Coke Ovens: Pushing, Quenching and Battery Stacks: National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
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Rule Summary
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finalized amendments to update and strengthen emission standards for hazardous air pollutants (HAP) such as benzene, mercury, lead and arsenic that are emitted by coke oven facilities.
Coke is used in blast furnaces in the conversion of iron ore to iron, which can be further refined to produce steel. Coke plants produce coke from coal, using coke oven batteries. A battery consists of a group of ovens connected by common walls.
The final amendments will fulfill EPA’s responsibility under the Clean Air Act to periodically review emission standards to reflect developments in pollution control technologies and techniques, and to establish standards for all types of HAP emitted by regulated facilities.
Rule History
08/02/2005 - Final rule; amendments.
01/10/2005 - Partial withdrawal of direct final rule.
10/13/2004 - Direct final rule; amendments.
10/13/2004 - Proposed rule; amendments.
04/22/2003 - Correction.
04/14/2003 - Final rule.
07/03/2001 - Proposed rule.
Additional Resources
Fenceline data for five facilities 2022-2023 (zip)
2016 Section 114 test reports (zip)
2022 Section 114 test reports (zip)
Pre-proposal modeling file - July 6, 2023 (zip) . To view the updated modeling data, please download the zipped MS Access database to your computer and extract the file.
HEM4 Inputs Coke Ovens Final Risk Modeling (zip)
Related Rules
Coke Ovens Batteries: National Emissions Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP)