98-21027. Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Category Effluent Limitations Guidelines, Pretreatment Standards, and New Source Performance Standards; Final Rule  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 182 (Monday, September 21, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 50388-50437]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-21027]
    
    
    
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    Part III
    
    
    
    
    
    Environmental Protection Agency
    
    
    
    
    
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    40 CFR Parts 136 and 439
    
    
    
    Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Category Effluent Limitations Guidelines, 
    Pretreatment Standards, and New Source Performance Standards; Final 
    Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 63, No. 182 / Monday, September 21, 1998 / 
    Rules and Regulations
    
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    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    40 CFR Parts 136 and 439
    
    [FRL-6135-7]
    RIN 2040-AA13
    
    
    Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Category Effluent Limitations 
    Guidelines, Pretreatment Standards, and New Source Performance 
    Standards; Final Rule
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This final regulation limits the discharge of pollutants into 
    navigable waters of the United States and into publicly owned treatment 
    works (POTWs) by existing and new pharmaceutical manufacturing 
    facilities. This regulation revises limitations and standards for four 
    subcategories of the pharmaceutical manufacturing Point Source 
    Category: Subcategory A (Fermentation), Subcategory B (Extraction), 
    Subcategory C (Chemical Synthesis): and Subcategory D (Mixing, 
    Compounding, and Formulating); and reformats and clarifies language 
    without revision to certain specified provisions of these four 
    subcategories and a fifth subcategory: Subcategory E (Research). This 
    regulation establishes effluent limitations guidelines and standards 
    under the Clean Water Act including ``best conventional pollutant 
    control technology (BCT) and ``best available technology economically 
    achievable (BAT)'' for existing direct dischargers, ``new source 
    performance standards (NSPS)'' for new direct dischargers and 
    pretreatment standards for existing and new indirect dischargers (PSES 
    and PSNS). This regulation also amends and clarifies some of the 
    limitations based on ``best practicable control technology (BPT)'' for 
    pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities and establishes analytical 
    methods for certain organic pollutants contained in this regulation. 
    EPA is today also publishing final Maximum Available Control Technology 
    (MACT) standards under the Clean Air Act (CAA) for the pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing industry elsewhere in today's Federal Register. The MACT 
    standards final rule will control emissions of hazardous air pollutants 
    (HAPs) from pharmaceutical manufacturing emission sources including 
    wastewater collection and treatment systems. The Offices of Water and 
    Air and Radiation have coordinated the development of these regulations 
    and have used a common technology basis in developing limitations and 
    standards for the volatile organic compounds (VOCs).
        The final MACT standards and effluent limitations guidelines and 
    standards rules will benefit the environment by removing a total of 
    85.4 million pounds per year of conventional, nonconventional and toxic 
    (priority) pollutants from water discharges. The effluent limitations 
    guidelines and standards portion of those removals is 13.9 million 
    pounds per year of nonconventional and 16.0 million pounds per year of 
    organic pollutants including VOCs.
    
    DATES: This regulation shall become effective November 20, 1998. The 
    incorportion by reference of certain publications listed in Part 136 is 
    approved by the Director of the Federal Register as of November 20, 
    1998.
    
    ADDRESSES: For additional technical information write to Dr. Frank H. 
    Hund, Engineering and Analysis Division (4303), U.S. EPA, East Tower, 
    401 M Street SW, Washington, D.C. 20460 or send E-mail to: 
    hund.frank@epamail.epa.gov or call at (202) 260-7182. For additional 
    economic information contact Mr. William Anderson at the address above 
    or by calling (202) 260-5131 or send E-mail to: 
    anderson.william@epamail.epa.gov.
        The complete record (excluding confidential business information) 
    for this Clean Water Act rulemaking is available for review at EPA's 
    Water Docket, Room EB57; 401 M Street, SW, Washington, DC 20460. For 
    access to Docket materials, call (202) 260-3027 between 9 a.m. and 3:30 
    p.m. for an appointment. The EPA public information regulation (40 CFR 
    part 2) provides that a reasonable fee may be charged for copying.
        The Technical Development Document and Economic Impact Analysis 
    supporting today's final water rule may be obtained by writing to the 
    EPA Office of Water Resource Center (RC-4100), 401 M Street SW., 
    Washington, DC 20460, or calling (202) 260-7786.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For additional technical information 
    call Dr. Frank H. Hund at (202) 260-7182. For additional information on 
    the economic impact analyses contact Mr. William Anderson at (202) 260-
    5131.
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 
    
    Judicial Review
    
        In accordance with 40 CFR 23.2, the rule will be considered 
    promulgated for purposes of judicial review at 1:00 p.m. Eastern time 
    on October 5, 1998. Under section 509(b)(1) of the Act, judicial review 
    of this regulation can be obtained only by filing a petition for review 
    in the United States Court of Appeals within 120 days after the 
    regulation is considered promulgated for purposes of judicial review. 
    Under section 509 (b)(2) of the Act, the requirements in this 
    regulation may not be challenged later in civil or criminal proceedings 
    brought by EPA to enforce these requirements.
    
    Regulated Entities
    
        Entities potentially regulated by this action include:
    
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                 Category                  Examples of regulated entities   
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    Industry..........................  Facilities that generate process    
                                         wastewater from the manufacture of 
                                         pharmaceutical products and/or     
                                         pharmaceutical intermediates by    
                                         fermentation, extraction, chemical 
                                         synthesis and/or mixing,           
                                         compounding and formulating.       
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        This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a 
    guide for readers regarding entities likely to be regulated by this 
    action. This table lists the types of entities that EPA is now aware 
    could potentially be regulated by this action. Other types of entities 
    not listed in the table could also be regulated. To determine whether 
    your facility is regulated by this action, you should carefully examine 
    the applicability criteria in Secs. 439.1, 439.10, 439.20, 439.30, 
    439.40 and 439.50 of this final rule. If you have questions regarding 
    the applicability of this action to a particular entity, consult the 
    technical information person listed in the preceding FOR FURTHER 
    INFORMATION CONTACT section.
    
    Compliance Dates
    
        The compliance date for PSES is as soon as possible, but no later 
    than September 21, 2001. The compliance dates for NSPS and PSNS are the 
    dates the new source commences discharging.
    
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    Deadlines for compliance with BPT, BCT, and BAT are established in the 
    National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permits.
    
    Organization of This Document
    
    I. Legal Authority
    II. Background
        A. Clean Water Act
        1. Best Practicable Control Technology Currently Available (BPT)
        2. Best Available Technology Economically Achievable (BAT) 
    (Section 304(b)(2) of the Act)
        3. Best Conventional Pollutant Control Technology (BCT) (Section 
    304(b)(4) of the Act)
        4. New Source Performance Standards (NSPS) (Section 306 of the 
    Act)
        5. Pretreatment Standards for Existing Sources (PSES) (Section 
    307(b) of the Act)
        6. Pretreatment Standards for New Sources (PSNS) (Section 307(b) 
    of the Act)
        B. Section 304(m) Requirements and the Pollution Prevention Act
        C. Updated Profile of the Industry
        D. Existing and Proposed Rules
        1. Clean Water Act Proposal
        2. Clean Air Act Proposal
        3. Clean Water Act Federal Register Notice of Availability
        E. Discussion of Final Clean Air Act Rule Published Elsewhere in 
    Today's Federal Register
        F. Relationship Between the MACT and CWA Rules
        G. Final Clean Water Act Effluent Limitations Guidelines and 
    Standards Rule
    III. Summary of Most Significant Changes to Water Rules From 
    Proposal
        A. Limitations and Standards for Volatile Organic Compounds
        B. Change in BAT Technology Basis for Organic Pollutants
        C. BPT and BAT/BCT Limitation Changes
        D. Pollutant Selection
    IV. The Final Clean Water Act Regulation
        A. Applicability and Scope of the Final Rule
        B. Options Selection
        C. Best Practicable Control Technology Currently Available (BPT)
        D. Best Available Technology Economically Achievable
        E. Pretreatment Standards for Existing Sources (PSES)
        F. New Source Performance Standards (NSPS)
        G. Pretreatment Standards for New Sources (PSNS)
        H. Best Conventional Pollutant Control Technology (BCT)
    V. Assessment of Costs and Impacts for the Final Pharmaceutical 
    Regulations
        A. Introduction
        B. Summary of Economic Analysis Methodology and Data
        C. Changes to the Economic Analysis Since Proposal
        D. Estimated Economic Impacts
        1. Costs of Compliance
        2. Economic Impacts on Facilities
        3. Economic Impacts on Firms
        4. Impacts on Output and Employment
        5. Other Secondary Impacts
        6. Impacts on New Sources
        E. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
        F. Cost-Benefit Analysis
        G Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
    VI. Environmental Benefits
    VII. Non-Water Quality Environmental Impacts
        A. Air Pollution
        B. Solid Waste
        C. Energy Requirements
    VIII. Regulatory Implementation
        A. Implementation of the Limitations and Standards
        B. Upset and Bypass Provisions
        C. Variances and Modifications
        1. Fundamentally Different Factors Variances
        2. Removal Credits
        D. Analytical Methods
    IX. Regulatory Assessment Requirements
        A. Executive Order 12866
        B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and the Small Business Regulatory 
    Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA)
        C. Submission to Congress and the General Accounting Office
        D. Paperwork Reduction Act
        E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
        F. Executive Order 12875 Enhancing Intergovernmental Partnership
        G. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
        H. Executive Order 13045 and Protecting Children's Health
    X. Summary of Public Participation
        A. Summary of Proposal Comments and Responses
        B. Summary of Notice of Availability Comments and Responses
    Appendix A to the Preamble--List of Abbreviations, Acronyms, 
    Definitions and Other Terms Used in This Document
    
    I. Legal Authority
    
        This final regulation establishes effluent limitations guidelines 
    and standards of performance and analytical methods for the 
    pharmaceutical manufacturing point source category under the 
    authorities of sections 301, 304, 306, 307, 308, 402 and 501 of the 
    Clean Water Act (``the Act''), 33 U.S.C. 1311, 1314, 1316, 1317, 1318, 
    1342 and 1361.
    
    II. Background
    
    A. Clean Water Act
    
        The Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 
    established a comprehensive program to ``restore and maintain the 
    chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation's waters,'' 
    (section 101(a)). To implement the Act, EPA is to issue effluent 
    limitations guidelines, pretreatment standards and new source 
    performance standards for industrial dischargers.
        These guidelines and standards are summarized briefly below:
    1. Best Practicable Control Technology Currently Available (BPT) 
    (Section 304(b)(1) of the Act)
        BPT effluent limitations apply to all discharges from existing 
    direct dischargers. BPT effluent limitations guidelines are generally 
    based on the average of the best existing performance by plants of 
    various sizes, ages, and unit processes within the category or 
    subcategory for control of pollutants.
        In establishing BPT effluent limitations guidelines, EPA considers 
    the total cost of achieving effluent reductions in relation to the 
    effluent reduction benefits, the age of equipment and facilities 
    involved, the processes employed, process changes required, engineering 
    aspects of the control technologies, non-water quality environmental 
    impacts (including energy requirements) and other factors as the EPA 
    Administrator deems appropriate (Section 304(b)(1)(B) of the Act). The 
    Agency considers the category or subcategory-wide cost of applying the 
    technology in relation to the effluent reduction benefits. Where 
    existing performance is uniformly inadequate within a category or 
    subcategory, BPT may be transferred from a different subcategory or 
    category.
    2. Best Available Technology Economically Achievable (BAT) (Section 
    304(b)(2) of the Act)
        In general, BAT effluent limitations represent the best existing 
    economically achievable performance of plants in the industrial 
    subcategory or category, based upon available technology. The Act 
    establishes BAT as the principal national means of controlling the 
    direct discharge of toxic and nonconventional pollutants to navigable 
    waters. The factors considered in assessing BAT include the age of 
    equipment and facilities involved, the process employed, potential 
    process changes, and non-water quality environmental impacts (including 
    energy requirements) (Section 304(b)(2)(B)). The Agency retains 
    considerable discretion in assigning the weight to be accorded these 
    factors. As with BPT, where existing performance is uniformly 
    inadequate within a category or subcategory, BAT may be transferred 
    from a different subcategory or category. BAT may include process 
    changes or internal controls, even when these technologies are not 
    common industry practice.
    
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    3. Best Conventional Pollutant Control Technology (BCT) (Section 
    304(b)(4) of the Act)
        The 1977 Amendments to the Act established BCT for discharges of 
    conventional pollutants from existing industrial point sources. Section 
    304(a)(4) designated the following as conventional pollutants: 
    Biochemical oxygen demanding pollutants (BOD5), total 
    suspended solids (TSS), fecal coliform, pH, and any additional 
    pollutants defined by the Administrator as conventional. The 
    Administrator designated oil and grease as an additional conventional 
    pollutant on July 30, 1979 (44 FR 44501).
        BCT is not an additional limitation, but replaces BAT for the 
    control of conventional pollutants. In addition to other factors 
    specified in Section 304(b)(4)(B), the Act requires that BCT 
    limitations be established in light of a two part ``cost-
    reasonableness'' test. American Paper Institute v. EPA, 660 F.2d 954 
    (4th Cir. 1981). EPA's current methodology for the general development 
    of BCT limitations was issued in 1986 (51 FR 24974; July 9, 1986).
    4. New Source Performance Standards (NSPS) (Section 306 of the Act)
        NSPS are based on the best available demonstrated control 
    technology. New plants have the opportunity to install the best and 
    most efficient production processes and wastewater treatment 
    technologies. As a result, NSPS should represent the most stringent 
    numerical values attainable through the application of the best 
    available control technology for all pollutants (e.g., conventional, 
    nonconventional, and toxic pollutants). In establishing NSPS, EPA is 
    directed to take into consideration the cost of achieving the effluent 
    reduction and any non-water quality environmental impacts and energy 
    requirements.
    5. Pretreatment Standards for Existing Sources (PSES) (Section 307(b) 
    of the Act)
        PSES are designed to prevent the discharge of pollutants that pass 
    through, interfere with, or are otherwise incompatible with the 
    operation of publicly owned treatment works (POTWs). The Act authorizes 
    EPA to establish pretreatment standards for pollutants that pass 
    through POTWs or interfere with POTWs' treatment processes or sludge 
    disposal methods. The legislative history of the 1977 Act indicates 
    that pretreatment standards are to be technology-based and analogous to 
    the BAT effluent limitations guidelines for removal of toxic 
    pollutants. For the purpose of determining whether to promulgate 
    national category-wide pretreatment standards, EPA generally determines 
    that there is pass through of a pollutant and thus a need for 
    categorical standards if the nation-wide average percent removal of a 
    pollutant removed by well-operated POTWs achieving secondary treatment 
    is less than the percent removed by the BAT model treatment system.
        The General Pretreatment Regulations, which set forth the framework 
    for the implementation of categorical pretreatment standards, are found 
    at 40 CFR Part 403. (Those regulations contain a definition of pass 
    through that addresses localized rather than national instances of pass 
    through and does not use the percent removal comparison test described 
    above. See 52 FR 1586, January 14, 1987.)
    6. Pretreatment Standards for New Sources (PSNS) (Section 307(b) of the 
    Act)
        Like PSES, PSNS are designed to prevent the discharges of 
    pollutants that pass through, interfere with, or are otherwise 
    incompatible with the operation of POTWs. PSNS are to be issued at the 
    same time as NSPS. New indirect dischargers, like new direct 
    dischargers, have the opportunity to incorporate into their plants the 
    best available demonstrated technologies. The Agency considers the same 
    factors in promulgating PSNS as it considers in promulgating NSPS.
    
    B. Section 304(m) Requirements and the Pollution Prevention Act
    
        Section 304(m) of the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. 1314(m)), added by 
    the Water Quality Act of 1987, requires EPA to establish schedules for 
    (i) reviewing and revising existing effluent limitations guidelines and 
    standards (``effluent guidelines''), and (ii) promulgating new effluent 
    guidelines. On January 2, 1990, EPA published an Effluent Guidelines 
    Plan (55 FR 80), in which schedules were established for developing new 
    and revised effluent guidelines for several industry categories. One of 
    the industries for which the Agency established a schedule was the 
    Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Point Source Category.
        Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. (NRDC) and Public Citizen, 
    Inc., challenged the Effluent Guidelines Plan in a suit filed in U.S. 
    District Court for the District of Columbia (NRDC et al v. Reilly, Civ. 
    No. 89-2980). The plaintiffs charged that EPA's plan did not meet the 
    requirements of sec. 304(m). A Consent Decree in this litigation was 
    entered by the Court on January 31, 1992. The terms of the Consent 
    Decree are reflected in the Effluent Guidelines Plan published on 
    September 8, 1992 (57 FR 41000). This plan, as modified, required, 
    among other things, that EPA propose effluent guidelines for the 
    pharmaceutical manufacturing category by February, 1995 and take final 
    action on these effluent guidelines by April, 1998. Recently EPA filed 
    an unopposed motion requesting an extension of time until July 30, 1998 
    for the Administrator to sign the final rule.
        The Pollution Prevention Act of 1990 (PPA) (42 U.S.C. 13101 et 
    seq., Pub. L. 101-508, November 5, 1990) ``declares it to be the 
    national policy of the United States that pollution should be prevented 
    or reduced whenever feasible; pollution that cannot be prevented should 
    be recycled in an environmentally safe manner, whenever feasible; 
    pollution that cannot be prevented or recycled should be treated in an 
    environmentally safe manner whenever feasible; and disposal or release 
    into the environment should be employed only as a last resort...'' 
    (Sec. 6602; 42 U.S.C. 13101(b). In short, preventing pollution before 
    it is created is preferable to trying to manage, treat or dispose of it 
    after it is created. This effluent guideline was reviewed for its 
    incorporation of pollution prevention as part of this Agency effort.
        According to the PPA, source reduction reduces the generation and 
    release of hazardous substances, pollutants, wastes, contaminants or 
    residuals at the source, usually within a process. The term source 
    reduction ``include[s] equipment or technology modifications, process 
    or procedure modifications, reformulation or redesign of products, 
    substitution of raw materials, and improvements in housekeeping, 
    maintenance, training, or inventory control.'' The term ``source 
    reduction'' does not include any practice which alters the physical, 
    chemical, or biological characteristics or the volume of a hazardous 
    substance, pollutant, or contaminant through a process or activity 
    which itself is not integral to or necessary for the production of a 
    product or the providing of a service.'' 42 U.S.C. 13102(5) In effect, 
    source reduction means reducing the amount of a pollutant that enters a 
    waste stream or that is otherwise released into the environment prior 
    to out-of-process recycling, treatment, or disposal.
        The PPA directs the Agency to, among other things, ``review 
    regulations of the Agency prior and subsequent to their proposal to 
    determine their effect on
    
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    source reduction'' (Sec. 6604; 42 U.S.C. 13103(b)(2). This directive 
    led the Agency to implement a pilot project called the Source Reduction 
    Review Project that would facilitate the integration of source 
    reduction in the Agency's regulations, including the technology-based 
    effluent guidelines and standards.
        In the preamble to the proposed regulations, EPA discussed the 
    possible pollution prevention alternatives available in pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing. At that time, EPA indicated that pollution prevention 
    opportunities were limited in the active ingredient manufacturing 
    subcategories (namely, fermentation, natural extraction and chemical 
    synthesis) but the use of water-based coatings in the formulation 
    subcategory operations was a viable pollution prevention approach which 
    eliminates the need for solvents in tablet coating operations. This 
    approach may only be applicable to some and not most tablet coating 
    operations, however. Since the proposal, EPA has received two 
    suggestions for incorporating pollution prevention into the final 
    regulations which were discussed in the August 8, 1997 Notice of 
    Availability at 62 FR 42720. One suggestion presented to the Agency was 
    that Subcategories B and D dischargers that incorporate best management 
    practices (BMPs), which reduce their discharge of any of the regulated 
    pollutants should not have to monitor for the specific regulated 
    pollutants, and possibly only monitor for the conventional pollutants 
    and COD. This pollution prevention approach is similar to the one 
    adopted in the Pesticide Formulators, Packagers and Repackagers (PFPR) 
    final regulation which was published in the Federal Register on 
    November 6, 1996 at 61 FR 57518. (It should be noted that PFPR 
    facilities that use the promulgated pollution prevention option have to 
    assess their wastewater and may be required to treat wastewater prior 
    to discharge.) EPA evaluated this suggestion and decided that since EPA 
    is not promulgating BAT limitations for specific organic pollutants, 
    this pollution prevention suggestion was not relevant to compliance by 
    subcategory B and D direct dischargers with final BAT limitations. For 
    PSES, EPA believes the suggestion may be workable for indirect 
    dischargers, since standards for specific organic pollutants are 
    contained in the final rule; however, no information was submitted to 
    identify the pollution prevention practices that would be incorporated 
    into the rule, and EPA has been unable to identify any.
        Another pollution prevention approach suggested to EPA was that 
    Subcategories A and C facilities that can demonstrate a reduction in 
    the use of a regulated pollutant and resultant lowered air emissions or 
    water discharges should receive a higher effluent discharge limitation. 
    As suggested, the higher effluent discharge limitation would be 
    directly proportional to the amount of reduction achieved in the use of 
    the regulated pollutant. Along with this suggestion, the commenters 
    provided examples of how this pollution prevention suggestion could 
    work in individual instances.
        In evaluating this suggestion including the examples provided, EPA 
    was concerned about the amount and type of process information that 
    would have to be obtained from facilities and the methodology for 
    estimating the pollutant reductions as the result of any pollution 
    prevention practices. Another concern of the Agency had to do with the 
    determination of when, in the new product development phase of work, 
    the practice represents a pollution prevention activity or is just part 
    of normal process development work in bringing a new product process to 
    full scale production. EPA was also concerned that pollutant discharge 
    or emission reductions achieved in the bench scale or pilot scale 
    product development activities may not be realized during full scale 
    production operations. In the period following publication of the NOA, 
    the Agency did not receive sufficient information relative to these 
    concerns to enable it to develop a viable pollution prevention 
    alternative based on this suggestion.
    
    C. Updated Profile of the Industry
    
        The pharmaceutical manufacturing industry covered by this 
    rulemaking is made up of 566 facilities located in 39 states, Puerto 
    Rico and the Virgin Islands. EPA estimates that 304 of these facilities 
    could be affected by today's final rule. The major concentrations of 
    manufacturing facilities are located in the Northeast, the Midwest and 
    Puerto Rico.
        The pharmaceutical manufacturing industry is defined by four types 
    of manufacturing operations or processes. These activities result in 
    subcategorization for purposes of this rulemaking. The four 
    subcategories are referred to as:
         Subcategory A: Fermentation
         Subcategory B: Natural Extraction
         Subcategory C: Chemical Synthesis
         Subcategory D: Formulating, Mixing and Compounding
        A complete discussion of each subcategory's manufacturing 
    operations and wastewater characteristics may be found in Sections 3 
    and 5 of the final Technical Development Document (TDD), ``Development 
    Document for Final Effluent Limitations Guidelines and Standards for 
    the Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Point Source Category'' (EPA 821-R-98-
    005).
        A fifth subcategory, Subcategory E: Research, was excluded from 
    regulation beyond the existing BPT regulation promulgated on October 
    27, 1983 at 48 FR 49808. The Research subcategory is defined by bench-
    scale activities or operations related to the research on and 
    development of pharmaceutical products. BAT/BCT limitations for this 
    subcategory are determined on a case by case best professional judgment 
    (BPJ) basis. For indirect dischargers, the general prohibition in 40 
    CFR part 403 apply; in addition POTWs will establish local pretreatment 
    limits on a case by case basis as necessary.
    
    D. Existing and Proposed Rules
    
        EPA promulgated interim final BPT regulations for the 
    pharmaceutical manufacturing point source category on November 17, 1976 
    (41 FR 50676; 40 CFR Part 439, Subparts A through E). The five 
    subcategories of the pharmaceutical manufacturing industry (40 CFR part 
    439) were defined at that time as:
         Subpart A--Fermentation Products Subcategory
         Subpart B--Extraction Products Subcategory
         Subpart C--Chemical Synthesis Subcategory
         Subpart D--Mixing, Compounding, and Formulating 
    Subcategory
         Subpart E--Research Subcategory
        The 1976 BPT regulations set monthly limitations for biochemical 
    oxygen demand (BOD5) and chemical oxygen demand (COD) based 
    on percent removal for all subcategories. No daily maximum effluent 
    limitations were established for these parameters. The pH was set 
    within the range of 6.0 to 9.0 standard units. The regulations also set 
    maximum 30 day average concentration-based limitations for total 
    suspended solids (TSS) for subcategories B, D and E. No TSS limitations 
    were established for subcategories A and C. Subpart A was amended (42 
    FR 6813) on February 4, 1977, to improve the language referring to 
    separable mycelia and solvent recovery. The amendment also allowed the 
    inclusion of spent beers (broths) in the calculation of raw waste loads 
    for Subpart A in those instances where the spent beer is actually 
    treated in the wastewater treatment system.
    
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        On October 27, 1983, at 48 FR 49808, EPA revised the subcategory 
    names to those currently applicable and promulgated revised BPT, BAT, 
    PSES and PSNS for Subparts A thru D to cover the toxic pollutant 
    cyanide, conventional pollutants BOD5, TSS and pH, and the 
    nonconventional pollutant COD. The 1983 regulations kept intact the 
    percent reduction regulations for BOD5 and COD established in 1976 but 
    added floor concentration-based limitations for these parameters 
    applicable to subcategories B, D and E. The revisions for TSS consisted 
    of deriving the limitations by the use of a multiplication factor of 
    1.7 times each plant's BOD5 discharge. EPA also promulgated 
    BPT, BAT, PSES and PSNS for pH (6.0-9.0) and BAT concentration-based 
    limitations controlling the discharge of cyanide for subcategory A 
    through D. The Agency also proposed NSPS for BOD5, TSS and 
    pH in the October 1983 notice, but did not publish final NSPS for these 
    parameters.
        On December 16, 1986, at 51 FR 45094, EPA promulgated BCT effluent 
    limitations guidelines for BOD5, TSS and pH for 
    subcategories A thru D. That final rule set BCT effluent limitations 
    equal to the existing BPT effluent limitations guidelines for 
    BOD5, TSS, and pH.
    1. Clean Water Act Proposal
        On May 2, 1995 at 60 FR 21592, EPA proposed revised BPT 
    concentration based limitations for BO5, COD and TSS based 
    on advanced biological treatment for all subcategories and cyanide 
    limitations based on hydrogen peroxide oxidation technology for the A 
    (Fermentation) and C (Chemical Synthesis) subcategories. For BAT, EPA 
    proposed end-of-pipe limitations for 53 organic pollutants plus 
    ammonia, cyanide and COD for subcategories A and C. For subcategories B 
    (Natural Extraction) and D (Formulating, Mixing and Compounding), EPA 
    proposed BAT limitations for 53 organic pollutants and COD. The 
    technology basis for the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) limitations 
    was steam stripping plus advanced biological treatment for 
    subcategories A and C and advanced biological treatment for 
    subcategories B and D. The technology basis for the non-volatile 
    organics was advanced biological treatment only, and the proposed 
    ammonia limitations were based on nitrification. The proposed BAT 
    cyanide limitations were equivalent to the BPT limitations, and the BCT 
    limitations were also proposed equal to BPT for all manufacturing 
    subcategories.
        For NSPS, EPA proposed end-of-pipe standards for 53 organic 
    pollutants plus ammonia, BO5, TSS, cyanide and COD for 
    subcategories A and C and end-of-pipe standards for 53 organic 
    pollutants plus BO5, TSS, and COD for subcategories B and D. 
    The BO5, COD, and TSS standards were based on two sets of 
    performance data from the best performing plants in each of the A or C 
    and B or D subcategories. The end-of-pipe VOC limitations were based on 
    steam stripping with distillation and advanced biological treatment.
        For PSES EPA detailed two coproposals (A and B) to control VOCs in 
    all subcategories. Coproposal A had pretreatment standards for 12 
    highly volatile organic compounds and 33 less volatile organic 
    compounds. To show compliance with the pretreatment standards, 
    monitoring for the 12 highly volatile compounds would have been 
    required in-plant. Coproposal B had only the pretreatment standards for 
    the 12 highly volatile compounds. In addition, EPA proposed cyanide 
    (identical to BPT) and ammonia standards (based on steam stripping) for 
    subcategories A and C. The proposed PSNS differed from PSES in that the 
    standards for all volatile organic compounds were based on steam 
    stripping plus distillation technologies.
        Finally, EPA proposed that pilot plant wastewater would not be 
    regulated by Subcategory E (Research) limitations but under appropriate 
    manufacturing subcategory limitations.
    2. Clean Air Act Proposal
        On April 2, 1997 at 62 FR 15753, EPA proposed National Emission 
    Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAPs) for the 
    Pharmaceuticals Production Source Category. In that proposed rule, the 
    Agency proposed Maximum Available Control Technology (MACT) standards 
    for controlling emissions of hazardous air pollutants (HAPs) from 
    process vents, storage tanks, equipment leaks, wastewater collection 
    and treatment systems and heat exchange systems at pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing facilities that are determined to be major sources of 
    HAPs.
        The proposed MACT standards for wastewater emission sources 
    contained two alternative formats for achieving compliance, a percent 
    removal and a reference control technology. Applicability 
    determination, definitions, and control requirements were similar to 
    the Hazardous Organic NESHAPs (HON) MACT standards for wastewater. The 
    proposed standard required facilities to control wastewater streams 
    that exceed the concentration cutoff where the process wastewater 
    stream exits the pharmaceutical process equipment identified as the 
    point of determination (POD). The proposed concentration cutoffs were 
    1,300 parts per million by weight (ppmw) for partially soluble HAPs and 
    5,200 ppmw for total HAPs at processes or PODs with annual HAP loads of 
    1 megagram per year or metric ton per year (Mg/yr).
        Also, the proposed standard required all streams having a HAP 
    concentration of 10,000 ppmw to be controlled at facilities with annual 
    HAP loads of 1 Mg/yr or greater.
        The proposed standards required that the control of wastewater 
    emissions be accomplished in one of the following manners: (1) Using a 
    design biotreatment system for soluble HAPs; (2) Demonstrating removals 
    achieving 99 percent by weight of partially soluble HAPs and 90 percent 
    by weight of soluble HAPs from treatment systems; or (3) Demonstrating 
    a removal of 95 percent by weight of total organic HAP from the 
    treatment system. The MACT standard proposal also discussed options for 
    CWA controls in light of the CAA MACT standard proposal for controlling 
    emissions from wastewater streams at pharmaceutical facilities being 
    covered by the proposed effluent limitations guidelines and standards. 
    EPA's intent was that the effluent limitations guidelines and standards 
    build on the MACT standards, and the discussion suggested several 
    options to accomplish this.
    3. Clean Water Act Federal Register Notice of Availability
        EPA published a Notice of Availability (NOA) in the Federal 
    Register on August 8, 1997 at 62 FR 42720. EPA published this Notice in 
    order to: allow public comment on the data received since the May 2, 
    1995 CWA proposal, further develop and revise options for the control 
    of the VOCs that were presented in the April 2, 1997 CAA MACT proposal, 
    and suggest responses to some comments on the 1995 CWA proposal.
        In section II of the NOA, EPA provided the results of an EPA 
    sampling study designed to provide information concerning the pass 
    through analysis for water soluble organic pollutants such as methanol 
    and discussed the pass through analysis that EPA would be performing 
    with respect to these and other pollutants.
        In section III, EPA presented revisions of the pretreatment options 
    which were earlier described in the MACT proposal, and presented 
    options for reducing the discharge loadings of VOCs not controlled by 
    the proposed MACT
    
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    standards. One option was compliance with the proposed MACT standards 
    together with additional PSES requirements for all VOCs except alcohols 
    and related compounds based on the performance database used in the 
    1995 proposal. A second option included coverage of additional 
    pollutants including alcohols and related compounds. EPA also presented 
    costs and loadings for two scenarios involving these two options. One 
    scenario would exclude facilities that discharged less than 10,000 
    pounds per year of pollutants of concern, while the other scenario 
    would not exclude them.
        In section IV, EPA presented the results of analyses with respect 
    to the proposed data base for NSPS requirements for the conventional 
    pollutants, COD and ammonia, pollutant exclusions, use of surrogate 
    pollutants for compliance monitoring, small facility exclusion and 
    changes to engineering costs and loadings removal estimates. In 
    addition, EPA presented data editing criteria and methodologies for 
    deriving BPT and BAT effluent limitations and PSES. On pages 42722-
    42724 of the NOA, EPA presented BPT, BAT limitations and PSES being 
    considered.
    
    E. Discussion of Final Clean Air Act Rule Published Elsewhere in 
    Today's Federal Register
    
        EPA received a number of comments on the proposed MACT standards 
    for wastewater streams. While certain changes were made (see the final 
    MACT rule published elsewhere in today's Federal Register) the controls 
    required by the proposed MACT standards have not changed. As proposed, 
    the final MACT incorporates the HON wastewater standards, thereby 
    clarifying the MACT requirements for off-site treatment of wastewater. 
    Under specified conditions, a source can transfer affected wastewater 
    streams containing soluble HAPs and less than 50 ppmw partially soluble 
    HAPs off-site for treatment. In addition, if the off-site treatment 
    facility is a POTW with uncovered headworks (grit chamber, primary 
    settling tanks, etc.) a demonstration that less than five percent of 
    the total soluble HAPs are emitted is required. For POTWs with 
    completely covered headworks, the final rule does not require a 
    demonstration that less than five percent of the total soluble HAPs are 
    emitted.
    
    F. Relationship Between the MACT and CWA Rules
    
        As noted above, the CAA MACT rule being promulgated today sets 
    emission standards for HAPs from wastewater collection and treatment 
    systems at major source pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities. The 
    CWA final effluent limitations guidelines and standards control the 
    discharge of toxic, conventional and nonconventional pollutants in 
    wastewater discharges from pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities. 
    Some of the water pollutants being controlled by today's effluent 
    guidelines and standards are also HAPs and thus these pollutants are 
    being controlled by both the MACT and CWA final rules. The extent of 
    the coverage of waterborne HAPs by the air and water rules will be 
    discussed in subsequent sections, as will the joint economic analysis 
    and environmental benefits assessment that were conducted for the two 
    rules.
    
    G. Final Clean Water Act Effluent Guidelines Limitations and Standards 
    Rule
    
        Today EPA is promulgating revised BPT limitations only for COD 
    based on advanced biological treatment for all four subcategories.
        For subcategories A and C, EPA is promulgating BAT limitations for 
    COD equal to the revised BPT limitations and for 30 organic pollutants, 
    including 28 VOCs (of which 13 are HAPS) based on advanced biological 
    treatment identified as a basis for the revised COD limitations. In 
    addition, for subcategories A and C, EPA is promulgating BAT ammonia 
    limitations based on nitrification technology, and is modifying the BAT 
    compliance monitoring requirements for the existing cyanide 
    limitations.
        For subcategories B and D, EPA is adding BAT limitations for COD 
    equal to the revised BPT requirements, and is withdrawing the existing 
    BPT and BAT cyanide limitations since the facilities in these 
    subcategories do not generate cyanide in their wastewaters.
        The Agency is promulgating PSES for 23 VOCs (10 of which are HAPs) 
    plus ammonia for subcategories A and C, and is also clarifying the 
    compliance requirements for the existing cyanide pretreatment 
    standards. For subcategories B and D, EPA is promulgating PSES for the 
    5 VOCs (1 of which is a HAP) and, for the same reason given above, is 
    withdrawing the existing cyanide standards. Subcategories A and C 
    facilities must continue to comply with the cyanide standards, and 
    achieve compliance with the standards for ammonia and the 23 organic 
    pollutants within three years. Subcategories B and D facilities must 
    achieve compliance with the 5 organic pollutant standards within three 
    years. The compliance times of up to three years is being given because 
    of the design and installation of technologies used as a basis for the 
    standards, such as steam stripping and nitrification require sufficient 
    lead times for implementation.
        EPA is promulgating NSPS for subcategories A and C equal to the BAT 
    limitations for COD, ammonia and the organic pollutants, including the 
    VOCs, and revised limitations for BOD5 and TSS based on 
    advanced biological treatment. EPA is also promulgating NSPS for 
    subcategories B and D equal to BAT for COD and revised limitations for 
    BOD5 and TSS based on advanced biological treatment, and is 
    withdrawing the existing cyanide NSPS for these two subcategories.
        For PSNS EPA is promulgating standards equal to PSES for all 
    pollutants and subcategories and is withdrawing the existing cyanide 
    PSNS for subcategories B and D. Finally, EPA is promulgating BCT 
    limitations equal to the existing BPT limitations for BOD5, 
    TSS and pH.
        In today's rule, EPA has republished many parts of the existing 
    guideline in Part 439 to make the changes made today easier to 
    understand, and also reformated the guideline to make it more clear and 
    easier to use. The republication or reformatting of existing 
    requirements is not intended to introduce substantive changes to these 
    regulatory provisions. For that reason, EPA believes prior notice and 
    comment on these provisions is unnecessary.
    
