Fact Sheet - FinaS Changes for Certain EthanoS Production Facilities Under
Three Clean Air Act Permitting Programs

ACTION

•	On April 12, 2007, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) modified

the definition of "chemical process plants" as it applies to three Clean Air
Act permitting programs. These three programs are the:

1 .Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) permitting program -
a preconstruction permitting program for areas that meet national
air quality standards;

2.Nonattainment New Source Review (NSR) permitting program - a
preconstruction permitting program for areas not meeting national
air quality standards; and the
3.Operating Permits (Title V) program - which improves compliance
with emission requirements by requiring operating permits that
consolidate Clean Air Act requirements such as national
emissions standards for toxic air pollutants and standards of
performance.

•	Ethanol is produced at corn milling facilities for industrial use, use as fuel

or for human consumption. Before today's rule changes, corn milling
facilities that produced only ethanol for fuel use, were considered by EPA
to be a "chemical process plant" while facilities that produced only
ethanol for human consumption were not considered by EPA to be in
that category. Generally, a primary difference between production of
industrial or fuel ethanol and ethanol for human consumption is that a
small amount of gasoline or solvent is added to the fuel ethanol to make
it undrinkable and the process does not generally use food-grade
equipment. Otherwise, the processes are generally similar.

•	This final rule will provide equal treatment for corn milling facilities as well

as any facility that produces ethanol by processing carbohydrate
feedstock such as corn through a natural fermentation. This rule applies
to those facilities regardless of whether the ethanol produced is for
human consumption, for fuel, or for an industrial purpose.

•	EPA's air permitting programs rely upon emissions thresholds to

determine when program requirements will apply. If a facility has the
potential to emit target air pollutants in amounts equal to or greater than
the threshold, requirements to obtain permits that outline emissions
controls will apply. This final rule establishes the same emissions
thresholds for facilities that produce ethanol using corn or other
carbohydrate feedstocks - 250 tons per year for the PSD permitting


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program. The thresholds for the nonattainment NSR and Title V
programs will remain at current levels.

•	Under the final rule, permitted emissions limits and other requirements for

existing sources remain in effect and enforceable. These limits and
other requirements may only be modified through a permit revision
demonstrating that modifications meet all requirements that apply to the
facility and will not contribute to air quality that would violate the National
Ambient Air Quality Standards.

•	The final rule also will no longer require facilities that use carbohydrate

feedstocks in producing ethanol to count fugitive emissions of criteria
pollutants when determining if they meet or exceed the emissions
threshold for the title V operating permits, nonattainment NSR, or PSD
programs. Fugitive emissions are emissions that do not come from
process stacks or vents. This change may allow some plants to expand
production.

BACKGROUND

•	Congress established the PSD and major NSR programs as part of the

1977 Clean Air Act Amendments. PSD and major NSR are
preconstruction permitting programs that assure the goals of attaining
and maintaining air quality and providing for economic growth. These
goals are achieved through installation of state-of-the-art control
technology at new plants and at existing plants that undergo a major
modification.

•	Congress established the title V operating permits program as part of the

1990 Clean Air Act Amendments. Title V is intended to improve
compliance with emission requirements by requiring operating permits
that consolidate requirements, requiring annual certifications of
compliance, and in some cases creating additional monitoring
requirements.

•	Under the Clean Air Act, there are two potential thresholds for determining

whether a source is a major source under the PSD program - one
threshold is 100 tons per year and the other is 250 tons per year.

•	To determine which threshold is relevant for a particular facility under the

Clean Air Act permitting programs, EPA determines what source
category it belongs to and has used the Standard Industrial Classification
(SIC) manual as a guide to make such determinations. If the source falls
within one of 27 source categories listed in the PSD regulations, then the
100 tons per year threshold applies. Otherwise, the 250 tons per year
threshold is applicable.


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•	One of the source categories in this list of 27 source categories is

chemical process plants. The SIC code for chemical process plants
includes establishments primarily engaged in manufacturing ethanol
fuel. Where corn milling operations produce ethanol fuel, EPA has
historically determined that these operations fall within the source
category of chemical process plants. As a result, before today's rule,
EPA determined that the 100 tons per year threshold was applicable to
corn milling operations that produce fuel. The 250 tons per year
threshold was applied by EPA to corn milling operations that produced
only products for human consumption.

•	Before today's rule, as a chemical process plant, fuel and industrial

ethanol facilities were required to include fugitive emissions of criteria
pollutants in their emissions threshold totals for determining the
applicability of PSD, nonattainment NSR, and operating permit major
source thresholds. Today's rule eliminates that requirement for fuel and
industrial ethanol produced by processing carbohydrate feedstock
through a natural fermentation process.

•	The Clean Air Act requires EPA to set National Ambient Air Quality

Standards for six common air pollutants. These commonly found air
pollutants (also known as "criteria pollutants") are found all over the
United States. They are particle pollution (often referred to as particulate
matter), ground-level ozone, carbon monoxide, sulfur oxides, nitrogen
oxides, and lead. These pollutants can harm human health and the
environment, and cause property damage.

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

•	The final rule may be found at EPA's Web site at http://www.epa.gov/nsr.

•	Interested parties can download information on this final action from EPA's

Web site at: www.epa.gov/nsr.

•	Today's final rule and other background information are also available

either electronically at http://www.regulations.gov, EPA's electronic
public docket and comment system, or in hardcopy at the EPA Docket
Center's Public Reading Room.

•	The Public Reading Room is located in the EPA Headquarters Library,

Room Number 3334 in the EPA West Building, located at 1301
Constitution Ave., NW, Washington, DC. Hours of operation are 8:30
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. eastern standard time, Monday through Friday,
excluding Federal holidays.


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•	Visitors are required to show photographic identification, pass through a

metal detector, and sign the EPA visitor log. All visitor materials will be
processed through an X-ray machine as well. Visitors will be provided a
badge that must be visible at all times.

•	Materials for this action can be accessed using Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-

OAR-2006-0089.

•	For general information about this final rule, contact Joanna Swanson of

EPA's Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards at (919) 541-5282, or
swanson.ioanna@epa.gov


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