A. For the purposes of this section:
"Carrying cost" means the cost associated with financing expenditures incurred but not yet recovered from the electric utility's customers and shall be calculated by applying the electric utility's weighted average cost of debt and equity capital, as determined by the State Corporation Commission, with no additional margin or profit, to any unrecovered balances.
"CCR landfill" means an area of land or an excavation that receives CCR and is not a surface impoundment, underground injection well, salt dome formation, salt bed formation, underground or surface coal mine, or cave and that is owned or operated by an electric utility.
"CCR surface impoundment" means a natural topographic depression, man-made excavation, or diked area that (i) is designed to hold an accumulation of CCR and liquids; (ii) treats, stores, or disposes of CCR; and (iii) is owned or operated by an electric utility.
"CCR unit" means any CCR landfill, CCR surface impoundment, lateral expansion of a CCR unit, or combination of two or more such units that is owned by an electric utility. Notwithstanding the provisions of 40 C.F.R. Part 257, "CCR unit" also includes any CCR below the unit boundary of the CCR landfill or CCR surface impoundment.
"Coal combustion residuals" or "CCR" means fly ash, bottom ash, boiler slag, and flue gas desulfurization materials generated from burning coal for the purpose of generating electricity by an electric utility.
"Commission" means the State Corporation Commission.
"Encapsulated beneficial use" means a beneficial use of CCR that binds the CCR into a solid matrix and minimizes its mobilization into the surrounding environment.
The definitions in this subsection shall be interpreted in a manner consistent with 40 C.F.R. Part 257, except as expressly provided in this section.
B. The owner or operator of any CCR unit located in Giles County or Russell County at the Glen Lyn Plant and the Clinch River Plant shall, if all CCR units at such plant ceased receiving CCR and submitted notification of completion of a final cap to the Department prior to January 1, 2019, complete post-closure care and any required corrective action of such unit. If all CCR units at such plant have not submitted notification of completion of a final cap to the Department prior to January 1, 2019, the owner or operator shall close all CCR units at such plant by (i) removing all of the CCR in accordance with applicable standards established by Virginia Solid Waste Management Regulations (9VAC20-81) and (ii) either (a) beneficially reusing all such CCR in a recycling process for encapsulated beneficial use or (b) disposing of the CCR in a permitted landfill on the property upon which the CCR unit is located, adjacent to the property upon which the CCR unit is located, or off of the property on which the CCR unit is located, that includes, at a minimum, a composite liner and leachate collection system that meets or exceeds the federal Criteria for Municipal Solid Waste Landfills pursuant to 40 C.F.R. Part 258. The owner or operator shall beneficially reuse CCR removed from its CCR unit if beneficial use of such removed CCR is anticipated to reduce costs incurred under this section.
C. The owner or operator shall complete the closure of any such CCR unit required by this section no later than 15 years after initiating the excavation process at that CCR unit. During the closure process, the owner or operator shall, at its expense, offer to provide a connection to a municipal water supply, or where such connection is not feasible provide water testing, for any residence within one-half mile of the CCR unit.
D. Where closure pursuant to this section requires that CCR that has been beneficially reused be removed off-site, the owner or operator shall develop a transportation plan in consultation with any county, city, or town in which the CCR units are located and any county, city, or town within two miles of the CCR units that minimizes the impact of any transport of CCR on adjacent property owners and surrounding communities. The transportation plan shall include (i) alternative transportation options to be utilized, including rail and barge transport, if feasible, in combination with other transportation methods necessary to meet the closure timeframe established in subsection C and (ii) plans for any transportation by truck, including the frequency of truck travel, the route of truck travel, and measures to control noise, traffic impact, safety, and fugitive dust caused by such truck travel. Once such transportation plan is completed, the owner or operator shall post it on a publicly accessible website. The owner or operator shall provide notice of the availability of the plan to the Department and the chief administrative officers of the consulting localities and shall publish such notice once in a newspaper of general circulation in such locality.
