Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 62C-25.002 - Definitions
Unless the context otherwise requires, the words defined shall have the following meaning when found in Chapters 62C-25 through 62C-30, F.A.C.:
(1) ADMINISTRATOR (OIL AND GAS
ADMINISTRATOR) shall mean the Department's Oil and Gas Program
Administrator.
(2) AGENT shall mean
a professional employee of the Department acting on behalf of the
Department.
(3) BARREL OF OIL shall
mean 42 United States gallons of oil at a temperature of 60 degrees Fahrenheit,
adjusted in accordance with generally accepted industry practices for basic
sediment, water and other impurities.
(4) BLOWOUT shall mean a dangerous and
uncontrolled eruption of oil, gas or other well bore fluids from a
well.
(5) BLOWOUT PREVENTER shall
mean the equipment designed for oil field use and installed at the wellhead to
prevent a blowout.
(6) BOTTOM-HOLE
PRESSURE shall mean the pressure in pounds per square inch at the face of the
producing horizon as determined by means of an industry recognized pressure
recording instrument.
(7) CASING
PRESSURE shall mean the pressure at the surface built up between the casing and
the tubing.
(8) CASINGHEAD GAS
shall mean any gas produced with oil from an oil reservoir (see DRY
GAS).
(9) CIRCULATION shall mean
pumping a fluid down the drill stem and up the annulus to the surface in the
process of rotary rig operations. REVERSE CIRCULATION shall mean pumping a
fluid down the drill stem annulus and up the drill stem to the
surface.
(10) CLASS II WELL shall
mean any well which injects fluids:
(a) Which
are brought to the surface in connection with conventional oil or natural gas
production and may be commingled with waste waters from gas plants which are an
integral part of production operations, unless those waters are classified as a
hazardous waste at the time of injection.
(b) For enhanced recovery of oil or natural
gas.
(c) For storage of
hydrocarbons which are liquid at standard temperature and
pressure.
(11) COMMON
CARRIER shall mean a pipeline, railroad, barge, truck or other transportation
facility offering service for hire to remove oil, gas, and products derived
from any producer to a designated purchaser, as opposed to a transporter who
carries exclusively his own production of oil or gas.
(12) COMMON SOURCE OF SUPPLY shall mean a
common accumulation of oil or gas or both.
(13) COMPLETION DATE shall mean the day,
month, and year that a new well is either plugged and abandoned, or is tested
for oil and gas and determined to be productive or nonproductive, or is tested
as an injection well and is considered to be completed and suitable for
injection use. The Department shall determine the well completion date when the
operator fails to determine and report on the prescribed forms its completion,
temporary abandonment, or abandonment within 30 days after the well has been
drilled to total depth.
(14)
CONDENSATE shall mean the liquid hydrocarbons produced by the condensation of a
vapor or gas, either after it leaves the reservoir or while still in the
reservoir. Condensate is often called DISTILLATE, DRIPS, WHITE OIL,
etc.
(15) CONSERVATION shall mean
conserving, preserving, guarding, or protecting the oil and gas resources of
the State by obtaining the maximum efficiency with minimum waste in the
producing, transporting, processing, refining, treating, and marketing of the
unrenewable oil and gas resources of the State.
(16) CUBIC FOOT OF GAS shall mean that amount
of gaseous hydrocarbons contained in a cubic foot of space at a base
temperature of 60 degrees Fahrenheit and an absolute pressure of 14.65 lbs. per
square inch, which temperature and pressure are referred to as the base
temperature and pressure respectively.
(17) DAY shall mean a period of 24
consecutive hours, from 7:00 a.m. one day to 7:00 a.m. the following
day.
(18) DEPARTMENT shall mean the
State of Florida, Department of Environmental Protection.
(19) DRILLING MUD shall mean the liquid
circulated through the wellbore during rotary drilling and workover operations,
primarily to remove cuttings and prevent blowouts.
(20) DRILLING UNIT shall mean the block of
land surrounding and assigned to a particular well and into which no other like
well may be completed.
(21) DRY GAS
shall mean natural gas obtained from formations that produce gas only, or
natural gas which does not contain the heavier fractions which may easily
condense under normal atmospheric conditions; not casinghead gas.
