- A. Any stationary source with potential emissions in excess of any of the applicability thresholds for this regulation, but with actual emissions less than those thresholds, may apply to the Director for an emissions cap, at or below that threshold level. An emissions cap relieves the stationary source from the requirement to obtain an operating permit under this regulation.
B. The following stationary sources are not eligible to apply for an emissions cap:
- 1. Any non-major source required to obtain a permit pursuant to § 29.6 of this Part by the Administrator, regardless of emissions level.
- 2. Any stationary source, including an area source, subject to a Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) standard promulgated by EPA pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 7412(e) (CAA § 112(e)), whose actual emissions exceed the applicability threshold of the standard.
- 3. Any stationary source, including an area source, subject to a Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) standard determined by the Office of Air Resources pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 7412(j) (CAA § 112(j)), whose actual emissions exceed the applicability threshold of the standard.
C. Application for an emissions cap can be made at any time. Any stationary source applying for an emissions cap must submit an application at least six (6) months prior to:
- 1. The date by which a timely and complete initial operating permit application must be submitted to the Office of Air Resources.
D. Application for an emissions cap shall:
- 1. Be made on forms obtained from the Office of Air Resources or by other means prescribed by the Office of Air Resources.
- 2. Be submitted in duplicate and signed by a responsible official.
- 3. Include documentation of actual annual emissions for each of the three (3) previous calendar years.
- 4. Include sufficient information to document the proposed restriction.
E. An emissions cap issued by the Office of Air Resources shall:
- 1. Be federally enforceable and include some combination of production and /or operational limitations to ensure that emissions are limited by quantifiable and enforceable means including short-term emission limits or operational restrictions.
- 2. Include requirements to maintain records sufficient to demonstrate that the limitations imposed in the emissions cap are followed and that the emissions have not exceeded those allowed by the emissions cap.
- 3. All emissions limitations, controls and other requirements imposed by the emissions cap will be at least as stringent as any applicable requirement and the emissions cap will not waive or make less stringent any applicable requirement.
F. All emissions caps shall be processed according to the following procedures:
1. Following receipt of a complete application the Office of Air Resources shall review each application and shall either:
- a. Deny the application for an emissions cap and notify the applicant and EPA of the denial; or,
- b. Give public notice of its intention to issue an emissions cap.
- 2. The draft emissions cap, including all supporting documentation, shall be made available for public comment. The notice of public comment period shall be posted on the Department's website. Public notice may also include any other means the Office of Air Resources finds necessary to assure adequate notice to the affected public of the opportunity for public comment.
3. At a minimum, a copy of the public notice shall be sent to:
- a. The applicant for the emissions cap.
- b. The Regional Administrator of the EPA or their authorized representative.
- c. The chief executives of the city or town where the source is located.
- d. Persons on a mailing list developed by the Office of Air Resources, including those who request in writing to be on the list.
- 4. A public hearing for interested persons to appear and submit written or oral comments on the emissions cap shall be held if requested by ten (10) or more persons, or by a governmental subdivision or agency or by an association having not less than ten (10) members. The Director shall also hold a hearing, whenever they believe there is a significant degree of public interest in the proposed action. If held, a hearing shall take place no earlier than thirty (30) days nor later than sixty (60) days following initial public notice. Comments from the applicant and/or any interested persons shall be recorded at the public hearing. Written comments, to be considered part of the record, must be submitted during the public comment period. The public comment period shall commence on the date of initial public notice. The public comment period shall close thirty (30) days later, if no hearing is held. If a public hearing is held, the public comment period shall close at the close of the public comment hearing or on a date set by the Office of Air Resources.
- 5. After the close of the public comment period, the Office of Air Resources shall prepare a final determination concerning the request for an emissions cap and notify the applicant of its determination. The Office of Air Resources shall provide a written response to each substantive public comment. A copy of all emissions caps will be forwarded to the EPA. The Office of Air Resources shall maintain a record of the commenters and also of the issues raised during the public participation process. Such records shall be available to the public upon request.
G. If the application for an emissions cap is not approved, the applicant will be notified, by certified mail, of:
- 1. The reasons the application for an emissions cap was not approved; and,
- 2. The date by which a timely and complete operating permit application must be submitted to the Office of Air Resources.
H. Except as provided in §§ 29.8(F), 29.14.2, and 29.14.3 of this Part, no source may operate after the time it is required to submit a timely and complete application under the operating permit program except in compliance with either:
- 1. A permit issued under this regulation; or,
- 2. An emissions cap issued under this regulation.
A. A permit, permit modification or permit renewal may be issued only if all of the following conditions have been met:
- 1. The Office of Air Resources has a complete application for a permit, permit modification or permit renewal.
- 2. Except for modifications qualifying as minor permit modifications, the Office of Air Resources has complied with the requirements for public participation as stated in §§ 29.13.2(D) through (M) of this Part.
