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1. General.
2. Air Pollution Control Facilities. 3. Water Pollution Control Facilities. 4. Multiple-purpose facilities.
5. Facilities serving both old and new plants.
6. State certification.
7. Dispersal of pollutants.
8. Profit-making facilities.
9. Multiple applications. 1. General. Section 2112 of the Tax Reform Act of 1976 (Pub. L.
94-455, October 4, 1976) amended section 169 of the Internal Revenue Code of
1954, "Amortization of Pollution Control Facilities." The amendment made
permanent the rapid amortization provisions of section 704 of the Tax Reform Act
of 1969 (Pub. L. 91-172, December 30, 1969) and redefined eligibility limits to
allow certification of facilities which prevent the creation or emission of
pollutants.
The law defines a certified pollution control facility as a new
identifiable treatment facility which is:
(a) Used in connection with a plant or other property in operation before
January 1, 1976, to abate or control air or water pollution by removing,
altering, disposing of, storing, or preventing the creation or emission of
pollutants, contaminants, wastes, or heat;
(b) Constructed, reconstructed, erected or (if purchased) first placed in
service by the taxpayer after December 31, 1975;
(c) Not to significantly increase the output or capacity, extend the
useful life, alter the nature of the manufacturing or production process or
facility or reduce the total operating costs of the operating unit of the plant
or other property most directly associated with the pollution control facility
(as suggested by the legislative history, EPA regulations define the term
significant as any increase, reduction or extension greater than 5%); and
(d) Certified by both State and Federal authorities, as provided in section
169(d)(1) (A) and (B) of the Internal Revenue Code.
If the facility is a building, the statute requires that it be exclusively
devoted to pollution control. Most questions as to whether a facility is a
building and, if so, whether it is exclusively devoted to
pollution control are resolved by §1.169-2(b)(2) of the Treasury Department
regulations.
Since a treatment facility is eligible only if it furthers the general
policies of the United States under the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act, a
facility will be certified only if its purpose is to improve the quality of the
air or water outside the plant. Facilities to protect the health or safety of
employees inside the plant are not eligible.
Facilities installed before January 1, 1976, in plants placed in operation
after December 31, 1968, are ineligible for certification under the statute. 26
U.S.C. 169.
2. Air pollution control facilities.
a. Pollution control or treatment facilities normally eligible for
certification. The following devices are illustrative of facilities for
removal, alteration, disposal, storage or preventing the creation or emission of
air pollution:
(1) Inertial separators (cyclones, etc.).
(2) Wet collection devices (scrubbers).
(3) Electrostatic precipitators.
(4) Cloth filter collectors (baghouses).
(5) Director fired afterburners.
(6) Catalytic afterburners.
(7) Gas absorption equipment.
(8) Vapor condensers.
(9) Vapor recovery systems.
(10) Floating roofs for storage tanks.
(11) Fuel cleaning equipment.
(12) Combinations of the above.
(b) Air Pollution control facility boundaries. Most facilities are
systems consisting of several parts. A facility need not start at the point
where the gaseous effluent leaves the last unit of the processing equipment, nor
will it always extend to the point where the effluent is emitted to the
atmosphere or existing stack, breeching, ductwork or vent. It includes all the
auxiliary equipment used to operate the control system, such as fans, blowers,
ductwork, valves, dampers and electrical equipment. It also includes all
equipment used to handle, store, transport or dispose of the collected
pollutants.
(c) Examples of eligibility limits. The amortization deduction is
limited to new identifiable treatment facilities which remove, alter, destroy,
dispose of, store, or prevent the creation or emission of pollutants,
contaminants or wastes. It is not available for all expenditures for air
pollution control and is limited to devices which are installed for the purpose
of pollution control and which actually remove, alter, destroy, dispose of,
store or prevent the creation or emission of pollutants by removing potential
pollutants at any stage of the production process.
(1) Boiler modifications or replacements. Modifications of boilers to
accommodate cleaner fuels are not eligible for rapid amortization: e.g.,
removal of stokers from a coal-fired boiler and the addition of gas or oil
burners. The purpose of the burners is to produce heat, and they are not
identifiable as treatment facilities nor do they prevent the creation or
emission of pollutants by removing potential pollutants. A new gas or oil-fired
boiler that replaces a coal-fired boiler would also be ineligible for
certification.
(2) Fuel processing. Eligible air pollution control facilities include
preprocessing equipment which removes potential air pollutants from fuels before
they are burned. A desulfurization facility would thus be eligible provided it
is used in connection with the plant where the desulfurized coal will be burned
or is used as a centralized facility for one or more plants. However, fluidized
bed facilities would generally not be eligible for rapid amortization. Such
facilities would almost certainly increase output or capacity, reduce total
operating costs, or extend the useful life of the plant or other property by
more than 5%, since the boiler itself would be the operating unit of the plant
most closely associated with the pollution control facility. Where the Regional
Office and the taxpayer disagree as to the applicability of the 5% rule, the
Regional office should nonetheless certify the facility if it is otherwise
eligible and leave the ultimate determination to the Treasury Department. The
certification should alert Treasury to the possibility that the facility is
ineligible for rapid amortization.