(22) ENHANCED RECOVERY shall mean the
recovery of additional oil from a reservoir above the oil that could be
produced using only existing reservoir energy. Enhanced recovery is
accomplished by imparting man-made energy to the reservoir, usually by
injecting fluids into the producing zone to maintain reservoir pressure and
displace hydrocarbons, and includes secondary, tertiary, and exotic forms of
recovery.
(23) FLOW LINE shall mean
the infield surface pipe through which produced or pressure maintenance fluids
travel to or from a well and the field processing equipment or
storage.
(24) FRESHWATER shall mean
any surface or ground waters of the State whose total dissolved solids content
is less than 1, 000 milligrams per liter.
(25) GATHERING LINE shall mean the pipe used
in transferring produced fluids from field storage to the point of sale to a
common carrier or other purchaser.
(26) GEOPHYSICAL SEISMIC INFORMATION shall
mean that non-interpreted data defined in subsection
62C-26.007(2),
F.A.C.
(27) HORIZONTAL WELL shall
mean any well with a horizontal or nearly horizontal borehole within the
productive interval.
(28) LEASE
TANK shall mean the tank or other receptacle into which the oil is produced,
either directly from a well or from a well through gas separator, gun barrel or
similar equipment.
(29) LOCATION
shall mean the place where a well is drilled and may, depending upon context,
refer to either the wellbore or to the pad upon which the drilling rig is
assembled.
(30) MONTH and CALENDAR
MONTH shall mean the period or interval of time from 7:00 a.m. on the first day
of any month of the calendar to 7:00 a.m. of the first day of the next
succeeding month of the calendar.
(31) MUD PIT shall mean an earthen pit
utilized to contain mud-laden fluid. Example: Reserve Pit.
(32) NONROUTINE DRILLING UNIT shall mean any
drilling unit composed of unsurveyed land not divided into townships and
sections, composed of irregular townships and sections, or composed of odd
sized lots other than 40, 160, or 640 acres. See Rule
62C-26.004, F.A.C.
(33) NONROUTINE SPACING shall mean that the
required amount of land surrounding an oil or gas well is uncommon in its size,
shape, etc., and does not conform to subsections
62C-26.004(1) through
(4), F.A.C.
(34) OPERATE shall mean to develop a lease
and/or drilling or producing well, produce or transport produced fluids from a
lease, dispose of saltwater via a Class II well, or inject fluids for pressure
maintenance.
(35) OPERATOR shall
mean any duly authorized person who is in charge of the development of a lease
and/or a drilling or producing well.
(36) PRESSURE MAINTENANCE (see enhanced
recovery) shall mean the injection of fluid(s) into a reservoir to maintain
reservoir pressure.
(37) PURCHASER
shall mean any person who directly or indirectly purchases, transports, takes,
or otherwise removes production to his account from a well, lease, or common
source of supply.
(38) RESERVE PIT
(Tank) shall mean a pit (tank) utilized for storage of all excess wellbore and
pad fluids produced during drilling.
(39) RESERVE CIRCULATION (See
CIRCULATION).
(40) ROUTINE DRILLING
UNITS are those units based on U.S. Government surveyed township and range
lines and, for oil wells, are quarter-quarter or quarter sections (depending on
well depth) and for gas wells of any depth, full sections.
(41) ROUTINE LOCATION or WELL shall mean an
oil or gas well whose bottom hole position complies with subsection
62C-26.004(4),
F.A.C. A routine oil well drilled to a depth of less than 7, 000 feet has a
bottom hole position no closer than 460 feet to the nearest drilling unit
boundary while an oil well drilled to a greater depth has a bhp no closer than
920 feet to the nearest drilling unit boundary. A routine gas well of any depth
has a bhp no closer than 1, 360 feet to the nearest drilling unit
boundary.
(42) ROUTINE SPACING
shall mean well spacing based on the U.S. Government Township and Range System
as described in Rule 62C-26.004, F.A.C. Routine
spacings for oil wells are quarter-quarter sections for wells less than 7, 000
feet deep and quarter sections for wells greater than 7, 000 feet deep. Gas
wells, regardless of depth, are assigned 640 acres.
