Haw. Code R. § 11-264-193 - Containment and detection of releases
(a) In order to
prevent the release of hazardous waste or hazardous constituents to the
environment, secondary containment that meets the requirements of this section
must be provided (except as provided in subsections (f) and (g)):
(1) For all new tank systems or components,
prior to their being put into service;
(2) For all existing tank systems used to
store or treat EPA Hazardous Waste Nos. F020, F021, F022, F023, F026, and F027,
by the effective date of these rules;
(3) For those existing tank systems of known
and documented age, by the effective date of these rules or when the tank
system has reached 15 years of age, whichever comes later;
(4) For those existing tank systems for which
the age cannot be documented, by January 12, 1995; but if the age of the
facility is greater than seven years, secondary containment must be provided by
the time the facility reaches 15 years of age, or by the effective date of
these rules, whichever comes later;
(5) For those existing tank systems of known
and documented age that store or treat materials that become hazardous wastes
subsequent to the effective date of these rules, within two years after the
date that the material becomes a hazardous waste under RCRA, or by the
effective date of these rules, or when the tank system has reached 15 years of
age, whichever comes later; and
(6)
For those existing tank systems for which the age cannot be documented that
store or treat materials that become hazardous wastes subsequent to the
effective date of these rules, within eight years after the date that the
material becomes a hazardous waste under RCRA, or by the effective date of
these rules, whichever comes later; but if the age of the facility is greater
than seven years, secondary containment must be provided by the time the
facility reaches 15 years of age, or within two years after the date that the
material becomes a hazardous waste under RCRA, or by the effective date of
these rules, whichever comes later.
(b) Secondary containment systems must be:
(1) Designed, installed, and operated to
prevent any migration of wastes or accumulated liquid out of the system to the
soil, ground water, or surface water at any time during the use of the tank
system; and
(2) Capable of
detecting and collecting releases and accumulated liquids until the collected
material is removed.
(c)
To meet the requirements of subsection (b), secondary containment systems must
be at a minimum:
(1) Constructed of or lined
with materials that are compatible with the waste(s) to be placed in the tank
system and must have sufficient strength and thickness to prevent failure owing
to pressure gradients (including static head and external hydrological forces),
physical contact with the waste to which it is exposed, climatic conditions,
and the stress of daily operation (including stresses from nearby vehicular
traffic).
(2) Placed on a
foundation or base capable of providing support to the secondary containment
system, resistance to pressure gradients above and below the system, and
capable of preventing failure due to settlement, compression, or
uplift;
(3) Provided with a
leak-detection system that is designed and operated so that it will detect the
failure of either the primary or secondary containment structure or the
presence of any release of hazardous waste or accumulated liquid in the
secondary containment system within twenty-four hours, or at the earliest
practicable time if the owner or operator can demonstrate to the director that
existing detection technologies or site conditions will not allow detection of
a release within twenty-four hours; and
(4) Sloped or otherwise designed or operated
to drain and remove liquids resulting from leaks, spills, or precipitation.
Spilled or leaked waste and accumulated precipitation must be removed from the
secondary containment system within twenty-four hours, or in as timely a manner
as is possible to prevent harm to human health and the environment, if the
owner or operator can demonstrate to the director that removal of the released
waste or accumulated precipitation cannot be accomplished within twenty-four
hours.
(d) Secondary
containment for tanks must include one or more of the following devices:
(1) A liner (external to the tank);
(2) A vault;
(3) A double-walled tank; or
(4) An equivalent device as approved by the
director
(e) In addition
to the requirements of subsections (b), (c), and (d), secondary containment
systems must satisfy the following requirements:
(1) External liner systems must be:
(i) Designed or operated to contain one
hundred percent of the capacity of the largest tank within its
boundary;
(ii) Designed or operated
to prevent run-on or infiltration of precipitation into the secondary
containment system unless the collection system has sufficient excess capacity
to contain run-on or infiltration. Such additional capacity must be sufficient
to contain precipitation from a twenty-five year, twenty-four hour rainfall
event.
(iii) Free of cracks or
gaps; and
(iv) Designed and
installed to surround the tank completely and to cover all surrounding earth
likely to come into contact with the waste if the waste is released from the
tank(s) (i.e., capable of preventing lateral as well as vertical migration of
the waste).