(3) Incinerators. The addition of an afterburner, secondary combustion
chamber or particulate collector would be eligible as would any device added to
effect more efficient combustion.
(4) Collection devices used to collect products or process material.
In some manufacturing operations, devices are used to collect product or process
material, as in the case of the manufacture of carbon black. The baghouse would
be eligible for certification, but the certification should notify the Treasury
Department of the profitable waste recovery involved. (See paragraph 8 below.)
(5) Intermittent control systems. Measuring devices which inform the
taxpayer that ambient air quality standards are being exceeded are not eligible
for certification since they do not physically remove, alter, destroy, dispose
of, store or prevent the creation or emission of pollutants, but merely act as a
signal to curtail operations. Of course, measuring devices used in connection
with an eligible pollution control facility would be eligible.
d. Replacement of manufacturing process by another, nonpolluting
process. An installation does not qualify for certification where it uses a
process known to be cleaner than an alternative, but which does not
actually remove, alter, destroy, dispose of, store or prevent the creation or
emission of pollutants by removing potential pollutants at any stage in the
production process. For example, a minimally polluting electric induction
furnace to melt cast iron which replaces, or is installed instead of, a heavily
polluting iron cupola furnace would be ineligible for this reason and because it
is not an identifiable treatment facility. However, if the replacement equipment
has an air pollution control device added to it, the control device would be
eligible even though the process equipment would not. For example, where a
primary copper smelting reverberatory furnace is replaced by a flash smelting
furnace, followed by the installation of a contact sulfuric acid plant, the acid
plant would qualify since it is a control device not necessary to the production
process. The flash smelting furnace would not qualify because its purpose is to
produce copper matte.
3. Water Pollution Control Facilities.
a. Pollution control or treatment facilities normally eligible for
certification. The following types of equipment are illustrative of
facilities to remove, alter, destroy, store or prevent the creation of water
pollution:
(1) Pretreatment facilities which neutralize or stabilize industrial or
sanitary wastes, or both, from a point immediately preceding the point of such
treatment to the point of disposal to, and acceptance by, a publicly-owned
treatment works. The necessary pumping and transmitting facilities are also
eligible.
(2) Treatment facilities which neutralize or stabilize industrial or sanitary
wastes, or both, to comply with Federal, State or local effluent or water
quality standards, from a point immediately preceding the point of such
treatment to the point of disposal, including necessary pumping and transmitting
facilities, including those for recycle or segregation of wastewater.
(3) Ancillary devices and facilities such as lagoons, ponds and structures
for storage, recycle, segregation or treatment, or any combination of these, of
wastewaters or wastes from a plant or other property.
(4) Devices, equipment or facilities constructed or installed for the primary
purpose of recovering a by-product of the operation (saleable or otherwise)
previously lost either to the atmosphere or to the waste effluent. Examples are:
(A) A facility to concentrate and recover vaporous by-products from a process
stream for reuse as raw feedstock or for resale, unless the estimated profits
from resale exceed the cost of the facility (see paragraph 8 below).
(B) A facility to concentrate or remove gunk or similar tars or
polymerized tar-like materials from the process waste effluent previously
discharged in the plant effluents. Removal may occur at any stage of the
production process.
(C) A device used to extract or remove insoluble constitutents from a solid
or liquid by use of a selective solvent; an open or closed tank or vessel in
which such extraction or removal occurs; a diffusion battery of tanks or vessels
for countercurrent decantation, extraction, or leaching, etc.
(D) A skimmer or similar device for removing grease, oils and fat-like
materials from the process or effluent stream.
(b) Examples of eligibility limits.
(1) In-plant process changes which may result in the reduction or elimination
of pollution but which do not themselves remove, alter, destroy, dispose of,
store or prevent the creation of pollutants by removing potential pollutants at
some point in the process stream are not eligible for certification.
(2) A device, piece of equipment or facility is not eligible if it is
associated with or included in a stream for subsurface injection of untreated or
inadequately treated industrial or sanitary waste.
4. Multiple-purpose facilities. A facility can qualify for rapid
amortization if it serves a function other than the abatement of pollution
(unless it is a building). Otherwise, the effect might be to discourage
installation of sensible pollution abatement facilities in favor of less
efficient single-function facilities.
