-New Source Performance Standard	
 Ammonium Sulfate Manufacturing Plant
 Public
 Participation
                   The   promulgated
                   standards   reflect
                   written comments the
                   Agency received from
                   the general public,  as
                   well as comments from
                   ammonium   sulfate
                   manufacturers   and
	 State air pollution con-
trol agencies.  The Background Information
Document for the promulgated standards may
be obtained from the EPA Library (MD-35),
Research Triangle  Park,  North Carolina
27711, telephone (919) 541-2777. Interested
persons should request "Ammonium Sulfate
Manufacture—Background Information for
Promulgated Emission Standards," report
number EPA-450/3-79-034b.

For further information  on the standards,
contact Gene W. Smith, Standards Develop-
ment Branch, Emission Standards and Engi-
neering Division (MD-13), U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park,
North Carolina 27711, telephone  number
(919) 541-5421.

The final NSPS for ammonium sulfate manu-
facturing plants were published in  the No-
vember 12, 1980 issue of the Federal Register
(45FR74846).
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                         United States
                         Environmental Protection
                         Agency
                               Office of Air Quality
                               Planning and Standards
                               Research Triangle Park, NC 27711
                 November 1980
                         New Source Performance Standards
 &EPA
      Ammonium Sulfate
      Manufacturing Plants
                         Final Regulation

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-New Source Performance Standards —
 Ammonium Sulfate Manufacturing Plants
 Regulatory
 Authority
 Emission
 Limits
 Affected
 Sources
The Clean Air Act, as amended in 1977, calls
for a  comprehensive national program to
reduce air pollution and improve air quality.
The Act requires the U.S.  Environmental
Protection Agency to establish nationwide
emission standards to prevent air pollution
problems from  selected  new stationary
industrial sources.  These New Source Per-
formance Standards  (NSPS),  in accordance

                     The NSPS for ammo-
                     nium sulfate  manufac-
                     turing plants are de-
                     signed to reduce emis-
                     sions of particulate
                     matter.   Particulate
                     matter usually consists
                     of dust, soot, ash, and
                     other inorganic impuri-
ties which become suspended in the air.  In
addition to contributing to health problems,
these particulates  may corrode metals and
other materials, and damage buildings, sta-
tues, and man-made monuments. Particulate
matter is a major or "criteria" pollutant
subject to Federal control under the Clean Air

NSPS  for ammonium sulfate manufacturing
plants were proposed on February 4, 1980,
following  EPA's determination that  this
industrial source category is a contributor to
air pollution that adversely affects human
health and the environment. All ammonium
sulfate dryers for which  construction began
on or after this date are subject to the stand-
ards.

Ammonium  sulfate,  used  primarily as a
fertilizer, is produced synthetically by direct-
ly combining ammonia and sulfuric acid.
Ammonium  sulfate also originates as  a by-
product  from  streams  generated  during
caprolactum manufacturing.  In addition,
ammonia recovered from coke oven off-gas is
reacted with sulfuric acid to produce ammo-
nium sulfate.

The NSPS cover dryers  used  in synthetic,
caprolactum by-product, and  coke  oven
by-product plants.  These three manufactur-
ing categories account for over 90 percent of
                                            with Section 111 of the Clean Air Act, apply
                                            to categories of  new,  modified, or recon-
                                            structed stationary sources causing or con-
                                            tributing to pollution  that could threaten
                                            public health or welfare. EPA recently pub-
                                            lished  final NSPS for  ammonium sulfate
                                            manufacturing plants;  these new NSPS are
                                            discussed below.
                                             Act Amendments.

                                             Nearly all particulate matter emitted during
                                             ammonium sulfate manufacture is found in
                                             gaseous exhaust streams from process dryers.
                                             Other plant processes (such as crystallization,
                                             dewatering, screening, and material handling)
                                             were not found to be significant emission
                                             sources, and thus are not subject to the NSPS.

                                             These standards will limit exhaust emissions
                                             from process dryers to 0.15 kilogram of
                                             particulate matter per megagram of ammoni-
                                             um sulfate produced (0.30 Ib/ton). In addi-
                                             tion, visible  emissions from dryers will be
                                             limited to 15 percent opacity.