    III. Summary of Most Significant Changes to Water Rules From 
    Proposal
    
        This section describes the most significant changes to the rule 
    since proposal. Many of these changes have resulted from the comments 
    that are discussed below (see section X). This section will discuss the 
    major changes in the rule concerning revisions to the limitations and 
    standards for VOCs, changes in the BAT technology basis and changes in 
    the BPT and BAT limitations for pollutants other than the VOCs. More 
    detailed explanations for changes may be found in the comment response 
    document in the record of the final rule.
    
    A. Limitations and Standards for Volatile Compounds
    
        In today's final rule, EPA is not requiring that the limitations 
    for VOCs be measured in-plant as proposed. For all four subcategories, 
    BAT, NSPS, PSES, and PSNS limitations and standards, except for cyanide 
    limitations and standards in subcategories A and C, this rule does not 
    alter the generally applicable rule
    
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    (122.45(h) or 403.6(e)) that limitations generally are measured at the 
    end-of-pipe discharge point. This rule provides clarification of the 
    existing in-plant monitoring for cyanide as discussed in the 
    Implementation Section of this preamble (see section VIII A).
        At proposal, EPA proposed PSES for 13 alcohols and related 
    pollutants (compounds) under coproposal B. These pollutants were 
    methanol, ethanol, n-propanol, isopropanol, n-butyl alcohol, tert-butyl 
    alcohol, amyl alcohol, formamide, N,N-dimethylaniline, pyridine, 1,4-
    dioxane, aniline, and petroleum naphtha. No PSES/PSNS are being 
    promulgated for these pollutants today because EPA determined these 
    pollutants do not pass through POTWs or interfere with the treatment 
    works. (See section IV.E for a discussion of the passthrough analysis 
    for these pollutants).
    
    B. Change in BAT Technology Basis for Organic Pollutants
    
        In the August 8, 1997 NOA, EPA discussed changing the technology 
    basis for BAT organic pollutant limitations for subcategories A and C 
    facilities from in-plant steam stripping and advanced biological 
    treatment to advanced biological treatment only. EPA received comments 
    supporting this change in technology basis. The final MACT standards 
    being promulgated today will control most emissions of VOCs from 
    wastewaters at subcategories A and C direct discharging facilities 
    based on the use of steam stripping technology. Accordingly, EPA 
    believes that it is not necessary or appropriate to include this 
    technology in the BAT technology basis; the CWA limitations and 
    standards are calculated from a data base representing advanced 
    biological treatment only. Thus, EPA is promulgating BAT limitations 
    for all of the 30 organic pollutants for subcategories A and C 
    facilities based on advanced biological treatment only. EPA notes that 
    one facility not covered by the MACT standards would need to install 
    steam stripping technology in order to achieve the effluent limitations 
    following the biological treatment system.
    
    C. BPT and BAT/BCT Limitation Changes
    
        Based on the receipt of new data from commenters, proposed 
    limitations were revised for the nonconventional pollutants COD and 
    ammonia and a number of the organic pollutants. In addition, commenters 
    on the proposed limitations for the conventional pollutants BOD5 and 
    TSS, as well as COD, indicated that EPA should eliminate all non-
    process wastewater in the calculation of limitations for these 
    parameters. In developing limitations for the proposal, EPA did not 
    back out the estimated non-process wastewater from the total wastewater 
    flow and adjust the concentration accordingly because the non-process 
    flow data provided by facilities in the data sets were only gross 
    estimates and were not based on daily measurements of non-process flow. 
    Despite requesting more precise information (such as daily non-process 
    flow data) from facilities that generated the data sets used to 
    calculate the proposed limitations for BOD5, TSS and COD, EPA did not 
    obtain this information. However, in the NOA, EPA presented revised 
    proposed limitations for BOD5 and TSS and COD that were calculated from 
    the existing plant data sets using the gross estimates of non-process 
    flow, as described below, to adjust the concentrations in addition to 
    several new data sets from plants other than those used for the 
    proposal.
        In a previous EPA effluent limitations guidelines and standards 
    rulemaking for the Organic Chemicals, Plastics and Synthetic Fibers 
    (OCPSF) industry (52 FR 42522), only plant data sets that contained 
    less than 25 percent non-process wastewater through treatment were used 
    in calculating limitations. Thus, the 25 percent level of non-process 
    wastewater dilution was determined as a benchmark in order to evaluate 
    biological treatment performance. For the purposes of the NOA, in cases 
    where the non-process flow was estimated to be more than 25 percent of 
    the total flow, the non-process wastewater was backed out of the total 
    flow volume and the parameters corrected for the absence of this non-
    process wastewater. However, for the final rule, limitations for COD 
    are developed from data sets in which the reported flow volume contains 
    less than 25 percent non-process wastewater and the limitations are 
    calculated without correcting the data sets for the non-process flow 
    dilution. This change is discussed further in section IV.D below. As 
    further discussed below, limitations for BOD5 and some of the remaining 
    TSS are not being revised at this time since the revised COD limits 
    requiring advanced biological treatment will incidentally remove a 
    large portion of the remaining BOD5 and TSS.
        Another change to the proposal involved the limitations and 
    standards proposed for cyanide. EPA proposed BPT, BAT, NSPS, PSES and 
    PSNS limitations and standards for cyanide based on the performance of 
    hydrogen peroxide oxidation technology. Following the proposal, EPA 
    received comments indicating that the use of the hydrogen peroxide 
    technology to destroy cyanide could possibly result in equipment 
    explosions with certain types of wastewater. Other commenters indicated 
    that hydrogen peroxide technology may not be an appropriate cyanide 
    destruction technology for all treatment situations. Along with these 
    comments, EPA received additional data on the performance of alkaline 
    chlorination technology in destroying cyanide. Based on these comments 
    and the new performance data, EPA indicated in the NOA that it was 
    considering promulgating two sets of cyanide limitations, one based on 
    the performance of hydrogen peroxide technology and the other based on 
    the performance of alkaline chlorination technology. In the NOA, EPA 
    indicated that only those facilities that could demonstrate that a 
    potential safety hazard could result from their use of hydrogen 
    peroxide technology would be subject to the alkaline chlorination 
    limitations and standards. EPA also solicited information and comments 
    regarding wastestreams with high organic content as evidenced by high 
    COD or total organic carbon (TOC) levels, and at what levels these 
    pollutants would indicate that the wastestream(s) high organic content 
    would present a safety concern and would more appropriately be 
    controlled by limitations based on alkaline chlorination. After 
    consideration of the information provided in response to the 
    solicitation in the NOA, particularly new performance data representing 
    current (post 1990 base year) loadings, EPA has decided not to revise 
    the existing limitations and standards for cyanide based on the small 
    amount of cyanide discharge loadings that would be removed. However, 
    the final rule continues to require compliance with the cyanide 
    limitations be established in-plant, prior to commingling the cyanide 
    bearing wastestreams with non-cyanide wastestreams for those facilities 
    where the cyanide levels would be below the level of detection at the 
    end-of-pipe monitoring location.
        Along with comments on its proposed numerical limitations and 
    standards for ammonia and organic pollutants, EPA received data 
    concerning the performance of steam strippers, advanced biological 
    treatment and nitrification in connection with these proposed 
    limitations. EPA evaluated these data, and provided revised numerical 
    limitations and standards in the NOA for ammonia, several organic 
    pollutants controlled by BAT technology (advanced biological treatment) 
    and several VOCs controlled
    
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    by steam stripping technology for PSES. As the result of the data 
    received and evaluated, along with comments on the NOA, EPA has changed 
    the numerical BAT limitations for ammonia. In response to comments in 
    the NOA indicating that indirect dischargers should be able to achieve 
    the PSES ammonia limitations using either two-step nitrification 
    technology or steam stripping, EPA has decided to set the PSES ammonia 
    limitations equal to the BAT ammonia limitations, and to provide that 
    indirect discharging subcategories A and C facilities discharging to 
    POTWs with nitrification capability need not comply with the 
    categorical limit for ammonia. EPA has also changed the numerical BAT 
    limitations and PSES for several organic pollutants based on its 
    analysis of data received in response to the proposal.
    
    D. Pollutant Selection
    
        EPA received several comments concerning the reasoning behind the 
    regulation of certain pollutants as well as the overall rationale for 
    selecting pollutants for regulation. In the NOA, EPA indicated that it 
    had reviewed the loadings bases of all the pollutants selected for 
    regulation and had determined that in the case of eight pollutants, 
    insufficient amounts of the pollutants are being discharged to justify 
    national regulation. These pollutants are diethyl ether, cyclohexane, 
    chloromethane, dimethylamine, methylamine, furfural, 2-methylpyridine 
    and trichlorofluoromethane. Since the NOA, EPA has reevaluated its 
    final loadings database and has determined that the exclusion of these 
    pollutants along with an additional 15 pollutants is appropriate. The 
    additional 15 pollutants are excluded from the BAT regulation based on 
    the lack of removals from current discharge or the control of 
    discharges of the pollutant by other regulated pollutant parameters. 
    These pollutants are butanone, formaldehyde, n-butanol, tertiary 
    butanol, n-propanol, ethylene glycol, polyethylene glycol 600, aniline, 
    petroleum naphtha, 1,4-dioxane, formamide and dimethyl formamide, 
    dimethylaniline, dimethylacetamide and pyridine.
        EPA proposed PSES for 45 organic pollutants, 37 of which are VOCs, 
    under co-proposal A with compliance for the standards for 12 of the 
    VOCs to be monitored in-plant, and compliance for the standards for the 
    remaining 33 organics to be monitored at the end-of-pipe. In the NOA, 
    EPA presented two revised PSES options, under which EPA would 
    promulgate pretreatment standards for VOCs with end-of-pipe monitoring. 
    The pollutants not regulated under one of these PSES options include 
    water soluble alcohols such as methanol and related compounds. After 
    consideration of comments and evaluating the results of the 
    Barcelonetta POTW study and its implications on the final pass through 
    analysis (see further discussion of pass through analysis in section IV 
    E below) and further evaluation of incidental removals and the amount 
    of or discharge removals for the pollutants, EPA is promulgating PSES 
    and PSNS for 23 VOCs for subcategories A and C and 5 VOCs for 
    subcategories B and D. The PSES and PSNS do not include the alcohols 
    and related compounds, and are based on monitoring at the end-of-pipe 
    unless the POTW determines it to be impractical per 40 CFR 403.6(e).
    
    IV. The Final Clean Water Act Regulation
    
        This section discusses the applicability of the final rule, 
    regulatory options considered and the rationale for the selected 
    options for BPT, BCT, BAT, PSES, PSNS and NSPS.
    
    A. Applicability and Scope of the Final Rule
    
        Today's final effluent limitations guidelines and standards are 
    intended to cover pollutants in process wastewater discharges from 
    existing and new pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities. Based on 
    comments, EPA has revised the proposed scope of the rule. This final 
    rule contains revisions to the effluent limitations guidelines and 
    standards in four subcategories (A thru D) of the pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing point source category, EPA is not revising the scope of 
    the applicability for the fifth subcategory (Subcategory E-Research).
        With regard to subcategory E facilities, EPA proposed to revise the 
    description of the research subcategory in the applicability section of 
    the existing subcategory E regulations to exclude pilot or full-scale 
    operations that generate wastewater using fermentation, extraction, 
    chemical synthesis or mixing, compounding and formulating from the 
    scope of subpart E, and these operations were proposed to be covered by 
    the appropriate subcategory A through D. After considering the comments 
    received concerning the regulation of wastewaters from pilot-scale 
    operations, EPA has decided not to change the existing description of 
    the research subcategory in the applicability section. EPA believes 
    that it does not have sufficient information concerning subcategory E 
    generated wastewaters to change the existing description. Subpart E 
    facilities remain subject to the BPT limitations in the existing 
    guidelines. If pilot scale operations occur at either stand alone 
    research facilities or during operations at manufacturing facilities, 
    then BAT and BCT limits for these wastewaters can be determined by 
    permit writers on a best professional judgment (BPJ) basis, or 
    similarly, such wastewater generated at indirect discharging facilities 
    may be addressed by the regulations found at 40 CFR 403.5 and by local 
    limits on a case-by-case basis.
        Pharmaceutical manufacturers use many different raw materials and 
    manufacturing processes to create a wide range of products. These 
    products include medicinal and feed grades of all organic chemicals 
    having therapeutic value, whether obtained by chemical synthesis, 
    fermentation, extraction from naturally occurring plant or animal 
    substances, or by refining a technical grade product.
        The pharmaceutical products, processes and activities covered by 
    the manufacturing subcategories in this final regulation include, but 
    are not limited to:
        a. Biological products covered by the U.S. Department of Commerce, 
    Bureau of the Census Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) Code No. 
    2836, with the exception of diagnostic substances. (Products covered by 
    SIC Code No. 2836 were formerly covered under the 1977 SIC Code No. 
    2831.)
        b. Medicinal chemicals and botanical products covered by SIC Code 
    No. 2833;
        c. Pharmaceutical products covered by SIC Code No. 2834;
        d. All fermentation, biological and natural extraction, chemical 
    synthesis and formulation products considered to be pharmaceutically 
    active ingredients by the Food and Drug Administration that are not 
    covered by SIC Code Nos. 2833, 2834, and 2836;
        e. Multiple end-use products derived from pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing operations (e.g., components of formulations, 
    intermediates, or final products, provided that the primary use of the 
    product is intended for pharmaceutical purposes);
        f. Products not covered by SIC Code Nos. 2833, 2834, and 2836 or 
    other categorical limitations and standards if they are manufactured by 
    a pharmaceutical manufacturer by processes that generate wastewaters 
    that in turn closely correspond to those of pharmaceutical products. 
    (An example of such a product is citric acid.)
        g. Cosmetic preparations covered by SIC Code No. 2844 that contain 
    pharmaceutically active ingredients or
    
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    ingredients intended for treatment of some skin condition. (This group 
    of preparations does not include products such as lipsticks or perfumes 
    that serve to enhance appearance or to provide a pleasing odor, but do 
    not provide skin care. In general, this also excludes deodorants, 
    manicure preparations, shaving preparations and non-medicated shampoos 
    that do not function primarily as a skin treatment.)
        A number of products and/or activities such as surgical and medical 
    manufacturing and medical laboratory activity are not part of the 
    pharmaceutical manufacturing category. A descriptive listing of the 
    products and activities that are specifically excluded from the 
    pharmaceutical manufacturing category are contained in the 
    applicability provision of the final rule and in sections 2 and 3 of 
    the final TDD.
        In the NOA, EPA indicated that it was considering excluding from 
    the scope of the regulation organic chemical manufacturers covered by 
    the OCPSF regulation (40 CFR, Part 414) that manufacture pharmaceutical 
    intermediates and active ingredients provided that the pharmaceutical 
    portion of the process wastewater is less than 50 percent of the total 
    process wastewater. EPA received no adverse comments concerning this, 
    and has decided to promulgate this exclusion as described in the NOA. 
    Thus facilities will be covered by the existing OCPSF regulation for 
    both their OCPSF and pharmaceutical manufacturing process wastewaters 
    provided that the pharmaceutical portion of the process wastewater at 
    the facility is less than 50 percent of the total.
    
    B. Options Selection
    
        EPA evaluated final technology options for BPT, BAT, BCT, NSPS, 
    PSES and PSNS limitations and standards for all four subcategories A 
    thru D. The options considered for each level of control are discussed 
    below in sections IV.C thru H.
    
    C. Best Practicable Control Technology Currently Available (BPT)
    
        EPA proposed to revise BPT for the conventional pollutants 
    BOD5 and TSS, the nonconventional pollutant COD, and the 
    toxic pollutant cyanide for subcategories A and C, and for 
    subcategories B and D, proposed to revise BPT limitations for 
    BOD5, TSS, and COD and to withdraw the cyanide limitations. 
    In response to this proposal, EPA received comments claiming that EPA 
    lacks the legal authority to revise BPT for the conventional pollutants 
    since the proposed revised BPT limitations did not pass the BCT cost-
    reasonableness test. EPA also received comments claiming that COD and 
    cyanide should not be regulated at BPT but only at the BAT level.
        In today's rulemaking, EPA is revising BPT limitations only as to 
    COD. The current BPT limitations for BOD5, TSS and cyanide 
    will continue to apply (except for subcategories B and D where EPA is 
    withdrawing the BPT limitations for cyanide). Accordingly, issues 
    raised by commenters regarding EPA's legal authority to revise BPT for 
    BOD5, TSS, or cyanide do not need to be addressed in this 
    rulemaking. Nonetheless, EPA continues to believe that it has the legal 
    authority to revise BPT limitations as appropriate. EPA further 
    believes it can do so for conventional pollutants without having to 
    apply the BCT cost-reasonableness test. Because EPA's authority to 
    revise BPT limitations for conventional pollutants or cyanide is no 
    longer an issue in this rulemaking, EPA is providing only a general 
    statement of its statutory authority to revise BPT. For example, 
    section 304(b) of the CWA directs EPA to revise all effluent limitation 
    guidelines, including those based on BPT, at least annually if 
    appropriate. Similarly, section 304(m) directs EPA to establish a 
    schedule ``for the annual review and revision of promulgated effluent 
    guidelines, in accordance with subsection (b) of this section.'' EPA 
    does not believe that the addition of the BCT provisions to the CWA 
    supplanted the BPT provisions. When enacting the more recent BCT 
    provisions, Congress did not strip EPA of its explicit authority to 
    revise or update BPT as necessary and appropriate. Moreover, the 
    different purposes of BPT and BCT limitations would support an EPA 
    decision to promulgate best ``practicable'' control technology for 
    conventional pollutant control (represented by BPT), rather than the 
    higher ``best available'' standard (represented by BCT).
        Similarly, it is the Agency's position that it is not required to 
    regulate COD or cyanide only at the BAT level. As noted above, section 
    304(b) of the CWA as well as section 304(m) directs EPA to revise all 
    effluent limitations guidelines, including those based on BPT, at least 
    annually if necessary and appropriate. It is EPA's view that the 
    addition of BAT provisions to the CWA did not supplant the BPT 
    provisions. When enacting the more recent BAT provisions, Congress did 
    not strip EPA of its authority to revise or update BPT as necessary and 
    appropriate. Further, the different purposes of BPT and BAT limitations 
    would support an EPA decision to promulgate revised effluent limitation 
    guidelines for nonconventional or toxic pollutants that reflect simply 
    the next generation of best ``practicable'' control technology 
    (represented by BPT), rather than the higher ``best available'' 
    standard (represented by BAT).
        Since EPA is not revising BPT limitations for cyanide (but rather 
    is modifying the compliance monitoring requirements for cyanide for 
    subcategories A and C, and withdrawing the limitations as to 
    subcategories B and D), the issue need not be addressed further in this 
    rulemaking.
        EPA believes that the decision of whether or not to revise BPT for 
    nonconventional pollutants should be made based upon consideration of a 
    number of factors, including, but not necessarily limited to, cost, the 
    technology being considered and the relative performance being achieved 
    (best ``practicable'' versus best ``available''), the anticipated 
    pollutant reductions, and implementation burden on permit writers.
        In this case, EPA has made a determination that the costs and 
    removals associated with the implementation of advanced biological 
    treatment at a best ``practicable'' level warrant revision of COD at 
    BPT. This is in part due to the relatively high concentrations of COD 
    in the effluent that are allowed under the existing percent removal BPT 
    limitations which are unique to this industry. In other cases, the 
    Agency has decided not to revise BPT (see, for example, Effluent 
    Limitation Guidelines for the Pulp, Paper, and Paperboard Category, 
    subparts B and E, 63 FR 18534, April 15, 1998).
        As noted above, EPA proposed to revise BPT for the conventional 
    pollutants BOD5 and TSS, the nonconventional pollutant COD, 
    and the toxic pollutant cyanide for subcategories A and D, and for 
    subcategories B and D, to revise BPT limitations for BOD5, 
    TSS, and COD and to withdraw the existing cyanide limitations. The 
    technology basis of the proposed BPT limitations was advanced 
    biological treatment. EPA also determined that the level of performance 
    necessary for a plant to be considered as a best performer at the best 
    ``practicable'' level was full compliance with the existing BPT 
    limitations. Of the plants considered as best performers at proposal, 
    EPA selected five A and C subcategory plants and two B and D 
    subcategory plants. The Agency then calculated long-term average 
    performance concentrations for regulated pollutants from the best 
    performing A and C and B and D plants.
        In developing the final BPT limitations, EPA has essentially
    
    [[Page 50397]]
    
    followed the proposal methodology except that EPA used only data sets 
    representing less than 25 percent non-process wastewater through 
    treatment and included the additional data sets received since proposal 
    in its final limitations determinations. Except for one facility which 
    adds non-process wastewater after treatment but before the end-of-pipe 
    sample point, the BPT data sets were not corrected for non-process 
    wastewater and the final limitations were calculated using the plant 
    flow that included some non-process wastewater.
        EPA did not back out the estimated non-process wastewater in 
    developing the proposed BPT concentration based limitations because 
    non-process flow data available at that time were only gross estimates 
    not identified in sufficient detail and were not based on daily 
    measurements of non-process flow. Regarding the proposed BPT 
    limitations, commenters indicated that EPA should eliminate all non-
    process wastewater from the calculation of BPT limitations. EPA did not 
    have information such as daily non-process flow data from facilities 
    that generated the data sets used in the calculation of BPT and BAT 
    limitations for BOD5, TSS and COD to allow adjustment. In 
    the recent NOA, EPA presented BPT limitations for BOD5 and 
    TSS and BAT COD limitations that were calculated from plant data sets 
    which included the additional data submissions obtained since proposal 
    from which the non-process wastewater had been backed out. In cases 
    where the non-process flow was estimated by EPA to be more than 25 
    percent of the total flow using the available data, the fraction of the 
    non-process to process flow volume was used to calculate a correction 
    factor and the long-term average concentration values for each of the 
    BPT parameters were adjusted to reflect the parameters absence of this 
    non-process wastewater. No corrections were made to data sets where the 
    non-process flow was estimated to be less than 25 percent of the total 
    flow.
        EPA received no adverse comments regarding these adjusted 
    limitations. However, based on further analysis, EPA believes that it 
    is more appropriate to follow the methodology used in developing the 
    final Organic Chemicals, Plastics, and Synthetic Fibers (OCPSF) 
    regulation (52 FR 52522) final BPT limitations. In that rule, only 
    plant data sets that contained less than 25 percent non-process 
    wastewater through treatment were used in the calculation of BPT 
    limits, and the effluent data were not adjusted to take into account 
    plant data sets that contained more than 25 percent non-process 
    wastewater through treatment. EPA selected this approach in calculating 
    the final BPT limitations in this rule for the same two reasons used 
    during development of the OCPSF rule. (See 52 FR 42522). First, using 
    data sets with greater than 25 percent non-process wastewater through 
    treatment introduces considerable uncertainty into the limitation 
    calculations because the flow data that would be used are only in part 
    based on daily flow measurements whereas the concentration-based 
    limitations are calculated from the long term average of daily 
    measurements over long periods of time (12-24 months). Second, the 
    final limitations should represent as much as possible the performance 
    of treatment technology on process wastewater. In determining permit 
    mass limits, permit writers and, where applicable, pretreatment control 
    authorities should identify the amount of non-process wastewater being 
    treated. The flow volume representing 25 percent or less of the total 
    flow should be included in the volume used to calculate allowable mass 
    discharges. Any additional volume would have to be evaluated on a case-
    by-case basis to determine what, if any, mass allowances are 
    appropriate.
        EPA considered four options for the final BPT limitations. Under 
    the first option, EPA would not revise the existing BPT limitations for 
    BOD5, TSS, COD and cyanide. No costs or removals are 
    associated with this option. Under the second option, EPA would revise 
    the BPT limitations based on advanced biological treatment only for 
    COD, and revise the monitoring requirements for the existing cyanide 
    limitations. Under option three, EPA would revise BPT limitations for 
    BOD5 and TSS based on advanced biological treatment and 
    revise the monitoring requirements for the existing cyanide 
    limitations. Under the fourth option, EPA would revise BPT limitations 
    for BOD5, TSS, and COD based on advanced biological 
    treatment, and revise the monitoring requirements for the existing 
    cyanide limitations. The options for all subcategories are the same, 
    except as to cyanide where the option for subcategories B and D 
    contains the option to withdraw the cyanide limitations rather than 
    just modify the monitoring requirements.
        The pretax total annualized costs, pollutant removals, and costs 
    per pound removed associated with the options, except the ``no action'' 
    option, are shown below in Table IV.C.1.
    
                  Table IV.C.1.--BPT Pretax Option Costs, Pollutant Removals and Cost per Pound Removed             
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           Total                                    
                                                                        annualized       Pollutant    Cost per pound
                            Treatment option                             cost  ($        removals        ($1996/lb) 
                                                                       million 1997)       (lbs)                    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     A/C Subcategory                                                
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Clarify cyanide monitoring, revise COD only.....................           $2.48      14,352,000           $0.17
    Clarify cyanide monitoring, revise BOD5 & TSS...................            2.61       4,692,000            0.56
    Clarify cyanide monitoring, revise BOD5, TSS, & COD.............            3.10      15,731,000            0.20
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     B/D Subcategory                                                
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Withdraw cyanide, revise COD only...............................           $1.38         539,000           $2.56
    Withdraw cyanide, revise BOD5 & TSS.............................            1.89         588,000            3.21
    Withdraw cyanide, revise BOD5, TSS, & COD.......................            2.16         598,000            3.62
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In selecting these treatment options, EPA considered the total cost 
    in relation to the effluent reduction benefits, the age of equipment 
    and facilities involved, the processes employed, process changes 
    required, engineering aspects of the control technologies, non-water 
    quality environmental impacts (including energy requirements) and
    
    [[Page 50398]]
    
    other factors in accordance with section 304(b)(1)(B) of the CWA.
        EPA has determined to revise BPT effluent limitations only for COD. 
    EPA is also clarifying the compliance monitoring requirements for the 
    existing BPT limitations for cyanide for subcategories A and C, and 
    withdrawing the existing cyanide limitations for subcategories B and D. 
    As discussed above, EPA believes that it has the statutory authority to 
    revise BPT and that it has the discretion to determine whether to 
    revise BPT effluent limitations guidelines in particular circumstances. 
    The CWA requires EPA, when setting BPT, to examine the total cost of 
    treatment technologies in relation to the effluent reduction benefits 
    achieved. In addition, in determining whether to set BCT limitations, 
    the Agency needs to consider the reasonableness of the cost of reducing 
    conventional pollutants and compare the cost of removing those 
    pollutants by regulated plants and by POTWs. Accordingly, EPA examined 
    the use of advanced biological treatment as a basis for both BPT and 
    BCT limitations for BOD5 and TSS. The Agency found that the 
    reductions in these conventional contaminants achieved by this 
    technology were not commensurate with the costs, largely because of the 
    large operational costs associated with the removal of TSS. While it is 
    EPA's view that it can revise BPT limitations for conventional 
    pollutants without passing the BCT cost test (where the BPT effluent 
    reduction ratio is favorable), the Agency is not generally inclined to 
    do so unless the removals achieved by the existing BPT limitations are 
    significantly fewer than would be achieved through revision of BPT. 
    That was not the case here. Revising BPT (and BAT) for COD plants will 
    not only remove large amounts of COD, but also achieve significant 
    incidental removals of BOD5 and TSS. For this reason, EPA 
    has determined that it is not necessary to separately revise the BPT 
    limits for BOD5 and TSS in this case.
        EPA has determined to revise BPT for COD because the biological 
    treatment technology used as a basis for the limitations really 
    represents BPT technology and is widely used in the industry.
        The bulk parameter and nonconventional pollutant COD is an 
    indicator of organic matter in the wastestream that is susceptible to 
    strong oxidation, and as such would also measure organic material 
    susceptible to biochemical oxidation, as well as some that is more 
    difficult to oxidize biochemically. In addition, limited studies and 
    discharge monitoring data have identified toxicity associated with the 
    COD levels contained in effluents from pharmaceutical manufacturing 
    facilities. Further discussion of the toxicity levels measured in the 
    effluents from pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities is contained in 
    Section 6 of the TDD. The revised COD limitations are estimated to 
    remove approximately 14.9 million pounds annually, including incidental 
    removal of 2.7 million pounds of BOD at an annualized cost of $2.48 
    million ($1997).
        The revised COD provisions require the use of either the new 
    effluent concentration limitations or the existing 74 percent reduction 
    requirement, depending upon which method determines the more stringent 
    plant permit limitation. This is being done in order to avoid back-
    sliding issues for existing plants that because of low influent 
    concentration already meet lower effluent limits for COD.
        With regard to cyanide, EPA is retaining the existing BPT 
    limitations for the A and C subcategories. Further revision of the BPT 
    cyanide limitations was not selected since the removals were estimated 
    to be less than 42 pounds per year, thus, determined not to be 
    beneficial in relation to the annualized costs of over $200,000 
    ($1997).
        However, EPA is modifying the requirements for compliance 
    monitoring (for subcategories A and C). The current limitations require 
    compliance monitoring after cyanide treatment and before dilution with 
    other wastestreams, or in the alternative, monitoring after mixing with 
    other wastestreams based on a standard dilution factor. Today's rule 
    does not change the prohibition on dilution to meet the effluent 
    limitations for cyanide. The rule continues to require monitoring for 
    compliance with the existing limitations in-plant, prior to the 
    commingling of cyanide-bearing wastestreams with non-cyanide bearing 
    wastestreams for those facilities where the cyanide levels would be 
    below the level of detection at the end-of-pipe monitoring location. 
    The only change in the monitoring requirements is to eliminate the 
    current dilution standard that applied industry-wide, and to allow 
    individual facilities to demonstrate that end-of-pipe monitoring for 
    cyanide is feasible (i.e., cyanide is detectable); those facilities may 
    continue to monitor at the end of pipe.
        The ability of EPA to require in-plant monitoring has recently been 
    questioned in connection with the Great Lakes water quality guidance 
    program. American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI) v. EPA, 115 F.3d 979 
    (D.C. Cir. 1997). The Court held that although EPA has the authority to 
    require monitoring of internal wastestreams, see AISI, 115 F.3d at 995, 
    the CWA does not authorize EPA to require compliance with water quality 
    based effluent limitations at a point inside the facility and thereby 
    deprive a permittee of the ability to choose its own control system to 
    meet the limitations, see id. at 966. EPA does not believe that 
    decision controls here. The AISI court did not consider the question 
    whether EPA has authority to regulate internal wastestreams in the 
    context of technology-based controls such as BPT/BAT, PSES and NSPS/
    PSNS. Unlike water quality-based effluent limitations, which are 
    calculated to ensure that water quality standards for the receiving 
    water are attained, technology-based limitations and standards are 
    derived to measure the performance of specific model technologies that 
    EPA is required by statute to identify. In identifying these 
    technologies, EPA is directed to consider precisely the type of 
    internal controls that are irrelevant to the development of water 
    quality-based effluent limitations, such as the processes employed, 
    process changes, and the engineering aspects of various types of 
    control techniques. EPA's technology-based effluent limitations are 
    intended to reflect, for each industrial category or subcategory, the 
    ``base level'' of technology (including process changes) and to ensure 
    that ``in no case * * * should any plant be allowed to discharge more 
    pollutants per unit of production than is defined by that base level.'' 
    E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Train, 430 U.S. at 129 (1973).
        EPA believes that it can require in-plant monitoring to demonstrate 
    compliance with technology-based effluent limitations in accordance 
    with the CWA and its regulations at 40 CFR 122.44(i), 122.45(h), 
    125.3(e) and 403.6(e). In today's rule, EPA is continuing to require 
    in-plant monitoring for cyanide except where cyanide can be detected in 
    the final effluent. Were EPA to require compliance monitoring of the 
    final effluent without adjustment for the amount of dilution in 
    cyanide-bearing waste streams, there would be no way to determine 
    whether the facility had adequately controlled for cyanide or whether 
    the effluent has simply been diluted below the analytical detection 
    level. Diluting pollutants in this manner rather than preventing their 
    discharge is inconsistent with achieving the removals represented by 
    the technology-based levels of control and hence with
    
    [[Page 50399]]
    
    the purposes of the limitations. It is also inconsistent with the goals 
    of the CWA in general.
    
