[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 29]
[Revised as of July 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR430.01]

[Page 104-107]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 430_THE PULP, PAPER, AND PAPERBOARD POINT SOURCE CATEGORY
--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 430.01  General definitions.

    In addition to the definitions set forth in 40 CFR part 401 and 40 
CFR 403.3, the following definitions apply to this part:
    (a) Adsorbable organic halides (AOX). A bulk parameter that measures 
the total mass of chlorinated organic matter in water and wastewater.
    (b) Annual average. The mean concentration, mass loading or 
production-normalized mass loading of a pollutant over a period of 365 
consecutive days (or such other period of time determined by the 
permitting authority to be sufficiently long to encompass expected 
variability of the concentration, mass loading, or production-normalized 
mass loading at the relevant point of measurement).
    (c) Bleach plant. All process equipment used for bleaching beginning 
with the first application of bleaching agents (e.g., chlorine, chlorine 
dioxide, ozone, sodium or calcium hypochlorite, or peroxide), each 
subsequent extraction stage, and each subsequent stage where bleaching 
agents are applied to the pulp. For mills in subpart E of this part 
producing specialty grades of pulp, the bleach plant includes process 
equipment used for the hydrolysis or extraction stages prior to the 
first application of bleaching agents. Process equipment used for oxygen 
delignification prior to the application of bleaching agents is not part 
of the bleach plant.
    (d) Bleach plant effluent. The total discharge of process 
wastewaters from the bleach plant from each physical bleach line 
operated at the mill, comprising separate acid and alkaline filtrates or 
the combination thereof.
    (e) Chemical oxygen demand (COD). A bulk parameter that measures the 
oxygen-consuming capacity of organic and inorganic matter present in 
water or wastewater. It is expressed as the amount of oxygen consumed 
from a chemical oxidant in a specific test.
    (f) Elemental chlorine-free (ECF). Any process for bleaching pulps 
in the absence of elemental chlorine and hypochlorite that uses 
exclusively chlorine dioxide as the only chlorine-containing bleaching 
agent.
    (g) End of the pipe. The point at which final mill effluent is 
discharged to waters of the United States or introduced to a POTW.
    (h) Fiber line. A series of operations employed to convert wood or 
other fibrous raw material into pulp. If the final product is bleached 
pulp, the fiber line encompasses pulping, de-knotting, brownstock 
washing, pulp screening, centrifugal cleaning, and multiple bleaching 
and washing stages.
    (i) Minimum level (ML). The level at which the analytical system 
gives recognizable signals and an acceptable

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calibration point. The following minimum levels apply to pollutants in 
this part:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Pollutant                Method          Minimum level
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2,3,7,8-TCDD......................        1613  10 pg/L \a\
2,3,7,8-TCDF......................        1613  10 pg/L \a\
Trichlorosyringol.................        1653  2.5 ug/L \b\
3,4,5-Trichlorocatechol...........        1653  5.0 ug/L \b\
3,4,6-Trichlorocatechol...........        1653  5.0 ug/L \b\
3,4,5-Trichloroguaiacol...........        1653  2.5 ug/L \b\
3,4,6-Trichloroguaiacol...........        1653  2.5 ug/L \b\
4,5,6-Trichloroguaiacol...........        1653  2.5 ug/L \b\
2,4,5-Trichlorophenol.............        1653  2.5 ug/L \b\
2,4,6-Trichlorophenol.............        1653  2.5 ug/L \b\
Tetrachlorocatechol...............        1653  5.0 ug/L \b\
Tetrachloroguaiacol...............        1653  5.0 ug/L \b\
2,3,4,6-Tetrachlorophenol.........        1653  2.5 ug/L \b\
Pentachlorophenol.................        1653  5.0 ug/L \b\
AOX...............................        1650  20 ug/L \b\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Picograms per liter.
\b\ Micrograms per liter.

    (j) New source. (1) Notwithstanding the criteria codified at 40 CFR 
122.29(b)(1), a source subject to subpart B or E of this part is a ``new 
source'' if it meets the definition of ``new source'' at 40 CFR 122.2 
and:
    (i) It is constructed at a site at which no other source is located; 
or
    (ii) It totally replaces the process or production equipment that 
causes the discharge of pollutants at an existing source, including the 
total replacement of a fiber line that causes the discharge of 
pollutants at an existing source, except as provided in paragraph (j)(2) 
of this section; or
    (iii) Its processes are substantially independent of an existing 
source at the same site. In determining whether these processes are 
substantially independent, the Director shall consider such factors as 
the extent to which the new facility is integrated with the existing 
plant; and the extent to which the new facility is engaged in the same 
general type of activity as the existing source.
    (2) The following are examples of changes made by mills subject to 
subparts B or E of this part that alone do not cause an existing mill to 
become a ``new source'':
    (i) Upgrades of existing pulping operations;
    (ii) Upgrades or replacement of pulp screening and washing 
operations;
    (iii) Installation of extended cooking and/or oxygen delignification 
systems or other post-digester, pre-bleaching delignification systems;
    (iv) Bleach plant modifications including changes in methods or 
amounts of chemical applications, new chemical applications, 
installation of new bleaching towers to facilitate replacement of sodium 
or calcium hypochlorite, and installation of new pulp washing systems; 
or
    (v) Total replacement of process or production equipment that causes 
the discharge of pollutants at an existing source (including a 
replacement fiber line), but only if such replacement is performed for 
the purpose of achieving limitations that have been included in the 
discharger's NPDES permit pursuant to Sec. 430.24(b).
    (k) Non-continuous discharger. (1) Except as provided in paragraph 
(k)(2) of this section, a non-continuous discharger is a mill which is 
prohibited by the NPDES authority from discharging pollutants during 
specific periods of time for reasons other than treatment plant upset 
control, such periods being at least 24 hours in duration. A mill shall 
not be deemed a non-continuous discharger unless its permit, in addition 
to setting forth the prohibition described above, requires compliance 
with the effluent limitations established for non-continuous dischargers 
and also requires compliance with maximum day and average of 30 
consecutive days effluent limitations. Such maximum day and average of 
30

