N.M. Admin. Code § 20.6.2.5358 - TESTING AND MONITORING REQUIREMENTS
Testing and monitoring requirements shall at a minimum include.
A. Monitoring of the injected
wastes .
(1) The owner or operator shall
develop and follow an approved written waste analysis plan that describes the
procedures to be carried out to obtain a detailed chemical and physical
analysis of a representative sample of the waste , including the quality
assurance procedures used. At a minimum, the plan shall specify:
(a) the parameters for which the waste will
be analyzed and the rationale for the selection of these parameters;
(b) the test methods that will be used to
test for these parameters; and
(c)
the sampling method that will be used to obtain a representative sample of the
waste to be analyzed.
(2) The owner or operator shall repeat the
analysis of the injected wastes as described in the waste analysis plan at
frequencies specified in the waste analysis plan and when process or operating
changes occur that may significantly alter the characteristics of the waste
stream.
(3) The owner or operator
shall conduct continuous or periodic monitoring of selected parameters as
required by the director .
(4) The
owner or operator shall assure that the plan remains accurate and the analyses
remain representative.
B. Hydrogeologic compatibility determination.
The owner or operator shall submit information demonstrating to the
satisfaction of the director that the waste stream and its anticipated reaction
products will not alter the permeability, thickness or other relevant
characteristics of the confining or injection zones such that they would no
longer meet the requirements specified in
20.6.2.5352 NMAC.
C. Compatibility of well materials.
(1) The owner or operator shall demonstrate
that the waste stream will be compatible with the well materials with which the
waste is expected to come into contact, and submit to the director a
description of the methodology used to make that determination. Compatibility
for purposes of this requirement is established if contact with injected fluids
will not cause the well materials to fail to satisfy any design requirement
imposed under Subsection B of
20.6.2.5355 NMAC.
(2) The director shall require continuous
corrosion monitoring of the construction materials used in the well for wells
injecting corrosive waste , and may require such monitoring for other waste , by:
(a) placing coupons of the well construction
materials in contact with the waste stream; or
(b) routing the waste stream through a loop
constructed with the material used in the well ; or
(c) using an alternative method approved by
the director .
(3) If a
corrosion monitoring program is required:
(a)
the test shall use materials identical to those used in the construction of the
well , and such materials must be continuously exposed to the operating
pressures and temperatures (measured at the well head) and flow rates of the
injection operation; and
(b) the
owner or operator shall monitor the materials for loss of mass, thickness,
cracking, pitting and other signs of corrosion on a quarterly basis to ensure
that the well components meet the minimum standards for material strength and
performance set forth in Subsection B of
20.6.2.5355 NMAC.
D. Periodic mechanical
integrity testing. In fulfilling the requirements of
20.6.2.5204 NMAC, the owner or
operator of a Class I hazardous waste injection well shall conduct the
mechanical integrity testing as follows:
(1)
the long string casing , injection tube, and annular seal shall be tested by
means of an approved pressure test with a liquid or gas annually and whenever
there has been a well workover;
(2)
the bottom-hole cement shall be tested by means of an approved radioactive
tracer survey annually;
(3) an
approved temperature, noise, or other approved log shall be run at least once
every five years to test for movement of fluid along the borehole; the director
may require such tests whenever the well is worked over;
(4) casing inspection logs shall be run
whenever the owner or operator conducts a workover in which the injection
string is pulled, unless the director waives this requirement due to well
construction or other factors which limit the test 's reliability, or based upon
the satisfactory results of a casing inspection log run within the previous
five years; the director may require that a casing inspection log be run every
five years, if he has reason to believe that the integrity of the long string
casing of the well may be adversely affected by naturally-occurring or man-made
events;
(5) any other test approved
by the director in accordance with the procedures in
40 CFR Section
146.8(d) may also be
used.
E. Ambient
monitoring.
(1) Based on a site-specific
assessment of the potential for fluid movement from the well or injection zone ,
and on the potential value of monitoring wells to detect such movement, the
director shall require the owner or operator to develop a monitoring program.
At a minimum, the director shall require monitoring of the pressure buildup in
the injection zone annually, including at a minimum, a shut down of the well
for a time sufficient to conduct a valid observation of the pressure fall-off
curve.
(2) When prescribing a
monitoring system the director may also require:
(a) continuous monitoring for pressure
changes in the first aquifer overlying the confining zone ; when such a well is
installed, the owner or operator shall, on a quarterly basis, sample the
aquifer and analyze for constituents specified by the director ;
(b) the use of indirect, geophysical
techniques to determine the position of the waste front, the water quality in a
formation designated by the director , or to provide other site specific
data;
(c) periodic monitoring of
the ground water quality in the first aquifer overlying the injection
zone ;
(d) periodic monitoring of
the ground water quality in the lowermost groundwater of the state of New
Mexico; and
(e) any additional
monitoring necessary to determine whether fluids are moving into or between
groundwater of the state of New Mexico.
F. The director may require seismicity
monitoring when he has reason to believe that the injection activity may have
the capacity to cause seismic disturbances.
Notes
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