primarily beta or gamma radiation, or both, in concentrations or quantities that exceed applicable federal or state standards for unrestricted release. Low-level radioactive waste is not high-level radioactive waste, spent nuclear fuel, or by-product material as defined by the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2014(e)(2)).
emissions which reflects—
contained in any state implementation plan for a class or category of source, unless the owner or operator of the proposed source demonstrates that the limitations are not achievable; or
achieved in practice by the class or category of source, whichever is more stringent. LAER shall not be less stringent than the new source performance standard limit.
(M) All terms beginning with M.
nonattainment and has been re-designated in 40 CFR 81 to attainment, meeting the provisions of section 107(d)(3)(E) of the Act and has a maintenance plan approved under section 175A of the Act.
on any stationary internal combustion engine or the use of an emergency standby engine and fuel system during testing, repair, and routine maintenance to verify its readiness for emergency standby use.
State Implementation Plan, meeting the requirements of section 175A of the Clean Air Act.
4. Malfunction—Defined as follows:
is any sudden, infrequent, and not reasonably preventable failure of air pollution control equipment, process equipment, or a process to operate in a normal or usual manner. Failures that are caused, in part, by poor maintenance or careless operation are not malfunctions. During periods of malfunction the operator shall operate within established parameters as much as possible, and monitoring of all applicable operating parameters shall continue until all waste has been combusted or until the malfunction ceases, whichever comes first; and
and unavoidable failure of air pollution control equipment or process equipment or of a process to operate in a normal and usual manner. Excess emissions caused by improper design shall not be deemed a malfunction.
of transportation on water, except amphibious vehicles.
component to protect those areas when etching other parts of the component.
template to coat a small portion of a substrate.
physical, technical, and safety information document supplied by the manufacturer of the coating, solvent, or other chemical product.
maximum degree of reduction in emissions of the hazardous air pollutants listed in subsection (3)(C) of this rule (including a prohibition on these emissions where achievable) that the administrator, taking into consideration the cost of achieving emissions reductions and any non-air quality health and environmental impacts and requirements, determines is achievable for new or existing sources in the category or subcategory to which this emission standard applies, through application of measures, processes, methods, systems, or techniques including but not limited to measures which—
pollutants through process changes, substitution of materials, or other modifications;
from a process, stack, storage, or fugitive emissions point;
standards (including requirements for operational training or certification); or
this rule.
to combust a stated maximum amount of fuel per hour on a steady state basis, as determined by the physical design and physical characteristics of the unit.
machine, contrivance, implant, in vitro reagent, or other similar article, including any component or accessory that meets one (1) of the following conditions:
other conditions, or in the cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease;
of the body; or
States Pharmacopoeia, or any supplement to them.
diagnosis, treatment, or immunization of human beings or animals, in research pertaining thereto, or in the production or testing of biologicals as exempted in the applicable rule. The definition of medical/infectious waste does not include hazardous waste identified or listed under the regulations in 40 CFR 261; household waste, as defined in 40 CFR 261.4(b) (1); ash from incineration of medical/infectious waste, once the incineration process has been completed; human corpses, remains, and anatomical parts that are intended for interment or cremation; and domestic sewage materials identified in 40 CFR 261.4(a)(1).
associated biologicals, including cultures from medical and pathological laboratories; cultures and stocks of infectious agents from research and industrial laboratories; wastes from the production of biologicals; discarded live and attenuated vaccines; and culture dishes and devices used to transfer, inoculate, and mix cultures.
and body parts and body fluids that are removed during surgery or autopsy, or other medical procedures, and specimens of body fluids and their containers.
C. Human blood and blood products including—
blood; and
human blood that are now caked with dried human blood including serum, plasma, and other blood components, and their containers, which were used or intended for use in either patient care, testing and laboratory analysis, or the development of pharmaceuticals. Intravenous bags are also included in this category.
patient care or treatment or in medical, research, or industrial laboratories, including hypodermic needles, syringes (with or without the attached needle), pasteur pipettes, scalpel blades, blood vials, needles with attached tubing, and culture dishes (regardless of presence of infectious agents). Also included are other types of broken or unbroken glassware that were in contact with infectious agents, such as used slides and cover slips.
carcasses, body parts, and bedding of animals that were known to have been exposed to infectious agents during research (including research in veterinary hospitals), production of biologicals, or testing of pharmaceuticals.
discarded materials contaminated with blood, excretions, exudates, or secretions from humans who are isolated to protect others from certain highly communicable diseases, or isolated animals known to be infected with highly communicable diseases.
discarded sharps: hypodermic needles, suture needles, syringes, and scalpel blades.
(HMIWI)—An HMIWI whose maximum design waste burning capacity is more than two hundred pounds (200 lbs) per hour but less than or equal to five hundred pounds (500 lbs) per hour, or a continuous or intermittent HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is more than two hundred pounds (200 lbs) per hour but less than or equal to five hundred pounds (500 lbs) per hour, or a batch HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is more than one thousand six hundred pounds (1,600 lbs) per day, but less than or equal to four thousand pounds (4,000 lbs) per day. The following are not medium HMIWI: a continuous or intermittent HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is less than or equal to two hundred pounds (200 lbs) per hour or more than five hundred pounds (500 lbs) per hour; or a batch HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is more than four thousand pounds (4,000 lbs) per day or less than or equal to one thousand six hundred pounds (1,600 lbs) per day.
189(c)(1) of the Clean Air Act. It consists of an emissions level and the date on which it is required to be achieved.
percent (90%) of the highest three- (3-) hour average dioxin/ furan sorbent flow rate (taken, at a minimum, once every hour) measured during the most recent performance test demonstrating compliance with the dioxin/furan emission limit.
percent (90%) of the highest three- (3-) hour average Hg sorbent flow rate (taken, at a minimum, once every hour) measured during the most recent performance test demonstrating compliance with the Hg emission limit.
(90%) of the highest three- (3-) hour average horsepower or amperage to the wet scrubber (taken, at a minimum, once every minute) measured during the most recent performance test demonstrating compliance with the applicable emission limit.
Ninety percent (90%) of the highest three- (3-) hour average HCl sorbent flow rate (taken, at a minimum, once every hour) measured during the most recent performance test demonstrating compliance with the HCl emission limit.
Ninety percent (90%) of the highest three- (3-) hour average pressure drop across the wet scrubber particulate matter (PM) control device (taken, at a minimum, once every minute) measured during the most recent performance test demonstrating compliance with the PM emission limit.
the highest three- (3-) hour average reagent flow rate at the inlet to the selective noncatalytic reduction technology (taken, at a minimum, once every minute) measured during the most recent performance test demonstrating compliance with the NOx emissions limit.
(90%) of the highest three- (3-) hour average liquor flow rate at the inlet to the wet scrubber (taken, at a minimum, once every minute) measured during the most recent performance test demonstrating compliance with all applicable emission limits.
of the highest three- (3-) hour average liquor pH at the inlet to the wet scrubber (taken, at a minimum, once every minute) measured during the most recent performance test demonstrating compliance with all hydrogen chloride emission limits.
percent (90%) of the highest three- (3-) hour average secondary chamber temperature (taken, at a minimum, once every minute) measured during the most recent performance test demonstrating compliance with the PM, carbon monoxide (CO), dioxin/furan, and NOx emission limits.
potential to harm the environment or human health or cause pollution, was not knowingly committed, and is not defined by the United States Environmental Protection Agency as other than minor.
follows:
Department of Revenue is the state agency responsible for the oversight of vehicle registration at contract offices and via the Internet. This agency is also responsible for the registration denial method of enforcement for the vehicle emissions inspection and maintenance program; and
Revenue means the state agency that serves as the central collection agency for all state revenue with primary duties of collecting tax, registering and titling vehicles, and licensing drivers.
interface of the state of Missouri’s air emissions inventory database.