(2) Vault
systems must be:
(i) Designed or operated to
contain one hundred percent of the capacity of the largest tank within its
boundary;
(ii) Designed or operated
to prevent run-on or infiltration of precipitation into the secondary
containment system unless the collection system has sufficient excess capacity
to contain run-on or infiltration. Such additional capacity must be sufficient
to contain precipitation from a twenty-five year, twenty-four hour rainfall
event:
(iii) Constructed with
chemical-resistant water stops in place at all joints (if any):
(iv) Provided with an impermeable interior
coating or lining that is compatible with the stored waste and that will
prevent migration of waste into the concrete;
(v) Provided with a means to protect against
the formation of and ignition of vapors within the vault, if the waste being
stored or treated:
(A) Meets the definition
of ignitable waste under section 11-262-21; or
(B) Meets the definition of reactive waste
under section 11-262-21, and may form an ignitable or explosive
vapor.
(vi) Provided
with an exterior moisture barrier or be otherwise designed or operated to
prevent migration of moisture into the vault if the vault is subject to
hydraulic pressure.
(3)
Double-walled tanks must be:
(i) Designed as
an integral structure (i.e., an inner tank completely enveloped within an outer
shell) so that any release from the inner tank is contained by the outer
shell.
(ii) Protected, if
constructed of metal, from both corrosion of the primary tank interior and of
the external surface of the outer shell: and
(iii) Provided with a built-in continuous
leak detection system capable of detecting a release within twenty-four hours,
or at the earliest practicable time, if the owner or operator can demonstrate
to the director, and the director concludes, that the existing detection
technology or site conditions would not allow detection of a release within
twenty-four hours.
(f) Ancillary equipment must be provided with
secondary containment (e.g., trench, jacketing, double-walled piping) that
meets the requirements of subsections (b) and (c) except for:
(1) Aboveground piping (exclusive of flanges,
joints, valves, and other connections) that are visually inspected for leaks on
a daily basis;
(2) Welded flanges,
welded joints, and welded connections, that are visually inspected for leaks on
a daily basis;
(3) Sealless or
magnetic coupling pumps and sealless valves, that are visually inspected for
leaks on a daily basis; and
(4)
Pressurized aboveground piping systems with automatic shut-off devices (e.g.,
excess flow check valves, flow metering shutdown devices, loss of pressure
actuated shut-off devices) that are visually inspected for leaks on a daily
basis.
(g) The owner or
operator may obtain a variance from the requirements of this section if the
director finds, as a result of a demonstration by the owner or operator that
alternative design and operating practices, together with location
characteristics, will prevent the migration of any hazardous waste or hazardous
constituents into the ground water; or surface water at least as effectively as
secondary containment during the active life of the tank system or that in the
event of a release that does migrate to ground water or surface water, no
substantial present or potential hazard will be posed to human health or the
environment. New underground tank systems may not, per a demonstration in
accordance with paragraph (g)(2), be exempted from the secondary containment
requirements of this section.
(1) In deciding
whether to grant a variance based on a demonstration of equivalent protection
of ground water and surface water, the director will consider:
(i) The nature and quantity of the
wastes;
(ii) The proposed alternate
design and operation;
(iii) The
hydrogeologic setting of the facility, including the thickness of soils present
between the tank system and ground water, and
(iv) All other factors that would influence
the quality and mobility of the hazardous constituents and the potential for
them to migrate to ground water or surface water
(2) In deciding whether to grant a variance
based on a demonstration of no substantial present or potential hazard, the
director will consider:
(i) The potential
adverse effects on ground water, surface water, and land quality taking into
account:
(A) The physical and chemical
characteristics of the waste in the tank system, including its potential for
migration.
(B) The hydrogeological
characteristics of the facility and surrounding land,
(C) The potential for health risks caused by
human exposure to waste constituents,
(D) The potential for damage to wildlife,
crops, vegetation, and physical structures caused by exposure to waste
constituents, and
(E) The
persistence and permanence of the potential adverse effects;
(ii) The potential adverse effects
of a release on ground-water quality, taking into account:
(A) The quantity and quality of ground water
and the direction of ground-water flow,
(B) The proximity and withdrawal rates of
ground-water users,
(C) The current
and future uses of ground water in the area, and
(D) The existing quality of ground water,
including other sources of contamination and their cumulative impact on the
ground-water quality;
(iii) The potential adverse effects of a
release on surface water quality, taking into account:
(A) The quantity and quality of ground water
and the direction of ground-water flow,
(B) The patterns of rainfall in the
region,
(C) The proximity of the
tank system to surface waters,
(D)
The current and future uses of surface waters in the area and any water quality
standards established for those surface waters, and
(E) The existing quality of surface water,
including other sources of contamination and the cumulative impact on
surface-water quality; and
(iv) The potential adverse effects of a
release on the land surrounding the tank system, taking into account:
(A) The patterns of rainfall in the region,
and
(B) The current and future uses
of the surrounding land.