- 3. The Office of Air Resources has complied with the requirements for notifying and responding to affected States.
- 4. The conditions of the permit provide for compliance with all applicable requirements and the requirements of this regulation; and
- 5. The EPA has received a copy of the proposed permit and any notices required by § 29.13.2(H) of this Part and has not objected to the issuance of the permit within the time period specified.
- B. Priority shall be given to applications for construction or modification under 42 U.S.C. §§ 7440-7490 (CAA §§ 160-169(b)) and 42 U.S.C. §§ 7501-7515 (CAA §§ 171-193).
C. Except as provided under the initial transition plan or under regulations promulgated under 42 U.S.C. §§ 7651-7651o (CAA §§ 401-406) or 42 U.S.C. §§ 7661-7661f (CAA §§ 501-507) for permitting of affected sources under the acid rain program, the Office of Air Resources shall take final action on each permit application (including a request for permit modification or renewal) within eighteen (18) months after receiving a complete application.
29.13.2 Initial Permit Issuance
- A. The Office of Air Resources shall notify the applicant of whether the application is complete within sixty (60) days of receipt of the application. A complete application must provide all the information requested in § 29.9.1 of this Part. Unless the Office of Air Resources requests additional information or otherwise notifies the applicant of incompleteness within sixty (60) days of receipt of an application, the application shall be deemed complete. However, if while reviewing a complete permit application it is determined that additional information is required to take final action on the permit, the Office of Air Resources may request such information in writing and set a reasonable deadline for a response.
- B. A copy of each complete permit application will be forwarded to the EPA. The Office of Air Resources may require the applicant to send a copy of the application (including the compliance plan) directly to the EPA. Upon agreement with EPA, the Office of Air Resources may submit to EPA a permit application summary form and any relevant portion of the permit application and compliance plan, in place of the complete application and compliance plan.
- C. The Office of Air Resources shall provide a statement that sets forth the legal and factual basis for the draft permit conditions (including references to the applicable statutory or regulatory provisions). The Office of Air Resources shall send this statement to EPA and to any other person who requests it.
- D. The Office of Air Resources shall review each application and shall give public notice of its intention to either issue a permit or deny the application. The draft permit or tentative denial, including all supporting documentation, shall be made available for public comment. A public notice shall be posted on the Department's website. Public notice may also include any other means the Office of Air Resources finds is necessary to assure adequate notice to the affected public of the opportunity for public comment.
E. All public notices shall contain the following minimum information:
- 1. Identification of the affected facility.
- 2. Name and address of the permittee.
- 3. Name and address of the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, Office of Air Resources (the agency reviewing the permit).
- 4. The activity or activities involved in the permit action.
- 5. The emissions change involved in any permit modification.
- 6. The name, address and telephone number of a person from whom interested persons may obtain additional information, including the availability for public inspection of copies of the draft permit, the application, all relevant supporting information including; compliance plans, monitoring and compliance certification reports (except for information entitled to confidential treatment pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 7414(c) (CAA § 114(c)); and all other materials available to the Office of Air Resources that are relevant to the permit decision.
- 7. A brief description of the comment procedures required by this regulation.
- 8. The time and place of any hearing that may be held, including a statement of procedures to request a hearing unless a hearing has already been scheduled.
F. At a minimum, a copy of the public notice shall be sent to:
- 1. The permit applicant.
- 2. The Regional Administrator of the EPA.
- 3. The chief executives of the city or town where the stationary source is located.
- 4. Persons on a mailing list developed by the Office of Air Resources, including those who request in writing to be on the list.
- 5. Any affected State.
- G. A public hearing for interested persons to appear and submit written or oral comments on the draft permit or tentative denial shall be held if requested by ten (10) or more persons, or by a governmental subdivision or agency or by an association having not less than ten (10) members. The Director shall also hold a hearing, whenever they believe there is a significant degree of public interest in the proposed action. If held, a hearing shall take place no earlier than thirty (30) days nor later than sixty (60) days following initial public notice. The public shall have at least thirty (30) days notice of any hearing. Comments from the applicant and/or any interested persons shall be recorded at the public hearing. Written comments, to be considered part of the record, must be submitted during the public comment period. The public comment period shall commence on the date of initial public notice. The public comment period shall close thirty (30) days later, if no hearing is held. If a public hearing is held, the public comment period shall close at the close of the public comment hearing or on a date set by the Office of Air Resources.
- H. After the close of the public comment period, the Office of Air Resources shall prepare a proposed permit. The Office of Air Resources shall provide a written response to each substantive public comment. A copy of the proposed permit will be forwarded to the EPA. The Office of Air Resources shall, when submitting a proposed or revised permit to EPA for review, notify the EPA and any affected State of any refusal by the Office of Air Resources to accept all recommendations for the proposed revised permit that the affected state submitted during its review period. The notice shall include the Office of Air Resource's reasons for not accepting any such recommendation. The Office of Air Resources is not required to accept any recommendations that are not based on applicable requirements or the requirements of 40 C.F.R. § 70.