(MOPETP)—The set of standards and test procedures for evaluating performance of Stage I/II vapor recovery control equipment and systems to be installed or that have been installed in Missouri.
follows:
Highway Patrol is the state agency responsible for the oversight of the vehicle safety inspection program and joint oversight with the department of the vehicle emissions inspection and maintenance program; and
is the state law enforcement agency with the primary duties of enforcing the traffic laws and promoting highway safety.
emissions of the pollutant or its precursor taken at the location of the federal action and used to reduce the impact of the emissions of that pollutant caused by the action.
capable of being driven or drawn on a roadway, including but not limited to the following types of equipment:
bulldozers, concrete mixers, etc.;
pesticide sprayer, etc.;
bodies, etc.; and
carts, etc.
period which includes January 1 of such calendar year. If the manufacturer has no annual production period, model year shall refer to the calendar year.
air quality model.
33. Modification—Defined as follows:
6.310, modification is an increase in the permitted volume design capacity of the landfill by either horizontal or vertical expansion based on its most recent permitted design capacity; modification does not occur until the owner or operator commences construction on the horizontal or vertical expansion;
any change to a source of odor emissions or source operations, including odor controls, that causes or could cause an increase in potential odor emissions; and
physical change to, or change in method of operation of, a source operation or attendant air pollution control equipment which would cause an increase in potential emissions of any air pollutant emitted by the source operation.
(HMIWI)—Any change to an HMIWI unit after the effective date of these standards such that the cumulative costs of the modifications, over the life of the unit, exceed fifty percent (50%) of the original cost of the construction and installation of the unit (not including the cost of any land purchased in connection with such construction or installation) updated to current costs, or the change involves a physical change in or change in the method of operation of the unit which increases the amount of any air pollutant emitted by the unit for which standards have been established under section 129 or section 111 of the Clean Air Act.
the requirements as described in a specific rule, including a continuous emissions monitoring system, an excepted monitoring system, or an alternative monitoring system.
(3) wheels, including a motorcycle with any conveyance, temporary or otherwise, requiring the use of a third wheel.
wheels.
disposal facility in a contiguous geographical space where household waste is placed in or on land. An MSW landfill may also receive other types of Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) Subtitle D wastes per 40 CFR 257.2, such as commercial solid waste, nonhazardous sludge, conditionally exempt small quantity generator waste, and industrial solid waste. Portions of an MSW landfill may be separated by access roads. An MSW landfill may be publicly or privately owned. An MSW landfill may be a new MSW landfill, an existing MSW landfill, or a lateral expansion.
generated by the decomposition of organic waste deposited in an MSW landfill or derived from the evolution of organic compounds in the waste.
(N) All terms beginning with N.
generating output (expressed as megawatt) that a generator can sustain over a specified period of time when not restricted by seasonal or other deratings, as listed in the National Allowance Data Base (NADB) under the data field “NAMECAP” if the generator is listed in the NADB or as measured in accordance with the United States Department of Energy standards. For generators not listed in the NADB, the nameplate capacity shall be used.
Those standards established pursuant to section 109 of the Act and defined by 40 CFR 50. It includes standards for carbon monoxide (CO), lead (Pb), nitrogen dioxide (NO2) or oxides of nitrogen (NOx), ozone, particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5), and sulfur dioxide (SO2) or sulfur oxides (SOx).
Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).
engineering practice (GEP) stack height in subparagraph (2) (G)7.B. of this rule, is defined for a specific structure or terrain feature—
subparagraph (2)(G)7.B. of this rule, nearby means that distance up to five (5) times the lesser of the height or the width dimension of a structure, but not greater than one-half (1/2) mile; and
demonstrations under subparagraph (2)(G)7.C. of this rule, nearby means not greater than one-half (1/2) mile, except that the portion of a terrain feature may be considered to be nearby which falls within a distance of up to ten (10) times the maximum height of the feature, not to exceed two (2) miles if feature achieves a height one-half (1/2) mile from the stack that is at least forty percent (40%) of the GEP stack height determined by the formula provided in subparagraph (2)(G)7.B. of this rule, or twenty-six meters (26 m), whichever is greater, as measured from the ground-level elevation at the base of the stack. The height of the structure or terrain feature is measured from the ground-level elevation at the base of the stack.
CFR 52.21(b)(3), promulgated as of July 1, 2003, and hereby incorporated by reference in this rule, as published by the Office of the Federal Register, U.S. National Archives and Records, 700 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20408. This rule does not incorporate any subsequent amendments or additions.
United States which has been designated as nonattainment under section 107 of the Clean Air Act and described in 40 CFR 81.
for which the location of the source is in an area designated to be in nonattainment of a National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) under section 107(d)(1)(A)(i) of the Act. Any constituent or precursor of a nonattainment pollutant shall be a nonattainment pollutant, provided that the constituent or precursor pollutant may only be regulated as part of regulation of the corresponding NAAQS pollutant. Both volatile organic compounds (VOC) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) shall be nonattainment pollutants for a source located in an area designated nonattainment for ozone.
decompose through chemical breakdown or microbiological activity. Examples are but are not limited to concrete, municipal waste combustor ash, and metals.
to oxidant formation that allow ozone to accumulate in the atmosphere.
administered by the director pursuant to the Clean Air Act (CAA) and regulatory authority under the CAA, other than Title V of the CAA and 40 CFR 70 or 40 CFR 71.
recovery, repair, or replacement of vapor recovery control equipment and/or gasoline dispensing components/dispensers that does not require breaking of concrete (by any method) and does not require removal of dispenser(s) from island(s).
rate of a source necessary for determining the actual emissions rate for the two (2) years prior to the date necessary for determining actual emissions, unless some other time period is more representative of the operation of the source or otherwise approved by the staff director.
or the administrator under a NOx trading program to emit one (1) ton of NOx during the control period of the specified year or of any year thereafter.
The permanent withdrawal of NOx allowances by the administrator from a NOx allowance tracking system compliance account or overdraft account to account for the number of tons of emissions from a NOx budget unit for a control period, determined in accordance with a rule, or for any other NOx allowance surrender obligation required.
which the director or the administrator records allocations, deductions, and transfers of NOx allowances under a NOx trading program.
the NOx allowance tracking system established by the director or administrator for purposes of recording the allocation, holding, transferring, or deducting of NOx allowances.
the director or administrator, or submitted to the director or administrator for recordation, in accordance with a rule, in a NOx allowance tracking system account.
person who is authorized by the owners or operators of the source and all NOx budget units at the source, in accordance with all applicable rules, to represent and legally bind each owner and operator in matters pertaining to a NOx trading program or, for a general account, the natural person who is authorized to transfer or otherwise dispose of NOx allowances held in the general account in accordance with the applicable rules.
unit, the tonnage equivalent of the NOx allowances available for compliance deduction for the unit and for a control period adjusted by any deductions of such NOx allowances to account for actual utilization for the control period or to account for excess emissions for a prior control period or to account for withdrawal from the NOx budget program or for a change in regulatory status for an affected unit.
enforceable written document, or portion of such document, issued by the director, including any permit revisions, specifying the NOx budget trading program requirements applicable to a NOx budget source, to each NOx budget unit at the NOx budget source, and to the owners and operators and the NOx authorized account representative of the NOx budget source and each NOx budget unit.
more NOx budget units.
oxides air pollution control and emission reduction program pursuant to 40 CFR 51.121, as a means of mitigating the interstate transport of ozone and nitrogen oxides, an ozone precursor.
budget trading program emissions limitation under section (1) or paragraph (3)(H)1. of 10 CSR 10-6.360.
combustion unit in pounds per million British thermal units of heat input as recorded by approved monitoring devices.
tonnage equivalent of the NOx emissions rate available for compliance deduction for the unit and for a control period adjusted by any deductions of such NOx allowances to account for actual utilization for the control period or to account for excess emissions for a prior control period or to account for withdrawal from a NOx trading program or for a change in regulatory status for an affected unit.
owner or operator has requested to become an affected unit under a NOx trading program and has been approved by the department.
combustion turbine, internal combustion engine, or combined cycle system.
