EPA Extends Tune-up Deadline for Area-Source Boilers

March 26, 2012
For the time being, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will not pursue enforcement action against facilities that missed the March 21, 2012, deadline to conduct a boiler tune-up as required by the Boiler Area Source Rule.

For the time being, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will not pursue enforcement action against facilities that missed the March 21, 2012, deadline to conduct a boiler tune-up as required by the Boiler Area Source Rule.

A no-action-assurance letter issued March 13 will remain in effect until Oct. 1, 2012, or the effective date of a final rule, whichever comes first.

The tune-up requires stack testing to measure carbon monoxide and oxygen. Many operators of older boilers told the EPA their facilities would have to undergo alterations, such as the installation of a sampling port or platform, for such testing to be conducted and that more time was needed. Additionally, many said their older boilers would have to be repaired to meet the requirement that combustion be optimized consistent with manufacturer specifications.

Units subject to the tune-up requirement include existing coal units with heat-input capacity of less than 10 million Btuh and existing biomass and oil units.

“Even though the EPA has extended the tune-up deadline for area-source boilers, we strongly recommend that these facilities take the necessary steps to meet this and other compliance requirements set forth in the rule,” Welch Goggins, president and chief executive officer of Cleaver-Brooks Inc., provider of boiler-room products and systems, said.

For more information about Boiler Area Source Rule requirements, go to www.cleaver brooks.com/epa.

About the Author

Scott Arnold | Executive Editor

Described by a colleague as "a cyborg ... requir(ing) virtually no sleep, no time off, and bland nourishment that can be consumed while at his desk" who was sent "back from the future not to terminate anyone, but with the prime directive 'to edit dry technical copy' in order to save the world at a later date," Scott Arnold joined the editorial staff of HPAC Engineering in 1999. Prior to that, he worked as an editor for daily newspapers and a specialty-publications company. He has a bachelor's degree in journalism from Kent State University.