- I. The Office of Air Resources shall maintain, for seven (7) years, a record of the commenters and also of the issues raised during the public participation process. Such records shall be available to the public upon request.
- J. No permit for which an application must be transmitted to the EPA under this regulation shall be issued if the EPA objects to its issuance in writing within forty-five (45) days of receipt of the proposed permit and all necessary supporting information. The EPA will object to the issuance of any permit which it determines is not in compliance with the applicable requirements or requirements under 40 C.F.R. § 70.
- K. Any EPA objection under § 29.13.2(J) of this Part shall include a statement of the EPA's reasons for objection and a description of the terms and conditions that the permit must include to respond to the objections. The EPA will provide the permit applicant a copy of the objection.
- L. Within ninety (90) days after the date of an objection under § 29.13.2(J) of this Part, the Office of Air Resources shall revise the proposed permit in response to the objection and issue the permit or deny the application in writing. A copy of each final permit will be forwarded to the EPA.
M. If the Office of Air Resources fails, within ninety (90) days after the date of an objection under § 29.13.2(J) of this Part, to revise and submit a final permit in response to the objection, the EPA will issue the permit or deny the application in accordance with the requirements of the Federal Operating Permit Program promulgated under 40 C.F.R. § 71.
29.13.3 Public Petitions to the EPA
- A. If the EPA does not object in writing as stated in § 29.13.2(I) of this Part any person may petition the EPA within sixty (60) days after the expiration of the EPA's 45-day review period to make such objection. Any such petition shall be based on comments raised with reasonable specificity during the public comment period provided for in § 29.13.2(G) of this Part unless the petitioner demonstrates that it was impracticable to raise such objections within such period, or unless the grounds for such objection period arose after such period.
- B. If the EPA objects to the permit as a result of a petition filed under this paragraph, the Office of Air Resources shall not issue the permit until EPA's objection has been resolved, except that the petition for review does not stay the effectiveness of a permit or its requirements if the permit was issued after the end of the 45-day review period and prior to an EPA objection.
C. If the Office of Air Resources has issued a permit prior to receipt of an EPA objection under this paragraph, the Administrator will modify, terminate, or revoke such permit, and shall do so consistent with the procedures in §§ 29.13.6(D) or 29.13.6(E)(1) and (2) of this Part except in unusual circumstances, and the Office of Air Resources may thereafter issue only a revised permit that satisfies EPA's objection. In any case, the stationary source will not be in violation of the requirement to have submitted a timely and complete application.
29.13.4 Permit Renewal and Expiration
- A. Permits being renewed are subject to the same procedural requirements, including those for public participation, affected State and EPA review, which apply to initial permit issuance.
- B. Permit expiration terminates the stationary source's right to operate unless a timely and complete renewal application has been submitted consistent with §§ 29.8(B)(3), 29.8(C), and 29.8(F) of this Part or an emissions cap has been issued to the stationary source pursuant to § 29.7 of this Part.
- C. If the Office of Air Resources fails to act in a timely manner with regard to a permit renewal, EPA may invoke its authority under 42 U.S.C. § 7661d(e) (CAA § 505(e)) to terminate or revoke and reissue the permit.
D. If a timely and complete application for a permit renewal is submitted, consistent with § 29.8(B)(3) of this Part, but the Office of Air Resources has failed to issue or deny the renewal permit before the end of the term of the previous permit, then the permit shall not expire until the renewal permit has been issued or denied and any permit shield that may be granted pursuant to § 29.10(K) of this Part may extend beyond the original permit term until renewal.
29.13.5 Reopenings for cause by the State
- A. Proceedings to reopen and issue a permit shall follow the same procedures as apply to initial permit issuance and shall affect only those parts of the permit for which cause to reopen exists. Such reopening shall be made as expeditiously as practicable.
B. Reopenings for cause by the State shall not be initiated before a notice of such intent is provided to the stationary source by the Office of Air Resources. This notice shall be sent at least thirty (30) days in advance of the date that the permit is to be reopened. In the case of an emergency, notice shall be sent five (5) days in advance of the date that the permit is to be reopened.
29.13.6 Reopenings for cause by EPA
- A. If the EPA finds that cause exists to terminate, modify, or revoke and reissue a permit pursuant to § 29.13.5 of this Part, the EPA will notify the Office of Air Resources and the permittee of such finding in writing.
- B. The Office of Air Resources shall, within ninety (90) days after receipt of such notification, forward to EPA a proposed determination of termination, modification, or revocation and reissuance as appropriate. The EPA may extend this 90-day period for an additional ninety (90) days if it finds that a new or revised permit application is necessary or that the EPA must require the permittee to submit additional information.
- C. The EPA will review the proposed determination from the Office of Air Resources within ninety (90) days of receipt.
