[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 40, Volume 21]

[Revised as of July 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 40CFR122.45]



[Page 223-225]

 

                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT

 

         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)

 

PART 122_EPA ADMINISTERED PERMIT PROGRAMS: THE NATIONAL POLLUTANT 

DISCHARGE ELIMINATION SYSTEM--Table of Contents

 

                       Subpart C_Permit Conditions

 

Sec.  122.45  Calculating NPDES permit conditions (applicable to State 

NPDES programs, see Sec.  123.25).



    (a) Outfalls and discharge points. All permit effluent limitations, 

standards and prohibitions shall be established for each outfall or 

discharge point of the permitted facility, except as otherwise provided 

under Sec.  122.44(k) (BMPs where limitations are infeasible) and 

paragraph (i) of this section (limitations on internal waste streams).

    (b) Production-based limitations. (1) In the case of POTWs, permit 

effluent limitations, standards, or prohibitions shall be calculated 

based on design flow.

    (2)(i) Except in the case of POTWs or as provided in paragraph 

(b)(2)(ii) of this section, calculation of any permit limitations, 

standards, or prohibitions which are based on production (or other 

measure of operation) shall be based not upon the designed production 

capacity but rather upon a reasonable measure of actual production of 

the facility. For new sources or new dischargers, actual production 

shall be estimated using projected production.



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The time period of the measure of production shall correspond to the 

time period of the calculated permit limitations; for example, monthly 

production shall be used to calculate average monthly discharge 

limitations.

    (ii)(A)(1) The Director may include a condition establishing 

alternate permit limitations, standards, or prohibitions based upon 

anticipated increased (not to exceed maximum production capability) or 

decreased production levels.

    (2) For the automotive manufacturing industry only, the Regional 

Administrator shall, and the State Director may establish a condition 

under paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A)(1) of this section if the applicant 

satisfactorily demonstrates to the Director at the time the application 

is submitted that its actual production, as indicated in paragraph 

(b)(2)(i) of this section, is substantially below maximum production 

capability and that there is a reasonable potential for an increase 

above actual production during the duration of the permit.

    (B) If the Director establishes permit conditions under paragraph 

(b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section:

    (1) The permit shall require the permittee to notify the Director at 

least two business days prior to a month in which the permittee expects 

to operate at a level higher than the lowest production level identified 

in the permit. The notice shall specify the anticipated level and the 

period during which the permittee expects to operate at the alternate 

level. If the notice covers more than one month, the notice shall 

specify the reasons for the anticipated production level increase. New 

notice of discharge at alternate levels is required to cover a period or 

production level not covered by prior notice or, if during two 

consecutive months otherwise covered by a notice, the production level 

at the permitted facility does not in fact meet the higher level 

designated in the notice.

    (2) The permittee shall comply with the limitations, standards, or 

prohibitions that correspond to the lowest level of production specified 

in the permit, unless the permittee has notified the Director under 

paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(B)(1) of this section, in which case the permittee 

shall comply with the lower of the actual level of production during 

each month or the level specified in the notice.

    (3) The permittee shall submit with the DMR the level of production 

that actually occurred during each month and the limitations, standards, 

or prohibitions applicable to that level of production.

    (c) Metals. All permit effluent limitations, standards, or 

prohibitions for a metal shall be expressed in terms of ``total 

recoverable metal'' as defined in 40 CFR part 136 unless:

    (1) An applicable effluent standard or limitation has been 

promulgated under the CWA and specifies the limitation for the metal in 

the dissolved or valent or total form; or

    (2) In establishing permit limitations on a case-by-case basis under 

Sec.  125.3, it is necessary to express the limitation on the metal in 

the dissolved or valent or total form to carry out the provisions of the 

CWA; or

    (3) All approved analytical methods for the metal inherently measure 

only its dissolved form (e.g., hexavalent chromium).

    (d) Continuous discharges. For continuous discharges all permit 

effluent limitations, standards, and prohibitions, including those 

necessary to achieve water quality standards, shall unless impracticable 

be stated as:

    (1) Maximum daily and average monthly discharge limitations for all 

dischargers other than publicly owned treatment works; and

    (2) Average weekly and average monthly discharge limitations for 

POTWs.

