Market conditions, changes in fire codes disrupt operations for TSDFs
Currently, there’s a slowdown in the nation’s capacity to incinerate hazardous waste. A perfect storm of market conditions such as the restructuring of the commercial hazardous waste industry, increases in permit denials, and changes in fire codes have all work together to disrupt the operations of facilities that treat or dispose of hazardous waste.
A new EPA memo written for EPA regional offices and authorized state programs that implement their own hazardous waste programs addresses the backlog of hazardous waste awaiting processing at permitted facilities with incinerators across the country. The memo describes options that are available to facilities that generate or manage hazardous waste, including both hazardous waste generators and permitted treatment, storage, and disposal facilities (TSDFs).
For permitted TSDFs, the memo discusses the use of temporary authorizations and permit modifications to increase storage capacity. For both large and small quantity generators of hazardous waste, the regulations provide the option to request an accumulation time limit extension from EPA or their state. The extensions may be granted to address “unforeseen, temporary, and uncontrollable circumstances” at the discretion of the agency. Individual requests may be granted for a 30-day period. Authorized agencies are in the best position to determine on a case-by-case basis whether further extensions are appropriate. Although federal regulations do not limit the number of extensions, each extension request must meet the criteria laid out in state and federal regulations.