(O) All terms beginning with O.
operation or installation that is greater than the amount of emissions anticipated from a modification or construction of a source operation or installation. The decrease must be of the same pollutant and have substantially similar environmental and health effects on the impacted area. Any ratio of decrease to increase greater than one to one (1:1) constitutes offset. The exception to this are ozone nonattainment areas where volatile organic compound and oxides of nitrogen emissions will require an offset ratio of actual emission reduction to new emissions according to the following schedule: marginal area = 1.1:1; moderate area = 1.15:1; serious area = 1.2:1; severe area = 1.3:1; and extreme area = 1.5:1.
obstructs the transmission of incident light and obscures the visual background. Opacity is stated as a percentage of light obstructed and can be measured by a continuous opacity monitoring system or a trained observer. An opacity of one hundred percent (100%) represents a condition in which no light is transmitted, and the background is completely obscured.
air contaminants resulting from combustion are emitted directly into the ambient air without passing through a stack or chimney from an enclosed chamber. For purposes of this definition, a chamber shall be regarded as enclosed, when, during the time combustion takes place, only those apertures, ducts, stacks, flues, or chimneys, as are necessary to provide combustion air and to permit the escape of exhaust gases, are open.
consists of a tank where solvent is heated to its boiling point which creates a zone of solvent vapor contained by a set of cooling coils. Condensation of the hot solvent vapor cleans or degreases the colder metal parts.
between 12:00 midnight and the following midnight during which any amount of hospital waste or medical/infectious waste is combusted at any time in the HMIWI.
value established for a control device or process parameter that, if achieved by itself or in combination with one (1) or more other operating parameter values, determines that an owner or operator has complied with an applicable emission limit.
period during which waste is combusted in the incinerator excluding periods of start-up or shutdown.
compounds that is used for dissolving or dispersing constituents in a coating, adjusting the viscosity of a coating, cleaning, or washoff. When used in a coating, the organic solvent evaporates during drying and does not become a part of the dried film.
CSR 10-6.061, the shaft work output from any engine plus the energy reclaimed by any useful heat recovery system.
system, calculated as the product of the capture and control device efficiencies, expressed as a percentage.
account established by the director or administrator for each NOx budget source where there are two (2) or more NOx budget units or for each NOx authorized account representative.
operates, controls, or supervises an air contaminant source.
each year.
(P) All terms beginning with P.
twelve- (1–12-) gallon capacity.
organic compounds as the major solvent and thinner which converts to a relatively opaque solid film after application as a thin layer.
regulations, codified at 40 CFR 70, setting forth requirements for state operating permit programs pursuant to Title V of the Act.
operating permit requirements of rule 10 CSR 10-6.065 apply, in accordance with the following criteria:
in the aggregate, ten (10) tons per year (tpy) or more of any hazardous air pollutant, other than radionuclides, or twentyfive (25) tpy or more of any combination of these hazardous air pollutants or such lesser quantity as the administrator may establish by rule. Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, emissions from any oil or gas exploration or production well (with its associated equipment) and emissions from any pipeline compressor or pump station shall not be aggregated with emissions from other similar units, whether or not these units are in a contiguous area or under common control, to determine whether these units or stations are subject installations. For sources of radionuclides, the criteria shall be established by the administrator;
emit one hundred (100) tpy or more of any air pollutant, including all fugitive air pollutants. The fugitive emissions of an installation shall not be considered unless the installation belongs to one (1) of the source categories listed in subsection (3)(B) of this rule;
transport regions—
potential to emit one hundred (100) tpy or more of volatile organic compounds or oxides of nitrogen in areas classified as marginal or moderate, fifty (50) tpy or more in areas classified as serious, twenty-five (25) tpy or more in areas classified as severe, and ten (10) tpy or more in areas classified as extreme; except that the references in this paragraph to one hundred (100), fifty (50), twenty-five (25), and ten (10) tpy of nitrogen oxides shall not apply with respect to any source for which the administrator has made a finding, under section 182(f)(1) or (2) of the Act, that requirements under section 182(f) of the Act do not apply;
to section 184 of the Act, sources with the potential to emit fifty (50) tpy or more of volatile organic compounds;
classified as serious, and in which stationary sources contribute significantly to carbon monoxide levels as determined under rules issued by the administrator, sources with the potential to emit fifty (50) tpy or more of carbon monoxide; and
micrometers (PM10) nonattainment areas classified as serious, sources with the potential to emit seventy (70) tpy or more of PM10;
of the 1990 Act;
to section 129(e) of the Act;
administrator as a part 70 source pursuant to 40 CFR 70.3; and
requirements unless the administrator subjects them to part 70 requirements by rule and the installations would be part 70 sources strictly because they are subject to—
section 111 of the Act, including area sources; or
of the Act, except that a source, including an area source, is not required to obtain a permit solely because it is subject to rules or requirements under section 112(r) of the Act.
water, that exists in a finely divided form as a liquid or solid and as specifically defined as follows:
A. For purposes of ambient air concentrations—
material with an aerodynamic diameter smaller than one hundred (100) micrometers as measured in the ambient air as specified in 10 CSR 10-6.040(4)(B);
diameter less than or equal to a nominal ten (10) micrometers as measured in the ambient air as specified in 10 CSR 10- 6.040(4)(J); and
diameter less than or equal to a nominal two and one-half (2.5) micrometers including the filterable component as measured in the ambient air as specified in 10 CSR 10-6.040(4)(L);
matter emitted from a hospital medical infectious waste incinerator as measured by EPA Method 5 of 40 CFR 60, Appendix A–3 or EPA Method 29 of 40 CFR 60, Appendix A–8; and
C. For all other purposes—
that is vapor phase at stack conditions, but condenses and/or reacts upon cooling and dilution in the ambient air to form solid or liquid PM immediately after discharge from the stack. Note that all condensable PM is assumed to be in the PM2.5 size fraction;
by a source as a solid or liquid at stack or release conditions and captured on the filter of a stack test train;
that enter the atmosphere as a direct emission from a stack or an open source. Primary PM has two (2) components: filterable PM and condensable PM. These two (2) PM components have no upper particle size limit;
PM2.5, PM2.5, or combined filterable PM2.5 and condensable PM)—PM with an aerodynamic diameter less than or equal to two and five-tenths (2.5) micrometers. These solid particles are emitted directly from an air emissions source or activity, or are the gaseous or vaporous emissions from an air emission source or activity that condense to form PM at ambient temperatures. Direct PM2.5 emissions include elemental carbon, directly emitted organic carbon, directly emitted sulfate, directly emitted nitrate, and other inorganic particles (including but not limited to crustal material, metals, and sea salt); and
PM10, or the combination of filterable PM10 and condensable PM)—PM with an aerodynamic diameter equal to or less than ten (10) micrometers.
solely uses positive pressure within the landfill to move the gas rather than using gas mover equipment.
human or animal remains, anatomical parts, and/or tissue, the bags/containers used to collect and transport the waste material, and animal bedding (if applicable).
operation of any air pollution control equipment or process equipment, not to be placed back into service or have a start-up.
state air pollution control agency, local agency, or other agency authorized by the administrator to carry out a permit program as intended by the Act.
included under the Standard Industrial Classification Codes 2833 (Medicinal Chemicals and Botanical Products) and 2834 (Pharmaceutical Preparations), excluding products formulated by fermentation, extraction from vegetable material or animal tissue, or formulation and packaging of the final product.
plant that consists of mineral aggregate uniformly coated with asphalt cement, cutback asphalt, or emulsified asphalt.
polymerization of organic substances and capable of being molded, extruded, cast into various shapes and films, or drawn into filaments.
