99-11271. Land Disposal Restrictions Phase IV: Treatment Standards for Wood Preserving Wastes, and Treatment Standards for Metal Wastes, and Zinc Micronutrient Fertilizers, and Carbamate Treatment Standards, and K088 Treatment Standards, Final Rule  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 90 (Tuesday, May 11, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 25408-25417]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-11271]
    
    
    
    [[Page 25407]]
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    Environmental Protection Agency
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    40 CFR Part 261 et al.
    
    
    
    Land Disposal Restrictions Phase IV: Treatment Standards for Wood 
    Preserving Wastes, Treatment Standards for Metal Wastes, Zinc 
    Micronutrient Fertilizers, Carbamate Treatment Standards, and K088 
    Treatment Standards; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 64, No. 90 / Tuesday, May 11, 1999 / Rules 
    and Regulations
    
    [[Page 25408]]
    
    
    
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    40 CFR Parts 261, 262, and 268
    
    RIN 2050-AE05
    [EPA # F-98-P3F4-FFFFF; FRL-6335-7]
    
    
    Land Disposal Restrictions Phase IV: Treatment Standards for Wood 
    Preserving Wastes, and Treatment Standards for Metal Wastes, and Zinc 
    Micronutrient Fertilizers, and Carbamate Treatment Standards, and K088 
    Treatment Standards, Final Rule
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
    
    ACTION: Final rule; technical correction.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This rule corrects and clarifies five related rules the EPA 
    published on May 12, 1997, May 26, 1998, August 31, 1998, September 4, 
    1998, and September 24, 1998. On May 12, 1997, EPA published 
    regulations promulgating Land Disposal Restrictions (LDR) treatment 
    standards for wood preserving wastes, as well as reducing the paperwork 
    burden for complying with LDRs. On May 26, 1998, EPA published 
    regulations promulgating LDR treatment standards for metal-bearing 
    wastes, as well as amending the LDR treatment standards for soil 
    contaminated with hazardous waste, and amending the definition of which 
    secondary materials from mineral processing are considered to be wastes 
    subject to the LDRs. On August 31, 1998, EPA published an 
    administrative stay of the metal-bearing waste treatment standards as 
    they apply to zinc micronutrient fertilizers. On September 4, 1998, EPA 
    published an emergency revision of the LDR treatment standards for 
    hazardous wastes from the production of carbamate wastes. On September 
    24, 1998, EPA published revised treatment standards for spent aluminum 
    potliners from primary aluminum production. Today's rule makes 
    technical corrections and clarifications to these final regulations.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: This rule is effective on May 11, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: The public may obtain a copy of this technical correction at 
    the RCRA Information Center (RIC), located at Crystal Gateway One, 1235 
    Jefferson Davis Highway, First Floor, Arlington, Virginia.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For general information contact the 
    RCRA Hotline at (800) 424-9346 (toll free) or (703) 920-9810 in the 
    Washington, DC metropolitan area. For information on this rule contact 
    Peggy Vyas (5302W), Office of Solid Waste, 401 M Street, SW, 
    Washington, DC 20460, (703) 308-5477, e-mail address is 
    vyas.peggy@epamail.epa.gov''.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Reasons and Basis for Today's Amendments
    
        The Agency has received several comments from the regulated 
    community requesting clarification and correction of certain aspects of 
    five rules all promulgating and revising Phase IV of the LDRs. These 
    are: the May 12, 1997 LDR Phase IV final rule (the so-called ``Mini'' 
    Rule, 62 FR 25998), the May 26, 1998 LDR Phase IV final rule (63 FR 
    28556), the August 31, 1998 administrative stay of the May 26, 1998 
    rule's applicability to certain zinc micronutrient fertilizers (63 FR 
    46332), the September 4, 1998 emergency revisions to the treatment 
    standards for carbamate production wastes (63 FR 172), and the 
    September 24, 1998 revisions to the treatment standards for spent 
    aluminum potliners (63 FR 51254). Today's preamble discussion 
    amendments make clarifications and technical corrections where 
    appropriate in light of the comments received.
    
    II. Clarification of the May 12, 1997 LDR Phase IV ``Mini Rule''
    
        On May 12, 1997, EPA published regulations promulgating certain 
    aspects of the original LDR Phase IV proposal (60 FR 11702, March 2, 
    1995), including a discussion clarifying point of generation of 
    hazardous wastes (see 60 FR 26006-7, May 12, 1997). That discussion may 
    have been confusing with regard to the status of sludge from high-TOC 
    ignitable waste treated in entirely tank-based NPDES or POTW discharge 
    systems. To clarify, EPA's position is that where wastes are managed in 
    NPDES or POTW discharge systems that are entirely tank-based, the 
    wastes are not destined for land disposal and, therefore, neither the 
    LDR disposal prohibitions nor the treatment standards (or attendant 
    dilution prohibition) apply. Conversely, where an NPDES or POTW 
    discharge system includes a land-based unit (i.e., a surface 
    impoundment), wastes managed in the system are considered to be 
    destined for land disposal, and the LDR regulations do apply. See 61 FR 
    15566 at 15570 (April 8, 1996), 53 FR 31136 at 31149 (August 17, 1988).
        Accordingly, the management of a high-TOC ignitable waste in an 
    entirely tank-based NPDES or POTW discharge system--whether inadvertent 
    or not--would trigger no LDR requirements. Sludge subsequently removed 
    from the tanks would be considered newly-generated waste (for LDR 
    purposes) regardless of any changes in treatability group, and LDR 
    requirements would apply with respect to its management only if the 
    sludge itself is hazardous waste when removed. If the sludge is a 
    hazardous waste, the LDR treatment standard that would apply would 
    depend on the hazardous waste code and treatability group (or 
    subcategory) of the sludge itself.
    
    III. Amendments to and Clarifications of the May 26, 1998 LDR Phase 
    IV Final Rule
    
        Several errors exist in the regulatory language of the LDR Phase IV 
    final rule, which we are correcting with today's rule. We are also 
    making several clarifications to the preamble of the LDR Phase IV final 
    rule.
    
    A. Corrections to the LDR Phase IV Final Rule
    
    1. Section 261.2(e)(1)(iii)
        Section 261.2(e) identifies materials that are not solid wastes 
    when recycled. The rule added an amendment to Sec. 261.2(e)(1)(iii), 
    which amendment applies only to secondary materials generated and 
    reclaimed by the primary mineral processing industry. The rule 
    inadvertently deleted language in Sec. 261.2(e)(1)(iii) that applies to 
    other industrial sectors recycling secondary materials. The Agency did 
    not intend to eliminate the long-standing regulatory exclusions for 
    other industrial sectors, and indeed effectively stated that the 
    provision was not being amended for other industry sectors, see 63 FR 
    at 28583-584. We are therefore restoring the omitted text in this 
    section.
    2. Section 261.4
        The Hazardous Waste Combustion Revised Standards published on June 
    19, 1998 (63 FR 33782) added a paragraph to Sec. 261.4(a)(16), which 
    inadvertently changed what was promulgated in the LDR Phase IV final 
    rule. To avoid confusion, we are redesignating the language promulgated 
    in Sec. 261.4(a)(16) in the LDR Phase IV final rule as 
    Sec. 261.4(a)(17).
        Section 261.4(a)(17) (as renumbered in this rule) identifies 
    certain mineral processing secondary materials as subject to a 
    conditional exclusion from subtitle C regulation as follows:
    
        Secondary materials * * * generated within the primary mineral 
    processing industry from which minerals, acids, cyanide, water or 
    other values are recovered by mineral processing.
    
