Green on the Hill
Environmentalists contest EPA exemption
for manufacturing recycling of byproducts
By Stephen Barlas,
Contributing Writer
Apreliminary decision by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) not to define nonhazardous secondary materials (byproducts, if
you will) recycled by manufacturers for
heat recovery as solid waste has set
off a brouhaha. Environmental groups
are complaining that the proposed rule
that the EPA issued in June would allow
manufacturing and industrial facilities
to recycle spent solvents, fuels, scrap
plastics, shredded tires, used oil, and
industrial sledges in boilers or process
heaters for the purpose of heat recovery
and not have to comply with Clean Air
Act emission restrictions.
The latter part of that proposal is the
problem, from the standpoint of groups
such as the Natural Resources Defense
Council and Sierra Club. If those same
secondary materials were simply being disposed of in a boiler—absent
recycling—emissions restrictions would
come into play.
A final EPA rule in 2000 established
emission controls for the category of
Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste
Incinerators (CISWI Rule). The Sierra
Club challenged the rule in 2001 in
court, but only as it pertained to cement
kilns. But that kicked off a decadelong
legal and regulatory process around
the issue of solid waste recycling, which
resulted in the proposed rule that came
out on June 4 and set off a firestorm.
Energy Department Establishing
Rules for Federal Green Buildings
The Department of Energy (DOE) has
issued a proposed rule dealing with the
use of sustainable design principles for
siting, design, and construction of new
and existing federal buildings. It also
establishes regulations that require
water conservation technologies and
solar hot water heaters in federal buildings to the extent that they are “life-cycle
cost-effective.” It also provides criteria
for identifying a certification system and
level for green buildings.
Again, this proposal applies only to
federal buildings. But as is often the
case, federal green standards find their
way into local and state building codes,
and sometimes end up applying to private buildings and facilities.
The four prongs of this federal green
buildings proposal are sustainable design, water conservation, solar heating,
and green certification.
As an example, the proposed rule
would require federal agencies to apply
sustainable design principles to the
The Sierra Club
challenged the rule in
2001 in court … which
resulted in the proposed
rule that came out on
June 4 and set off a
firestorm.
extent that it is practicable. This is defined further—when designing new federal buildings and major renovations,
the phrase “to the extent practicable”
means that actions would need to be
implemented unless an agency determines any of the following: full implementation would prevent the building or
facility from fulfilling a key design or function objective; the necessary products
or materials could not be commercially
procured in a timely fashion; the net increases in total project life cycle costs
would be very large; or if initial funding
required to integrate features to comply
with this rule exceeded 3 percent of
total first costs.
EPA Wants Employees Involved
in RMP Inspections
The EPA published interim guidance—
which will be finalized by the end of the
year—on how agency inspectors should
enlist the assistance of company employees when an EPA inspector arrives
at a company’s front door to check the
facility’s risk management plan (RMP).
Companies that produce, handle,
process, distribute, or store certain
chemicals over certain threshold levels
must produce RMPs that describe how
the company would handle an emergency when a chemical is accidentally
released into the water or air in its neighborhood. Those plans must be updated
every five years.
To the extent that a facility handles
more than one chemical on the list, it