(43) SECONDARY CONTAINMENT FACILITY shall
mean any safety back-up system or structure(s) designed to contain spilled
fluids in the event of an accident. Examples include firewalls, dikes, concrete
platforms, hard packed clay drilling or producing pads or loading racks, drip
pans, curbs, gutters, and drains.
(44) SENSITIVE ENVIRONMENTS shall mean those
areas identified by commenting agencies during the Department's external review
process as especially susceptible to disturbances peculiar to the proposed
activity. Sensitive environments may be related to species specific habitat or
other ecosystems. Some examples are aquatic preserves, live bottom areas, water
conservation areas, endangered or threatened species habitat, wetlands,
etc.
(45) SEPARATOR shall mean an
apparatus for separating oil, gas, water, etc., with relative efficiency as it
is produced.
(46) SHUT IN PRESSURE
shall mean the pressure noted at the wellhead when the well is completely shut
in. Not to be confused with BOTTOM-HOLE PRESSURE.
(47) SPECIFIED MINIMUM YIELD STRENGTH shall
mean the minimum yield strength expressed in pounds per square inch, prescribed
by the specification under which the material is purchased from the
manufacturer.
(48) SUBMERGED LANDS
shall mean those lands overlain by the Gulf of Mexico, the Atlantic Ocean, the
bays and estuaries, and all inland rivers, streams, and lakes within the
territorial limits of the State.
(49) SURGE PRESSURE shall mean pressure
produced by a change in velocity of the moving stream that results from
shutting down a pump station or pumping unit, closure of a valve, or any other
blockage of the moving stream.
(50)
TOXIC GAS (SOUR GAS) shall mean any natural gas containing more than 50 parts
per million of hydrogen sulfide.
(51) TYPE I WELL (or LOCATION) shall mean
either a well which flows without artificial lift and has a gas-oil ratio
greater than 200 cubic feet of gas per barrel of oil or a well whose produced
fluids contain more than 50 parts per million of hydrogen sulfide.
(52) TYPE II WELL (or LOCATION) shall mean a
well or location not classified as a Type I.
(53) TUBINGLESS COMPLETION shall mean any
well equipped with 4.5 inch OD or smaller production casing and which is
produced through the production casing without tubing.
(54) UNDERGROUND SOURCE OF DRINKING WATER
(USDW) shall mean an aquifer or its portion:
(a) Which supplies any public water system,
or
(b) Which contains a sufficient
quantity of ground water to supply a public water system and:
1. Currently supplies drinking water for
human consumption, or
2. Contains
fewer than 10, 000 milligrams per liter total dissolved solids and is not an
exempted aquifer.
(55) WATERS shall include all ground and
surface waters of Florida, both freshwater and saltwater, contained in lakes,
rivers, streams, swamps, marsh basins, wetlands, bays, the Gulf of Mexico, and
the Atlantic Ocean.
(56) WELL
COMPLETION DATE (see COMPLETION DATE).
(57) WELL LOGS shall mean any record obtained
by lowering an instrument into a well and recording some physical, chemical, or
other property of formation fluids and rock matrix. Examples: electric log,
radioactivity log, sonic log, temperature log.
(58) WELL RECORD shall mean Oil & Gas
Form No. 8, as defined in Rules
62C-25.008 and 62C-27.002,
F.A.C., of these rules.
(59) WELL
SITE shall mean the surface location of the well and all attendant facilities
necessary to produce, transport, treat, or store production from the well. Well
site includes access road, drilling pad, reserve pit, flowline, and production
pad, including separating or treating facility and tank battery. See location
and routine location.
(60) WETLANDS
shall mean those lands of the State of Florida which are overlain by water
periodically, seasonally, or permanently.
(61) WORKOVER shall mean an operation
involving a deepening, plug back, repair, cement squeeze, perforation,
hydraulic fracturing, acidizing, or other chemical treatment which is performed
in a production, disposal, or injection well in order to restore, sustain, or
increase production, disposal, or injection rates.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 377.22 FS. Law Implemented 377.19, 377.22(2) FS.
New 11-26-81, Amended 4-12-83, 8-1-83, Formerly 16C-25.02, Amended 6-4-89, 5-12-93, Formerly 16C-25.002, Amended 3-24-96, 4-29-13.
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