FG-00 Part 70 Fiberglass General Permit Qualifications Review List - Air Quality Permit

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FG-00 Part 70 Fiberglass General Permit Qualifications Review List - Air Quality Permit

FG-00 Part 70 Fiberglass General Permit Qualifications Review List Air Quality Permit Program Doc Type: Permit Application

Refer to the Handbook and Application Instructions for the Part 70 Fiberglass General Permit for form instructions.

Facility Information a) AQ Facility ID No.: b) AQ File No.: c) Facility Name: The following list of questions will help you to determine if you qualify for the Part 70 Fiberglass general air emission permit. This application is for new and existing facilities manufacturing fiberglass parts. The general permit contains limitations to keep the potential-to-emit for Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) below 250 tons per year and the potential-to-emit for all other criteria pollutants below 100 tons per year. Complete the following questions to determine if your stationary source qualifies for this general permit. If you do not qualify for this general permit, you must submit a permit application for a Part 70 or State permit before you make a change to your facility.

I. Requirements 1. Does your stationary source have any emissions units other than the following process operations and emission units? spray guns, spraying and coating booths, molding, casting, lamination, mixing, cleaning, resin and gel coat, adhesive, fuel storage, boilers, catalytic or thermal afterburner, fabric filters, wall filters, flares, bag houses, internal combustion engine (generators), burn-off ovens, furnaces, ovens, dip tanks, soldering, welding, brazing, space heaters, storage tanks, screen printing, sanding, stenciling and/or any of the insignificant activities listed in Minn. R. 7007.1300 and/or conditionally insignificant activities listed in Minn. R. 7008. Yes; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.  No; go to question 2.

2. Does your stationary source belong to one of the 28 Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) source categories listed: (a) coal cleaning plants (with thermal dryers); (b) kraft pulp mills; (c) portland cement smelters; (d) primary zinc smelters; (e) iron and steel mills; (f) primary aluminum ore reduction plants; (g) primary copper smelters; (h) municipal incinerators capable of charging more than 250 tons of refuse per day; (i) hydrofluoric, sulfuric, or nitric acid plants; (j) petroleum refineries;(k) lime plants; (l) phosphate rock processing plants; (m) coke oven batteries;(n) sulfur recovery plants; (o) carbon black plants (furnace process); (p) primary lead smelters; (q) fuel conversion plants; (r) sintering plants;(s) secondary metal production plants; (t) chemical process plants; (u) fossil-fuel boilers (or combination thereof) totaling more than 250 million BTU per hour heat input; (v) petroleum storage and transfer units with a total storage capacity exceeding 300,000 barrels; (w) taconite ore processing plants; (x) glass fiber processing; (y) charcoal production plants; (z) fossil fuel-fired steam electric plants of more than 250 million British thermal units per hour heat input? Yes; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.  No; go to question 3.

3. Since August 7, 1980, have actual emissions of VOCs ever exceeded 250 tons per year?  Yes; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit. No; go to question 4.

4. Are any of the emission units at your stationary source subject to any New Source Performance Standards other than 40 CFR pt. 60, Subpart Kb (volatile organic liquid storage vessels [including petroleum liquid storage vessels] for which construction, reconstruction, or modification commenced after July 23, 1984); Subpart Dc (small industrial-commercial-institutional steam generating units); Subpart IIII (compression ignition internal combustion engines); or Subpart JJJJ (spark ignition internal combustion engines)? If you have modified (as defined in 40 CFR 60.14), reconstructed (as defined in 40 CFR 60.15) or constructed the emission source described in a particular subpart of 40 CFR pt. 60, on or after the effective date listed in the subpart, your stationary source may subject to the requirements of that subpart. NSPS Subparts can be found at http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx?sid=50ba9af7bdd3e863f6499a78f133887b&c=ecfr&tpl=/ecfrbrowse/Title40/40tab_02.tpl  Yes; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit. No; go to question 5. www.pca.state.mn.us • 651-296-6300 • 800-657-3864 • TTY 651-282-5332 or 800-657-3864 • Available in alternative formats aq-f4-fg00 • 12/28/09 Page 1 of 3 5. Are any of the emission units at your stationary source subject to a National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) standard other than one of the following: Reinforced Plastic Composites Production (Subpart WWWW), Plastic Parts Surface Coating (Subpart PPPP), Surface Coating of Miscellaneous Metal Parts and Products (Subpart MMMM), or Reciprocating Internal Combustion Engines (Subpart ZZZZ)? NESHAP standards can be found at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/mactfnlalph.html or http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx? sid=50ba9af7bdd3e863f6499a78f133887b&c=ecfr&tpl=/ecfrbrowse/Title40/40tab_02.tpl. Yes; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit. No; go to question 6.