E. The owner or operator of any CCR unit subject to the provisions of subsection B shall accept and review proposals for the encapsulated beneficial use of CCR pursuant to the provisions of subsection B every four years beginning July 1, 2023. Any entity submitting such a proposal shall provide information from which the owner or operator can determine (i) the amount of CCR that will be utilized for encapsulated beneficial use; (ii) the cost of the proposed beneficial use of such CCR; and (iii) the guaranteed timeframe in which the CCR will be utilized.
F. In conducting closure activities described in subsection B, the owner or operator shall (i) identify options for utilizing local workers; (ii) consult with the Commonwealth's Chief Workforce Development Officer on opportunities to advance the Commonwealth's workforce goals, including furtherance of apprenticeship and other workforce training programs to develop the local workforce; and (iii) give priority to the hiring of local workers.
G. No later than October 1, 2023, and no less frequently than every two years thereafter until closure of or corrective action at all of its CCR units is complete, the owner or operator of any CCR unit subject to the provisions of subsection B shall compile the following two reports:
1. A report describing the owner's or operator's closure plan for all such CCR units; the closure progress to date, both per unit and in total; a detailed accounting of the amounts of CCR that have been and are expected to be beneficially reused from such units, both per unit and in total; a detailed accounting of the amounts of CCR that have been and are expected to be landfilled from such units, both per unit and in total; a detailed accounting of the utilization of transportation options and a transportation plan as required by subsection D; and a discussion of groundwater and surface water monitoring results and any corrective actions or other measures taken to address such results as closure is being completed.
2. A report that contains the proposals and analysis for proposals required by subsection E.
The owner or operator shall post each such report on a publicly accessible website and shall submit each such report to the Governor, the Secretary of Natural and Historic Resources, the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Conservation and Natural Resources, the Chairman of the House Committee on Agriculture, Chesapeake and Natural Resources, the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce and Labor, the Chairman of the House Committee on Labor and Commerce, and the Director.
H. All costs associated with closure by removal of a CCR unit or encapsulated beneficial use of CCR material in accordance with subsection B shall be recoverable through a rate adjustment clause authorized by the Commission under the provisions of subdivision A 5 e of § 56-585.1, provided that (i) when determining the reasonableness of such costs the Commission shall not consider closure in place of the CCR unit as an option; (ii) the annual revenue requirement recoverable through a rate adjustment clause authorized under this section, exclusive of any other rate adjustment clauses approved by the Commission under the provisions of subdivision A 5 e of § 56-585.1, shall not exceed $40 million on a Virginia jurisdictional basis for the Commonwealth in any 12-month period, provided that any under-recovery amount of revenue requirements incurred in excess of $40 million in a given 12-month period, limited to the under-recovery amount and the carrying cost, shall be deferred and recovered through the rate adjustment clause over up to three succeeding 12-month periods without regard to this limitation, and with the length of the amortization period being determined by the Commission; (iii) costs may begin accruing on July 1, 2020, but no approved rate adjustment clause charges shall be included in customer bills until July 1, 2022; (iv) any such costs shall be allocated to all customers of the utility in the Commonwealth as a non-bypassable charge, irrespective of the generation supplier of any such customer; and (v) any such costs that are allocated to the utility's system customers outside of the Commonwealth that are not actually recovered from such customers shall be included for cost recovery from jurisdictional customers in the Commonwealth through the rate adjustment clause.
I. Any electric public utility subject to the requirements of this section may, without regard for whether it has petitioned for any rate adjustment clause pursuant to subdivision A 5 e of § 56-585.1, petition the Commission for approval of a plan for CCR unit closure at any or all of its CCR unit sites listed in subsection B. Any such plan shall take into account site-specific conditions and shall include proposals to beneficially reuse CCR from the sites if beneficial use is anticipated to reduce the costs allocated to customers. The Commission shall issue its final order with regard to any such petition within six months of its filing, and in doing so shall determine whether the utility's plan for CCR unit closure, and the projected costs associated therewith, are reasonable and prudent, taking into account that closure in place of any CCR unit is not to be considered as an option. The Commission shall not consider plans that do not comply with subsection B.
J. Nothing in this section shall be construed to require additional beneficial reuse of CCR at any active coal-fired electric generation facility if such additional beneficial reuse results in a net increase in truck traffic on the public roads of the locality in which the facility is located as compared with such traffic during calendar year 2019.