[[Page 106]]

consecutive days effluent limitations for non-continuous dischargers 
shall be established by the NPDES authority in the form of 
concentrations which reflect wastewater treatment levels that are 
representative of the application of the best practicable control 
technology currently available, the best conventional pollutant control 
technology, or new source performance standards in lieu of the maximum 
day and average of 30 consecutive days effluent limitations for 
conventional pollutants set forth in each subpart.
    (2) A mill is a non-continuous discharger for the purposes of 
determining applicable effluent limitations under subpart B or E of this 
part (other than conventional limits for existing sources) if, for 
reasons other than treatment plant upset control (e.g., protecting 
receiving water quality), the mill is prohibited by the NPDES authority 
from discharging pollutants during specific periods of time or if it is 
required to release its discharge on a variable flow or pollutant 
loading rate basis.
    (l) POTW. Publicly owned treatment works as defined at 40 CFR 
403.3(o).
    (m) Process wastewater. For subparts B and E only, process 
wastewater is any water that, during manufacturing or processing, comes 
into direct contact with or results from the production or use of any 
raw material, intermediate product, finished product, byproduct, or 
waste product. For purposes of subparts B and E of this part, process 
wastewater includes boiler blowdown; wastewaters from water treatment 
and other utility operations; blowdowns from high rate (e.g., greater 
than 98 percent) recycled non-contact cooling water systems to the 
extent they are mixed and co-treated with other process wastewaters; 
wastewater, including leachates, from landfills owned by pulp and paper 
mills subject to subpart B or E of this part if the wastewater is 
commingled with wastewater from the mill's manufacturing or processing 
facility; and storm waters from the immediate process areas to the 
extent they are mixed and co-treated with other process wastewaters. For 
purposes of this part, contaminated groundwaters from on-site or off-
site groundwater remediation projects are not process wastewater.
    (n) Production. (1) For all limitations and standards specified in 
this part except those pertaining to AOX and chloroform: Production 
shall be defined as the annual off-the-machine production (including 
off-the-machine coating where applicable) divided by the number of 
operating days during that year. Paper and paperboard production shall 
be measured at the off-the-machine moisture content, except for subpart 
C of this part (as it pertains to pulp and paperboard production at 
unbleached kraft mills including linerboard or bag paper and other mixed 
products, and to pulp and paperboard production using the unbleached 
kraft neutral sulfite semi-chemical (cross recovery) process), and 
subparts F and J of this part (as they pertain to paperboard production 
from wastepaper from noncorrugating medium furnish or from corrugating 
medium furnish) where paper and paperboard production shall be measured 
in air-dry-tons (10% moisture content). Market pulp shall be measured in 
air-dry tons (10% moisture). Production shall be determined for each 
mill based upon past production practices, present trends, or committed 
growth.
    (2) For AOX and chloroform limitations and standards specified in 
subparts B and E of this part: Production shall be defined as the annual 
unbleached pulp production entering the first stage of the bleach plant 
divided by the number of operating days during that year. Unbleached 
pulp production shall be measured in air-dried-metric-tons (10% 
moisture) of brownstock pulp entering the bleach plant at the stage 
during which chlorine or chlorine-containing compounds are first applied 
to the pulp. In the case of bleach plants that use totally chlorine free 
bleaching processes, unbleached pulp production shall be measured in 
air-dried-metric tons (10% moisture) of brownstock pulp entering the 
first stage of the bleach plant from which wastewater is discharged. 
Production shall be determined for each mill based upon past production 
practices, present trends, or committed growth.
    (o) TCDD. 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin.

[[Page 107]]

    (p) TCDF. 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzofuran.
    (q) Totally chlorine-free (TCF) bleaching. Pulp bleaching operations 
that are performed without the use of chlorine, sodium hypochlorite, 
calcium hypochlorite, chlorine dioxide, chlorine monoxide, or any other 
chlorine-containing compound.
    (r) Wet Barking. Wet barking operations shall be defined to include 
hydraulic barking operations and wet drum barking operations which are 
those drum barking operations that use substantial quantities of water 
in either water sprays in the barking drums or in a partial submersion 
of the drums in a ``tub'' of water.

[63 FR 18635, Apr. 15, 1998; 63 FR 42239, Aug. 7, 1998]