| EPA rules EPA adopted three primary rules for operating
used oil-fired heating systems: burn only used oil generated on-site
or collected from do-it-yourself generators: furnace or boiler must
be vented to ambient air; and furnace or boiler capacity cannot exceed
500.000 Btu.
These simple rules have been adopted by most states and similar guidelines
are in place in some Canadian provinces. EPA reaffirmed its rules
in 1992.
A study by the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources determined that
"emissions from these waste oil furnaces were reasonably able
to demonstrate compliance with ambient standards — (and) the
on-site management of used oils for energy recovery reduces the potential
for other environmental impact caused by spills, improper disposal,
and vehicle emissions generated during transport of the used oil off-site."
In 1996. Texas announced new regulations for authorizing burning
used oil as a fuel without the need for a permit, after finding that
"a significant opportunity for recycling used oil is to use it
for fuel for heating purposes."
Most recently. New Jersey is evaluating the need to require air permits.
The New Jersey Bureau of Air Quality concluded in a 1996 memo, "Taking
into account the fact that these risks are about the same as burning
standard fuel oil and the fact that allowing combustion of used automotive
oils in space heating may reduce the amount of crankcase oil that
is poured down storm drains, this risk appears to be insignificant."
The most recent findings support UOMA's 15-year effort to advocate
the on-site recycling of used oil for energy recovery as a safe, efficient,
, economical and environmentally responsible method of managing used
oil. |