stationary (nonmobile), identifiable source of emissions that releases pollutants into the atmosphere. A point source is an installation that is either—
which reporting is required; or
(3)(A) of this rule without regard to levels of emission or air quality impact.
chlorinated vinyl monomer that contains fifty-seven percent (57%) chlorine.
often microscopic, in which fluids may be absorbed or discharged, including but not limited to paper and corrugated paperboard. For the purpose of 10 CSR 10-5.330, porous material does not include wood.
designed and maintained to be movable, primarily for use in noncontinuous operations. Portable equipment includes rock crushers, asphaltic concrete plants, and concrete batching plants.
up solely of portable equipment, meeting the requirements of or having been permitted according to 10 CSR 10-6.060(4).
pulverizing clinker consisting essentially of hydraulic calcium silicates, usually containing one (1) or more of the forms of calcium sulfate as an interground addition.
gaseous, or liquid fuel combustion equipment, used to calcine and fuse raw materials, including limestone and clay, to produce Portland cement clinker.
at maximum design capacity. Annual potential shall be based on the maximum annual-rated capacity of the installation assuming continuous year-round operation. Federally enforceable permit conditions on the type of materials combusted or processed, operating rates, hours of operation, and the application of air pollution control equipment shall be used in determining the annual potential. Secondary emissions do not count in determining annual potential.
electrolytic cells in which aluminum is produced.
which is controlled individually, or a group of potrooms or potroom segments ducted to a common or similar control system.
24. Precursors of a criteria pollutant are—
exempted from NOx requirements under section 182(f) of the Clean Air Act, and volatile organic compounds (VOCs);
nonattainment area applicable state implementation plan as significant contributors to the PM10 levels; and
C. For PM2.5—
maintenance areas;
areas unless both the state and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) determine that it is not a significant precursor; and
nonattainment or maintenance areas where either the state or EPA determines that they are significant precursors.
system is preheated in cyclone chambers prior to the final fusion, which forms clinker.
made up of one (1) or many units to produce a finished product. For the purpose of 10 CSR 10-5.442, this includes any associated coating, spray powder application, heatset web dryer, ultraviolet or electron beam curing units, or infrared heating units.
manufacturing aluminum by electrolytic reduction of alumina.
receives waste material, in which the waste is ignited, and from which ash is removed.
input to the device. To be considered primary, the fuel must be able to sustain operation without the addition of other fuels.
text onto a substrate using printing inks.
printing, impressing, or transferring an image onto a substrate. Varnishes and coatings applied with offset lithographic and letterpress printing presses are inks and are part of the applicable printing process, not a separate operation such as paper coating.
flame, that is not a boiler, and the unit’s primary purpose is to transfer heat indirectly to a process material (liquid, gas, or solid) or to heat transfer material for use in a process unit, instead of generating steam. Process heaters are devices in which the combustion gases do not directly come into contact with process materials. Process heaters do not include units used for comfort heat or space heat, food preparation for onsite consumption, or autoclaves.
10-6.060(9), any collection of structures and/or equipment, that processes, assembles, applies, or otherwise uses material inputs to produce or store an intermediate or final product. A single facility may contain more than one (1) process or production unit.
equipment assembled and connected by pipes or ducts to produce, as intermediates or final products, one (1) or more chemicals included in Appendix A of Control of Volatile Organic Compound Emissions from Reactor Processes and Distillation Operations Processes in the Synthetic Organic Chemical Manufacturing Industry, EPA-450/4-91-031. A process unit can operate independently if supplied with sufficient feed or raw materials and sufficient product storage facilities.
introduced into an emission unit, including solid fuels which may cause any emission of particulate matter, but excluding liquids and gases used solely as fuels and air introduced for purposes of combustion.
as follows:
may cause any emission of particulate matter;
the total process weight for the entire period of continuous operation or for a typical portion, divided by the number of hours of that period or portion;
weight for a period of time which covers a complete operation or an integral number of cycles, divided by the hours of actual process operation during that period; or
the design of any equipment permits more than one (1) interpretation of this section, that interpretation which results in the minimum value for allowable emission shall apply.
collecting and directing out of the work area fugitive emissions from reactor openings, centrifuge openings, and other vessel openings and equipment for the purpose of protecting workers from excessive exposure.
printing upon paper which is subsequently formed into books, magazines, catalogues, brochures, directories, newspaper supplements, and other types of printed materials.
waste and/or medical/infectious waste using external energy.
(R) All terms beginning with R.
permit temperature control, designed to contain chemical reactions.
or more chemicals, or reactants other than air, are combined or decomposed in such a way that their molecular structures are altered and one (1) or more new organic compounds are formed.
direct and indirect emissions that are identified at the time the conformity determination is made; the location of such emissions is known and the emissions are quantifiable, as described and documented by the federal agency based on its own information and after reviewing any information presented to the federal agency.
or the administrator, to come into possession of a document, information, or correspondence (whether sent in writing or by authorized electronic transmission), as indicated in an official correspondence log, or by a notation made on the document, information, or correspondence, by the director or the administrator in the regular course of business.
10-6.060(9), replacement of components at an existing process or production unit where the replacement of components in and of itself emits or has the potential to emit ten (10) tons per year (tpy) of any hazardous air pollutant (HAP) or twenty-five (25) tpy of any combination of HAPs, whenever—
fifty percent (50%) of the fixed capital cost that would be required to construct a comparable process or production unit; and
reconstructed major source to meet the applicable maximum achievable control technology emission limitation for new sources established under this section.
new components exceeds fifty percent (50%) of the fixed capital cost of a comparable entirely new source of operation or installation; the use of an alternative fuel or raw material by reason of an order in effect under sections 2(a) and (b) of the Energy Supply and Environmental Coordina tion Act of 1974, by reason of a natural gas curtailment plan in effect pursuant to the Federal Power Act, or by reason of an order or rule under section 125 of the Clean Air Act, shall not be considered reconstruction. In determining whether a reconstruction will occur, the provisions of 40 CFR 60.15, December 1, 1979, shall be considered by the director.
use for energy recovery under 10 CSR 10-6.065.
such as an adsorber, carbon adsorber, or condenser, capable of and used for the purpose of recovering chemicals for use, reuse, or sale.
series of such devices applied to the same vent stream.
cooking, drying, dehydrating, digesting, evaporating, and protein concentrating.
analyzing for an air pollutant that is published in Appendix A of 40 CFR 60.
salvageable material, agricultural wastes, or other wastes.
construction, operation, and maintenance of water or wastewater conveyances, water or wastewater treatment facilities, and water storage reservoirs which affect a large portion of a nonattainment or maintenance area.
for which any standard has been promulgated.
of a petroleum liquid as determined by “Tests for Determining Reid Vapor Pressure (RVP) of Gasoline and Gasoline-Oxygenate Blends,” 40 CFR 80, Appendix E as in effect July 1, 1990.
reissued at the end of its term.
of 10 CSR 10-6.060(9), activities conducted at a research or laboratory facility whose primary purpose is to conduct research and development into new processes and products, where such source is operated under the close supervision of technically trained personnel and is not engaged in the manufacture of products for sale or exchange for commercial profit, except in a de minimis manner.
thermal oxidizer, incinerator, or afterburner is exposed to heat and oxygen at a specified temperature in order to destroy pollutants present in the gas.
as Bunker C, PS 400, and Number 6 generally used for the production of electric power, space heating, vessel bunkering, and various industrial purposes. It has a minimum flash point of one hundred forty degrees Fahrenheit (140 °F).
before metallic plating to prevent deposits of metal on portions of the plastic part.
