NR 220.02(51) (51)Steam electric power generating
NR 220.02(52) (52)Steam supply
NR 220.02(53) (53)Sugar processing
NR 220.02(54) (54)Textile mills
NR 220.02(55) (55)Timber products processing
NR 220.02(56) (56)Transportation industry
NR 220.02(57) (57)Water supply
NR 220.02 History History: Cr. Register, June, 1977, No. 258, eff. 7-1-77; CR 21-063: cr. (13m) Register April 2022 No. 796, eff. 5-1-22.
subch. II of ch. NR 220 Subchapter II — Effluent Limitations Based Upon Federally Promulgated Regulations
NR 220.10 NR 220.10Purpose. The purpose of this subchapter is to provide for the incorporation of effluent limitations into discharge permits required under s. 283.31, Stats., as soon as possible after the promulgation of regulations establishing effluent limitation guidelines.
NR 220.10 History History: Cr. Register, July, 1981, No. 307, eff. 8-1-81; renum. from NR 207.01 and am. Register, September, 1988, No. 393, eff. 10-1-88; CR 17-002: am. Register April 2018 No. 748, eff. 5-1-18.
NR 220.11 NR 220.11Applicability. This subchapter is applicable to discharge permits issued for all categories and classes of point sources listed in s. NR 220.02.
NR 220.11 History History: Cr. Register, July, 1981, No. 307, eff. 8-1-81; am. Register, April, 1983, No. 328, eff. 5-1-83; renum. from NR 207.02 and am. Register, September, 1988, No. 393, eff. 10-1-88.
NR 220.12 NR 220.12Definitions. Terms used in this subchapter are defined in s. NR 205.03. Abbreviations used in this chapter are defined in s. NR 205.04. Other terms for this chapter are defined as follows:
NR 220.12(1) (1)“Effluent Limitation Guidelines” or “ELGs” are federal or state technology based guidelines or standards that are used to establish effluent limitations for industrial categories or classes of dischargers. They include federal guidelines, standards, and limitations that are established under 33 USC 1311, 1314, 1316, 1318, 1342 and 1361 and state promulgated guidelines, standards, and limitations in chs. NR 221 to 297.
NR 220.12(2) (2)“Fundamentally different factors variance” or “FDFV” means a variance or an adjustment to an effluent limitation when data specific to a permittee indicates the presence of factors that are fundamentally different from the factors considered by EPA in development of the effluent limitation guidelines 33 USC 1311 and 1314.
NR 220.12 History History: Cr. Register, July, 1981, No. 307, eff. 8-1-81; renum. from NR 207.03 and am. Register, September, 1988, No. 393, eff. 10-1-88; CR17-002: renum. 220.12 to (intro.) and am., cr. (1), (2) Register April 2018 No. 748, eff. 5-1-18; correction in (1) under s. 13.92 (4) (b) 7., Stats., Register April 2018 No. 748.
NR 220.13 NR 220.13Establishment of limitations based upon federal regulations.
NR 220.13(1)(1)Listed industrial categories. In the event that the EPA promulgates an effluent limitation guideline for a category or class of point sources listed in s. NR 220.02 that is more stringent than the promulgated effluent limitation guideline for that category or class, the department shall include an effluent limitation based on the EPA-promulgated effluent limitation guideline in an issued, reissued, or modified WPDES permit for a point source that belongs to the federal category or class of point sources in accordance with the federally required compliance date.
NR 220.13(2) (2) Industrial categories not specifically listed. In the event that the EPA promulgates an effluent limitation guideline for a category or class of point sources not listed in s. NR 220.02, the department shall include an effluent limitation based on the EPA-promulgated effluent limitation guideline in an issued, reissued, or modified WPDES permit for a point source that belongs to the federal category or class of point sources in accordance with the federally required compliance date.
NR 220.13(3) (3) Less stringent limitations. If a promulgated federal effluent limitation guideline results in an effluent limitation that is less stringent than an existing applicable technology based limitation contained in a WPDES permit, the department may only include the less stringent limitation if the antibacksliding requirements in ch. NR 207 are satisfied.