- D. The Office of Air Resources shall have ninety (90) days from receipt of an EPA objection to resolve any objection that EPA makes and to terminate, modify, or revoke and reissue the permit in accordance with EPA's objection.
E. If the Office of Air Resources fails to submit a proposed determination pursuant to § 29.13.6(B) of this Part or fails to resolve any objection pursuant to § 29.13.6(D) of this Part, the EPA will terminate, modify, or revoke and reissue the permit after taking the following actions:
- 1. Provide at least thirty (30) days written notice to the permittee of the reasons for any such action. This notice may be given during the procedures in §§ 29.13.6(A) through (D) of this Part.
- 2. Provide the permittee an opportunity for comment on EPA's proposed action and an opportunity for a hearing.
A. An administrative permit amendment is a permit revision that:
- 1. Corrects typographical errors;
- 2. Identifies a change in the name, address or phone number of any person identified in the permit; or provides a similar minor administrative change at the stationary source;
- 3. Requires more frequent monitoring or reporting by the permittee;
- 4. Allows for a change in ownership or operational control of a stationary source where the Office of Air Resources determines that no other change in the permit is necessary, provided that a written agreement containing a specific date for transfer of permit responsibility, coverage and liability between the current and new permittee has been submitted to the Office of Air Resources;
- 5. Incorporates into the permit the requirements from preconstruction review permits authorized under an EPA-approved program, provided that such a program meets procedural requirements substantially equivalent to the requirements of § 29.14 of this Part that would be applicable to the change if it were subject to review as a permit modification and compliance requirements substantially equivalent to those contained in § 29.10 of this Part.
- 6. Incorporates into the permit any terms and conditions which are not federally enforceable under the Act.
- B. Administrative permit amendments for purposes of the acid rain portion of the permit shall be governed by regulations promulgated under 42 U.S.C. §§ 7651-7651o (CAA §§ 401-416).
C. An administrative permit amendment may be made by the Office of Air Resources consistent with the following:
- 1. The Office of Air Resources shall take no longer than sixty (60) days after receiving the request for an administrative permit amendment to take final action on the request. The Office of Air Resources may incorporate such changes without providing notice to the public or affected States provided that it designates any such permit revisions are in accordance with those listed in § 29.14.1(A) of this Part.
- 2. The Office of Air Resources will submit a copy of the revised permit to the EPA.
- 3. The stationary source may implement any changes addressed in the administrative amendment request immediately upon submittal of the request.
D. The Office of Air Resources may, upon taking final action granting a request for an administrative permit amendment, allow coverage by the permit shield in § 29.10(K) of this Part for administrative permit amendments made pursuant to § 29.14.1(A)(5) of this Part which meet the relevant requirements of §§ 29.10, 29.13.2 and 29.14.4 of this Part for significant permit modifications.
29.14.2 Minor Permit Modifications
A. Minor permit modification procedures may be used only for those permit modifications that:
- 1. Do not violate any applicable requirement;
- 2. Do not involve significant changes to existing monitoring, reporting or recordkeeping requirements in the permit;
- 3. Do not require or change a case by case determination of an emission limitation including those made under Part 9 of this Subchapter (Air Pollution Control Permits), §§ 9.8.1(A) and (B) or §§ 9.9.1(A)(1)(a) and (b) of this Subchapter (Air Pollution Control Permits), or a source specific determination for temporary stationary sources of ambient impacts, or a visibility or increment analysis made under Part 9 of this Subchapter (Air Pollution Control Permits), §§ 9.9.1(A)(2)(a)(2) or 9.9.1(A)(3)(a) of this Subchapter (Air Pollution Control Permits).
4. Do not seek to establish or change a permit term or condition for which there is no corresponding underlying applicable requirement and that the stationary source has assumed to avoid an applicable requirement to which the stationary source would otherwise be subject. Such terms and conditions include:
- a. A federally enforceable emissions cap assumed to avoid classification as a modification under any provision of 42 U.S.C. §§ 7401-7431 (CAA §§ 101-131), 42 U.S.C. §§ 7470-7492 (CAA §§ 160-169b), or 42 U.S.C. §§ 7501-7515 (CAA §§ 171-193); and
- b. An alternative emissions limit approved pursuant to regulations promulgated under 42 U.S.C. § 7412(i)(5) (CAA § 112(i)(5));
- 5. Are not modifications under any provision of 42 U.S.C. §§ 7401-7431 (CAA §§ 101-131), 42 U.S.C. §§ 7470-7492 (CAA §§ 160-169b), or 42 U.S.C. §§ 7501-7515 (CAA §§ 171-193);
- 6. Are not otherwise required by the Office of Air Resources to be processed as a significant modification.
- B. Notwithstanding §§ 29.14.2(A) and 29.14.3(A) of this Part; minor permit modification procedures may be used for permit modifications involving the use of economic incentives, marketable permits, emissions trading and other similar approaches, to the extent that such minor permit modification procedures are explicitly provided for in the Rhode Island State Implementation Plan or in applicable requirements promulgated by EPA.