        As noted throughout the preamble, however, the same mineral 
    processing secondary materials are also recovered
    
    [[Page 25409]]
    
    in beneficiation operations. See, e.g., 63 FR at 28578. EPA did not 
    intend to restrict the scope of the conditional exclusion to recovery 
    only in mineral processing operations. Id. Consequently, EPA is 
    amending Sec. 261.4(a)(17) to indicate that recovery of these secondary 
    materials may occur in either mineral processing or beneficiation 
    operations.
        This same amendment is being made to Sec. 261.4(b)(7)(iii), which 
    sets out the conditions under which wastes from the co-processing of 
    normal feedstock with mineral processing secondary materials remains 
    exempt from subtitle C regulation under the Bevill Amendment. In 
    relevant part, the rule states:
    
        A residue derived from co-processing mineral processing 
    secondary materials with normal beneficiation raw materials remains 
    excluded under paragraph (b) * * * if the owner or operator:
        (A) Processes at least 50 percent by weight normal beneficiation 
    raw materials;
    
        The regulation inadvertently neglected to address the comparable 
    situation when Bevill residues come from mineral processing rather than 
    beneficiation operations. EPA clearly indicates in the preamble that 
    the provisions of paragraph (b)(7)(ii) also apply to co-processing 
    mineral processing secondary materials in beneficiation units. See 63 
    FR at 28595; see also 54 FR at 36614, 16619-620, 36629 (Sept. 1, 1989); 
    54 FR at 15324-325, 15341 (April 17, 1989) (prior rulemakings where EPA 
    indicated that these conditions apply). Consequently, EPA is adding 
    clarifying language to Sec. 261.4(b)(7)(iii) to affirm that both 
    beneficiation and mineral processing operations are included.
    3. Section 268.7
        The tables in Sec. 268.7(a) and (b), entitled ``Generator Paperwork 
    Requirements Table'' and ``Treatment Facility Paperwork Requirements 
    Table,'' are now erroneously missing certain checkmarks, which we are 
    reinstating in today's rule. The LDR Phase IV final rule also added a 
    line eight to the ``Generator Paperwork Requirements Table,'' and a 
    line five to the ``Treatment Facility Paperwork Requirements Table,'' 
    both for contaminated soil, which inadvertently erased the previous 
    lines eight and five. We are correcting this oversight by reinstating 
    the missing lines as nine and six, respectively.
    4. Section 268.9
        The language in Sec. 268.9(d)(2) currently refers to language in 
    Sec. 268.7(b)(5), which has been renumbered as Sec. 268.7(b)(4). 
    Today's rule amends the language in Sec. 268.9 to correct this 
    miscitation. For more clarification of LDR certifications and how they 
    apply to soil, see the discussion in section B.6.c. below.
    5. Section 268.40
        Today's rule also amends the treatment standard table found in 
    Sec. 268.40. The entry for P015 incorrectly describes this waste as 
    ``beryllium dust''; the proper term is ``beryllium powder.'' Also, the 
    entry for U408 gave the incorrect CAS number for 2,4,6-Tribromophenol. 
    We are correcting these errors in today's rule. For other errors in the 
    Sec. 268.40 table, see sections V. and VI. below.
    
    B. Clarifications to the LDR Phase IV Final Rule
    
    1. Effective Dates
        The Agency has received a number of questions about the dates when 
    various provisions of the LDR Phase IV final rule become effective. A 
    memorandum explaining in further detail the effective dates of the LDR 
    Phase IV final rule is available in the RCRA docket for the rule, and 
    is also available on the internet at: http://www.epa.gov/epaoswer/
    hazwaste/ldr/ldrmetal/memos/effectiv.pdf.
        Part of the confusion over the compliance dates for the LDR Phase 
    IV final rule resulted from EPA incorrectly referring to effective 
    dates as ``compliance dates''. In the ``Effective Dates'' section in 
    the preamble (see page 28556, middle column), the Agency lists four 
    exceptions to the August 24, 1998 effective date for the rule. These 
    exceptions are referred to as ``compliance dates'', when, in fact, they 
    are effective dates.
        Another point of clarification relates to the LDR Phase IV final 
    rule amendments of the treatment standards for carbamate wastes, which 
    were originally promulgated in the LDR Phase III final rule on April 8, 
    1996 (61 FR 15566). The LDR Phase IV amendments went into effect August 
    24, 1998. However, on September 4, 1998, the Agency changed the 
    compliance dates for the LDR Phase IV carbamate treatment standards. If 
    you have any questions related to compliance with the carbamate 
    treatment standards, we direct you to the Emergency Revision of the 
    Land Disposal Restrictions Treatment Standards for Listed Hazardous 
    Wastes from Carbamate Production, which was published on September 4, 
    1998 (63 FR 172).
    2. Waste as Fill
        In the May 12, 1997 second supplemental proposed rule, EPA raised 
    the issue of prohibiting the use of hazardous waste as fill material 
    unless it was demonstrated to the Agency (or authorized State) that the 
    use of the waste minimized threats to human health and the environment 
    (see 62 FR 26061). The Agency did not finalize this issue in the LDR 
    Phase IV final rule, but the proposal remains pending and awaiting EPA 
    further action.
    3. Cement Kiln Dust
        EPA states at 63 FR at 28600/3 that:
    
        The Agency is aware that both cement kiln[s] and aggregate kilns 
    may both burn hazardous wast[e] fuels and that the dusts from air 
    pollution control devices are often blended into final products. 
    Under existing regulations, if these dusts resulting from burning 
    listed hazardous waste fuels are blended into products that are used 
    on the land, the product would be subject to RCRA's `derived from' 
    rules. * * *''
    
    The second sentence refers to a situation where the Bevill amendment 
    does not apply to the residue from burning the hazardous waste derived 
    fuel. The overall sense and intent of this section of the preamble 
    remains that EPA wishes to consider cement kiln dust and dust from 
    lightweight aggregate kilns (including dusts from kilns burning 
    hazardous waste as fuels) in the same fashion because they are similar 
    materials managed in similar manners.
    4. D004 Treatment Standards
        Some confusion also apparently exists as to whether the Universal 
    Treatment Standards (UTS) apply to D004 arsenic wastes. In the preamble 
    to the LDR Phase IV final rule, we state that the UTS apply to both 
    wastewater and nonwastewater forms of the TC metal wastes. But a 
    parenthetical then states that, for TC arsenic wastes, the UTS applies 
    to the wastewater form only. The Agency unfortunately has caused 
    confusion by this parenthetical language. The parenthetical only meant 
    to explain that we were revising or replacing the standard solely for 
    the nonwastewater form of arsenic in LDR Phase IV. We did not intend by 
    the parenthetical to suggest that the wastewater form of arsenic had 
    changed or been eliminated, or that the UTS do not apply. The existing 
    standard for the wastewater form of arsenic was and remains the UTS. 
    Therefore, the UTS have and will continue to apply to D004 arsenic 
    wastes in both forms.
    5. TC Metal Standards and Mixed Wastes
        In the preamble to the final rule, EPA refers to characteristic 
    metal mixed wastes that were previously stabilized to meet the then-
    existing LDR
    