21. Responsible official—Includes one (1) of the following:
of a corporation in charge of a principal business function, any other person who performs similar policy and decisionmaking functions for the corporation, or a duly authorized representative of this person if the representative is responsible for the overall operation of one (1) or more manufacturing, production, or operating facilities applying for or subject to a permit and either—
(250) persons or have a gross annual sales or expenditures exceeding twenty-five (25) million dollars (in second quarter 1980 dollars); or
approved in advance by the permitting authority;
a sole proprietorship;
official in a municipality or state, federal, or other public agency. For the purpose of this subparagraph, a principal executive officer of a federal agency includes the chief executive officer having responsibility for the overall operations of a principal geographic unit of the agency; or
insofar as actions, standards, requirements, or prohibitions under Title IV of the Act or the regulations promulgated under the Act are concerned and the designated representative for any other purposes under part 70.
or that is otherwise protected from disclosure pursuant to applicable statutes, executive orders, or regulations. Such information includes but is not limited to classified national security information, protected critical infrastructure information, sensitive security information, and proprietary business information.
ignited (SI) engine where the oxygen content in the exhaust stream before any dilution is one percent (1%) or less measured on a dry basis.
mineral aggregate and cutback or emulsified asphalt at the road site by means of travel plants, motor graders, drags, or special road-mixing equipment.
designs, and pictures to a substrate by means of a roll-printing technique which involves an intaglio or recessed image areas in the form of cells.
(S) All terms beginning with S.
wood substrate before additional coats of finishing material are applied. Washcoats, which are used in some finishing systems to optimize aesthetics, are not sealers.
receives combustion gases from the primary chamber and in which the combustion process is completed.
would occur as a result of the construction or operation of an installation or major modification but do not come from the installation or major modification itself. Secondary emissions must be specific, well-defined, quantifiable, and impact the same general area as the installation or modification which causes the secondary emissions. Secondary emissions may include, but are not limited to—
from the installation or modification; and
would not be constructed or increase its emissions except as a result of the construction or operation of the major stationary source or major modification.
unique identification number assigned to each NOx allowance by the administrator or director.
5. Shutdown—Defined as follows:
after all waste has been combusted in the primary chamber. For continuous HMIWI, shutdown shall commence no less than two (2) hours after the last charge to the incinerator. For intermittent HMIWI, shutdown shall commence no less than four (4) hours after the last charge to the incinerator. For batch HMIWI, shutdown shall commence no less than five (5) hours after the high-air phase of combustion has been completed; and
any air pollution control equipment or process equipment, except the routine phasing out of process equipment.
emit at a rate equal to or exceeding the de minimis levels or create an ambient air concentration at a level greater than those listed in 10 CSR 10-6.060(5)(E)3., or any emissions rate or any net emissions increase associated with an installation subject to 10 CSR 10-6.060 which would be constructed within ten kilometers (10 km) of a Class I area and have an air quality impact on the area equal to or greater than one microgram per cubic meter (1 µg/m3) (twenty-four- (24-) hour average). For purposes of new source review under 10 CSR 10-6.060 sections (7) and (8), net emission increases of hazardous air pollutants exceeding the de minimis levels are considered significant only if they are also criteria pollutants.
consecutive-second time interval. Six- (6-) minute block averages shall be utilized for continuous opacity monitoring system data per the provisions of Appendix B to 40 CFR 60, Performance Specification 1, promulgated as of July 1, 2007, and hereby incorporated by reference in this rule, as published by the U.S. Government Printing Office, 732 N Capitol Street NW, Washington, DC 20401. This rule does not incorporate any subsequent amendments or additions.
from a municipal, commercial, or industrial wastewater treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or air pollution control facility, exclusive of the treated effluent from a wastewater treatment plant.
waste burning capacity is less than or equal to two hundred (200) pounds per hour, or a continuous or intermittent HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is less than or equal to two hundred (200) pounds per hour, or a batch HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is less than or equal to one thousand six hundred (1,600) pounds per day. The following are not small HMIWI: a continuous or intermittent HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is more than two hundred (200) pounds per hour; a batch HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is more than one thousand six hundred (1,600) pounds per day.
installation subject to 10 CSR 10-6.110 but not a point source as defined in 10 CSR 10-6.020 for the purpose of 10 CSR 10-6.110.
combustion, consisting of carbon, ash, and other material.
but is not limited to coal, wood, biomass, tires, plastics, and other nonfossil solid materials.
wastewater treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or air pollution control facility; and other discarded material, including solid, liquid, semisolid, or contained gaseous material resulting from industrial, commercial, mining, and agricultural operations, and from community activities but does not include solid or dissolved material in domestic sewage, or solid or dissolved materials in irrigation return flows or industrial discharges that are point sources subject to permits under 33 U.S.C. 1342, or source, special nuclear, or byproduct material as defined by the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2014).
coating solids that is added to the electrodeposition primer system in a calendar month divided by the total volume design capacity of the electrodeposition primer system.
conditions and which are used as dissolvers, viscosity reducers, or cleaning agents.
from metal surfaces by cold cleaning or open-top vapor degreasing or conveyorized degreasing.
or industrial structure, installation, plant, building, or facility that emits or has the potential to emit any regulated air pollutant under the Clean Air Act (CAA). For purposes of section 502(c) of the CAA, a source, including a source with multiple units, shall be considered a single facility.
process or other source operation.
area contained within Greene County.
comprised of St. Louis, St. Charles, Jefferson, and Franklin counties and the City of St. Louis.
emit air contaminants into ambient air. An accidental opening such as a crack, fissure, or hole is a source of fugitive emissions, not a stack.
Program of the Department of Natural Resources.
weight of no more than eight percent (8%) that is applied in single or multiple coats directly to the substrate. Includes but is not limited to nongrain raising stains, equalizer stains, sap stains, body stains, no-wipe stains, penetrating stains, and toners.
degrees Fahrenheit (70 °F) and a gas pressure of 14.7 pounds per square inch absolute (psia).
areas listed in Office of Management and Budget Bulletin No. 93-17 entitled “Revised Statistical Definitions for Metropolitan Areas” dated June 30, 1993, and hereby incorporated by reference in this rule, as published by the National Technical Information Services, 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161. This rule does not incorporate any subsequent amendments or additions.
29. Start-up—Defined as follows:
between the activation of the system and the first charge to the unit. For batch HMIWI, start-up means the period of time between activation of the system and ignition of the waste; and
any air pollution control equipment or process equipment, except the routine phasing in of process equipment.
any local agency, interstate association, or statewide program. When clear from its context, state shall have its conventional territorial definition.
adopted by the commission, submitted by the director, and approved by the administrator detailing methods and procedures to be used in attaining and maintaining the ambient air quality standards in Missouri.
of tons apportioned to all NOx budget units in a given state, in accordance with the NOx budget trading program, for use in a given control period.
equipment, used to hold finishing, cleaning, or washoff materials.
container for liquids or gases, where no manufacturing process or part of it takes place.
information, or correspondence to the person specified in accordance with the applicable regulation—
delivery. Compliance with any submission, service, or mailing deadline shall be determined by the date of dispatch, transmission, or mailing and not the date of receipt.
(or into which coatings are impregnated).
facture of pharmaceutical products by chemical synthesis.
(T) All terms beginning with T.
or emits pollutants less than two (2) years.
permit under 10 CSR 10-6.060 section (7) or (8) or that is subject to any requirement under 10 CSR 10-6.070 or 10 CSR 10-6.080.
of the Clean Air Act and 40 CFR 70 or 40 CFR 71.
that the administrator has approved or issued as meeting the requirements of Title V of the Clean Air Act and 40 CFR 70 or 40 CFR 71.
(2,000 lbs)). For the purpose of determining compliance with the NOx budget emissions limitation, total tons for a control period shall be calculated as the sum of all recorded hourly emissions (or the tonnage equivalent of the recorded hourly emissions rates) in accordance with applicable requirements, with any remaining fraction of a ton equal to or greater than one-half (0.50) ton deemed to equal one (1) ton and any fraction of a ton less than one-half (0.50) ton deemed to equal zero (0) tons.