    D. Best Available Technology Economically Achievable
    
        EPA proposed adding new end-of-pipe BAT limitations for 53 organic 
    pollutants plus ammonia, revising the existing cyanide limitations and 
    adding the BPT revised COD limitations for subcategories A and C. For 
    subcategories B and D, EPA proposed adding new end-of-pipe BAT 
    limitations for 53 organics, BPT revised COD limitations and 
    withdrawing the existing cyanide limitations. The technology basis for 
    the limitations for VOCs was steam stripping plus advanced biological 
    treatment for subcategories A and C and advanced biological treatment 
    for subcategories B and D. The technology basis for the ammonia 
    limitations was nitrification. The revised cyanide limitations for the 
    A and C subcategories were the same as the revised BPT proposed 
    limitations. For subcategories B and D cyanide limitations were 
    proposed to be withdrawn since facilities in these subcategories do not 
    use or generate cyanide in their wastewaters.
        EPA received a number of comments indicating that steam stripping 
    technology was not appropriate for the treatment of VOCs and that 
    emissions of these pollutants from wastewater should be controlled by 
    CAA regulations. In the preamble to the proposed MACT standards, EPA 
    indicated that, in view of the MACT proposed wastewater standards, that 
    it was considering changing the BAT technology basis for subcategory A 
    and C VOCs limitations to end-of-pipe advanced biological treatment. In 
    the NOA, EPA reiterated this option and provided cost information which 
    compared the original proposal technology basis (steam stripping and 
    advanced biological treatment) to the advanced biological treatment 
    technology basis.
        EPA also received comments on its proposed ammonia limitations. 
    Commenters indicated that the ammonia limitations were inadequately 
    supported by nitrification data. In the NOA, EPA indicated that after 
    reevaluating its nitrification data base, it intended to base the BAT 
    ammonia limitations on both one or two stage nitrification technology, 
    presented compliance costs estimates based on two stage nitrification 
    technology and revised limitations based on incorporating additional 
    data, including data representing two stage nitrification, into the 
    data base. In comments on the NOA, commenters indicated that some 
    plants employing the proposed technology basis did not believe that 
    they could achieve consistent compliance with the revised limitations.
        In order to respond to these commenters, EPA evaluated additional 
    nitrification data received from facilities after the August 8, 1997 
    publication of the NOA. As a result of this evaluation, EPA has 
    recalculated the ammonia limitations that were presented in the NOA. In 
    doing so, EPA used only data that showed evidence that nitrification 
    was occurring and compared separate sets of limitations developed using 
    single-stage and two-stage nitrification data sets, respectively. The 
    results of this comparison gave final limitations less stringent than 
    those calculated for the NOA, but reflective of systems that nitrify 
    continuously whether they are one or two stage systems.
        EPA considered three regulatory options as the basis for BAT 
    limitations for subcategory A and C facilities. All three options 
    modify the existing BAT regulations to parallel the BPT regulations and 
    to clarify the compliance monitoring point for the existing cyanide 
    limitations. The first option is a no cost revision which incorporates 
    the BPT clarification for cyanide and revised BPT limitations for COD. 
    The second option adds limitations for 30 organic pollutants based on 
    advanced biological treatment and revised limitations for COD equal to 
    the final BPT limitations and clarifies the compliance monitoring point 
    for cyanide. The third option adds limitations for 30 organic 
    pollutants based on advanced biological treatment, ammonia limitations 
    based on one or two stage biological nitrification technology, 
    incorporates the revised COD limitations and clarifies the compliance 
    monitoring point for cyanide. The pretax total annualized compliance 
    costs and pollutant removals associated with the second and third 
    options (only options incurring costs) are shown below in Table IV.D.1 
    for subcategories A and C:
    
       Table IV.D.1--BAT Pretax Options Costs, and Pollutant Removals for   
                     Subcategory A and C Direct Dischargers                 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   Total         Pollutant  
                                                annualized       removals   
                Regulatory option                 cost ($      (million lbs 
                                               million 1997)      per yr)   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Add Organics and COD and clarify cyanide            $2.3             1.4
    Add Organics, Ammonia and COD and                                       
     clarify cyanide........................             3.6             2.2
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        EPA evaluated the costs and economic impacts associated with each 
    option and determined that all the options were economically 
    achievable. After considering the pollutant load removals, the costs, 
    as well as the non-water quality environmental impacts associated with 
    the options, EPA selected the third option which adds effluent 
    limitations for 30 organic pollutants, ammonia and COD and modifies the 
    cyanide monitoring requirements. EPA believes that this option is 
    economically achievable and there are no significant adverse non-water 
    quality impacts associated with it. In addition, EPA believes the 
    discharge loadings of ammonia, COD and the organic pollutants are 
    significant from subcategory A and C facilities, and that limitations 
    on these discharges are appropriate. EPA has also evaluated the 
    technology bases of the final BAT limitations in the context of the BAT 
    statutory factors, i.e., the age of equipment and facilities involved, 
    the process(s) employed, potential process changes and non-water 
    quality impacts such as energy requirements. EPA believes the final BAT 
    limitations are appropriate based on its assessment of these factors in 
    relation to A and C subcategory facilities.
        For facilities with subcategories B and D operations, EPA has 
    identified only the pollutant COD for control by BAT limitations based 
    on advanced biological treatment (the technology selected as the basis 
    for the BPT limitations). As discussed under BPT, cyanide is not a 
    pollutant of concern for subcategories B and D operations and EPA is 
    withdrawing the current BAT cyanide limitations for facilities with 
    subcategories B and D operations. EPA
    
    [[Page 50400]]
    
    also has determined that ammonia is not a pollutant of concern for 
    these subcategories since ammonia is not found in significant amounts 
    in wastewaters from these operations.
        Thus, for subcategories B and D, EPA considered two final BAT 
    regulatory options. The first option is a no cost option consisting of 
    the withdrawal of the existing cyanide limitations, the same as the 
    final BPT withdrawal of cyanide control and the addition of the BPT 
    revised COD limitations. The second option includes the withdrawal of 
    the existing cyanide limitations and the addition of the BPT revised 
    COD limitations and limitations based only on advanced biological 
    treatment for 30 of the same organic pollutants selected for regulation 
    at the subcategories A and C facilities.
        The total annualized cost and annual pollutant removal associated 
    with the second option are $0.410 million ($1997) and 22,300 pounds per 
    year.
        EPA has evaluated the discharge loadings of organic pollutants from 
    subcategories B and D facilities and has determined that 95 percent of 
    the discharge of organic pollutants is from two facilities. Most direct 
    discharging subcategories B and D facilities do not discharge any 
    organic pollutants. EPA believes these organic pollutant discharges are 
    not sufficient to justify national regulations for these subcategories. 
    If permit writers determine the need to further control the organic 
    pollutants from the two facilities, the appropriate limits contained in 
    the subcategories A and C BAT regulations may be used. For this final 
    rule, EPA has selected the first option, which is to only add the BPT 
    revised COD limitations to BAT for subcategories B and D facilities, 
    and to withdraw the existing cyanide limitations.
    
    E. Pretreatment Standards for Existing Sources (PSES)
    
        EPA proposed pretreatment standards for 45 organic pollutants 
    (including 37 VOCs), with in-plant monitoring for 12 VOCs and end-of-
    pipe monitoring for the remaining 33 organics (25 of which are VOCs) 
    under coproposal A; and in-plant monitoring only for the 12 VOCs under 
    coproposal B. EPA received considerable comment on its proposal pass 
    through analysis which indicated that the 45 organic pollutants passed 
    through POTW treatment works. Thirty-seven of the organic pollutants, 
    including 13 alcohols and related compounds had Henry's Law Constants 
    greater than 10 -6 atm m3/gmole, which was the 
    physical property used to consider a pollutant to be too volatile to be 
    treated properly at POTWs. The other eight organic pollutants were 
    determined to pass through based on the BAT technology percent removal 
    exceeding that of well operated activated sludge treatment represented 
    by EPA's 50 POTW data base.
        Many commenters objected to the assumption that pollutants with 
    Henry's Law constants greater than 10-6 atm m3/
    gmole would be considered to pass through based on their volatility. 
    The pollutants commenters identified as being insufficiently volatile 
    and highly biodegradable included: methanol, ethanol and other 
    pollutants with Henry's Law constants lower than 1 x 10-5 
    atm m3/gmole. Commenters indicated that many of the alcohols 
    and related compounds were easily biodegraded by POTWs and did not pass 
    through.
        EPA also received a number of comments concerning the proposed in-
    plant monitoring point for the 12 VOCs. Commenters indicated that CAA 
    MACT standards not CWA pretreatment standards should control in-plant 
    emissions of these pollutants from internal wastestreams.
        In order to address these and other comments related to controlling 
    the alcohols and related compounds, EPA conducted a sampling study in 
    August 1996 at a POTW in Barceloneta, Puerto Rico. This POTW treats 
    pharmaceutical industry wastewaters containing measurable amounts of 
    the predominant alcohols and related compounds, such as methanol, 
    ethanol and isopropanol. The purpose of the sampling study was to 
    determine the extent to which methanol and other compounds with similar 
    Henry's Law Constants volatilize in the primary treatment works 
    (aerated grit chambers and primary clarifiers) prior to the 
    biodegradation unit process. Amounts volatilized prior to the 
    biodegradation unit are not considered to be treated.
        In the NOA, EPA published the preliminary results of the study 
    along with those of a separate bench-scale study of anaerobic 
    degradation in the Barceloneta primary clarifiers conducted by 
    industry. EPA indicated in the NOA that it was considering a finding of 
    no pass through for 13 of the organic pollutants (methanol and other 
    alcohols and related compounds) based on the belief that the 
    volatization of these pollutants in the primary works of POTWs is 
    roughly equivalent to that observed in the primary works of direct 
    discharging BAT level facilities. Thus, the treatment of these 
    pollutants by a well operated POTW is roughly equivalent to that 
    achieved by industrial facilities meeting BAT. As noted earlier in 
    section III.D. EPA proposed PSES for 45 organic pollutants, and 
    subsequently removed eight pollutants based on no pass through at the 
    POTWs, thus making a total of 21 (with the alcohols and related 
    compounds) not passing through POTWs.
        In addition to discussing results of its pass through analyses in 
    the NOA, EPA presented two revised pretreatment options for all four 
    subcategories, with end-of-pipe monitoring for all VOCs including the 
    12 volatile pollutants for which in-plant monitoring for PSES/PSNS had 
    been proposed. In the NOA, EPA indicated that PSES for these 12 
    pollutants were unnecessary because they would be controlled by the 
    MACT wastewater standards which require an in-plant compliance 
    demonstration for 10 of the 12 VOCs which are HAPs. The remaining 12 
    VOCs, in addition to the two non-HAPs that are part of the 12 VOCs 
    discussed above, are controlled by end-of-pipe limits based on steam 
    stripping, with removals incidental to controlling HAPs either directly 
    by the MACT standards or separately from the MACT standards at smaller 
    facilities not covered by the MACT rule but controlled by this CWA 
    final rule.
        In finalizing the methodology for the pass through analysis 
    discussed above, EPA relied on three criteria that had to be met before 
    a pollutant was deemed to pass through. These criteria included 
    volatility, solubility in water, and the BAT and POTW technologies 
    percent removal comparison. With regard to volatility, EPA raised its 
    Henry's Law Constant threshold for volatility from 1 x 10-
    \6\ atm/gmole/m \3\ to 1 x 10-
    \5\ atm/gmole/m\3\ based on comments that the Henry's 
    Law Constant used at proposal was not consistent with what was used for 
    the OCPSF final rule. Pollutants with Henry Law Constants greater than 
    1 x 10-\5\ atm/gmole/m \3\ were believed to 
    volatilize significantly before reaching treatment at a POTW. In 
    connection with volatility, in order to be consistent with the MACT 
    standards approved for controlling water soluble HAPs, EPA also 
    considered whether a pollutant was water soluble because water soluble 
    compounds are less likely to volatilize than compounds that are 
    partially soluble. Finally, EPA considered differences in removal 
    percentages for organic pollutants obtained by comparing the BAT model 
    treatment system percentage removal to the average pollutant removal 
    percentage achieved by well-operated POTWs achieving secondary 
    treatment performance standards.
        In developing BAT pollutant removal percentages, EPA only used 
    pollutant data pairs where the influent
    
    [[Page 50401]]
    
    concentrations were greater than ten times the pollutant method 
    detection limits which was the approach used in developing the 
    supporting information for the NOA. In developing the final POTW 
    pollutant removal percentages, EPA utilized the acclimated data from 
    the same sources used to develop these percentages for the NOA. These 
    removal percentages are the POTW removal percentages used in the final 
    comparison. Thus, in order for a pollutant to be deemed to pass 
    through, it had to have a Henry's Law Constant greater than 
    1 x 10-\5\ atm/gmole/m \3\, be less than totally 
    soluble in water, and have a BAT removal percentage greater than its 
    POTW removal percentage. Based on this analysis, EPA has determined 
    that 23 organic pollutants in subcategories A and C and 5 organic 
    pollutants in subcategories B and D, that pass through POTWs are 
    regulated by pretreatment standards in today's rule. A more detailed 
    description of this analysis may be found in section 17 of the final 
    TDD.
        In addition to pretreatment standards for VOCs, EPA proposed 
    ammonia standards based on either steam stripping or two-stage 
    nitrification. In May 1995 EPA proposed ammonia pretreatment standards 
    based only on steam stripping technology. The Agency received a number 
    of comments concerning the proposed ammonia pretreatment standards. 
    Some commenters indicated that steam stripping may not be a reliable 
    treatment technology. Others questioned the need for national ammonia 
    standards because many POTWs have imposed local limits for ammonia and 
    others have nitrification capability. EPA discussed both of these 
    concerns in the NOA. EPA suggested in the NOA that ammonia does not 
    pass through POTWs with nitrification, and requested comments on the 
    preliminary discussion not to set pretreatment standards for industrial 
    users which discharge to POTWs with this technology. Comments from POTW 
    control authorities and industry supported this approach to developing 
    PSES ammonia standards. The final rule contains ammonia pretreatment 
    standards only for subcategories A and C, based on the BAT technology 
    of nitrification and is applicable to those facilities discharging to 
    POTWs without nitrification capability.
        EPA determined that cyanide passes through POTWs based on the 
    percent removal comparison with the hydrogen peroxide (BAT) technology. 
    Thus, EPA proposed revised cyanide pretreatment standards based on 
    hydrogen peroxide technology but maintaining that the standards based 
    on in-plant monitoring for the requirements. EPA received comments 
    raising safety concerns using this technology for high organic strength 
    wastes. Based on these comments and additional data submitted by 
    facilities, in the NOA, EPA proposed establishing two sets of cyanide 
    standards. One standard would be identical to the proposed standards 
    based on hydrogen peroxide technology, while the other standard would 
    be based on alkaline chlorination technology and applicable only to 
    those facilities that could demonstrate, due to safety concerns, that 
    hydrogen peroxide technology was not an appropriate technology to use 
    with their wastewater. EPA estimated compliance costs and loadings 
    removals to be the same for both sets of standards because it was 
    assumed that the vast majority of facilities would meet these standards 
    based on the use of the more expensive and efficient hydrogen peroxide 
    technology.
        In developing the final PSES for subcategories A and C, EPA 
    considered three options. The first option was not to develop 
    pretreatment standards for ammonia or any of the VOC pollutants, and to 
    modify the monitoring requirements for the existing cyanide standards. 
    The second option would build on compliance with the MACT standard with 
    additional pretreatment standards for 23 VOCS based on steam stripping 
    technology and ammonia based on steam stripping or nitrification and 
    modify the cyanide monitoring requirements. The third option would be 
    the same as the second option, with the addition of revised 
    pretreatment standards for cyanide.
        The annualized compliance costs (1997 dollars) and pollutant 
    removals for the second and third options (the only ones incurring 
    costs) are shown below in Table IV.E.1. EPA did not consider additional 
    options involving small facility exclusions because results of the 
    economic analyses for the small facilities using the costs for both 
    options described above showed that both options are economically 
    achievable (see section V of this preamble for more discussion).
    
       Table IV.E.1--PSES Pretax Options Costs and Pollutant Removals for   
                   Subcategories A and C Indirect Dischargers               
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   Total                    
                                                annualized       Pollutant  
                Treatment option                  cost ($        removals   
                                               million 1996)   (million lbs)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Add organics and ammonia and modify                                     
     cyanide monitoring requirements........           $44.5          10.653
    Add organics and ammonia and revise                                     
     cyanide limits.........................            44.8          10.654
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Due to the low pollutant removals achievable by the revised cyanide 
    standards (approximately 1000 lbs per year with 97 percent of the 
    removals coming from one facility) in relation to the compliance costs, 
    EPA has decided not to revise the existing cyanide standards, and has 
    selected the option to add organics and ammonia only and modify the 
    current cyanide monitoring requirements. The selected option adds 
    standards for ammonia and the 23 organic pollutants determined to pass 
    through (see previous discussion in this section), and modifies the 
    monitoring point for the current cyanide pretreatment standards for 
    subcategories A and C.
        EPA is setting pretreatment standards for ammonia for subcategories 
    A and C because of the high loads of ammonia currently being discharged 
    by a number of pharmaceutical facilities to POTWs that do not have 
    nitrification capability and receive wastewaters from subcategories A 
    and C facilities. However, EPA is aware that some POTWs treating 
    pharmaceutical wastewaters from these subcategories have nitrification 
    capability, and EPA has made a determination of no passthrough for 
    ammonia at these POTWS. Thus, PSES ammonia limitations will not apply 
    to subcategory A and C facilities discharging to POTWs with 
    nitrification capability. POTWs with nitrification capability oxidize 
    ammonium salts to nitrites (via Nitrosomonas bacteria) and the further 
    oxidize nitrites to nitrates via Nitrobacter bacteria and achieve 
    greater removals of ammonia than POTWs
    
    [[Page 50402]]
    
    without nitrification. Nitrification can be accomplished in either a 
    single or two-stage activated sludge system. In addition, POTWs that 
    have wetlands which are developed and maintained for the expressed 
    purpose of removing ammonia with a marsh/pond configuration are also 
    examples of having nitrification capability. Indicators of 
    nitrification capability are: (1) biological monitoring for ammonia 
    oxidizing bacteria (AOB) and nitrite oxidizing bacteria (NOB) to 
    determine if nitrification is occurring, and (2) analysis of the 
    nitrogen balance to determine if nitrifying bacteria reduce the amount 
    of ammonia and increase the amount of nitrite and nitrate.
        For subcategories B and D, EPA considered two options. The first 
    option was not to add regulated pollutants to the existing PSES and, 
    since cyanide is not present in wastewaters for these subcategories 
    facilities, to withdraw the existing cyanide standards. Thus, 
    compliance with the MACT standard would be the only requirement for 
    controlling VOC pollutants. The second option was to add pretreatment 
    standards for 5 VOCs (not including the alcohols and related compounds 
    and 19 pollutants determined not to be present in subcategory B and D 
    wastewaters) based on steam stripping in addition to withdrawing the 
    existing cyanide standards. No ammonia standards were considered since 
    facilities in these subcategories do not generate significant levels of 
    ammonia in their wastewaters. The pretax annualized compliance cost for 
    this second option is $8.8 million ($1997) and annual pollutant 
    removals are 3.35 million pounds.
        For PSES for subcategories B and D, EPA has selected the second 
    option. EPA is basing this selection on the fact that the 5 pollutants 
    (VOCs) have been determined to passthrough, and the pollutant removals 
    are relatively high with respect to the compliance costs. The costs are 
    economically achievable and the nonwater quality environmental impacts 
    are acceptable.
    
    F. New Source Performance Standards (NSPS)
    
        EPA proposed NSPS for 53 organic pollutants, BOD5, TSS 
    and COD based on steam stripping or distillation and advanced 
    biological treatment for subcategories A and C. EPA also proposed NSPS 
    for ammonia and cyanide based on nitrification and hydrogen peroxide 
    oxidation technologies, respectively for these two subcategories. EPA 
    received comments indicating that distillation technology was not a 
    demonstrated technology for removing soluble VOCs (such as methanol), 
    and therefore, should not be part of the technology basis of NSPS. EPA 
    has reevaluated its steam stripping and distillation database and has 
    concluded that distillation technology is sufficiently demonstrated to 
    be considered BADT (Best Available Demonstrated Technology). However, 
    after taking into account the high removal of these pollutants 
    achievable by steam stripping and advanced biological treatment, the 
    addition of distillation technology is unnecessary. Consequently EPA 
    did not consider distillation technology as part of final NSPS model 
    technology.
        EPA evaluated technology options capable of achieving greater 
    pollutant removal of conventional pollutants (BOD5 and TSS), 
    COD, Organics, Cyanide and Ammonia than those selected as the basis for 
    existing source limitations (BPT, BCT and BAT). The only option 
    potentially capable of achieving additional removals involves the use 
    of granular activated carbon (GAC) adsorption technology. This 
    technology is capable of reducing the COD from some direct discharging 
    A and C subcategory facilities. However, there is only limited GAC 
    performance data available, from one pilot study.
        For subcategories B and D, EPA proposed NSPS for 53 organic 
    pollutants, BOD5, TSS and COD based on in-plant steam 
    stripping with distillation and end-of-pipe advanced biological 
    treatment. As was the case with the proposed NSPS for subcategories A 
    and C, EPA received comments stating that use of distillation 
    technology as BADT for new sources is inappropriate because its ability 
    to remove methanol and other water soluble organic pollutants has not 
    been demonstrated with respect to representative wastestreams.
        For subcategories A and C, EPA is promulgating NSPS equal to the 
    final BAT effluent limitations for 30 organic pollutants, cyanide and 
    ammonia. For subcategories B and D, EPA is promulgating NSPS equal to 
    BAT (including withdrawal of the existing cyanide standards). EPA is 
    also promulgating revised NSPS for BOD5, COD and TSS for all 
    four subcategories at a level equal to the discharge characteristics of 
    the best performing BPT plants which for COD is also the BAT/BPT level 
    of control. These final standards are based on the best available 
    demonstrated control technologies, which include advanced biological 
    treatment, cyanide destruct and nitrification. In developing these 
    final standards, the Agency considered factors including the cost of 
    achieving effluent reductions, non-water quality environmental impacts, 
    and energy requirements. EPA finds that the final standards represent 
    the best available demonstrated control technologies, are economically 
    achievable and do not present a barrier to entry and have acceptable 
    non-water quality environmental impacts.
    
    G. Pretreatment Standards for New Sources (PSNS)
    
        EPA proposed PSNS for 45 organic pollutants, cyanide and ammonia 
    for subcategories A and C, and the same 45 organic pollutants only, for 
    subcategories B and D. The technology basis for the proposed organic 
    pollutant standards was steam stripping with distillation, and the 
    technology bases for the proposed cyanide and ammonia standards were 
    hydrogen peroxide oxidation and steam stripping technologies, 
    respectively.
        The proposed pretreatment standards for new sources were more 
    stringent than the proposed PSES. However, for the final rule, EPA was 
    unable to identify a technology that would achieve greater removal of 
    the pollutants to be controlled by the PSES being promulgated today and 
    is therefore promulgating PSNS equal to PSES for all four 
    subcategories.
    
    H. Best Conventional Pollutant Control Technology (BCT)
    
        EPA proposed BCT equal to BPT for the conventional pollutants 
    BOD5 and TSS for all four subcategories. The Agency 
    indicated that it had not identified technologies that achieve greater 
    removals of conventional pollutants other than those associated with 
    the proposed revision of BPT limits, and that these technologies did 
    not pass the two-part BCT cost reasonable test. EPA has not received 
    any comments concerning its proposal BCT cost test analysis. The Agency 
    has repeated the cost test with the postproposal data, with the same 
    results. Based on the failure to identify any incremental conventional 
    pollutant removal technology options that pass the BCT cost reasonable 
    test, EPA is promulgating BCT limitations equal to the existing BPT 
    limitations for BOD5 and TSS for all subcategories.
    
    V. Assessment of Costs and Impacts for the Final Pharmaceutical 
    Regulations
    
    A. Introduction
    
        The economic analysis for the final pharmaceutical effluent 
    limitations guidelines and standards assesses the costs and impacts of 
    these guidelines. The results of this analysis are contained in the 
    record for this final
    
    [[Page 50403]]
    
    rule and are summarized in a document entitled Economic Analysis for 
    Final Effluent Guidelines and Standards for the Pharmaceutical Industry 
    (EPA-821-B-98-009). Included in the Economic Analysis (EA) and 
    summarized below are (1) the annualized costs of the rule by 
    subcategory, separately and together with the costs of the MACT 
    standards rule discussed previously; (2) the impacts of the rule both 
    separately and together with the MACT standards on pharmaceutical 
    facilities, both existing and new sources; (3) the impacts of these 
    rules on pharmaceutical firms; (4) the impacts of these rules on 
    employment and communities; and (5) other secondary impacts on trade, 
    inflation, POTWs, environmental justice, and distributional equity. 
    Also included in the EA are a Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis as 
    required under the Regulatory Flexibility Act and a Cost-Benefit 
    Analysis, as required under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA) and 
    Executive Order 12866, which are summarized in Sections V.E and V.F of 
    this preamble. An additional document, Cost Effectiveness Analysis for 
    Effluent Limitations Guidelines and Standards for the Pharmaceutical 
    Industry (EPA-821-B-98-010), assesses the cost-effectiveness of the 
    rule. The results of this analysis are summarized below in Section V.G.
    
    B. Summary of the Economic Analysis Methodology and Data
    
        EPA determined the annualized costs of compliance in exactly the 
    same way as was done for proposal, with the exception of the choice of 
    discount rate (discussed in V.C). Costs are annualized at seven percent 
    over 16 years (a 1-year installation period a 15-year project life is 
    assumed). The cost annualization also accounts for tax shields on both 
    O&M and depreciation (calculated using the modified accelerated cost 
    recovery system allowed by IRS rules) to develop a posttax estimate of 
    annual costs (see Section 4 of the Economic Analysis for a detailed 
    discussion). For analytical consistency, MACT standards costs are also 
    annualized in the same way, both pretax and posttax. This is slightly 
    different from the way EPA annualized the MACT standards costs in the 
    preamble to the MACT standards rule, where costs are annualized at 
    seven percent over ten years (with no delay for installation) to create 
    a pretax annual cost (i.e., without accounting for tax shields). 
    Additionally, the MACT standards costs presented in the preamble to the 
    MACT standards rule include costs for new sources, which are not 
    included in this preamble. Despite the differences in annualization 
    method, the current cost annualization approach in no way conflicts 
    with the alternative analysis.
        To assess impacts on firms and facilities, EPA has set up three 
    baselines in the analysis. Baseline 1 is the usual baseline analyzed in 
    all effluent guidelines. It is a scenario that reflects a baseline 
    condition without additional regulation, that is, no additional 
    effluent limitations guidelines and standards or MACT standards costs 
    are considered. This baseline is taken from the current (i.e., 1990 
    Survey) financial data. Baseline 2 incorporates certain MACT standards 
    costs pertaining only to wastewater emission controls, and does not 
    include costs for controlling emissions from process vents, equipment 
    leaks and storage tanks. This baseline is presented in the EA, but 
    results of this baseline (which are not appreciably different from 
    those for Baseline 1) are not discussed at length in this preamble. 
    Baseline 3 incorporates costs for all components associated with the 
    MACT standards rule. EPA estimated the capital and operating costs for 
    MACT standards cost components for emission controls on wastewater 
    streams (on which Baseline 2 is based), as well as the capital and 
    operating costs for all MACT components (on which Baseline 3 is based) 
    as a part of the Agency's MACT standards rulemaking process.
        To model Baseline 2, EPA used the capital and operating costs 
    associated with the wastewater emission controls for all facilities in 
    the MACT analysis for which costs were developed and matched them to 
    the facilities that are also in the effluent guidelines analysis. 
    However, a number of facilities in the effluent guidelines analysis are 
    not covered by the MACT standards and were not assigned MACT costs.
        EPA annualized the costs at seven percent over 16 years in the cost 
    annualization model and also developed a present value of posttax 
    compliance costs over this same time frame. EPA subtracted the present 
    value posttax compliance costs from the Baseline 1 present value 
    posttax facility earnings (derived from the Survey data) to determine 
    Baseline 2 posttax earnings for each facility in the effluent 
    guidelines analysis. EPA used this same approach to derive Baseline 3 
    posttax earnings (for those facilities without MACT standards costs, 
    earnings are the same in all three baselines).
        A facility whose posttax earnings are zero or negative in Baseline 
    1 is counted as a Baseline 1 closure; a facility whose posttax earnings 
    are zero or negative in Baseline 2 is counted as a Baseline 2 closure; 
    and a facility whose posttax earnings are zero or negative in Baseline 
    3 is counted as a Baseline 3 closure.
        EPA then incorporated the present value posttax costs of the 
    effluent guidelines into each of the baselines in the same way as MACT 
    standards costs were incorporated to calculate postcompliance, posttax 
    earnings. EPA then tallied the closure results (in terms of whether 
    postcompliance, posttax earnings are zero or negative) by counting 
    postcompliance closures incrementally from each baseline. In other 
    words, EPA considered any closures that occurred additional to those 
    occurring in each of the baselines as postcompliance closures under the 
    three baseline scenarios. Any facilities that certified that the 
    effluent guidelines would have no impact on them were assumed not to 
    close under any baseline or in postcompliance. Note that as in the 
    proposal Economic Impact Analysis (EIA), impacts on single-facility 
    firms were assessed at the firm level.
        MACT standards costs were also incorporated into firm-level data 
    under the same three baseline scenarios. In the firm-level analysis, 
    however, the key data that could change were assets, liabilities, and 
    earnings before interest and taxes, which were used in an equation 
    called Altman's Z, a multi-discriminant ratio analysis approach to 
    identifying relative firm health. This equation is composed of several 
    common financial ratios that are weighted according to their relative 
    ability to predict bankruptcy based on empirical industry data. The 
    result of this equation is called the Altman's Z-score. Scores below a 
    certain value are considered indicative of poor financial health and a 
    high likelihood of bankruptcy.
        For Baseline 1, EPA used the current survey data in the Altman's Z 
    model to determine a Baseline 1 Altman's Z-score. For Baseline 2, EPA 
    took the MACT standards capital costs aggregated at the firm level 
    (since firms often own more than one facility) and adjusted both assets 
    and liabilities to reflect the acquisition of capital equipment through 
    an increase in debt. EPA then adjusted earnings before interest and 
    taxes by subtracting the annualized amount of operating costs plus 
    depreciation computed by the cost annualization model, given the 
    Baseline 2 MACT standards capital and operating costs (also aggregated 
    at the firm level) and then computed a Baseline 2 Altman's Z-score.
        EPA used the same approach using the Baseline 3 MACT standards 
    operating and capital costs to create the Baseline 3 Altman's Z-score. 
    If any of
    
    [[Page 50404]]
    
    these three baseline scores were below the cutoff point considered a 
    sign of poor financial health, EPA considered the firm a baseline 
    failure.
        Compliance costs for the effluent guidelines were then used in the 
    same manner to further adjust the financial data used in the Altman's Z 
    model in each of the baselines. Where the Altman's Z-score changed from 
    one reflecting a healthy firm or one in indeterminate status in any of 
    the baselines to one of poor financial health, EPA considered the firm 
    to be a postcompliance firm failure relative to the baseline under 
    consideration.
        EPA's methodology for computing output and employment effects is 
    discussed in detail in Section V.C. These effects are presented as net 
    effects in Section V.D.4. To compute net effects, EPA calculated both 
    losses and gains in output and employment and subtracted losses from 
    gains (or vice versa). Thus EPA calculated net national-level output 
    effects, net national-level employment effects, and net direct 
    employment effects (employment losses in the pharmaceutical industry 
    driven by output losses in the industry). EPA also estimated the 
    employment losses estimated to occur as a result of closures and 
    failures. These types of losses were used to determine whether any 
    community-level impacts are likely.
        Trade impacts were assessed in the same way as in the EIA for the 
    proposal, except that a profit margin analysis has been added, as 
    described below in Section V.C. Impacts on inflation were assessed by 
    comparing the cost of the regulation to gross domestic product (GDP). 
    The potential for distributional impacts was assessed by identifying 
    facilities where compliance costs were greater than 10 percent of 
    operating costs and determining what types of products might be most 
    affected if costs are passed through to consumers. The users of these 
    products were then qualitatively identified to determine if these 
    potential users might be disproportionately represented by economically 
    disadvantaged groups. Impacts on environmental justice were also 
    qualitatively addressed.
    
    C. Changes to the Economic Analysis Since Proposal
    
        The most significant change in the EA since proposal is associated 
    with the change in costs. The costs of the effluent limitations 
    guidelines and standards for the pharmaceutical industry point source 
    category are now substantially lower than those estimated at proposal 
    because the costs of controlling air emissions are now a part of EPA's 
    MACT standards. Impacts from the final rule do not change measurably 
    from proposal, however, mostly because impacts both now and at proposal 
    were estimated to be very small.
        Costs for control of air pollutants, previously assigned to the 
    effluent guidelines at proposal, are now assigned to the MACT standards 
    requirements. The economic analyses show the impacts of the effluent 
    guidelines against three separate regulatory baselines: no MACT 
    standards requirements in place, wastewater emissions control and 
    treatment system requirements in place, and all MACT standards 
    requirements in place (see Section II.E. of this preamble for a 
    description of MACT standards requirements). In this way, EPA can 
    present impacts from the effluent guidelines alone and in combination 
    with impacts from the MACT standards requirements. The methods EPA used 
    to assess the impact of MACT standards on the baselines against which 
    the effluent guidelines are measured were discussed in Section V.B.
        EPA is now using a seven percent discount rate in all of its 
    analyses. Previously, the Agency used the seven percent rate only in 
    determining the pretax cost of the regulation. EPA has chosen to use a 
    seven percent social discount rate (in real terms) in this analysis, 
    rather than the 11.4 percent discount rate used in the proposal, for 
    two reasons. First, the seven percent discount rate is strongly 
    recommended by the Office of Management and Budget for use in economic 
    analyses (see the EA for more details). Second, the cost of capital has 
    generally declined since 1990. This change in discount rate, however, 
    has little effect on the analysis. A comparison of estimated impacts in 
    the proposal to impacts as estimated here show that the analyses are 
    not sensitive to assumptions about discount rates in the ranges used.
        In terms of content, the economic analyses are now presented as a 
    more comprehensive report, in which the EIA and Regulatory Impact 
    Analysis (RIA) have been combined into one report (the EA). The cost-
    benefit portion of the RIA is now contained in Section 10 of the EA 
    report.
        EPA has also made a few methodological changes in its firm and 
    facility analyses. In the EIA for the proposal, EPA included salvage 
    value in the calculations for the facility closure analysis for 
    projection of baseline closures (i.e., before compliance costs are 
    considered) and postcompliance closures. EPA recognized some potential 
    difficulties with the salvage value calculations and, in the proposal 
    EIA, investigated the effects of assuming salvage value does not play a 
    role in determining facility viability. EPA found that the facility 
    closure projections were not sensitive to the alternate salvage value 
    assumption. Furthermore, industry also commented that using salvage 
    value overstated baseline closures. Thus EPA believes that its current 
    analysis, which does not consider salvage value but rather uses 
    negative posttax earnings as the indicator of closure, is the best 
    methodology to use, given the uncertainty of salvage value data.
        An additional difference in the closure analysis addresses the 
    issue of non-self-supporting facilities (baseline facility closures). 
    In the current analysis, EPA investigates all baseline closures at the 
    firm level to determine if a multi-facility firm could install and 
    operate pollution control equipment at all of its affected facilities, 
    including those estimated as baseline closures. If the firms can 
    continue to support a baseline closure facility without risk of 
    failure, EPA determines that impacts to the firm and its affected 
    facilities are minimal. EPA performed this analysis under the 
    assumption that if the facility was not expected to support itself in 
    the baseline, the firm level is the appropriate level at which to 
    assess impacts.
        EPA also modified the methodology for determining impacts on firms. 
    In response to comments that baseline firm failures were overstated 
    because the Agency used benchmarks that identified lowest quartile 
    firms as baseline failures, EPA reassessed the methodology and turned 
    to a more sophisticated method for determining firm financial health. 
    EPA used a multi-discriminant analysis approach for evaluating the 
    financial health of firms. This analysis, developed by Edward Altman, 
    is known as Altman's Z-score analysis. This approach allows the 
    simultaneous analysis of several common financial ratios and answers 
    the question of how to determine financial health when some ratios 
    appear strong and some appear weak. The equation developed by Altman 
    assigns relative weights to the various ratios on the basis of how well 
    they predict bankruptcy (determined using actual firm data and 
    information on whether the firms did in fact go bankrupt). This 
    approach reduced the proportion of firms considered baseline failures 
    from 28 percent in the EIA for the proposal to about 10 percent (see 
    Section V.D.3), thus allowing for substantially more firms to be 
    evaluated at the firm level in the postcompliance
    
    [[Page 50405]]
    
    analysis. The Altman's Z analysis is also described in Section V.B 
    above and is fully described in Section 6 of the EA Report.
        The Agency has added an analysis of national-level output and 
    employment effects to the EA for the final rule. Output is measured in 
    terms of revenues, and under the assumption that industry cannot pass 
    through compliance costs to consumers, the worst-case output loss to 
    the pharmaceutical industry is equal to the pretax costs of compliance. 
    The output losses occurring in the pharmaceutical industry (direct 
    effects) affect input industries, which are industries that provide 
    inputs (e.g., raw chemicals) to the pharmaceutical industry. These 
    effects are known as indirect effects. The direct output losses also 
    affect consumption, as workers lose jobs or work fewer hours and their 
    households reduce purchases of goods and services. These effects are 
    called induced effects. Thus a dollar of output lost in the 
    pharmaceutical industry can also result in additional dollars lost in 
    the U.S. economy as a whole through indirect and induced effects. EPA 
    calculates these additional losses at the national level using input-
    output analysis. The relevant multipliers used in the analysis were 
    developed by the U.S. Department of Commerce's Bureau of Economic 
    Analysis (BEA).
        In addition to output losses, EPA calculates national-level output 
    gains based on output gains in pollution control industries. These 
    industries receive revenues from the pharmaceutical industry for 
    pollution control equipment and operations. Using BEA multipliers, the 
    Agency calculates the subsequent effect of these gains on the pollution 
    control industries' input industries and consumption (i.e., indirect 
    and induced effects). By comparing national-level output losses and 
    gains, EPA develops a net national-level output loss or gain.
        In the EA, EPA no longer relies exclusively on employment losses 
    from closures and failures to calculate employment losses in the 
    pharmaceutical industry or national-level employment losses. Because 
    output effects and employment are linked in input-output analysis, EPA 
    calculates employment losses based on output effects using BEA's final 
    demand and direct effect multipliers. EPA uses final demand employment 
    multipliers to compute the total number of jobs lost (including direct, 
    indirect, and induced job losses) given the total loss of output in 
    millions of dollars in the pharmaceutical industry and uses direct 
    effect multipliers to compute the total number of job losses occurring 
    just in the pharmaceutical industry (direct losses), given the total 
    jobs lost nationwide (which include direct, indirect, and induced 
    losses).
        Output-based employment losses can be thought of as longer-term 
    losses associated with longer-term market equilibrium, whereas losses 
    associated with closures and failures can be considered the more 
    immediate impact of the rule before market equilibrium is achieved. 
    Thus output-based employment losses may be greater than or less than 
    the losses estimated on the basis of closures and failures, which means 
    that nonclosing facilities might gain or lose production and employment 
    depending on how many facilities close. If no facilities close, 
    nonclosing facilities might lose some production and employment. If 
    many facilities close, nonclosing facilities might actually gain 
    production and employment if closure losses ``overshoot'' the expected 
    losses at market equilibrium. Note, however, that both the output-based 
    employment effects and the closure/failure employment effects derived 
    here are worst-case impacts within the pharmaceutical industry since 
    EPA assumes the industry cannot pass through the costs of compliance to 
    consumers.
        EPA also computes employment gains on the basis of output gains in 
    pollution control industries in much the same way as was done for the 
    EIA for the proposal. The approach has been changed slightly to 
    accommodate labor costs estimated as a part of the engineering cost 
    analysis rather than relying on assumed labor shares. EPA compares the 
    employment losses and gains to estimate a net gain or loss in 
    employment both at the national level and in the pharmaceutical 
    industry alone (some gains will occur in the pharmaceutical industry 
    since labor to operate pollution control equipment is required).
        EPA now performs an assessment of impacts on profit margins to 
    address commenter concerns that pharmaceutical firms will locate (or 
    relocate) facilities outside of the U.S. because of environmental 
    regulatory requirements. EPA assumes that those firms most likely to 
    consider relocating facilities are those with measurable differences in 
    profitability with sufficient means to effect a relocation. EPA also 
    addresses comments that reductions in loadings to POTWs will result in 
    substantial impacts on POTWs.
        All other methodologies used and analyses undertaken in the EA 
    remain substantively the same as those in the EIA for the proposal.
    