    [[Page 25410]]
    
    requirements and that are now being stored prior to disposal. We 
    indicate that these mixed wastes do not have to be re-treated to meet 
    the revised treatment standards prior to disposal (63 FR 28575-28576). 
    Mixed wastes are those that are both radioactive and hazardous. 
    Although we believe that the preamble is clear, EPA has received a 
    number of inquiries on this point. The Agency wishes to reiterate that, 
    for the reasons explained in the LDR Phase IV preamble, if mixed wastes 
    that are characteristically hazardous for metals were treated via 
    stabilization to the old treatment standards before the effective date 
    of the LDR Phase IV rule, these wastes do not need to be re-treated to 
    meet the new treatment standards even if land disposal of the waste 
    occurs after the effective date of the LDR Phase IV rule. Wastes 
    previously treated by methods other than stabilization will have to be 
    re-treated, as indicated clearly in the LDR Phase IV preamble, unless a 
    site-specific variance is granted. Please note that the preamble 
    further indicates EPA's amenability to grant such variances where, for 
    example, there is risk of re-exposure to radiation. See 63 FR at 28576.
    6. Soil Issues
        EPA has received numerous questions about the alternative soil 
    treatment standards. Two important questions and their answers appear 
    below. Other questions will be handled through regular information 
    channels, such as the RCRA Hotline at 1-800-424-9346. We also wish to 
    remind readers generally that before receiving authorization for the 
    soil treatment standards, states authorized for other portions of the 
    LDR program may, for contaminated soil, use state waivers or other 
    state authorities to waive the duty to comply with the LDR treatment 
    standards for pure hazardous waste and allow, instead, compliance with 
    the soil treatment standards. This is discussed more fully in the 
    guidance memorandum mentioned above on LDR Phase IV rule effective 
    dates.
        a. What are the certification requirements for decharacterized 
    soil? The certification requirements for decharacterized soil are 
    similar to the requirements for decharacterized wastes. The 
    certification language found in Sec. 268.7(b)(4) is to be used if 
    underlying hazardous constituents in decharacterized soil have been 
    treated, either to meet the 90% reduction or the ten times UTS 
    provisions in the soil treatment standards. If underlying hazardous 
    constituents in decharacterized soil have not been treated and are 
    above the 10 X UTS soil standard, the soil still requires treatment. In 
    this case, the revised certification language found in 
    Sec. 268.7(b)(4)(iv) must be used instead. See 63 FR at 28620.
        b. If constituents of concern in a hazardous contaminated soil have 
    a specified method of treatment, can a facility still use the 
    alternative soil treatment standards? In interpreting the alternative 
    soil treatment standards found at Sec. 268.49(c)(3), questions have 
    arisen, particularly with respect to: (1) use of soil treatment 
    standards where the only constituents of concern are nonanalyzable, and 
    (2) situations in which both analyzable and non-analyzable constituents 
    are present. The table below details the appropriate implementation of 
    the language in Sec. 268.49(c)(3), based on language from the preamble 
    to the proposed and final rules with respect to contaminated soils 
    containing both analyzable and nonanalyzable constituents. Readers 
    should note that the following information only applies to constituents 
    of concern present in a hazardous contaminated soil that must meet LDRs 
    before land disposal.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Then soils
                                                          contaminated with
     If these constituents are *      And if these       these constituents
                 * *               constituents * * *    meet LDR treatment
                                                          requirements when
                                                              you * * *
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Nonanalyzable only..........  Have a method of      Treat all of these
                                   treatment specified   constituents using
                                   in Sec.  268.40.      the treatment
                                                         method[s] specified
                                                         in Sec.  268.40.
    Analyzable and nonanalyzable  Are organic           Treat analyzable
                                   compounds.            constituents to
                                                         numerical soil
                                                         treatment levels;
                                                         no need to
                                                         separately treat
                                                         nonanalyzable
                                                         constituents using
                                                         method specified in
                                                         Sec.  268.40.
    analyzable only.............  Have a method of      Treat each
                                   treatment specified   constituent to
                                   in Sec.  268.40 AND   numerical soil
                                   ALSO a                treatment levels.
                                   concentration-based
                                   limit in the Sec.
                                   268.48 UTS table.
                                  Have only             Treat each
                                   concentration based   constituent to
                                   limits in Sec.        numerical soil
                                   268.40 and Sec.       treatment levels.
                                   268.48.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The preambles to both the final and proposed rules on contaminated 
    soils make clear that EPA intended to allow treatment of analyzable 
    constituents to serve as a surrogate for treating unanalyzable 
    constituents only when the analyzable and unanalyzable constituents are 
    both organics. The Phase IV preamble thus states that ``[i]n situations 
    where contaminated soil contains both analyzable and nonanalyzable 
    organic constituents, treating the analyzable constituents to meet the 
    soil treatment standards is also reasonably expected to provide 
    adequate treatment of nonanalyzable constituents.'' 63 FR at 28609 
    (emphasis added). This sentence indicates that it is reasonable to 
    expect that treatment for analyzable organic constituents will be 
    sufficiently effective for other organic, but nonanalyzable, 
    constituents. See also, Phase II proposal, 58 FR at 48124 (col. 2) 
    (Sept. 14, 1993) (likewise stating that the principle of treating only 
    analyzable constituents applies only where analyzable and nonanalyzable 
    constituents are both organics). We are accordingly amending the 
    language of the rule so that it matches these preamble explanations.
        This leaves unaddressed in the rule situations (which may or may 
    not actually exist) where analyzable and unanalyzable hazardous 
    constituents are not both organics. If the situation exists, it would 
    not be reasonable to assume in all situations that organic treatment 
    would serve as a surrogate for inorganic or metal treatment, or vice 
    versa. Should the situation arise, EPA believes it should be addressed 
    on a site-specific basis. The relevant factors to be considered include 
    the types of hazardous constituents, their concentrations (for the 
    analyzable constituents), and their amenability to common treatment.
        c. What are nonanalyzable constituents? A nonanalyzable constituent 
    is any constituent that does not have appropriate test methods or 
    chemical standards to properly measure compliance with LDR 
    concentration-based standards. A constituent is nonanalyzable under LDR 
    regulation when (1) the appropriate Sec. 268.40 listing
    
    [[Page 25411]]
    