6. Topcoat—Defined as follows:
a coating that is applied over a primer on an aerospace vehicle or component for appearance, identification, camouflage, or protection. Topcoats that are defined as specialty coatings are not included under this definition; and
material applied for the purpose of establishing the color or protective surface, or both, including groundcoat and paint sealer materials, base coat, and clear coat. Nonpermanent final finishes are not topcoats.
compounds as measured by reference methods specified in 10 CSR 10-6.030(12) or equivalent or alternative methods.
direct and indirect emissions increases and decreases caused by the federal action; that is, the net emissions considering all direct and indirect emissions. Any emissions decreases used to reduce such total shall have already occurred or shall be enforceable under state and federal law. The portion of emissions which are exempt or presumed to conform under subsection (3)(C), (D), (E), or (F) of 10 CSR 10-6.300 are not included in the total of direct and indirect emissions, except as provided in subsection (3)(J) of 10 CSR 10-6.300. The total of direct and indirect emissions includes emissions of criteria pollutants and emissions of precursors of criteria pollutants. The segmentation of projects for conformity analyses when emissions are reasonably foreseeable is not permitted by 10 CSR 10-6.300.
resulting from construction or the prosecution of any business, trade, or industry or any demolition operation including but not limited to plastics, cardboard cartons, grease, oil, chemicals, or cinders.
the national ambient air quality standards adopted and submitted by a federally recognized Indian tribal government determined to be eligible under 40 CFR 49.9 and the plan has been approved by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
(U) All terms beginning with U.
is not bound, physically or chemically, to any air contaminant.
a stationary boiler, combustion turbine, or combined cycle system. For the purpose of 10 CSR 10-6.390, unit is any diesel, lean-burn, or rich-burn stationary internal combustion engine as defined in this rule.
control period (or other specified time period) produced by combusting a given heat input of fuel expressed in terms of—
megawatt) produced by the unit, including generation for use within the plant; or
other than electrical generation, the total steam flow (lb/hr) or total steam pressure (psia) produced by the unit, including steam for use by the unit.
combusts any fuel.
hour or fraction of an hour during which a unit combusts fuel.
within distinct equipment that are used to prepare reactants, facilitate reactions, separate and purify products, and recycle materials.
reduction credits to comply with an applicable emission reduction requirement.
for a unit. The unit’s total heat input for the control period in each year will be determined in accordance with 40 CFR 75 if the NOx budget unit was otherwise subject to the requirements of 40 CFR 75 for the year or will be based on the best available data reported to the administrator for the unit if the unit was not otherwise subject to the requirements of 40 CFR 75 for the year.
(V) All terms beginning with V.
capable of collecting the hydrocarbon vapors and gases discharged and a vapor disposal system capable of processing the hydrocarbon vapors and gases so as to limit their emission to the atmosphere.
volatile organic compounds and composed of resins, oils, thinners, and driers used to give a glossy surface to wood, metal, etc.
primarily for use on streets, roads, or highways, except those propelled or drawn by human or animal power or those used exclusively on fixed rails or tracks.
process vents from batch processes include condenser vents, vacuum pumps, steam ejectors, and atmospheric vents from reactors and other process vessels. Vents also include relief valve discharges. Equipment exhaust systems that discharge from unit operations also would be considered process vents.
a distillation operation or reactor process to the atmosphere or indirectly to the atmosphere after diversion through other process equipment. The vent stream excludes relief valve discharges and equipment leaks including but not limited to pumps, compressors, and valves.
including condensables, which reduces the transmission of light or obscures the view of an object in the background.
carbon, excluding carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, carbonic acid, metallic carbides or carbonates, and ammonium carbonate, that participates in atmospheric photochemical reactions to produce ozone.
because of their known lack of participation in the atmospheric reactions to produce ozone:
CAS # Compound 138495428
431890
375031
690391
679867
24270664
431312
460731
431630
406586
422560
507551
354234
1615754
163702076 1,1,1,2,3,4,4,5,5,5-decafluoropentane (HFC 43-10mee) 1,1,1,2,3,3,3-heptafluoropropane (HFC 227ea) 1,1,1,2,2,3,3-heptafluoropropane (n-C3F7OCH3 or HFE-7000) 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoropropane (HFC-236fa) 1,1,2,2,3-pentafluoropropane (HFC-245ca) 1,1,2,3,3-pentafluoropropane (HFC-245ea) 1,1,1,2,3-pentafluoropropane (HFC-245eb) 1,1,1,3,3-pentafluoropropane (HFC-245fa) 1,1,1,2,3,3-hexafluoropropane (HFC-236ea) 1,1,1,3,3-pentafluorobutane (HFC-365mfc) 3,3-dichloro-1,1,1,2,2-pentafluoropropane (HCFC-225ca) 1,3-dichloro-1,1,2,2,3-pentafluoropropane (HCFC-225cb) 1,2-dichloro-1,1,2-trifluoroethane (HCFC-123a) 1-chloro-1-fluorethane (HCFC-151a) 1,1,1,2,2,3,3,4,4-nonafluoro 4-methoxy-butane (C4F9OCH3or HFE-7100) 163702087
163702054
163702065
297730939
71556
67641 75683
75456
593704 76153 2837890
75718 1717006
76142
75376 75105 74840 353366 74828 79209 75092
98566
354336 127184
359353
811972
75694
26523648
306832
420462 75467 107313 132182924
108327 616386 29118249
1691174 2-(difluoromethoxymethyl)- 1,1,1,2,3,3,3-heptafluoropropane ((CF3)2CFCF2OCH3) 1-ethoxy-1,1,2,2,3,3,4,4,4- nonafluorobutane (C4F9OC2H5 or HFE-7200) 2-(ethoxydifluoromethyl)- 1,1,1,2,3,3,3-heptafluoropropane ((CF3)2CFCF2OC2H5) 3-ethoxy- 1,1,1,2,3,4,4,5,5,6,6,6- dodecafluoro-2-(trifluoromethyl) hexane (HFE-7500) 1,1,1-trichloroethane (methyl chloroform) acetone 1-chloro 1,1-difluoroethane (HCFC-142b) chlorodifluoromethane (HCFC-22) chlorofluoromethane (HCFC-31) chloropentafluoroethane (CFC-115) 2-chloro-1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane (HCFC-124) dichlorodifluoromethane (CFC-12) 1,1-dichloro 1-fluoroethane (HCFC-141b) 1,2-dichloro 1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethane (CFC-114) 1,1-difluoroethane (HFC-152a) difluoromethane (HFC-32) ethane ethylfluoride (HFC-161) methane methyl acetate methylene chloride (dichloromethane) parachlorobenzotrifluoride (PCBTF) pentafluoroethane (HFC-125) perchloroethylene (tetrachloroethylene) 1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethane (HFC-134) 1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane (HFC-134a) trichlorofluoromethane (CFC-11) 1,1,2-trichloro-1,2,2-trifluoroethane (CFC-113) 1,1,1-trifluoro-2,2-dichloroethane (HCFC-123) 1,1,1-trifluoroethane (HFC-143a) trifluoromethane (HFC-23) methyl formate (HCOOCH3) 1,1,1,2,2,3,4,5,5,5-decafluoro- 3-methoxy-4-trifluoromethylpentane (HFE-7300) propylene carbonate dimethyl carbonate trans-1,3,3,3-tetrafluoropropene (HFO-1234ze) 1,1,3,3-tetrafluorodimethyl ether (HCF2OCF2H or HFE-134) 78522471
188690780
188690779
102687650
754141 124685 540885 406780
692499
66711862
Perfluorocarbon compounds in the following classes:
VOC may be measured by a reference method, an equivalent method, an alternative method, or by procedures specified in either 10 CSR 10-6.030 or 40 CFR 60. These methods and procedures may measure nonreactive compounds, so an owner or operator must exclude these nonreactive compounds when determining compliance.
