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National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES)

Stormwater Discharges from Industrial Activities

National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES)

Stormwater Discharges from Industrial Activities

2021 Multi-Sector General Permit Minor Modification

Following the issuance of the 2021 MSGP, EPA identified several typographical and similar errors in the permit. On September 29, 2021, EPA signed and issued a minor modification to the 2021 MSGP to incorporate the corrections to the errors identified. The corrections included in the modification improve the readability of the permit and fact sheet for permittees. The modified 2021 MSGP is effective on September 29, 2021.

Eligible discharges available for coverage under the 2021 MSGP are not altered in this modification and coverage remains available to operators of eligible facilities.  Any industrial facility operator that has permit coverage under the 2021 MSGP prior to the final issuance of the modification will automatically remain covered under the permit.

NPDES e-Reporting Tool (NeT)

EPA has improved the security of the NPDES e-Reporting Tool (NeT) to ensure organizations only have access to their permit forms and information. NeT users will now "own" or have access to specific NPDES IDs to prepare or submit: Changes to NOIs, Notices of Terminations (NOTs), or Annual Reports associated with that NPDES ID.

 

Industrial Stormwater Overview

Material handling and storage, equipment maintenance and cleaning, and other activities at industrial facilities are often exposed to the weather. Runoff from rainfall or snowmelt that comes in contact with these activities can pick up pollutants, and transport them directly to a nearby river, lake, or coastal water or indirectly via a storm sewer and degrade water quality.

Federal regulations at 40 CFR 122.26(b)(14)(i)-(xi) require stormwater discharges associated with specific categories of industrial activity to be covered under NPDES permits (unless otherwise excluded). One of the categories—construction sites that disturb five acres or more—is generally permitted separately because of the significant differences between those activities and the others. The 11 categories of regulated industrial activities are:

  • Category One (i): Facilities subject to federal stormwater effluent discharge standards at 40 CFR Parts 405-471
  • Category Two (ii): Heavy manufacturing (e.g., paper mills, chemical plants, petroleum refineries, steel mills and foundries)
  • Category Three (iii): Coal and mineral mining and oil and gas exploration and processing
  • Category Four (iv): Hazardous waste treatment, storage, and disposal facilities
  • Category Five (v): Landfills, land application sites, and open dumps with industrial wastes
  • Category Six (vi): Metal scrapyards, salvage yards, automobile junkyards, and battery reclaimers
  • Category Seven (vii): Steam electric power generating plants
  • Category Eight (viii): Transportation facilities that have vehicle maintenance, equipment cleaning, or airport deicing operations
  • Category Nine (ix): Treatment works treating domestic sewage with a design flow of 1 million gallons a day or more
  • Category Ten (x): Construction sites that disturb 5 acres or more (permitted separately)

Category Eleven (xi): Light manufacturing (e.g., food processing, printing and publishing, electronic and other electrical equipment manufacturing, public warehousing and storage)

EPA has authorized many states to administer the NPDES stormwater permitting program. Most industrial facilities will need to obtain NPDES permit coverage through their state. EPA remains the permitting authority in a few states, most territories, and most Indian country. For industrial facilities located in those areas, permit coverage is available under EPA’s 2021 Multi-Sector General Permit (MSGP).