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OSM CCB Placement in Coal Mines - Proposed Rulemaking

OSM CCB Placement in Coal Mines - Proposed Rulemaking. John R. Craynon, P.E. Chief, Division of Regulatory Support Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement Washington, DC. What are CCBs?. Boiler slag Bottom ash Fluidized bed combustion materials

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OSM CCB Placement in Coal Mines - Proposed Rulemaking

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  1. OSM CCB Placement in Coal Mines - Proposed Rulemaking John R. Craynon, P.E. Chief, Division of Regulatory Support Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement Washington, DC

  2. What are CCBs? • Boiler slag • Bottom ash • Fluidized bed combustion materials • Flue gas desulfurization materials • Fly ash

  3. Mine Placement Economic Realities Limited to: • Low transportation cost situations • Mine mouth power plants • Small power plants without RCRA disposal facilities • Beneficial applications

  4. Volumes of CCBs placed at mines • Around 1.4% of all generated CCBs placed in mines • CCBs placed equal to 0.15% of coal mined • Beneficial use cases: 5% of coal volume replacement • Mine mouth power plants: maximum 25% of coal volume

  5. History • OSM has been working on CCBmine placement issues for a number of years • 1994 Interagency Cooperation • 1996 Policy Statement • Mine placement is an acceptable practice under SMCRA • IMCC, OSM, EPA have been meeting regularly since 1999 to formulate regulatory approaches

  6. OSM CCB Activities • Hosted six interactive forums on CCBs • Publication of Forum Proceedings • Provided assistance to ASTM • Developed CCB Website

  7. Regulatory History • 1988 EPA Report to Congress • No Subtitle C regulations needed • 2000 EPA Regulatory Determination • No Subtitle C regulations needed • RCRA, SMCRA or a combination

  8. EPA Information Gathering • Risk assessment of groundwater data • CCB damage case information • No SMCRA mine site damage cases • Field investigations • Comparison of RCRA and SMCRA requirements • 2002 public listening sessions hosted by EPA, OSM and IMCC

  9. NAS Study • Directed by Congress • Focused on coal mine placement • Focused on identifying risks • Released in March 2006

  10. SMCRA Regulatory Background • No explicit regulatory provisions related to CCBs in SMCRA • CCB placement subject to all permitting and performance requirements

  11. OSM Rulemaking Process • Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (March 2007) • Proposed Rulemaking (2008?) • Currently at OMB for approval • Final Rulemaking (2009?)

  12. ANPR • Sought comments on intention to propose rule • Looked for input on what rule should address • Over 1,700 comments received, about 40 of which were substantial

  13. Comments received on ANPR • Coal industry/Electrical utilities • OSM/SMCRA States should regulate • Incorporate into existing regulatory structure • Allow for flexibility

  14. Comments received on ANPR • States • States have experience • Rules should be flexible and build on existing program • Look at characterization of material and site • Reflect beneficial use of CCBs

  15. Comments received on ANPR • Individuals/environmental organizations • SMCRA not intended to regulate waste disposal • Rules must also follow RCRA • OSM should prepare an EIS • Follow NRC recommendations

  16. Proposed Rulemaking • Proposed rules based solely on existing SMCRA authorities • Proposed rules draw from existing regulations • Proposed rules collect CCB placement requirements into a few sections, make implicit requirements explicit, and add new requirements as necessary

  17. Rulemaking Content • Title V • Permitting • Bonding • Monitoring • Performance Standards

  18. Rules (cont.) • Title IV (AML) • Limited to sites using AML Fund monies • Information requirements • Analysis/Design requirements

  19. OSM Rulemaking Approach • OSM worked with EPA and states to develop proposal • OSM considered ANPR comments and technical input • Proposal allows what works to continue and adds only what is needed

  20. OSM Goals in rulemaking • Balance need for coal and opportunity to enhance mining and reclamation with CCB placement • Ensure protection of the public and environment • Enhance reclamation of mined lands

  21. NOTE • Proposed rule has not been cleared by OMB and is subject to change • OSM has no control over or idea when the proposed rule will be published

  22. Potential Areas to be Addressed Types of placement to be covered • Placement in mined-out area • Use in construction or reclamation of waste disposal facility • Return of CCBs to coal refuse reprocessing facility

  23. Potential Areas to be Addressed Exceptions • Use of CCBs as soil amendments • Use of CCBs for road building • Placement of CCBs in underground mine voids • Placement of CCBs under a RCRA permit • Placement before issuance of final rules

  24. Potential Areas to be Addressed Regulatory Review of Permits • Regular review of permits with CCBs after placement begins • Ensure compliance with the plan and regulatory requirements

  25. Potential Areas to be Addressed Permit application requirements • Spell out specific information needed when CCBs are to be placed

  26. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Potential permit application requirements • Maps • Right to place CCBs • Descriptions and cross-sections of placement

  27. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Permit application requirements (cont.) • Volumes of CCBs to be placed • Info on the source of CCBs • Type of CCBs to be placed • Tests and analyses required

  28. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Permit application requirements (cont.) • Parameters to be tested for • Baseline hydrologic information • Geologic descriptions of placement areas

  29. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Permit application requirements (cont.) • Surface and groundwater flow info • Hydrological modeling info • Anticipated effects of CCBs on water

  30. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Determinations and findings • Set out RA responsibilities in permitting • Requirement for written finding on suitability of CCB placement

  31. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Permit revisions • Permit revisions that include placement of CCBs are significant and require public involvement • Addresses concern in NRC report

  32. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Bonding • Add new requirement for amount and duration of groundwater monitoring data showing no adverse trends prior to bond release

  33. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Performance Standards • Adds several specific requirements • Address concerns from NRC report, comments received on ANPR, and other input

  34. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Performance standards • Regular testing • Testing when source or character of CCBs changes • Groundwater monitoring requirements

  35. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Performance standards (cont.) • Remedial action requirements • RA review of monitoring • Contemporaneous reclamation requirements

  36. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Performance standards (cont.) • Prohibitions on creation of excess spoil as a result of CCB placement • Requirement for minimum cover • Requirement for prevention of air and water pollution resulting from placement

  37. Potential Areas to be Addressed • Abandoned Mine Lands • Add new requirements for projects funded under Title IV which contemplate CCB placement • Requirements generally adopt same approach for AML projects as for Title V • Proposal must recognize unique nature of AML

  38. Comment period • OSM will likely be proposing a 60-day comment period • We expect requests for extension • OMB review may result in expanded or contracted comment period

  39. EPA Rulemaking • EPA will address the few coal sites outside of SMCRA jurisdiction • Operations not classified as “coal mines” • AML sites with no SMCRA involvement • OSM has worked closely with EPA • Minefilling rules under SMCRA and EPA rules will complement each other

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