    specifies a treatment technology, and (2) there is no concentration-
    based limit in the Sec. 268.48 UTS table. We note, simply for technical 
    accuracy, that the Phase IV preamble (63 FR 28609, col. 2) refers in a 
    parenthetical statement to nonanalyzable constituents as belonging only 
    to P and U waste codes. That preamble parenthetical is not entirely 
    correct. A limited number of organic nonanalyzable constituents are 
    also regulated under K and F waste codes. This clarification does not 
    affect implementation of Sec. 268.49(c)(3) in any way.
    7. Intentional Mixing of Hazardous Waste With Soil or Debris
        It is illegal to add soil or debris to a hazardous waste to change 
    the waste's treatment classification to soil or debris and thereby to 
    falsely claim eligibility for the alternative treatment standards for 
    soil or debris. Put another way, addition of soil or debris to a 
    hazardous waste does not change that waste into soil or debris for 
    purposes of LDR treatment. As the Agency stated in the May 26, 1998 
    preamble, ``[A]ny deliberate mixing of prohibited hazardous waste with 
    soil in order to change its treatment classification (i.e. from waste 
    to contaminated soil) is illegal. Existing regulations concerning 
    impermissible dilution already make this point.'' 63 FR at 28621. The 
    conduct is impermissible dilution because it adds a diluting medium--
    the soil--that neither contributes to effective treatment nor 
    represents a bona fide substitute for adequate treatment. Id.
        EPA further made clear that this conduct subjects generators to 
    civil and criminal penalties. 63 FR at 28621. In addition, the 
    impermissibly diluted waste remains subject to the original treatment 
    standard, ``so no benefit in terms of reduced treatment would occur.'' 
    Id.
        EPA had earlier established the same principle for debris: 
    ``[a]lthough EPA is classifying mixtures that are predominantly debris 
    as debris, this does not mean that debris can be deliberately mixed 
    with other wastes in order to change their treatment classification. 
    Such mixing is impermissible dilution under Sec. 268.3 since it is a 
    substitute for adequate treatment.'' 57 FR at 37224 (Aug. 18, 1992); 
    see also 57 FR at 37243 (``if debris is intentionally mixed with 
    contaminated soil or hazardous waste (e.g. after excavation), and the 
    mixture is regulated as debris by the application of the mixture 
    principle and subsequently immobilized, prohibited sham mixing has 
    occurred'').
        To ensure that there is no possibility of misunderstanding current 
    law, EPA has decided to amend the definitions in Sec. 268.2 to reflect 
    more directly the preamble language stating that intentional addition 
    of soil or debris to hazardous waste is impermissible. Currently, the 
    definitions of ``soil'' and ``debris'', respectively state that soil or 
    debris is ``made up primarily of soil'' or ``primarily of debris.'' 40 
    CFR Sec. 268.2 (k) and (g). To remove any possible (albeit unfounded, 
    given the existence of the dilution prohibition in Sec. 268.3 and the 
    preamble language quoted above) confusion regarding the term 
    ``primarily'' in the rules, EPA is incorporating language directly into 
    the respective definitions that states that deliberate mixing of 
    process waste to soil or debris that changes a treatment classification 
    is impermissible dilution. These additions merely incorporate existing 
    preamble text into regulations and do not establish any new principles. 
    Thus, today's correction is at most an interpretive rule because EPA's 
    existing interpretations are being codified as clarifications to the 
    definitions of soil and debris and to the existing dilution prohibition 
    in Sec. 268.3. Moreover, no new obligations are created because 
    existing regulations--viz., the dilution prohibition in Sec. 268.3--
    already make the conduct illegal. Whether the change is a technical 
    correction or an interpretive rule, no opportunity for notice and 
    comment is required. 5 U.S.C. Sec. 553(b).
    8. Treatment Residuals and Point of Generation of a New Hazardous Waste 
    for LDR Purposes
        The Agency has received several inquiries concerning treating TC 
    metal wastes and the potential for finding underlying hazardous 
    constituents at levels above the UTS in the treatment residuals that 
    were either not present in the waste prior to treatment or may have 
    been present but only at levels below the UTS. This would occur, for 
    example, if the treatment process is such that certain underlying 
    hazardous constituents ( UHCs) might be more concentrated in treatment 
    residuals than in the original waste.
        Two illustrative scenarios are useful. The first involves a D007 
    chromium waste that is incinerated. Trace quantities of lead are 
    present in the original waste, but at levels below the UTS (thus, lead 
    is not a UHC under 40 CFR Sec. 268.2(i)). The resulting ash is no 
    longer characteristic for chromium, but lead is now present at levels 
    above the UTS. The second involves a D008 lead wastewater that contains 
    no underlying hazardous constituents as generated, but that is treated 
    with dithiocarbamate, a metal precipitating agent. Dithiocarbamate is 
    also a hazardous constituent that appears on the list of potential UHCs 
    in Sec. 268.48. The dithiocarbamate assists the stabilization of the 
    lead but, after treatment, is present at levels above the UTS in the 
    treatment residuals.
        In both of these cases, the treatment residuals (ash and sludge) 
    demonstrate that the original waste is decharacterized. Under 
    Sec. 268.2(i), the only UHCs that must be treated and that must meet 
    the Universal Treatment Standards (UTS) are those determined to be 
    present above UTS levels in the original waste--either via testing or 
    generator knowledge. Because the treatment process results in non-
    hazardous residuals, the treatment facility is not responsible for 
    additional testing to determine if any different underlying hazardous 
    constituents are added or created during the treatment process itself. 
    Furthermore, only the original UHCs must meet the UTS.
        However, if in either case the treatment residual is also 
    characteristic by having constituents that are not only above the UTS 
    level but also above the TC level, then the residual is a newly-
    generated hazardous waste for LDR purposes. This result is consistent 
    with the definition of generator at Sec. 260.10: ``Generator means any 
    person, by site, whose act or process produces hazardous waste 
    identified or listed in part 261 * * * `` The result is also consistent 
    with the key LDR principle that hazardous wastes must meet LDR 
    treatment standards to minimize threats before the wastes are land 
    disposed. See, e.g., Chemical Waste Management v. EPA, 976 F. 2d 2, 16-
    18 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (treatment must include treatment for both 
    characteristic property and for underlying hazardous constituents). For 
    these reasons, the Agency regards generation of a new characteristic 
    treatment residual as being a new point of generation for LDR purposes. 
    This newly-formed hazardous waste would have to be treated to below the 
    characteristic, and any underlying hazardous constituents would have to 
    be treated to below their UTS levels.1
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1\ This analysis is consistent with the so-called change of 
    treatability group principle first stated at 55 FR at 22661, col. 2 
    (June 1, 1990). That principle states that LDR prohibitions remain 
    attached to the initial waste as long as the waste remains within 
    the same treatability group (normally wastewater or nonwastewater). 
    Thus, if a characteristic wastewater is treated and a non-wastewater 
    sludge is generated from the treatment process, the prohibition for 
    the wastewater does not automatically apply to the sludge. Id. The 
    situation discussed in the text above, however, involves the status 
    for this hypothetical sludge if it itself exhibits a characteristic 
    of hazardous waste. EPA views such a characteristic sludge as being 
    newly generated for LDR purposes.
    
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    [[Page 25412]]
    