    D. Estimated Economic Impacts
    
    1. Costs of Compliance
        Table V.D.1 presents a summary of compliance costs for the effluent 
    limitations guidelines and standards and for the MACT standards. EPA 
    estimated annualized compliance costs on both a pre-tax and post-tax 
    basis; both sets of costs are shown in Table V.D.1. Post-tax costs 
    reflect tax savings accruing to the industry from the installation and 
    operation of pollution control equipment; the post-tax costs are used 
    in the economic analysis to assess impacts to facilities and firms in 
    the industry. Pre-tax costs are a component of the total social cost of 
    the regulatory action (see Section V.F).
        EPA describes the cost annualization procedure in Section V.B and 
    in the EA. The annualized costs in Table V.D.1 for both the effluent 
    limitations guidelines and standards and the MACT standards rule 
    incorporate the same annualization period assumptions. The annualized 
    costs reported in the preamble to the MACT standards rule are based on 
    another annualization period and thus, do not correspond exactly to 
    Table V.D.1. As noted in Section V.B, costs are annualized over 16 
    years (with an 1-year installation period and a 15-year project life), 
    while in the preamble to the MACT standards rule, costs are annualized 
    over 10 years (with no delay for installation). As an illustration, 
    Table V.D.1 reports pre-tax annualized costs for the MACT standards 
    rule for all facilities (referred to as ``existing sources'' in the 
    MACT standards rule) at $58.4 million. In the preamble to the MACT 
    standards rule, the corresponding annualized costs are reported at 
    $64.8 million.
        The annualized post-tax compliance costs for effluent guidelines 
    for the selected options are $39.4 million. The annualized post-tax 
    compliance costs of the MACT standards for the subset of facilities 
    also subject to effluent guidelines are $32.4 million. The total 
    annualized costs for facilities covered by both the effluent guidelines 
    and MACT standards are $71.8 million, and the total annualized costs 
    for all facilities (i.e., including those facilities covered by MACT 
    standards only) are $77.5 million.
    
    [[Page 50406]]
    
    
    
                Table V.D.1--Annualized Costs of Compliance for Effluent Guidelines and MACT Requirements           
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                          Posttax         Pretax    
                                                                                        annualized      annualized  
                                                                                          cost of         cost of   
                      Subcategory                                Option                 compliance      compliance  
                                                                                         (million        (million   
                                                                                          1997$)          1997$)    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    A/C Direct....................................  BPT=Revise COD and modify                   $1.6            $2.5
                                                     cyanide.                                                       
                                                    BAT=Add organics, ammonia and                2.3             3.6
                                                     COD and modify cyanide.                                        
    B/D Direct....................................  Revise BPT COD and withdraw                  0.9             1.4
                                                     cyanide.                                                       
    A/C Indirect..................................  PSES=Add organics and ammonia               28.8            44.5
                                                     and modify cyanide.                                            
    B/D Indirect..................................  PSES=Add organics and withdraw               5.8             8.8
                                                     cyanide.                                                       
                                                                                     -------------------------------
        Total Annualized Cost of Effluent           ................................            39.4            60.8
         Guidelines for all Selected Options.                                                                       
    Cost of MACT Standards........................  Effluent Guidelines Facilities..            32.4            49.6
                                                    All Facilities..................            38.1            58.4
                                                                                     -------------------------------
        Total Annualized Cost of Effluent           ................................            71.8           110.4
         Guidelines and MACT Standards for                                                                          
         Effluent Guidelines Facilities.                                                                            
                                                                                     ===============================
        Total Annualized Costs of Effluent          ................................            77.5           119.2
         Guidelines and MACT Standards for All                                                                      
         Facilities.                                                                                                
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. Economic Impacts on Facilities
        EPA determined on the basis of zero or negative posttax earnings 
    that 18 facilities, or 9 percent of all facilities in the analysis, 
    would be likely to close even without the effect of the effluent 
    guidelines or MACT standards requirements. The impacts to the firms of 
    installing and operating pollution control equipment at these 
    facilities are, however, assessed at the firm level to determine if the 
    firms can continue to support these facilities postcompliance (see 
    below under results of the firm analysis). When all MACT standards 
    costs are incorporated into the initial baseline financial conditions 
    (Baseline 3), no additional facilities close.
        When the costs of compliance for this final effluent guidelines 
    rule are incorporated into the financial conditions of facilities in 
    the analysis (the postcompliance analysis), only one additional 
    facility closes (an A/C indirect). Even though this facility does not 
    close when faced with costs of meeting this effluent guidelines rule 
    alone, EPA conservatively attributes this closure to the effluent 
    guidelines. In general, however, neither MACT standards costs nor 
    effluent guidelines costs singly or together have major impacts on 
    pharmaceutical facilities operated by multifacility firms.
    3. Economic Impacts on Firms
        EPA projected that 18 firms would be likely to fail even without 
    the effect of the effluent guidelines or MACT standards requirements 
    (Baseline 1). Two additional firms are projected to fail before 
    effluent guidelines costs are considered when all MACT standards costs 
    are included in the initial baseline financial conditions (Baseline 3).
        In the postcompliance analysis, EPA estimated that four firms would 
    fail under the Baseline 1 scenario and two firms would fail under the 
    Baseline 3 scenario. (There are two fewer postcompliance firm failures 
    under the Baseline 3 scenario because these failures were estimated to 
    be precompliance failures when all MACT standards costs were included.) 
    Thus at most, regardless of baseline, four firms fail postcompliance. 
    To be conservative in the EA, EPA attributes these failures to the 
    Pharmaceutical Effluent Guidelines alone. Out of the four firm failures 
    projected to occur, EPA estimates only one will result in both a firm 
    failure and a facility closure (because earnings become negative at the 
    only facility owned by the firm). The other three firms will incur 
    substantial impacts, up to and including firm failure, but own 
    financially viable facilities. Because the facilities are self-
    supporting, they are likely to be attractive for acquisition by 
    financially stronger firms. Therefore, the three failing firms with 
    viable facilities might not fail, but instead might be forced to sell 
    their facilities.
        As discussed in Section V.D.2, EPA evaluated all facilities 
    projected to close in the baseline analysis at the firm level, under 
    the assumption that perhaps these facilities are not expected to be 
    self-supporting and thus might not close in the baseline. If this is 
    so, the appropriate level of analysis is the firm. EPA determined that 
    all facilities projected to close in the baseline facility closure 
    analysis can continue to be supported by their firms postcompliance 
    without significant impact on these firms.
    
                                 Table V.D.3 Firm Failure Analysis Results (Baseline 1)                             
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                              Failures only                         
                                                   -----------------------------------------------------------------
                  Type of discharger                    Number       Percentage of                    Percentage of 
                                                     Failures with   total firms in      Number       total firms in
                                                       closures       subcategory                      subcategory  
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    A/C Direct....................................               0              0                 0              0  
    B/D Direct....................................               0              0                 0              0  
    A/C Indirect..................................               2              3.2               1              1.6
    B/D Indirect..................................               1              1.2               0              0  
    
    [[Page 50407]]
    
                                                                                                                    
        Total All Firms...........................               3              1.8               1              0.6
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    4. Impacts on Output and Employment
        EPA estimates that at the national level, output gains will exceed 
    output losses. EPA determines a net output gain of about $21.7 million 
    (1996$) as a result of the effluent guidelines. Net output gains for 
    the combined rulemakings (including MACT standards for facilities in 
    the effluent guidelines analysis only) will total $40.1 million 
    (1996$). EPA also determines that employment gains will exceed 
    employment losses at the national level. The net gain in national-level 
    employment as a result of the effluent guidelines alone will total 218 
    full-time equivalents (a full-time equivalent, or FTE, equals 2,080 
    hours per year of labor), and net employment gains for the combined 
    rulemakings (including MACT standards for facilities in the effluent 
    guidelines analysis only) will total 407 FTEs.
        Despite net employment gains at the national level, EPA calculates 
    that losses will exceed gains in the pharmaceutical industry. Direct 
    losses in the pharmaceutical industry are composed of two types of 
    losses--output-based losses and closure/failure type losses. As noted 
    in Section V.C., closure/failure employment losses might be less than 
    the output-based employment losses that are driven by the contraction 
    in the pharmaceutical industry as it responds to the compliance costs 
    and a new market equilibrium is achieved. Closure/failure employment 
    losses can also be greater than these output-based losses if they 
    ``overshoot'' the expected market equilibrium result. In this case, the 
    direct losses computed on the basis of output losses (and net of gains 
    in employment in the industry due to the need to operate the pollution 
    control equipment) are slightly greater than the closure/failure losses 
    (which are estimated to total 139 FTEs). Output-based losses total 138 
    FTEs, or 0.1 percent of pharmaceutical employment in the analysis. With 
    MACT standards costs for facilities included in the effluent guidelines 
    analysis, net direct employment losses will total 254 FTEs, or 0.1 
    percent of employment.
        Because output-based employment losses are greater than closure/
    failure employment losses, nonclosing facilities might experience some 
    small reductions in labor hours and production over time that are 
    additional to the losses of labor hours and production associated with 
    facilities that close or fail (assuming a worst-case scenario where no 
    costs can be passed through to consumers).
        The losses in employment due to closures/failures will have a 
    negligible impact on individual communities. No community is expected 
    to experience a change in its unemployment rate exceeding 0.4 percent.
    5. Other Secondary Impacts
        No trade losses or major changes in the balance of payments are 
    associated with closures/failures of firms or facilities, as these 
    firms and facilities indicate no foreign shipments. Thus EPA finds that 
    neither rule, together or separately, will have a substantial impact on 
    trade or the balance of payments.
        An analysis of profit margin shows only a few firms will experience 
    impacts on profit margin as a result of the effluent guidelines. A 
    total of 8 firms (6 percent of the firms analyzed) have a greater than 
    10 percent change (e.g., go from a 5 percent profit margin to a 4.5 
    percent profit margin) in their profit margin. Most of these firms are 
    considered the least likely to relocate their facilities to foreign 
    countries. These firms tend to be small, and generally, they are 
    unlikely to have experience in international locations. The transaction 
    costs of learning how to operate in foreign countries, along with the 
    expense of relocating, are likely to be prohibitively expensive for 
    these firms. With the MACT standards costs included for the facilities 
    analyzed as part of this effluent guidelines final rule, one additional 
    firm shows a greater than 10 percent change in profit margin. Thus EPA 
    has determined that even under the combined effect of the two rules, 
    firms are unlikely to relocate to foreign countries to escape the 
    impacts on profitability induced by the two rules.
        The rules, together or separately, will have no major impact on 
    inflation, as the costs of the two rules are at most only 0.001 percent 
    of gross domestic product (GDP).
        Although the Agency received comments on the proposal arguing 
    otherwise, EPA expects that impacts on POTWS will be minimal. EPA is 
    promulgating pretreatment standards for 24 VOCs for all four 
    subcategories and ammonia for subcategories A and C. The Agency expects 
    that the reduction in the BOD discharged to POTWs as the result of 
    compliance with PSES for these pollutants will be minimal. As a result, 
    EPA believes that any reduction in revenue to POTWs that charge 
    industrial users subject to the PSES will be insignificant. Since many 
    of these pollutants are highly volatile and are volatilized in the 
    POTWs primary units before they can be biodegraded, EPA believes that 
    the final PSES should not have any substantial effect on the variable 
    operating costs of POTWs as well. In summary, EPA believes that 
    compliance with the final PSES by pharmaceutical facilities should not 
    have any significant effect on the POTW revenues. Furthermore, EPA 
    believes that the benefits associated with reduced discharges of VOCs 
    and ammonia to POTWs by pharmaceutical industrial users will outweigh 
    any revenue losses.
        Based on the analysis in the proposal EIA and further investigation 
    in the EA for this final rule, the MACT standards and effluent 
    guidelines, together or separately, will have no major distributional 
    impacts. Compliance costs are generally a very small percentage of 
    baseline operating costs, thus any cost increases are likely to be very 
    small and are not likely to have any major effect on any one group of 
    consumers.
        Impacts on environmental justice also should be minimal. As noted 
    above, any price increases on drugs will be very small and impacts on 
    disadvantaged groups such as the poor and certain minority groups will 
    be minimal. Furthermore, many of these groups will benefit from the 
    effluent guidelines final rule. A large portion of the affected 
    facilities are located in urban areas where poor or minority 
    populations tend to be high. Although everyone benefits, it is these 
    populations that will
    
    [[Page 50408]]
    
    likely benefit the most from the cleaner water resulting from both 
    rules.
    6. Impacts on New Sources
        The selected options for new sources are equivalent to the selected 
    options for existing sources. Because the costs for designing in 
    pollution control technologies are generally no more expensive than and 
    are usually less expensive than retrofitting pollution control 
    technologies, costs for new facilities will be no more expensive than 
    costs for existing facilities. Because EPA has shown that the 
    requirements for existing sources are economically achievable, they 
    should be economically achievable for new sources. Furthermore, since 
    the requirements for new sources will not be more expensive than those 
    for existing sources, the rule will not pose a barrier to entry for new 
    sources. In response to proposal comments, EPA also investigated 
    whether impacts from the effluent guidelines rule (with and without 
    MACT standards) might contribute to firms locating new facilities in 
    foreign countries. EPA found the median percentage of capital costs of 
    compliance to total costs to build a new facility to be negligible 
    (0.21 percent, on average including MACT standards costs among surveyed 
    newer facilities). Thus compliance costs are unlikely to be a major 
    impetus to locating new facilities outside the U.S.
    
    E. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        There are no major changes to EPA's Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 
    (RFA), except that the Agency has undertaken a revenue test in addition 
    to the closure analysis to better assess the potential impact on small 
    firms. The revenue test measures impact on the basis of annual 
    compliance costs as a percentage of annual revenues. The analysis 
    indicates that out of 145 firms considered small (i.e., firms with 
    fewer than 750 employees), only four firms will experience annual 
    compliance costs that are greater than one percent of annual revenues 
    (six with MACT costs included). No firms will experience annual 
    compliance costs exceeding 3 percent. When MACT standards costs are 
    included only one small firm will experience annual compliance costs 
    that exceed three percent of annual revenues, but this firm is not 
    estimated to incur any effluent guideline costs.
        The RFA further also considered impacts to small firms in terms of 
    firm failures or facility closures. Five small firms are significantly 
    affected by the rule. The regulatory action is found to be economically 
    achievable for all dischargers, including small entities as detailed in 
    Section V.D. Further, the analysis indicates no disproportionate effect 
    on small entities, compared to large entities. Based on these findings, 
    EPA certifies that this final rule does not have a significant impact 
    on a substantial number of small entities.
    
    F. Cost-Benefit Analysis
    
        Because the combined costs of the rules are at the level that 
    defines a major rule both under Executive Order 12866 and UMRA 
    (although neither rule considered separately would be near this level), 
    EPA has undertaken a cost-benefit analysis. As in the proposal, pretax 
    costs for all facilities are used as a proxy for social cost. The major 
    portion of the social cost of the effluent guidelines is the total 
    pretax annual cost, which is $60.8 million (1997$). Adding in the cost 
    of administering the rule and providing administrative services to the 
    unemployed (the only other significant cost categories), the total 
    social cost of the rule is $61.0 million (1997$). Combined with the 
    costs of the MACT standards rule for facilities in the effluent 
    guidelines analysis, the two rules together have annual social cost of 
    $110.7 million (1997$). (Costs of both rules including MACT standards 
    costs to facilities that will not be affected by the effluent 
    guidelines are $119.5 million (1997$)).
        Benefits include the benefits of water removals and benefits of air 
    removals. Types of benefits analyzed include human health risk, 
    recreational use benefits, benefits to POTWs, and benefits of 
    reductions in VOCs (other than human health). The benefits to POTWs, 
    however, could not be monetized (see Section VI.E. of this preamble for 
    more details). Total monetizable benefits of the effluent guidelines 
    alone total $0.93 to $14.0 million (1997$), while the combined benefits 
    of the two rules total $4.06 to $81.1 million (1997$).
    
                                   Table V.F.1                              
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                            
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                               Costs ($ millions)                           
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total Social Cost of Effluent Guidelines.  $61.0                        
    Total Social Cost of MACT (ELG facilities  49.7                         
     only).                                                                 
    Total Social Cost of MACT (all             58.4                         
     facilities).                                                           
    Social Cost of Combined Rules (ELG         110.7                        
     facilities only).                                                      
    Social Cost of Combined Rules (all         119.5                        
     facilities).                                                           
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              Benefits ($ millions)                         
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Effluent Guidelines......................  0.9 to 14.0                  
    MACT Standards...........................  3.9 to 67.2                  
                                              ------------------------------
        Total................................  4.8 to 81.1                  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    G. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
    
        Cost-effectiveness evaluates the relative efficiency of options in 
    removing toxic pollutants. Costs evaluated include direct compliance 
    costs, such as capital expenditures and operation and maintenance 
    costs.
        Cost-effectiveness results are expressed in terms of the 
    incremental and average costs per pound-equivalent removed. A pound 
    equivalent is a measure that addresses differences in the toxicity of 
    pollutants removed. Total pound-equivalents are derived by taking the 
    number of pounds of a pollutant removed and multiplying this number by 
    a toxic weighting factor. EPA calculates the toxic weighting factor 
    using ambient water quality criteria and toxicity values. The toxic 
    weighting factors are then standardized by relating them to a 
    particular pollutant, in this case copper. EPA's standard procedure is 
    to rank the options considered for each subcategory in order of 
    increasing pounds-equivalent (PE) removed. The Agency calculates 
    incremental cost-effectiveness as the ratio of the incremental annual 
    costs to the incremental pounds-equivalent removed under each option, 
    compared to the previous (less effective) option. Average cost-
    effectiveness is calculated for each option as a ratio of total costs 
    to total pounds-equivalent removed. EPA reports annual costs for all 
    cost-effectiveness analyses in 1981 dollars to enable limited 
    comparisons of the cost-effectiveness among regulated industries.
        Table V.G.1 presents the results of the cost-effectiveness analysis 
    for all subcategories. As the table shows, the average and incremental 
    cost-effectiveness of the selected BAT option for subcategories A and C 
    is $224/lb. eq., the average and incremental cost-effectiveness of the 
    selected PSES option for subcategories A and C is $96/lb. eq. and the 
    average and incremental cost-effectiveness of the selected PSES option 
    for subcategories B and D is $66/lb. eq. The selected BAT option for 
    the subcategories B and D directs is the no additional action 
    alternative, so no cost-effectiveness results are calculated.
        The cost-effectiveness determined for this rule does not represent 
    an estimate of the removal of the toxic pounds resulting from the 
    removal of COD. As discussed previously in section IV.C., discharges 
    from pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities exhibit toxicity as 
    measured by the whole effluent
    
    [[Page 50409]]
    
    toxicity test and reported as part of the routine NPDES discharge 
    monitoring reports (DMRs). One study conducted by EPA at a 
    pharmaceutical manufacturing facility showed a significant decrease in 
    toxicity with a corresponding decrease in COD level for the tested 
    effluent sample from the facility and a sample effluent of a pilot 
    scale biological treatment plant study. Because of the limited amount 
    of data, and the inability to identify the different mix of specific 
    organic compounds represented by the COD measurement, the total amount 
    of toxic pound-equivalent represented by the nonconventional pollutant 
    parameter of COD could not be determined.
        Based on the lack of pound-equivalents associated with COD removals 
    the cost-effectiveness analysis results understates the true cost-
    effectiveness of this rule. EPA therefore considers these options to be 
    cost-effective.
    
                                                        Table V.G.1--Cost/Effectiveness Analysis Results                                                    
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                       Total Annual                     Incremental                                         
                                                             ----------------------------------------------------------------   Average C-E   Incremental C-
                             Option                               Lb. eq.                         Lb. eq.                       ($/lb.eq.)    E  ($/lb. eq.)
                                                                  removed      Cost  (1981$)      removed      Cost  (1981$)                                
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           A/C Direct                                                                       
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    MACT Only...............................................               0              $0               0              $0              NA              NA
    Advanced Bio............................................           9,780       2,186,106           9,780       2,186,106            $224            $224
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                          A/C Indirect                                                                      
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    MACT Only...............................................               0               0               0               0              NA              NA
    Steam Stripping no alcohols.............................         282,614      26,990,998         282,614      26,990,998              96              96
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                          B/D Indirect                                                                      
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    MACT Only...............................................               0               0               0               0              NA              NA
    Steam Stripping no alcohols.............................          80,807       5,353,790          80,807       5,353,790              66              66
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    VI. Environmental Benefits
    
        In addition to costs and impacts, EPA also estimated the 
    environmental and human health benefits of implementing CWA 
    requirements. Benefits identified as a result of this final rule are 
    associated with improvements in both water quality and air quality, 
    since many of the regulated and incidentally controlled pollutants are 
    prone to volatilization from the effluent waste streams. Section IV of 
    this preamble and Section IX of the TDD describe the estimated 
    reductions in effluent discharges, and those reductions and the 
    estimates of incremental environmental improvements noted in Section IV 
    are derived compared to a baseline consisting of current discharges. 
    Because current discharges are a function of current technology, this 
    is the same baseline that is used to establish the costs of complying 
    with this rule.
        EPA is confident that its estimation of compliance costs is a full 
    and accurate account of such costs; however, EPA is less confident that 
    the estimation of benefits is similarly complete. EPA is not currently 
    able to quantitatively evaluate all human health and ecosystem benefits 
    associated with air and water quality improvements. EPA is even more 
    limited in its ability to assign monetary values to these benefits. A 
    comparison of costs to only the limited monetized subset compromises 
    the validity of the cost-benefit analysis. The economic benefit values 
    described below and in Section 10.4 of the EA should be considered a 
    limited subset of the total benefits of this rule and should be 
    evaluated along with descriptive assessments of benefits and the 
    acknowledgment that even these may fall short of the real-world 
    benefits that may result from this rule. For example, the analyses 
    consider the impacts of toxic pollutants, but do not evaluate the 
    impacts of other pollutants (such as BOD5, COD, and TSS) 
    which can produce significant adverse environmental impacts.
        Within these limitations, EPA analyzes the effects of current air 
    and water emissions and assesses the benefits of reductions in these 
    emissions resulting from this final regulation. EPA expects a variety 
    of human health, environmental, and economic benefits to result from 
    these reductions in effluent loadings and air emissions (See 
    Environmental Assessment of the Final Effluent Guidelines for the 
    Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Industry, (July 1998, EPA-821-B-98-008). 
    In particular, the benefits assessment addresses the following benefit 
    categories: human health and agricultural benefits due to reductions in 
    emissions of ozone precursors (i.e., reductions in VOC emissions); 
    human health benefits due to reductions in excess cancer risk; human 
    health benefits due to reductions in non-carcinogenic hazard 
    (systemic); ecological and recreational benefits due to improved water 
    quality with respect to toxic pollutants, including intrinsic benefits; 
    and benefits to publicly owned treatment works (POTWs) from reductions 
    in interference, pass through, and sludge contamination problems, 
    improvements in worker health and safety, and elimination of some of 
    the efforts associated with establishing local pretreatment limits. EPA 
    monetizes the estimated benefits for reductions in air emissions of 
    ozone precursors, cancer risk reductions, improvements in recreational 
    fishing opportunities, and improvements in intrinsic value, but is 
    unable to quantify the dollar magnitude of benefits from the other 
    benefit categories. Air benefits due to reductions in emissions of 
    ozone precursors, are estimated using the methods and data summarized 
    in the November 5, 1997 OAQPS memorandum titled ``Benefits-Transfer 
    Analysis for Pulp and Paper''. This methodology is based on the 
    recently published benefits analyses provided in the Regulatory Impact 
    Analyses for the Particulate Matter and Ozone National Ambient Air 
    Quality Standards and Proposed Regional Haze Rule. The methodology and 
    data used in the estimate of all benefits are described in detail in 
    the Environmental Assessment.
    
    [[Page 50410]]
    
    a. Reduced Emissions of Ozone Precursors
    
        These final effluent guidelines are expected to result in 
    reductions in ambient ozone concentrations due to reductions in VOC 
    emissions. Controlling VOC emissions is beneficial because some VOCs 
    are precursors to ozone, which negatively affects human health and 
    plant life.
        EPA estimates that the annual monetized benefits resulting from 
    reductions in VOC emissions due to this final rule range from $755,000 
    to $9.8 million ($1997). The benefits are monetized using a benefits-
    transfer-based approach. Specifically, the estimated reductions in VOC 
    emissions in nonattainment areas alone, and in both nonattainment and 
    attainment areas (1,254 Mg to 3,608 Mg, respectively) are multiplied by 
    an existing estimate of the range of the value of a unit reduction in 
    VOC emissions ($602/Mg to $2,723/Mg, $1997). This range is based on the 
    ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) benefits analysis, 
    which used new scientific studies to quantify the association between 
    ozone exposure and premature mortality. The $602/Mg estimate does not 
    include mortality effects associated with ozone exposure, while the 
    $2,723/Mg estimate includes mortality effects.
        The overall benefit estimate for ozone precursor reduction also 
    includes an estimate of the potential adverse effects which may result 
    from increased emissions of particulate matter (PM) and sulfur dioxide 
    (SO2) related to steam stripping of the VOCs. Emissions of 
    PM and SO2 arise from the use of fossil fuels as an energy 
    source for the steam stripping technology basis. The quantity of these 
    emissions is based on the type of fossil fuel (natural gas or fuel oil) 
    used.
        Particulate matter is associated with adverse human health and 
    welfare effects. EPA estimates that the annual monetized adverse 
    environmental impact resulting from increases in PM emissions due to 
    this final rule is $266,000 ($1997). This value was obtained by using 
    an estimated increase in PM emissions of 20 Mg multiplied by an 
    estimate of the value of a unit reduction in PM emissions of $13,325 
    per Mg ($1997). This value is based on the PM NAAQS benefits analysis.
        Sulfur dioxide is associated with the adverse human health effects 
    and environmental impacts, including ``acid rain.'' EPA estimates that 
    the annual monetized adverse environmental impact resulting from 
    increases in SO2 emissions range from $311,000 to $688,000 
    ($1997). This value was obtained using an estimated increase in 
    SO2 emissions of 52.1 Mg (51.8 Mg eastern U.S. and 0.3 Mg 
    western U.S.) multiplied by an estimate of the value of a unit 
    reduction in SO2 emissions of $5,984 to $13,251 per Mg 
    ($1997) for the eastern U.S. and $4,329 to $5,164 per Mg ($1997) for 
    the western U.S. These ranges are based on the PM NAAQS benefits 
    analysis and assumes emission reductions of SO2 are 
    proportional to emission reductions of PM. The lower values include a 
    measure of premature mortality due to short-term exposure, and the 
    higher values use a measure of premature mortality due to long-term 
    exposure.
        The benefits transfer method is utilized to value the pollutants 
    discussed above (VOCs, PM, and SO2). This method relies on 
    previous benefit studies that have been conducted for the same 
    pollutants that are identified in this rulemaking. These studies 
    provide useful data that can be transferred across contexts in order to 
    approximate the benefits of the pharmaceuticals industry's emission 
    reductions.
        The impacts and benefits associated with the different emission 
    components are aggregated by adding the lower values separately from 
    the higher values to give a maximum total range. Using this method of 
    analysis, the total monetized air benefits from reduction of ozone 
    precursors, including associated PM and SO2 increases, range 
    from an adverse environmental impact of $0.20 million ($1997) to a 
    benefit of $9.2 million ($1997).
    
    b. Reduced Human Health Cancer Risk
    
        The benefits from the final rule include human health benefits from 
    reductions in excess cancer risk. EPA expects the final rule to reduce 
    loadings of toxic substances that otherwise would volatilize and pose a 
    cancer risk to humans, resulting in reductions in excess cancer risk in 
    exposed populations from inhalation of VOCs. In addition, EPA expects 
    that reduced loadings to surface waters will improve water quality and 
    thus reduce cancer risk to the exposed populations from consumption of 
    contaminated drinking water and fish tissue. Based on the cancer risk 
    assessment conducted for fugitive air emissions, EPA estimates that the 
    final guidelines will result in 0.15 excess cancer cases avoided per 
    year nationwide due to reduced exposure to four identified pollutants 
    (benzene, chloroform, 1,2-dichloroethane, and methylene chloride). The 
    estimated monetized value of the human health benefits from these 
    cancer risk reductions ranges from $350,000 to $1.9 million ($1997) 
    annually. EPA developed these benefit estimates by applying an existing 
    estimate of the value of a statistical life to the estimated number of 
    excess cancer cases avoided. The estimated range of the value of a 
    statistical life used in this analysis is $2.3 million to 12.6 million 
    ($1997). This estimated range is based on EPA's Office of Policy, 
    Planning and Evaluation (OPPE) review of willingness-to-pay studies for 
    valuing an avoided event of premature mortality or a statistical life 
    saved.
    
    c. Reduced Noncarcinogenic Human Health Hazard
    
        Exposure to toxic substances poses risk of systemic and other 
    effects to humans, including effects on the circulatory, respiratory or 
    digestive systems and neurological and developmental effects. This 
    final rule is expected to generate human health benefits by reducing 
    exposure to these substances, thus reducing the hazards of these 
    associated effects.
        As in the case of the cancer risk assessment, systemic hazards from 
    exposure to fugitive air emissions and consumption of contaminated fish 
    tissue and drinking water are evaluated. Based on this analysis, 
    reductions in fugitive air emissions are expected to result in reduced 
    systemic hazard to 32,300 individuals due to reduced exposure to four 
    identified toxic pollutants (ammonia, chlorobenzene, methyl cellosolve, 
    and triethylamine). No systemic hazards reductions are expected to 
    result from reduced exposure to contaminated fish tissue or drinking 
    water. Sufficient data to quantify these benefits further are not 
    available.
    
    d. Improved Ecological Conditions and Recreational Activity
    
        EPA expects this final rule to generate environmental benefits by 
    improving water quality. There are a wide range of benefits associated 
    with the maintenance and improvement of water quality. These benefits 
    include use values (e.g., recreational fishing), ecological values 
    (e.g., preservation of habitat), and passive use (intrinsic) values 
    (e.g., aesthetics). For example, water pollution might affect the 
    quality of the fish and wildlife habitat provided by water resources, 
    thus affecting the species using these resources. This in turn might 
    affect the quality and value of recreational experiences of users, such 
    as anglers fishing in the affected streams. EPA considers the value of 
    the recreational fishing benefits and intrinsic benefits resulting from 
    this final rule, but does not evaluate the
    
    [[Page 50411]]
    
    other types of ecological and environmental benefits (e.g., increased 
    assimilative capacity of the receiving stream, protection of 
    terrestrial wildlife and birds that consume aquatic organisms, and 
    improvements to other recreational activities, such as swimming, 
    boating, water skiing, and wildlife observation) due to data 
    limitations.
        To estimate some of the benefits from the improvements in water 
    quality expected to result from this rule, instream concentration 
    estimates are modeled and then compared to both aquatic life and human 
    health ambient water quality criteria (AWQC) or toxic effect levels to 
    evaluate whether these discharges pose risk to aquatic organisms or to 
    human health. The projected reductions in toxic loadings to surface 
    waters and POTWs are significant. Modeled end-of-pipe pollutant 
    loadings are estimated to decline by 71 percent, from 11.2 million 
    pounds per year under current conditions to 3.3 million pounds per year 
    under this final rule.1 The analysis comparing instream 
    concentration levels to AWQC estimates that current discharge loadings 
    result in excursions of AWQC at five locations. The analysis also 
    indicates that no excursions are expected to occur at these five sites 
    under this final rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1 2 3\ These benefits are a result of the CAA MACT Rule and/or 
    the CWA Rule. Monetized benefits of $290,000 to $1.0 million ($1997) 
    of the total recreational benefit to anglers can be solely 
    attributed to the CWA Rule. Monetized benefits of $140,000 to 
    $510,000 ($1997) of the total intrinsic benefit can be solely 
    attributed to the CWA Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        EPA estimates that the annual monetized recreational benefits to 
    anglers associated with the expected changes in water quality range 
    from $520,000 to $1.8 million ($1997).2 EPA evaluates these 
    recreational benefits, applying a model that considers the increase in 
    value of a ``contaminant-free fishery'' to recreational anglers 
    resulting from the elimination of pollutant concentrations in excess of 
    AWQC at these five sites. The monetized value of impaired recreational 
    fishing opportunity is estimated by first calculating the baseline 
    value of the receiving stream using a value per person day of 
    recreational fishing, and the number of person-days fished on the 
    receiving stream. The value of improving water quality in this fishery, 
    based on the increase in value to anglers of achieving contaminant-free 
    fishing, is then calculated.
        In addition, EPA estimates that the annual monetized intrinsic 
    benefits to the general public, as a result of the same improvements in 
    water quality, range from at least $260,000 to $920,000 
    ($1997).3 These intrinsic benefits are estimated as half of 
    the recreational benefits and may be significantly underestimated.
    
    e. Improved POTW Operations/Conditions
    
        EPA considers three potential sources of benefits to POTWs from 
    this final regulation: (1) reductions in the likelihood of 
    interference, pass through, and sewage sludge contamination problems; 
    (2) reductions in health and safety risks to POTW workers; and (3) 
    reductions in costs potentially incurred by POTWs in analyzing toxic 
    pollutants and determining whether to, and the appropriate level at 
    which to, set local limits. Although the benefits from reducing these 
    effects at POTWs might be substantial, the EPA does not quantify all of 
    these benefits due to data limitations.
        First, regarding potential interference, pass through and sewage 
    sludge contamination problems, this final rule is expected to help 
    reduce these problems by reducing toxic loadings in the industry's 
    effluent and reducing shock releases. Anecdotal evidence from POTW 
    responses to an EPA survey and sampling results indicate that such 
    effects can occur. In addition, based on an analysis comparing POTW 
    influent levels to available data on inhibition levels, inhibition 
    problems are projected to occur at three POTWs for five pollutants 
    (acetonitrile, diethylamine, N,N-dimethylacetamide, N,N-
    dimethylformamide, and triethylamine) under current conditions. 
    Inhibition problems are projected to remain at the same three POTWs for 
    three of these pollutants (acetonitrile, N,N-dimethylacetamide, and 
    N,N-dimethylformamide) after this final rule.4 While this 
    rule is not expected to completely eliminate inhibition problems, the 
    reduction in pollutant loadings is expected to reduce the severity of 
    the impact. Sufficient data are not available to further quantify this 
    benefit category.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \4\ This benefit is a result of the CAA MACT Rule and/or the CWA 
    Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Furthermore, toxic substances, particularly the VOCs, in effluent 
    discharges to POTWs pose health risks to POTW workers. This final rule 
    is expected to reduce these risks, thus generating human health 
    benefits. Based on the assessment of the risk posed to POTW workers 
    from exposure to the toxic pollutants (primarily acetonitrile, benzene, 
    chloroform, diethylamine, n-heptane, n-hexane, methylene chloride, 
    toluene, and triethylamine), this final rule is estimated to reduce 
    occupational risk at nine POTWs.5 Data are not available to 
    monetize this benefit category.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \5\ This benefit is a result of the CAA MACT Rule and/or the CWA 
    Rule. Reduction of occupational risk at five POTWs can be solely 
    attributed to the CWA Rule.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Finally, reducing the pollutant load to local POTWs may eliminate 
    some of the efforts associated with establishing local pollutant 
    limits. Local limits are sometimes required to protect against pass-
    through and interference, and to protect worker health and safety. 
    Establishing local limits involves labor and analytical costs to 
    determine the relative contribution of each industrial discharger and 
    to set limits which will be protective of the treatment works, the 
    workers, and the receiving environment. Several POTWs contacted in 
    EPA's survey indicated that establishment of more effective national 
    pretreatment standards would help them avoid these significant costs. 
    In addition, they indicated that where local limits are still required, 
    stricter national pretreatment standards will bolster the validity of 
    the limits they set.
        Furthermore, reducing the discharge of toxic pollutants reduces the 
    likelihood that the POTW effluents will exhibit excessive toxicity. 
    When POTW effluent exhibits excessive toxicity, the POTW must enact a 
    rigorous, costly analytical program to identify and reduce the source 
    of toxicity.
    