C. An application requesting the use of minor permit modification procedures shall meet the requirements of § 29.9.1 of this Part. The application need only include such information as is relevant to the proposed modification. In addition, the application shall include the following:
- 1. A description of the proposed change, the emissions resulting from the change and any new applicable requirements that will apply if the change occurs;
- 2. A proposed draft permit reflecting the proposed change;
- 3. Certification by a responsible official, consistent with § 29.9.1(B) of this Part that the proposed modification meets the criteria for use of minor permit modification procedures and a request that such procedures be used; and
- 4. Completed forms, available from the Office of Air Resources, for the Office of Air Resources to use to notify the EPA and affected States of the proposed change.
- D. Following receipt of an application for a minor permit modification, the Office of Air Resources shall notify the applicant of whether the application is complete. A complete application must provide all the information requested in § 29.14.2(C) of this Part as it pertains to the proposed modification.
- E. If the application for a minor modification is incomplete, the Office of Air Resources may request additional information in writing and set a reasonable deadline for a response.
- F. If the application for a minor modification is complete, the Office of Air Resources will, within five (5) working days, notify the EPA and any affected States of the requested permit modification. EPA and affected States will then have forty-five (45) days to notify the Office of Air Resources of any objection to, or comment on, the application. Such objection or comment shall be sent to the Office of Air Resources. The 45-day review period shall be presumed to begin three (3) days after the Office of Air Resources has mailed the notification to both the EPA and affected States, unless EPA demonstrates it received the notice late, in which case it shall begin on the date of receipt.
- G. The Office of Air Resources will not take final action on an application for a minor permit modification until after EPA's 45-day review period has concluded or until EPA has notified the Office of Air Resources that it will not object to issuance of the proposed permit modification, whichever is first.
H. Within ninety (90) days after the application for a minor modification is complete, or fifteen (15) days after the completion of EPA's 45-day review period, whichever is later, the Office of Air Resources shall:
- 1. Issue the permit modification as proposed; or
- 2. Deny the permit modification application; or
- 3. Determine that the requested modification does not meet the minor permit modification criteria and should be reviewed under the significant modification procedures; or
- 4. Revise the draft permit modification and transmit to the EPA the new proposed permit modification.
- I. A copy of the final permit modification will be forwarded to the EPA. The Office of Air Resources shall, when submitting a revised permit to EPA notify the EPA and any affected State of any refusal by the Office of Air Resources to accept all recommendations for the proposed permit that the affected state submitted during its review period. The notice shall include the Office of Air Resource's reasons for not accepting any such recommendation. EPA shall have forty-five (45) days following receipt of such notice to object to the permit modification. The Office of Air Resources is not required to accept any recommendations that are not based on applicable requirements or the requirements of 40 C.F.R. § 70.
- J. If preconstruction permits are required pursuant to Part 9 of this Subchapter (Air Pollution Control Permits) for the minor modification, the proposed change may, at the stationary source's risk, be made as soon as all required preconstruction permits have been issued, but no sooner. If the stationary source elects to make such changes and until the Office of Air Resources issues its final determination in accordance with § 29.14.2(H) of this Part, the stationary source must comply with both applicable requirements governing the change and the proposed permit terms and conditions. During this time period, the stationary source need not comply with the existing permit terms and conditions it seeks to modify. However, if the stationary source fails to comply with its proposed permit terms and conditions during the time period, the existing permit terms and conditions it seeks to modify may be enforced against it.
- K. If preconstruction permits are not required pursuant to Part 9 of this Subchapter (Air Pollution Control Permits), for the minor modification, the proposed change may, at the stationary source's risk, be made as soon as the application for a minor modification is filed with the Office of Air Resources, but no sooner. If the stationary source elects to make such changes and until the Office of Air Resources issues its final determination in accordance with § 29.14.2(H) of this Part, the stationary source must comply with both applicable requirements governing the change and the proposed permit terms and conditions. During this time period, the stationary source need not comply with the existing permit terms and conditions it seeks to modify. However, if the stationary source fails to comply with its proposed permit terms and conditions during the time period, the existing permit terms and conditions it seeks to modify may be enforced against it.
L. The permit shield as stated in § 29.10(K) of this Part does not apply to minor permit modifications.
29.14.3 Group Processing of Minor Permit Modifications
A. Group processing of modifications may be used only for those permit modifications:
- 1. That individually meet the criteria for minor permit modification procedures under § 29.14.2(A) of this Part; and
2. That collectively are below the lowest threshold level as set forth below:
- a. Ten percent (10%) of the emissions allowed by the permit for the emissions unit for which the change is requested, or
- b. Twenty percent (20%) of the applicable definition of major source, or
- c. Five (5) tons per year, whichever is least.