The regulations require applicants to state what percentage of the cost of a
facility is properly allocable to its abatement function and to justify the
allocation. The Regional Office will review these allocations, and the
certification will inform the Treasury Department if the allocation appears to
be incorrect. Although not generally necessary or desireable, site inspections
may be appropriate in cases involving large sums of money or unusual types of
equipment.
5. Facilities serving both old and new plants. The statute provides
that pollution control facilities must be used in connection with a plant or
other property in operation before January 1, 1976. When a facility is used in
connection with both pre-1976 and newer property, it may qualify for rapid
amortization to the extent it is used in connection with pre-1976 property.
Again, the applicant will submit a theory of allocation for review by the
Regional Office. The usual method of allocation is to compare the effluent
capacity of the pre-1976 plant to the treatment capacity of the control
facility. For example, if the old plant has a capacity of 80 units of effluent
(but an average output of 60 units), the new plant has a capacity of 40 units
(but an average output of 20 units), and the control facility has a capacity of
150 units, then If a taxpayer presents a seemingly reasonable method of allocation different
from the foregoing, Regional Office personnel should consult with the Office of
Air Quality Planning and Standards or the Office of Water Planning and
Standards, and with the Office of General Counsel.
6. State certification. To qualify for rapid amortization under
section 169, a facility must first be certified by the State as having been
installed "in conformity with the State program or requirements for abatement or
control of water or atmospheric pollution or contamination." Significantly, the
statute does not say that the State must require that a facility be installed.
If use of a facility will not actually contravene a State requirement, the State
may certify. However, since State certification is a prerequisite to EPA
certification, EPA may not certify if the State has denied certification for
whatever reason.
It should be noted that certification of a facility does not constitute the
personal warranty of the certifying official that the conditions of the statute
have been met. EPA certification is binding on the Government only to the extent
the submitted facts are accurate and complete.
7. Dispersal of pollutants. Section 169 applies to facilities which
remove, alter, destroy, dispose of, store or prevent the creation or emission of
pollutants -- including heat. Facilities which merely disperse pollutants (such
as tall stacks) do not qualify. However, there is no way to dispose of
heat other than by transferring B.t.u.'s to the environment. A cooling tower is
therefore eligible for certification provided it is used in connection with a
pre-1976 plant. A cooling pond or an addition to an outfall structure which
results in a decrease in the amount by which the temperature of the receiving
water is raised and which meets applicable State standards is likewise eligible.
8. Profit-making facilities. The statute denies rapid amortization
where the cost of pollution control facilities will be recovered from profits
derived through the recovery or wastes or otherwise.
If a facility recovers marketable wastes, estimated profits on which are not
sufficient to recover the entire cost of the facility, the amortization basis of
the facility will be reduced in accordance with Treasury Department regulations.
The responsibility of the Regional Offices is merely to identify for the
Treasury Department those cases in which estimated profits will arise. The
Treasury Department will determine the amount of such profits and the extent to
which they can be expected to result in cost recovery, but the EPA certification
should inform the Treasury whether cost recovery is possible.
The phrase or otherwise also includes situations where the taxpayer is
in the business of renting the facility for a fee or charging for the treatment
of waste. In such cases, the facility may theoretically qualify for EPA
certification. The decision as to the extent of its profitability is for the
Treasury Department. Situations may also arise where use of a facility is
furnished at no additional charge to a number of users, or to the public, as
part of a package of other services. In such cases, no profits will be deemed to
arise from operation of the facility unless the other services included in the
package are merely ancillary to use of the facility. Of course, the cost
recovery provision does not apply where a taxpayer merely recovers the cost of a
facility through general revenues; otherwise no profitable firm would ever be
eligible for rapid amortization.
It should be noted that §20.9 of the EPA regulation is not meant to affect
general principles of Federal income tax law. An individual other than the title
holder of a piece of property may be entitled to take depreciation deductions on
it if the arrangements by which such individual has use of the property may, for
all practical purposes, be viewed as a purchase. In any such case, the facility
could qualify for full rapid amortization, notwithstanding the fact that the
title holder charges a separate fee for the use of the facility, so long as the
taxpayer -- in such a case, the user -- does not charge a separate fee for use
of the facility.
9. Multiple applications. Under EPA regulations, a multiple
application may be submitted by a taxpayer who applies for certification of
substantially identical pollution abatement facilities used in connection with
substantially identical properties. It is not contemplated that the multiple
application option will be used with respect to facilities in different States,
since each such facility would require a separate application for certification
to the State involved. EPA regulations also permit an applicant to incorporate
by reference in an application material contained in an application previously
filed. The purpose of this provision is to avoid the burden of furnishing
detailed information (which may in some cases include portions of catalogs or
process flow diagrams) which the certifying official has previously received.
Accordingly, material filed with a Regional Office of EPA may be incorporated by
reference only in an application subsequently filed with the same Regional
Office.
[47 FR 38319, Aug. 31, 1982]