        Thus, in the first scenario above regarding a decharacterized waste 
    with lead in the ash, if the lead is present in the ash at or above TC 
    levels (i.e., a new D008 waste has been generated), the lead must be 
    treated to UTS levels. Furthermore, the treater has generated the new 
    hazardous waste for LDR purposes and is responsible for a new 
    determination of UHCs that are present and that require treatment to 
    UTS levels. The same is true in the second example if the 
    dithiocarbamate treatment sludge is characteristic.
        EPA notes further, however, that in determining whether a treatment 
    process has generated a new hazardous waste for LDR purposes, the 
    Agency looks to the entire treatment process, not to each component 
    part. In general, as explained below, the determination of whether a 
    new hazardous waste is generated--i.e., whether a new point of 
    generation for LDR purposes is created--is made at the completion of 
    the treatment process. Thus:
        (i) For residuals that are the end product of a one-step treatment 
    process or the end product of a treatment train, the treater has the 
    obligation to ensure only that the original UHCs meet UTS standards and 
    that the treatment residuals are not themselves characteristic. If a 
    treatment residual in this scenario does not meet the treatment 
    standards for the original characteristic (i.e., when treatment is 
    ineffective or incomplete) and requires further treatment, EPA does not 
    consider the treatment residue to be newly generated for LDR purposes. 
    Such a treatment residue, however, cannot be land disposed until it 
    meets the treatment standard applicable to the original waste. This 
    situation would normally involve re-treating the waste residuals on-
    site. Any UHCs added or created by the treatment process are not 
    required to be treated because there is no new point of generation for 
    LDR purposes. However, as noted above, if the treatment residuals are 
    themselves characteristic due to a new property (for example, the 
    formerly characteristic chromium D007 waste is now characteristic only 
    for D008 lead), then the treater must make a new determination of the 
    UHCs present--either through knowledge or additional testing. This is 
    the same obligation that attaches to any generator of a hazardous 
    waste.
        (ii) For treatment residuals that appear only at intermediate steps 
    of a treatment train, there is no obligation to determine UHCs or to 
    determine whether the residual is itself characteristic. Intermediate-
    step treatment residuals are not newly generated hazardous wastes for 
    LDR purposes. Thus, even when an intermediate treatment residual is 
    sent off-site for further treatment (such as incinerator ash going 
    offsite for stabilization and landfilling), our current regulations at 
    Sec. 268.7(b)(5) require only that the UHCs identified at the LDR point 
    of generation be identified. There is no such requirement for any new 
    UHCs that may be added or created during the preceding steps of the 
    treatment process.
    9. Clarification of Footnote 7 in Preamble
        LDR Phase IV, as mentioned earlier, deals with the status of 
    mineral processing materials under the RCRA definition of solid waste 
    at Sec. 261.2. Footnote seven of the preamble to the LDR Phase IV final 
    rule, as printed in the Federal Register, reads: ``EPA does note the 
    potential anomaly that non-mineral processing secondary materials, at 
    least for the moment, will be regulated in some cases stringently than 
    those generated and reclaimed within the mineral processing industry.'' 
    63 FR at 28583 n. 7. This language reflects a printing error by the 
    Office of Federal Register which erroneously omitted the word ``less'' 
    before the word ``stringently'' in this sentence. The footnote thus 
    should read: ``EPA does note the potential anomaly that non-mineral 
    processing secondary materials, at least for the moment, will be 
    regulated in some cases less stringently than those generated and 
    reclaimed within the mineral processing industry.''
        Of course, as EPA noted elsewhere in the rule, secondary materials 
    within the mineral processing industry will be regulated in other 
    instances less stringently than those from outside the industry (the 
    principal example being characteristic spent materials being 
    reclaimed). The main point, as expressed in the footnote, is that the 
    new rules establish a separate solid waste classification scheme for 
    the mineral processing industry that differs from the generic 
    classification scheme set out in the remainder of Sec. 261.2.
    
    IV. Amendment to the August 31, 1998 Stay for Certain Zinc 
    Micronutrient Fertilizers
    
        On August 31, 1998, EPA issued an administrative stay of the Phase 
    IV rule as it applies to zinc micronutrient fertilizers that are 
    produced from hazardous wastes exhibiting the toxicity characteristic. 
    63 FR 46332. Although EPA clearly stated throughout the rule that the 
    administrative stay applied to ``zinc micronutrient fertilizers,'' the 
    regulatory language codifying the stay mistakenly refers instead to 
    ``zinc-containing fertilizers.'' See 63 FR 46334, to be codified at 40 
    CFR Sec. 268.40(i). There exists a remote possibility that there are 
    fertilizers produced from toxicity characteristic hazardous wastes that 
    do not utilize zinc as a micronutrient but otherwise contain zinc 
    (possibly as a trace element without nutritive value). Since the 
    administrative stay was not meant to apply to such (hypothetical) 
    fertilizers, EPA is amending the regulatory language to cover only zinc 
    micronutrient fertilizers, as intended.
    
    V. Amendments to the September 4, 1998 Emergency Revision of the 
    Treatment Standards for Listed Hazardous Wastes From Carbamate 
    Production
    
        The September 4, 1998 Emergency Revision of the LDR Treatment 
    Standards for Listed Hazardous Wastes from Carbamate Production (63 FR 
    172) adds a paragraph (i) to Sec. 268.40, which inadvertently replaced 
    the existing paragraph (i) added by the Land Disposal Restrictions 
    final rule published on August 31, 1998 (staying LDR metal standards 
    for zinc micronutrient fertilizers). Today's rule redesignates the 
    current paragraph (i) as paragraph (j), and reinserts the paragraph (i) 
    from the August 31, 1998 rule (as additionally amended in this 
    correction notice, see section IV above). The September 4, 1998 rule 
    also inadvertently changes footnotes eight and 11 to the table of 
    treatment standards found in Sec. 268.40. The correct footnotes are 
    reinstated in today's rule.
        A more significant error in the September 4, 1998 Emergency Rule is 
    the removal of footnote six for all constituents listed in the table of 
    Universal Treatment Standards found in Sec. 268.48. In doing so, the 
    rule mistakenly changes the status of certain carbamate constituents, 
    which should not be underlying hazardous constituents until their newly 
    revised treatment standards go into effect on March 4, 1999. By 
    removing the footnote, these carbamate constituents are considered 
    underlying hazardous constituents as of September 4, 1998, the 
    effective date of the Emergency Rule. This was and is not the Agency's 
    intention, and we are therefore reinstating the footnote with the 
    correct date of March 4, 1999.
    
    [[Page 25413]]
    
        The treatment standards for K159 in the Table of Treatment 
    Standards for Hazardous Wastes in Sec. 268.40 are currently incorrect. 
    The standards were and should be those promulgated in the LDR Phase III 
    final rule (61 FR 15566, April 8, 1996). However, those standards were 
    inadvertently and mistakenly revised in a technical correction on 
    February 19, 1997 (62 FR 7502). Today's rule reinstates the correct 
    treatment standards for K159 in the Sec. 268.40 table.
        Finally, today's rule also corrects: (1) the nonwastewater standard 
    for oxamyl, which was listed incorrectly in the entry for P194; and (2) 
    the CAS numbers for acetophenone and triethylamine, which were listed 
    incorrectly in the entries for K156 and U404, respectively.
    
    VI. Amendment to the September 24, 1998 Revision of the Treatment 
    Standards for Spent Potliners From Primary Aluminum Reduction 
    (K088)
    
        On September 24, 1998 EPA promulgated revised LDR treatment 
    standards for waste code K088. The rule changes the nonwastewater 
    standard for arsenic in K088 from 5.0 mg/l TCLP to 26.1 mg/kg total, 
    and also changes the nonwastewater standard for fluoride in K088 from 
    48 mg/l TCLP to NA. The wastewater standard for fluoride is unaffected 
    by the rule. (That standard also is not affected by the court's 
    rationale in Columbia Falls Aluminum Co. v. EPA, 139 F. 3d 914, 922-23 
    (D.C. Cir. 1998) because the standard for fluoride wastewaters does not 
    involve the use of the TCLP.) Unfortunately, the final rule 
    inadvertently omitted fluoride, and its treatment standards, from the 
    entry for K088 in the table of treatment standards in Sec. 268.40. 
    Because of this omission, the change to the nonwastewater standard for 
    fluoride was not codified. Today we are restoring fluoride and its 
    revised standards in the entry for K088 in the Sec. 268.40 table.
    