B. An application requesting the use of group processing procedures shall meet the requirements of § 29.9.1 of this Part. The application need only include such information as is relevant to the proposed modifications. In addition, the application shall include the following:
- 1. A description of each change, the emissions resulting from the changes and any new applicable requirement that will apply if the changes occur.
- 2. The stationary sources suggested draft permit.
- 3. Certification by a responsible official, consistent with § 29.9.1(B) of this Part, that the proposed modification meets the criteria for use of group processing procedures and a request that such procedures be used.
- 4. A list of all of the stationary source's pending applications for minor permit modifications and a determination of whether the requested modification, aggregated with these other applications, equals or exceeds the threshold set in § 29.14.3(A)(2) of this Part.
- 5. Certification, consistent with § 29.9.1(B) of this Part, that the stationary source has notified EPA of the proposed modification. Such notification need only contain a brief description of the requested modification.
- 6. Completed forms for the Office of Air Resources to use to notify the EPA and affected States.
- C. Following receipt of an application for a group processing, the Office of Air Resources shall notify the applicant of whether the application is complete. A complete application must provide all the information requested in § 29.14.3(B) of this Part as it pertains to the proposed modifications.
- D. If the application for group processing is incomplete, the Office of Air Resources may deny the application or request additional information.
- E. On a quarterly basis or within five (5) business days of receipt of an application demonstrating that the aggregate of a stationary source's pending applications equals or exceeds the threshold level set under § 29.14.3(A)(2) of this Part, whichever is earlier, the Office of Air Resources shall notify the EPA and affected States of the requested permit modifications.
- F. EPA and affected States will then have forty-five (45) days from the receipt of such notice to notify the Office of Air Resources of any objection to, or comment on, the application. Such objection or comment shall be sent to the Office of Air Resources. The 45-day review period shall be presumed to begin three (3) days after the Office of Air Resources has mailed the notification to both the EPA and affected States, unless EPA demonstrates it received notice late, in which case it shall begin on the date of receipt.
- G. The Office of Air Resources will not take final action on the application until after EPA's 45-day review period has concluded or until EPA has notified the Office of Air Resources that EPA will not object to the issuance of the permit modification, whichever is first.
H. Within one hundred eighty (180) days of receipt of a complete application for group processing of minor permit modifications under this section, or fifteen (15) calendar days after the end of EPA's 45-day review period whichever is later, the Office of Air Resources shall:
- 1. Issue the minor permit modification as proposed; or,
- 2. Deny the minor permit modification application; or,
- 3. Determine that the requested modifications do not meet the minor permit modification criteria and should be reviewed under the significant modifications procedures; or,
- 4. Revise the draft minor permit modification and transmit to the EPA the new proposed minor permit modification.
- I. A copy of the final permit modification will be forwarded to the EPA. The Office of Air Resources shall, when submitting a revised permit to EPA, notify the EPA and any affected State of any refusal by the Office of Air Resources to accept all recommendations for the proposed permit that the affected state submitted during its review period. The notice shall include the Office of Air Resources’ reasons for not accepting any such recommendation. EPA shall have forty-five (45) days following receipt of such notice to object to the permit modification. The Office of Air Resources is not required to accept any recommendations that are not based on applicable requirements or the requirements of 40 C.F.R. § 70.
- J. If preconstruction permits are required pursuant to Part 9 of this Subchapter (Air Pollution Control Permits), for the modifications, the proposed changes may, at the stationary source's risk, be made as soon as all required preconstruction permits have been issued, but no sooner. If the stationary source elects to make such changes and until the Office of Air Resources issues its final determination in accordance with § 29.14.3(H) of this Part, the stationary source must comply with both applicable requirements governing the change and the proposed permit terms and conditions. During this time period, the stationary source need not comply with the existing permit terms and conditions it seeks to modify. However, if the stationary source fails to comply with its proposed permit terms and conditions during the time period, the existing permit terms and conditions it seeks to modify may be enforced against it.
- K. If preconstruction permits are not required pursuant to Part 9 of this Subchapter (Air Pollution Control Permits), for the modifications, the proposed changes may, at the stationary source's risk, be made as soon as the application for group processing has been filed with the Office of Air Resources, but no sooner. If the stationary source elects to make such changes and until the Office of Air Resources issues its final determination in accordance with § 29.14.3(H) of this Part, the stationary source must comply with both applicable requirements governing the change and the proposed permit terms and conditions. During this time period, the stationary source need not comply with the existing permit terms and conditions it seeks to modify. However, if the stationary source fails to comply with its proposed permit terms and conditions during the time period, the existing permit terms and conditions it seeks to modify may be enforced against it.