    f. Other Unquantified Benefits
    
        The above benefit analyses focus mainly on identified compounds 
    with quantifiable toxic or carcinogenic effects. This leads to a 
    potentially large underestimation of benefits, since some significant 
    pollutant characterizations are not considered. For example, the 
    analyses do not include the benefits associated with reducing the 
    particulate load (measured as TSS), or the oxygen demand (measured as 
    BOD and COD) of the effluents. TSS loads can degrade ecological habitat 
    by reducing light penetration and primary productivity, and from 
    accumulation of solid particles that alter benthic spawning grounds and 
    feeding habitats. BOD and COD loads can deplete oxygen levels, which 
    can produce mortality or other adverse effects in fish, as well as 
    reduce biological diversity.
        The benefits of COD reduction extend beyond reducing oxygen 
    depletion, since COD also represents the presence of organic chemicals 
    in a waste stream. Due to a lack of analytical methods, not all of the 
    compounds represented by COD are identified. In this benefits
    
    [[Page 50412]]
    
    assessment, specifically identified compounds represent only 2.2 
    million pounds of the 11.5 million pounds of COD projected to be 
    removed. This limits the estimate of benefits, since the analysis 
    relies on comparing instream concentrations to established criteria, 
    and there are obviously no established criteria for unidentified 
    compounds. However, there is inherent value in reducing pollutant 
    loads, despite (or perhaps due to) the lack of quantifiable effects.
        The benefits analyses are further limited because they concentrate 
    on projected excursions from established minimum standards, and do not 
    account for protection of higher quality conditions. Likewise, they do 
    not account for prevention of future impacts which could occur due to 
    increased effluent loadings.
    
    g. Summary of Benefits from Effluent Limitations Guideline Final Rule
    
        EPA estimates that the annual monetized benefits resulting from 
    this final effluent guidelines rule will range from $0.93 million to 
    $14 million ($1997). This range includes $0.34 to $1.2 million that 
    cannot be differentiated between the effluent guidelines rule and the 
    wastewater portion of the MACT standard. Table XI.B.9.g summarizes 
    these benefits, by category. The range reflects the uncertainty in 
    evaluating the effects of this final rule and in placing a dollar value 
    on these effects. As indicated in the table, these monetized benefits 
    ranges do not reflect many of the benefit categories expected to result 
    under this final rule, including reduced noncarcinogenic human health 
    hazards; improved ecological conditions from improvements in water 
    quality; improved POTW operations; and improved worker health and 
    safety at POTWs. Therefore the reported benefit estimate understates 
    the total benefits of this final rule.
    
    h. Benefits of the MACT Rule
    
        The CAA MACT Rule will regulate an estimated 101 facilities. The 
    Rule is expected to produce environmental and human health benefits due 
    to reductions in fugitive air emissions from four planks: wastewater, 
    process vents, storage tanks, and equipment leaks. EPA conducted 
    analyses on the 23 facilities covered under the wastewater plank, based 
    on site-specific raw loadings data from the 1990 Pharmaceuticals 
    Section 308 Questionnaire. These analyses were conducted using the same 
    methodologies, within the same limitations, as those conducted to 
    evaluate the CWA Rule as discussed in the previous Sections. Data on 
    emission reductions from the other planks were obtained by OAQPS, 
    however, a detailed benefit analysis of these planks was not conducted 
    due to data limitations (specifically, the lack of site-specific data).
        Within these limitations, the estimated benefits are as follows:
    Reduced Emissions of Ozone Precursors
        EPA estimates that the final MACT Rule will produce benefits due to 
    reductions in fugitive VOC emissions from wastewater, process vents, 
    storage tanks, and equipment leaks at pharmaceutical manufacturing 
    facilities. Considering the wastewater plank only, EPA estimates that 
    the annual monetized benefits range from $1.2 million to $45 million 
    ($1997). These benefits are based on estimated emission reductions in 
    VOC emissions in nonattainment areas alone, and in both nonattainment 
    and attainment areas (2,057 Mg to 16,619 Mg, respectively).
        The annual monetized adverse environmental impacts for these 23 
    facilities due to increases in PM emissions is estimated by EPA at 
    $56,000 ($1997). This value is based on an estimated increase in PM 
    emissions of 4.2 Mg. EPA also estimates that the annual monetized 
    adverse environmental impacts for these 23 facilities due to increases 
    in SO2 emissions due to the final MACT Rule range from 
    $65,000 to $143,000 based on an estimated increase in SO2 
    emissions of 11.0 Mg (10.6 Mg eastern U.S., and 0.4 Mg western U.S.).
        The total monetized air benefits from reductions of ozone 
    precursors from wastewater, after correction for PM and SO2 
    increases, range from $1.0 million to $45 million ($1997).
        In addition, based on the analysis of the 101 pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing facilities covered by the MACT rule, EPA estimates that 
    the reductions in fugitive VOC emissions from process vents, storage 
    tanks, and equipment leaks would result in a range of annual monetized 
    air benefits of $0.77 million to $11 million ($1997). These benefits 
    are based on estimated reductions in VOC emissions in nonattainment 
    areas alone, and in both nonattainment and attainment areas (1,278 Mg 
    to 4,027 Mg, respectively). Adverse impacts due to increased energy 
    consumption from control of these planks are not quantified due to data 
    limitations. The total monetized benefits from reductions in VOC 
    emissions from all four planks are estimated to be $1.8 million to $56 
    million ($1997).
    Reduced Human Health Cancer Risk
        The estimated monetized value of the human health benefits from 
    cancer risk reductions due to reductions in fugitive air emissions from 
    wastewater ranges from $2.1 million to $11 million ($1997) annually. 
    This is based on EPA estimates that the MACT Rule will result in 0.88 
    cancer cases avoided per year nationwide, considering an inhalation 
    exposure route. EPA also expects that reduced loadings to surface 
    waters will improve water quality and thus reduce cancer risk to the 
    exposed populations from consumption of contaminated drinking water and 
    fish tissues.
        EPA estimates that cancer risk will be further reduced due to 
    reductions in fugitive air emissions from process vents, storage tanks, 
    and equipment leaks. However, these reductions were not quantified due 
    to lack of site-specific data.
    Reduced Noncarcinogenic Human Health Hazard
        EPA estimates that reductions in fugitive air emissions from 
    wastewater are expected to result in reduced systemic hazard to 370,000 
    individuals due to reduced exposure to four identified toxic 
    pollutants. EPA also expects that reductions in fugitive air emissions 
    from process vents, storage tanks, and equipment leaks will result in 
    reduced systemic hazard. However, EPA does not quantify these benefits 
    due to data limitations. No systemic hazard reductions are expected to 
    result from reduced exposure to contaminated fish tissue or drinking 
    water.
    Improved Ecological Conditions and Recreational Activity
        EPA estimates that the annual monetized recreational benefits to 
    anglers associated with the expected changes in water quality at two 
    locations range from $230,000 to $820,000 ($1997). The annual monetized 
    intrinsic benefits to the general public range from at least $115,000 
    to $410,000 ($1997). These benefits are a result of the CAA MACT Rule 
    and/or the CWA Rule. These monetized benefits cannot be solely 
    attributed to the MACT Rule.
    Improved POTW Operations
        Inhibition problems are projected by EPA to occur at three POTWs 
    for five pollutants under current conditions. Inhibition problems are 
    projected to remain at the same three POTWs for three of these 
    pollutants. The benefits cannot be solely attributed to the MACT Rule.
    
    [[Page 50413]]
    
        Additionally, the MACT Rule is expected to reduce health risks to 
    POTW workers. This rule is estimated to reduce occupational risks at 
    four POTWs. However, these benefits cannot be solely attributed to the 
    MACT Rule.
    Summary of Benefits From MACT Final Rule
        EPA estimates that the annual monetized benefits resulting from the 
    MACT final rule will range from at least $3.9 million to $67 million 
    ($1997). Additional annual monetized benefits that cannot be solely 
    attributed to the CAA portion of this final rule will range from $0.34 
    million to $1.2 million ($1997). Table VI.B.9.h summarizes these 
    benefits, by category. As explained previously in Section g, the 
    expected benefit estimate understates the total benefits of the MACT 
    rule. The estimate is further constrained by data limitations.
    
        Table VI.B.9.g.--Potential Economic Benefits From Final Effluent    
             Limitations Guidelines for the Pharmaceutical Industry         
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    Millions of 1997 dollars
                   Benefit category                         per year        
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Reduced Emissions of Ozone Precursors........  -$0.20 to $9.2.          
    Reduced Cancer Risk..........................  $0.35 to $1.9.           
    Reduced Noncarcinogenic Hazard...............  Unquantified.            
    Improved Ecological Conditions...............  Unquantified.            
    Improved Recreational Activity...............  $0.52 to $1.8.           
    Improved Intrinsic Value.....................  $0.26 to $0.92.          
    Improved POTW Operations (Inhibition and       Unquantified.            
     Sludge Contamination).                                                 
    Improved Occupational Conditions at POTWs....  Unquantified.            
                                                  --------------------------
        Total Monetized Benefits.................  $0.93 to $14.0.          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Note: These benefits include a portion of recreational and intrinsic    
      monetized benefits attributed to the CAA Rule. Specifically, two      
      facilities included in the modeling were required to have MACT        
      strippers and were also costed for additional strippers to meet the   
      CWA effluent guidelines. Overall removals due to these strippers      
      cannot be differentiated between MACT and CWA requirements. These two 
      facilities represent a total of $0.34 to $1.2 million based on        
      improved recreational activity and improved intrinsic value.          
    
    
             Table VI.B.9.h.--Potential Economic Benefits From CAA MACT Rule for the Pharmaceutical Industry        
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                            Millions of 1997 dollars per year                       
           Benefit category        ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             Wastewater           Other fugitive emissions\1\      Total benefits   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Reduced Emissions of Ozone      $1.0 to $45.................  $0.77 to $11$..............  $1.8 to $56.         
     Precursors.                                                                                                    
    Reduced Cancer Risk...........  $2.1 to $11.................  Unquantified...............  $2.1 to $11.         
    Reduced Noncarcinogenic Hazard  Unquantified................  Unquantified...............  Unquantified.        
    Improved Ecological Conditions  Unquantified................  Unquantified...............  Unquantified.        
    Improved POTW Operations        Unquantified................  Unquantified...............  Unquantified.        
     (Inhibition and Sludge                                                                                         
     Contamination).                                                                                                
    Improved Occupational           Unquantified................  Unquantified...............  Unquantified.        
     Conditions at POTWs.                                                                                           
        Total Monetized Benefits..  $3.1 to $56.................  $0.77 to $11...............  $3.9 to $67.         
                                   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Includes process vents, storage tanks, and equipment leaks.                                                 
    Notes: These benefits exclude a portion of the recreational and intrinsic monetized benefits attributed to the  
      CAA Rule. Specifically, two facilities included in the modeling were required to have MACT strippers and were 
      also costed for additional strippers to meet the CWA effluent guidelines. Overall removals due to these       
      strippers cannot be differentiated between MACT and CWA requirements. These two facilities represent a total  
      of $0.34 to $1.2 million dollars, based on improved recreational activity and improved intrinsic value.       
    The benefits analysis for the MACT Rule is particularly limited due to data constraints.                        
    
    VII. Non-Water Quality Environmental Impacts
    
        The elimination or reduction of one form of pollution may create or 
    aggravate other environmental problems. Therefore, Sections 304(b) and 
    306 of the Act call for EPA to consider the non-water quality 
    environmental impacts of effluent limitations guidelines and standards. 
    Accordingly, EPA has considered the effect of these regulations on air 
    pollution, solid waste generation, and energy consumption.
    
    A. Air Pollution
    
        EPA estimated the impacts of the selected technology options for 
    the existing source BAT and PSES regulations and the technology basis 
    for the MACT standard on air emissions. EPA considered emissions of 
    HAPs and non-HAPs as well as criteria air pollutants (CO, 
    NoX, SO2 and particulate matter) in its analysis. 
    EPA estimates that the MACT standards steam strippers will reduce air 
    emissions of HAPs and non-HAPs at direct and indirect subcategory A and 
    C facilities by 14.1 and 41.4 million lbs. per year, respectively. No 
    emission reductions have been estimated for B and D subcategory direct 
    and indirect dischargers as the result of the MACT standard because 
    these facilities are not ``major sources'' of hazardous air pollutants 
    (HAPs) (defined as facilities with total annual emissions of HAPs 
    greater than 25,000 metric tons). EPA has estimated the reduction in 
    air emissions of HAPs and non-HAPs as the result of steam strippers 
    that may be installed to comply with PSES for VOC pollutants for A and 
    C and B and D subcategory facilities to be 10.7 and 3.3 million lbs. 
    per year, respectively. With
    
    [[Page 50414]]
    
    respect to criteria pollutants, EPA estimates that as a result of steam 
    generation requirements for PSES steam strippers, emissions of criteria 
    pollutants will increase by 616,000 pounds per year.
    
    B. Solid Waste
    
        EPA has estimated the increases in solid waste generation as from 
    the use of advanced biological treatment (the basis for BPT/BCT 
    limitations), and steam stripping technology (the basis for PSES). EPA 
    also estimated an increase in waste hydrogen chloride due to scrubber 
    liquor generated by facilities with wastewater containing ammonia.
        EPA estimates that compliance with the BPT/BCT limitations will 
    increase the mass of wastewater treatment sludge by subcategories A and 
    C and B and D direct dischargers by 343 and 194 tons per year, 
    respectively. Compliance with BAT ammonia and organic limitations by A 
    and C subcategory plants is expected to increase wastewater sludge 
    generation by 308 tons per year. No increase in sludge generation is 
    expected as the result of the subcategories B and D BAT COD limitations 
    because these limitations are equivalent to the BPT COD limitations and 
    there are no BAT organic compound limitations for these subcategories. 
    EPA does expect that indirect discharging A and C facilities will 
    generate an increase in waste aqueous hydrogen chloride resulting from 
    the use of wet hydrogen chloride scrubbers to control air emissions 
    from steam strippers used to remove ammonia from wastewater. EPA 
    estimates that waste aqueous hydrogen chloride generation will increase 
    by 283 tons per year.
        Compliance with PSES subcategory A and C and subcategory B and D 
    facilities is expected to increase the amount of waste solvents 
    generated. This increase in waste solvent generation is due to the 
    waste solvents recovered from the in-plant steam stripping operations 
    at these facilities. EPA anticipates that 10,600 and 3,310 tons/yr of 
    waste solvents will be generated at subcategory A and C and B and D 
    facilities, respectively.
        Ten of the pollutants being regulated by BAT limitations and 
    pretreatment standards are solvents listed as hazardous waste 
    constituents (F0002, F0003, and F0005) under 40 CFR 261.31. These 
    pollutants are acetone, 4-methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK), ethyl acetate, 
    methanol, benzene, toluene, xylenes, methylene chloride, chlorobenzene, 
    and o-dichlorobenzene. EPA is promulgating PSES for nine of these 
    pollutants and has included costs for disposal of all overheads from 
    steam stripping as hazardous wastes in its steam stripping cost 
    estimates. As noted above, EPA has estimated increased sludge 
    generation as a result of compliance with BAT limitations for 29 
    pollutants including the 10 pollutants listed above. EPA has assumed 
    that this sludge will be incinerated in developing its final BAT cost 
    estimates, but does not believe that the increased sludge generated 
    will be considered as hazardous.
    
    C. Energy Requirements
    
        EPA has estimated the energy impacts on the pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing industry associated with compliance with the final BPT, 
    BAT and PSES regulations. The Agency estimates that electrical usage 
    would increase for subcategory A and C and subcategory B and D 
    facilities by 5.9  x  106 and 1.07  x  106 
    kilowatt hours (kWh) as the result of the final BPT and BAT 
    regulations. This increase is equivalent to a 0.1 percent increase 
    above current electrical usage by the industry. EPA also estimated the 
    increase in electrical usage as the result of increased steam 
    generation. The increased steam generation is required to operate the 
    steam strippers that EPA anticipates will be installed to comply with 
    the pretreatment standards for VOCs. (The impacts of the BPT and BAT 
    regulations on electrical usage for steam generation are negligible). 
    EPA estimates that electrical usage for steam generation will increase 
    for subcategories A and C and subcategories B and D indirect 
    dischargers by 454  x  106 and 58.8  x  106 kWh, 
    respectively. The total of these two increases in electrical usage is 
    equivalent to an eight percent overall increase in electrical usage 
    above current levels.
    
    VIII. Regulatory Implementation
    
        The purpose of this section is to provide assistance and direction 
    to permit writers and control authorities to aid in their 
    implementation of this regulation and its unique compliance 
    alternative. This section also discusses the relationship of upset and 
    bypass provisions, variances and modifications, and analytical methods 
    to the final limitations and standards.
    
    A. Implementation of the Limitations and Standards
    
        Upon the promulgation of these regulations, the effluent 
    limitations for the appropriate subcategory must be applied in all 
    Federal and State NPDES permits issued to direct dischargers in the 
    pharmaceutical manufacturing industry. In addition, the pretreatment 
    standards are directly applicable to indirect dischargers.
        Permit writers and pretreatment authorities need to be aware of 
    special circumstances involving compliance with the cyanide limitations 
    and standards, ammonia pretreatment standards, pH monitoring and the 
    portion of nonprocess wastewater in the final effluent. In the case of 
    the cyanide limitations and standards, EPA determined that the 
    monitoring point for purposes of compliance with the cyanide will 
    generally be in-plant at a point before the cyanide-bearing wastewaters 
    are commingled with noncyanide-bearing waste streams in accordance EPA 
    permit and pretreatment program regulations at 40 CFR 122.44(i)(1)(iii) 
    for direct dischargers and Sec. 403.6(e) for indirect dischargers. 
    These regulations allow permit writers and pretreatment control 
    authorities to establish in-plant monitoring points for regulated 
    pollutants in cases where it is impractical or infeasible to monitor at 
    the normal end-of-pipe monitoring point e.g., because the regulated 
    pollutant is not detectable at the end-of-pipe. This, in turn, is the 
    result of the wastewater stream bearing the regulated pollutant being 
    commingled with significantly higher volume streams not bearing the 
    regulated pollutant. EPA's analysis of waste stream flow data, from 
    subcategories A and C facilities containing cyanide in their 
    wastewaters, indicate that the volume of cyanide-bearing wastewaters 
    is, on average, less than 2.1 percent of the total process wastewater 
    flow and that all but two of the facilities required to monitor for 
    cyanide do so at an in-plant monitoring point. Facilities that can 
    demonstrate that it is not impractical or infeasible to monitor for 
    cyanide at the normal end-of-pipe point, i.e., cyanide can be detected 
    at the end-of-pipe point, may do so.
        In connection with the ammonia pretreatment standards being 
    promulgated for subcategories A and C, EPA has determined that the 
    pollutant ammonia does not passthrough POTWs that possess nitrification 
    capability. As a result, ammonia pretreatment standards would not apply 
    to subcategories A and C industrial users that discharge to these 
    POTWs. In order to provide guidance to pretreatment authorities, EPA 
    describes the treatment system requirements under which nitrification 
    is considered to occur in section 17 of the final TDD and defines the 
    basis for considering a POTW to have acceptable nitrification 
    capability in Sec. 439.1 of the final rule. POTWs that nitrify should 
    impose local limits for
    
    [[Page 50415]]
    
    ammonia if they believe that the ammonia load from the pharmaceutical 
    industrial user(s) will nevertheless pass through their facilities (see 
    40 CFR 403.5).
        During the post-proposal period, EPA has received comments from 
    industry commenters that complying with the pH requirements 100 percent 
    of the time when using continuous monitoring is not practical for many 
    facilities. Direct discharging pharmaceutical facilities are required 
    by today's final regulation to maintain effluent pH in the 6.0-9.0 
    range. The general pretreatment regulations specifically in 40 CFR 
    403.5(b)(2), set a pH minimum of 5.0, except in certain design 
    conditions, but do not set an upper boundary. EPA has addressed the 
    problem of random excursions at 40 CFR 401.17 for direct discharging 
    facilities. This regulation recognizes that random excursions from the 
    pH range (6.0-9.0) may occur in the process of continuous monitoring 
    and these random excursions should not be treated as violations. EPA is 
    developing a proposal for a similar provision for indirect dischargers 
    and expects to propose this provision by the end of this year.
        In implementing the final limitations and standards, permit writers 
    need to account for the facility's nonprocess wastewater contained in 
    the effluent being discharged in developing either mass or 
    concentration based permit limits. As discussed previously, in section 
    IV of this preamble, the final limitations and standards are developed 
    from data sets from plants which had less than 25 percent nonprocess 
    wastewater in the total plant discharge. The flow basis of the final 
    limitations and standards is discussed in section 13 of the TDD. In 
    addition, examples of BPT and BAT permit limit calculations involving 
    different plant flow configurations are provided in Appendix A to the 
    TDD. In addition, permitting authorities have requested clarification 
    on whether certain operations performed at pharmaceutical facilities 
    would cause those facilities to be regulated under additional effluent 
    guidelines. Specifically, guidance has been requested in cases where 
    pharmaceutical facilities, during routine maintenance and cleaning 
    periods, use acid containing solutions on or in stainless steel 
    processing equipment. Some permitting authorities have inquired whether 
    these operations are considered passivation operations which would 
    place the wastewater generated during such cleaning operations under 
    the limitations set forth by 40 CFR Part 433, the Metal Finishing Point 
    Source Category. The Food and Drug Administration requires that 
    pharmaceutical products must be of high purity and cannot be 
    contaminated with dirt, biological organisms, or corrosion products. 
    The pharmaceutical production equipment includes many interconnected 
    pipes, storage vessels, and reactors. Most of the piping system and 
    tanks are fabricated from austenitic stainless steel similar to AISI 
    304. The Agency is aware of several pharmaceutical facilities which 
    clean production equipment with a mild alkaline ``soap'' followed by a 
    flush with an acid containing solution. Some of these acid solutions 
    contain nitric acid. The alkaline cleaner/acid-rinse operation is 
    usually performed during plant shut-downs or routine preventative 
    maintenance. Because much of the plant piping is fabricated from 
    austenitic stainless steel, and such stainless steels are known to be 
    ``passivated'' using nitric acid solutions, it has been asked if the 
    nitric-acid-based process used by the pharmaceutical facilities would 
    be considered ``passivation'' or ``cleaning'' for the purpose of 
    regulation under the 40 CFR Part 433 Metal Finishing regulation.
        The ``Development Document for Effluent Limitations Guidelines, New 
    Source Performance Standards for the Metal Finishing Point Source 
    Category'' describes the ``coating'' unit operation, which includes 
    ``passivation'', as one of the six key ``trigger'' processes, while the 
    ``cleaning'' operation description includes a discussion of acid 
    cleaning as an operation that is not one of the six ``trigger'' 
    processes. For a process wastestream to be regulated under 40 CFR Part 
    433, a facility must perform one of the six ``trigger'' operations. To 
    determine the status of the alkaline ``soap''/acid-based operations 
    performed at pharmaceutical facilities, key provisions of the 
    ``passivation'' and ``cleaning'' definitions were reviewed. From the 
    definitions provided in the Development Document ``passivation'' is a 
    process in which iron particles are removed from a surface, while a 
    protective coating is formed. ``Cleaning'' is a process in which acid 
    can be used in combination with detergent to remove soil from metal 
    surfaces. Based on these definitions from the Metal Finishing 
    Development Document, the process conducted at pharmaceutical 
    facilities should be considered cleaning for the following three 
    reasons:
        1. The processes in question use both acid and detergent.
        2. The processes in question are not used to remove imbedded iron 
    particles.
        3. The processes in question are not used to form a coating on 
    stainless steel piping. (This conclusion can be reached based on the 
    inherent vulnerability of non-passivated stainless to corrosion. If the 
    pipes in this system were not already passivated, they would corrode 
    during the production operations and contaminate the pharmaceutical 
    products.)
        For the reasons listed above, the pharmaceutical production 
    operations performed at these facilities should be considered ``acid 
    cleaning'' and non ``passivation'' with respect to 40 CFR Part 433 
    Metal Finishing. Because the facilities only perform ``acid cleaning'' 
    and not ``passivation'' there is no metal finishing ``trigger'' process 
    performed at the facility and therefore the facility would not be 
    regulated using 40 CFR Part 433.
    
    B. Upset and Bypass Provisions
    
        A recurring issue is whether industry limitations and standards 
    should include provisions authorizing noncompliance with effluent 
    limitations during periods of ``upset'' or ``bypass''. An upset, 
    sometimes called an ``excursion,'' is an unintentional and temporary 
    noncompliance with technology based effluent limitations occurring for 
    reasons beyond the reasonable control of the permittee. EPA believes 
    that upset provisions are necessary to recognize an affirmative defense 
    for an exceptional incident. Because technology-based limitations can 
    require only what properly designed, maintained and operated technology 
    can achieve, it is claimed that liability for such situations is 
    improper.
        While an upset is an unintentional episode during which effluent 
    limitations are exceeded, a bypass is an act of intentional 
    noncompliance during which wastewater treatment facilities are 
    circumvented in emergency situations.
        EPA has both upset and bypass provisions in NPDES permits, and has 
    promulgated NPDES and pretreatment regulations which include upset and 
    bypass provisions. (40 CFR 122.41(m), 122.41(n) and 40 CFR 403.16 and 
    403.17.) The upset provision establishes an upset as an affirmative 
    defense to prosecution for violation of technology-based effluent 
    limitations. The bypass provision provides that EPA may enforce against 
    facilities that bypass except where necessary to prevent loss of life, 
    personal injury, or severe property damage; there were no feasible 
    alternatives; or permittee submitted notices as required under 
    122.41(n)(3).
    
    C. Variances and Modifications
    
        Upon the promulgation of these regulations, the effluent 
    limitations for
    
    [[Page 50416]]
    
    the appropriate subcategory must be applied in all Federal and State 
    NPDES permits issued to direct dischargers in the pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing industry. In addition, the pretreatment standards are 
    directly applicable to indirect dischargers.
    
    1. Fundamentally Different Factors Variances
    
        For the BPT effluent limitations, the only exception to the binding 
    limitations is EPA's ``fundamentally different factors'' (``FDF'') 
    variance (40 CFR Part 125 Subpart D). This variance recognizes factors 
    concerning a particular discharger which are fundamentally different 
    from the factors considered in this rulemaking. Although this variance 
    clause was set forth in EPA's 1973-1976 effluent guidelines, it is now 
    included in the NPDES regulations and not the specific industry 
    regulations. (See 44 FR 32854, 32893 [June 7, 1979] for an explanation 
    of the ``fundamentally different factors'' variance). The procedures 
    for application for a BPT FDF variance are set forth at 40 CFR 
    122.21(m)(1)(I)(A).
        Dischargers subject to the BAT limitations and PSES in these final 
    regulations may also apply for an FDF variance, under the provisions of 
    sec. 301(n) of the Act, which regulates BAT, BCT, and PSES for existing 
    sources pretreatment FDFs. (See 40 CFR 122.21 and 40 CFR 403.13, 
    respectively) In addition, BAT limitations for nonconventional 
    pollutants may be modified under sec. 301(c) (for economic reasons) and 
    301(g) (for water quality reasons) of the Act. Under sec. 301(l) of the 
    Act, these latter two statutory modifications are not applicable to 
    ``toxic'' or conventional pollutants.
    2. Removal Credits
        Congress, in enacting Section 307(b) of the CWA, recognized that, 
    in certain instances, POTWs could provide some or all of the treatment 
    of an industrial user's wastestream that would be required pursuant to 
    the pretreatment standard. Consequently, Congress established a 
    discretionary program for POTWs to grant ``removal credits'' to their 
    indirect dischargers. The credit, in the form of a less stringent 
    pretreatment standard, allows an increased amount of pollutants to flow 
    from the indirect discharger's facility to the POTW.
        Section 307(b) of the CWA establishes a three-part test for 
    obtaining removal credit authority for a given pollutant. Removal 
    credits may be authorized only if (1) the POTW ``removes all or any 
    part of such toxic pollutant,'' (2) the POTW's ultimate discharge would 
    ``not violate that effluent limitation, or standard which would be 
    applicable to that toxic pollutant if it were discharged'' directly 
    rather than through a POTW and (3) the POTW's discharge would ``not 
    prevent sludge use and disposal by such [POTW] in accordance with 
    section [405]. . . .'' Section 307(b).
        EPA has promulgated removal credit regulations in 40 CFR 403.7. The 
    United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has interpreted 
    the statute to require EPA to promulgate comprehensive sewage sludge 
    regulations before any removal credits could be authorized. NRDC v. 
    EPA, 790 F.2d 289, 292 (3rd Cir. 1986) cert. denied. 479 U.S. 1084 
    (1987). Congress made this explicit in the Water Quality Act of 1987 
    which provided that EPA could not authorize any removal credits until 
    it issued the sewage sludge use and disposal regulations required by 
    section 405(d)(2)(a)(ii).
        Section 405 of the CWA requires EPA to promulgate regulations which 
    establish standards for sewage sludge when used or disposed for various 
    purposes. These standards must include sewage sludge management 
    standards as well as numerical limits for pollutants which may be 
    present in sewage sludge in concentrations which may adversely affect 
    public health and the environment. Section 405 requires EPA to develop 
    these standards in two phases. On February 19, 1993, EPA published the 
    Round One sewage sludge regulations establishing standards, including 
    numerical pollutant limits, for the use and disposal of sewage sludge. 
    58 FR 9248. EPA established pollutant limits for ten metals when sewage 
    sludge is applied to land, for three metals when it is disposed of at 
    surface disposal sites and for seven metals and total hydrocarbons, a 
    surrogate for organic pollutant emissions, when sewage sludge is 
    incinerated. These requirements are codified at 40 CFR Part 503.
        At the same time EPA promulgated the Round One regulations, EPA 
    also amended its pretreatment regulations to provide that removal 
    credits would be available for certain pollutants regulated in the 
    sewage sludge regulations. See 58 FR at 9386. The amendments to Part 
    403 provide that removal credits may be made potentially available for 
    the following pollutants:
        (1) If a POTW applies its sewage sludge to the land for beneficial 
    uses, disposes of it on surface disposal sites or incinerates it, 
    removal credits may be available, depending on which use or disposal 
    method is selected (so long as the POTW complies with the requirements 
    in Part 503). When sewage sludge is applied to land, removal credits 
    may be available for ten metals. When sewage sludge is disposed of on a 
    surface disposal site, removal credits may be available for three 
    metals. When the sewage sludge is incinerated, removal credits may be 
    available for seven metals and for 57 organic pollutants. See 40 CFR 
    403.7(a)(3)(iv)(A).
        (2) In addition, when sewage sludge is used on land or disposed of 
    on a surface disposal site or incinerated, removal credits may also be 
    available for additional pollutants so long as the concentration of the 
    pollutant in sludge does not exceed a concentration level established 
    in Part 403. When sewage sludge is applied to land, removal credits may 
    be available for two additional metals and 14 organic pollutants. When 
    the sewage sludge is disposed of on a surface disposal site, removal 
    credits may be available for seven additional metals and 13 organic 
    pollutants. When the sewage sludge is incinerated, removal credits may 
    be available for three other metals. See 40 CFR 403.7(a)(3)(iv)(B).
        (3) When a POTW disposes of its sewage sludge in a municipal solid 
    waste landfill that meets the criteria of 40 CFR Part 258 (MSWLF), 
    removal credits may be available for any pollutant in sewage sludge. 
    See 40 CFR 403.7(a)(3)(iv)(C).
        Thus, given compliance with the requirements of EPA's removal 
    credit regulations, following promulgation of the pretreatment 
    standards in today's rule, removal credits may be authorized for any 
    pollutant subject to pretreatment standards if the applying POTW 
    disposes of its sewage sludge in a MSWLF that meets the requirements of 
    40 CFR Part 258. Currently there are two pretreatment programs 
    authorized to issue removal credits. EPA is not promulgating 
    pretreatment standards for metals, thus removal credits for metals are 
    not applicable. Given compliance with Sec. 403.7, removal credits may 
    be available for the following organic pollutants (depending on the 
    method of use or disposal) if the POTW uses or disposes of its sewage 
    sludge: benzene, chloroform, 1,2-dichloroethane, methylene chloride and 
    toluene.
    
    D. Analytical Methods
    
        Section 304(h) of the Act directs EPA to promulgate guidelines 
    establishing test methods for the analysis of pollutants. These methods 
    are used to determine the presence and concentration of pollutants in 
    wastewater, and are used for compliance monitoring and for filing 
    applications for the NPDES program
    
    [[Page 50417]]
    
    under 40 CFR 122.21, 122.41, 122.44 and 123.25, and for the 
    implementation of the pretreatment standards under 40 CFR 403.10 and 
    403.12. To date, EPA has promulgated methods for conventional 
    pollutants, toxic pollutants, and for some nonconventional pollutants. 
    The five conventional pollutants are defined at 40 CFR 401.16. Table I-
    B at 40 CFR Part 136 lists the analytical methods approved for these 
    pollutants. The 65 toxic metals and organic pollutants and classes of 
    pollutants are defined at 40 CFR 401.15. From the list of 65 classes of 
    toxic pollutants EPA identified a list of 126 ``Priority Pollutants.'' 
    This list of Priority Pollutants is shown, for example, at 40 CFR Part 
    423, Appendix A. The list includes non-pesticide organic pollutants, 
    metal pollutants, cyanide, asbestos, and pesticide pollutants. 
    Currently approved methods for metals and cyanide are included in the 
    table of approved inorganic test procedures at 40 CFR 136.3, Table I-B. 
    Table I-C at 40 CFR 136.3 lists approved methods for measurement of 
    non-pesticide organic pollutants, and Table I-D lists approved methods 
    for the toxic pesticide pollutants and for other pesticide pollutants. 
    Dischargers must use the test methods promulgated at 40 CFR 136.3 or 
    incorporated by reference in the tables, when available, to monitor 
    pollutant discharges from the pharmaceutical manufacturing industry, 
    unless specified otherwise by the permitting authority.
        As a part of today's final rule, EPA is promulgating additional 
    test methods for the additional pollutants to be regulated under Part 
    439 by adding a new Table IF at 40 CFR 136.3 listing test methods for 
    the pharmaceutical pollutants. To support the Part 439 regulations at 
    the time of proposal, EPA published test methods developed specifically 
    for the pharmaceutical industry in a compendium entitled, ``Analytical 
    Methods for the Determination of Pollutants in Pharmaceutical 
    Manufacturing Industry Wastewater,'' EPA-821-B-94-001. These proposed 
    test methods were discussed in the proposed rule. The proposed test 
    methods have been revised in response to public comment and the revised 
    test methods are available for monitoring some pollutants covered by 
    today's final rule. The revised test methods have been published in a 
    revised compendium (the ``Pharmaceutical Methods Compendium, Revision 
    A''; EPA-821-B-98-016 [A, July 1998] with the same title as the 
    proposed compendium. EPA does not anticipate that any dischargers from 
    industrial categories other than the pharmaceutical manufacturing 
    industry will ever need to monitor for the additional pollutants (with 
    methods listed in Table 1F).
        In addition, EPA is allowing use of applicable drinking water 
    methods that have been promulgated at 40 CFR part 141 and use of ASTM 
    Methods D3371, D3695, and D4763, for monitoring of the pollutants 
    included in this rulemaking. The final rule allows for use of these 
    additional test methods for several reasons: (1) it allows greater 
    flexibility in monitoring as requested by some commenters; (2) it 
    conforms use of methods in EPA's drinking water and wastewater 
    programs, (3) it moves toward a performance-based measurement system, 
    and (4) it allows use of technical standards as contemplated by the 
    National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (NTTAA; see 
    Section IX.G.).
        For pollutants to be monitored under today's final rule, EPA has 
    included a new table of methods in Sec. 136.3(a). The methods in this 
    table are in addition to other methods approved at 40 CFR 136.3. The 
    listed methods are incorporated by reference into this rule.
        With the allowed use the methods included in the new Table IF at 40 
    CFR 136.3, in addition to those already approved in other Tables at 40 
    CFR 136.3, EPA believes that dischargers in the pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing point source category will have great flexibility in 
    selection of a method for monitoring the pollutants being regulated in 
    today's final rule.
        On October 6, 1997, EPA published a Notice of the Agency's intent 
    to implement a Performance Based Measurement System (PBMS) in all of 
    its programs to the extent feasible (62 FR 52098). The Agency is 
    currently determining the specifics steps necessary to implement PBMS 
    in its programs and preparing an implementation plan. Final decisions 
    have not yet been made concerning the implementation of PBMS in water 
    programs. However, EPA is currently evaluating what relevant 
    performance characteristics should be specified for monitoring methods 
    used in the water programs under a PBMS approach to ensure adequate 
    data quality. EPA would then specify performance requirements in its 
    regulations to ensure that any method used for determination of a 
    regulated analyte is at least equivalent to the performance achieved by 
    other currently approved methods. EPA expects to publish its PBMS 
    implementation strategy for water programs in the Federal Register by 
    the end of calendar year 1998.
        Once EPA has made its final determinations regarding implementation 
    of PBMS in programs under the Clean Water Act, EPA would incorporate 
    specific provisions of PBMS into its regulations, which may include 
    specification of the performance characteristics for measurement of the 
    regulated pollutants in today's final rule.
    