at storage conditions and which contains one (1) or more volatile organic compounds as defined in this rule.
materials are defined as those which have a vapor pressure less than or equal to seventy-five (75) mmHg at twenty degrees Celsius (20°C), moderate volatility materials have a vapor pressure greater than seventy-five (75) and less than or equal to one hundred fifty (150) mmHg at twenty degrees Celsius (20°C), and high volatility materials have a vapor pressure greater than one hundred fifty (150) mmHg at twenty degrees Celsius (20°C). To evaluate volatile organic compound (VOC) volatility for single unit operations that service numerous VOCs or for processes handling multiple VOCs, the weighted average volatility can be calculated from knowing the total amount of each VOC used in a year, and the individual component vapor pressure, per the equation in paragraph (1)(E)1. of 10 CSR 10- 5.540. bis (difluoromethoxy)(difluoro) methane (HCF2OCF2OCF2H or HFE-236cal2) 1,2-bis (difluoromethoxy)- 1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethane (HCF2OCF2CF2OCF2H or HFE-338pcc13) 1-(difluoromethoxy)-2- [(difluoromethoxy)(difluoro) methoxy]-1,1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethane (HCF2OCF2OCF2CF2OCF2 H or H-Galden 1040x or H-Galden ZT 130 (or 150 or 180)) trans-1-chloro-3,3,3-trifluoroprop- 1-ene (SolsticeTM 1233zd(E)) 2,3,3,3-tetrafluoropropene 2-amino-2-methyl-1-propanol (AMP) t-butyl acetate (TBAC) 1,1,2,2-tetrafluoro-1- (2,2,2-trifluoroethoxy) ethane (HFE-347pcfe) cis-1,1,1,4,4,4-hexafluorobut-2-ene (HFO-1336mzz-Z) trans-1,1,1,4,4,4-hexafluorobute-2-ene (HFO-1336mzz(E))
Cyclic, branched or linear, completely fluorinated alkanes Cyclic, branched or linear, completely fluorinated ethers with no unsaturations Cyclic, branched or linear, completely methylated siloxanes Cyclic, branched or linear, completely fluorinated tertiary amines with no unsaturations Sulfur-containing perfluorocarbons with no unsaturations and with sulfur bonds only to carbon and fluorine
(W) All terms beginning with W.
that utilizes an alkaline scrubbing liquor to collect particulate matter (including nonvaporous metals and condensed organics) and/or to absorb and neutralize acid gases.
product such as rattan or wicker, or an engineered wood product such as particleboard that is manufactured under any of the following standard industrial classification codes: 2434, 2511, 2512, 2517, 2519, 2521, 2531, 2541, 2599, or 5712.
the manufacture of wood furniture. Examples include but are not limited to drawer sides, cabinet doors, seat cushions, and laminated tops.
facility is engaged in manufacturing.
(3) General Provisions. Common reference tables are provided in this section of the rule.
Air Contaminant Emission Rate Carbon monoxide Nitrogen oxides Particulate Matter PM PM10 PM2.5 SO2 (PM2.5 precursor) NOx (PM2.5 precursor) (emissions of nitrogen oxides are considered precursors to PM2.5 unless the state or EPA successfully demonstrates that emissions in a specific area are not a significant contributor to that area’s ambient PM2.5 concentrations) Sulfur dioxide Ozone VOC (Ozone precursor) NOx (Ozone precursor) Lead Fluorides (Excluding hydrogen fluoride) Sulfuric acid mist Hydrogen sulfide Total reduced sulfur (including hydrogen sulfide) Reduced Sulfur Compounds (including hydrogen sulfide) Municipal waste combustor organics (measured as total tetra-through octa-chlorinated dibenzop-dioxins and dibenzofurans) Municipal waste combustor metals (measured as particulate matter) Municipal waste combustor acid gases (measured as sulfur dioxide and hydrogen chloride) Municipal solid waste landfill emissions (measured as nonmethane organic compounds) Hazardous Air Pollutant (each) 100.0 40.0
25.0 15.0 10.0 40.0 40.0
40.0
40.0 40.0 0.6 3.0
7.0 10.0 10.0
10.0
3.5 × 10-6
15.0
40.0
50.0
10.0 Sum of Hazardous Air Pollutants Note: All rates in tons per year.
Named Installations
CAS # Hazardous Air Pollutant 75070 60355 75058 98862 53963 107028 79061 79107 107131 107051 92671 62533 90040 1332214 71432 92875 98077 100447 92524 117817 542881 75252 25.0
Acetaldehyde Acetamide Acetonitrile Acetophenone 2-Acetylaminofluorene Acrolein Acrylamide Acrylic acid Acrylonitrile Allyl chloride 4-Aminobiphenyl Aniline o-Anisidine Asbestos Benzene (including from gasoline) Benzidine Benzotrichloride Benzyl chloride Biphenyl Bis(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP) Bis(chloromethyl)ether Bromoform 106945 106990 156627 133062 63252 75150 56235 463581 120809 133904 57749 7782505 79118 532274 108907 510156 67663 107302 126998 1319773
108394 95487 106445 98828 94757 3547044 334883 132649 96128 84742 106467 91941 111444
542756 62737 111422 121697
64675 119904 60117 119937 79447 68122 57147 131113 77781 534521 51285 121142 123911 122667 106898
106887 140885 100414 51796 75003 106934 107062
107211 1-Bromopropane 1,3-Butadiene Calcium cyanamide Captan Carbaryl Carbon disulfide Carbon tetrachloride Carbonyl sulfide Catechol Chloramben Chlordane Chlorine Chloroacetic acid 2-Chloroacetophenone Chlorobenzene Chlorobenzilate Chloroform Chloromethyl methyl ether Chloroprene Cresols/Cresylic acid (isomers and mixture) m-Cresol o-Cresol p-Cresol Cumene 2,4-D, salts and esters DDE Diazomethane Dibenzofurans 1,2-Dibromo-3-chloropropane Dibutylphthalate 1,4-Dichlorobenzene(p) 3,3-Dichlorobenzidene Dichloroethyl ether (Bis(2- chloroethyl)ether) 1,3-Dichloropropene Dichlorvos Diethanolamine N,N-Diethyl aniline (N,N-Dimethylaniline) Diethyl sulfate 3,3-Dimethoxybenzidine Dimethyl aminoazobenzene 3,3-Dimethyl benzidine Dimethyl carbamoyl chloride Dimethyl formamide 1,1-Dimethyl hydrazine Dimethyl phthalate Dimethyl sulfate 4,6-Dinitro-o-cresol and salts 2,4-Dinitrophenol 2,4-Dinitrotoluene 1,4-Dioxane (1,4-Diethyleneoxide) 1,2-Diphenylhydrazine Epichlorohydrin (1-Chloro-2,3- epoxypropane) 1,2-Epoxybutane Ethyl acrylate Ethyl benzene Ethyl carbamate (Urethane) Ethyl chloride (Chloroethane) Ethylene dibromide (1,2-Dibromoethane) Ethylene dichloride (1,2- Dichloroethane) Ethylene glycol 151564 75218 96457 75343
50000 76448 118741 87683 77474 67721 822060 680319 110543 302012 7647010 7664393 123319 78591 58899 108316 67561 72435 74839
74873
71556
60344 74884 108101
624839 80626 1634044 101144
75092
101688
101779 91203 98953 92933 100027 79469 684935 62759 59892 56382 82688
87865 108952 106503 75445 7803512 7723140 85449 1336363
1120714 57578 Ethylene imine (Aziridine) Ethylene oxide Ethylene thiourea Ethylidene dichloride (1,1-Dichloroethane) Formaldehyde Heptachlor Hexachlorobenzene Hexachlorobutadiene Hexachlorocyclopentadiene Hexachloroethane Hexamethylene-1,6-diisocyanate Hexamethylphosphoramide Hexane Hydrazine Hydrochloric acid Hydrogen fluoride (hydrofluoricacid) Hydroquinone Isophorone Lindane (all isomers) Maleic anhydride Methanol Methoxychlor Methyl bromide (Bromomethane) Methyl chloride (Chloromethane) Methyl chloroform (1,1,1- Trichloroethane) Methyl hydrazine Methyl iodide (Iodomethane) Methyl isobutyl ketone (Hexone) Methyl isocyanate Methyl methacrylate Methyl tert butyl ether 4,4-Methylene bis(2-chloroaniline) Methylene chloride (Dichloromethane) Methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI) 4,4-Methylenedianiline Naphthalene Nitrobenzene 4-Nitrobiphenyl 4-Nitrophenol 2-Nitropropane N-Nitroso-N-methylurea N-Nitrosodimethylamine N-Nitrosomorpholine Parathion Pentachloronitrobenzene (Quintobenzene) Pentachlorophenol Phenol p-Phenylenediamine Phosgene Phosphine Phosphorus Phthalic anhydride Polychlorinated biphenyls (Aroclors) 1,3-Propane sultone beta-Propiolactone 123386 114261 78875
75569 75558 91225 106514 100425 96093 1746016 79345 127184
7550450 108883 95807 584849 95534 8001352 120821 79005 79016 95954 88062 121448 1582098 540841 108054 593602 75014 75354
1330207 108383 95476 106423
Note: For all listings in this table that contain the word compounds and for glycol ethers, the following applies: Unless otherwise specified, these listings are defined as including any unique chemical substance that contains the named chemical (that is, antimony, arsenic, and the like) as part of that chemical’s infrastructure.