NR 220.13(4) (4) Compliance. Prior to any permit modification, revocation and reissuance, or reissuance to incorporate a limitation for a toxic substance based on a revised federal effluent guideline promulgated under 33 USC 1317, the permittee shall comply with the federally promulgated guideline by the required compliance date even if the permit has not yet been modified, revoked and reissued, or reissued to include a limitation based on the revised guideline.
NR 220.13 History History: Cr. Register, July, 1981, No. 307, eff. 8-1-81; am. Register, April, 1983, No. 328, eff. 5-1-83; renum. from NR 207.04, Register, September, 1988, No. 393, eff. 10-1-88; CR 17-002: r. and recr. Register April 2018 No. 748, eff. 5-1-18.
NR 220.14 NR 220.14Establishment of effluent guideline limitations in the Wisconsin administrative code. The department shall, as soon as possible after the promulgation of any federal regulations establishing effluent guidelines for certain categories and classes of point sources, adopt appropriate effluent guideline limitations for such point sources in the Wisconsin administrative code.
NR 220.14 History History: Cr. Register, July, 1981, No. 307, eff. 8-1-81; am. Register, April, 1983, No. 328, eff. 5-1-83; renum. from NR 207.05, Register, September, 1988, No. 393, eff. 10-1-88.
NR 220.15 NR 220.15Disposal of pollutants into publicly owned treatment works, land treatment systems, or land application of wastewater.
NR 220.15(1)(1)In this section, “surface waters” means waters of the state, excluding groundwater.
NR 220.15(2) (2)When part of a discharger's process wastewater is not being discharged into surface waters because it is disposed into a POTW, into a land treatment system, or via land application of wastewater, thereby reducing the flow or level of pollutants being discharged into surface waters, applicable effluent standards and limitations for the discharge in a WPDES permit shall be adjusted to reflect the reduced raw waste resulting from such disposal. Effluent limitations and standards in the permit shall be calculated by one of the following methods:
NR 220.15(2)(a) (a) If none of the waste from a particular process is discharged into surface waters, and effluent limitations guidelines provide separate allocation for wastes from that process, all allocations for the process shall be eliminated from calculation of permit effluent limitations or standards.
NR 220.15(2)(b) (b) In all cases other than those described in par. (a), effluent limitations shall be adjusted by multiplying the effluent limitation derived by applying effluent limitation guidelines to the total waste stream by the amount of wastewater flow to be treated and discharged into surface waters, and dividing the result by the total wastewater flow. This method is expressed algebraically as:
Where:
P is the final, adjusted permit effluent limitation,
E is the limitation derived by applying effluent guidelines to the total wastestream,
N is the wastewater flow to be treated and discharged to surface waters, and
T is the total wastewater flow.
NR 220.15(2)(c) (c) In addition to the adjustment in par. (b), effluent limitations and standards may be further adjusted under a fundamentally different factors variance under s. NR 220.20 to make them more or less stringent if discharges to POTWs or land treatment systems change the character or treatability of the pollutants being discharged.
NR 220.15 Note Note: “Land treatment system” is defined in s. NR 214.03 (24). Wells as defined in s. NR 812.05 (1) (b) are not land treatment systems. Disposal of pollutants into wells is prohibited by s. NR 812.05.
NR 220.15(3) (3)Sub. (2) does not apply to the extent that effluent limitations guidelines do any of the following:
NR 220.15(3)(a) (a) Control concentrations of pollutants discharged but not mass.
NR 220.15(3)(b) (b) Specify a different specific technique for adjusting effluent limitations to account for land application or disposal into POTWs.
NR 220.15(4) (4)This section does not alter a permittee's obligation to meet any more stringent limitations or requirements established under other WPDES permit program regulations, including those under chs. NR 204 and 214.