    (e) Non-continuous discharges. Discharges which are not continuous, 

as defined in Sec.  122.2, shall be particularly described and limited, 

considering the following factors, as appropriate:

    (1) Frequency (for example, a batch discharge shall not occur more 

than once every 3 weeks);

    (2) Total mass (for example, not to exceed 100 kilograms of zinc and 

200 kilograms of chromium per batch discharge);

    (3) Maximum rate of discharge of pollutants during the discharge 

(for example, not to exceed 2 kilograms of zinc per minute); and



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    (4) Prohibition or limitation of specified pollutants by mass, 

concentration, or other appropriate measure (for example, shall not 

contain at any time more than 0.1 mg/1 zinc or more than 250 grams (\1/

4\ kilogram) of zinc in any discharge).

    (f) Mass limitations. (1) All pollutants limited in permits shall 

have limitations, standards or prohibitions expressed in terms of mass 

except:

    (i) For pH, temperature, radiation, or other pollutants which cannot 

appropriately be expressed by mass;

    (ii) When applicable standards and limitations are expressed in 

terms of other units of measurement; or

    (iii) If in establishing permit limitations on a case-by-case basis 

under Sec.  125.3, limitations expressed in terms of mass are infeasible 

because the mass of the pollutant discharged cannot be related to a 

measure of operation (for example, discharges of TSS from certain mining 

operations), and permit conditions ensure that dilution will not be used 

as a substitute for treatment.

    (2) Pollutants limited in terms of mass additionally may be limited 

in terms of other units of measurement, and the permit shall require the 

permittee to comply with both limitations.

    (g) Pollutants in intake water. (1) Upon request of the discharger, 

technology-based effluent limitations or standards shall be adjusted to 

reflect credit for pollutants in the discharger's intake water if:

    (i) The applicable effluent limitations and standards contained in 

40 CFR subchapter N specifically provide that they shall be applied on a 

net basis; or

    (ii) The discharger demonstrates that the control system it proposes 

or uses to meet applicable technology-based limitations and standards 

would, if properly installed and operated, meet the limitations and 

standards in the absence of pollutants in the intake waters.

    (2) Credit for generic pollutants such as biochemical oxygen demand 

(BOD) or total suspended solids (TSS) should not be granted unless the 

permittee demonstrates that the constituents of the generic measure in 

the effluent are substantially similar to the constituents of the 

generic measure in the intake water or unless appropriate additional 

limits are placed on process water pollutants either at the outfall or 

elsewhere.

    (3) Credit shall be granted only to the extent necessary to meet the 

applicable limitation or standard, up to a maximum value equal to the 

influent value. Additional monitoring may be necessary to determine 

eligibility for credits and compliance with permit limits.

    (4) Credit shall be granted only if the discharger demonstrates that 

the intake water is drawn from the same body of water into which the 

discharge is made. The Director may waive this requirement if he finds 

that no environmental degradation will result.

    (5) This section does not apply to the discharge of raw water 

clarifier sludge generated from the treatment of intake water.

    (h) Internal waste streams. (1) When permit effluent limitations or 

standards imposed at the point of discharge are impractical or 

infeasible, effluent limitations or standards for discharges of 

pollutants may be imposed on internal waste streams before mixing with 

other waste streams or cooling water streams. In those instances, the 

monitoring required by Sec.  122.48 shall also be applied to the 

internal waste streams.

    (2) Limits on internal waste streams will be imposed only when the 

fact sheet under Sec.  124.56 sets forth the exceptional circumstances 

which make such limitations necessary, such as when the final discharge 

point is inaccessible (for example, under 10 meters of water), the 

wastes at the point of discharge are so diluted as to make monitoring 

impracticable, or the interferences among pollutants at the point of 

discharge would make detection or analysis impracticable.

    (i) Disposal of pollutants into wells, into POTWs or by land 

application. Permit limitations and standards shall be calculated as 

provided in Sec.  122.50.



[48 FR 14153, Apr. 1, 1983, as amended at 49 FR 38049, Sept. 26, 1984; 

50 FR 4514, Jan. 31, 1985; 54 FR 258, Jan. 4, 1989; 54 FR 18784, May 2, 

1989; 65 FR 30909, May 15, 2000]



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