[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 18]
[Revised as of July 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR130.32]

[Page 363-366]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 130--WATER QUALITY PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT--Table of Contents
 
   Subpart C--Identifying Impaired Waterbodies And Establishing Total 
                       Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs)
 
Sec. 130.32  What are the minimum elements of a TMDL submitted to EPA?

    (a) A TMDL is a written, quantitative plan and analysis for 
attaining and maintaining water quality standards in all seasons for a 
specific waterbody and pollutant. TMDLs may be established on a 
coordinated basis for a group of waterbodies in a watershed. A TMDL 
provides the opportunity to compare relative contributions of pollutants 
from all sources and consider technical and economic trade-offs between 
point and nonpoint sources.
    (b) You must include the following minimum elements in any TMDL 
submitted to EPA:
    (1) The name and geographic location, as required by 
Sec. 130.27(b)(3), of the impaired waterbody for which the TMDL is being 
established and, to the extent known, the names and geographic locations 
of the waterbodies upstream of the impaired waterbody that contribute 
significant amounts of the pollutant for which the TMDL is being 
established;
    (2) Identification of the pollutant and the applicable water quality 
standard for which the TMDL is being established;
    (3) Quantification of the pollutant load that may be present in the 
waterbody and still ensure attainment and maintenance of water quality 
standards;
    (4) Quantification of the amount or degree by which the current 
pollutant load in the waterbody, including the pollutant load from 
upstream sources that is being accounted for as background loading, 
deviates from the pollutant load needed to attain and maintain water 
quality standards;
    (5) Identification of source categories, source subcategories, or 
individual sources of the pollutant consistent with the definitions of 
load and wasteload allocation in Secs. 130.2(f) and (g), respectively, 
for which the wasteload allocations and load allocations are being 
established;
    (6) Wasteload allocations assigned to point sources permitted under 
section 402 of the Clean Water Act discharging the pollutant for which 
the TMDL is being established that will, when implemented in conjunction 
with assigned load allocations, if any, result in the attainment and 
maintenance of water quality standards in the waterbody. Wasteload 
allocations that reflect pollutant load reductions for point sources 
needed to ensure that the waterbody attains and maintains water quality 
standards must be expressed as individual wasteload allocations for each 
source. Wasteload allocations that do not reflect pollutant load 
reductions from point sources needed for the waterbody to attain and 
maintain water quality standards may be expressed as an individual 
wasteload allocation for a source or may be included within a wasteload 
allocation for a category or subcategory of sources. Wasteload 
allocations for sources subject to a specified general permit, 
regardless of whether they reflect pollutant reductions, may be allotted 
to categories of sources. You should submit supporting technical 
analyses demonstrating that wasteload allocations, when implemented in 
conjunction with necessary load allocations, will result in the 
attainment and maintenance of

[[Page 364]]

the water quality standard(s) applicable to the pollutant for which the 
TMDL is being established;
    (7) Load allocations, ranging from reasonably accurate estimates to 
gross allotments, for nonpoint sources of a pollutant, storm water 
sources for which an NPDES permit is not required, atmospheric 
deposition, ground water or background sources of a pollutant that, when 
implemented in conjunction with assigned wasteload allocations, if any, 
result in the attainment and maintenance of water quality standards in 
the waterbody. If feasible, a separate load allocation must be allocated 
to each source of a pollutant. Where this is not feasible, load 
allocations may be allocated to categories or subcategories of sources. 
Pollutant loads from sources that do not need to be reduced for the 
waterbody to attain and maintain water quality standards may be included 
within a category of sources or subcategory of sources. You should 
submit supporting technical analyses demonstrating that load 
allocations, when implemented in conjunction with necessary wasteload 
allocations, will result in the attainment and maintenance of water 
quality standards applicable to the pollutant for which the TMDL is 
being established;
    (8) A margin of safety that appropriately accounts for uncertainty 
related to the TMDL, including uncertainties associated with pollutant 
loads, modeling water quality, and monitoring water quality. A margin of 
safety may be expressed as unallocated assimilative capacity or 
conservative analytical assumptions used in establishing the TMDL;
    (9) Consideration of seasonal variations, stream water flow levels, 
and other environmental factors that affect the relationship between 
pollutant loadings and water quality impacts, such that the allocations 
will result in attainment and maintenance of water quality standards in 
all seasons of the year and during all flow conditions;
    (10) Allowance for reasonably foreseeable increases in pollutant 
loads including future growth; and
    (11) An implementation plan which meets the requirements of 
paragraph (c) of this section.
    (c) The purpose of the implementation plan is to provide a 
description, in a level of detail appropriate to the circumstances, of 
actions necessary to implement the TMDL so that the waterbody attains 
and maintains water quality standards. EPA does not expect the 
implementation plan to be a complex, lengthy document.
    (1) For waterbodies impaired only by point sources for which NPDES 
permits will implement the TMDL, an implementation plan must include:
    (i) An identification of the wasteload allocation(s) that the 
effluent limitation(s) must be consistent with pursuant to 
Sec. 122.44(d)(1)(vii)(B) in the NPDES permit(s) that will be issued, 
reissued, or revised. In all instances, the NPDES permit effluent 
limitation(s) must be consistent with the applicable wasteload 
allocation(s). You must identify:
    (A) The point sources that are or will be regulated by individual 
permits and the categories or subcategories of point sources that are or 
will be regulated by general permits that will be subject to such 
effluent limitations.
    (B) The permit, if you intend to implement the wasteload allocation 
by requiring a point source to apply for coverage under an existing 
NPDES general permit.
    (C) The elements of the general permit necessary to ensure 
implementation of the wasteload allocation, if you intend for a point 
source to be regulated by a new general permit.
    (ii) A schedule for issuing, reissuing or revising the NPDES 
permit(s) as expeditiously as practicable to include effluent limits 
consistent with the wasteload allocation(s) in the TMDL. EPA must:
    (A) Reissue or revise the permit(s) within two years after the 
establishment of the TMDL where EPA is the NPDES permitting authority.
    (B) Notify the NPDES Director of EPA's intent to object to the 
permit pursuant to the provisions of Sec. 123.44(k) within one year 
after expiration of the permit term, or where the permit term expired 
prior to the establishment of the TMDL, within one year from 
establishment of the TMDL where the State is the NPDES permitting 
authority, and the permit term has expired.