NR 220.15 History History: Cr. Register, July, 1981, No. 307, eff. 8-1-81; am. Register, April, 1983, No. 328, eff. 5-1-83; renum. from NR 207.06 and am. Register, September, 1988, No. 393, eff. 10-1-88; CR 17-002: r. and recr. Register April 2018 No. 748, eff. 5-1-18.
subch. III of ch. NR 220 Subchapter III — Best Professional Judgment Effluent Limitations for Point Sources
NR 220.20 NR 220.20Purpose. The purpose of this subchapter is to provide for the application of effluent limitations in permits for discharges from point sources which are not subject to the effluent limitations in chs. NR 221 to 299 inclusive.
NR 220.20 History History: Cr. Register, June, 1976, No. 246, eff. 7-1-76; renum. from NR 217.01 and am. Register, September, 1988, No. 393, eff. 10-1-88.
NR 220.21 NR 220.21Application of effluent limitations.
NR 220.21(1)(1)The department may specify effluent limitations applicable in permits for the discharge from point sources:
NR 220.21(1)(a) (a) Which do not include the classes or categories of point sources identified in ch. NR 220, subch. I,
NR 220.21(1)(b) (b) Which belong to classes or categories of point sources for which effluent limitations have not been adopted in chs. NR 221 to 297 inclusive, or
NR 220.21(1)(c) (c) Which belong to classes or categories of point sources excluded from, or not specifically included in, the applicability provisions of the effluent limitations of chs. NR 221 to 299 inclusive.
NR 220.21(2) (2)In permits for discharges from point sources identified in sub. (1) effluent limitations shall be those which the department determines are achievable by the application of the best practicable control technology currently available, or, where appropriate, the best available control technology economically achievable.
NR 220.21(3) (3)In making such determinations the department shall in part be guided, where appropriate, by transferable technology identified in guideline development documents, published by the U.S. environmental protection agency pursuant to Public Law 92-500, as best practicable control technology currently available or best available control technology economically achievable and by effluent limitations achievable by such technologies as set forth in chs. NR 221 to 299 inclusive.
NR 220.21 History History: Cr. Register, June, 1976, No. 246, eff. 7-1-76; renum. from NR 217.10 and am. (1) (a), Register, September, 1988, No. 393, eff. 10-1-88; correction in (2) made under s. 13.93 (2m) (b) 4., Stats., Register, September, 1988, No. 393.
subch. IV of ch. NR 220 Subchapter IV — Variances to Effluent Limitation Guidelines
NR 220.30 NR 220.30Purpose. The purpose of this subchapter is to establish the criteria and standards to be used in determining whether effluent limitations alternative to those required by chs. NR 221 to 297 or by federal effluent limitation guidelines should be included in a WPDES permit for a discharger because factors relating to the discharger's facilities, equipment, processes, or other factors related to the discharger are fundamentally different from the factors considered by the department or the EPA in development of the effluent limitation guidelines. This subchapter also provides expedited variance procedures for fundamentally different factors variances and for other variances under 33 USC 1311(c).
NR 220.30 History History: CR 17-002: cr. Register April 2018 No. 748, eff. 5-1-18; correction under s. 13.92 (4) (b) 7., Stats., Register April 2018 No. 748.
NR 220.31 NR 220.31Fundamentally different factors variances.
NR 220.31(1)(1)General. The department may adjust an effluent limitation that is based on a requirement in chs. NR 221 to 297 or based on a federal effluent limitation guideline established under 33 USC 1311 and 1314 on a case-by-case basis to make the limitation more or less stringent for a permittee within an industrial category or subcategory. An FDFV may only be approved for a limitation if data specific to the discharger indicates the presence of factors fundamentally different from those considered by EPA or the department in developing the limitation at issue. Any request for a variance and department approval of a variance shall comply with the requirements in 33 USC 1311(n) and 40 CFR 125 subpart D.
NR 220.31(2) (2) Who may request an FDFV. Any interested person, including the permittee, believing that the factors relating to a discharger' facilities, equipment, processes, or other facilities related to the discharger are fundamentally different from the factors considered during the development of the effluent limitation guidelines may request an FDFV. An FDFV may also be proposed by the department in the draft permit.