    IX. Regulatory Assessment Requirements
    
    A. Executive Order 12866
    
        Under Executive Order 12866, (58 FR 51735 (October 4, 1993)) the 
    Agency must determine whether the regulatory action is ``significant'' 
    and therefore subject to Office of Management and Budget (OMB) review 
    and the requirements of this Executive Order. The Order defines 
    ``significant regulatory action'' as one that is likely to result in a 
    rule that may: (1) have an annual effect of the economy of $100 million 
    or more or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of 
    the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public 
    health or safety, or State, local, or Tribal governments or 
    communities; (2) create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere 
    with an action taken or planned by another agency; (3) materially alter 
    the budgetary impact of entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan 
    programs or the rights and obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) 
    raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the 
    President's priorities, or the principles set forth in this Executive 
    Order.
        Pursuant to the terms of the Executive Order, it has been 
    determined that this rule is a ``significant regulatory action'' As 
    such, this action was submitted to OMB for review. Changes made in 
    response to suggestions or recommendations are documented in the public 
    record.
    
    B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and the Small Business Regulatory 
    Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA)
    
        Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., 
    as amended by SBREFA, EPA generally is required to conduct a regulatory 
    flexibility analysis describing the impact of the regulatory action on 
    small entities as part of the rulemaking. However, under section 605 
    (b) of the RFA, EPA is not required to prepare the regulatory 
    flexibility analysis if EPA certifies that the rule will not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
    
    [[Page 50418]]
    
        Pursuant to section 605(b) of the RFA, the Administrator certifies 
    that this rule will not have a significant impact on a substantial 
    number of small entities. Nevertheless, the Agency prepared a small 
    business analysis, which is presented in the Economic Analysis for 
    Final Effluent Guidelines and Standards for the Pharmaceutical Industry 
    and summarized in Section V.E. of this document. Briefly, EPA estimates 
    that 145 small businesses will incur costs to comply with this rule 
    (based on a small business definition of 750 or fewer employees as 
    recommended by the U.S. Small Business Administration). EPA evaluated 
    the compliance costs of the regulatory action relative to the company's 
    annual revenue. When considering the effluent limitations guidelines 
    and standards costs only, four small firms are estimated to incur 
    annualized compliance costs exceeding one percent of revenue and no 
    firms are estimated to incur annualized compliance costs exceeding 
    three percent of revenue. When considering the aggregate costs of the 
    effluent limitations guidelines and standards and the MACT standards, 
    six small firms are estimated to incur annualized compliance costs 
    exceeding one percent of revenue and one firm is estimated to incur 
    annualized compliance costs exceeding three percent of revenue. No 
    firms are expected to incur annualized compliance costs in excess of 
    four percent of revenue.
        Further, EPA's economic achievability analysis considers the 
    potential for facility closure and corporate bankruptcy. The analysis 
    indicates no disproportionate effects for small businesses compared to 
    large businesses. The regulatory action is found to be economically 
    achievable for all dischargers, including small businesses.
    
    C. Submission to Congress and the General Accounting Office
    
        Under 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A) as added by the Small Business 
    Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, EPA submitted a report 
    containing this rule and other required information to the U.S. Senate, 
    the U.S. House of Representatives and the Comptroller General of the 
    General Accounting Office prior to publication of the rule in today's 
    Federal Register. This rule is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 
    U.S.C. 804(2).
    
    D. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This rule contains no new information collection activities 
    requiring an information collection request, and therefore, no 
    information collection request was submitted to OMB for review under 
    the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. 
    OMB has approved information collection requirements for existing 
    regulations (40 CFR Part 439) and assigned OMB Control No. 2040-0110 in 
    connection with NPDES related information collection requirements and 
    No. 2040-0009 in connection with pretreatment information collection 
    requirements. The information collection requirements resulting from 
    the regulations being promulgated today are covered by these OMB 
    control numbers.
    
    E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
    
        Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), P.L. 
    104-4, establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the 
    effects of their regulatory actions on State, local, and Tribal 
    governments, and the private sector. Under section 202 of the UMRA, EPA 
    generally must prepare a written statement, including a cost-benefit 
    analysis, for proposed and final rules with ``Federal mandates'' that 
    may result in expenditures to State, local, and Tribal governments, in 
    the aggregate, or to the private sector, of $100 million or more in any 
    one year. Before promulgating an EPA rule for which a written statement 
    is needed, section 205 of the UMRA generally requires EPA to identify 
    and consider a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives and adopt 
    the least costly, most cost effective or least burdensome alternative 
    that achieves the objectives of the rule. The provisions of section 205 
    do not apply when they are inconsistent with applicable law. Moreover, 
    section 205 allows EPA to adopt an alternative other than the least 
    costly, most cost effective or least burdensome alternative if the 
    Administrator publishes with the final rule an explanation why that 
    alternative was not adopted. Before EPA establishes any regulatory 
    requirements that may significantly or uniquely affect small 
    governments, including tribal governments, it must have developed under 
    section 203 of the UMRA a small government agency plan. The plan must 
    provide for notifying potentially affected small governments, enabling 
    officials of affected small governments to have meaningful and timely 
    input in the development of EPA regulatory proposals with significant 
    Federal intergovernmental mandates, and informing, educating, and 
    advising small governments on compliance with the regulatory 
    requirements.
        EPA has determined that this CWA rule does not contain a Federal 
    mandate that may result in expenditures of $100 million or more for 
    State, local or tribal governments, in the aggregate, or the private 
    sector in any one year. EPA estimates that the annual compliance costs 
    to the private sector are $61.0 million ($1996). Thus, this rule is not 
    subject to the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of UMRA. EPA has 
    also determined that this rule contains no regulatory requirements that 
    might significantly or uniquely affect small governments and thus, this 
    rule is not subject to the requirements of section 203 of UMRA. 
    Nevertheless, EPA has consulted with state and local governments 
    pertaining to implementation issues. EPA's evaluation of their comments 
    is reflected in the final rules.
    
    F. Executive Order 12875 Enhancing Intergovernmental Partnership
    
        To reduce the burden of Federal regulations on States and small 
    governments, the President issued Executive Order 12875, entitled 
    Enhancing the Intergovernmental Partnership, on October 28, 1993 (58 FR 
    58093). Under Executive Order 12875, EPA may not issue a regulation 
    that is not required by statute and that creates a mandate upon a 
    State, local or Tribal government unless the Federal government 
    provides the necessary funds to pay the direct costs incurred by the 
    State, local or Tribal government or EPA provides to the Office of 
    Management and Budget a description of the extent of the Agency's prior 
    consultation and written communications with elected officials and 
    other representatives of affected State, local and Tribal governments, 
    the nature of their concerns, and an Agency statement supporting the 
    need to issue the regulation. In addition, Executive Order 12875 
    requires EPA to develop an effective process permitting elected 
    officials and other representatives of State, local and Tribal 
    governments ``to provide meaningful and timely input in the development 
    of regulatory proposals containing significant unfunded mandates.'' As 
    discussed above in paragraph IX.E, this regulation would not result in 
    expenditures to state, local and tribal governments of $100 million or 
    more in any one year. The discussion of the Unfunded Mandates Reform 
    Act of 1995 that precedes this paragraph applies to Executive Order 
    12875 as well and is incorporated here by reference. Since this rule 
    does not impose a significant unfunded mandate on governments subject 
    to this Executive Order, the provisions of the Order do not apply. 
    Nonetheless, EPA did consult with State and local
    
    [[Page 50419]]
    
    governments during development of this rule. In particular, EPA has had 
    numerous discussions with representatives of the North Shore Sanitary 
    District regarding PSES for pharmaceutical plants. In addition, EPA 
    also consulted with the Puerto Rico Aqueducts and Sewer Authority 
    (PRASA) regarding discharges of VOCs by pharmaceutical industrial 
    users. In addition, prior to the proposal, EPA sent a questionnaire 
    concerning pharmaceutical discharges to a number of POTWs receiving 
    significant amounts of these discharges. The meeting summaries and 
    questionnaire responses may be found in the record of this rule.
    
    G. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
    
        Under Section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and 
    Advancement Act (NTTAA), the Agency is required to use voluntary 
    consensus standards in its regulatory activities unless to do so would 
    be inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise impractical. Voluntary 
    consensus standards are technical standards (e.g., materials 
    specifications, test methods, sampling procedures, business practices, 
    etc.) that are developed or adopted by voluntary consensus standards 
    bodies. Where available and potentially applicable voluntary consensus 
    standards are not used by EPA, the Act requires the Agency to provide 
    Congress, through the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), an 
    explanation of the reasons for not using such standards.
        EPA performed a search of the technical literature to identify any 
    applicable analytical test methods from industry, academia, voluntary 
    consensus standard bodies, and other parties that could measure the 
    analytes in this rule. EPA's search revealed that there are consensus 
    standards for many of the analytes specified in the tables at 40 CFR 
    136.3. Even prior to enactment of the NTTAA, EPA has traditionally 
    included any applicable consensus test methods in its regulations. 
    Consistent with the requirements of the CWA, those applicable consensus 
    test methods are incorporated by reference in the tables at 40 CFR 
    136.3. The consensus test methods in these tables include American 
    Society for Testing Materials (ASTM) and Standard Methods.
        Today's rule requires dischargers to monitor for 31 organic 
    pollutants, ammonia nitrogen and COD. Examples of pollutants with 
    consensus methods promulgated by reference in today's rule include 
    various volatile organics such as benzene, chlorobenzene, chloroform, 
    chloromethane, methylene chloride, and toluene. In addition, EPA 
    developed several test methods for certain nonconventional pollutants 
    not included in the tables at 40 CFR 136.3 in support of the 
    pharmaceutical rule and these methods were discussed in the proposal. 
    Examples of the pollutants for which methods were developed are 
    acetone, cyclohexane, diethylamine, ethanol and methylamine. The test 
    methods being promulgated for those pollutants without test methods 
    listed at 40 CFR 136.3 are EPA Methods 1665, 1666, 1667, 1671 and 1673 
    which are found in a Methods Compendium, and EPA Method 8015. EPA notes 
    that no applicable consensus methods were found for those pollutants.
    
    H. Executive Order 13045 and Protecting Children's Health
    
        The Executive Order ``Protection of Children From Environmental 
    Health Risks and Safety Risks'' (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) applies 
    to any rule that EPA determines (1) ``economically significant'' as 
    defined under Executive Order 12866, and (2) concerns an environmental 
    health or safety risk that EPA has reason to believe may have a 
    disproportionate effect on children. If the regulatory action meets 
    both criteria, the Agency must evaluate the environmental health or 
    safety effects of the planned rule on children; and explain why the 
    planned regulation is preferable to other potentially effective and 
    reasonably feasible alternatives considered by the Agency.
        EPA interprets the E.O. 13045 as encompassing only those regulatory 
    actions that are risk based or health based, such that the analysis 
    required under section 5-501 of the E.O. has the potential to influence 
    the regulation. This rule is not subject to E.O. 13045 because it does 
    not involve decisions regarding environmental health or safety risks.
    
    X. Summary of Public Participation
    
        The following section describes the major comments on the proposed 
    rule and the NOA, and EPA's responses. The full comment summary and 
    response document can be found in the public record for this 
    rulemaking.
    
    A. Summary of Proposal Comments and Response Summary
    
        Sixty six different commenters provided detailed comments on all 
    aspects of the May 2, 1995 proposal. In all, the comments dealt with 27 
    separate aspects of the proposal. In this comment and response summary, 
    only major comments and responses will be summarized. Responses to all 
    comments are contained in the Comment Response Document in the record 
    for this final rule. In selecting comments and responses for summary in 
    this section, the Agency has selected those major and controversial 
    issues that received considerable numbers and types of comments. 
    Alternatively, comments and responses on other less controversial 
    issues and issues where EPA essentially agrees with the commenters are 
    not included in the comment and response summaries below.
        Comment: EPA's decision to set in-plant limits is primarily based 
    on controlling air emissions. The appropriate statutory authority for 
    regulating air emissions from wastewater is under the MACT rule, 
    therefore, in-plant wastewater limits should not be used for the 
    purpose of controlling air emissions. The intention of the Clean Water 
    Act is to set limits at the end-of-pipe to protect surface water 
    quality and POTW's from pass through and interference. Application of 
    end-of-pipe standards and limitations will fulfill this intent.
        Response: EPA agrees that the intention of the Clean Water Act is 
    to set limits to protect surface water quality and POTWs from pass 
    through and interference. EPA is promulgating effluent limitations 
    guidelines and standards for which compliance will generally be 
    monitored end-of-pipe, except for cyanide. EPA has the authority to 
    control any pollutants found in wastewater. Although in-plant air 
    emissions will be regulated under the MACT standards rule, organic 
    pollutants in wastewater will be controlled by this effluent guidelines 
    rule using limits monitored at end-of-pipe except in cases where end-
    of-pipe monitoring is impractical as authorized in Sec. 122.45 or 
    Sec. 403.6(e).
        Comment: Oxygenated organic solvents such as methanol, ethanol, 
    acetone, and isopropanol should not be regulated by pretreatment 
    standards because they do not volatilize in appreciable amounts and do 
    not typically pass through the POTW or interfere with POTW operations.
        Response: EPA agrees that oxygenated organic solvents such as 
    methanol, ethanol, acetone and isopropanol with Henry's Law Constants 
    less than 1.0 x 10-5atm/gmole/m3 will not 
    volatilize in appreciable amounts in POTWs and sewers, and will 
    biodegrade in POTW biological treatment units to a large extent. EPA 
    has made this determination based on information submitted by PhRMA 
    which estimated sewer losses of VOCs and EPA and PhRMA empirical 
    sampling and modeling data from the Barceloneta POTW sampling episode. 
    Based on an evaluation of this data, EPA agrees that
    
    [[Page 50420]]
    
    the oxygenated (alcohols and related) compounds under normal conditions 
    will not pass through or interfere with POTW operations. Therefore, EPA 
    is not promulgating categorical pretreatment standards for these 
    pollutants for the pharmaceutical industry. However, local control 
    authorities can set local limits for these compounds to take care of 
    any site specific pass through or interference problems that may occur 
    (Sec. 403.5.b.2).
        Comment: Steam stripping with distillation is not a demonstrated 
    treatment technology for the pharmaceutical industry since the Agency 
    has not demonstrated the performance of this technology for any 
    pollutant other than methanol and the data set used for proposing 
    limits and standards was generated during treatment of a clean process 
    wastewater which is not representative of typical industry process 
    wastewaters.
        Response: EPA agrees that the distillation data set used at 
    proposal for setting limitations and standards based on steam stripping 
    with distillation for alcohols were generated during treatment of a 
    wastewater for a process which generated mostly methanol in the 
    wastewater. EPA has not used these performance data in the calculation 
    of final BAT limitations for the alcohols. Since the alcohols are not 
    being regulated at PSES or PSNS because they do not pass through or 
    interfere with the POTW operation, use of steam stripping with 
    distillation technology is not an issue.
        Comment: Solgar is a small business with process wastewater flow of 
    approximately 100 gallons per day. They manufacture vitamins of natural 
    origin and are not under the jurisdiction of the FDA. The definition of 
    Subcategory D includes products and processes covered by SIC No. 2833 
    (Medical and Botanical Products). Being a regulated facility creates an 
    adverse economic effect because of the operating costs related to 
    permitting, sampling, analysis and reporting. EPA should consider 
    exempting such facilities from the definition of pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing.
        Response: EPA has estimated compliance costs for all of the 
    pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities which discharge pollutants for 
    which effluent limitations and standards have been developed. If a 
    facility does not discharge regulated pollutants, the compliance costs 
    connected with sampling and analysis will be minimal. Permitting costs 
    were not included in the cost estimates because these costs would be 
    incurred by all dischargers regardless of category and are not specific 
    to this regulation. EPA does not believe that small facilities such as 
    the one described in the comment will incur significant costs in 
    complying with the final rule. In a part of the economic analysis for 
    this rule, special emphasis was placed on small businesses as required 
    by the Regulatory Flexibility Act. Results of this analysis showed that 
    there are no significant adverse impacts on small facilities or firms. 
    (See the Economic Analysis Report)
        Comment: Facilities should not be required to monitor for 
    constituents that they do not use. In lieu of annual testing, 
    facilities could submit annual (or on other frequencies) certifications 
    regarding the constituent used or expected in the wastewater based on a 
    review of all raw materials used and an assessment of all chemical 
    processes used, considering resulting products and by-products. This 
    would avoid incorrect data created by inflow of contaminated 
    groundwater in facility sewers. Most commenters supported the 
    certification approach.
        Response: EPA agrees that facilities should not be required to 
    monitor for constituents that they do not use. EPA disagrees that in 
    lieu of annual testing, facilities could submit annual certifications 
    regarding the constituents used or expected in the wastewater based on 
    a review of all raw materials used and an assessment of all chemical 
    processes used. Facilities will not have permit limits or be required 
    to monitor regularly for constituents not used in their pharmaceutical 
    processes, and EPA agrees that most commenters support the 
    certification approach. In cases where groundwater may be contaminated 
    by regulated pollutants which are not used in manufacturing operations 
    at a facility, the facility should submit groundwater sampling data 
    along with the other certification information to avoid regular 
    monitoring for these regulated pollutants.
        Comment: Provisions d and f of the applicability section of the 
    Preamble, Section IV.B, would have the effect of extending the 
    applicability of the proposed regulations to many diagnostic products 
    listed in SIC Code 2835. The processes used in, and the wastewater 
    produced from the manufacture of many of these products is 
    substantially different from products listed in SIC code no. 2833, 
    2834, and 2836. EPA should define applicability by SIC code, without 
    the exceptions contained in provisions d and f, and excluding SIC code 
    no. 2835. Provisions d and f will be difficult to administer because 
    they are based on subjective determinations.
        Response: Defining applicability strictly by SIC code could result 
    in considerable amounts of wastewater at some facilities not being 
    covered by any categorical limitations and standards and therefore the 
    Agency has not adopted this approach in the final regulation. The 
    Agency agrees that regulatory decisions based on applicability section 
    IV.B.f. may require a subjective judgement by the permit writer or 
    pretreatment authority with regard to the nature of the wastewater 
    generated by the manufacture of the products in question. In order to 
    remove any ambiguity that may be associated with this applicability 
    section, EPA has revised the applicability provision of the final rule 
    in 439.1.
    
    B. Summary of Notice of Availability Comments and Responses
    
        EPA received comments on the August 8, 1997 Notice of Availability 
    from 25 commenters regarding seven major topics and 35 subtopics. A 
    summary of the major comments and EPA responses is provided below. 
    Responses to all of the comments are contained in the Comment Response 
    Document in the record for this final rule.
        Comment: The commenters support Option 1 for PSES and PSNS that 
    provided for compliance with the MACT standards plus some regular 
    monitoring. Option 1 will reduce redundant regulation, needless cost, 
    confusion, and potentially contradictory rulemakings.
        Response: EPA disagrees with the commenters. EPA is promulgating 
    PSES/PSNS limitations based on Option 2 because this option controls 
    VOC wastewater discharges from pharmaceutical wastewaters that are not 
    controlled by the final MACT standard for the pharmaceutical industry. 
    Therefore, EPA does not believe that selecting Option 2 will result in 
    a redundant, confusing, and potentially contradictory regulation. EPA 
    is directed to control pollutants found in wastewater that pass through 
    or interferes with POTWs. EPA has taken into account the effects of the 
    MACT rule in estimating the compliance costs for the industry to meet 
    the final effluent guidelines and standards.
        Comment: The commenters believe EPA should also exclude benzene and 
    o-dichlorobenzene from coverage under this regulation because they are 
    each discharged by only one plant. The fact that a pollutant is a 
    priority pollutant is not justification for regulating it when it is 
    found at a small number of sources within an industrial point source 
    category. EPA excluded 20 priority
    
    [[Page 50421]]
    
    pollutants from regulation by the Organic Chemicals, Plastics, and 
    Synthetic Fibers (OCPSF) effluent guidelines under the authority of 
    Paragraph 8(a)(iii) of the then applicable consent decree (Table VI-3, 
    OCPSF Development Document, EPA 440/1-87/009). Another reason for 
    excluding benzene is that the one plant that currently discharges this 
    chemical has permanently shut down the process generating this 
    pollutant.
        Response: Benzene and o-dichlorobenzene were reported in the 1990 
    Questionnaire as discharged from one facility; however, EPA sampling 
    data found they were present at more than one facility. Using industry 
    supplied data, EPA has determined that benzene and o-dichlorobenzene 
    were discharged in 1990 at quantities of approximately 120,200 and 
    21,500 lbs per year, respectively, well above the 3,000 lbs/year small 
    discharge limit and there are estimated removals in excess of 1000 lbs/
    year. Both criteria that are used to determine which pollutants are 
    excluded from this regulation. In addition, given the variable nature 
    of the pharmaceutical industry, EPA has not excluded pollutants from 
    regulation that may be present at more that one facility. Benzene is a 
    good case in point, since even though only one facility identified it 
    as discharged in 1990, it was found to be present in 10 of the samples 
    taken by EPA in August 1996 at the Barceloneta Regional Wastewater 
    Treatment Plant, which is a POTW that receives predominately 
    pharmaceutical wastewaters.
        Comment: Several commenters will be requesting fundamentally 
    different factor (FDF) variances for ammonia production because EPA has 
    not properly developed nitrification-based BAT ammonia limits. (1) EPA 
    did not properly identify facilities that may have to treat ammonia, 
    (2) it excluded data from the biological nitrification database for 
    plants that had influent ammonia concentrations of greater than 100 mg/
    L, (3) it assumed ammonia in process wastewaters are all ammonium 
    hydroxide and not ammonium nitrate or ammonium phosphate, (4) and it 
    did not consider the effects of high organic nitrogen loading present 
    with high ammonia nitrogen loading. Because of the incorrect chemistry 
    and engineering assumptions, EPA has overestimated the feasibility to 
    meet the proposed BAT limits on ammonia-nitrogen. Therefore, commenters 
    would request that EPA handle wastewater discharges of ammonia-nitrogen 
    from certain facilities in a fundamentally different manner.
        Response: In response to point one, EPA has identified all 
    facilities that may have to treat ammonia from information provided in 
    the 1990 questionnaire responses and data submissions provided in 
    response to the proposal. With regard to point two, the five plant data 
    sets used to develop the final limits included numerous influent 
    ammonia concentration points greater than 100 mg/L. With regard to 
    point three, EPA has converted all ammonium salt and hydroxide loadings 
    to NH3 nitrogen loadings. In response to point four, EPA did consider 
    the effect of the presence of high organic ammonia along with high 
    ammonia nitrogen with respect to achieving compliance with the final 
    ammonia limitations. EPA has concluded that ability of nitrification 
    systems to nitrify ammonia is not affected by large loadings of organic 
    amines because these compounds are biodegraded to ammonia in the 
    advanced biological treatment along with other carbonaceous waste. The 
    ammonia thus generated is then nitrified in the nitrification system. 
    In certain cases, where organic amine levels are sufficiently high, 
    two-stage nitrification will be necessary. The limitations and 
    standards for ammonia in the final rule were determined using all of 
    the data (one and two stage), after comparing the single stage and two 
    stage performance data, and then setting the limits at the levels that 
    were reflected by the data bases being examined separately. In 
    conclusion, EPA costed compliance with the limits by two-stage 
    nitrification, and believes the final BAT limits based on two stage 
    nitrification technology are appropriate.
    
    Appendix A to the Preamble--Lists of Abbreviations, Acronyms, 
    Defintions and Other Terms Used in This Document
    
    I. Definitions, Acronyms, and Abbreviations
    
        1990 Detailed Questionnaire--The 1990 Pharmaceutical 
    Manufacturing Survey. A questionnaire sent by EPA to certain 
    facilities in the pharmaceutical manufacturing industry in September 
    1991 to gather technical and financial information. The 
    questionnaire was sent to those facilities likely to be affected by 
    promulgation of revised effluent limitations guidelines, 
    pretreatment standards, and new source performance standards for 
    this industry.
        Administrator--The Administrator of the U.S. Environmental 
    Protection Agency.
        Agency--The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Mass loading 
    at the relevant point of measurement).
        Average monthly discharge limitation--The highest allowable 
    average of ``daily discharges'' over a calendar month, calculated as 
    the sum of all ``daily discharges'' measured during a calendar month 
    divided by the number of ``daily discharges'' measured during that 
    month.
        BAT--The best available technology economically achievable, as 
    described in Section 304(b)(2) of the Clean Water Act.
        Bench-scale operation--Laboratory testing of materials, methods, 
    or processes on a small scale, such as on a laboratory worktable.
        BCT--The best conventional pollutant control technology, as 
    described in section 304(b)(4) of the Clean Water Act.
        BID--Background Information Document, which presents the 
    technical basis for air pollution controls under the Clean Air Act.
        Biological and Natural Extraction--The chemical and physical 
    extraction of pharmaceutically active ingredients from natural 
    sources such as plant roots and leaves, animal glands, and parasitic 
    fungi. The process operations involving biological and natural 
    extraction define subcategory B (40 CFR Part 439, subpart B).
        BMP or BMPs--Best management practices, as described in section 
    304(e) of the Clean Water Act.
        BOD5--Five-Day Biochemical Oxygen Demand. A measure 
    of biochemical decomposition of organic matter in a water sample. It 
    is determined by measuring the dissolved oxygen consumed by 
    microorganisms to oxidize the organic contaminants in a water sample 
    under standard laboratory conditions of five days and 20 deg.C. 
    BOD5 is not related to the oxygen requirements in 
    chemical combustion.
        BPT--The best practicable control technology currently 
    available, as described in section 304(b)(1) of the Clean Water Act.
        CAA--Clean Air Act. The Air Pollution Prevention and Control Act 
    (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.), as amended, inter alia, by the Clean Air 
    Act Amendments of 1990 (Pub. L. 101-549, 104 Stat. 2399).
        Chemical Synthesis--The process(es) of using a chemical reaction 
    or a series of chemical reactions to manufacture pharmaceutically 
    active ingredients. The chemical synthesis process operations define 
    subcategory C (40 CFR Part 439, subpart C).
        Clarifier--A treatment unit designed to remove suspended 
    materials from wastewater, typically by sedimentation.
        CN--Abbreviation for total cyanide.
        COD--Chemical oxygen demand (COD)--A nonconventional bulk 
    parameter that measures the total oxygen-consuming capacity of 
    wastewater. This parameter is a measure of materials in water or 
    wastewater that are biodegradable and materials that are resistant 
    (refractory) to biodegradation. Refractory compounds slowly exert 
    demand on downstream receiving water resources. Certain of the 
    compounds measured by this parameter have been found to have 
    carcinogenic, mutagenic, and similar adverse effects, either singly 
    or in combination. It is expressed as the amount of oxygen consumed 
    by a chemical oxidant in a specific test.
        Condensate--Any material that has condensed from a gaseous phase 
    into a liquid phase.
        Controlled-release discharge--A discharge that occurs at a rate 
    that is intentionally varied to accommodate fluctuations in 
    receiving stream assimilative capacity or for other reasons.
        Conventional pollutants--The pollutants identified in section 
    304(a)(4) of the Clean
    
    [[Page 50422]]
    
    Water Act and the regulations thereunder (i.e., biochemical oxygen 
    demand (BOD5), total suspended solids (TSS), oil and 
    grease, fecal coliform and pH).
        CWA--Clean Water Act. The Federal Water Pollution Control Act 
    Amendments of 1972 (33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.), as amended, inter alia, 
    by the Clean Water Act of 1977 (Pub. L. 95-217) and the Water 
    Quality Act of 1987 (Pub. L. 100-4).
        Daily discharge--The discharge of a pollutant measured during 
    any calendar day or any 24-hour period that reasonably represents a 
    calendar day for purposes of sampling. For pollutants with 
    limitations expressed in units of mass, the daily discharge is 
    calculated as the total mass of the pollutant discharged over the 
    day. For pollutants with limitations expressed in other units of 
    measurement, the daily discharge is calculated as the average 
    measurement of the pollutant over the day.
        Direct discharger--A facility that discharges or may discharge 
    treated or untreated process wastewaters, non-contact cooling 
    waters, or non-process wastewaters (including stormwater runoff) 
    into waters of the United States.
        Effluent--Wastewater discharges.
        Effluent limitation--Any restriction, including schedules of 
    compliance, established by a State or the Administrator on 
    quantities, rates, and concentrations of chemical, physical, 
    biological, and other constituents which are discharged from point 
    sources into waters of the United States, the waters of the 
    contiguous zone, or the ocean.
        Emission--Passage of air pollutants into the atmosphere via a 
    gas stream or other means.
        EOP effluent--Final plant effluent discharged to waters of the 
    United States or to a POTW.
        EOP treatment--End-of-pipe treatment facilities or systems used 
    to treat process wastewaters, non-process wastewaters (including 
    stormwater runoff) after the wastewaters have left the process area 
    of the facility and prior to discharge. End-of-pipe treatment 
    generally does not include facilities or systems where products or 
    by-products are separated from process wastewaters and returned to 
    the process or directed to air emission control devices.
        EPA--The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
        General Provisions--General Provisions for national emission 
    standards for hazardous air pollutants and other regulatory 
    requirements pursuant to section 112 of the Clean Air Act, as 
    amended November 15, 1990. The General Provisions, located in 
    subpart A of part 63 of title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations, 
    codify procedures and criteria to implement emission standards for 
    stationary sources that emit (or have the potential to emit) one or 
    more of the 189 chemicals listed as hazardous air pollutants in 
    section 112(b) of the Clean Air Act as amended in 1990. EPA 
    published the NESHAP General Provisions in the Federal Register on 
    March 16, 1993 (59 FR 12408). The term General Provisions also 
    refers to the General Provisions for the effluent limitations 
    guidelines and standards proposed today, to be located at 40 CFR 
    part 439.
        Fermentation--A chemical change induced by a living organism or 
    enzyme, specifically bacteria or the microorganisms occurring in 
    unicellular plants such as yeast, molds, or fungi. Process 
    operations that utilize fermentation to manufacture pharmaceutically 
    active ingredients define subcategory A (40 CFR Part 439, subpart 
    A).
        HAP--Hazardous Air Pollutant. Any of the 189 chemicals listed 
    under section 112(b) of the Clean Air Act.
        HON--Hazardous Organic NESHAP. As used in this document, it 
    refers to the standard published by EPA for the Synthetic Organic 
    Chemical Manufacturing Industry (SOCMI) on April 22, 1994 (59 FR 
    19402).
        Incinerator--An enclosed combustion device that is used for 
    destroying organic compounds. Auxiliary fuel may be used to heat 
    waste gas to combustion temperatures. Any energy recovery section 
    present is not physically formed into one manufactured or assembled 
    unit with the combustion section; rather, the energy recovery 
    section is a separate section following the combustion section and 
    the two are joined by ducts or connections carrying flue gas.
        Indirect discharger--A facility that discharges or may discharge 
    wastewaters into a publicly owned treatment works.
        In-plant Control Technologies--These include controls or 
    measures applied within the manufacturing process to reduce or 
    eliminate pollutant and hydraulic loadings; these also include 
    technologies, such as steam stripping and cyanide destruction, 
    applied directly to wastewater generated by manufacturing processes.
        IU--Industrial User. Synonym for ``Indirect Discharger.''
        Junction box--A manhole access point to a wastewater sewer 
    system or a lift station.
        LTA--Long-term average. For purposes of proposed effluent 
    limitations guidelines and standards, average pollutant levels 
    achieved over a period of time by a plant, subcategory, or 
    technology option. LTAs were used in developing the limitations and 
    standards in today's proposed regulation.
        MACT--Maximum Achievable Control Technology. Technology basis 
    for the national emission standards for hazardous air pollutants.
        Major source--As defined in section 112(a) of the Clean Air Act, 
    major source is any stationary source or group of stationary sources 
    located within a contiguous area and under common control that emits 
    or has the potential to emit, considering controls, in the aggregate 
    10 tons per year or more of any hazardous air pollutant or 25 tons 
    per year or more of any combination of hazardous air pollutants.
        Maximum daily discharge limitation--The highest allowable daily 
    discharge of a pollutant measured during a calendar day or any 24 
    hour period that reasonably represents a calendar day for purposes 
    of sampling.
        Mg--Megagram. One million (106) grams, or one metric 
    ton.
        Metric ton--One thousand (103) kilograms (abbreviated 
    as kkg), or one megagram. A metric ton is equal to 2,204.5 pounds.
        Minimum level--The level at which an analytical system gives 
    recognizable signals and an acceptable calibration point.
        Mixing/Compounding/Formulating--Processes through which 
    pharmaceutically active ingredients are put in dosage forms. 
    Processes involving mixing/compounding/formulating define 
    subcategory D (40 CFR part 439, subpart D).
        NESHAP--National Emission Standard for Hazardous Air Pollutants. 
    Emission standard promulgated that has been or will be promulgated 
    under section 112(d) of the Clean Air Act for hazardous air 
    pollutants listed in section 112(b) of the Clean Air Act.
        New Source--As defined in 40 CFR 122.2, 122.29, and 403.3(k), a 
    new source is any building, structure, facility, or installation 
    from which there is or may be a discharge of pollutants, the 
    construction of which commenced (1) for purposes of compliance with 
    New Source Performance Standards, after the promulgation of such 
    standards being proposed today under CWA section 306; or (2) for the 
    purposes of compliance with Pretreatment Standards for New Sources, 
    after the publication of proposed standards under CWA section 
    307(c), if such standards are thereafter promulgated in accordance 
    with that section.
        Nitrification--Nitrification is the oxidation of ammonium salts 
    to nitrites (via nitrosomonas bacteria) and the further oxidation of 
    nitrite to nitrate via nitrobacter bacteria. Nitrification can be 
    accomplished in either a single or two-stage activated sludge 
    system. Indicators of nitrification capability are (1) biological 
    monitoring for ammonia oxidizing bacteria (AOB) and nitrite 
    oxidizing bacteria (NOB) to determine if nitrification is occurring, 
    and (2) analysis of the nitrogen balance to determine if nitrifying 
    bacteria reduce the amount of ammonia and increase the amount of 
    nitrite and nitrate.
        Nonconventional pollutants--Pollutants that are neither 
    conventional pollutants nor toxic pollutants.
        Non-detect value--A concentration-based measurement reported 
    below the minimum level that can reliably be measured by the 
    analytical method for the pollutant.
        Non-water quality environmental impact--An environmental impact 
    of a control or treatment technology, other than to surface waters.
        NPDES--The National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System 
    authorized under section 402 of the CWA. The Clean Water Act 
    requires NPDES permits for discharge of pollutants from any point 
    source into waters of the United States.
        NRDC--Natural Resources Defense Council.
        NSPS--New Source Performance Standards. As used in this notice, 
    this term refers to standards for new sources under section 306 of 
    the CWA.
        OMB--Office of Management and Budget.
        Outfall--The mouth of conduit drains and other conduits from 
    which a plant discharges effluent into receiving waters.
        Pharmaceutically active ingredient--Any substance considered to 
    be an active ingredient by Food and Drug Administration regulations 
    (21 CFR 210.3(6)(7)).
        Pilot-scale operation--The trial operation of processing 
    equipment, which is the intermediate stage between laboratory 
    experimentation and full-scale operation in the development of a new 
    process or product.
    
