1 / 28

MPCA Nutrient Policy – Implementing river eutrophication standards

MPCA Nutrient Policy – Implementing river eutrophication standards. Dennis Wasley. Introduction. Instream standards for river discharges Limits for rivers may be equivalent to requirements for downstream lakes and reservoirs Steve W., Dennis W ., Marco G., others and TMDLs calculate

Download Presentation

MPCA Nutrient Policy – Implementing river eutrophication standards

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MPCA Nutrient Policy – Implementing river eutrophication standards Dennis Wasley

  2. Introduction • Instream standards for river discharges • Limits for rivers may be equivalent to requirements for downstream lakes and reservoirs • Steve W., Dennis W., Marco G., others and TMDLs calculate • Various aspects of implementation are being tested with lake standards • Variance, schedule of compliance, seasonal limits • Mass limits vs. concentration limits

  3. Big issues / questions • What is the limit? • How long before the limit is implemented at the facility?

  4. Need for Lake & River Nutrient Standards • Nutrient enrichment negatively impacts aquatic biota and recreation • USEPA – States should develop nutrient criteria for lakes, streams, wetlands (must develop may be more accurate based on Florida where EPA promulgated) • MN promulgated ecoregion-based lake eutrophication standards in 2008 in MN Rules Chapter 7050; • River, navigational pool & Pepin site specific under promulgation (2010-2012)

  5. Current Policy • Statewide phosphorus rule (2008) • 1 mg/L for expansions • Lake and Reservoir standards (2008) • Phosphorus decision tree (2010) • Balanced approach with reductions from non-point and point sources • Consider multiple dischargers in watershed • Use draft or completed TMDLs • WQBELs

  6. Draft: Future policy • River nutrient standards • Summer average • Long-term average • Response variables • Non-point sources are very important • Streamflow • Examples

  7. River Nutrient Regions (RNR) • Regionalized criteria because of distinct differences among landform, land use, soil type, & stream water quality in MN • Consistent with lake criteria approach; • EPA Ecoregion map was base map: • Rivers classified based on relative ecoregion composition & • Changes in reach-specific WQ;

  8. Draft river eutrophication criteria (summer-means) • Assessments based on minimum of 2 summers & 6 or more obs./summer; • Must exceed cause & one or more response (stressors)to be deemed impaired; • existing pH standard may be used also

  9. Implementing river criteria at HUC-8 scale. First TMDL assessments 2013

  10. Effluent limits 101 (RNS standards) • Establish background concentration of stream • Background concentration is dynamic for TP over summer period • Calculate load from facility • Standard applies during wet and dry times • Determine if load from facility drives concentration in stream above standard during a critical condition • Requires extensive concentration and flow data for stream • Dilution is the Solution • High flows do not always offer dilution

  11. Single flow vs. all flow (ug/L) 122Q10

  12. Examples

  13. Bigfork River (meets RNS) High flow Low flow

  14. Bigfork River • Very minimal point sources • Non-point only exceeds standard at highest flows • This is expected and complies with RNS • Downstream impairment in Lake of the Woods (LOW) • Existing limits in Bigfork watershed will be adopted by LOW TMDL • Boise Cascade, North Kooch larger point sources • Complicated lake

  15. Point source locations in Cottonwood Minnesota R. at Jordan Cottonwood at New Ulm Minnesota R. Mankato

  16. Cottonwood: proposal • Very minimal point sources • No point source signature during low flow • Non-point drives impairment • Clearly exceed standards above median flow • Focus on non-point and set point source limits to protect MN River • Minnesota needs considerable non-point reductions and some point source reductions • Balanced approach to point sources in Minnesota R watershed

  17. SF Crow River (high TP at all flows)

  18. SF Crow • Considerable non-point reductions needed • Very difficult to drive concentration at moderate to high flows below 0.150 mg/L • Non-point trading options • Existing point sources overwhelm background at moderate to low flows • Could assume 0.075 – 0.10 mg/L based on other watersheds • Tremendous algal production at low flows • Low flow is really low flow in SF Crow?

  19. Use available data to determine status of receiving reach and impact of point source on that reach (reasonable potential) Immediate stream exceeds TP standard No data at receiving reach Focus on downstream CWLSS or representative reach Limited response data or acceptable response data in immediate reach Response variables exceeded in immediate stream: Set limits to meet TP standard in immediate stream reach River meets TP standard Collect more data at receiving reach, Set TP limits based on downstream response Existing Facilities: Evaluate if existing design limits are sufficient to protect downstream waters (e.g. St. Cloud WWTP) Expanded/New Facilities:Design plant to meet RNS and applicable nondegradation requirements. Protect downstream waters. One permit cycle TP and response variables exceed standards in immediate reach Response variables do not exceed standards in immediate reach Maintain TP limits to protect downstream resources

  20. Headwaters / small rivers • If good data for TP, response and flow • Proceed with same process as outlined in examples • Limited data at immediate reach • Set limits for downstream impairments • Require additional monitoring for immediate reach • Flow • TP • Response variables

  21. Other considerations • Seasonal relief (no downstream lakes) • State rule for October-March/April • RNS limit for April/May-September • Pond discharges • Adjust discharge window in watersheds where restrictive limits are needed • Maintain limits in watersheds where meet RNS or non-point is the major source reduction needed

  22. Mass vs. Concentration limits • Mass limits for TP are not always AWWDF x concentration limit x conversion factor • Mass limits are often easier to meet in the near term • Flexibility is preferred • Balance protecting resource with limits that make sense for facility for years to come

  23. Summary • Set limits on downstream reach with adequate data to make calculations • MPCA wants to be right the first time • Watershed approach, TMDLs and additional monitoring will refine original limit calculations • Non-point reduction considerations are critical to our approach • This is especially true during moderate to high flows

  24. Questions? • dennis.wasley@state.mn.us (Implementation strategy) • 651-757-2908 • steve.weiss@state.mn.us (Phosphorus effluent limits) • 651-757-2814

More Related