6. Do you use painting or coating materials that contain lead? Yes; go to question 7. No; go to question 8.

7. Will you discontinue using materials that contains lead within 60 days of permit issuance?  Yes; go to question 8.  No; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.

8. Do/will you use any fuels other than diesel fuel (distillate oil), biodiesel, natural gas, LPG or gasoline?  Yes; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.  No; go to question 9.

9. Do you have pollution control equipment to control particulate matter emissions from painting/coating operations? Yes; go to question 11.  No; go to question 10.

10. Will you install particulate control equipment within 60 days of permit issuance?  Yes; go to question 11.  No; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.

11. Will you accept a permit condition to limit potential to emit of particulate matter (PM/PM10/PM2.5 PTE) to less than 100 tons based on a 12-month monthly rolling sum?  Yes; go to question 12.  No; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.

12. Will you accept a permit condition to limit potential to emit of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC PTE) to less than 250 tons based on a 12-month monthly rolling sum?  Yes; go to question 13.  No; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.

13. Will you accept a permit condition to limit potential to emit of nitrogen oxides (NOx PTE), of sulfur dioxide (SO2 PTE) and of carbon monoxide (CO PTE) to less than 100 tons based on a 12-month monthly rolling sum?  Yes; go to question 14.  No; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.

14. Will you accept a permit condition to limit potential to emit of organic hazardous air pollutants to less than 100 tons based on a 12-month monthly rolling sum?  Yes; go to question 15.  No; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.

15. Have you ever performed an air toxics review?  Yes; go to question 16.  No; go to question 17.

16. Did the air toxics review resulted in permit conditions?  Yes; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.  No; go to question 17.

www.pca.state.mn.us • 651-296-6300 • 800-657-3864 • TTY 651-282-5332 or 800-657-3864 • Available in alternative formats aq-f4-fg00 • 12/28/09 Page 2 of 3 17. Have you been asked to perform an ambient air quality assessment to demonstrate that your facility does not cause a violation of ambient air quality standards?  Yes; the assessment must be completed before you know if facility qualifies for the general permit. When the ambient air quality assessment is complete, go on to question 18.  No; go to question 19.

18. In performing the ambient air quality assessment, did your assessment results in any required permit limits or conditions?  Yes; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.  No; go to question 19.

II. Determine if your stationary source is in compliance with all applicable requirements

19. You will not be able to definitively determine if you qualify for this general permit until you complete a compliance certification. After completing the compliance certification form, FG-06, return to question 19a.

19a. Is your stationary source in compliance with all applicable requirements?  Yes; your stationary source qualifies for this general permit.  No; continue with question 19b.

19b. Is your stationary source in compliance with all applicable requirements except that you that you do not have a permit and/or you are currently not in compliance with NSPS requirements?  Yes; continue with question 19c.  No; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.

19c.If your stationary source is currently not in compliance with NSPS requirements, will you agree to permit conditions that will bring your stationary source into compliance? The compliance schedule as required for boilers and storage tanks subject to NSPS are listed below:

For boilers: * Notifications within 60 days of permit issuance; * Performance test, if applicable within 180 days of permit issuance; * Fuel certifications within 60 days of permit issuance.

For storage tanks: Update recordkeeping within 30 days of permit issuance.  Yes; your stationary source qualifies for this general permit.  No; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.

19d.If your stationary source is currently not in compliance with NESHAP requirements, will you agree to permit conditions that will bring your stationary source into compliance? The compliance schedule consists of submittal of the initial notification report within 30 days of permit issuance for the following NESHAPs: Reinforced Plastic Composites Production, Plastic Parts Surface Coating, Surface Coating of Miscellaneous Metal Parts and Products, and Reciprocating Internal Combustion Engines.  Yes; your stationary source qualifies for this general permit.  No; your stationary source does not qualify for this general permit.

www.pca.state.mn.us • 651-296-6300 • 800-657-3864 • TTY 651-282-5332 or 800-657-3864 • Available in alternative formats aq-f4-fg00 • 12/28/09 Page 3 of 3

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