    [[Page 50423]]
    
        Point of Determination--The location where the process 
    wastewater stream exits the pharmaceutical process equipment.
        Point source category--A category of sources of water pollutants 
    that are included within the definition of ``point source'' in 
    section 502(14) of the Clean Water Act.
        Pollutant (to water)--Dredged spoil, solid waste, incinerator 
    residue, filter backwash, sewage, garbage, sewage sludge, munitions, 
    chemical wastes, biological materials, certain radioactive 
    materials, heat, wrecked or discarded equipment, rock, sand, cellar 
    dirt, and industrial, municipal, and agricultural waste discharged 
    into water. See CWA section 502(6); 40 CFR 122.2.
        POTW or POTWs--Publicly owned treatment works, as defined at 40 
    CFR 403.3(o).
        Pretreatment standard--A regulation specifying industrial 
    wastewater effluent quality required for discharge to a POTW.
        Primary fuel--The fuel that provides the principal heat input to 
    a combustion device. To be considered primary, the fuel must be able 
    to sustain operation of the combustion device without the addition 
    of other fuels.
        Priority pollutants--The toxic pollutants listed in 40 CFR part 
    403, Appendix A (printed immediately following 40 CFR 423.17).
        Process changes--Alterations in process operating conditions, 
    equipment, or chemical use that reduce the formation of chemical 
    compounds that are pollutants and/or pollutant precursors.
        Process unit--A piece of equipment, such as a chemical reactor 
    or fermentation tank, associated with pharmaceutical manufacturing 
    operations.
        Process wastewater--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. Process wastewater 
    includes surface runoff from the immediate process area that has the 
    potential to become contaminated.
        (1) For purposes of this part, the following materials are 
    excluded from the definition of process wastewater:
        1. Trimethyl silanol;
        2. Any active anti-microbial materials;
        3. Wastewater from imperfect fermentation batches; and
        4. Process area spills
        (2) For purposes of this part, the following waters and 
    wastewaters are excluded from the definition of process wastewater: 
    noncontact cooling water, utility wastewaters, general site surface 
    runoff, groundwater (e.g., contaminated groundwaters from on-site or 
    off-site groundwater remediation projects), and other water 
    generated on site that are not process wastewaters.
        The discharge of such waters and wastewaters must be regulated 
    separately.
        Process wastewater collection system--A piece of equipment, 
    structure, or transport mechanism used in conveying or storing a 
    process wastewater stream. Examples of process wastewater collection 
    system equipment include individual drain systems, wastewater tanks, 
    surface impoundments, and containers.
        Process wastewater stream--When used in connection with CAA 
    obligations, any HAP-containing liquid that results from either 
    direct or indirect contact of water with organic compounds.
        Process water--Water used to dilute, wash, or carry raw 
    materials or any other materials used in pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing processes.
        PSES--Pretreatment standards for existing sources of indirect 
    discharges, under section 307(b) of the CWA.
        PSNS--Pretreatment standards for new sources of indirect 
    discharges, under sections 307 of the CWA.
        RCRA--Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, as amended 
    (42 U.S.C. 6901, et seq.).
        Research--Bench-scale activities or operations used in research 
    and/or product development of a pharmaceutical product. The Research 
    operations define subcategory E (40 CFR part 439, Subpart E).
        SIC--Standard Industrial Classification. A numerical 
    categorization system used by the U.S. Department of Commerce to 
    denote segments of industry. An SIC code refers to the principal 
    product, or group of products, produced or distributed, or to 
    services rendered by an operating establishment. SIC codes are used 
    to group establishments by the primary activity in which they are 
    engaged.
        Source Category--A category of major or area sources of 
    hazardous air pollutants.
        Source Reduction--The reduction or elimination of waste 
    generation at the source, usually within a process. A source 
    reduction practice is any practice that (1) reduces the amount of 
    any hazardous substance, pollutant, or contaminant entering any 
    waste stream or otherwise released into the environment (including 
    fugitive emissions) prior to recycling, treatment, or disposal; and 
    (2) reduces the hazards to public health and the environment 
    associated with the release of such substances, pollutants, or 
    contaminants.
        Stationary source--Any building, structure, facility, or 
    installation that emits or may emit any air pollutant. See CAA 
    section 111(a)(3).
        Toxic pollutants--the pollutants designated by EPA as toxic in 
    40 CFR 401.15.
        Variability factor--The daily variability factor is the ratio of 
    the estimated 99th percentile of the distribution of daily values 
    divided by the expected value, or mean, of the distribution of the 
    daily data. The monthly variability factor is the estimated 95th 
    percentile of the monthly averages of the data divided by the 
    expected value of the monthly averages.
        VOC--Any organic pollutant with a Henry's Law Constant greater 
    than or equal to 3.97  x  10-7 atm/gmole/m3.
        Waters of the United States--the same meaning set forth in 40 
    CFR 122.2.
        Zero discharge (ZD)--No discharge of pollutants to waters of the 
    United States or to a POTW.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    40 CFR Part 136
    
        Environmental protection, Incorporation by reference, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements, Water pollution control.
    
    40 CFR Part 439
    
        Environmental protection, Pharmaceutical manufacturing pollution 
    prevention, Waste treatment and disposal, Water pollution control.
    
        Dated: July 30, 1998.
    Carol M. Browner,
    Administrator.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, title 40, chapter I of the 
    Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
    
    PART 136--[AMENDED]
    
        1. The authority citation for part 136 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 301, 304(h), 307, and 501(a) Pub. L. 95-217, 
    Stat. 1566, et seq. (33 U.S.C. 1251, et seq.) (The Federal Water 
    Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 as amended by the Clean 
    Water Act of 1977).
    
        2. Section 136.3 is amended by revising paragraph (a) introductory 
    text and by adding a new Table IF in numerical order to the end of 
    paragraph (a) and revising paragraph (b) introductory text and adding 
    paragraph (b)(40) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 136.3  Identification of test procedures.
    
        (a) Parameters or pollutants, for which methods are approved, are 
    listed together with test procedure descriptions and references in 
    Tables IA, IB, IC, ID, IE, and IF. The full text of the referenced test 
    procedures are incorporated by reference into Tables IA, IB, IC, ID, 
    IE, and IF. The references and the sources which are available are 
    given in paragraph (b) of this section. These test procedures are 
    incorporated as they exist on the day of approval and a notice of any 
    change in these test procedures will be published in the Federal 
    Register. The discharge parameter values for which reports are required 
    must be determined by one of the standard analytical test procedures 
    incorporated by reference and described in Tables IA, IB, IC, ID, IE, 
    and IF, or by any alternate test procedure which has been approved by 
    the Administrator under the provisions of paragraph (d) of this section 
    and Secs. 136.4 and 136.5. Under certain circumstances (paragraph (b) 
    or (c) of this section or 40 CFR 401.13) other test procedures may be 
    used that may be more advantageous when such other test procedures have 
    been previously approved by the Regional Administrator of the Region in 
    which the discharge occur, and providing the Director of the State in 
    which such discharge will occur does
    
    [[Page 50424]]
    
    not object to the use of such alternate test procedure.
    * * * * *
    
                            Table IF.--List of Approved Methods for Pharmaceutical Pollutants                       
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       Pharmaceuticals pollutants              CAS registry No.                    Analytical method number         
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    acetonitrile...................  75-05-8............................  1666/1671/D3371/D3695.                    
    n-amyl acetate.................  628-63-7...........................  1666/D3695.                               
    n-amyl alcohol.................  71-41-0............................  1666/D3695                                
    benzene........................  71-43-2............................  D4763/D3695/502.2/524.2.                  
    n-butyl-acetate................  123-86-4...........................  1666/D3695.                               
    tert-butyl alcohol.............  75-65-0............................  1666.                                     
    chlorobenzene..................  108-90-7...........................  502.2/524.2.                              
    chloroform.....................  67-66-3............................  502.2/524.2/551.                          
    o-dichlorobenzene..............  95-50-1............................  1625C/502.2/524.2.                        
    1,2-dichloroethane.............  107-06-2...........................  D3695/502.2/524.2.                        
    diethylamine...................  109-89-7...........................  1666/1671.                                
    dimethyl sulfoxide.............  67-68-5............................  1666/1671.                                
    ethanol........................  64-17-5............................  1666/1671/D3695.                          
    ethyl acetate..................  141-78-6...........................  1666/D3695.                               
    n-heptane......................  142-82-5...........................  1666/D3695.                               
    n-hexane.......................  110-54-3...........................  1666/D3695.                               
    isobutyraldehyde...............  78-84-2............................  1666/1667.                                
    isopropanol....................  67-63-0............................  1666/D3695.                               
    isopropyl acetate..............  108-21-4...........................  1666/D3695.                               
    isopropyl ether................  108-20-3...........................  1666/D3695.                               
    methanol.......................  67-56-1............................  1666/1671/D3695.                          
    Methyl Cellosolve....  109-86-4...........................  1666/1671                                 
    methylene chloride.............  75-09-2............................  502.2/524.2                               
    methyl formate.................  107-31-3...........................  1666.                                     
    4-methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK)....  108-10-1...........................  1624C/1666/D3695/D4763/524.2.             
    phenol.........................  108-95-2...........................  D4763.                                    
    n-propanol.....................  71-23-8............................  1666/1671/D3695.                          
    2-propanone (acetone)..........  67-64-1............................  D3695/D4763/524.2.                        
    tetrahydrofuran................  109-99-9...........................  1666/524.2.                               
    toluene........................  108-88-3...........................  D3695/D4763/502.2/524.2.                  
    triethlyamine..................  121-44-8...........................  1666/1671.                                
    xylenes........................  (Note 1)...........................  1624C/1666.                               
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Table 1F note:                                                                                                  
    1. 1624C: m-xylene 108-38-3, o,p-xylene E-14095 (Not a CAS number; this is the number provided in the           
      Environmental Monitoring Methods Index (EMMI) database.); 1666: m,p-xylene 136777-61-2, o-xylene 95-47-6.     
    
    * * * * *
        (b) The full texts of the methods from the following references 
    which are cited in Tables IA, IB, IC, ID, IE,and IF are incorporated by 
    reference into this regulation and may be obtained from the sources 
    identified. All costs cited are subject to change and must be verified 
    from the indicated sources. The full texts of all the test procedures 
    cited are available for inspection at the National Exposure Research 
    Laboratory, Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental 
    Protection Agency, 26 West Martin Luther King Dr., Cincinnati, OH 45268 
    and the Office of the Federal Register, 800 North Capitol Street, NW., 
    Suite 700, Washington, DC.
    * * * * *
        (40) EPA Methods 1666, 1667, and 1671 listed in the table above are 
    published in the compendium titled Analytical Methods for the 
    Determination of Pollutants in Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Industry 
    Wastewaters (EPA 821-B-98-016). EPA Methods 502.2 and 524.2 have been 
    incorporated by reference into 40 CFR 141.24 and are in Methods for the 
    Determination of Organic Compounds in Drinking Water, EPA-600/4-88-039, 
    December 1988, Revised, July 1991, and Methods for the Determination of 
    Organic Compounds in Drinking Water-Supplement II, EPA-600/R-92-129, 
    August 1992, respectively. These EPA test method compendia are 
    available from the National Technical Information Service, NTIS PB91-
    231480 and PB92-207703, U.S. Department of Commerce, 5285 Port Royal 
    Road, Springfield, Virginia 22161. The toll-free number is 800-553-
    6847. ASTM test methods D3371, D3695, and D4763 are available from the 
    American Society for Testing and Materials, 100 Barr Harbor Drive, West 
    Conshohocken, PA 19428-2959.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 439--[AMENDED]
    
        1. The authority citation for part 439 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 301, 304, 306, 307, 308, 402 and 501 of the 
    Clean Water Act, as amended; 33 U.S.C. 1311, 1314, 1316, 1317, 1318, 
    1342 and 1361.
    
        2. Part 439 is amended by revising the undesignated heading 
    ``GENERAL PROVISIONS'' to read ``General''.
        3. Section 439.0 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.0  Applicability.
    
        (a) This part applies to process wastewater discharges resulting 
    from the research and manufacture of pharmaceutical products, which are 
    generally, but not exclusively, reported under SIC 2833, SIC 2834 and 
    SIC 2836 (1987 Standard Industrial Classification Manual).
        (b) Although not reported under SIC 2833, SIC 2834 and SIC 2836, 
    discharges from the manufacture of other pharmaceutical products to 
    which this part applies include (but are not limited to):
        (1) Products manufactured by one or more of the four types of 
    manufacturing
    
    [[Page 50425]]
    
    processes described in subcategories A, B, C or D of this part, and 
    considered by the Food and Drug Administration to be pharmaceutical 
    active ingredients;
        (2) Multiple end-use products (e.g., components of formulations, 
    chemical intermediates, or final products) derived from pharmaceutical 
    manufacturing operations and intended for use primarily in 
    pharmaceutical applications;
        (3) Pharmaceutical products and intermediates not subject to other 
    categorical limitations and standards, provided the manufacturing 
    processes generate process wastewaters that are similar to those 
    derived from the manufacture of pharmaceutical products elsewhere (an 
    example of such a product is citric acid);
        (4) Cosmetic preparations that are reported under SIC 2844 and 
    contain pharmaceutical active ingredients, or active ingredients that 
    are intended for the treatment of a skin condition. (These preparations 
    do not include products such as lipsticks or perfumes that serve to 
    enhance appearance, or provide a pleasing odor, but do not enhance skin 
    care. Also excluded are deodorants, manicure preparations, shaving 
    preparations and non-medicated shampoos that do not function primarily 
    as a skin treatment.)
        (c) The provisions of this part do not apply to wastewater 
    discharges resulting from the manufacture of the following products, or 
    as a result of providing one or more of the following services:
        (1) Surgical and medical instruments and apparatus reported under 
    SIC 3841;
        (2) Orthopedic, prosthetic, and surgical appliances and supplies 
    reported under SIC 3842;
        (3) Dental equipment and supplies reported under SIC 3843;
        (4) Medical laboratory services reported under SIC 8071;
        (5) Dental laboratory services reported under SIC 8072;
        (6) Outpatient care facility services reported under SIC 8081;
        (7) Health and allied services reported under SIC 8091, and not 
    classified elsewhere;
        (8) Diagnostic devices other than those reported under SIC 3841;
        (9) Animal feed products that include pharmaceutical active 
    ingredients such as vitamins and antibiotics, where the major portion 
    of the product is non-pharmaceutical, and the resulting process 
    wastewater is not characteristic of process wastewater from the 
    manufacture of pharmaceutical products;
        (10) Food and beverage products fortified with vitamins or other 
    pharmaceutical active ingredients, where the major portion of the 
    product is non-pharmaceutical, and the resulting process wastewater is 
    not characteristic of process wastewater from the manufacture of 
    pharmaceutical products;
        (11) Pharmaceutical products and intermediates subject to the 
    provisions of 40 CFR part 414, provided their manufacture results in 
    less than 50 percent of the total flow of process wastewater that is 
    regulated by 40 CFR part 414 at the facility.
        4. Section 439.1 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.1  General definitions.
    
        As used in this part:
        (a) The general definitions, abbreviations and methods of analysis 
    in 40 CFR part 401 shall apply.
        (b) The term bench-scale operation means the laboratory testing of 
    materials, methods, or processes on a small scale, such as on a 
    laboratory worktable.
        (c) The term cyanide (T) means the parameter total cyanide.
        (d) The term in-plant monitoring point means a location within a 
    plant, where an individual process effluent can be exclusively 
    monitored before it is diluted or mixed with other process wastewaters 
    enroute to the end-of-pipe.
        (e) The term minimum level means the level at which an analytical 
    system gives recognizable signals and an acceptable calibration point.
        (f) The term nitrification capability means the capability of a 
    POTW treatment system to oxidize ammonia or ammonium salts initially to 
    nitrites (via Nitrosomonas bacteria) and subsequently to nitrates (via 
    Nitrobacter bacteria). Criteria for determining the nitrification 
    capability of a POTW treatment system are: bioassays confirming the 
    presence of nitrifying bacteria; and analyses of the nitrogen balance 
    demonstrating a reduction in the concentration of ammonia or ammonium 
    salts and an increase in the concentrations of nitrites and nitrates.
        (g) The term non-detect (ND) means a concentration value below the 
    minimum level that can be reliably measured by the analytical method.
        (h) The term pilot-scale operation means processing equipment being 
    operated at an intermediate stage between laboratory-scale and full-
    scale operation for the purpose of developing a new product or 
    manufacturing process.
        (i) The term POTW means publicly owned treatment works (40 CFR 
    403.3).
        (j) The term process wastewater, as defined at 40 CFR 122.2 and for 
    the purposes of this part, does not include the following:
        (1) Trimethyl silanol, any active anti-microbial materials, process 
    wastewater from imperfect fermentation batches, and process area 
    spills. Discharges containing such materials are not subject to the 
    limitations and standards of this part.
        (2) Non-contact cooling water, utility wastewaters, general site 
    surface runoff, groundwater (e.g., contaminated groundwaters from on-
    site or off-site groundwater remediation projects), and other non-
    process water generated on site. Discharges of such waters and 
    wastewaters are not subject to the limitations and standards of this 
    part.
        (k) The term non-conventional pollutants means parameters that are 
    neither conventional pollutants (40 CFR 401.16), nor ``toxic'' 
    pollutants (40 CFR 401.15).
        (l) The term surrogate pollutant means a regulated parameter that, 
    for the purpose of compliance monitoring, is allowed to serve as a 
    surrogate for a group of specific regulated parameters. Plants would be 
    allowed to monitor for a surrogate pollutant(s), when the other 
    parameters for which it stands are receiving the same degree of 
    treatment as the surrogate pollutant(s) and all of the parameters 
    discharged are in the same treatability class(es) as their respective 
    surrogate pollutant(s). Treatability classes have been identified in 
    Appendix A to this part for both steam stripping and biological 
    treatment technologies, which are the respective technology bases for 
    PSES/PSNS and BAT/NSPS limitations controlling the discharge of 
    regulated organic parameters.
        (m) The term xylenes means a combination of the three isomers: o-
    xylene, p-xylene, and m-xylene.
        5. Section 439.3 is added under the undesignated center heading 
    ``General'' to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.3  General pretreatment standards.
    
        Any source subject to this part that introduces process wastewater 
    pollutants into a publicly owned treatment works (POTW) must comply 
    with 40 CFR part 403.
        6. Section 439.4 is added under the undesignated center heading 
    ``General'' to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.4  Monitoring requirements.
    
        Permit limits and compliance monitoring are required for each 
    regulated pollutant generated or used at a pharmaceutical manufacturing 
    facility, except where the regulated pollutant is monitored as a 
    surrogate parameter. Permit limits and compliance monitoring are not 
    required for regulated pollutants that are neither
    
    [[Page 50426]]
    
    used nor generated at the facility. Except for cyanide, for which an 
    alternate monitoring requirement is established in subparts A and C of 
    this part a determination that regulated pollutants are neither used 
    nor generated should be based on a review of all raw materials in use, 
    and an assessment of the process chemistry, products and by-products 
    resulting from each of the manufacturing processes. This determination 
    along with recommendation of any surrogate must be submitted with 
    permit applications for approval by the permitting authority, and 
    reconfirmed by an annual chemical analysis of wastewater from each 
    monitoring location, and the measurement of a non-detect value for each 
    regulated pollutant or its surrogate. Permits shall specify that such 
    determinations will be maintained in the facility's permit records with 
    their discharge monitoring reports and will be available to regulatory 
    authorities upon request.
    
    Subpart A--[Amended]
    
        7. Section 439.10 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.10  Applicability.
    
        This subpart applies to discharges of process wastewater resulting 
    from the manufacture of pharmaceutical products by fermentation.
        8. Section 439.11 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.11  Specialized definitions.
    
        For the purpose of this subpart:
        (a) The term fermentation means process operations that utilize a 
    chemical change induced by a living organism or enzyme, specifically, 
    bacteria, or the microorganisms occurring in unicellular plants such as 
    yeast, molds, or fungi to produce a specified product.
        (b) The term product means pharmaceutical products derived from 
    fermentation processes.
        9. Section 439.12 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    citation and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.12  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of the 
    best practicable control technology currently available (BPT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BPT:
        (a) The average monthly effluent limitation for BOD5, 
    expressed as mass loading (pounds, kilograms) per day, must reflect not 
    less than 90 percent reduction in the long-term average daily 
    BOD5 load of the raw (untreated) process wastewater, 
    multiplied by a variability factor of 3.0.
        (1) The long-term average daily BOD5 load of the raw 
    process wastewater (i.e., the base number to which the percent 
    reduction is applied) is defined as the average daily BOD5 
    load during any calendar month, over 12 consecutive months within the 
    most recent 36 months, and must include one or more periods during 
    which production was at a maximum.
        (2) To assure equity in the determination of NPDES permit 
    limitations regulating discharges subject to this subpart, calculation 
    of the long-term average daily BOD5 load in the influent to 
    the wastewater treatment system must exclude any portion of the load 
    associated with separable mycelia and solvents, except for residual 
    amounts of mycelia and solvents remaining after the practices of 
    recovery and/or separate disposal or reuse. These residual amounts may 
    be included in the calculation of the average influent BOD5 
    loading.
        (3) The practices of recovery, and/or separate disposal or reuse 
    include: physical separation and removal of separable mycelia; recovery 
    of solvents from waste streams; incineration of concentrated solvent 
    wastestreams (including tar still bottoms); and concentration of broth 
    for disposal other than to the treatment system. This part does not 
    prohibit the inclusion of such wastes in raw waste loads in fact, nor 
    does it mandate any specific practice, but rather describes the 
    rationale for determining NPDES permit limitations. The effluent 
    limitation for BOD5 may be achieved by any of several, or a 
    combination, of these practices.
        (b) The average monthly effluent limitation for TSS, expressed as 
    mass loading (pounds, kilograms) per day, must be calculated as 1.7 
    times the BOD5 limitation determined in paragraph (a) of 
    this section.
        (c) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, the 
    effluent limitations for COD and pH are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Effluent limitation \1\
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                  Regulated parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    COD...........................................         1675          856
    pH............................................        (\2\)        (\2\)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Within the range 6.0 to 9.0.                                        
    
        (d) If the average monthly COD concentrations in paragraph (c) of 
    this section are higher than concentration values reflecting a 
    reduction in the long-term average daily COD load in the raw 
    (untreated) process wastewater of 74 percent multiplied by a 
    variability factor of 2.2, then the average monthly effluent 
    limitations for COD corresponding to the lower concentration values 
    must be applied.
        (e) The effluent limitations for cyanide are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Effluent limitation \1\
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                  Regulated parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Cyanide (T)...................................         33.5          9.4
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (f) When monitoring for cyanide at the end-of-pipe is impractical 
    because of dilution by other process wastewaters, compliance with the 
    cyanide effluent limitations in paragraph (e) of this section must be 
    demonstrated at in-plant monitoring points pursuant to 40 CFR 122.44(i) 
    and 122.45(h). Under the same provisions, the permitting authority may 
    impose monitoring requirements on internal wastestreams for any other 
    parameter(s) regulated by this section.
        (g) Compliance with the limitation in paragraph (e) or (f) of this 
    section may be achieved by certifying to the permit issuing authority 
    that the facility's manufacturing processes neither use nor generate 
    cyanide.
        10. Section 439.13 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.13  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of the 
    best conventional pollutant control technology (BCT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BCT: Limitations 
    for BOD5, TSS and pH are the same as the corresponding 
    limitations in Sec. 439.12.
        11. Section 439.14 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    citation and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.14  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of best 
    available technology economically achievable (BAT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BAT:
    
    [[Page 50427]]
    
    
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Effluent limitations \1\   
                                             -------------------------------
                                                                  Average   
               Regulated parameter             Maximum daily      monthly   
                                                 discharge    discharge must
                                                                not exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1  Ammonia (as N).......................           84.1            29.4 
    2  Acetone..............................            0.5             0.2 
    3  4-Methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK)..........            0.5             0.2 
    4  Isobutyraldehyde.....................            1.2             0.5 
    5  n-Amyl acetate.......................            1.3             0.5 
    6  n-Butyl acetate......................            1.3             0.5 
    7  Ethyl acetate........................            1.3             0.5 
    8  Isopropyl acetate....................            1.3             0.5 
    9  Methyl formate.......................            1.3             0.5 
    10  Amyl alcohol........................           10.0             4.1 
    11  Ethanol.............................           10.0             4.1 
    12  Isopropanol.........................            3.9             1.6 
    13  Methanol............................           10.0             4.1 
    14  Methyl Cellosolve...................          100.0            40.6 
    15  Dimethyl Sulfoxide..................           91.5            37.5 
    16  Triethyl Amine......................          250.0           102.0 
    17  Phenol..............................            0.05            0.02
    18  Benzene.............................            0.05            0.02
    19  Toluene.............................            0.06            0.02
    20  Xylenes.............................            0.03            0.01
    21  n-Hexane............................            0.03            0.02
    22  n-Heptane...........................            0.05            0.02
    23  Methylene chloride..................            0.9             0.3 
    24  Chloroform..........................            0.02            0.01
    25  1,2-Dichloroethane..................            0.4             0.1 
    26  Chlorobenzene.......................            0.15            0.06
    27  o-Dichlorobenzene...................            0.15            0.06
    28  Tetrahydrofuran.....................            8.4             2.6 
    29  Isopropyl ether.....................            8.4             2.6 
    30  Diethyl amine.......................          250.0           102.0 
    31  Acetonitrile........................           25.0            10.2 
    32  pH..................................        (\2\)           (\2\)   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Within the range of 6.0-9.0.                                        
    
        (a) The effluent limitations for COD are the same as the 
    corresponding limitations in Sec. 439.12(c) and (d).
        (b) The effluent limitations for cyanide are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Effluent limitation \1\
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                  Regulated parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Cyanide (T)...................................         33.5          9.4
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (c) When monitoring for cyanide at the end-of-pipe is impractical 
    because of dilution by other process wastewaters, compliance with the 
    cyanide effluent limitations in paragraph (b) of this section must be 
    demonstrated at in-plant monitoring points pursuant to 40 CFR 122.44(i) 
    and 122.45(h). Under the same provisions, the permitting authority may 
    impose monitoring requirements on internal wastestreams for any other 
    parameter(s) regulated by this section.
        (d) Compliance with the limitation in paragraph (b) or (c) of this 
    section may be achieved by certifying to the permit issuing authority 
    that a facility's manufacturing processes neither use nor generate 
    cyanide.
        12. Section 439.15 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    citation and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.15  Standards of performance for new (point) sources (NSPS).
    
        Any new source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    performance standards:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Effluent limitations \1\   
                                             -------------------------------
                                                                  Average   
               Regulated parameter             Maximum daily      monthly   
                                                 discharge    discharge must
                                                                not exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1  BOD5.................................          267             111   
    2  TSS..................................          472             166   
    3  COD..................................         1675             856   
    4  Ammonia (as N).......................           84.1            29.4 
    5  Acetone..............................            0.5             0.2 
    6  4-Methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK)..........            0.5             0.2 
    7  Isobutyraldehyde.....................            1.2             0.5 
    8  n-Amyl acetate.......................            1.3             0.5 
    
    [[Page 50428]]
    
                                                                            
    9  n-Butyl acetate......................            1.3             0.5 
    10  Ethyl acetate.......................            1.3             0.5 
    11  Isopropyl acetate...................            1.3             0.5 
    12  Methyl formate......................            1.3             0.5 
    13  Amyl alcohol........................           10.0             4.1 
    14  Ethanol.............................           10.0             4.1 
    15  Isopropanol.........................            3.9             1.6 
    16  Methanol............................           10.0             4.1 
    17  Methyl Cellosolve...................           25.0            10.2 
    18  Dimethyl Sulfoxide..................           91.5            37.5 
    19  Triethyl Amine......................          250.0           102.0 
    20  Phenol..............................            0.05            0.02
    21  Benzene.............................            0.05            0.02
    22  Toluene.............................            0.06            0.02
    23  Xylenes.............................            0.03            0.01
    24  n-Hexane............................            0.03            0.02
    25  n-Heptane...........................            0.05            0.02
    26  Methylene chloride..................            0.9             0.3 
    27  Chloroform..........................            0.02            0.01
    28  1,2-Dichloroethane..................            0.4             0.1 
    29  Chlorobenzene.......................            0.15            0.06
    30  o-Dichlorobenzene...................            0.15            0.06
    31  Tetrahydrofuran.....................            8.4             2.6 
    32  Isopropyl ether.....................            8.4             2.6 
    33  Diethyl amine.......................          250.0           102.0 
    34  Acetonitrile........................           25.0            10.2 
    35  pH..................................        (\2\)           (\2\)   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Within the range of 6.0--9.0.                                       
    
        (a) The performance standards for cyanide are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      Performance standards 
                                                   ------------\1\----------
                                                                   Average  
                  Regulated parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Cyanide (T)...................................         33.5          9.4
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (b) When monitoring for cyanide at the end-of-pipe is impractical 
    because of dilution by other process wastewaters, compliance with the 
    cyanide performance standards in paragraph (a) of this section must be 
    demonstrated at in-plant monitoring points pursuant to 40 CFR 122.44(i) 
    and 122.45(h). Under the same provisions, the permitting authority may 
    impose monitoring requirements on internal wastestreams for any other 
    parameter(s) regulated by this section.
        (c) Any new source subject to the provisions of this section that 
    commenced discharging after November 21, 1988 and prior to November 20, 
    1998 must continue to achieve the standards specified in the earlier 
    version of this section until the expiration of the applicable time 
    period specified in 40 CFR 122.29(d)(1), after which the source must 
    achieve the standards specified in Secs. 439.13 and 439.14.
        (d) Compliance with the standard in paragraph (a) or (b) of this 
    section may be achieved by certifying to the permit issuing authority 
    that the facility's manufacturing processes neither use nor generate 
    cyanide.
        13. Section 439.16 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    citation and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.16  Pretreatment standards for existing sources (PSES).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 403.7 and 403.13, any existing source 
    subject to this subpart must continue to achieve compliance with 
    cyanide pretreatment standards and achieve compliance with all the 
    other pretreatment standards by September 21, 2001.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Pretreatment standards\1\  
                                             -------------------------------
                                                                  Average   
               Regulated parameter             Maximum daily      monthly   
                                                 discharge    discharge must
                                                                not exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     1  Ammonia (as N) \2\..................            84.1            29.4
     2  Acetone.............................            20.7             8.2
     3  4-Methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK).........            20.7             8.2
     4  Isobutyraldehyde....................            20.7             8.2
     5  n-Amyl acetate......................            20.7             8.2
     6  n-Butyl acetate.....................            20.7             8.2
     7  Ethyl acetate.......................            20.7             8.2
     8  Isopropyl acetate...................            20.7             8.2
    
    [[Page 50429]]
    
                                                                            
     9  Methyl formate......................            20.7             8.2
    10  Methyl Cellosolve...................           275.0             9.7
    11  Isopropyl ether.....................            20.7             8.2
    12  Tetrahydrofuran.....................             9.2             3.4
    13  Benzene.............................             3.0             0.6
    14  Toluene.............................             0.3             0.1
    15  Xylenes.............................             3.0             0.7
    16  n-Hexane............................             3.0             0.7
    17  n-Heptane...........................             3.0             0.7
    18  Methylene chloride..................             3.0             0.7
    19  Chloroform..........................             0.1            0.03
    20  1,2-Dichloroethane..................            20.7             8.2
    21  Chlorobenzene.......................             3.0             0.7
    22  o-Dichlorobenzene...................            20.7             8.2
    23  Diethyl amine.......................           255.0           100.0
    24  Triethyl amine......................           255.0           100.0
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Not applicable to sources that discharge to a POTW with             
      nitrification capability.                                             
    
        (a) Sources that discharge to a POTW with nitrification capability 
    (defined at Sec. 439.2(f)) are not required to achieve the pretreatment 
    standard for ammonia.
        (b) The pretreatment standards for cyanide are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                          Pretreatment      
                                                          standards\1\      
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                  Regulated parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Cyanide (T)...................................         33.5          9.4
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (c) When monitoring for cyanide at the end-of-pipe is impractical 
    because of dilution by other process wastewaters, compliance with the 
    cyanide standards in paragraph (b) of this section must be demonstrated 
    at in-plant monitoring points pursuant to 40 CFR 403.6(e)(2) and (4). 
    Under the same provisions, the permitting authority may impose 
    monitoring requirements on internal wastestreams for any other 
    parameter(s) regulated by this section.
        (d) Compliance with the limitation in paragraph (b) or (c) of this 
    section may be achieved by certifying to the permit issuing authority 
    that the facility's manufacturing processes neither use nor generate 
    cyanide.
        14. Section 439.17 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    citation and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.17  Pretreatment standards for new sources (PSNS).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 403.7, any new source subject to this 
    subpart must achieve the following pretreatment standards:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Pretreatment standards\1\  
                                             -------------------------------
                                                                  Average   
               Regulated parameter             Maximum daily      monthly   
                                                 discharge    discharge must
                                                                not exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     1  Ammonia (as N) \2\..................            84.1           29.4 
     2  Acetone.............................            20.7            8.2 
     3  4-Methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK).........            20.7            8.2 
     4  Isobutyraldehyde....................            20.7            8.2 
     5  n-Amyl acetate......................            20.7            8.2 
     6  n-Butyl acetate.....................            20.7            8.2 
     7  Ethyl acetate.......................            20.7            8.2 
     8  Isopropyl acetate...................            20.7            8.2 
     9  Methyl formate......................            20.7            8.2 
    10  Methyl Cellosolve...................           275.0           59.7 
    11  Isopropyl ether.....................            20.7            8.2 
    12  Tetrahydrofuran.....................             9.2            3.4 
    13  Benzene.............................             3.0            0.7 
    14  Toluene.............................             0.3            0.1 
    15  Xylenes.............................             3.0            0.7 
    16  n-Hexane............................             3.0            0.7 
    17  n-Heptane...........................             3.0            0.7 
    18  Methylene chloride..................             3.0            0.7 
    19  Chloroform..........................             0.1            0.03
    20  1,2-Dichloroethane..................            20.7            8.2 
    21  Chlorobenzene.......................             3.0            0.7 
    22  o-Dichlorobenzene...................            20.7            8.2 
    23  Diethyl amine.......................           255.0          100.0 
    
    [[Page 50430]]
    
                                                                            
    24  Triethyl amine......................           255.0          100.0 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm)                                                          
    \2\ Not applicable to sources that discharge to a POTW with             
      nitrification capability.                                             
    
        (a) Sources that discharge to a POTW with nitrification capability 
    (defined at Sec. 439.2(f))are not required to achieve the pretreatment 
    standard for ammonia.
        (b) The pretreatment standards for cyanide are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                          Pretreatment      
                                                          standards\1\      
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                  Regulated parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Cyanide (T)...................................         33.5          9.4
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (c) When monitoring for cyanide at the end-of-pipe is impractical 
    because of dilution by other process wastewaters, compliance with the 
    cyanide standards in Sec. 439.17(b) must be demonstrated at in-plant 
    monitoring points pursuant to 40 CFR 403.6(e)(2) and (4). Under the 
    same provisions, the permitting authority may impose monitoring 
    requirements on internal wastestreams for any other parameter(s) 
    regulated by this section.
        (d) Any new source subject to the provisions of this section that 
    commenced discharging after November 21, 1988 and prior to November 20, 
    1998 must continue to achieve the standards specified in the earlier 
    version of this section until the expiration of the applicable time 
    period specified in 40 CFR 122.29(d)(1), after which the source must 
    achieve the standards specified in Sec. 439.16.
        (e) Compliance with the standards in paragraph (b) or (c) of this 
    section may be achieved by certifying to the permit issuing authority 
    that a facility's manufacturing processes neither use nor generate 
    cyanide.
        15. Section 439.20 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.20  Applicability.
    