[[Page 365]]

    (C) Issue an NPDES permit that incorporates effluent limitations 
based on wasteload allocation(s) in the TMDL within one year thereafter 
where the State has not done so. Nothing in this paragraph (c)(1)(ii) 
limits EPA's authority to reissue a permit after the expiration of the 
two-year time frame set forth in this paragraph (c)(1)(ii), or invoke 
the mechanism described in Sec. 123.44(k) after the expiration of either 
of the one-year time frames set forth in this paragraph (c)(1)(ii).
    (iii) The date by which the implementation plan will result in the 
waterbody attaining and maintaining applicable water quality standards 
and the basis for that determination;
    (iv) A monitoring and/or modeling plan designed to measure the 
effectiveness of the controls implementing the wasteload allocations and 
the progress the waterbody is making toward attaining water quality 
standards; and
    (v) The criteria you will use to determine that substantial progress 
toward attaining water quality standards is being made and if not, the 
criteria for determining whether the TMDL needs to be revised.
    (2) For waterbodies impaired only by nonpoint source(s), storm water 
sources for which an NPDES permit is not required, atmospheric 
deposition, ground water or background sources of a pollutant where no 
NPDES permit will implement the TMDL, the implementation plan must 
include:
    (i) An identification of the source categories, source 
subcategories, or individual sources of the pollutant which must be 
controlled to implement the load allocations;
    (ii) A description of specific regulatory or voluntary actions, 
including management measures or other controls, by Federal, State or 
local governments, authorized Tribes, or individuals that provide 
reasonable assurance, consistent with Sec. 130.2(p), that load 
allocations will be implemented and achieve the assigned load 
reductions. Your selection of management measures for achieving the load 
allocation may recognize both the natural variability and the difficulty 
in precisely predicting the performance of management measures over 
time;
    (iii) A schedule, which is as expeditious as practicable, for 
implementing the management measures or other control actions to achieve 
load allocations in the TMDL within 5 years, when implementation within 
this period is practicable;
    (iv) The date by which the implementation plan will result in the 
waterbody attaining and maintaining applicable water quality standards, 
and the basis for that determination;
    (v) A description of interim, measurable milestones for determining 
whether management measures or other control actions are being 
implemented;
    (vi) A monitoring and/or modeling plan designed to measure the 
effectiveness of the management measures or other controls implementing 
the load allocations and the progress the waterbody is making toward 
attaining water quality standards, and a process for implementing 
stronger and more effective management measures if necessary; and
    (vii) The criteria you will use to determine that substantial 
progress toward attaining water quality standards is being made and if 
not, the criteria for determining whether the TMDL needs to be revised.
    (3) For waterbodies impaired by both point sources and nonpoint 
sources where NPDES permits and management measures or other control 
actions for nonpoint or other sources will implement the TMDL, the 
implementation plan must include:
    (i) The elements of paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section; and
    (ii) A description of the extent to which wasteload allocations 
reflect expected achievement of load allocations requiring reductions in 
loadings.
    (4) For all impaired waterbodies, the implementation plan must be 
based on a goal of attaining and maintaining the applicable water 
quality standards within ten years whenever attainment and maintenance 
within this period is practicable.
    (d) TMDTLs must meet all the requirements of paragraphs (b) and (c) 
of this section, except that, rather than estimating a TMDTL at a level 
necessary to attain and maintain water quality standards, you must 
estimate the TMDTL as required by statute at a

[[Page 366]]

level necessary to ensure protection and propagation of a balanced 
indigenous population of shellfish, fish, and wildlife, taking into 
account the normal water temperatures, flow rates, seasonal variations, 
existing sources of heat input, and dissipative capacity of the 
waterbody for which the TMDTL is being established. Estimates for those 
waterbodies must include a calculation of the maximum heat input and a 
margin of safety that takes into account any lack of knowledge 
concerning the development of thermal water quality criteria.
    (e) A TMDL must not be likely to jeopardize the continued existence 
of an endangered or threatened species listed under section 4 of the 
Endangered Species Act or result in the destruction or adverse 
modification of its designated critical habitat.