                                                                  total ammonium sul-
                                                                  fate production in the
                                                                  United States. There
                                                                  are other types of
                                                                  ammonium   sulfate
                                                                  manufacture, but EPA
                                                                  has concluded that the
                                                                  most significant poten-
                                                                  tial for emission reduc-
                                             tion exists within these three sectors of the
                                             industry.

                                             The NSPS for ammonium sulfate manufactur-
                                             ing plants cover only new process dryers, or
                                             existing ones that are modified or reconstruc-
                                             ted. Certain physical or operational changes
                                             resulting in  increased  emission  rates are
                                             considered modifications.  If the cost  of
                                             component replacement in an existing source
                                             is more than 50 percent of the cost to con-
                                             struct a new source, and it is technically and
                                             economically feasible for the source to meet
                                             the standards, that replacement is considered
                                             a reconstruction.
 Control
 Options
 Impacts
                      The NSPS for ammoni-
                      um sulfate dryers  re-
                      flect the degree of emis-
                      sion control that can
                      be obtained by using
                      the best technological
                      system of continuous
                      emission reduction. In
                      determining the most
 effective controls for the ammonium sulfate
 manufacturing  industry, EPA considered
 economic impacts, as well as health, energy,
 and environmental factors unrelated to air
 quality. The degree of emission reduction the
 standards would require is based on the use of
 a medium-energy wet scrubber system as  a
 pollution control method.

 A medium-energy wet scrubber system is con-
 sidered compatible with, and complementary
 to, operation processes of ammonium sulfate
 dryers, and  therefore is considered most
 suitable for application to these dryers.  Wet
 scrubbers use a spray of water to capture

Environmental:   If controlled only to the
extent required by a typical existing State air
pollution regulation,  particulate  emissions
from  ammonium sulfate dryers could  be
expected to reach 737 tons per year by 1985.
Compliance with the promulgated standards is
expected to lower projected 1985  particulate
emission levels to 144 tons per year—an 80
percent reduction from the level a typical
State  regulation would allow.

No adverse water or solid waste impacts are
expected to result from compliance with the
standards, since the scrubbing liquids will be
recirculated to  the  production  process.

Energy:  Compliance with the standards will
not significantly increase energy consumption
at ammonium sulfate plants.   Additional
energy needed  to operate the  pollution
control devices  is 0.10 percent of the total
energy used for a synthetic or coke oven
by-product ammonium sulfate plant, and 0.65
percent of the total energy used for a capro-
                                             particulate matter from the dryers' exhaust
                                             gas stream.  The scrubber liquid containing
                                             the particulates is then recirculated to the
                                             ammonium sulfate  production  process.

                                             To ensure proper operation and maintenance
                                             of control equipment, the owner or operator
                                             of an affected ammonium sulfate dryer will
                                             be required to install a monitoring device that
                                             continuously  measures and  records  the
                                             pressure drops across the emission control
                                             system.  The  owner or operator must also
                                             install flow monitoring devices necessary for
                                             determining the  mass  flow of  ammonium
                                             sulfate feed material to the process, unless
                                             weigh scales are provided.

                                             EPA  Method 5 will be used to determine com-
                                             pliance with the standards.  The promulgated
                                             standards also require  that  a  15-percent
                                             opacity level  be maintained;  the opacity of
                                             particulate emissions from dryers will be
                                             measured by using EPA Method 9.
                                                                 lactum by-product am-
                                                                 monium sulfate plant.

                                                                 Economic/Industrial:
                                                                 Costs of compliance
                                                                 with the NSPS are not
                                                                 expected to  restrict
                                                                 growth of the ammoni-
                                                                 um sulfate industry.
                                            It is estimated that by 1985, the standards
                                            will affect dryers at  six caprolactum by-
                                            product plants, two synthetic plants, and four
                                            coke oven by-product plants.

                                            Compliance with the  standards should result
                                            in capital  costs to the industry of about
                                            $1.0 million by 1985.  Industry-wide, total
                                            annualized costs of controls to meet the
                                            standards are expected to  be $500,000 per
                                            year by 1985.  The wholesale price of ammo-
                                            nium sulfate fertilizer is estimated to increase
                                            no more than 0.01 percent as a result of the
                                            NSPS.

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