    VII. Analysis Under Executive Order 12866, Executive Order 12875, 
    Executive Order 12898, Executive Order 13045, Executive Order 
    13084, the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, the Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act, and the Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), this 
    action is not a ``significant regulatory action'' and is therefore not 
    subject to review by the Office of Management and Budget. In addition, 
    this action does not impose any enforceable duty, contain any unfunded 
    mandate, or impose any significant or unique impact on small 
    governments as described in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 
    (Pub. L. 104-4). This rule also does not require prior consultation 
    with State, local, and tribal government officials as specified by 
    Executive Order 12875 (58 FR 58093, October 28, 1993) or Executive 
    Order 13084 (63 FR 27655, May 10, 1998), or involve special 
    consideration of environmental justice related issues as required by 
    Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994). Because this 
    action is not subject to notice-and-comment requirements under the 
    Administrative Procedure Act or any other statute, it is not subject to 
    the regulatory flexibility provisions of the Regulatory Flexibility Act 
    (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.). This rule also is not subject to Executive 
    Order 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) because EPA interprets E.O. 
    13045 as applying only to those regulatory actions that are based on 
    health or safety risks, such that the analysis required under section 
    5-501 of the Order has the potential to influence the regulation. This 
    rule is not subject to E.O. 13045 because it does not establish an 
    environmental standard intended to mitigate health or safety risks. 
    EPA's compliance with these statutes and Executive Orders for the 
    underlying rule is discussed in the May 12, 1997, the May 26, 1998, the 
    August 31, 1998, the September 4, 1998, and the September 24, 1998 
    Federal Register notices.
    
    VIII. Submission to Congress and the General Accounting Office
    
        The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the 
    Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, generally 
    provides that before a rule may take effect, the agency promulgating 
    the rule must submit a rule report, which includes a copy of the rule, 
    to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of the 
    United States. Section 808 allows the issuing agency to make a good 
    cause finding that notice and public procedure is impracticable, 
    unnecessary or contrary to the public interest. This determination must 
    be supported by a brief statement. 5 U.S.C. 808(2). As stated 
    previously, EPA has made such a good cause finding, including the 
    reasons therefor, and established an effective date of May 11, 1999. 
    EPA will submit 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 United States prior to publication of 
    the rule in the Federal Register. This action is not a ``major rule'' 
    as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
    
    IX. Immediate Effective Date
    
        EPA is making this rule effective immediately. The rule adopts 
    corrections which are purely technical in that they correct outright 
    printing errors, or are manifestly inconsistent with the Agency's 
    stated intent. Comment on such changes is unnecessary, within the 
    meaning of 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B). For the same reasons, there is good 
    cause to make the rule effective immediately pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 
    553(d)(3).
    
    List of Subjects
    
    40 CFR Part 261
    
        Environmental protection, Hazardous waste, Recycling, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements.
    
    40 CFR Part 262
    
        Hazardous waste, Labeling, Manifest, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
    40 CFR Part 268
    
        Hazardous waste, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
        Dated: April 20, 1999.
    Timothy Fields, Jr.,
    Acting Assistant Administrator.
    
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, title 40, chapter I of 
    the Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
    
    PART 261--IDENTIFICATION AND LISTING OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
    
    Subpart A--General
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 261 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6905, 6912(a), 6921, 6922, 6924(y), and 
    6938.
    
        2. Section 261.2 is amended by revising paragraph (c)(3), in Table 
    1 in paragraph (c)(4) by revising the reference ``261.4(a)(15)'' in the 
    heading of column 3 to read ``261.4(a)(17)'', and paragraph (e)(1)(iii) 
    is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 261.2  Definition of solid waste.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (3) Reclaimed. Materials noted with a ``*'' in column 3 of Table 1 
    are solid wastes when reclaimed (except as provided under 40 CFR 
    261.4(a)(17)). Materials noted with a ``---'' in column 3 of Table 1 
    are not solid wastes when reclaimed (except as provided under 40 CFR 
    261.4(a)(17)).
    * * * * *
        (e) * * *
        (1) * * *
    
    [[Page 25414]]
    
        (iii) Returned to the original process from which they are 
    generated, without first being reclaimed or land disposed. The material 
    must be returned as a substitute for feedstock materials. In cases 
    where the original process to which the material is returned is a 
    secondary process, the materials must be managed such that there is no 
    placement on the land. In cases where the materials are generated and 
    reclaimed within the primary mineral processing industry, the 
    conditions of the exclusion found at Sec. 261.4(a)(17) apply rather 
    than this paragraph.
        3. Section 261.4 is amended by redesignating the first paragraph 
    (a)(16) as (a)(17), and by revising paragraphs (a)(17) introductory 
    text, (a)(17)(v), and (b)(7)(iii) introductory text and (b)(7)(iii)(A) 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 261.4  Exclusions.
    
        (a) * * *
        (17) Secondary materials (i.e., sludges, by-products, and spent 
    materials as defined in Sec. 261.1) (other than hazardous wastes listed 
    in subpart D of this part) generated within the primary mineral 
    processing industry from which minerals, acids, cyanide, water or other 
    values are recovered by mineral processing or by beneficiation, 
    provided that:
    * * * * *
        (v) The owner or operator provides a notice to the Regional 
    Administrator or State Director, identifying the following information: 
    the types of materials to be recycled; the type and location of the 
    storage units and recycling processes; and the annual quantities 
    expected to be placed in non land-based units. This notification must 
    be updated when there is a change in the type of materials recycled or 
    the location of the recycling process.
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (7) * * *
        (iii) A residue derived from co-processing mineral processing 
    secondary materials with normal beneficiation raw materials or with 
    normal mineral processing raw materials remains excluded under 
    paragraph (b) of this section if the owner or operator:
        (A) Processes at least 50 percent by weight normal beneficiation 
    raw materials or normal mineral processing raw materials; and,
    * * * * *
    
    PART 262--STANDARDS APPLICABLE TO GENERATORS OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
    
        4. The authority citation for part 262 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6906, 6912, 6922-6925, 6937, and 6938.
    
    Subpart C--Pre-Transport Requirements
    
        5. Section 262.34 is amended by revising paragraph (d)(4) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 262.34  Accumulation time.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (4) The generator complies with the requirements of paragraphs 
    (a)(2) and (a)(3) of this section, the requirements of subpart C of 
    part 265, the requirements of 40 CFR 268.7(a)(5); and
    * * * * *
    
    PART 268--LAND DISPOSAL RESTRICTIONS
    
        6. The authority citation for part 268 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6905, 6912(a), 6921, and 6924.
    
    Subpart A--General
    
        7. Section 268.2 is amended by revising paragraphs (h) and (k) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 268.2  Definitions applicable in this part.
    
    * * * * *
        (h) Hazardous debris means debris that contains a hazardous waste 
    listed in subpart D of part 261 of this chapter, or that exhibits a 
    characteristic of hazardous waste identified in subpart C of part 261 
    of this chapter. Any deliberate mixing of prohibited hazardous waste 
    with debris that changes its treatment classification (i.e., from waste 
    to hazardous debris) is not allowed under the dilution prohibition in 
    Sec. 268.3.
    * * * * *
        (k) Soil means unconsolidated earth material composing the 
    superficial geologic strata (material overlying bedrock), consisting of 
    clay, silt, sand, or gravel size particles as classified by the U.S. 
    Natural Resources Conservation Service, or a mixture of such materials 
    with liquids, sludges or solids which is inseparable by simple 
    mechanical removal processes and is made up primarily of soil by volume 
    based on visual inspection. Any deliberate mixing of prohibited 
    hazardous waste with soil that changes its treatment classification 
    (i.e., from waste to contaminated soil) is not allowed under the 
    dilution prohibition in Sec. 268.3.
        8. Section 268.7 is amended by revising entries 1, 3, and 8 to the 
    table entitled ``Generator Paperwork Requirements Table'' in paragraph 
    (a)(4), by revising entry 1 to the table entitled ``Treatment Facility 
    Paperwork Requirements Table'' in paragraph (b)(3)(ii), and by revising 
    paragraph (b)(4)(iv) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 268.7  Testing, tracking, and recordkeeping requirements for 
    generators, treaters, and disposal facilities.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) * * *
        (4) * * *
    
                                         Generator Paperwork Requirements Table
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              Required information                  Sec.              Sec.              Sec.              Sec.
    ---------------------------------------------268.7(a)(2)-------268.7(a)(3)-------268.7(a)(4)-------268.7(a)(9)--
    1. EPA Hazardous Waste Numbers and                                                
     Manifest Number of first shipment......
     