NR 220.31(3) (3) FDFV restrictions. A fundamentally different factors variance may not be granted for any new source performance standard and does not apply to the BPT limitations for steam electric power generating, contained in s. NR 290.12 (1). The department may not include an alternative limitation based on a fundamentally different factors variance in a permit unless the EPA has approved the variance under 40 CFR 124.62.
NR 220.31 History History: CR 17-002: cr. Register April 2018 No. 748, eff. 5-1-18; correction in (1) under s. 13.92 (4) (b) 7., Stats., Register April 2018 No. 748.
NR 220.32 NR 220.32Criteria for fundamentally different factors variances.
NR 220.32(1)(1)Approvable FDFV requests. A request for the establishment of effluent limitations under this subchapter may be approved only if all of the following apply:
NR 220.32(1)(a) (a) There is an applicable effluent limitation guideline that applies and specifically controls the pollutant for which alternative effluent limitations or standards have been requested.
NR 220.32(1)(b) (b) Factors relating to the discharge controlled by the permit are fundamentally different, as specified in sub. (4), from those considered by EPA or the department in establishing effluent limitation guidelines.
NR 220.32(1)(c) (c) The request for alternative effluent limitations or standards is made as part of the permit application.
NR 220.32(2) (2) Less stringent FDFV limitations. A request for the establishment of effluent limitations less stringent than those required by effluent limitation guidelines shall be approved only if all of the following apply:
NR 220.32(2)(a) (a) The alternative effluent limitation or standard requested is no less stringent than justified by the fundamental difference.
NR 220.32(2)(b) (b) The alternative effluent limitation or standard will be consistent with any applicable areawide waste treatment management plan under ch. NR 121 and with any more stringent limitations.
NR 220.32(2)(c) (c) Compliance with the effluent limitation guidelines, either by using the technologies upon which the effluent limitation guidelines are based or by other control alternatives, would result in any of the following:
NR 220.32(2)(c)1. 1. A cost wholly out of proportion to the removal cost considered during development of the effluent limitation guidelines.
NR 220.32(2)(c)2. 2. A non-water quality environmental impact, including energy requirements, fundamentally more adverse than the impact considered during development of the effluent limitation guidelines.
NR 220.32(3) (3) More stringent FDFV limitations. A request for an alternative limitation that is more stringent than required by effluent limitation guidelines shall be approved only if all of the following apply:
NR 220.32(3)(a) (a) The alternative effluent limitation or standard requested is no more stringent than justified by the fundamental difference.
NR 220.32(3)(b) (b) Compliance with the alternative effluent limitation or standard would not result in any of the following:
NR 220.32(3)(b)1. 1. A removal cost wholly out of proportion to the removal cost considered during development of the effluent limitation guidelines.
NR 220.32(3)(b)2. 2. A non-water quality environmental impact, including energy requirements, fundamentally more adverse than the impact considered during development of the effluent limitations.
NR 220.32(4) (4) Fundamentally different factors. Factors that may be considered fundamentally different are limited to any of the following:
NR 220.32(4)(a) (a) The nature or quality of pollutants contained in the raw waste load of the applicant's process wastewater.
NR 220.32(4)(b) (b) The volume of the discharger's process wastewater and effluent discharged.
NR 220.32(4)(c) (c) Non-water quality environmental impact of control and treatment of the discharger's raw waste load.
NR 220.32(4)(d) (d) Energy requirements of the application of control and treatment technology.
NR 220.32(4)(e) (e) Age, size, land availability, and configuration as they relate to the discharger's raw waste load.
NR 220.32(4)(f) (f) Cost of compliance with required control technology.
NR 220.32(5) (5) Unapprovable FDFV requests. A variance request or portion of such a request under this section may not be granted on any of the following grounds:
NR 220.32(5)(a) (a) The infeasibility of installing the required waste treatment equipment within the time specified in the effluent limitation guidelines or standards or Clean Water Act.
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Published under s. 35.93, Stats. Updated on the first day of each month. Entire code is always current. The Register date on each page is the date the chapter was last published.