K. The Commonwealth shall not authorize any cost recovery by an owner or operator subject to the provisions of this section for any fines or civil penalties resulting from violations of federal and state law or regulation.
2020, c. 563; 2021, Sp. Sess. I, c. 401.
Structure Code of Virginia
Chapter 14 - Virginia Waste Management Act
§ 10.1-1400.1. Certified mail; subsequent mail or notices may be sent by regular mail
§ 10.1-1401. Virginia Waste Management Board continued
§ 10.1-1402. Powers and duties of the Board
§ 10.1-1402.01. Further duties of Board; localities particularly affected
§ 10.1-1402.02. Use, reuse, or reclamation of coal combustion by-product in a flood plain
§ 10.1-1402.03. Closure of certain coal combustion residuals units
§ 10.1-1402.04. Closure of certain coal combustion residuals units; Giles and Russell Counties
§ 10.1-1402.1. Permit fee regulations
§ 10.1-1402.1:1. Annual fees for nonhazardous solid waste management facilities
§ 10.1-1402.2. Permit Program Fund established; use of moneys
§ 10.1-1402.3. Conformance with federal requirements
§ 10.1-1403. Advisory committees
§ 10.1-1404. Department continued; general powers
§ 10.1-1405. Powers and duties of Director
§ 10.1-1406. Exemptions from liability; expedited settlements
§ 10.1-1406.1. Access to abandoned waste sites
§ 10.1-1406.2. Conditional exemption for coal and mineral mining overburden or solid waste
§ 10.1-1407.1. Notification of local government of violation
§ 10.1-1408.1. Permit required; open dumps prohibited
§ 10.1-1408.2. Certification and on-site presence of facility operator
§ 10.1-1408.4. Landfill siting review
§ 10.1-1408.5. Special provisions regarding wetlands
§ 10.1-1409. Revocation or amendment of permits
§ 10.1-1410. Financial responsibility for abandoned facilities; penalties
§ 10.1-1410.1. Sanitary landfill final closure plans; notification requirements
§ 10.1-1410.2. Landfill postclosure monitoring, maintenance and plans
§ 10.1-1410.3. Operating burn pits at closed landfills
§ 10.1-1411. Regional and local solid waste management plans
§ 10.1-1412. Contracts by counties, cities and towns
§ 10.1-1413. State aid to localities for solid waste disposal
§ 10.1-1413.1. Waste information and assessment program
§ 10.1-1413.2. Requirements for landfill closure
§ 10.1-1415. Litter Control Program
§ 10.1-1415.1. Labeling of plastic container products required; penalty
§ 10.1-1415.2. Plastic holding device prohibited
§ 10.1-1416. Collection and survey of litter
§ 10.1-1417. Enforcement of article
§ 10.1-1418. Penalty for violation of article
§ 10.1-1418.1. Improper disposal of solid waste; civil penalties
§ 10.1-1418.2. Improper disposal of tires; exemption; penalty
§ 10.1-1418.3. Liability for large waste tire pile fires; exclusions
§ 10.1-1418.4. Removal of waste tire piles; cost recovery; right of entry
§ 10.1-1418.5. Lien for waste tire pile removal
§ 10.1-1419. Litter receptacles; placement; penalty for violations
§ 10.1-1421. Responsibility for removal of litter from receptacles
§ 10.1-1422. Further duties of Department
§ 10.1-1422.01. Litter Control and Recycling Fund established; use of moneys; purpose of Fund
§ 10.1-1422.03. Membership, meetings, and staffing
§ 10.1-1422.04. Local litter prevention and recycling grants; eligibility and funding process
§ 10.1-1422.06. Beneficiation facility as manufacturer for grant purposes
§ 10.1-1422.1. Disposal of waste tires
§ 10.1-1422.2. Recycling residues; testing
§ 10.1-1422.3. Waste Tire Trust Fund established; use of moneys; purpose of Fund
§ 10.1-1422.4. Partial reimbursement for waste tires; eligibility; promulgation of regulations
§ 10.1-1423. Notice to public required