        This subpart applies to discharges of process wastewater resulting 
    from the manufacture of pharmaceutical products by extraction.
        16. Section 439.21 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.21  Specialized definitions.
    
        For the purpose of this subpart:
        (a) The term extraction means process operations that derive 
    pharmaceutically active ingredients from natural sources such as plant 
    roots and leaves, animal glands, and parasitic fungi by chemical and 
    physical extraction.
        (b) The term product means any substance manufactured by an 
    extraction process, including blood fractions, vaccines, serums, animal 
    bile derivatives, endocrine products and medicinal products such as 
    alkaloids that are isolated from botanical drugs and herbs.
        17. Section 439.22 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.22  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of the 
    best practicable control technology currently available (BPT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BPT:
        (a) The average monthly effluent limitation for BOD5, 
    expressed as mass loading (pounds, kilograms) per day, must reflect not 
    less than 90 percent reduction in the long-term average daily 
    BOD5 load of the raw (untreated) process wastewater, 
    multiplied by a variability factor of 3.0.
        (1) The long-term average daily BOD5 load of the raw 
    process wastewater (i.e., the base number to which the percent 
    reduction is applied) is defined as the average daily BOD5 
    load during any calendar month, over 12 consecutive months within the 
    most recent 36 months, and must include one or more periods during 
    which production was at a maximum.
        (2) To assure equity in the determination of NPDES permit 
    limitations regulating discharges subject to this subpart, calculation 
    of the long-term average daily BOD5 load in the influent to 
    the wastewater treatment system must exclude any portion of the load 
    associated with separable mycelia and solvents, except for residual 
    amounts of mycelia and solvents remaining after the practices of 
    recovery and/or separate disposal or reuse. Residual amounts of these 
    substances may be included in the calculation of the average influent 
    BOD5 loading.
        (3) The practices of recovery, and/or separate disposal or reuse 
    include: physical separation and removal of separable mycelia; recovery 
    of solvents from wastestreams; incineration of concentrated solvent 
    wastestreams (including tar still bottoms); and broth concentration for 
    disposal other than to the treatment system. This part does not 
    prohibit the inclusion of such wastes in raw waste loads in fact, nor 
    does it mandate any specific practice, but rather describes the 
    rationale for determining NPDES permit limitations. The effluent 
    limitation for BOD5 may be achieved by any of several, or a 
    combination, of these practices.
        (b) The average monthly effluent limitation for TSS, expressed as 
    mass loading (pounds, kilograms) per day, must be calculated as 1.7 
    times the BOD5 limitation determined in paragraph (a) of 
    this section.
        (c) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, effluent 
    limitations for COD and pH are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    Effluent limitations \1\
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                 Regulated  parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    COD...........................................          228           86
    pH............................................        (\2\)        (\2\)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Within the range 6.0 to 9.0.                                        
    
        (d) If the average monthly COD concentrations in paragraph (c) of 
    this section are higher than concentration values reflecting a 
    reduction in the long-term average daily COD load in the raw 
    (untreated) process wastewater of 74 percent multiplied by a 
    variability factor of 2.2, then the average monthly effluent 
    limitations for COD corresponding to the lower concentration values 
    must be applied.
        18. Section 439.23 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.23  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of the 
    best conventional pollutant control technology (BCT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point
    
    [[Page 50431]]
    
    source subject to this subpart must achieve the following effluent 
    limitations representing the application of BCT: Limitations for 
    BOD5, TSS and pH are the same as the corresponding 
    limitations in Sec. 439.22.
        19. Section 439.24 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    citation and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.24  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of best 
    available technology economically achievable (BAT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BAT: Limitations 
    for COD are the same as the corresponding limitations in Sec. 439.22(c) 
    and (d).
        20. Section 439.25 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.25  Standards of performance for new (point) sources (NSPS).
    
        Any new source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    performance standards:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    Performance standards\1\
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                  Regulated parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    BOD5 .........................................           35           18
    TSS...........................................           58           31
    COD...........................................          228           86
    pH............................................        (\2\)        (\2\)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Within the range 6.0 to 9.0.                                        
    
        (b) Any new source subject to the provisions of this section that 
    commenced discharging after November 21, 1988 and prior to November 20, 
    1998 must continue to achieve the standards specified in the earlier 
    version of this section, until the expiration of the applicable time 
    period specified in 40 CFR 122.29(d)(1), after which the source must 
    achieve the standards specified in Secs. 439.23 and 439.24.
        21. Section 439.26 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    citation and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.26  Pretreatment standards for existing sources (PSES).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 403.7 and 403.13, any existing source 
    subject to this subpart must achieve the following pretreatment 
    standards by October 22, 2001:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                            Pretreatment    
                                                            standards\1\    
                                                       ---------------------
                                                                    Average 
                    Regulated parameter                  Maximum    monthly 
                                                          daily    discharge
                                                        discharge   must not
                                                                     exceed 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1  Acetone........................................       20.7        8.2
    2  n-Amyl acetate.................................       20.7        8.2
      Ethyl acetate...................................       20.7        8.2
    4  Isopropyl acetate..............................       20.7        8.2
    5  Methylene chloride.............................        3.0        0.7
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        22. Section 439.27 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    citation and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.27  Pretreatment standards for new sources (PSNS).
    
        (a) Except as provided in 40 CFR 403.7, this subpart must achieve 
    the following pretreatment standards:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                            Pretreatment    
                                                            standards \1\   
                                                       ---------------------
                                                                    Average 
                    Regulated parameter                  Maximum    monthly 
                                                          daily    discharge
                                                        discharge   must not
                                                                     exceed 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1  Acetone........................................       20.7        8.2
    2  n-Amyl acetate.................................       20.7        8.2
    3  Ethyl acetate..................................       20.7        8.2
    4  Isopropyl acetate..............................       20.7        8.2
    5  Methylene chloride.............................        3.0        0.7
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (b) Any new source subject to the provisions of this section that 
    commenced discharging after November 21, 1988 and prior to November 20, 
    1998 must continue to achieve the standards specified in Sec. 439.27, 
    until the expiration of the applicable time period specified in 40 CFR 
    122.29(d)(1), after which the source must achieve the standards 
    specified in Sec. 439.26.
        23. Section 439.30 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.30  Applicability.
    
        This subpart applies to discharges of process wastewater resulting 
    from the manufacture of pharmaceutical products by chemical synthesis.
        24. Section 439.31 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.31  Specialized definitions.
    
        For the purpose of this subpart:
        (a) The term chemical synthesis means using one or a series of 
    chemical reactions in the manufacturing process of a specified product.
        (b) The term product means any pharmaceutical product manufactured 
    by chemical synthesis.
        25. Section 439.32 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    cite and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.32  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of the 
    best practicable control technology currently available (BPT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BPT:
        (a) The average monthly effluent limitation for BOD5, 
    expressed as mass loading (pounds, kilograms) per day, must reflect not 
    less than 90 percent reduction in the long-term average daily 
    BOD5 load of the raw (untreated) process wastewater, 
    multiplied by a variability factor of 3.0.
        (1) The long-term average daily BOD5 load of the raw 
    process wastewater (i.e., the base number to which the percent 
    reduction is applied) is defined as the average daily BOD5 
    load during any calendar month, over 12 consecutive months within the 
    most recent 36 months, and must include one or more periods during 
    which production was at a maximum.
        (2) To assure equity in the determination of NPDES permit 
    limitations regulating discharges subject to this subpart, calculation 
    of the long-term average daily BOD5 load in the influent to 
    the wastewater treatment system must exclude any portion of the load 
    associated with separable mycelia and solvents, except for residual 
    amounts of mycelia and solvents remaining after the practices of 
    recovery and/or separate disposal or reuse. Residual amounts of these 
    substances may be included in the calculation of the average influent 
    BOD5 loading.
        (3) The practices of recovery, and/or separate disposal or reuse 
    include: physical separation and removal of separable mycelia; recovery 
    of solvents from wastestreams; incineration of concentrated solvent 
    wastestreams (including tar still bottoms); and concentration of broth 
    for disposal other than to the treatment system. This part does not 
    prohibit the inclusion of such wastes in raw waste loads in fact, nor 
    does it mandate any specific practice, but rather describes the 
    rationale for determining NPDES permit limitations. The effluent 
    limitation for BOD5 may be achieved by any of several, or a 
    combination, of these practices.
    
    [[Page 50432]]
    
        (b) The average monthly effluent limitation for TSS, expressed as 
    mass loading (pounds, kilograms) per day, must be calculated as 1.7 
    times the BOD5 limitation determined in paragraph (a) of 
    this section.
        (c) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, the 
    effluent limitations for COD and pH are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Effluent limitation \1\
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                  Regulated parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    COD...........................................         1675          856
    pH............................................        (\2\)        (\2\)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Within the range 6.0 to 9.0.                                        
    
        (d) If the average monthly COD concentrations in paragraph (c) of 
    this section are higher than concentration values reflecting a 
    reduction in the long-term average daily COD load in the raw 
    (untreated) process wastewater of 74 percent multiplied by a 
    variability factor of 2.2, then the average monthly effluent 
    limitations for COD corresponding to the lower concentration values 
    must be applied.
        (e) The effluent limitations for cyanide are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    Effluent limitation \1\ 
                                                 ---------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                 Regulated parameter                 Maximum       monthly  
                                                      daily       discharge 
                                                    discharge     must not  
                                                                   exceed   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Cyanide (T).................................         33.5           9.4 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (f) When monitoring for cyanide at the end-of-pipe is impractical 
    because of dilution by other process wastewaters, compliance with the 
    cyanide effluent limitations in Sec. 439.32(e) must be demonstrated at 
    in-plant monitoring points pursuant to 40 CFR 122.44(i) and 122.45(h). 
    Under the same provisions, the permitting authority may impose 
    monitoring requirements on internal wastestreams for any other 
    parameter(s) regulated by this section.
        (g) Compliance with the limitation in paragraph (e) or (f) of this 
    section may be achieved by certifying to the permit issuing authority 
    that the facility's manufacturing processes neither use nor generate 
    cyanide.
        26. Section 439.33 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.33  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of the 
    best conventional pollutant control technology (BCT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BCT: Limitations 
    for BOD5, TSS and pH are the same as the corresponding limitations in 
    Sec. 439.32.
        27. Section 439.34 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    cite and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.34  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of best 
    available technology economically achievable (BAT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BAT:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Effluent limitations \1\   
                                             -------------------------------
                                                                  Average   
               Regulated parameter             Maximum daily      monthly   
                                                 discharge    discharge must
                                                                not exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     1  Ammonia (as N)......................           84.1            29.4 
     2  Acetone.............................            0.5             0.2 
     3  4-Methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK).........            0.5             0.2 
     4  Isobutyraldehyde....................            1.2             0.5 
     5  n-Amyl acetate......................            1.3             0.5 
     6  n-Butyl acetate.....................            1.3             0.5 
     7  Ethyl acetate.......................            1.3             0.5 
     8  Isopropyl acetate...................            1.3             0.5 
     9  Methyl formate......................            1.3             0.5 
    10  Amyl alcohol........................           10.0             4.1 
    11  Ethanol.............................           10.0             4.1 
    12  Isopropanol.........................            3.9             1.6 
    13  Methanol............................           10.0             4.1 
    14  Methyl Cellosolve...................           25.0            10.2 
    15  Dimethyl Sulfoxide..................           91.5            37.5 
    16  Triethyl amine......................          250.3           101.5 
    17  Phenol..............................            0.05            0.02
    18  Benzene.............................            0.05            0.02
    19  Toluene.............................            0.06            0.02
    20  Xylenes.............................            0.03            0.01
    21  n-Hexane............................            0.03            0.02
    22  n-Heptane...........................            0.05            0.02
    23  Methylene chloride..................            0.9             0.3 
    24  Chloroform..........................            0.02            0.01
    25  1,2-Dichloroethane..................            0.4             0.1 
    26  Chlorobenzene.......................            0.15            0.06
    27  o-Dichlorobenzene...................            0.15            0.06
    28  Tetrahydrofuran.....................            8.4             2.6 
    29  Isopropyl ether.....................            8.4             2.6 
    30  Diethyl amine.......................          250.0           102.0 
    31  Acetonitrile........................           25.0            10.2 
    32  pH..................................        (\2\)           (\2\)   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Within the range of 6.0-9.0.E.                                      
    
    
    [[Page 50433]]
    
        (a) Effluent limitations for COD are the same as the corresponding 
    limitations in Sec. 439.32(c) and (d).
        (b) The effluent limitations for cyanide are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    Effluent limitations \1\
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                  Regulated parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Cyanide (T)...................................         33.5          9.4
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (c) When monitoring for cyanide at the end-of-pipe is impractical 
    because of dilution by other process wastewaters, compliance with the 
    cyanide effluent limitations in paragraph (a) of this section must be 
    demonstrated at in-plant monitoring points pursuant to 40 CFR 122.44(i) 
    and 122.45(h). Under the same provisions, the permitting authority may 
    impose monitoring requirements on internal wastestreams for any other 
    parameter(s) regulated by this section.
        (d) Compliance with the limitation in Sec. 439.34(b) or (c) may be 
    achieved by certifying to the permit issuing authority that a 
    facility's manufacturing processes neither use nor generate cyanide.
        28. Section 439.35 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    cite and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.35  Standards of performance for new (point) sources (NSPS).
    
        Any new source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    performance standards:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Effluent limitations \1\   
                                             -------------------------------
                                                                  Average   
               Regulated parameter             Maximum daily      monthly   
                                                 discharge    discharge must
                                                                not exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     1  BOD 5...............................          267             111   
     2  TSS.................................          472             166   
     3  COD.................................         1675             856   
     4  Ammonia (as N)......................           84.1            29.4 
     5  Acetone.............................            0.5             0.2 
     6  4-Methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK).........            0.5             0.2 
     7  Isobutyraldehyde....................            1.2             0.5 
     8  n-Amyl acetate......................            1.3             0.5 
     9  n-Butyl acetate.....................            1.3             0.5 
    10  Ethyl acetate.......................            1.3             0.5 
    11  Isopropyl acetate...................            1.3             0.5 
    12  Methyl formate......................            1.3             0.5 
    13  Amyl alcohol........................           10.0             4.1 
    14  Ethanol.............................           10.0             4.1 
    15  Isopropanol.........................            3.9             1.6 
    16  Methanol............................           10.0             4.1 
    17  Methyl Cellosolve...................          100.0            40.6 
    18  Methyl Sulfoxide....................           91.5            37.5 
    19  Triethyl amine......................          250.0           102.0 
    20  Phenol..............................            0.05            0.02
    21  Benzene.............................            0.05            0.02
    22  Toluene.............................            0.06            0.02
    23  Xylenes.............................            0.02            0.01
    24  n-Hexane............................            0.03            0.02
    25  n-Heptane...........................            0.05            0.02
    26  Methylene chloride..................            0.9             0.3 
    27  Chloroform..........................            0.02            0.01
    28  1,2-Dichloroethane..................            0.4             0.1 
    29  Chlorobenzene.......................            0.15            0.05
    30  o-Dichlorobenzene...................            0.15            0.06
    31  Tetrahydrofuran.....................            8.4             2.6 
    32  Isopropyl ether.....................            8.4             2.6 
    33  Diethyl amine.......................          250.0           102.0 
    34  Acetonitrile........................           25.0            10.2 
    35  pH..................................        (\2\)           (\2\)   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Within the range of 6.0-9.0.                                        
    
        (a) The performance standards for cyanide are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      Performance standards 
                                                   ------------\1\----------
                                                                   Average  
                  Regulated parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Cyanide (T)...................................         33.5          9.4
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (b) When monitoring for cyanide at the end-of-pipe is impractical 
    because of dilution by other process wastewaters, compliance with the 
    cyanide standards in paragraph (a) of this section must be demonstrated 
    at in-plant monitoring points pursuant to 40 CFR 122.44(i) and 
    122.45(h). Under the same provisions, the permitting authority may 
    impose monitoring requirements on internal wastestreams for any other 
    parameter(s) regulated by this section.
        (c) Any new source subject to the provisions of this section that 
    commenced discharging after November 21, 1988 and prior to November 20, 
    1998 must continue to achieve the standards specified in the earlier 
    version of this section until the expiration of the applicable time 
    period specified in 40 CFR 122.29(d)(1), after
    
    [[Page 50434]]
    
    which the source must achieve the standards specified in Secs. 439.33 
    and 439.34.
        (d) Compliance with the standards in paragraph (a) or (b) of this 
    section may be achieved by certifying to the permit issuing authority 
    that a facility's manufacturing processes neither use nor generate 
    cyanide.
        29. Section 439.36 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    cite and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.36  Pretreatment standards for existing sources (PSES).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 403.7 and 403.13, any existing source 
    subject to this subpart must continue to achieve compliance with 
    cyanide pretreatment standards and achieve compliance with all other 
    pretreatment standards by September 21, 2001.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                Pretreatment standards \1\  
                                             -------------------------------
                                                                  Average   
               Regulated parameter             Maximum daily      monthly   
                                                 discharge    discharge must
                                                                not exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     1  Ammonia (as N) \2\..................           84.1            29.4 
     2  Acetone.............................           20.7             8.2 
     3  4-Methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK).........           20.7             8.2 
     4  Isobutyraldehyde....................           20.7             8.2 
     5  n-Amyl acetate......................           20.7             8.2 
     6  n-Butyl acetate.....................           20.7             8.2 
     7  Ethyl acetate.......................           20.7             8.2 
     8  Isopropyl acetate...................           20.7             8.2 
     9  Methyl formate......................           20.7             8.2 
    10  Methyl Cellosolve...................          275.0            54.7 
    11  Isopropyl ether.....................           20.7             8.2 
    12  Tetrahydrofuran.....................            9.2             3.4 
    13  Benzene.............................            3.0             0.7 
    14  Toluene.............................            0.3             0.1 
    15  Xylenes.............................            3.0             0.7 
    16  n-Hexane............................            3.0             0.7 
    17  n-Heptane...........................            3.0             0.7 
    18  Methylene chloride..................            3.0             0.7 
    19  Chloroform..........................            0.1             0.03
    20  1,2-Dichloroethane..................           20.7             8.2 
    21  Chlorobenzene.......................            3.0             0.7 
    22  o-Dichlorobenzene...................           20.7             8.2 
    23  Diethyl amine.......................          255.0           100.0 
    24  Triethyl amine......................          255.0           100.0 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Not applicable to sources that discharge to a POTW with             
      nitrification capability.                                             
    
        (a) Sources that discharge to a POTW with nitrification capability 
    (defined at Sec. 439.2(f)) are not required to achieve the pretreatment 
    standard for ammonia.
        (b) The pretreatment standards for cyanide are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                  Pretreatment standards \1\
                                                 ---------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                 Regulated parameter                 Maximum       monthly  
                                                      daily       discharge 
                                                    discharge     must not  
                                                                   exceed   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Cyanide (T).................................         33.5           9.4 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (c) When monitoring for cyanide at the end-of-pipe is impractical 
    because of dilution by other process wastewaters, compliance with the 
    cyanide pretreatment standards in paragraph (b) of this section must be 
    demonstrated at in-plant monitoring points pursuant to 40 CFR 403.6(e) 
    (2) and (4). Under the same provisions, the permitting authority may 
    impose monitoring requirements on internal wastestreams for any other 
    parameter(s) regulated by this section.
        (d) Compliance with the pretreatment standards in paragraph (b) or 
    (c) of this section may be achieved by certifying to the permit issuing 
    authority that the facility's manufacturing processes neither use nor 
    generate cyanide.
        30. Section 439.37 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    cite and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.37  Pretreatment standards for new sources (PSNS).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 403.7, any new source subject to this 
    subpart must achieve the following pretreatment standards:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                Pretreatment standards \1\  
                                             -------------------------------
                                                                  Average   
               Regulated parameter             Maximum daily      monthly   
                                                 discharge    discharge must
                                                                not exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     1  Ammonia (as N)\2\...................            84.1           29.4 
     2  Acetone.............................            20.7            8.2 
     3  4-Methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK).........            20.7            8.2 
     4  Isobutyraldehyde....................            20.7            8.2 
     5  n-Amyl acetate......................            20.7            8.2 
    
    [[Page 50435]]
    
                                                                            
     6  n-Butyl acetate.....................            20.7            8.2 
     7  Ethyl acetate.......................            20.7            8.2 
     8  Isopropyl acetate...................            20.7            8.2 
     9  Methyl formate......................            20.7            8.2 
    10  Methyl Cellosolve...................           275.0           59.7 
    11  Isopropyl ether.....................            20.7            8.2 
    12  Tetrahydrofuran.....................             9.2            3.4 
    13  Benzene.............................             3.0            0.7 
    14  Toluene.............................             0.3            0.1 
    15  Xylenes.............................             3.0            0.7 
    16  n-Hexane............................             3.0            0.7 
    17  n-Heptane...........................             3.0            0.7 
    18  Methylene chloride..................             3.0            0.7 
    19  Chloroform..........................             0.1            0.03
    20  1,2-Dichloroethane..................            20.7            8.2 
    21  Chlorobenzene.......................             3.0            0.7 
    22  o-Dichlorobenzene...................            20.7            8.2 
    23  Diethyl amine.......................           255.0          100.0 
    24  Triethyl amine......................           255.0          100.0 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Not applicable to sources that discharge to a POTW with             
      nitrification capability.                                             
    
        (a) Sources that discharge to a POTW with nitrification capability 
    (defined at Sec. 439.2(f)) are not required to achieve the pretreatment 
    standard for ammonia.
        (b) The pretreatment standards for cyanide are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    Effluent limitation \1\ 
                                                 ---------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                 Regulated parameter                 Maximum       monthly  
                                                      daily       discharge 
                                                    discharge     must not  
                                                                   exceed   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Cyanide (T).................................         33.5           9.4 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (c) When monitoring for cyanide at the end-of-pipe is impractical 
    because of dilution by other process wastewaters, compliance with the 
    cyanide pretreatment standards in paragraph (b) of this section must be 
    demonstrated at in-plant monitoring points pursuant to 40 CFR 403.6(e) 
    (2) and (4). Under the same provisions, the permitting authority may 
    impose monitoring requirements on internal wastestreams for any other 
    parameter(s) regulated by this section.
        (d) Any new source subject to the provisions of this section that 
    commenced discharging after November 21, 1988 and prior to November 20, 
    1998 must continue to achieve the standards specified in the earlier 
    version of Sec. 439.37, until the expiration of the applicable time 
    period specified in 40 CFR 122.29(d)(1), after which the source must 
    achieve the standards specified in Sec. 439.36.
        (e) Compliance with the standard in paragraph (b) or (c) of this 
    section may be achieved by certifying to the permit issuing authority 
    that a facility's manufacturing processes neither use nor generate 
    cyanide.
        31. Section 439.40 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.40  Applicability.
    
        This subpart applies to discharges of process wastewater resulting 
    from the manufacture of pharmaceutical products by mixing, compounding 
    and formulating operations.
        32. Section 439.41 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.41  Specialized definitions.
    
        For the purpose of this subpart:
        (a) The term mixing, compounding, and formulating operations means 
    processes that put pharmaceutical products in dosage forms.
        (b) The term product means any pharmaceutical product manufactured 
    by blending, mixing, compounding, and formulating pharmaceutical 
    ingredients. The term includes pharmaceutical preparations for both 
    human and veterinary use, such as ampules, tablets, capsules, vials, 
    ointments, medicinal powders, solutions, and suspensions.
        33. Section 439.42 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.42  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of the 
    best practicable control technology currently available (BPT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BPT:
        (a) The average monthly effluent limitation for BOD5, 
    expressed as mass loading (pounds, kilograms) per day, must reflect not 
    less than 90 percent reduction in the long-term average daily 
    BOD5 load of the raw (untreated) process wastewater, 
    multiplied by a variability factor of 3.0.
        (1) The long-term average daily BOD5 load of the raw 
    process wastewater (i.e., the base number to which the percent 
    reduction is applied) is defined as the average daily BOD5 
    load during any calendar month, over 12 consecutive months within the 
    most recent 36 months, and must include one or more periods during 
    which production was at a maximum.
        (2) To assure equity in the determination of NPDES permit 
    limitations regulating discharges subject to this subpart, calculation 
    of the long-term average daily BOD5 load in the influent to 
    the wastewater treatment system must exclude any portion of the load 
    associated with separable mycelia and solvents, except for residual 
    amounts of mycelia and solvents remaining after the practices of 
    recovery and/or separate disposal or reuse. Residual amounts of these 
    substances may be included in the calculation of the average influent 
    BOD5 loading.
        (3) The practices of recovery, and/or separate disposal or reuse 
    include: physical separation and removal of separable mycelia; recovery 
    of solvents from wastestreams; incineration of
    
    [[Page 50436]]
    
    concentrated solvent wastestreams (including tar still bottoms); and 
    broth concentration for disposal other than to the treatment system. 
    This part does not prohibit the inclusion of such wastes in raw waste 
    loads in fact, nor does it mandate any specific practice, but rather 
    describes the rationale for determining NPDES permit limitations. The 
    effluent limitation for BOD5 may be achieved by any of 
    several, or a combination, of these practices.
        (b) The average monthly effluent limitation for TSS, expressed as 
    mass loading (pounds, kilograms) per day, must be calculated as 1.7 
    times the BOD5 limitation determined in paragraph (a) of 
    this section.
        (c) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, effluent 
    limitations for COD and pH are as follows:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Effluent limitations\1\
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                  Regulated parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    COD...........................................          228           86
    pH............................................        (\2\)        (\2\)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Within the range 6.0 to 9.0.                                        
    
        (d) If the average monthly COD concentrations in paragraph (c) of 
    this section are higher than concentration values reflecting a 
    reduction in the long-term average daily COD load in the raw 
    (untreated) process wastewater of 74 percent multiplied by a 
    variability factor of 2.2, then the average monthly effluent 
    limitations for COD corresponding to the lower concentration values 
    must be applied.
        34. Section 439.43 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.43  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of the 
    best conventional pollutant control technology (BCT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BCT: Limitations 
    for BOD5, TSS and pH are the same as the corresponding 
    limitations in Sec. 439.42.
        35. Section 439.44 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    citation and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.44  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of best 
    available technology economically achievable (BAT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BAT. Limitations 
    for COD are the same as the corresponding limitations in Sec. 439.42 
    (c) and (d).
        36. Section 439.45 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    citation and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.45  Standards of performance for new (point) sources (NSPS).
    
        (a) Any new source subject to this subpart must achieve the 
    following performance standards:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      Performance standards 
                                                   ------------\1\----------
                                                                   Average  
                 Regulated  parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    BOD5..........................................           35           18
    TSS...........................................           58           31
    COD...........................................          228           86
    pH............................................        (\2\)        (\2\)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    \2\ Within the range 6.0 to 9.0.                                        
    
        (b) Any new source subject to the provisions of this section that 
    commenced discharging after November 21, 1988 and prior to November 20, 
    1998 must continue to achieve the standards specified in the earlier 
    version of this section until the expiration of the applicable time 
    period specified in 40 CFR 122.29(d)(1), after which the source must 
    achieve the standards specified in Sec. 439.43 and 439.44.
        37. Section 439.46 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    cite, and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.46  Pretreatment standards for existing sources (PSES).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 403.7 and 403.13, any existing source 
    subject to this subpart must achieve the following pretreatment 
    standards by September 21, 2001:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Pretreatment standards 
                                                               \1\          
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                 Regulated  parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1 Acetone.....................................         20.7          8.2
    2 n-Amyl acetate..............................         20.7          8.2
    3 Ethyl acetate...............................         20.7          8.2
    4 Isopropyl acetate...........................         20.7          8.2
    5 Methylene chloride..........................          3.0          0.7
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        38. Section 439.47 is amended by removing the OMB control number 
    cite, and revising the section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.47  Pretreatment standards for new sources (PSNS).
    
        (a) Except as provided in 40 CFR 403.7, any new source subject to 
    this subpart must achieve the following pretreatment standards:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Pretreatment standards 
                                                               \1\          
                                                   -------------------------
                                                                   Average  
                 Regulated  parameter                 Maximum      monthly  
                                                       daily      discharge 
                                                     discharge     must not 
                                                                    exceed  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1 Acetone.....................................         20.7          8.2
    2 n-Amyl acetate..............................         20.7          8.2
    3 Ethyl acetate...............................         20.7          8.2
    4 Isopropyl acetate...........................         20.7          8.2
    5 Methylene chloride..........................          3.0          0.7
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ Mg/L (ppm).                                                         
    
        (b) Any new source subject to the provisions of this section that 
    commenced discharging after November 21, 1988 and prior to November 20, 
    1998 must continue to achieve the standards specified in the earlier 
    version of this section, until the expiration of the applicable time 
    period specified in 40 CFR 122.29(d)(1), after which the source must 
    achieve the standards specified in Sec. 439.46.
        39. Section 439.50 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.50  Applicability.
    
        This subpart applies to discharges of process wastewater resulting 
    from pharmaceutical research.
        40. Section 439.51 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.51  Specialized definitions.
    
        For the purpose of this subpart, the term product means products or 
    services resulting from research and product development activities.
        41. Section 439.52 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 439.52  Effluent limitations attainable by the application of the 
    best practicable control technology currently available (BPT).
    
        Except as provided in 40 CFR 125.30 through 125.32, any existing 
    point source subject to this subpart must achieve the following 
    effluent limitations representing the application of BPT:
        (a) The average monthly effluent limitation for BOD5, 
    expressed as mass loading (pounds, kilograms) per day, must reflect not 
    less than 90 percent reduction in the long-term average daily 
    BOD5 load of the raw (untreated) process wastewater, 
    multiplied by a
    
    [[Page 50437]]
    
    variability factor of 3.0. No facility shall be required to attain a 
    limitation for BOD5 that is less than the equivalent of 45 
    mg/L.
        (b) The average monthly effluent limitation for COD, expressed as 
    mass loading (pounds, kilograms) per day, must reflect not less than 74 
    percent reduction in the long-term average daily COD load of the raw 
    (untreated) process wastewater, multiplied by a variability factor of 
    2.2. No facility shall be required to attain a limitation for COD that 
    is less than the equivalent of 220 mg/L.
        (c) The long-term average daily BOD5 or COD mass loading 
    of the raw process wastewater (i.e., the base number to which the 
    percent reduction is applied) is defined as the average daily 
    BOD5 or COD load during any calendar month, over 12 
    consecutive months within the most recent 36 months.
        (1) To assure equity in the determination of NPDES permit 
    limitations regulating discharges subject to this subpart, calculation 
    of the long-term average daily BOD5 or COD load in the 
    influent to the wastewater treatment system must exclude any portion of 
    the load associated with solvents, except for residual amounts of 
    solvents remaining after the practices of recovery and/or separate 
    disposal or reuse. Residual amounts of these substances may be included 
    in the calculation of the average influent BOD5 or COD 
    loading.
        (2) The practices of recovery, and/or separate disposal or reuse 
    include: recovery of solvents from wastestreams; and incineration of 
    concentrated solvent wastestreams (including tar still bottoms). This 
    part does not prohibit the inclusion of such wastes in raw waste loads 
    in fact, nor does it mandate any specific practice, but rather 
    describes the rationale for determining NPDES permit limitations. The 
    effluent limitation for BOD5 or COD may be achieved by any 
    of several, or a combination, of these practices.
        (d) The average monthly effluent limitation for TSS, expressed as 
    mass loading (pounds, kilograms) per day, must be calculated as 1.7 
    times the BOD5 limitation determined in paragraph (a) of 
    this section.
        (e) The pH must be within the range 6.0 to 9.0.
    
    
    Secs. 439.33 through 439.57  [Removed]
    
        41. Sections 439.53 through 439.57 are removed.
    
    Appendix A to part 439 [Added]
    
        42. Appendix A is added to part 439 to read as follows:
    
    Appendix A to Part 439--Tables
    
              Table 1.--Surrogate Parameters for Direct Dischargers         
                   [Utilizing biological treatment technology]              
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Regulated  parameter                  Treatability class        
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Amyl alcohol.......................  Alcohols.                          
    Ethanol............................                                     
    Isopropanol........................                                     
    Methanol...........................                                     
    Phenol.............................                                     
    Isobutyraldehyde...................  Aldehydes.                         
    n-Heptane..........................  Alkanes.                           
    n-Hexane...........................                                     
    Diethylamine.......................  Amines.                            
    Triethylamine......................                                     
    Benzene............................  Aromatics.                         
    Toluene............................                                     
    Xylenes............................                                     
    Chlorobenzene......................                                     
    o-Dichlorobenzene..................                                     
    Chloroform.........................  Chlorinated Alkanes.               
    Methylene chloride.................                                     
    1,2-Dichloroethane.................                                     
    Ethyl acetate......................  Esters.                            
    Isopropyl acetate..................                                     
    n-Amyl acetate.....................                                     
    n-Butyl acetate....................                                     
    Methyl formate.....................                                     
    Tetrahydrofuran....................  Ethers.                            
    Isopropyl ether....................                                     
    Acetone............................  Ketones.                           
    4-Methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK)........                                     
    Ammonia (aqueous)..................  Miscellaneous.                     
    Acetonitrile.......................                                     
    Methyl Cellosolve..................                                     
    Dimethyl Sulfoxide.................                                     
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Notes:                                                                  
    1. Parameters in bold may be used as a surrogate to represent other     
      parameters in the same treatability class.                            
    2. Surrogates have not been identified for the ``Miscellaneous''        
      treatability class.                                                   
    
    
             Table 2.--Surrogate Parameters for Indirect Dischargers        
                [Utilizing steam stripping treatment technology]            
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Regulated parameters                  Treatability class        
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Benzene............................  High strippability.                
    Toluene............................                                     
    Xylenes............................                                     
    n-Heptane..........................                                     
    n-Hexane...........................                                     
    Chloroform.........................                                     
    Methylene chloride.................                                     
    Chlorobenzene......................                                     
    Methyl cellosolve..................                                     
    Ammonia (aqueous)..................  Medium strippability.              
    Diethyl amine......................                                     
    Triethyl amine.....................                                     
    Acetone 4-Methyl-2-pentanone (MIBK)                                     
    n-Amyl acetate.....................                                     
    n-Butyl acetate....................                                     
    Ethyl acetate......................                                     
    Isopropyl acetate..................                                     
    Methyl formate.....................                                     
    Isopropyl ether....................                                     
    Tetrahydrofuran....................                                     
    1,2-Dichloroethane.................                                     
    o-Dichlorobenzene..................                                     
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Notes:                                                                  
    1. Parameters in bold may be used as a surrogate to represent other     
      parameters in the same treatability class.                            
    
    [FR Doc. 98-21027 Filed 9-18-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
11/20/1998
Published:
09/21/1998
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
98-21027
Dates:
This regulation shall become effective November 20, 1998. The incorportion by reference of certain publications listed in Part 136 is approved by the Director of the Federal Register as of November 20, 1998.
Pages:
50388-50437 (50 pages)
Docket Numbers:
FRL-6135-7
RINs:
2040-AA13: Effluent Guidelines and Standards for the Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Category
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/2040-AA13/effluent-guidelines-and-standards-for-the-pharmaceutical-manufacturing-category
PDF File:
98-21027.pdf
CFR: (41)
40 CFR 403.6(e)
40 CFR 136.3
40 CFR 439.0
40 CFR 439.1
40 CFR 439.3
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