L. The permit shield under § 29.10(K) of this Part shall not apply to group processing of minor permit modifications.
29.14.4 Significant Permit Modifications
A. A permittee must apply for a significant permit modification if a proposed modification does not qualify as a minor permit modification or an administrative permit amendment. A significant permit modification shall include but not be limited to the following:
- 1. Any change that is considered a modification under any provision of 42 U.S.C. §§ 7401-7431 (CAA §§ 101-131), 42 U.S.C. §§ 7470-7492 (CAA §§ 160-169b), or 42 U.S.C. §§ 7501-7515 (CAA §§ 171-193);
- 2. Every significant change in existing monitoring permit terms or conditions;
- 3. Every relaxation of reporting or recordkeeping permit terms or conditions.
- B. Nothing herein shall be construed to preclude the permittee from making changes consistent with § 29.14.4 of this Part that would render existing permit compliance terms and conditions irrelevant.
- C. An application for a significant modification may, at the applicant's discretion, be submitted simultaneously with the corresponding application for a preconstruction permit for the proposed change required pursuant to Part 9 of this Subchapter (Air Pollution Control Permits). To be deemed timely, applications for significant permit modifications shall be submitted at least twelve (12) months prior to the planned startup of any emissions unit proposed to be modified or to be part of the modification.
- D. Where the existing operating permit prohibits the significant permit modification, the stationary source shall obtain the significant permit modification before commencing operation.
- E. Where the existing operating permit does not address or prohibit the significant permit modification and all required preconstruction permits have been issued following procedural requirements substantially equivalent to the requirements of § 29.13.2 of this Part, the stationary source can commence construction immediately after obtaining all preconstruction permits.
- F. Where the existing operating permit does not address or prohibit the significant permit modification and all required preconstruction permits have been issued following procedural requirements that are not substantially equivalent to the requirements of § 29.13.2 of this Part, the stationary source shall obtain the significant permit modification before commencing operation.
G. An application requesting the use of significant permit modification procedures shall meet the requirements of § 29.9.1 of this Part. The application need only include such information as is relevant to the proposed modification. In addition, the application shall include the following:
- 1. A description of the change, the emissions resulting from the change and any new applicable requirements that will apply if the change occurs;
- 2. A proposed draft permit reflecting the proposed change;
- 3. Completed forms, available at the Office of Air Resources, for the Office of Air Resources to use to notify the EPA and affected States of the proposed change.
- H. Significant permit modifications shall be processed following the procedures for initial permit issuance in § 29.13.2 of this Part.
- I. The permit shield under § 29.10(K) of this Part shall apply to significant modifications obtained pursuant to the provisions of § 29.14.4 of this Part.
- J. Notwithstanding the provisions of §§ 29.14.1 through 29.14.4 of this Part above, a permit revision is necessary for any change that is not addressed or prohibited by the operating permit, if such change is subject to any requirements under 42 U.S.C. §§ 7651-7651o (CAA §§ 401-416) or is a modification under any provision of Title I of the Act.
A. No permit revision is necessary for 42 U.S.C. § 7661(a)(b)(10) (CAA § 502(b)(10)) changes within a permitted facility, if the changes are not modifications under any provision of 42 U.S.C. §§ 7401-7431 (CAA §§ 101-131), 42 U.S.C. §§ 7470-7492 (CAA §§ 160-169b), or 42 U.S.C. §§ 7501-7515 (CAA §§ 171-193) and the changes do not exceed the emissions allowable under the permit, whether expressed therein as a rate of emissions or in the terms of total emissions, and provided that notice is provided to the Office of Air Resources as set forth below:
- 1. For each such change, the stationary source shall provide the Office of Air Resources and EPA with a minimum of fourteen (14) days written notification in advance of the proposed changes. The notice must be received by the Office of Air Resources no later than fourteen (14) days in advance of the proposed changes. The stationary source, the Office of Air Resources and the EPA shall attach each such notice to their copy of the relevant permit.
- 2. For each such change, the written notification required above shall include information describing the nature of the change, the effect of the change on the emission of any air contaminant, the scheduled completion date of the planned change and any permit term or condition that is no longer applicable as a result of the change.
- B. A stationary source shall be allowed to make such change proposed in its notice the day following the last day of the advance notice described in § 29.15.1 of this Part if the Office of Air Resources has not responded nor objected to the proposed change on or before that day.
- C. The permit shield shall not apply to any changes made pursuant to § 29.15.1 of this Part. If subsequent changes cause the stationary source's operations and emissions to revert to those anticipated in the operating permit, the permittee resumes compliance with the terms and conditions of the permit, and has provided the Office of Air Resources and EPA with a minimum of fourteen (14) days advance notice of such changes in accordance with the provisions of § 29.15.1(A)(1) of this Part the permit shield may be reinstated in accordance with terms and conditions stated in the operating permit.
D. Changes made pursuant to § 29.15.1 of this Part shall be incorporated into the operating permit at the time of renewal.