(3) The owner or operator of a tank system,
for which a variance from secondary containment had been granted in accordance
with the requirements of paragraph (g)(1), at which a release of hazardous
waste has occurred from the primary tank system but has not migrated beyond the
zone of engineering control (as established in the variance), must:
(i) Comply with the requirements of section
11-264-196, except subsection (d), and
(ii) Decontaminate or remove contaminated
soil to the extent necessary to:
(A) Enable
the tank system for which the variance was granted to resume operation with the
capability for the detection of releases at least equivalent to the capability
it had prior to the release; and
(B) Prevent the migration of hazardous waste
or hazardous constituents to ground water or surface water; and
(iii) If contaminated soil cannot
be removed or decontaminated in accordance with paragraph (g)(3)(ii), comply
with the requirement of subsection 11-264-197(b).
(4) The owner or operator of a tank system,
for which a variance from secondary containment had been granted in accordance
with the requirements of paragraph (g)(1), at which a release of hazardous
waste has occurred from the primary tank system and has migrated beyond the
zone of engineering control (as established in the variance), must:
(i) Comply with the requirements of
subsections 11-264-196(a), (b), (c), and (d); and
(ii) Prevent the migration of hazardous waste
or hazardous constituents to ground water or surface water, if possible, and
decontaminate or remove contaminated soil. If contaminated soil cannot be
decontaminated or removed or if ground water has been contaminated, the owner
or operator must comply with the requirements of subsection 11-264-197(b);
and
(iii) If repairing, replacing,
or reinstalling the tank system, provide secondary containment in accordance
with the requirements of subsections (a) through (f) or reapply for a variance
from secondary containment and meet the requirements for new tank systems in
section 11-264-192 if the tank system is replaced. The owner or operator must
comply with these requirements even if contaminated soil can be decontaminated
or removed and ground water or surface water has not been
contaminated.
(h) The following procedures must be followed
in order to request a variance from secondary containment:
(1) The director must be notified in writing
by the owner or operator that he intends to conduct and submit a demonstration
for a variance from secondary containment as allowed in subsection (g)
according to the following schedule:
(i) For
existing tank systems, at least twenty-four months prior to the date that
secondary containment must be provided in accordance with subsection
(a).
(ii) For new tank systems, at
least thirty days prior to entering into a contract for installation.
(2) As part of the notification,
the owner or operator must also submit to the director a description of the
steps necessary to conduct the demonstration and a timetable for completing
each of the steps. The demonstration must address each of the factors listed in
paragraph (g) (1) or paragraph (g) (2);
(3) The demonstration for a variance must be
completed within one-hundred and eighty days after notifying the director of an
intent to conduct the demonstration; and
(4) If a variance is granted under this
subsection, the director will require the permittee to construct and operate
the tank system in the manner that was demonstrated to meet the requirements
for the variance.
(i)
All tank systems, until such time as secondary containment that meets the
requirements of this section is provided, must comply with the following:
(1) For non-enterable underground tanks, a
leak test that meets the requirements of paragraph 11-264-191(b)(5) or other
tank integrity method, as approved or required by the director, must be
conducted at least annually.
(2)
For other than non-enterable underground tanks, the owner or operator must
either conduct a leak test as in paragraph (i)(1) or develop a schedule and
procedure for an assessment of the overall condition of the tank system by an
independent, qualified registered professional engineer. The schedule and
procedure must be adequate to detect obvious cracks, leaks, and corrosion or
erosion that may lead to cracks and leaks. The owner or operator must remove
the stored waste from the tank, if necessary, to allow the condition of all
internal tank surfaces to be assessed. The frequency of these assessments must
be based on the material of construction of the tank and its ancillary
equipment, the age of the system, the type of corrosion or erosion protection
used, the rate of corrosion or erosion observed during the previous inspection,
and the characteristics of the waste being stored or treated.
(3) For ancillary equipment, a leak test or
other integrity assessment as approved by the director must be conducted at
least annually.
(4) The owner or
operator must maintain on file at the facility a record of the results of the
assessments conducted in accordance with paragraphs (i)(1) through (i)
(3).
(5) If a tank system or
component is found to be leaking or unfit for use as a result of the leak test
or assessment in paragraphs (i)(1) through (i)(3), the owner or operator must
comply with the requirements of section 11-264-196.
Notes
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