1 X’CN where X–H’ or any other group where a formal dissociation may occur, for example, KCN or Ca(CN)2.
Propionaldehyde Propoxur (Baygon) Propylene dichloride (1,2- Dichloropropane) Propylene oxide 1,2-Propylenimine (2-Methylaziridine) Quinoline Quinone Styrene Styrene oxide 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzop-dioxin 1,1,2,2-Tetrachloroethane Tetrachloroethylene (Perchloroethylene) Titanium tetrachloride Toluene 2,4-Toluene diamine 2,4-Toluene diisocyanate o-Toluidine Toxaphene (chlorinated camphene) 1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene 1,1,2-Trichloroethane Trichloroethylene 2,4,5-Trichlorophenol 2,4,6-Trichlorophenol Triethylamine Trifluralin 2,2,4-Trimethylpentane Vinyl acetate Vinyl bromide (bromoethene) Vinyl chloride Vinylidene chloride (1,1- Dichloroethylene) Xylenes (isomers and mixture) m-Xylenes o-Xylenes p-Xylenes Antimony Compounds Arsenic Compounds (inorganic including arsine) Beryllium Compounds Cadmium Compounds Chromium Compounds Cobalt Compounds Coke Oven Emissions Cyanide Compounds1 Glycol ethers2 Lead Compounds Manganese Compounds Mercury Compounds Fine mineral fibers3 Nickel Compounds Polycyclic Organic Matter4 Radionuclides (including radon)5 Selenium Compounds 2 Includes monoand diethers of ethylene glycol, diethylene glycol and triethylene glycol R(OCH2CH2)n-OR’ where n = 1, 2, or 3; R = Alkyl or aryl groups; R’ = R, H, or groups which, when removed, yield glycol ethers with the structure R-(OCH2CH2)n-OH. Polymers and ethylene glycol monobutyl ether are excluded from the glycol category. 3 Includes glass microfibers, glass wool fibers, rock wool fibers, and slag wool fibers, each characterized as respirable (fiber diameter less than three and one-half (3.5) micrometers) and possessing an aspect ratio (fiber length divided by fiber diameter) greater than or equal to three (3), as emitted from production of fiber and fiber products.
4 Includes organic compounds with more than one (1) benzene ring, and which have a boiling point greater than or equal to one hundred degrees Celsius (100°C).
5 A type of atom which spontaneously undergoes radioactive decay.
AUTHORITY: section 643.050, RSMo Supp. 2023, and section 643.055, RSMo 2016.* Original rule filed Aug. 16, 1977, effective Feb. 11, 1978. Amended: Filed Feb. 27, 1978, effective Dec. 11, 1978. Amended: Filed Aug. 11, 1978, effective April 12, 1979. Amended: Filed Nov. 14, 1978, effective June 11, 1979. Amended: Filed Dec. 15, 1978, effective June 11, 1979. Amended: Filed March 15, 1979, effective Nov. 11, 1979. Amended: Filed Dec. 10, 1979, effective April 11, 1980. Amended: Filed March 13, 1980, effective Sept. 12, 1980. Amended: Filed Sept. 12, 1980, effective April 11, 1981. Amended: Filed Jan. 14, 1981, effective June 11, 1981. Amended: Filed March 11, 1981, effective Aug. 13, 1981. Amended: Filed Nov. 10, 1981, effective May 13, 1982. Amended: Filed Dec. 10, 1981, effective June 11, 1982. Amended: Filed June 14, 1982, effective Dec. 11, 1982. Amended: Filed Aug. 13, 1982, effective Jan. 13, 1983. Amended: Filed Jan. 12, 1983, effective June 11, 1983. Amended: Filed Oct. 13, 1983, effective March 11, 1984. Amended: Filed Oct. 15, 1984, effective May 11, 1985. Emergency amendment filed Nov. 9, 1984, effective Nov. 19, 1984, expired March 19, 1985. Amended: Filed Jan. 15, 1985, effective May 11, 1985. Amended: Filed July 3, 1985, effective Dec. 12, 1985. Amended: Filed Jan. 6, 1986, effective May 11, 1986. Amended: Filed Feb. 4, 1987, effective May 28, 1987. Amended: Filed April 2, 1987, effective Aug. 27, 1987. Amended: Filed Sept. 1, 1987, effective Dec. 24, 1987. Amended: Filed Jan. 5, 1988, effective April 28, 1988. Amended: Filed March 16, 1988, effective Aug. 25, 1988. Amended: Filed Oct. 4, 1988, effective March 11, 1989. Amended: Filed June 30, 1989, effective Nov. 26, 1989. Amended: Filed Jan. 24, 1990, effective May 24, 1990. Amended: Filed Jan. 3, 1991, effective Aug. 30, 1991. Amended: Filed March 31, 1992, effective Feb. 26, 1993. Amended: Filed Dec. 14, 1992, effective Sept. 9, 1993. Amended: Filed Sept. 2, 1993, effective May 9, 1994. Amended: Filed Dec. 15, 1994, effective Aug. 30, 1995. Amended: Filed Sept. 29, 1995, effective May 30, 1996. Amended: Filed Oct. 3, 1995, effective June 30, 1996. Amended: Filed Aug. 15, 1997, effective April 30, 1998. Amended: Filed July 29, 1998, effective May 30, 1999. Amended: Filed Sept. 22, 1999, effective May 30, 2000. Amended: Filed March 5, 2003, effective Oct. 30, 2003. Amended: Filed July 6, 2005, effective Feb. 28, 2006. Amended: Filed Feb. 4, 2008, effective Sept. 30, 2008. Amended: Filed April 26, 2010, effective Dec. 30, 2010. Amended: Filed Nov. 30, 2010, effective Aug. 30, 2011. Amended: Filed Sept. 16, 2011, effective May 30, 2012. Amended: Filed July 3, 2012, effective Feb. 28, 2013. Amended: Filed July 12, 2013, effective March 30, 2014. Amended: Filed Sept. 19, 2023, effective May 30, 2024. *Original authority: 643.050, RSMo 1965, amended 1972, 1992, 1993, 1995, 2011, 2022, and 643.055, RSMo 1979, amended 1992, 1994, transferred 1986, formerly 203.055, 2014.