29.15.2 Off Permit Changes
- A. No permit revision shall be necessary for changes within a permitted facility, not otherwise addressed or prohibited in the permit. This provision shall not apply to modifications under any provision of 42 U.S.C. §§ 7401-7431 (CAA §§ 101-131), 42 U.S.C. §§ 7470-7492 (CAA §§ 160-169b), or 42 U.S.C. §§ 7501-7515 (CAA §§ 171-193) or if such changes are subject to requirements of 42 U.S.C. §§ 7651-7651o (CAA §§ 401-416). Changes made pursuant to § 29.15.2 of this Part shall not be exempt from the requirement to obtain a minor source permit pursuant to the requirements of Part 9 of this Subchapter (Air Pollution Control Permits).
- B. Each such change shall meet all applicable requirements and shall not violate any existing permit term or condition.
- C. The stationary source must provide concurrent written notice to the Office of Air Resources and the EPA of each such change, except for changes that have been determined to be insignificant by the Office of Air Resources pursuant to regulation. Such written notice shall describe each such change, including the date, and change in emissions, pollutants emitted, and any applicable requirement that would apply as a result of the change.
- D. The permit shield shall not apply to any such change made pursuant to § 29.15.2 of this Part.
- E. The stationary source shall keep a record describing changes made at the stationary source that result in emissions of a regulated air pollutant subject to an applicable requirement, but not otherwise regulated under the permit, and the emissions resulting from those changes, including any other data necessary to show compliance with applicable ambient air quality standards.
F. Changes made pursuant to § 29.15.2 of this Part shall be incorporated into the operating permit at the time of renewal.
29.15.3 Emission Trading Allowed Under the SIP
A. No permit revision shall be necessary for a permitted stationary source to trade increases and decreases in emissions in the permitted facility, where the RI State Implementation Plan provides for such trades without requiring a permit revision and based on the notice provided in § 29.15.3(A)(1) of this Part. This provision is available in those cases where the permit does not already provide for such emissions trading. Notice shall be provided to the Office of Air Resources as set forth below:
- 1. For each such change, the stationary source shall provide the Office of Air Resources and EPA with a minimum of twenty (20) days written notification in advance of the proposed trades. The notice must be received by the Office of Air Resources no later than twenty (20) days in advance of the proposed trades. The stationary source, the Office of Air Resources and the EPA shall attach each such notice to their copy of the relevant permit.
- 2. For each such trade, the written notification required in § 29.15.3(A)(1) of this Part shall include information as may be required by the provision in the RI State Implementation Plan authorizing the emissions trade, including at a minimum, when the proposed trade will occur, a description of each trade, any change in emissions that will result, the permit requirements with which the stationary source will comply using the emissions trading provision of the RI State Implementation Plan, and the pollutants emitted subject to the trade. The notice shall also refer to the provisions with which the stationary source will comply in the RI State Implementation Plan and that provide for the trade.
- B. A stationary source shall be allowed to make such trade proposed in its notice the day following the last day of the advance notice described in § 29.15.3 of this Part if the Office of Air Resources has not responded nor objected to the proposed trade on or before that day.
C. The permit shield shall not apply to any changes made pursuant to § 29.15.3 of this Part. If subsequent changes cause the stationary source's operations and emissions to revert to those anticipated in the operating permit, the permittee resumes compliance with the terms and conditions of the permit, and has provided the Office of Air Resources and EPA with a minimum of twenty (20) days advance notice of such changes in accordance with the provisions of § 29.15.3(A)(1) of this Part the permit shield may be reinstated in accordance with terms and conditions stated in the operating permit.
29.15.4 Emission Trading Under an Emissions Cap
A. No permit revision shall be necessary for the trading of emissions increases and decreases in a permitted facility solely for the purpose of complying with a federally enforceable emissions cap that is established in the permit independent of otherwise applicable requirements consistent with § 29.10.6(F)(1)(c) of this Part. Notice shall be provided to the Office of Air Resources as set forth below:
- 1. For each such change, the stationary source shall provide the Office of Air Resources and EPA with a minimum of twenty (20) days written notification in advance of the proposed trades. The notice must be received by the Office of Air Resources no later than twenty (20) days in advance of the proposed trades. The stationary source, the Office of Air Resources and the EPA shall attach each such notice to their copy of the relevant permit.
- 2. For each such trade, the written notification required above shall state when the change will occur and shall describe the changes in emissions that will result and how these increases and decreases in emissions will comply with the terms and conditions of the permit.
- B. A stationary source shall be allowed to make such trade proposed in its notice the day following the last day of the advance notice described in § 29.15.4 of this Part if the Office of Air Resources has not responded nor objected to the proposed trade on or before that day.
- C. The permit shield shall not apply to any changes made pursuant to § 29.15.4 of this Part.
- D. Prior to the issuance of a stationary source's initial operating permit, the stationary source can make any modifications and commence operation immediately after obtaining all preconstruction permits required pursuant to Part 9 of this Subchapter (Air Pollution Control Permits).