               *              *              *              *              *              *              *
    3. The waste is subject to the LDRs. The                    
     constituents of concern for F001-F005,
     and F039, and underlying hazardous
     constituents in characteristic wastes,
     unless the waste will be treated and
     monitored for all constituents. If all
     constituents will be treated and
     monitored, there is no need to put them
     all on the LDR notice..................
     
    
    [[Page 25415]]
    
     
               *              *              *              *              *              *              *
    8. For contaminated soil subject to LDRs                    
     as provided in Sec.  268.49(a), the
     constituents subject to treatment as
     described in Sec.  268.49(d), and the
     following statement: This contaminated
     soil [does/does not] contain listed
     hazardous waste and [does/does not]
     exhibit a characteristic of hazardous
     waste and [is subject to/complies with
     the soil treatment standards as
     provided by Sec.  268.49(c) or the
     universal treatment standards..........
    9. A certification is needed (see         ................             ................         
     applicable section for exact wording)..
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (3) * * *
        (ii) * * *
    
                 Treatment Facility Paperwork Requirements Table
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                       Required Information                         Sec.
    --------------------------------------------------------------268.7(b)--
    1. EPA Hazardous Waste Numbers and Manifest Number of           
     first shipment..........................................
     
    *              *              *              *              *
                                  *              *
    6. A certification is needed (see applicable section for        
     exact wording)..........................................
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    * * * * *
        (4) * * *
        (iv) For characteristic wastes that are subject to the treatment 
    standards in Sec. 268.40 (other than those expressed as a method of 
    treatment), or Sec. 268.49, and that contain underlying hazardous 
    constituents as defined in Sec. 268.2(i); if these wastes are treated 
    on-site to remove the hazardous characteristic; and are then sent off-
    site for treatment of underlying hazardous constituents, the 
    certification must state the following:
    
        I certify under penalty of law that the waste has been treated 
    in accordance with the requirements of 40 CFR 268.40 or 268.49 to 
    remove the hazardous characteristic. This decharacterized waste 
    contains underlying hazardous constituents that require further 
    treatment to meet treatment standards. I am aware that there are 
    significant penalties for submitting a false certification, 
    including the possibility of fine and imprisonment.
    * * * * *
        9. Section 268.9 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(2) 
    introductory text and (d)(2)(i) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 268.9  Special rules regarding wastes that exhibit a 
    characteristic.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (2) The certification must be signed by an authorized 
    representative and must state the language found in Sec. 268.7(b)(4).
        (i) If treatment removes the characteristic but does not meet 
    standards applicable to underlying hazardous constituents, then the 
    certification found in Sec. 268.7(b)(4)(iv) applies.
    * * * * *
        10. Section 268.40 is amended by redesignating the first paragraph 
    (i) as paragraph (j), by revising paragraph (i), and the table at the 
    end of the section is amended by revising the entries for K088, K156, 
    K159, P194, U404 and U408, and footnotes 8 and 11 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 268.40  Applicability of treatment standards.
    
    * * * * *
        (i) Zinc micronutrient fertilizers that are produced for the 
    general public's use and that are produced from or contain recycled 
    characteristic hazardous wastes (D004-D011) are subject to the 
    applicable treatment standards in Sec. 268.41 contained in the 40 CFR, 
    parts 260 to 299, edition revised as of July 1, 1990.
    * * * * *
    
                                                            Treatment Standards for Hazardous Wastes
                                                                [Note: NA means not applicable.]
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    Regulated hazardous constituent         Wastewaters              Nonwastewaters
                                          Waste description and --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Waste code               treatment/regulatory                                           Concentration in    Concentration in mg/kg 5 unless
                                              subcategory 1           Common name          CAS 2 No.        mg/l 3; or         noted as ``mg/l TCLP''; or
                                                                                                         technology code 4           technology code
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    K088...............................  Spent potliners from    Acenaphthene.........         83-32-9              0.059   3.4
                                          primary aluminum
                                          reduction.
                                           ....................  Anthracene...........        120-12-7              0.059   3.4
                                           ....................  Benz(a)anthracene....         56-55-3              0.059   3.4
                                           ....................  Benzo(a)pyrene.......         50-32-8              0.061   3.4
                                           ....................  Benzo(b)fluoranthene.        205-99-2              0.11    6.8
                                           ....................  Benzo(k)fluoranthene.        207-08-9              0.11    6.8
                                           ....................  Benzo(g,h,i)perylene.        191-24-2              0.0055  1.8
                                           ....................  Chrysene.............        218-01-9              0.059   3.4
                                           ....................  Dibenz(a,h)anthracene         53-70-3              0.055   8.2
                                           ....................  Fluoranthene.........        206-44-0              0.068   3.4
    
    [[Page 25416]]
    
     
                                           ....................  Indeno(1,2,3,-               193-39-5              0.0055  3.4
                                                                  c,d)pyrene.
                                           ....................  Phenanthrene.........         85-01-8              0.059   5.6
                                           ....................  Pyrene...............        129-00-0              0.067   8.2
                                           ....................  Antimony.............       7440-36-0              1.9     1.15 mg/l TCLP
                                           ....................  Arsenic..............       7440-38-2              1.4     26.1 mg/l TCLP
                                           ....................  Barium...............       7440-39-3              1.2     21 mg/l TCLP
                                           ....................  Beryllium............       7440-41-7              0.82    1.22 mg/l TCLP
                                           ....................  Cadmium..............       7440-43-9              0.69    0.11 mg/l TCLP
                                           ....................  Chromium (Total).....       7440-47-3              2.77    0.60 mg/l TCLP
                                           ....................  Lead.................       7439-92-1              0.69    0.75 mg/l TCLP
                                           ....................  Mercury..............       7439-97-6              0.15    0.025 mg/l TCLP
                                           ....................  Nickel...............       7440-02-0              3.98    11 mg/l TCLP
                                           ....................  Selenium.............       7782-49-2              0.82    5.7 mg/l TCLP
                                           ....................  Silver...............       7440-22-4              0.43    0.14 mg/l TCLP
                                           ....................  Cyanide (Total) 7....         57-12-5              1.2     590
                                           ....................  Cyanide (Amenable) 7.         57-12-5              0.86    30
                                           ....................  Fluoride.............      16984-48-8             35       NA
     
                    *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *
    K156...............................  Organic waste           Acetonitrile.........         75-05-8              5.6     1.8
                                          (including heavy
                                          ends, still bottoms,
                                          light ends, spent
                                          solvents, filtrates,
                                          and decantates) from
                                          the production of
                                          carbamates and
                                          carbamoyl oximes.10.
                                           ....................  Acetophenone.........         98-86-2              0.010   9.7
                                           ....................  Aniline..............         62-53-3              0.81    14
                                           ....................  Benomyl..............      17804-35-2              0.056   1.4
                                           ....................  Benzene..............         71-43-2              0.14    10
                                           ....................  Carbaryl.............         63-25-2              0.006   0.14
                                           ....................  Carbenzadim..........      10605-21-7              0.056   1.4
                                           ....................  Carbofuran...........       1563-66-2              0.006   0.14
                                           ....................  Carbosulfan..........      55285-14-8              0.028   1.4
                                           ....................  Chlorobenzene........        108-90-7              0.057   6.0
                                           ....................  Chloroform...........         67-66-3              0.046   6.0
                                           ....................  o-Dichlorobenzene....         95-50-1              0.088   6.0
                                           ....................  Methomyl.............      16752-77-5              0.028   0.14
                                           ....................  Methylene chloride...         75-09-2              0.089   30
                                           ....................  Methyl ethyl ketone..         78-93-3              0.28    36
                                           ....................  Naphthalene..........         91-20-3              0.059   5.6
                                           ....................  Phenol...............        108-95-2              0.039   6.2
                                           ....................  Pyridine.............        110-86-1              0.014   16
                                           ....................  Toluene..............        108-88-3              0.080   10
                                           ....................  Triethylamine........        121-44-8              0.081   1.5
     