§ 10.1-1424. Allowing escape of load material; penalty
§ 10.1-1424.1. Material containing fully halogenated chloro-fluorocarbons prohibited; penalty
§ 10.1-1424.2. Products containing trichloroethylene prohibited; penalty
§ 10.1-1424.3. Expanded polystyrene food service containers prohibited; civil penalty
§ 10.1-1425. Preemption of certain local ordinances
§ 10.1-1425.1. Lead acid batteries; land disposal prohibited; penalty
§ 10.1-1425.2. Collection of lead acid batteries for recycling
§ 10.1-1425.3. Inspection of battery retailers; penalty
§ 10.1-1425.4. Lead acid battery wholesalers; penalty
§ 10.1-1425.5. Construction of article
§ 10.1-1425.6. Recycling programs of state agencies
§ 10.1-1425.7. Duty of the Department of Small Business and Supplier Diversity
§ 10.1-1425.8. Department of Transportation; authority and duty
§ 10.1-1425.9. Duties of the Department of Education
§ 10.1-1425.11. Establishment of pollution prevention policy
§ 10.1-1425.12. Pollution prevention assistance program
§ 10.1-1425.13. Pollution prevention advisory panels
§ 10.1-1425.14. Pilot projects
§ 10.1-1425.15. Waste exchange
§ 10.1-1425.16. Trade secret protection
§ 10.1-1425.17. Evaluation report
§ 10.1-1425.18. Pollution prevention grants
§ 10.1-1425.19. Inspections and enforcement actions by the Department
§ 10.1-1425.20. Findings and intent
§ 10.1-1425.22. Schedule for removal of incidental amounts of heavy metals
§ 10.1-1425.24. Certificate of compliance
§ 10.1-1425.25. Promulgation of regulations
§ 10.1-1425.26. Cathode ray tube and mercury thermostat special waste recycling program
§ 10.1-1425.29. Manufacturer recovery plan
§ 10.1-1425.30. Reporting requirements
§ 10.1-1425.31. Retailer responsibility
§ 10.1-1425.32. Liability for information stored on computers
§ 10.1-1425.33. Department responsibilities
§ 10.1-1425.35. Financial and proprietary information
§ 10.1-1425.36. Fees not authorized
§ 10.1-1425.37. Consumer responsibilities
§ 10.1-1425.38. Sound environmental management
§ 10.1-1425.39. Rechargeable battery recycling and disposal program
§ 10.1-1426. Permits required; waiver of requirements; reports; conditional permits
§ 10.1-1427. Revocation, suspension or amendment of permits
§ 10.1-1428. Financial responsibility for abandoned facilities; penalties
§ 10.1-1429. Notice of release of hazardous substance
§ 10.1-1432. Further powers of Board
§ 10.1-1434. Additional powers and duties of the Board
§ 10.1-1435. Certification of site approval required; "construction" defined; remedies
§ 10.1-1436. Site approval criteria
§ 10.1-1437. Notice of intent to file application for certification of site approval
§ 10.1-1438. Powers of governing body of host community; technical assistance
§ 10.1-1439. Briefing meetings
§ 10.1-1441. Application for certification of site approval
§ 10.1-1442. Negotiations; siting agreement
§ 10.1-1443. Draft certification of site approval
§ 10.1-1444. Public hearing on draft certification of site approval
§ 10.1-1445. Final decision on certification of site approval
§ 10.1-1446. Effect of certification
§ 10.1-1447. Public participation; notice
§ 10.1-1448. Technical Assistance Fund
§ 10.1-1449. Siting Dedicated Revenue Fund
§ 10.1-1450. Waste Management Board to promulgate regulations regarding hazardous materials
§ 10.1-1451. Enforcement of article and regulations
§ 10.1-1452. Article not to preclude exercise of certain regulatory powers
§ 10.1-1454. Transportation under United States regulations
§ 10.1-1454.1. Regulation of wastes transported by water
§ 10.1-1455. Penalties and enforcement
§ 10.1-1456. Right of entry to inspect, etc.; warrants
§ 10.1-1458. Persons to provide plans, specifications, and information