                    *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *
    K159...............................  Organics from the       Benzene..............         71-43-2              0.14    10
                                          treatment of
                                          thiocarbamate
                                          wastes.10.
                                           ....................  Butylate.............       2008-41-5              0.042   1.4
                                           ....................  EPTC (Eptam).........        759-94-4              0.042   1.4
                                           ....................  Molinate.............       2212-67-1              0.042   1.4
                                           ....................  Pebulate.............       1114-71-2              0.042   1.4
                                           ....................  Vernolate............       1929-77-7              0.042   1.4
     
                    *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *
    P194...............................  Oxamyl................  Oxamyl...............      23135-22-0              0.056   0.28
     
                    *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *
    U404...............................  Triethylamine.........  Triethylamine........        121-44-8              0.081   1.5
     
                    *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *
    U408...............................  2,4,6-Tribromophenol..  2,4,6-Tribromophenol.        118-79-6              0.035   7.4
     
    
    [[Page 25417]]
    
     
                    *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *                   *
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1 The waste descriptions provided in this table do not replace waste descriptions in 40 CFR 261. Descriptions of Treatment/Regulatory Subcategories are
      provided, as needed, to distinguish between applicability of different standards.
    2 CAS means Chemical Abstract Services. When the waste code and/or regulated constituents are described as a combination of a chemical with its salts
      and/or esters, the CAS number is given for the parent compound only.
    3 Concentration standards for wastewaters are expressed in mg/l and are based on analysis of composite samples.
    4 All treatment standards expressed as a Technology Code or combination of Technology Codes are explained in detail in 40 CFR 268.42 Table 1--Technology
      Codes and Descriptions of Technology-Based Standards.
    5 Except for Metals (EP or TCLP) and Cyanides (Total and Amenable) the nonwastewater treatment standards expressed as a concentration were established,
      in part, based upon incineration in units operated in accordance with the technical requirements of 40 CFR Part 264 Subpart O or Part 265 Subpart O,
      or based upon combustion in fuel substitution units operating in accordance with applicable technical requirements. A facility may comply with these
      treatment standards according to provisions in 40 CFR 268.40(d). All concentration standards for nonwastewaters are based on analysis of grab samples.
    *                 *                 *                 *                 *                 *                 *
    7 Both Cyanides (Total) and Cyanides (Amenable) for nonwastewaters are to be analyzed using Method 9010 or 9012, found in ``Test Methods for Evaluating
      Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods,'' EPA Publication SW-846, as incorporated by reference in 40 CFR 260.11, with a sample size of 10 grams and a
      distillation time of one hour and 15 minutes.
    *                 *                 *                 *                 *                 *                 *
    8 These wastes, when rendered nonhazardous and then subsequently managed in CWA, or CWA-equivalent systems, are not subject to treatment standards. (See
      Sec.  268.1(c)(3) and (4)).
    *                 *                 *                 *                 *                 *                 *
    10 The treatment standard for this waste may be satisfied by either meeting the constituent concentrations in this table or by treating the waste by the
      specified technologies: combustion, as defined by the technology code CMBST at Sec.  268.42 Table 1 of this Part, for nonwastewaters; and,
      biodegradation as defined by the technology code BIODG, carbon adsorption as defined by the technology code CARBN, chemical oxidation as defined by
      the technology code CHOXD, or combustion as defined as technology code CMBST at Sec.  268.42 Table 1 of this Part, for wastewaters.
    11 For these wastes, the definition of CMBST is limited to: (1) combustion units operating under 40 CFR 266, (2) combustion units permitted under 40 CFR
      Part 264, Subpart O, or (3) combustion units operating under 40 CFR 265, Subpart O, which have obtained a determination of equivalent treatment under
      268.42 (b).
    
        11. In Sec. 268.48, the table in paragraph (a) is amended by adding 
    footnote number ``6'' in column one, under the heading Regulated 
    Constituents/Common Name, after the following chemical names: 
    ``Aldicarb sulfone,'' ``Barban,'' ``Bendiocarb,'' ``Benomyl,'' 
    ``Butylate,'' ``Carbaryl,'' ``Carbenzadim,'' ``Carbofuran,'' 
    ``Carbofuran phenol,'' ``Carbosulfan,'' ``m-Cumenyl methylcarbamate,'' 
    ``Dithiocarbamates (total),'' ``EPTC,'' ``Formetanate hydrochloride,'' 
    ``Methiocarb,'' ``Methomyl,'' ``Metolcarb,'' ``Mexacarbate,'' 
    ``Molinate,'' ``Oxamyl,'' ``Pebulate,'' ``Physostigmine,'' 
    ``Physostigmine salicylate,'' ``Promecarb,'' ``Propham,'' ``Propoxur,'' 
    ``Prosulfocarb,'' ``Thiodicarb,'' ``Thiophanate-methyl,'' 
    ``Triallate,'' ``Triethylamine,'' and ``Vernolate;'' and by adding 
    footnote 6 to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 268.48   Universal treatment standards.
    
        (a) * * *
        6. Between August 26, 1998 and March 4, 1999, these constituents 
    are not ``underlying hazardous constituents'' as defined in 
    Sec. 268.2(i) of this part.
        12. Section 268.49 is amended by revising paragraph (c)(3) as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 268.49   Alternative LDR treatment standards for contaminated 
    soil.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (3) Soils that contain nonanalyzable constituents. In addition to 
    the treatment requirements of paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this 
    section, prior to land disposal, the following treatment is required 
    for soils that contain nonanalyzable constituents:
        (A) For soil that contains only analyzable and nonanalyzable 
    organic constituents, treatment of the analyzable organic constituents 
    to the levels specified in paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section; 
    or,
        (B) For soil that contains only nonanalyzable constituents, 
    treatment by the method(s) specified in Sec. 268.42 for the waste 
    contained in the soil.
    
    [FR Doc. 99-11271 Filed 5-10-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
5/11/1999
Published:
05/11/1999
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule; technical correction.
Document Number:
99-11271
Dates:
This rule is effective on May 11, 1999.
Pages:
25408-25417 (10 pages)
Docket Numbers:
EPA # F-98-P3F4-FFFFF, FRL-6335-7
RINs:
2050-AE05: Land Disposal Restrictions--Phase IV: Paperwork Reduction; Treatment Standards for Wood Preserving, Mineral Processing and Characteristic Metal Wastes; Related Mineral Processing Issues
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/2050-AE05/land-disposal-restrictions-phase-iv-paperwork-reduction-treatment-standards-for-wood-preserving-mine
PDF File:
99-11271.pdf
CFR: (12)
40 CFR 268.1(c)(3)
40 CFR 268.2(i)
40 CFR 261.2
40 CFR 261.4
40 CFR 262.34
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